Friday, June 29, 2012

Well, that didn’t take long


I saw a commercial about the ACA being a tax increase today.  The entire commercial was nothing but lies.  Can’t say I’m surprised.  I’m disappointed that politics is like this, and concerned that people will believe this nonsense, but I’m not surprised.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

A few things about the SCOTUS decision on the Affordable Care Act


I have to admit that I was surprised at the voting, but I shouldn’t have been.  I know that there was opposition to what was essentially a Republican idea just because a Democrat got it passed, so I understood why people were against it.  But this law supports private insurance companies over everything else so I expected it to be upheld because it matched the interests of corporate power.

So I shouldn’t have been surprised that the law was upheld or by some of the voting.

I think that Roberts’ opinion is a little convoluted but does match the intent of the law – which Congress was too chickenshit to explicitly spell out.  I also think that the minority opinion was ridiculous on at least two points.  For one thing, it stated that there were two key provisions that, had they been left out, the law never would have been passed so if they were struck down then the entire law must be struck down.  Great mind reading act there to begin with, but that’s like saying because I changed my shirt I have to take off all of my other clothes.

The other thing was to say that this law prevents Congress from attacking the health care issues the country faces in the future except in piecemeal fashion because this law gets in the way.  Politically that may have some truth to it – legally it’s just nonsense.  All the next law has to say is that it overturns all of this law.

This decision is mostly a good thing, even if the law itself didn’t go far enough.  It doesn’t foster socialism and never has.  The mandate doesn’t cost anyone anything unless they voluntarily comply because the law specifies that there will be no enforcement of the penalty.  And this law has already helped people, will continue to do so and will help more people in the future.

I still think we need to make this better.

Now, even though the law specifically says that the penalty can not be enforced, how long will it be before we see the campaign commercials about this being a new tax?

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

A little more on Snow White and the Huntsman


Since I haven’t seen any movies lately I thought I’d add two things about Snow White and the Huntsman.

I have read many comments about how the movie dealt with the issue of female power coming from beauty.  To be sure it is an element in the story, but no one commented on a couple of things that I saw.

For one thing, there were criticisms that in no way is Kristen Stewart more beautiful than Charlize Theron.  Putting aside whether or not that is true, the movie deals with it.  Snow White is not said to be more beautiful, she is called more fair and her beauty is explicitly stated to be of her heart and not her appearance.  So, yeah, not so much supporting the evil queen’s position that only physical beauty confers power.

Also, the idea that men use women and throw them away.  The king doesn’t do that, and neither do either of the two main male characters in the movie.  The childhood friend William, who becomes friends with Snow White when they are children, spends his life regretting not being able to save her even though he was a child.  There is nothing sexual about this bond.  When he learns that she is still alive he rides off to rescue her not because he wants her for sex (he may but that isn’t the stated motivation) or to be his bride but because he has a chance to finally redeem what he sees as the single greatest failing of his life: he let down a friend – and now he can help his friend.

Then there is the Huntsman.  When he is brought before the Queen there is a brief scene where he explains why he is a depressed drunk who doesn’t care whether he lives or dies – and who would welcome death though he isn’t the type to commit suicide.  He tells the Queen that he is miserable because he was unable to keep his wife safe after she had saved him from depression after the war.  He sees himself as unworthy of her and is devastated because she died when he was away.  His life is worthless because his wife is gone.  He is nothing without the woman he loves.

The Queen has what turned out to be a throwaway line where she is surprised that the Huntsman cares for his wife.  They didn’t do anything with that which I think is a shame, but it was in there.

Is this all very male-centric, yes, but only until Snow White gets her chance to show that she is not a damsel in distress and everyone around her sees that as well.  She doesn’t do much fighting, but she dons her Joan of Arc costume and helps lead the charge.  And of course she is the one who confronts the queen.

It’s not a perfect movie, but I am amazed at how much was missed by the people who reviewed it.

Just wondering


If the Supreme Court overturns all or part of the Affordable Care Act, will the people who usually complain about activist judges be upset by, you know, what they usually call activism?

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Movies


For those of you keeping score at home, my wife and I have indeed seen 4 movies in 2012.  That at least matches and may set a record for movies seen in one year.

I don’t know what it is about this year.  Maybe we’ve just been feeling better when the movies are out and it only takes a few hours and it’s close to home.

And there are a ton more movies that we want to see.

Oh boy.

Monday, June 11, 2012

The Avengers


I’ve been hacking up mini-critiques of movies lately.  All I can say about The Avengers is that it is a great movie.  Go see it.

The action is good, the dialog is good, the script is good, the humor is good – people laughed out loud more for The Avengers than for MIB III, the character development is good, the acting and the direction are good.  Add it all up and it’s a great movie.

See this movie.  Be sure to stay until after the credits – not just the first part, stay until the very end.  There were only a half dozen other people in the theater with my wife and me by that point and we were all laughing out loud.

Snow White and the Huntsman


The trailer for Snow White and the Huntsman makes it look like a typical Hollywood fantasy action adventure movie.  It fits that genre, complete with the evil queen, the heroine she wants to kill and the kind of scruffy hero, but there is more to it than that.  The movie is also a fairy tale.  Well, it tries to be.

Before I go any further let me say that I liked the movie and I recommend it.

The story was good and that makes Snow White and the Huntsman a good movie, though it needed a better script.  I also thought that the pacing was a little off and it didn’t build the world as much as I would have liked, but that’s just a personal complaint.  They did seem to know what they wanted to do with the characters but they didn’t quite fit them all together well enough.

The blending of fantasy and the folklore elements was a little uneven but I’m impressed that they tried to do as much as they did.  To be a good fantasy adventure a movie needs more embellishment than a story built around elements of folklore and archetypes.  Fantasy requires more explanation that fairy tale archetypes need, and they did that (with the exception of my above complaint), but I don’t think they tied everything together well enough.  Still, what they did was impressive.

Don’t get me wrong, like I said, I enjoyed the movie and I say go see it.  My complaints aren’t enough to recommend against it.  Most of this is the kind of thing you only think about after the fact and I can always nit-pick.  This is a good film.  It is visually appealing, the settings and effects were good, and though the effects were used heavily in some places they weren’t distracting in their overabundance.  There are scenes suffused with CGI that are not overwhelmed by it.

I’ve read several negative reviews and I really don’t think the people who wrote them saw the same movie I saw.  Every one of them missed things and then complained that they weren’t there or they complained about things that weren’t in the movie.  Almost no one got the point of it being a fairy tale and all that that involves.  I have a feeling the reviewers were all expecting something and when they didn’t get it they criticized the movie for not being what they wanted it to be.

Everyone does seem to like Charlize Theron though, and with good reason.

The good definitely outweighs any weaknesses, which are probably not anything most people would care about anyway, so go see it.

Oh, if you are planning on taking young children be aware that there are dark parts to this film.  Actually, it is overall a dark – as in atmosphere and lighting – film.  Though the young girl next to us seemed to handle it all well.  The infant crying in the back of the theater had other reasons to do so – probably just a critic.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Don’t worry, there’s more


I fell off a bit in the movie postings but there are a couple more on the way.

Saturday, June 2, 2012

MIB III


Saw Men in Black III.  Also a lot of fun.  People were actually laughing out loud in the theater and I was one of them.

Oddly enough this is the second movie that I have seen recently where Danny Elfman did the music and both of them included period music and from the same period.  Also, the mention of ‘happenings’.  I’m not sure if there is any significance to that, but it makes you go ‘hmmm’.

I did not see this is 3D so I can’t say if it was any good that way but I can say that it doesn’t need to be in 3D to be good.  I don’t think you can ever get back to the level of the first movie, but this was a good entry in the series.

Now this is not a deep, philosophical movie.  It’s a summer SF action movie and you know what to expect from the franchise.  Although there is some introspection and consideration of how people become who they are.

Again – as in Dark Shadows – we have a man out of time, though that isn’t the focus.  Agent J time jumps back to 1969 and there’s some commentary on racism, with some humor thrown in, and the attitudes and fashion and music are from then, but it’s atmosphere.  The major mention is really just the differences in technology used by the agents.  And of course the younger Agent K.

Personally, I think that Josh Brolin nailed the performance.  He is a young Agent K.  He is thoroughly enjoyable in this movie and a reason in himself to see it.  It was a lot of fun watching him.  I didn’t think there was anything distracting, either.  You just end up watching a younger version of the character.  If they want to replace Tommy Lee Jones, either because they think he’s too old or because he doesn’t want to do it anymore, they can just bring Josh Brolin’s version of the character to the future and take it from there.

I also really like the character of Griffin – a multidensional being who exists in pretty much all realities and potential realities of time at once with a thorough understanding of how and why they work the way they do.  He’s a bit odd at first, but funny and sympathetic and he brings some pathos to parts of the movie.  Don’t worry about how all that works, just see the movie, it’ll make sense.

Speaking of making sense, movies don’t always, especially if you take the time to think about them after you see them.  You think about the inconsistencies or where the storyline goes off from where they’ve been before.  But what matters most for me is whether or not you get pulled out of the movie by that while you’re watching it.  I didn’t.  Internally it all plays well and the movie holds together.

I say go see it.

And Frank, the pug, is sort of in this one, too.

Friday, June 1, 2012

Dark Shadows


My wife and I saw Dark Shadows and we liked it.

I’m old enough to have watched the series when it was originally on TV so I have a concept in my mind of what Dark Shadows should be.  I never expected the movie to match that since you can’t reproduce a soap opera, or even a story arc from a TV series, in a movie.  What I was hoping for was something different that would stand on its own.  That’s pretty much what I got.  It was enough its own story that you could separate it from the series and I liked it as a retelling of the story.

I have to admit that I was worried that the movie would be too campy.  Which is not to say that there was no camp in the series, but it was a different sort than you can get from Tim Burton and Johnny Depp.  Fortunately, they did not go too far.  There was definitely more intentional humor but I thought that it was well balanced and well used. 

I say intentional because, if you don’t know the series, there was humor in unexpected and unintended places.  If they snuck a scene in the movie where the walls moved or a stage hand was on camera I missed it.  That sort of thing happened on occasion in the show and I wouldn’t have minded seeing that in the movie as a sort of homage to the original.

As an aside, the people who made Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country missed a golden opportunity to put in the line: “Damn it, Jim!  I’m a doctor not an engineer!”  But I digress.

I did catch, I think, Jonathan Frid’s brief cameo which was nice to see.

The movie played on the man out of time element without overdoing that either.  Speaking of overdoing it the foreshadowing of the McDonald’s snark was really obvious.  Actually, I didn’t see it coming as foreshadowing at first, I just thought it was a somewhat hidden joke.

Overall I liked the movie.  It was entertaining and a fun movie going experience.  That is not faint praise, that is what I usually look for in a movie.  My wife and I don’t make it to many movies in a year – 3 is average – and what I want is entertainment and fun. 

As far as aesthetic, the movie is not quite as atmospherically dark as the series, but the look and feel of Collinwood were very well done with some scenes on the rocky coast that could have been from the TV show.  While they didn’t use the original theme – which I sort of wanted to hear – there was a brief reference to it with some flute themes in the score.  The use of period music was fun, too, and I’m sure it was a lot of fun for Danny Elfman to do.

The blend of comedy, horror and drama did a good job of evoking the feel of the series.  I would have done some things differently, but I say go see the it.  I was afraid I wouldn’t, but I enjoyed it.

Oh, and stay until after the credits.

And now for something completely different


Not a man with three buttocks or with a tape recorder up his nose, but some posts that aren’t about politics.