Showing posts with label George Stevens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Stevens. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 September 2024

Out Standing In My Field

Yes, it's astronomy season again.  Reading and sleeping have gone by the wayside.  This past week saw 5 clear nights in a row.  I was able to use three of them, as I need a day in between to recover from late nights.  Also, it is a 50 minute drive each way, which can be tiring.  But I have satellite radio and usually listen to NPR, CBC, or BBC World, so the time passes relatively quickly.  I might snag one more night before the moon is too bright.  Although we have a clubhouse and observatory slightly closer to home, the light pollution is so bad there now that I seldom even consider going there.  Instead, I park my self between two giant windmills on a narrow dirt road amidst soybean fields.  When harvest comes around I have to scoot elsewhere, or be blinded by combine lights.  No one has ever bothered me out there, not even the coyotes that often howl as they pass by.  I recently cleaned the mirror and reset it in its casing.  It made a huge difference this week to my observing program, too.  The mirror eventually gets coated by dust and loses some of its ability to gather light, so periodic cleaning is necessary.
 
As I said above, my reading time goes out the window during a run of clear nights like this.  At night I am under the stars, and my afternoon reading time is usually spent napping.  So I am still reading the first book, a non fiction by Silverberg. 
 
In other news, film festival weekend has arrived, and is now being spread over two weekends.  As things work out I get five choices in a row.  We began with a strange little 1960 Italian film starring Marcello called Il bell'Antonio, about a handsome man who attracts women to him.  He thinks he will never marry until he sees a photo of his supposed intended, played by Claudia Cardinale (21 years old in the picture).  He falls madly in love for the first time in his life and the wedding takes place.  However, because he is really in love with her, he is unable to consummate the marriage.  No problems with flirts and whores and even the maid, but not his wife.  This is really an oddball film, attacking society, the church, and marriage itself.  To Marcello, making love to his young wife would be like making it with a real angel.  He is unable to get past his sexual block when with her.  Of course annulment comes soon afterwards, and he is ridiculed.  There are several lighter moments, too, and the film was shot mostly in Sicily.  Well worth a look, especially the restored version.
 
Now showing on Criterion. 
 
One of the house rules for film selection is that at least one choice must come from the "leaving soon" selection on either Mubi or Criterion.  I chose a 1943 comedy directed by George Stevens called The More The Merrier, starring Joel McCrea, Jean Arthur, and Charles Coburn.  Not only is there a shortage of men in wartime Washington, D.C., but a critical shortage of housing, too.  The film has a lot of fun with both shortages when Jean Arthur sublets a bedroom in her apartment.  Watch how Coburn walks past the long line of people waiting outside to interview for the room at 5 pm, and takes the place for himself.  Today, exactly the same gag could be done with people staring at their phones as they wait; in 1943 they are all standing there reading their newspapers.  This is one of many funny gags.  Coburn's missing pants provide another.  Coburn then ends up letting half of his bedroom to McCrea.  Quite a fun picture.
 
Leaving Criterion Sept. 30th. 
 
Lastly came out first viewing of Blow Up in five or six years.  Criterion just got it, along with La Dolce Vita (see next blog).  Antonioni created a cultural icon with his 1966 film, still one of the best looks at swinging London ever put on film.  Though the main story about a photographer that unwittingly captures a murder on film is still the central element, there are so many distractive scenes and sidelines that one always discovers something new.  Such scenes include, but are not limited to, the visit to the old pawnshop and the purchase of a giant propeller, the sexually playful scenes with the young girls who want to be models (Jane Birkin is the blonde; she was 20 but could easily pass for 16), and the brilliant Yardbirds club scene.  These all contribute hugely to the overall effect of the film, though not directly involved in the plot.  Because of being over budget many scenes relating to the plot and its explanation were left out.  Thank goodness.  The film is a masterpiece as it stands.  One of my favourite films of all time.  Can you hear the tennis ball at the very end of the film?
 
Now showing on Criterion in a beautiful restored print. 
 
Mapman Mike

 



 


 

Monday, 22 February 2021

The Big Thaw

 Just after midnight (Tuesday 12:01 am), we finally rose about 0 C, after 17 full days of some serious cold for this part of Canada.  But looking back in retrospect, our Spring thaw came only 1 week late.  Even better, our usual 6 weeks of serious winter only lasted 3 weeks this year.  While the timing of the severe cold wasn't the greatest, we have survived.  Our power stayed on, our water pipes did not freeze, and our furnace worked miracles.  Had any one of those three things gone wrong, it would not have been pleasant.  See Texas news for what could go wrong.

As if to officially announce that winter is over, our mating pair of ducks returned today to the bird feeder.  The great melting of huge snow piles is now underway, and shouldn't take too long, as the sun is at a pretty high angle now.  Corresponding with this good news, our local Covid count was only 13 today.  We are hoping to leave the red zone someday.

We've had two Skype conversations with my parents, who both look well, and two or three with Lois, Deb's mom, who might be heading home from the hospital this week.  And as if to prove that it is nearly time to get out of the house and do something fun, last night I had the world's most boring dream.  It was about J cloths.  Enough said.
 
We finished playing Tunguska: Secret Files 1 last night.  We started the game last July!  It is a really long game, with so many different environments and rooms.  It's a classic point and click adventure game, with great graphics, story, and locations, and decent voice acting.  The story is quite good, actually, and Nina, the heroine, is often funny as she goes about her puzzle solving life.  The game is much better than the last Syberia (3) that we played, and also beats Longest Journey 3, though not in the graphics department.  We are about to embark on a wonderful sounding game called Dear Esther, which seems to garner rave reviews.
 
In movie news, it's my pick for tonight, and my film festival choice coming up later next weekend.  For my leaving February 28th choice I picked Dr. Strangelove.  Thanks to standout performances by Slim Pickens, George C Scott, and, of course, Peter Sellers, the movie can be watched repeatedly.  It is a true classic, and probably Kubrick's best film.
 
Showing on Criterion until Sunday.  
 
Deb's regular pick for the weekend was the latest restored film by Czech animator Karel Zeman.  Called Journey To The Beginning Of Time (1955), it tells the story of four adventurous young boys rowing up the river of time, going back in history in search of trilobites, and encountering all the major eons and critters from the ice age back as far as time goes on Earth.  It's not what we were expecting, but it is a fun little film, and the restoration is flawless.  There are half a dozen shorts that accompany it, and we get to see some of the film before it was restored.

Stop motion adventure with Karel Zeman. 
 
Deb's leaving choice was a film we both bailed on after less than twenty minutes.  Called Talk of the Town, it is from 1942 and was directed by George Stevens, starring Carry Grant, Jean Arthur, and Ronald Colman.  The film seriously got on our nerves early on, and the effect continued to worsen.  So, on to my choice tonight. 
 
Turning to art from the DIA, today I bring you some more highway robbery, at one time a lucrative hobby and occupation.
 
The Highway Robbery, 1625, Esaias Van de Velde,
Dutch, 1587-1630, and Cornelius Hendriksz Vroom, Dutch, 1591-1661.  Oil on oak, 12.5" x 18". 
 
Detail of right side, showing good hiding places for robbers.
 
Detail of left side.  More dark woods.
 
Central area detail.  
 
Mapman Mike

 

 



 

Monday, 19 August 2019

Syberia 3, Teotihuacan, and Fred and Ginger

First, the rain.  Since Thursday afternoon, we had 4" of rain through Sunday night.  That's a lot of rain, especially for an area already suffering from record high water levels in the surrounding lakes and rivers.  More is expected tomorrow, and possibly Wednesday.  What to do with it all.

For the past several weeks I have been playing Syberia 3, a game for PC, off and on in the evenings.  It's a rather tedious game, and not very special.  I am playing it only out of loyalty to the first two games in the series.  Anyway, as per usual, when I turned on the game to play, Steam downloaded an update.  Then, when the game finally loaded, all my progress was erased.  No saved games, no nothing.  Weeks and weeks of work down the tube, with no desire to start all over again.  I downloaded some saved games from the web, but so far they refuse to load.  Harrumph (and under my breath, many more worse words).

We finally sat down and played a mostly full round of our newest board game, called Teotihuacan.  It is certainly one of the better board games we now own.  It is an evening's commitment to set up the board and play, but it is a lot of fun, and as the game board changes with each new game, no sure fire strategy will help you win the next game.  And you get to build a pyramid, and decorate it.  How cool is that?  I think Tokaido Road and this game are our two favourites.  Now that the basement had been reassembled, I have room to store and display all of our board games.  Some have never been played yet.

Deb's weekend movie pick was Swing Time, starring Fred and Ginger.  From 1936, and directed by George Stevens, this b & w classic has some superb dancing and some memorable songs, including "The Way You Look Tonight," and "A Fine Romance," written by Jerome Kern and Dorothy Fields.  Great dance numbers (and music) include "Never Gonna Dance," and Fred's black face tribute to Bill "Bojangle" Robinson.  Some great hoofin'.  The plot, of course, is virtually non-existent. 
 Showing on the Criterion Channel until the end of August. 

And now we return to our regular programming, featuring another fine landscape painting from the Detroit Institute of Arts.
Bernardo Bellotto
View of the Tiber in Rome with the Castel Sant'Angelo, 1743 or 1744
oil on canvas, 34" x 48", unframed. 

The museum did a complete reorganization several years ago, something which I think destroyed the overall layout and made finding any specific painting much more difficult.  One of the newer spaces is called The Grand Tour," and purports to show how Italy was on everyone's grand tour in the 18th Century, and the artists who did souvenir type works of art.  Canaletto, Guardi, Panini, robert, and Bellotto are some of these artists, and thanks to them we have some rather good impressions of Rome, Venice, and other cities because of their painstaking renditions for rich tourists to carry home.  This particular painting has always been a favourite of mine, and it is large enough to get in close and observe all of the wonderful details of the time.
Detail of the bridge.
 Detail of far left side.

Detail of St. Peter's dome.

Detail of the Castel, which once served as Hadrian's tomb.

Castel, further detail.

Paintings like this hang in every great museum of the world, and are always worth stopping to look at more closely.  This one has an evening twilight colour that cannot be captured in a photo, but is magical and difficult to describe in person.

I had my first piano lesson this afternoon with Philip Adamson, bringing him my newest program.  We got to work on the Bach Prelude and Fugue, and the Schubert Impromptu in C Minor.  Very helpful.  I will return in a few weeks for help with the Haydn Sonata and the Bartok Allegro Barbaro.  I will not likely make my August memorization goals.  For every three notes I stick into my head, two of them pop out the other side.  I'll get there, but it will take more time.

Mapman Mike