Archive for April 8, 2008

College Trivia All Solved!

And I’m very pleased to see that some different players got winning answers this time.

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College Trivia

My son was accepted at a college he’s happy about today! Yay! Guess these movies with college themes or scenes.

1. The melodious-voiced professor in this 1970s film played the same role in the television series spin-off.
Solved by Ken (comment #2).

2. Marilyn Monroe’s jacket.
Solved by Trevor J (comment #7).

3. “Toga! Toga!”
Solved by lunofajro (comment #1).

4. The role of the art history professor was originated on Broadway by Joan Allen.
Solved by maurinsky (comment #4).

5. An immigrant father takes his son out to a bar to celebrate after the son’s college graduation. In the bar, they argue because the father wants his son to become a doctor, but the son wants to become a writer.
Solved by Cara (comment #17).

6. The new president of Huxley University hires a couple of bumblers to help rig the big football game.
Solved by Ken (comment #3).

7. At thirty she begins to attend college classes, to escape from life working in her parents’ diner.
Solved by lunofajro (comment #1).

Monday Movie Review: Ordinary People

Ordinary People (1980) 9/10
The Jarrett family is recovering from the death of their older son. The younger son, Conrad (Timothy Hutton), has recently come home from a mental institution after a suicide attempt. Parents Calvin (Donald Sutherland) and Beth (Mary Tyler Moore) struggle to connect to their surviving son and to each other. Directed by Robert Redford.

My sister has been trying to get me to see this film for years. So here I finally am.

Before I get into the movie, can we talk about Debut Central? Timothy Hutton’s first film. Elizabeth McGovern’s first film (Gods, I love her). Redford’s directorial debut (for which he won an Oscar). Mary Tyler Moore’s first dramatic film role (after debuting as a dramatic actress 2 years earlier in a made-for-TV breast cancer weepie). Taken as a whole, this is a very impressive bunch of firsts.

Some people don’t like what they call “psychobabble” movies. I’ve seen that complaint about Ordinary People. But look; it’s just s a mistake to watch a movie wherein the central relationship is between a boy and his psychiatrist, and expect it to be about something other than psychology. So yes, there will be revelations and discoveries, and yes there will be hidden rage that will come to the surface, and yes, talk therapy will be utilized. This is simply not the movie for you if that’s not interesting or appealing.

Part of my hesitation about seeing this movie (I mean, it’s been 27 years) was that it would be, well, depressing. Part of it was the opposite, that it would be feel-good, everything’s all better now that we talked to a shrink and we all love each other again and gosh I feel good. Well, neither is true. The movie is only depressing if the fact that there’s such a thing as depression is unbearable. Conrad’s struggles with his feelings are fervent and anguished, but the struggle, the choice to try to recover, the effort to climb out, is full of nobility and hope. He wants a life. He wants a girlfriend (McGovern); he wants to form connections, he wants desperately to move on. And yes, he’s sad and confused, but he also learns all too plainly that putting on the false happy-face that everyone seems to demand of him has terrible consequences.

Hutton is the star of this film, but the most fascinating character is Mary Tyler Moore’s Beth. She is frozen into a very specific place; she cannot change or interact beyond what has already happened. Her son’s efforts to change are therefore terribly threatening. It’s easy enough to play a cold character, but Beth’s coldness is complex and layered. What gets me is how she accepts it. She hasn’t the equipment to process her feelings or experiences beyond what she’s already done, and she doesn’t reach for that equipment; she simply resents that others have it and want it of her. She is the opposite of Conrad; all false front and performance. In allowing her character to be relentless; committed to rigidity as if it were her dearest friend, Redford keeps his movie from being sticky-sweet. Every time you long for one of those Lifetime Channel breakthroughs, Beth defies you. She challenges you to believe that her way is actually better. This honesty of character is so rare, and so remarkable, that it really makes the movie.

Any title to this post gives away the ending

I’m like the winningest girl ever. I win raffles and doorprizes and contests. I’ve got a DVD set coming and once I won a VCR and I won an MP3 player and I am reading a book I won in a raffle. I win shit.

Also I’m the clumsiest girl ever. My life she is a comedy of oops.

Anyway, I won this very cool stamp set. I decided what I wanted to do was frame it. So I took it with me to Marshall’s (carefully pressed between pages of a book) and sort of tried it out in a variety of frames. Found a frame I really liked. Quirky and impressive and it set off the stamps beautifully.

At home I realized the frame had a stand and I wanted to hang it not stand it, so I removed the stand, which took hammers and prying and a certain amount of anguish. During which I had the wrong hammer and the right hammer was lost in Arthur’s room, so days passed. Then Arthur found the hammer and I pried off most of the stand and then I realized there was no hook. Most frames seem to come with both the stand and the hook so you can do what you like. So now I’m hammering and hammering to get a hook into the frame and it’s not working and then I realize that I have one of those plastic glue-on hooks so I use that.

Then I stick a nail in the wall and hang the thing and it looks awesome. I have a whole display of movie-related stuff on the wall of my stairs so as you go up there it is, James Bond, Casablanca, Superman, various autographs, some collectibles. So I put it on the wall of the stairs and it’s just right. Except the hook is placed wrong so the nail hanger thingerjob shows. So I take it down, move the hook, hang it back on the nail hanger thingermoobob…

…and Crash, Bang, Boom, Tinkle.

(Crash, Bang, Boom, Tinkle was the original title to this post.)

Frame flies to the bottom of the stairs in an impressive barrel roll, not actually commencing with the shattering glass tinkle part until it’s rolled over like three times. Wish I’d filmed it.

So. I need to go to Marshall’s to buy a frame. My life is one long deja vu.

Site Outage

I’m back. Sorry. Life is full of uncertainty.

Loving would be easy

I made a really nice vegetable dish the other night. I sautéd onions and added zucchini medallions. I didn’t have any garlic, and I didn’t want to use tomatoes because I used them in the chicken main course.

I thought about it and added frozen corn and strips of prosciutto. I cooked the whole thing for less than ten minutes over very low heat (overcooked zuchinni is a sin).

When I served it, I said “Look at these beautiful colors; red, gold, and green.”

So I named the dish “Karma Chameleon.”

It was yummy. I brought the leftovers for lunch today. I suppose it’s still Karma Chameleon if you use a different green vegetable. I bet it would be great with snap beans. Only trouble is the song gets stuck in my head now.

Theme Trivia Solved

Everything solved in one day, I actually thought you might not make it.

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Tuesday Trivia: A much better hidden theme this time

Theme solved by Trevor J. (comment #12).

1. A supernatural hero who loves kittens.
Solved by Ken (comment #5).

2. After being raped by her husband, she attempts to drown herself.
Solved by Evn (comment #17).

3. “Not even the best magician in the world can produce a rabbit out of a hat if there is not already a rabbit in the hat.”
Solved by Trevor J. (comment #12).

4. “Are you righteous? Kind? Does your confidence lie in this? Are you loved by all? Know that I was, too. Do you imagine your suffering will be any less because you loved goodness and truth?”
Solved by Trevor J. (comment #12).

5. A dwarf named Mordecai.
Solved by Melville (comment #3).

6. The money is hidden in a hayfield near Buxton under a piece of black volcanic glass.
Solved by Melville (comment #3).

7. “I will live in Montana. And I will marry a round American woman and raise rabbits, and she will cook them for me.”
Solved by Daven (comment #6).