Veep S4 – this season really heats things up with
Selina now sitting in as president, and running for actual election. This season
is the best so far, adding in Hugh Laurie as her too good to be true running
mate/Vice President. Loads of physical comedy and eloquent observations on the
state of politics and those that vote them in. Hilariously this season ended
similarly to our own political dramas, Julia Louis-Dreyfus is outstanding in
this, but really the entire cast are superb.
Bloodline S1 – this is a great family saga series
set in Florida with an all star cast. When the family reunite for a family
occasion, they wonder if the eldest son and black sheep of the family, Ben
Mendelsohn, will turn up. He does, and this set off a chain reaction with
devastating consequences
Call the Midwife S5 – The latest season is still
great, but lacking a little with some main characters absent. It is one of those
odd shows that is sweet, and interesting, and sucks me in.
Wolfpack – this is the most fascinating and the
most disturbing documentary about a young family who live in Manhattan, whose
children have never left their apartment. Then one day one of the teens decides
to leave the apartment and see what the city has to offer. And what happens next
is to be seen.
The Man and Le Mans – this is the documentary
about Steve McQueen and his fight to make an honest film about Le Mans, with him
driving in the lead. With unreleased footage showing how dangerous the whole
shoot was and with interviews of those involved at the time, this is a great
documentary.
I am Malala – This is a must see documentary. I
thought I knew Malala’s story, and to a certain degree I did, but there is so
much more to it. With loads of footage of Malala and her family, albeit in
exile, it documents every step leading up to and including her shooting in
detail and how they are coping afterwards. It is a heartbreaking story, but
uplifting and thought provoking. She is an incredibly brave woman and an
inspiration to all.
Supermensch: the Legend of Shep Gordon – this was
a great documentary directed by Mike Myers about Hollywood Super Agent, Shep
Gordon. Shep accidentally fell into managing music artists, and moved to film
and cooking. He is the most delightful guy, kind, and true to his word. From the
long list of celebrities interviewed in this great doco, you can see how beloved
he is. His first client was Alice Cooper, and 45 years later they are still
together. But what wild times they had back then. They say Shep invented, sex,
drugs, and rock and roll, and they may be right. At his height, he managed three
huge but very very different stars, Alice Cooper, Anne Murray, and Luther
Vandross. I loved watching this story about a total unknown to me, who has been
behind some of my US faves. This is a must see and a highly recommend for
me.
Ghosts of the Abyss – I have always been
fascinated by The Titanic, but mostly repulsed by James Cameron. But I finally
decided to watch this interesting doco about investigating what’s left of the
old girl at the bottom of the ocean. Cameron put his money where his mouth was
and organised these deep sea dives to film and look at The Titanic, with Bill
Pullman along for the ride, it actually was rather
remarkable.
Adele Live in London – I adore Adele, her songs
and voice are timeless, her sassy attitude adorable, and that face, oh my. This
is a hodge podge of her singing at the Albert Hall in London and interviews with
Graham Norton, but it was great.
Judy Garland in Concert – this I watched on Fox,
it was the first proper concert Liza did with her mother, she is young and
stupendous, at times singing her mother off the stage. Shot in black and white
and not the best visual quality, it didn’t matter, as the music was
sublime.
Le Concert De Paris, Bastille Day 2013 – this is
another Fox offering, I am loving their Arts programs. A lovely classical
concert just under the Eiffel Tower at dusk on Bastille Day. Loads of Puccini
and Ravel, French classics, the sun setting, the Tower twinkling, and a chocka
block Champs De Mars with people. Simply divine, and one of the best concerts I
have seen
Beginners – this is a wonderful little melancholy
film, about a young man (Ewan McGregor – at his very best, oh my) grieving for
his just passed father (Christopher Plummer). Through a series of flashbacks you
see the lovely relationship between father and son, the changes in his father’s
life and his subsequent downturn with cancer. The present day timeline has Ewan
meeting a lovely French actress (Melanie Laurent) at a party and slowly falling
for her. This is beautiful, thought provoking, and sweet in the best possible
way. Plummer won the Oscar for this, but McGregor will break your
heart.
Learning to Drive – is a sweet little film about a
middle aged woman (Patricia Clarkson) who’s life is falling apart and she
decides to finally get her driving license. Her teacher is a taxi driver (Ben
Kingsley). Both are going through rough phases, but whilst Clarkson is not
coping, Kingsley is, and he teaches her much more than how to drive. This is a
good story, but lacked something. Worth seeing all the same.
Blood Orange – I am guessing this was an Iggy Pop
vanity piece, it is an awful murder story, and Iggy is painfully bad in it. He
has acted before, but I have no idea what anyone was thinking with this. Bizarre
and annoying. And I love Iggy!
End of the Tour – this is a rambling film based on
the true story of a Rolling Stone columnist driving around with David Foster
Wallace on a book tour. I just didn't buy Jason Segel as Wallace, and Jesse
Eisenberg as the columnist was also a little annoying. This was an ok film, for
Wallace fans only.
Experimenter – this reminds me of a very basic
version of Master of Sex, except the topic is human behaviour. Based on the true
story of Stanley Milgrim (Peter Sarsgaard) and his people experimentations on
how people react when told to do things. The experiments were controversial but
fascinating. The movie itself was dull in parts, but mostly rather interesting.
Bonus: Winona Ryder stars as Milgrim’s wife.
One Chance – This wasn’t too bad, the fabulous James
Cordon as Paul Potts, the UK singer who won a singing tv comp by singing Opera.
It could have been a soppy piece, but it actually was a lot of fun, well done
and nicely portrayed.
Freeheld – I wanted to love this film, but found it not
quite connecting until the end. It based on the true story of a US detective who
is a lesbian in a relationship, gets cancer and is not allowed her pension to be
given to her partner. Ellen Page and Julianne Moore star as the couple, both
were outstanding in their thankless roles, but I did find their lack of
chemistry a distraction. Michael Shannon also shines as Moore’s force partner
who comes through for the couple in the end. Small part of gay activist is also
played beautifully by Steve Carell.
Legend - This was a gritty film staring Tom Hardy as both
Reggie and Ron Kray, the notorious Kray brothers. The story follows Reggie’s
tempestuous marriage and Ron’s in and out of jail and the subsequent
disintegration of their crime group.
Sicario – FBI Agent, Emily Blunt, joins a taskforce that
heads to Mexico to investigate a drug cartel and things are not as they seem.
Awesome drama and Blunt is outstanding.
Le Tour De France – as always in July, it is lots
of late nights, Gabriel Gate and French Cuisine, Cheese, Stunning countryside,
guys in tight shorts on bikes, mountains, and castles, castles, castles. I love
it!
Big Blue Sky – written and read by Peter Garrett –
This was a great tale of Peter’s life as read by him. It is more political then
musical, which was interesting but slightly disappointing. I felt at times he
was using this to make amends or explain the situation of his political
aspirations. The first section of the book detailing his childhood, family and
move into music, with those political backgrounds was the most fascinating
section of the book. I loved hearing about MIdnight Oil, but it was certainly
lacking within such a large tome. But ultimately a great
read.
The BFG – Read by David Wallaims, written by Roald
Dahl – this was a load of fun, everyone knows the story of The BFG, and
listening to the wonderful Wallaims voice all those glorious characters was pure
joy.
Use Your Words by Catherine Deveny – I do love
Dev, though I know she can divide people with her no BS honest approach to life.
This is a great book on writing, with that same attitude and loads of advice
from other people she knows. I whipped through the book quickly and found myself
inspired to write immediately, not that I had been uninspired, but the book made
me want to type my words straight away. Loads of tips and ideas and projects to
help you are within, and this is a great book for anyone who loves to write,
amateur like me or real life actual writers. She knows her
stuff.
The Pleasure of Reading – Antonia Fraser – Antonia
has pulled together a range of essays from varying writers about why they read
and what they get out of it. It was a great read.
Seven Good Years – Etgar Keret - Etgar is a young
Israeli writer and this is an essay style memoir about politics and the middle
east. A fascinating insight into young life in a crazy
situation.
Dying: a memoir – Cory Taylor – this is the most
sublimely beautiful read, it is also melancholy and deep. Cory is a great writer
and has cancer so this is her last book, a memoir of her life, looking back and
reflecting on key moments lit by her imminent death. This sounds sad and
depressing, and at times it is, but it is also enlightening, stunning,
philosophical, and just wondrous. Death is such a taboo still, and yet why? This
is a small book, but one of the most worthy reads I have read in a very long
time.
What I’ve Been Listening to
Take all my love – Rufus Wainwright – this is a
lovely little tribute to Shakespeare on the 400th anniversary. He, like Paul
Kelly, put sonnets to music. It is a lovely, romantic album. Very suited to
Rufus, and works beautifully.
You and I – Jeff Buckley – I always get irritated
when long dead people ‘release’ albums, and feel apprehensive about listening to
them. I adore Buckley and Grace, but this wasn’t too bad, mostly covers, worth a
listen for sure.
Pure McCartney – Paul McCartney – I am an
unashamed, unabashed Paul McCartney fan, always have been and always will be.
He’s my main man, my main Beatle, my musical hero. This is the 2 disc version of
a best of his solo career. It is a great collection, full of gems long
forgotten, and songs well known. I’ve been blasting this all over the shop, and
just loving it. Cause these are comfort songs at their very best for
me.