Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

Saturday, January 4, 2025

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER REVIEWS

What I've Been Reading

Stone Yard Devotional by Charlotte Wood

I loved this book so much, you can see why it was nominated for the Booker.  A nameless woman escapes her life to a convent near the town she grew up in. Her days are simple and repetitive as she reflects on the trauma that went before. Whilst she is silently going about her retreat, the nuns are preparing for the return of a beloved sister's body, murdered overseas. There has also been a drought and there is a huge infestation of mice.

This sounds dour and I guess it is, but not in Charlotte Wood's deft hands. There is something light and easy within the darker tones that lift the reader and also makes it a page turner. You want to know what and why. Her writing is spare but full of emotions, and she creates a world you do not want to leave. This is a special book, will easily make my top 5 this year.

Question 7 by Richard Flanagan

Oh my goodness, another masterpiece. This is a memoir of Richard, his father and the war with some HG Wells thrown in for good measure. How does it all tie up together? Beautifully so, but to try and describe it would do it no favours plus spoilers! I love books like this, every time you think you know where it is headed, it takes a sharp turn and takes you somewhere completely different. 

His father was a prisoner of war in Japan near Hiroshima at that time, he nearly died in his beloved Franklin River, but what he weaves between these two life and death events WILL leave you breathless. 
It has been called a daisy chain of events, my colleague said it was the ripple effect of life. 

His words and sentence structure, made me constantly pause, re-read, read out loud, text people, and weep. But mostly it made me think. It was astonishingly beautiful. It is full of heart, sharp humour, and genuine drama. This is easily one of the best books I have read.

One Day We Are All Going to Die - Elise Eshe Hearst

This is a lovely companion piece to Nadine Cohen's Everyone and Everything. Naomi is in her mid 20s, working at the Jewish Museum in Melbourne and having a torrid affair with her married colleague. Her holocaust survivor Grandmother, Cookie, is starting to suffer from Dementia. Her life is a mess, she needs to make some changes. This is dark and deep, light and humourous, and full of interesting information about working in a museum. 

The Pursuit of Art by Martin Gayford

I enjoyed this book about the author travelling to see great and unusual art or interview artists including Marina Abramovic and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Gayford is an art critic and writer, and his essays are easy to read and engaging. He loves art and this comes across and is infectious. He travels at great lengths to see some amazing art. He makes you want to follows his every step.

Weather by Jenny Offill

This is an interesting novella about Lizzie, a Librarian who has seen it all, but is very disillusioned with the world. She muses on race and politics and the environment. hmmm. She looks after her mother and brother, both have mental health issues. Her husband and son are on a holiday without her. Her life is same old, same old, but then her old mentor asks for her help answering emails for her blog. Her mentor has a science/environmental blog that is popular and the correspondence is getting out of control. Lizzie uses this correspondence to help make meaning of her life and life generally.

The Mystery Writer by Sulari Gentille

Another stand-alone murder mystery by Gentille. Theo is staying with her lawyer brother in the US, after abandoning her own career in law in Australia. She is trying to write her debut novel and meets a writing hero in the small-town dinner. They strike a relationship but he turns up dead a week later and she is a suspect. The race is on to find the killer before she gets put away herself. This is a classic murder with twists and turns. 

We'll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida

Another Japanese comfort book, this time short stories. People visiting a special psychologist who prescribes a cat for them to look after as their medicine. Quirky, humourous and moving, this was a lot of fun.

The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa

When Rintaro's grandfather dies, he is left alone looking after his grandfather's second hand bookshop until his aunt comes to collect him. His school friends visit and try to cheer him up, but one day a talking cat, Tiger, appears and takes him through a portal in the shop to other dimensions, where he helps the cat 'save books'. A little bit of magic realism works in these comfort books from Japan. This is cute, witty, and wise. Highly recommend.

Where the Deer and the Antelope Play by Nick Offerman

Three memoir style essays from Nick Offerman about the American outdoors, specifically three different journey style holidays he has taken. My favourite of the three is a hiking trek he takes with Jeff Tweedy and George Saunders (IKR!!!!). Fascinating conversation and observations, funny and so very intelligent. At times I felt like I was intruding.  A great read.

The Encoding Green: poems of fields, meadows, and grasses edited by Cecily Parks

Cecily has gathered all sorts of poems that celebrate the green of our natural world. Poetry, classic and modern celebrating the grasses, fields, and land on our earth. Just beautiful.

What I've Been Watching

Hacks S3

Hacks is one of my favourite shows, and S3 upped the ante. Firstly, we get to see inside Deborah's clothes bunker...amazing! Some amazing guest stars, especially J Smith-Cameron as her estranged sister, and Deidre Hall as herself (this was pure gold!). The ups and downs continued as The Late Show is dangled in front of Deborah. Will she get the gig or will she sabotage it. This show is all killer, no filler, can't wait for S4!

Getting On S1-3 US

I loved the UK version of this show, that came first. Jo Brand wrote and starred in it, based on her years nursing. I wasn't sure about the US remake (which is some years old now) but it starred Alex Borstein, Niecy Nash, and the superb Laurie Metcalf. It was pretty good, with the right mix of pathos and humour. And as always, Metcalf showcases her unique sense of physical humour which always draws me in.

Julia S2

The second series of Julia, commence with Julia and her hubby holidaying in France at Simones (Isabella Rossellini), before heading back to the US to shoot the follow season of her successful show. Avis (Bebe Neuwirth) follows them over and gets caught up with Jean-Paul Satre. David Hyde Pierce gets to showcase his talents by also playing the twin brother of Paul Child and Sarah Lancashire is perfection as Julia Childs. A lot happens in this season, it is a shame it was not continued.

Frasier

I didn't mind the first season of the Frasier reboot, thing is the cast is good, but it just isn't the old cast. The kid that plays Niles' son is perfection and a few guest appearances kept things rolling. I will give S2 a go when I get a chance.

Long Way Up

I loved the first 2 Ewan MacGregor and Charley Boorman series where they took motorcycles through Africa and across the world. This is the third series after a long break. Charley has been doing a lot of solo motorcycle shows and was recovering from a serious injury. This time they are tackling South and Central America, which includes quite a few challenging areas, from the terrain to the people. And they are doing it on prototype electric Harleys! This in itself was quite the challenge. 

This was a genuinely edge of your seat show, placing our heroes in some tricky positions. But their beautiful friendship and love for each other and riding shine through. At one section Ewan meets up with one of his daughters - who he adopted from Mongolia after meeting her in the first ride they did many years ago - this was quite emotional.

I love a good travel show and this gives you that and then some. Highly recommend.

Michael Palin in Nigeria

This was Palin at his best, still travelling in his 80s and after his wife has died. He is certainly more fragile than I have ever seen him but also still managing perfectly fine. The humour and his love of people are still there. This one was gret viewing.

The Assembly

The has had varying reviews but I really enjoyed it. A bunch of disabled students are put through their paces at University doing media and getting to interview Australian celebrities as part of it all. They have media legend, Leigh Sales, showing them the ropes and guiding them through and each episode goes behind the scenes of the prep and then shows the interview. They were all superb, but the PM (I mean what other PM would allow such a personal thing other than Albo!), Amanda Keller, and Delta Goodrem stood out.

Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice

We saw this at the cinemas and really enjoyed it. It did take a while to get into and the exposition at the beginning was really clunky. But once we got to Halloween and the glorious Burton set design, things started to move. It didn't really offer anything new, but that was ok. Much like the Banana Boat Song in the first, the musical number in this one was also masterful. It had us both squealing with laughter. Everyone was great, especially Jenna Ortega and Michael Keaton (who looked like he was just having a blast!) but man I love seeing Winona back on the screen, she was everything!

Beetlejuice

We had to rewatch this prior to seeing the new one. It is a close to perfect film, from the cast, to the set design, the worlds created and Beetlejuice himself. Iconic cast and film and hasn't really dated either. Daylight come and I wanna go home! 

Being John Malkovich

Rewatching BJM fot the millionth time. Although, it has been a while but it still holds up beautifully. It is one of the most perfect films I have seen. What a script!!! I remember seeing it at the cinema and I've never laughed so much out loud than at that seminal Malkovich scene.

So much to take from it. How beautiful and clever it was. Spike Jonze and Charlie Kaufman's first film. Michael Stipe produced it. Why didn't Cameron Diaz do more indie roles. The clever cameos. Cusack and Keener were never better. But mostly, what a terrific sport JM was. Totally worth the rewatch.

30 for Brady
A fun film starring Jane Fonda, Rita Moreno, Sally Field, and Lily Tomlin. All in their 80s, they look and are utterly brilliant, it was a bit of a feel good football film, and not great, but the brilliance of the main 4 more than made up for a dodgy script.

Mothering Sunday

Jane is the servant of a rich family in 20s England. She is having an affair with their friend and neighbour, Paul. He is engaged to another. Paul's parents are having a garden party with his fiance's parents, and he stays at home with Jane. Then he rushes off to the party. Jane lingers in the mansion before returning to her own, where she returns to find Paul has been killed in a car crash. The story also moves to the future where Jane is now a writer and married but still holding the secret. Another jump to the future (now played by the glorious Glenda Jackson, her first on screen roles in years) she is an award-winning writer. The film jumps about a bit but is really lovely.

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

Based on the book of the same name, Harold receives a letter from an old colleague who reveals she is dying of cancer. He decides to take a walking pilgrimage to visit her and collects many friends and media attention on the way, much to the chagrin of his wife. Beautifully portrayed by Jim Broadbent, this was a really lovely film.

Event Horizon

This came up in the Sam Neill autobiography and I had never heard of it, so wanted to check it out. It is not great, more a B grade sci-fi with some memorable scenes. It now has quite the cult following, you can see why. It is almost so bad it is good...almost!

Remembering Gene Wilder

This was such a great documentary. Wilder was such a genius and talent, yet such a gentle soul with those beautiful eyes. There was his back story, his rise, his collaborations with Brooks, his relationships, especially with Richard Prior, and all those great films. Loads of interviews with others and some lovely voice work by Wilder himself, coming from interviews and a book of his life he narrated. A must watch for film buffs.

Supermensch

I saw this a few years back and it popped up in my timeline and I said to Andrew we have to watch this. He loved it and it was just as great as the first time. Shep Gordon was a talent manager in Hollywood, and he looked after an eclectic stable of stars, from Alice Cooper to Blondie to Anne Murray to Michael Douglas and that barely tips the surface. So you hear about all of these people and Shep and how great he was. A truly beloved man, and quite the enigma. This is a great doco!

McKellen: playing the part

A lovely little doco about the man and his theatrical life. It barely tipped the surface but it was enjoyable.

David Holmes: the boy who lived

This is a remarkable and little known story. David was Daniel Radcliffe's stunt double in the Harry Potter movies until a simple stunt went wrong in The Deathly Hallows, Part 1. His neck was broken and he is paralysed from the neck down. The doco is about his short but wonderful career as a stunt double, his work on Harry Potter and his life since the accident. Spoiler: Daniel and him are still close friends, but that is why Daniel is so beloved. This gets quite emotional in parts, but mostly is an uplifting and wonderful doco.

What I've Been listening to

Brydon & Richard Ayoade

I love the Rob Brydon podcast, Brydon &, but his interview with Richard Ayoade was exceptional. Richard Ayoade is mostly as you see him, but there is a slight persona when he is being filmed. Here you really got to know Ayoade, the father, the husband, the friend, the human and it was glorious. Look it up, you won't be disappointed.

Paul Giamatti

Paul Giamatti has a podcast with philosopher Stephen Asma called Chinwag. And that is what happens, they have a chinwag about all things esoteric but especially occult. They muse together, and with guests about these kind of topics, life and everything else. I adore Giamatti's voice and would listen to him read the phone  book, but I don't have to. I can listen to this.


Sunday, December 22, 2024

JULY/AUGUST REVIEWS

What I've Been Reading

Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel

This is one of the best books I have read in a long time and will definitely be a contender for my book of the year. It is a difficult book to write about without spoilers. It is speculative fiction, but feels more like a very impressive literary fiction work, with a touch of fantasy within, the fantasy being time travel. But really, whilst that is the main plot device, it is written in such a subtle way, if that is usually not your thing, it won't ruin the book for you.

It takes place from 1912 to way in the future, and is about memory and time.

The characters draw you in and keep the pages turning, as does the story. Center to the plot is a mystery, and it keeps you guessing to the end. It is beautifully written, and really makes you think. I want to write so much more, but I will not. This is a must read, it was on Obama's best reads of 2022, so you know it's good!

Days at Morisaki Bookshop by Satoshi Yagisawa

I don't really do light reading if you haven't worked that out over the years. If I want to rest my brain, I simple rest my brain, or flick through a magazine. I want to learn and go deep when I read. However, I have been really, really enjoying this new genre, of chill Asian (mostly from Japan and Hong Kong) reads. They are not very long and usually involve 1 or 2 (if not all) of the following: cats, coffee, bookshops, reading. Not a huge amount happens, but there is certainly plot. There is a great zen and chill feel to the characters and story, they are calming and fascinating to read.

Days at the Morisaki, is about a young woman, Takako, who decides to take  break from her job and visit her eccentric uncle. She is a broken heart, and takes him up on the offer to live in a small room above his second hand book-store. He lives in Jimbocho, which is a real live town in Tokyo, full of many book-store and publishing houses. It sounds surreal and amazing. Takako spends her time between helping in the book-store and hanging out at the local coffee shop, making friends and healing. When her uncle's estranged wife turns up, things take an interesting turn.

The Honeyeater by Jessie Tu

I loved Jessie's debut novel, A Lonely Girl is a Dangerous Thing, and The Honeyeater is as good if not better. Fay is a translator and works in academia. She is heading to France for a trip with her mother. She has a fractious relationship with her mother and is hoping the trip will smooth things a little as her mother gets older. She is working on a large translation she is hoping will make her better known in the translation world and has also broken off a relationship with her professor. There is a lot going on in Fay's life and when her supervisor's husband goes missing, things really get interesting. 

This is really well written, covers some interesting themes, and is a page turner. My only criticism is there were a few clunky turns towards the end to pull things completely together. You could see the wheels turning, which I always get annoyed with, but really that was minor. I cannot wait to see what Jessie Tu turns out next.

The Vulnerables by Sigrid Nunez

I have been bingeing Sigrid and loving her more with each read. The Vulnerables is set in New York during the pandemic. A middle-aged woman is house-sitting for a friend, and with that comes looking after her friend's bird. When the previous house-sitter - a young man - unexpectedly turns up, the tension heightens. The Vulnerables is a meditation on life, sharing the inner thoughts of the main character alongside of social niceties and pandemic trauma. 

So late in the Day by Claire Keegan

This is a rumination of relationships between men and women, what is and what could be. Everyone is raving about Claire Keegan, and the stories are good, but not great. As always, I am out of the loop and do not understand the hype. 

She is the Earth by Ali Cobby Eckermann

This is luminous book of poetry, or rather a 'verse novel' as each poem tells a continuing story. The story is Ali's relationship with the earth and all its beauty. Mountain ranges, oceans, trees, storms, clouds and so on. Utterly stunning, but at times harsh, all written with love.

She is Fierce: brave, bold and beautiful poems by women edited by Ana Simpson

Continuing with my love of poetry, this is a compilation of kick arse poems by amazing female poets. From heavy weights like Christina Rossetti, Margaret Atwood, Gertrude Stein, Emily Dickinson, Maya Angelou, and Dorothy Parker to unknowns, older and contemporary. This was great!

For the Working Class Man by Jimmy Barnes

This is the second volume of Jimmy's autobiography and covers the Cold Chisel years. It is no surprise he lived life on the edge, so much so he should be dead many times over. But reading this, or rather listening to Jimmy read it on talking book, tells the whole story and wow! Amazing stories on songwriting, touring, and drinking and drugs! It is the story of his attempts, many, of recovery. It is most importantly the story of Jane Barnes, what a phenomenal woman. I have no doubt that he is the man he is today (and still alive) because of her. This was a rip roaring read, and whilst he frustrated me at times, I thoroughly enjoyed the book.

Ice: tales from a disappearing world by Marco Tedesco with Alberto Flores d'Arcais

I loved this non-fiction, part memoir, part scientific book set in Greenland. Marco is an American scientist who spends part of the year in Greenland, look at the landscapes and working on environmental issues. It is part memoir of his time there and what it means to be a scientist in Greenland. It is also a geographical study of Greenland and climate in the area. Both are endlessly fascinating.

Best wishes by Richard Glover

This was a load of fun, as Glover's books always are. I listened to him reading it on spoken word. Which was a great move. Basically there are 365 chapters, one for each day of the year and each one has a wish or hope for change in the world that Richard would like to see. From plastic wrapped fruit and pre-ripped jeans to climate change, nothing is off the table. Told with humour and tongue firmly placed in cheek, this will make you laugh but also nod furiously in agreement.

Full Coverage: a history of rock journalism in Australia by Samuel J. Fell

This was a good, solid historical account of rock journalism. However, it was very dry and matter of a fact. It could have been far more interesting and written in a more enjoyable way. There is a lot of detail and fun to be had with this type of journalism, and whilst it ticked the boxes of what happened and who was there I felt it could have been so much more.

Transcendence : 50 years of unforgettable moments at the Sydney Opera House

This is a lovely coffee table style book with stunning photos of the Opera House and of shows and moments on the stages and the stairs. 50 moments were chosen, each with a memorable essay from someone involved in the moment or in the audience. Some of the people featured are Nick Cave, Briggs, Paul Kelly, David McAllister, Richard Tognetti, John Olsen, Deborah Mailman, William Barton, Simone Young, and Iva Davies. A wonderful gift to arts lovers.

A brief atlas of Lighthouses at the end of the world by Gonzalez Macias

I loved this coffee table style book. I have always loved lighthouses, there is something so very romantic about them. Lighthouses are featured with photos and drawings, and a little essay of their history etc. A very calming read.

What I've Been Watching

The Bear S3

What can be said that hasn't been said before. This is one of the best written shows on TV. This season upped the dramatic angle and had you on the edge of your seat for most of it. Not one to binge, you need time to breathe and think in between each episode. The characters arcs keep building and building. Liza Colon-Zayas as Tina gets a whole episode back story and understandably wins the Emmy for it. So wonderful for a show to let the non-leads shine Every single character is amazing on this show which is why it is the gold standard for TV right now.

Squid Game

I finally got around to watching this intense show. I really didn't have any clue about what to expect even though I knew the premise of the show. No spoilers here, but this is another one that is difficult to binge, you want to know what happens next but you need to let your heart rate slow down. And then you find out exactly what the show is about, and your mind is blown. Not for the faint hearted, but totally worth watching.

Doctor Who

Absolutely LOVED the new series of Doctor Who, and especially the new Doctor, Ncuti Gatwa. I also loved the manbabies having a sookie cry about the new doctor, fuckwittage at it's very best!

But on to the fun, Ncuti is such a brilliant actor, he is an utterly brilliant face actor, that is he doesn't have to say a thing, his face says it all. And when he smiles, his whole face and body smiles and he lifts you no matter how good you are feeling. Ruby Sunday grew on me, and her back story. I particularly loved the fairy circle episode and the final one. Bring on the Christmas special.

The Twelve S2

Sam Neill was back with another great season of The Twelve.  A new case, a murder, and much intrigue. A wonderful new cast, with the usual range of interconnecting stories, even moreso as the murder was in a small rural town. Many twists and turns, and it keeps you on the edge of your seat. Definitely recommend.

Austin

Look Austin wasn't brilliant, but it really grew on me. I loved Michael Theo as soon as he spoke on Love on the Spectrum and he is utterly brilliant in this. The problem was the storytelling felt clunky and Theo was so good, so real, so honest, he showed up the seasoned actors that rounded out the cast. But by the end, I wanted more and was happy to hear S2 is in production. 

Walking Dead: Dead City

One of the three spin offs from the original Walking Dead franchise. Focusing on Maggie and Negan, two of the best characters on the show, this is not great. Frenemies on the show, to pair them seems like it might be ok and it was ok, but not great. Maggie's son is kidnapped and they head off to Manhattan to find him. The set design was great and Zeljko Ivanek as the baddies (as always) was brilliant, but it lacked something I cannot put my finger on.

Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon

This was far better. Daryl is in France, there is a whole back story as to why (and to be honest it is a stretch but you do kinda go with you!), that even Daryl himself seems confused about. Norman Reedus really shines here as Daryl. He always did, but he pumps it up a few notches with this. Abandoned France and especially Paris is eerie and brilliant, superb set design here. And a great cast of French actors really up things too. The brilliant Dominique Pinon (The Return of Martin Guerre, Betty Blue, Delicatessen, City of Lost Children, Amelie etc) and Clemence Posey are particularly great. The Storyline does very much echo The Last of Us, which is apparently a coincidence. This had me sucked in as the early series of the original Walking Dead and I and very keen to see S2.

Shelved

This is a US comedy set in a library. Library comedies never quite get it right, but this one isn't too bad. There are loads of amusing moments that ring true but equally as many that do not. Also why is the branch librarian always a bit of an idiot? I didn't mind this one

An Audience with The Goodies

This was a lovely interview with all three Goodies while they were all still alive. It was padded with loads of cool clips that they talked about. They were all lovely and for the most part exactly what you would imagine they would be as older gents.

Hard Quiz Kids

We love Hard Quiz and couldn't resist the Kids edition! Some were the parent pushed painful smarty's but some were genuine geeky clever. There was one kid we loved who's topic was the Puffing Billy railway and he was amazing. We loved him. It was a lot of fun, and we hope they make more.

Hunt for truth: Tasmanian Tiger

This sucked me right in, a documentary about the search for the Tasmanian Tiger. Based on some supposed recent sighting, the documentary takes the main guy on quite the journey. No Spoilers, but I was totally and utterly on the edge of my seat. 

Wicked Little Letters

This was a fabulously weird comedy starring International Treasure, Olivia Colman and Jessie Buckley based on a real life story from the 20s. A small town community start to receive poison pen letter after a young single mother (Buckley) moves into town. Who is sending them and why. Colman's character grows close to the young woman and things start to unravel. This was a dark comedy, very funny but also quite sad at the same time. Totally unusual and as always Colman is a tour de force.

The Rooster

The Rooster is a great Australian film starring Hugo Weaving. Set in a rural community, a woman is missing, the local policeman's mental health is declining, especially when a fox gets his prized rooster and his best friend commits suicide. He decides to take some time and go bush where he encounters The Hermit. The Hermit (Weaving...natch!) and the policeman forma bond. This is a dramatic and at times eerie movie but it has a lot of heart.

Wonka

Wonka took a while to get into the swing of things. Chalamet was great as a young Wonka, and the supporting cast tremendous, especially Hugh Grant as a put upon Oompa Loompa. Every scene he is in is lifted tremendously, he wasn't in it enough. The set design was brilliant and engaging, bright colours and very delectable chocolate treats. There was a lovely whimsical feel to some of the film, and the songs and dancing worked well. I guess the thing is with any Willy Wonka film since the seminal 70s one with Gene Wilder doesn't stand a chance. Wilder became Wonka, and jumped off the pages of Dahl's books in a way that no one imagined. He is simply untouchable. Having said that, this was a lot of fun and I really enjoyed it.

Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre

A Guy Ritchie film with Jason Stratham as a spy trying to extract a stolen device from an atrocious arms dealer (Hugh Grant again...totally knocking it out the park as a greasy scum bag). Audrey Plaza, Josh Hartnett, and Cary Elwes round out the main cast and it a heady mix of action and dark humour. Josh Hartnett is outstanding playing a bastardised version of himself. This was a fun romp.

Hitman

This was a silly, fun movie about a professor who works with the police on the side. When he is asked to be an undercover hitman, chaos reigns. Directed by Richard Linklater (I love him so), this made for TV movie moves fast and is funny. Glen Powell (the new Brad Pitt if you believe the hype) is solid as the lead. This is based on a real life story, and written by Powell and Linklater. I had fun watching this. Also loved seeing Retta (Parks and Rec) as a sassy police woman.

The Miracle Club

Laura Linney returns home after many decades to attend her mother's funeral. She meets with her mother's friends, Maggie Smith and Kathy Bates, each with their own issues and they end up on a pilgrimage to Lourdes. There are some great moments here, but with such a great female cast, the story needed to be much better. This was ok.

Alice in Wonderland

The is the 1933 version of Alice, and it is quite something. It is live action, with some animation, and it is quite surreal. The cast, mostly hidden in large costumes, were WC Fields (Humpty Dumpty), Cary Grant (the mock turtle), Edward Everett Horton (The Mad Hatter), Gary Cooper (white night). This is totally worth a look. I was so thrilled to see it after all these years.

Masquerade 

Isabelle Adjani and Francois Cluzet star in this romp on the French Riveria about 2 young cons trying to manipulate older wealthy people out of their money. Great setting, good acting, this is a good French comedy.

Wonderwell

This is a Fantasy set in Italy and the reason I watched it was it was Carrie Fisher's final film. It is about the adventures of a young girl, her older sister is a model for Rita Ora's fashion designs. Bored she escapes the small town they are staying in, and ends up in some kind of enchanted forest where the local witch/enchantress is Carrie Fisher. Not the greatest film, but she certainly made it worthwhile watching.

One Love

As suspected this was a disappointing Bob Marley biopic. The movie takes place around his attempted assassinations and the peace concert he was trying to pull together, which is a fascinating part of his life. This was ok, but the casting just didn;t gel. I never thought it would. I cannot see how anyone could pull off the enigma that is Bob Marley. The charisma, the grace, the humour, the musicality the chill, that smile, and then, that voice...utterly impossible. The film isn't bad, I think if you didn't know much about Bob, it would be a nice entry to him.

Unfrosted

This is the Jerry Seinfeld directed film about the mostly true story of the Pop-Tart. A huge cast of comedians, there are moments of absolute hilarity, but it is also a huge hot mess of a film. It just didn't work as a film, as a series of bits with hugely talented people in small parts it was grand. So go in with zero expectations, you will get plenty of laughs. I also loved the set and costumes!

Bob and Don: a love story

This is a lovely documentary about the unlikely friendly of Don Rickles and Bob Newhart. I loved this so much, and learnt so much about these amazing comedians. I knew they were friends, and knew a lot of their public personas, but not much at all about their personal lives and some of their ups and downs. This will make you smile so much, I loved it.

Duran Duran: a Hollywood High

A doco about Duran Duran following a live show they are putting on in Hollywood in the early 2020s to celebrate 40 years of the band. It shows the leadup to the performance, the back story, interviews and clips, and the concert itself. Loads of fun and they still have it.

Joan Armatrading: live at Asylum Chapel

Stunning concert set in this beautiful chapel showcasing Armatrading's still brilliant voice. Really amazing.

What I've been listening to

INXS recorded live at the US festival 1983

This is a new live cutting I got from the vinyl fair, and it is wonderful. This is INXS in their early (and best) years. They sound sharp and great, Michael in particular. This took me straight back to the first time I heard Just Keep Walking and I was drawn immediately to the band. I love that early period so it is a gift to have this live recording (found abandoned and tidied up) from then.

Where Everyone Knows Your Name Podcast

A few great new podcasts, and this is the best of them. Ted Danson and (sometimes) Woody Harrelson, friend on Cheers, get together to and interview people they know. This is such fun and make you (me) love Ted more than you ever imagined you could (which is a lot). He is such a Mensch, and everyone loves him. Woody is not always there, but when he is it lifts the interview even higher. Best episode was George Wendt. You can just imagine.

The Rest is Entertainment Podcast

This is a close second to my fave new podcast. Richard Osman and Marina Hyde chatting about the week in entertainment. Between the two of them there isn't much they don't know about the entertainment industry and each week they dissect what has been happening in the past week, they also answer questions from viewers. This is an endlessly fascinating, and they have a great relationship, and it tells.                                                                                                  

FFF My Dad is Martin Kemp

This is a Martin Kemp (Spandau Ballet) giving advice to his Son (Rowen already a star himself, hosting breakfast television amongst other things) on various topics each week. I don't think Martin is the sharpest tool in the shed, but he still looks great and is a kind soul, and he has the best stories from his time in the band, usually at the chagrin of his son. Possibly only for fans.                                        

Dick and Angel's Chat...eau Podcast

This is for everyone that is devastated (me) The escape to the Chateau is no longer on television. I love this couple, and the podcast is what they have been up to post TV, stories that never made it to air, travels with their stage show and in France, and about their relationship and family. Loads of laughs and fun.

Wiser Than Me S2 Podcast

Julia Louis-Dreyfus is back with another season of this award winning and brilliant podcast where she interviews a load of older amazing women. The concept remains the same as S1, it is a three parter. Part 1 is a small riff on something that came up in the interview, part 2 is the interview, and part 3 is Julia ringing her 90 year old mother to discuss the podcast. Guest this season are Patti Smith, Sally Field, Bonnie Raitt, Debbie Allen, Vera Wang, Gloria Steinem, Julie Andrews,  and more.

Lovebuzz by The Hummingbirds

One of my favourite albums from the early 90s, I got a vinyl copy to replace my old cassette copy. It took me straight back and I knew every word. A great album with lovely pop tunes and great harmonies.

BuckinghamNicks by Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham

This is a classic album, pre Fleetwood Mac, that is VERY difficult to find on vinyl. But I did, the cover is worth the price alone, a very provocative black and white photo of a seemingly naked Nicks and Buckingham. The songs are great and you can see why Mick Fleetwood wanted them to join the band. This is a great album.





Saturday, June 29, 2024

MARCH/APRIL REVIEWS

 What I've Been Reading

Edenglassie by Melissa Lucashenko

Edenglassie is the latest by Lucashenko and like her previous book, Too Much Lip, there are dueling narratives from times past and times present.

Set in Brisbane, it begins in the present with Granny, in her late 90s, taking a fall in the gardens by the river. Worried, people will think she was drunk or drugged, she is helped up and an ambulance sent for.

I particularly enjoyed Granny's story, she was a funny and quite the character, and wanted more. I felt the characters here could have been fleshed out more. I wanted more Granny!

The older storyline had more detail and was compelling with tension building. You just knew something was going to get in the way of the young lovers the story worked around.

I really liked how most of the characters didn't quite see eye to eye, it was a very realistic addition to the story. The humour was dealt out well, balancing the more dramatic and horrendous plots. And as always, I love her use of indigenous language, and the theme of how the past reflects the future.

Finally, I could see that final scene on the boat in my mind's eye, brilliant!

Orwell's Roses by Rebecca Solnit

This makes the perfect companion piece to Anna Funder's Wifedom, which I am also reading but had not yet finished when I finished this.

Rebecca Solnit is a wonderful essayist and feminist. She originated the Mansplain word. She always loved Orwell's essays, and felt he was the master of them and used them to hone her craft.

This is essentially a book of interconnected essays, coming from Rebecca finding a rose garden planted by Orwell that she had read about. She was surprised to find it was still blossoming and was thrilled to touch something he had touched and planted.

The book is about Orwell and how he come to plant the roses, and some information about his life at the time and also before and after, but this is not really a biography. She also delves into all things roses, in terms of history. it is a fascinating mix that sounds odd but she really makes it work. I guess this is not for everyone, but I thoroughly enjoyed it.

The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart by Holly Ringland

This has been quite popular, and I usually steer away from popular books. But it came through on spoken word and my curiosity got the better of me. 

It is the (fictional) story of Alice, who is placed in the care of her grandmother after a tragic start to life...no spoilers. Her grandmother is a tough old broad, who runs a large flower farm and takes in lost souls. After an incident (again no spoilers) Alice leaves the farm and goes on the road and ends up in the outback.

The book is a family saga that has 4 parts to it. Alice's childhood, her time on her grandmother's farm, then the outback, and the conclusion. The characters are rich and layered and endlessly fascinating. The landscapes are described so beautifully you can visualise it all in your mind's eye. It is dramatic and funny. Wonderful for a debut novel that is loosely autobiographical. It has been made into a mini-series with Sigournay Weaver as the grandmother. 

The House That Joy Built by Holly Ringland

I also listened to this on spoken word, this time read by the author herself. It is about working on your creativity and it was a great listen. She intersperses personal stories within how she creates and overcoming some serious life blocks. I got loads of ideas and felt it opened my mind quite a bit. Mind you, I do not have the privilege of time, so I have jotted a lot of notes and ideas down, I will get to them at some point.

Animal Farm by George Orwell

I've been getting into some Orwell after reading Orwell's Roses. I have read and loved his essays, but never his novels. Animal Farm seemed a good place to start. I do know this story, and I've seen it as a play, but never actually read it. It was a wonderful wry story. The themes make a lot of sense when you know more about his life. Whilst the story of leadership gone mad was told in a whimsical way, it still packed a punch. Orwell knew war, and madness and poor leadership, but he also knew farm animals from keeping many himself. I really enjoyed how clever this was.

Every Man For Himself and God Against All: a memoir by Werner Herzog

This was a ripper of a read. I am a huge fan of Werner Herzog, but after reading this I realise I have not even tipped the edge of his amazing output. I knew he was bold and a bit bonkers, and this book validated my thoughts but in the best possible way. He is - as expected - an honest and great writer of his life. He gives you immense detail but in the best possible way.

He tells many stories of his childhood and young adulthood that shows he was a risk taker very early on, and that he understood the complexities of life and could turn these experiences into storytelling. He and his brother spent a lot of time wandering the countryside where they were brought up, including dense woods and alps. They were competitive and pushed each other to the edge of everything they did, psychologically and physically. They injured themselves and each other constantly, both in and out of hospital. You can see with man he would become within this feisty and fearless young boy. 

I came for the movie stories - which were utterly wonderful and crazy and funny and scary - but loved the before film stories. It was like seeing a character - because Herzog has become some kind of complex character - being built slowly... or actually, not slowly at all, he was a force of nature from the very beginning.

He told many stories of his family and his wives, all with good grace but honesty. He admits to being difficult, but it goes with the territory of being Werner Herzog. There were loads of amazing tales of finding or writing stories he would film. A he shoot films and documentaries, and sometimes a hybrid of both, there was a lot about his research, some stories are worked on or thought about for many years. He also spoke about his filming, especially some of his more troubling or challenging shoots. 

This is one memoir where everything you have heard is true and possibly even more than you have heard. He has tales of working with actors and the actual people some of his films or docos were based on. He goes into great detail about his friendships, especially those with Bruce Chatwin, and Reinhold Messner. 

Then there are the tales of physicality, also expected if you know his films even slightly. I cannot remember how many times he has come close to death by placing himself into crazy situations or just pushing his body too far, but there were a lot. This man knows adventure, he lives it, writes about it, and films it. The memoir features all of this and more. One of the best I have read. 

Con/Artist: the life and crimes of the world's greatest art forger by Tony Tetro and Giampiero Ambrosi

This was a ripper of a read, the autobiography of an art forger. A talented painter, Tony originally started doing replicas of paintings and signed his own name, these are the cheap prints you can get reasonably priced. People know they are not originals but that is ok. But his style was so good he soon realised he could really forge painters and sign with their name and people bought it. He is most famous behind the collection the then Prince Charles brought and insured for 200 million, only to be found out they were Tony's work. 

He starts to make a lot of money, which is puts into drugs and cars. He spends time in Europe studying great art, and goes to Asia to work with great professional re-producers (these people are doing it above board). This helps build his talent to something quite significant. Tony is a cheeky and gregarious narrator, and he gives huge insight into the crazy and deadly that is the art world. I love this kind of thing, it was a great read.

The Fire of Joy: roughly eighty poems to get by heart and say aloud by Clive James

This was pure joy, a selection of beloved poems from Clive James with little essays he wrote about each poem and the poet. Just perfection.

Pat in the City by Patricia Field

This was a fun escapist autobiography by Pat Field. We know Pat best as the costume designer behind Sex and the City. It goes into her early life, how she got into design, her sexuality, and everything else in between. It details all the behind scenes for the show. Loads of fun.

Audrey Hepburn in Paris by Meghan Friedlander

This was a lovely larger coffee table style book set in chapters of her life and linked to Paris. With an introduction by her don, Luca Dotti, there is a lot of information and some lovely photos.

Welcome to Consent/Sex/Boobs/Period by Yumi Stynes and Dr. Melissa Kang

After seeing Yumi and Melissa at Newcastle Writer's Festival, I sought out the books they had written. I have always loved Yumi's honesty and brazenness. And of course read and re-read Dolly Doctor a lot in my younger years. Dr Melissa Kang IS Dolly Doctor. Their styles differ but complement each other in real life, and the books follow this up. They are written for younger females but also males - to read themselves or with their parent. They are well presented, real, and easy to understand, with cute and humourous illustrations. They have been controversial, but I fail to understand why, except some humans on this earth are tragically stupid and just will never get 'it'. Definitely worth a look, especially if you have teenagers.

The Devil's Playground by Christos Tsiolkas.

This was a great little book with Christos writing about his love of film, specifically the Australian classic by Fred Schepisi, The Devil's Playground. His mother loved film and started taking him to see films from a very young age. More often than not with subject matter and rating much old than his age. The book recounts his multiple viewings of the film over the years. It shows that whilst he still loved the film, the viewings at different ages of his life brought him different and changed thoughts. He wrote about films that helped steer his life, thoughts, and his sexuality. It is a deeply personal book and utterly fascinating.

Christos Tsiolkas on Patrick White

This was another little book with Christos writing about Patrick White. It contains a potted history, and musings on his books, read at various times of his life. He draws from White a lot in his own writings, and explains how and why. I have never been interested in reading Patrick White, but after reading this, I am tempted.

The Last of Her Kind by Sigrid Nunez

I have been reading all the Sigrid Nunez I can get my hands on. I love her writing, and with each novel such differing subject matter with a semi-autobiographical undertone. She is in her 70s and still writing, so I am reading them in order to see the evolution of her writing. But it is subtle.

The Last of her Kind is about two young women who meet by sharing a room together at College. It is set in the late 60s, Woodstock is around the corner, activism rising. A time to be young in the US. George is the narrator, coming from an ethnic and poor family, and Ann is her wealthy, white upper class-room mate. George is equal parts annoyed by and drawn to Ann, who wants to align herself with non-white or poorer people and distance herself from the privilege she comes from. They become friends, despite George's discomfort, and this takes them on quite the adventure. 

Ann is a force of nature, but not necessarily in a good way, and this gets her into the most bizarre situations. George plods along, trying to keep her family together, and seems to be more a bystander of history. The story is about class, and wealth and poverty, and race. It moves through decades of these characters, and makes you think. Every time you have worked out what is going on and how you feel about the story and characters, something happens to make you question everything you have thought. I really loved this book.

Salvation City by Sigrid Nunez

Next novel by Sigrid Nunez is quite remarkable, it is about a young teen boy making his way through a pandemic. After the death of his parents, Cole is living with the local pastor and his young wife in a place called Salvation City. He reflects back to what led him to this point and what he can remember from his life. The small town is fairly remote and more interested in preparing for the supposed 'rapture' that is coming than the possibility of the pandemic sweeping through. And whilst he was raised without religion, he comes to fit in with the town and his carers. But things happen to uproot this seemingly quiet life.

Given this was published in 2010, it is very eerie in its descriptions similar to what we experienced in 2020 etc. Sigrid narrows down the pain, suffering, and general public reactions note perfect. But it is much more than a pandemic novel, it is a coming-of-age novel, and she writes Cole's story so well. It feels very much as a young male teen would narrate such a time. The character is layered and layered so beautifully and the descriptions of life going on around him quite visual. I am really enjoying her writing and cannot wait to read the next one.

The Soul of Woman by Isabel Allende

This was a lovely little memoir about Allende's life as a feminist. She believes she was a feminist in Kindergarten, and reading this I believe her. Watching her mother bring up her and her siblings after their father left, cemented feminism within. She writes about being a feminist during the second wave of feminism in the 60s, her many marriages and how she feels today. She has a lot of faith in young modern women but realises we all have a long way to go. She writes about activism and feminist role models, famous and not so famous. It is a small book, but a powerful and important one.

The Complete Collected Series of Blackadder

I listened to this in the car over a few weeks. It is essentially the audio of the shows with some interviews about the making of it towards the end. Having watched the show/s as much as I have it was easy to visualise the action behind the audio. And it was so much joy! I think Rowan Atkinson is probably more well-known for Mr Bean, but I believe Blackadder is his masterpieces. Actually, it is everyone's masterpiece, and it holds up beautifully.

Tony Robinson's Baldrick is obviously a stand-out, but I don't think Stephen Fry has done anything as good at Melchett. And I have always adored Miranda Richardson's Queenie. Rik Mayall's Flash steals every scene he is in...Woof! But everyone is outstanding, so many great actors in small roles. I've always said series 2 is my favourite, but after listening to it, I am really loving Blackadder Goes Forth right. That final scene, it still makes me tear up and listening to them discuss it did have me in tears. The behind the scenes/making of commentary is exceptional also. What joy!

What I've Been Watching

Poor Things

I cannot begin to express my love for this film! What a remarkably original take on the Frankenstein's monster trope. Emma Stone is simply astonishing in it. Her supporting cast, especially Mark Ruffalo and Willem Dafoe, are also amazing.

This tale is about the rebirth of a woman in the most pure way, and Emma Stone was utterly fearless in embodying her character, Bella. Everything about her character is unlike anything I have seen on film. It is a very funny film in many ways, slapstick, bawdy, genuinely funny, and dark humour.

The sets were so divine, I declared early on, I wanted to live there. The mad animal creations, the horse carriage, and other similar things, blew my mind. I love films with whole worlds created in them, and this was one. 

But I guess this film is not for everyone, this is usually the case for films by Yorgos Lanthimos. I imagine it would be quite confronting for some for many reasons. The medical/surgery aspects, sexuality, language, and so on. But the film wouldn't be as wonderful without those aspects.

This is a dramatic film that makes you laugh...a lot. I am unsure how it will go at The Oscars. I feel it should win production, hair and make-up, costume, script. And Emma Stone should win Best Actress but I think Lily Gladstone will tip her at the post, it will be close. This is easily my favourite film of all the contenders.

The New Boy

Written and directed by Warwick Thornton, The New Boy is an astonishing film and you can see why it has won so many awards. It is about a young orphaned aboriginal boy who lands at an outback monastery late one night. It is the 1940s and most men are at war, the monastery is run by a modern nun, Sister Eileen (played with perfection by Cate Blanchett) and has an aboriginal nun (Deborah Mailman) and aboriginal assistant (Wayne Blair) helping her. The new boy does not initially fit in or get along with the other young boys at the monastery, but after some time he does. But there is something very different, very mystical about him and strange things start to happen. He seems to be able to heal sick people and animals via balls of fire/light he can conjure. 

Over time he becomes infatuated with Christianity and whilst initially mesmerised, Sister Eileen becomes quite concerned and unsure how to keep him in check. A lot more happens but that would spoil such a wonderful story. I went in knowing little about this film and was absolutely taken by its brilliance. Beautifully filmed by Thornton, he is a remarkable cinematographer with captivating performances, especially by newcomer, Aswan Reid, as the New Boy himself. I loved this film.

The Zone of Interest

This was the final Oscar film and one I missed out on prior to the event. It is the most remarkable film, I thought it was excellent and yet incredibly disturbing. It is a film that really stays with you. It is based on a true story about a family of a SS Commandant who reside right next to a camp in WWII. The home is a beautiful deco building, with a lovely garden and pool and his family of 5 children. They live an iddylic existance...at the expense of what is happening over their walls. But the 'beauty' of this film is you never see over the walls. Only glimpse of smoke from the 'factories' and the sounds from over the wall. 

The sounds...oh my goodness, this brings an already remarkable film into a whole other realm. It won a sound Oscar and you can see/hear why. The eerie sounds have you thinking about what they may represent, and you know it is only pure evil. This was filmed in the most unusual way and presents this story in a disjointed, uncomfortable view. Just watching the family have picnics by the river, playing with their dog and see smoke stacks and hearing those noises, gives you chills. 

There is so much more to this movie, but I won't spoil it any more than I already have. This is not an easy watch but it is an important watch. This film stayed with me very closely for weeks after and even now, sends shivers up my spine.

Dune

With Dune II coming up, it was time for a re-watch of Dune. I enjoyed it as much as the first time. It has such a tremendous cast, with each actor really taking on each iconic role perfectly, most especially Timothee Chalamet and Zendaya. This first film is a lot of set up, but has some great action sequences and plot driven events. Stellan Skarsgard and Dave Bautista are almost unrecognisable as the villians. And Javier Bardem, Jason Momoa, and Josh Brolin are wonderful are our heroes. I loved seeing the great Charlotte Rampling in an ambiguous role, she was fierce!

But it is the world of Dune and Denis Villeneuve's vision that make this film remarkable. The effects and the bringing to life some of the more challenging aspects of the book are inspiring. The world is vast and detailed, and nothing has been spared to bring it to the big screen. This is an impressive film, that must be seen on a big screen.

May December

I went into this thinking it was a Lesbian long story between Julianne Moore and Natalie Portman. I have no idea why, I just did. Disappointing. It was a take on the Mary Kay Letourneau story, the teacher who got pregnant to her under aged student and they are still together. They mix things up and have the boy be the friend of her own child who works in the pet store her husband owns. Julianne Moore is great as the obviously mentally ill, Gracie. Natalie Portman is chilling as an actress who is about to play Gracie in an indie film and is shadowing her to get into character. 

This film was very well written and acted, leaving you feel very unsettled watching it. It is only up for a screenplay. It will not win anything.

The Color Purple

I was dubious about this remake as a musical but it really worked. The soundtrack is fantastic, mostly spiritual music and they were great songs. The musical numbers were very uplifting and well choreographed. The acting was powerful, Fantasia Barrino as Celie, Danielle Brooks as Sofia, and Taraji P. Henson as Shrug were amazing. There is not much else to say, but it was enjoyable despite the subject matter. I haven't seen the original in a long time so I cannot really compare.

Tar

I finally caught up with Tar, and Cate Blanchett was remarkable in this one. I did find the film and her character quite annoying, but that was the whole point of the film I guess. Cate plays Lydia Tar, an unconventional conductor. She is currently the main conductor with an orchestra in Berlin. Lydia has a lot going on, working in New York lecturing at Julliard, and back in Berlin with the orchestra. She is also interviewing for new spots in the orchestra. Whilst juggling all of this her past comes back to haunt her with allegations of bullying and disrespect. Tar's life begins to unravel, along with her stitched-up demeanor. This is an extraordinary performance, with Cate seemingly conducting the orchestra, no mean feat. The music was also wonderful. I don't think this film is for everyone, but I did appreciate it.

The Son

This was a bit of a melodrama starring Hugh Jackson. After leaving his wife and son, Hugh's character is in a new relationship with a young wife and baby. One night his ex-wife (Laura Dern) turns up on his doorstep upset about their son who hasn't attended school for a month. He decides to take the son in for a period to try and straighten him out. The son is deeply troubled and lots of bad things start to happen. Anthony Hopkins also features as Hugh's father. Hugh is very good in this, but I found it a little too melodramatic. 

Don't Worry Darling

I watched this out of curiosity and because I love Florence Pugh (and Harry Styles), and without her it would have been very ordinary. It was a sort of retelling of The Stepford Wives and is as flat as the wives themselves. The last 20 mins were great though.

You Hurt My Feelings

This was a little indie film with Julie Louis-Dreyfus as a writer about to finish a book. She has been working on it for a while and testing it by letting her husband read parts and he has been encouraging her. On a day shopping with her sister, they see and overhear her husband talking to a friend and saying how much he hates the latest book. He doesn't realise, she is broken and the film then delves into the semantics of a relationship. This was ok, I expected better.

Official Competition

This was really bonkers, but in the best possible way. An ageing billionaire wants a legacy and decides to bankroll a film, asking the best to pull it together. Penelope Cruz is phenomenal as a reclusive and crazy director who puts her actors through the mill in the most bizarre way. Antonio Banderas and Oscar Martinez play the brothers in the film, and both have very different ways of acting, which irritate the other. When art starts to imitate life, things get really crazy.

The Nowhere Inn
Initially I thought this was a documentary about St Vincent and her music, and directed by Carrie Brownstein. Carrie features throughout as herself, but early on the film turns in a weird (but good) way that made me realise they were both playing fictionalised versions of themselves. It was about Identity and the difference between the stage persona and real life but hyper intensified. Once I realised what was going on I really enjoyed it. I guess not for everyone though.

Curb Your Enthusiasm final season

Oh my, Larry turns it on for the final season of this hilarious and long running show. Initially I felt it had lost its mojo, but after a few episodes it found its feet. As always there are multiple storylines but the main one is Larry handing someone he knows a bottle of water while lining up to vote in Florida, unknowingly breaking a rule that you cannot do that. This is actually a real law!?! He is taken to court by the state, and rather than saying he had no idea and it was a mistake, he says he meant to do it, unintentionally making him a hero throughout the country. This leads to a hilarious storyline of Bruce Springsteen becoming enamoured of Larry, and if you know anything about Curb, nothing good will come of this. 

There was a huge amount of guest stars. Sean Hayes plays Larry's lawyer, who is married to Dan Levy. Lori Loughlin (yes!) has a great storyline, that had me in stitches. Steve Buscemi, Conan O'Brien, Matt Berry, Dean Norris, Allison Janney, and Jerry Seinfeld are some of the stars playing themselves or other characters. It is the little things I love about Curb, the long tail to a short but satisfying laugh.

I will miss this show, as it was one of the truly funny shows on tele. The supporting cast are tremendous. Richard Lewis had a few spots prior to his death, you can see how terribly ill he is but funny as ever. Susie Essman is my favourite, she is so very good and steals every scene, with her ferocious performances and her crazy clothing. And Ted Danson is always solid, bringing a bit of gravitas to the hilarity. I will not talk about the ending, cause spoilers, but it was pretty, pretty, pretty good!

Apples Never Fall

Based on a Liane Moriarty novel (I am so not a fan) I was sucked into this mini series because Sam Neill and Annette Benning. And they were great. Husband and wife with 4 adult children, they run a tennis centre but have recently retired and then the wife (Benning) goes missing. Everyone suspects the Dad (Neill) but the kids wonder about this girl who struck up a friendship with their mother months earlier. Each episode is told by someone else's pov. Neill was great and ambiguous and the whole thing kept you guessing. But ultimately the ending was a little ordinary.

The Completely Made-Up Adventures of Dick Turpin

Noel Fielding stars as the hero, Dick Turpin, in this historical romp. Hilarious and fun, with loads of great cameos. Dick decides to move from his life as a butcher (his father was a butcher) for the fame of being a highwayman. He pulls a gang together but they are not really great at being highwaymen. Fielding is charismatic as always, and is obviously having the time of his life playing Dick. Total must see, especially if you like laugh out loud comedy!

Only Murders in the Building S3

S3 started a little slow and tedious and we were worried it may have jumped the shark, but it started to pick up and sucked us back in! The trio of stars are indeed stars and have such great chemistry you often feel like you are eavesdropping. Meryl was a great addition, although initially I was not so sure. The Paud Rudd murder (no spoilers, this happens from the get go) was interesting once he really was dead, the back and forth initially was what made it tedious. Matthew Broderick as himself was hilarious! There was so much going on in S3, it will be interesting to see where S4 will go. 

Feud: Capote Vs The Swans

This was so much fun...initially, and then it started to drag. It should have had less episodes and been edited better. It was the most fun when multiple 'swans' were on the screen together. The swans being socialites that initially hung out with Truman Capote in the 60s culminating with his infamous black and white ball. But Truman being Truman starts to use their lives in his writing and soon finds out that does not go well with the ladies and fights commence. It also delves into Capote's love life and his addictions. Tom Holland is spectacular as Capote and Naomi Watts, Diane Lane, Chloe Sevigny, Calista Flockhart, Demi Moore, and Molly Ringwald as the swans were magnificent!

Our Flag Means Death S2

This season was really disappointing, the clever and laughs that built so beautifully in S1 were not missing, but not there enough. Keeping Taika Waititi and Rhys Darby's characters apart for most of the season was a bad move. Their chemistry was what made the show. 

Wham!

This was pure joy, focusing on Michael and Ridgeley, their beautiful friendship, and the short period of time they were Wham! Loads of footage and interviews with people who knew them well. There is a poignant interview with George's father. I didn't realise there was so much animosity against Ridgeley when it looked like George was going to go solo! That was quite upsetting to watch, and the fact he weathered it all with such grace and good humour is a testament to him as a person and as George's friend. Whilst this made me smile from beginning to end, there was a little melancholy there, knowing the outcome of George's life. This is a must see music doco.

20 Feet from Stardom

This is a rewatch as Andrew had never seen it. About all the backing vocalist for bands from 50s through to the 70s, some phenomenal women including the remarkable Darlene Love who sung on most of Phil Spector songs for "The Crystals' and many others. Also Merry Clayton who sang that stunning section on Gimme Shelter for The Stones. It is a great doco and wonderful to see so many wonderful women getting their dues and hearing the musicians they worked with talk them up.

Bottom: exposed

This was a great doco, funny and bittersweet. Obviously, the gaping hole of Rik Mayall was exposed through the entire thing. All the players, from supporting cast, writers and behind the scenes and of course Adrian Edmondson were interviewed. There was load of footage of Rik and Ade doing their thing and going to the very edge with physical gags and stunts. It was a load of fun, but broke my heart that Rik was no longer around. Everyone who was interviewed felt similarly, especially Adrian, who was devastated. 

Steve! (Martin): a documentary in 2 Pieces

This is an exceptional doco about Steve Martin. The first showing his early stand up days and the second more into his film, television and music. Steve took his time to make it big, which makes him all the more special. He had his own thing happening as a stand up, and really broke a lot of ground for being different. This was a great doco with so much archival footage and so many other people talking about how great he is. Towards the end we get a little insight into his personal life which was fascinating. I have always been a big Steve Martin fan, and there was so much I had no idea about. This is really worth watching

My Life as a Rolling Stone

This was a great 4 part doco, with each part coming from the perspective of each member of The Rolling Stones. Mick, Keith, Ronnie, and Charlie. All of them - bar Charlie - were interviewed for their section, and there was a lot of old footage used. What was great about this, was it had a lot of interesting bits I had not seen or heard about before. It has great humour and honesty, delves into their relationships with each other and was really really great. I laughed a lot watching this, they are a bunch of fun and funny guys.

MASH: The Comedy that changed TV

This is an older doco about MASH. It had interviews with all the key players and loads of clips. One of my favourite shows, it still holds up and the cast are phenomenal. A nice trip down memory lane

Geddy Lee Asks: Are Bass Players Human Too?

Geddy Lee is the Bassist from Rush and this short series is a delight. Geddy interviews Les Claypool, Robert Trujillo, Melissa Auf Der Maur, and Krist Noveselic about being Bass Players in bands. Funny, and edgy, and loads of great music. I loved this series so much and hope there is another series.

What I've Been Listening To

The Rest is Entertainment Podcast

This is a great podcast I have recently discovered and it is relatively new. Richard Osman (the producer and author) and Marina Hyde (writer and journalist) have a great relationship and it shows in this podcast. They discuss everything pop culture and entertainment. And between them, there is not much they do not know. Loads of fun!

Talking Pictures with Ben Mankiewicz

Ben Mankiewicz is the grandson of Herman and the great-nephew of Joseph, both big Hollywood players in the classic movie era. In this podcast Ben interviews directors about their films and films they love. It is wonderful, and very insightful! He interviews Mel Brooks, Nancy Meyers, Alexander Payne, Bill Hader, Errol Morris, and many more.

McCartney: A life in lyrics S2

I love this podcast, it is based on the book of lyrics (and the stories behind the songs) he put together with Paul Muldoon. Each episode he explains the making of a song. Usually the less popular ones. It is great. Beatles, Wings, Solo. Muldoon is a great conversationalist, and a gentle soul. Paul tells stories I have not heard before. It is a must listen for all Beatles fans.

Out to lunch with Adrian Edmondson

This was a short podcast, with beloved Adrian Edmonson taking someone to lunch and their conversation over some yummy food (we hear about the food, don't listen while hungry!) is the podcast. He has taken Chrissie Hynde, Tony Visconti (this was my fave!), Nigel Planer, and Ian Rankin to name a few.


CHAT...eau Podcast

This is the Escape to the Chateau podcast. Now the show is over, Dick and Angel share what has been happening at the Chateau, and reminisce about the past decade getting the Chateau up and running. As always it can be a he said/she said, which is adorable and amusing. I love their take on the world, and their relationship. A great listen. 

GANGgajang

I picked up their self-titled, debut album on vinyl recently. I have a signed copy on CD, but hadn't listened to it in a long time. It really holds up and every track is wonderful. Sounds of Them is an instant classic. but my faves are the upbeat Ambulance Men and House of Cards.

The Raw and the Cooked by Fine Young Cannibals

Another album I have not listened to in forever, this is one I brough way back in the day, and it also holds up beautifully. What a voice, great songs.

Led Zep II/IV

Been listening to my ole faves, readying for the Led Zep tribute we are going to in June.

Friday, March 8, 2024

2023 REVIEWS - Cathy's faves

2023 - what can I say you were magnificent and also rather shite.

I have never worked as hard as I did in 2023. This left a lot less time for me personally. In most ways it was worth it, but at times I was very much in need of a weekend doing absolutely nothing and I scheduled such weekends when I could.

I regularly commenced my side hustle, teaching Library at TAFE. I had taught one subject early 2022, but in 2023 all my study and over 30 years of working in Libraries came to fruition. I picked up a regular gig teaching Diploma students on Wednesday nights for Newcastle TAFE and was 'headhunted' by Western digital to teach Cert IV on Tuesday nights. Both were online and so my huge learning curve begun.

To commence a new career, albeit a side career and a topic I know well - Libraries, in your 50s is a really big deal. I didn't really think about it then, but reflecting on this now I can see how huge this was. The teaching side of things came fairly easily, I knew my subject well, and I enjoyed it and my lovely students. I was not perfect and made mistakes, but nothing too horrendous and I was continually learning and getting better as I went. This came from the wonderful support of my students and my amazing colleagues. I still have a long way to go, but I am pleased with my first proper year. 

Teaching is hard - this is the truth, and I kind of knew that, but doing it you really get the enormity of the job. So hats off to all the teachers out there, especially my lovely Andrew, you are amazing. But it such a rewarding vocation, I look forward to what 2024 brings.

I also saw through an enormous project at work. I came up with the idea of having a Comic Con in The Hunter after attending the Sydney one around the same time we were looking at inclusive programming in the library. This seemed the ultra-inclusive event. Under the guise of Pop Bam, I led an amazing group/team of people over many months. It got huge quick, we do not have exact attendance figures, but 800-1000 would be a generous guess.

Our hard work paid off by offering the community a wonderful day out and the chance to cosplay and enjoy themselves, along with exhibitors and wonderful people who work and volunteer in the pop culture and cosplay worlds.

My regular gig at Belmont Library continued along, working with a wonderful team and great community that continue to make me smile.

I know people work much harder than I do, juggling families and study and so forth, so I feel lucky and privileged to have the time to work on all of the above. 

My health gets better and better. The long-term stress that is post-cancer never really leaves you. I am getting a better handle on my menopause. The more I read, the more I realise it has probably been hanging around much longer than I realised and that some of my minor health 'issues' are probably related to this. As a breast cancer survivor, no HRT for me. But I am seeing a fab oncologist gyno who is helping me deal with it all. So despite the menopause and my osteo arthritis, which both can have their moments, overall I feel like I am doing better.

Andrew and i still continue to do weekends between here and Sydney and whilst this is still a temporary thing it works for us.

We both love the escape into each other's world, and we enjoyed a great holiday in Melbourne in October. 

Our year also had a good many great concerts, big and small.

We enjoyed some whale watching, and visiting the beautiful puppies our lovely friends were fostering.

We participated in Wuthering Heights Day and Newcastle Writers Festival and farewelled a fave venue, The Cambridge

Here are my lists for the year.

Film

1. Everything Everywhere All At Once

2. Asteroid City

3. Maestro

4. Barbie

5. Elvis

6. Aftersun

7. Unbearable weight of massive talent

8. Blueback

9. Wonka

10. Triangle of Sadness

Honorable mentions to some older movies we rewatched:

Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

Bowfinger

Broadcast News

Pee Wees Big Adventure

The Kid

Television

1. The Bear

2. Succession Final Season

3. Barry Final Season

4. Funny Woman

5. The Sandman

6. The Mandarlorian

7. The Newsreader

8. The Larkins

9. The Cleaner

10. Wednesday

Honorable Mentions:

Call the Midwife S12

only murders in teh building S2

Mother and Son

Hard Quiz

Cunk on Earth

Jury Duty

Docos

1. The Sparks Brother

2. Judy Blume Forever

3. Arnold

4. Kusama Infinity

5. The Last Movie Stars

6. Shatner in Space

7. Keeping the Score

8. Marilyn Reframed

9. Rainn WIlson and the Geography of Bliss

10. Love to Love You, Donna Summer. 

Honorable Mentions:

The ABC of with David Wenham

Dream of Destiny - Richard Linklater

Val

Defending my life - Albert Brooks

MUSIC

1. Fossfora - Bjork

2. Special - Lizzo

3. Palomino - First Aid Kit

4. Australian Carnage - Nick Cave and Warren Ellis

5. The best of Sparks

GIGS 

1. Paul McCartney

2. Devo

3. The White Album show

4. Nick Mason's Saucerful of Secrets

5. The Cruel Sea

6. Weird Al

7. Henry Rollins

8. Tim Rogers

9. Jane's Addiction

10. ROCKWIZ

Honorable Mentions

David Sedaris, John Cleese, Ita, Judy Nunn

Podcasts

1. Wiser than Me - Julia Louis Dreyfus

2. McCartney: a life in lyrics

3. Joanna and the Maestro

4. All There is with Anderson Cooper

5. The Newsreader 

6. Smartless

7. Imperfects

8. Helen Garner 80 - Annabel Crabb - single episode

9. Pamela Adlon on Alan Alda's Clear and Vivid with Alan Alda - single episode

10. Annie Lennox -on Julia Gillard's A Podcast of Owns Own - single episode

Honorable mentions:

WTF - always brilliant

Bang On

BOOKS

1. All the Beauty in the World by Patrick Bringley

2. Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro

3. Novelist as a Vocation by Haruki Murakami

4. Cold Enough for Snow by Jessica Au

5. Bodies of light by Jennifer Down

6. Did I Ever Tell You This by Sam Neil

7. A Heart that works by Rob Delany

8. Limberlost by Robbie Arnott

9. No Bull by Vika and Linda Bull

10. Everything and Nothing by Heather Mitchell

Honorable Mentions:

Aphrodite's Breath by Susan Johnson

The Book of Form and Emptiness by Ruth Ozeki

Dickens and Prince by Nick Hornby

JANUARY/FEBRUARY REVIEWS

What I've been Reading

Berserker by Adrian Edmondson

This is a wonderful memoir from Adrian Edmondson. It mostly delves into his childhood, family, and schooling. His father was a teacher and their family moved around a lot. He didn't have a great relationship with his father and was sent to boarding school quite young, which was not ideal. Reading this section of his book you can see where this lovely, gentle man became known for his very physical and mad comedy. This part of his life looms large through the whole book, and it is rough going at times but speckled with his lovely humour

Once out of that system and in college he meets Rik Mayall and the rest is history. His description of meeting his friend and their early days honing their humour has so much love and admiration. So much so that decades later when they fall out, it is very upsetting to read. You can feel his pain, but also understand the circumstances. But no spoilers.

Adrian delves into his comedy and reluctantly includes The Young Ones. He spends a lot of time explaining that it was such a very small section of his life, it seems he feels equally pleased and burdened by the show. He goes into depth and yet also glosses over some of his career. But it is all so very fascinating. There isn't much about his life with Jennifer and their children, but that is to be expected.

This is one of the best autobiographies I have read in a long time. It was totally different to what I expected, but as I read it, it was exactly as it should be. Adrian is an excellent writer, and very honest and real. If you are a fan you will love it, it you are not, I think it will still draw you right in.

ai weiwei: making sense

Presented as a coffee table style book with load of amazing photos of weiwei's work, it also contained many essays and a few Q and A's with the artist himself. It included a lot of his works, especially the layouts of his collections with backgound on the installations, and his other work. I thought it would be a nice entry into his art, which is always very political (even if you do not realise this at first), but always absolutely beautiful. I loved immersing myself in his unique world.

Pilgrimage: the great pilgrimage routes of Britain and Europe by Derry Brabbs

This was a beautiful coffee table book following some of the great pilgrimage routes. I am not at all religious and my osteo arthritis prevents me from long walks, but I am somehow drawn to pilgrimages. I have read a lot of books about them and watched many shows and TVs. There is something very peaceful and meditative about a pilgrimage which I find very attractive. The book told many stories but also had the most beautiful photography from the routes.

Retro Sydney by Nathan Mete

Another coffee table book, showing photos of Sydney through the decades. It was a lot of fun looking at favourite places from the city and seeing how much they have changed...or not. 

The Golden Maze: a biography of Prague by Richard Fidler

I listened to this on talking book, with Richard "I drove him in my car once" Fidler reading it. It is basically a history of Prague interlaced with Richard's own travels in the great city. I have always had a bit of a love affair with Prague (one day I will get there) and whilst I know bits and pieces of its history, once I got into this I realised I knew nothing. It is a wild ride, but oh boy, really really depressing stuff. So much hurt and bad, it took a lot to process. But it was great to know, presented and written beautifully. Must have taken some time to research and write. I think this is a book for those interested in Prague, and history.

A Feather on the Breath of God - Sigrid Nunez

I have fallen in love with Sigrid Nunez after a friend recommended a title a few years back. I am finally working my way through her titles from the beginning. This is a semi-autobiographical novel. It follows a young girl with immigrant parents, living in New York. Her parents are elusive, and she escapes into her dreamworld and into the world of ballet. The book is divided into sections, about her mother, her father, ballet, her relationships. It is beautifully written and incredibly engaging. Sigrid is definitely a new favourite author.

Love: a curious history in 50 objects by Edward Brooke-Hitching

This was a beautiful book with short essays about love and the objects being written about. They include stories/books about love, love stories, paintings (eg The Kiss Frida Kahlo), The Kama Sutra, Items of love, The Taj Mahal, the Unicorn Tapestries and so forth.

Consent Laid Bare - Chanel Contos

Consent Laid Bare is an important book and should be read by everyone. I actually listened to it in the car, and it was read by Chanel herself. It was a deep and difficult read/listen, but very much worth it. It is about why consent is so very important and talks in great detail about abuse and rape. The depth, details, and statistics are absolutely gut wrenching. But if we walk by this we will never resolve this issue. I also think it is a must read for parents of teenagers. Tread carefully but tread towards.

Bill Bryson' African Diary: a short trip for a worthy cause - Bill Bryson

I was so excited to see a new Bill Bryson, but it is barely 70 pages. It is about a trip to Africa for charity he made. It is a very quick and witty read, and I am hoping a larger tome more to his usual stylings will come out later.

Mixtape: stories and essays about the 1980s - Simon Castles

This wasn't bad, but it wasn't great. Every time I see something like this I sigh as this is the kind of book I would like to write. Then I read it and see it is nothing like I would actually write, so my idea is safe lol. It is a mix of autobiographical essays about all things 80s, film, music, television etc. It was funny and interesting, but not great.

Poetry Unbound: 50 poems to open your world by Padraig O'Tuama
Loved this book about poetry. O'Tauma has selected 50 poems and written a little essay about them with each selection. Mostly modern poetry and it was glorious, I really enjoyed this. 

What I've Been Watching

Boy Swallows Universe

Oh my goodness, I don't know where to start. I was very apprehensive about one of my all-time favourite books being made into a series. I need not have been. This was so bloody good I was often in tears watching this. Trent Dalton was very hands on with the filming and you can tell. He also appears in the series, he was the voice on the red phone - which he says was very emotional and meta, given he was talking to the young actor playing himself - and as a hospital patient walking by towards the end of the final episode.

It is pretty true to the book, although there are some changes and the series is much lighter in tone than the book. But it didn't matter. The attention to detail of the set, Brisbane in the 80s, was so stunning, and so much to take in, I didn't know where to look. The soundtrack, was also superb. They nailed the feel of the book. Things and people were exactly as I imagined them!

And then there were the actors. 

Felix Cameron as Eli Bell was everything. An actor wise beyond his years, much like the character he is playing. Every scene he was in, you were drawn to him. It is a remarkable performance. I do feel sorry for the guy who steps in as older Eli, he was good but he was no Felix. Lee Hailey as Gus was also superb. He pulls off the initially mute character beautifully. Bryan Brown, Simon Baker, Travis Fimmel, and Phoebe Tonkin were also perfectly casted. Simon Baker was also everything as the gorgeous Dad, and by gorgeous I mean a gorgeous heart, not looks, lol. I have never seen casting so perfected. 

The final episode goes off the rail a little (this is an expansion from the book) but I can forgive that slight miss-step. This was one of the best Australian series I have seen in a long time. Its worldwide popularity showcases how stunning it is. This is truly must-see television, you don't have to have read the book to enjoy this. There is so much I want to say, but I really do not want to spoil things. This is as close to perfection as you will see.

The Larkins S2

I do love this remake of the Darling Buds of May starring Bradley Walsh and Joanna Scanlan as Pa and Ma. S2 is a lesson in class, with the upper class snoots setting Pa up for a terrible fall. The humour and love is still there though. A new and young Reverand is in town causing issues for the Vicar (played beautifully by Peter Davison - Doctor Who and All Creatures Great and Small). Primrose falls in love and Marigold returns from her honeymoon.  That house The Larkins live in still makes me weak at the knees and the food, oh the food!!! Perfect comfort watching.

Doctor Who Christmas Special

This introduces us properly to the new Doctor and his companion, Ruby. It was a cute little Christmas special with a lovely nod to Tolkien. Gollumishly gnomes snatching babies in a pirate ship. Lovely storytelling, simplistic and easy to follow, courtesy of Russell T Davies. Ncuti Gatwa, as expected, was wonderful. Bright and happy, and marching to the beat of his own drum, he took the reins in the most confidant of ways. Watching him, made you feel like he had been doing it for years. This is great. Cannot wait for the series proper.

Call the Midwife Christmas Special

A large snowstorm causes problems for our Midwives, doctors, and friends. I love this show, I love the characters, it is just one of those feel-good, comfort shows. About to enter its 13th season, they never seem to run out of stories, and I guess babies are born every day!

The Lovers

This was a fun British comedy about 2 people who meet under extraordinary circumstances and fall in love. They are from different worlds, and have a lot of hidden baggage that unfolds as the series progresses. What will happen, will they ruin the romance or will they make it. I quite enjoyed this one.

Nolly

A powerhouse performance from Helena Bonham-Carter as Noele Gordon, a real actress from the British soap, Crossroads who was unceremoniously sacked after years of service. The 3-part series follows the story and the public who were very upset about their favourite character being sacked. Helena is amazing - as always - as the eccentric Nolly, the supporting cast were great. 

Strife

Urgh, if you know me, you know I loathe Mama Fucking Mia, and this is a show based on that and it is as awful as you would expect. I only watched it as I love Asher Keddie, and she was ok, but I felt like I had seen her do this before. Her character is an awful awful person, and her 'business' model is disgusting. This interested me as that is exactly how I feel about the real-life counterpart and her business model, so I was surprised at how 'honest' it seemed. So yeah, I hate watched this, and I am not proud of myself. You have been warned.

Oppenheimer

It took me a while to get to this, but boy it was worth the wait. We know the basic story, but this is so insightful and full of detail. It is obviously a terrible part of our history, but the complexity behind the story is heart breaking. Christopher Nolan is a genius film-maker, this goes without saying. The cinematography is always outstanding, and this is no exception. He uses black and white on and off throughout the film and it is a great thing. The film looks so very elegant, and so were the performances.

Cillian Murphy is everything as the conflicted Oppenheimer. Robert Downey Jnr, is impeccably restrained as Lewis Strauss, a man on the downward spiral. Emily Blunt is mesmering as Oppenheimer's wife. The cast is full of amazing character actors, as someone recently said, when Remi Malik only gets one line, you know this is a great film.

I could see a lot of crossover from Asteroid City, which amused me, but this film is not a comedy. I remember only too well the fear of nuclear war. I guess this film is not for everyone, but it is an important film, and I predict many Oscars in its future. At the very least for Robert Downey Jnr...but I will leave all that for my Oscar blogs.

The Holdovers

What a joy the latest Alexander Payne film is. Firstly, I have loved Paul Giamatti since Private Parts, he is one of the greatest character actors and satirists. Set in the 70s at a boarding school/college. Giamatti is an odd character, a tough history teacher with malice for the privileged students he has to teach. Older, never married, cantankerous, the students do not care for him, and quite possibly a lot of his colleagues. He is chosen to stay over the Christmas period with students unable to go home. The only other adult is his friend, Mary the cook (played beautifully by Da'Vine Joy Randolph - who I have loved in High Fidelty the TV series, and Only Murders in the Building). Mary is grieving her son, who was recently killed in Vietnam. 

The acting is phenomenal, and like all Payne films, it is a dark comedy with a lot of melancholy. There are a lot of 'unknowns' playing the students, and they are great. The film becomes a two-hander when Paul and a student head out of the school on some errands, and layers upon layers are unravelled. How has Giamatti never won an Oscar, this would surely be his year, but oh boy he has some competition. Da'Vine's beautifully nuanced comedy/dramatic turn will surely nab one. This is such a beautiful film AND a truly lovely Christmas film.

Anatomy of a Fall

Anatomy of a Fall really sucked me in. I didn't know much about it going in, other than Sandra Huller's performance was extraordinary, and it was. The movie commences with Sandra (played by Sandra) trying to give an interview about her writing to a young journalist. You can see they live in the French alps, in a lovely house but are very isolated. As the interview progresses very loud and disjointed world music begins to play. Sandra keeps up appearances despite being obviously irritated by the music which is being played by her husband. The interview is cut short and the journalist leaves. At the same time the son, who is legally blind, goes for a walk with his guide dog, Snoop.

Aside: Snoop is the most gorgeous good boy and an extraordinary actor, but I cannot say why as that will be a spoiler!!

Then tension builds, you know something is going to happen and indeed something has. When Daniel and Snoop return they find his father in the snow surrounded by blood and dead. He calls for his mother who eventually comes out and calls an ambulance etc. This then leads into investigations and Sandra is the key suspect despite her claims he must have fallen from the top floor where he was working. 

The film is essentially a trial with some flash backs and you just do not know what to believe, but when Daniel is called upon as a 'witness' things get very intense. He is wonderful, but it is Sandra who just knocks it out the ball park, what a tremendous performance. She will not win, but it is a mesmerising performance. One that will leave you guessing until the very end.

American Fiction

I loved this movie so much, it had a great dry wit to it. Jeffery Wright is Monk, a writer of literary novels, which are critically acclaimed but they do not sell. When his latest title is rejected for not being black enough he is infuriated. So he decides to write the kind of book he hates but everyone seems to want.

His mother is declining with Alzheimers so he visits her and his sister, Tracee Ellis Ross who is a doctor. His estranged brother, Sterling K. Brown, turns up to add to the chaos, and Monk falls in love with a neighbour. And there is more, but that would be spoilers, but he has a lot going on.

In the meantime his publisher loves his new book, but is not aware it is Monk. His agent convinces him to make up this crazy persona to help 'promote' the book. This is hilarious. But when he is asked to be a on a panel to judge a literary prize and his joke book turns up on the long list, things get really hectic.

I loved this really well written and tight story. The story moves swiftly with all the moving parts working beautifully. Mostly due to Wright's great performance, and the great supporting cast. Tracee Ellis Ross and Issa Rae as a fellow writer are utterly brilliant as always. As are the remaining cast. I am unsure if this will win any Oscars, but it is well worth watching.

Past Lives

This was such a lovely heartfelt little film. Na Young and Hae Sung are living in Seoul in 2000, they are 12 and good friends, Hae Sung is a little bit in love with Na Young. Her family are creatives and about to emigrate to Toronto. Her mother wants to leave her with a great final memory, and organises a 'date' for the children. Hae Sung is bereft.

2012, Na Young is now Nora Moon and living in New York, and Hae Sung is out of military college and decides to track Na Young down to no avail. Nora finds out this via facebook and contacts him under her new guise. They fall easily back into their friendship. More changes happen over the years (spoilers) and in 2024 and Hae Sung decides to visit Nora.

This rocks her very safe world. And I will leave it there.

Past Lives is such a lovely understated film with so much heart. I really loved this. Beautifully acted, lovely to watch, genuine chemistry. Stayed with me for days.

Rustin

Rustin is a biopic about the civil rights activist Bayard Rustin. He was working with Martin Luther King Jnr and really pushing him forward. Rustin is quite an important figure in this part of history but has been mostly pushed under the carpet as he was gay. This story rights that wrong as he was instrumental in organising the March on Washington in 1963. This is where MLKJ gave his very famous, I had a Dream, speech.

This film is good and an important historical record and produced as part of the Obama's production company. But it is Colman Domingo's performance as Rustin that makes this movie really stand out and worth watching.

Nyad

I was unsure about this film going in, a 2 hour biopic about a woman trying to swim from Cuba to Florida. But Annette Benning and more specifically Jodie Foster hooked me in. Firstly, the film absolutely flies by, it never feels like 2 hours. Secondly, it really is interesting and rather frightening. Definitely makes you NOT want to swim in the ocean. Benning is absolutely amazing in the role of Diana Nyad, a champion swimmer who comes out of retirement at 60 to do the swim that she never nailed. Her friend, Bonnie, is a retired sports coach. 

Jodie Foster plays Bonnie, and herein is what really drew me in. I have always found Jodie a magnetic and charismatic presence on screen and in her first big film in a long time she is absolutely brilliant. You never catch her acting, she embodies Bonnie, and I couldn't keep my eyes off her. I really enjoyed this film, but truly it is worth it for the drama in the waters and for Jodie Foster.

Living

This is a very lowkey but utterly beautiful film. Set in the 50s, adapted by Kazuo Ishiguro from the Japanese film by Kurosawa Ikiru which was in turn loosely based on Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich. Bill Nighy plays Mr Williams, a council bureaucrat, who finds out he has a terminal illness. He has lived most of his life quietly, and not pushing the boundaries in any way, most especially his work.

After initial despair, he takes stock of his life and decides to make his mark and live his life before the illness takes hold. He updates his wardrobe, works with enthusiasm, including ensuring a special project is seen through. He also meets an ex-colleague working at a restaurant, and spends time with her, despite being significantly younger than him. It is not a romance as such, more her positivity fuels this new life he is living. The film is about making a difference in this world, if only in a small way. Nighy was up for Best Actor last year for this performance, deservingly so, he is always great. 

Mrs Harris Goes to Paris

This was a sweet little movie, Mrs Harris is played by Lesley Manville. Set in the 50s, Mrs Harris is a cleaner and widowed and loves Dior Couture and after a series of windfalls, decides to head to Paris to buy a Dior gown. This is a simple but very sweet fish out of water. Isabelle Huppert plays a snooty director, as only she can. Look, this was not great, but the fashion and Paris were sublime. 

Falling for Figaro

Millie leaves the US for Scotland to follow her dream of being an Opera Singer. She enlists in the help of a formidable, former opera singer, played by Joanna Lumley. There is romance, opera, beautiful countryside. Again, this is not a great film, but a sweet little feel-good one. 

Marlow

Like most Noir this was style over substance. Diane Kruger looked good as the femme fatale but I feel she was misused. Jessica Lange did better as her mother. Liam Neeson felt miscast as Marlow, he looked good, but didn't pull off the down on his luck detective thing. The story was haphazard, but the set design was phenomenal and the supporting cast was really great. 

Renfield

This was a lot of fun, Nicholas Hoult Is Renfield, Dracula's (Nicolas Cage) familiar with special strength after eating bugs. But he has had enough and tries to escape but gets caught up in some real-life drama. It is pure fun and hilarious. Awkwafina also stars, so you know you will get loads of laughs. I bloody love her. Cage is at his craziest best as Dracula also. Loads of fun.

Ghostbusters: afterlife

I didn't mind this at all, it focuses on the kids Ghostbusting, after a long set up. I feel like Carrie Coon and Paul Rudd were very much under-utilised, especially Coon who is such an extraordinary actress. The back story was clever, and seeing the original cast added some gravitas. I did enjoy this.

Dungeons and Dragons: honour among thieves

This was style over substance, but a lot of fun. I enjoyed this action adventure. Chris Pine was good, but Hugh Grant stole every scene. 

Between Two Worlds

Juliette Binoche is an author researching a book on poverty. She moves out of Paris under a guise and made up story and gets work as a cleaner with a bunch of feisty but down and out women. She throws herself into her work and becomes friendly with the women, making notes. But then things turn, and she is exposed. This was a good film, Binoche is always great.

My Old School

This was a very bizarre documentary about a man, Brandon Lee, who enrols in a British school, despite being 30, and no one picks up on it. Seriously! He tells a whole load of lies and people buy it. Until he is found out. They say truth is stranger than fiction, and this is a great example. You could never make this up. The film itself, like the man, is a strange hybrid with archival footage, cartoons, and characterisation, and interviews with key players. Brandon agreed to be interviewed but not appear on film, so Alan Cumming plays him. This is something to be seen to be believed. 

Gimme Danger

This is a great documentary by Jim Jarmusch about Iggy Pop and The Stooges. Loads of footage and interviews and music. This kicks arse and is funny, I loved it!

The Mission

Another Marc Fennell show about art theft, or is it!? This is the fascinating story of an art heist from a monastery in WA. The story takes him around the world in his quest to find the truth. It uncovers a whole lot more than the art that was stolen. Every time I thought I had worked out what was going on, some other bizarre twist was thrown in. This was truly compelling.

Great Australian Walks with Julia Zemiro

I really enjoyed this meditative series with the always brilliant Julia Zemiro. The premise is simple, Julia takes us on long walks/hikes around Australia. Picking key places with great history, we learn a lot about our indigenous history and tragedies, and meet some lovely characters, and enjoy the stunning scenery. My favourites were Melbourne, Tasmania and the North Coast.

Bill Bailey's Wild West Australia

Comedian Bill Bailey explores WA and has a great time, Interesting, loads of nature, and very funny as you would expect.

The Greatest Night in Pop

Oh my goodness!!
14 year old Cathy was absolutely losing her shit within me.
I have always loved a spectacle, and my world was absolutely blown when this came out. I bloody loved watching that clip and seeing all my faves and then some in one room.

So this blew my mind.
For music fans, this is a MUST SEE.
I learned so much I didn't know.
I had no idea Bob Geldof was there for the whole thing, guiding them.
I had no idea it was filmed DIRECTLY after the American Music Awards.
The awards Lionel Richie had just hosted and won heaps of awards.
He led the project with Quincy Jones and Michael Jackson - I knew that.
The Doco delves into how it all came together - a logistical nightmare.
The writing of the song - equal parts genius, crazy and hilarity.
And, of course, the filming...and therein lies the gold.
I won't spoilt much more.
However, the Waylon Jennings and Sheila E stories will blow your mind.
AND the Dylan arc actually had me in tears.
A few more thoughts.
Michael Jackon...genius and generous.
I know he is kinda cancelled these days, but we both think how things ended up for him is a huge tragedy.
Because he is at the height of his brilliance (IMO) here, before things got too whacky.
And it is something to behold.
Lionel Richie - not a fan, but he really kept things together at the busiest moment of his life.
Excellent leadership.
There are a lot of amazing stuff with Stevie Wonder and Ray Charles.
Also Harry Belafonte and Smokey Robinson.
To me, those who came out looking most brilliant - Cyndi Lauper and Huey Lewis - they were absolutely phenomenal - just watch!
The group also sing another song, we wish had been properly made, would have been a great b-side - again, just watch.
Also quite beautiful watching some of our most wonderful musicians who have passed performing at their prime!
This was such pure joy, I cannot recommend it enough.

The Grammys 2024
This year The Grammys were superb. I always love the performances, but the past few years have been a bit meh. This year took it up a few notches. I surprised myself by really enjoying Miley Cyrus and Oliva Rodrigo. Both songs are great. Billie Eillish was perfection. The memorial, specifically Stevie and Annie was remarkable and moving. Billy Joel and Joni Mitchell brough old school back with lovely performances.

But it was Tracy Chapman who brought the house down with a great duet of Fast Car with Luke Coombes. There is nothing that hasn't already been said, except it was perfection and her smile could light the world forever.

What I've Been Listening To

Joanna and the Maestro

I have been loving this great new to me podcast. Joanna Lumley is the Joanna and the Maestro is her husband, Stephen Barlow, who really is a Maestro. Stephen is a conductor and composer and an incredible font of knowledge on classical music. Joanna herself knows quite a lot. The podcast takes a small part of classical music and discusses it in a way that is really accessible for everyone. They talk about styles of music, composers, favourite pieces, and occasionally interview people who love or are involved in classical music. Each episode is usually around 30 mins which I love and they have smaller hybrid episodes where they answer questions that people write in. This is an utter delight. I have loved and studied classical music on and off my entire life so I am i heaven listening to this. Joanna and Stephen are just lovely to listen to. I want to meet them so much!

Dick and Angel's Chat...eau podcast

Devastated the wonderful Escape to the Chateau has finished up, do not worry, Dick and Angel now have their own podcast and like everything they do, it is wonderful. They retell stories we know and keep us abreast of what is happening in their lives since the show ended. Their charisma comes across like old friends. Love this podcast.