Tag: 2009

  • Songs That Broke My Heart: U2’s Running to Stand Still

    Songs That Broke My Heart: U2’s Running to Stand Still

    The classic U2 song decries the political violence and drug epidemic afflicting their hometown Dublin.

  • Businessman, artiste, or madman? We Live in Public

    Businessman, artiste, or madman? We Live in Public

    If you dig the deeply cynical TV series Black Mirror, you’ll love this documentary profile of businessman/artiste/madman Josh Harris. Love, hate, or pity him, Harris is undoubtedly a fascinating individual who succumbed to information-age and surveillance state delusion back during a time when we still used terms like “cyber-surfing the information superhighway” to describe the…

  • Apart Hate: District Neill Blomkamp’s District 9

    Apart Hate: District Neill Blomkamp’s District 9

    Neill Blomkamp’s District 9 is an old story told many times in fiction and history: an undesirable group intrudes upon the space and resources of privileged power possessors. This story never ends well. District 9‘s highly allegorical culture clash corresponds to great many groups that have suffered in throughout history, many sadly ongoing: refugees, minorities,…

  • Terminator Salvation is oppressively feel-bad apocalypse porn

    Terminator Salvation is oppressively feel-bad apocalypse porn

    Terminator Salvation was released in a year curiously rife with apocalypse porn. The visions of world’s end in theaters that year varied wildly in tone: everything from illuminating art to alarmism to escapism. The competition to bum you out included Roland Emmerich’s 2012, which utilized the best special effects technology money could buy to ritually…

  • Relentless Withholding: Michael Mann’s Public Enemies

    Relentless Withholding: Michael Mann’s Public Enemies

    Khoi Vinh rightly observes in Minimalism, Michael Mann and Miami Vice that “Mann has produced a taut, stylistic and often brutally impersonal filmography that seems most interested in the concept of work” (via Daring Fireball). I wholly understand and laud the aim of a minimalist, “relentlessly withholding” narrative, but I don’t believe it’s ignorant or…

  • Adapting Cormac McCarthy’s The Road: After the End of the World

    Adapting Cormac McCarthy’s The Road: After the End of the World

    Genre fiction has long resided on the less reputable side of the divide between escapism and literature. But as The Atlantic notes, cult writers like Neil Gaiman are increasingly crossing over into the mainstream while established novelists like Michael Chabon are exploring sci-fi/horror/fantasy territory blazed by the likes of Margaret Atwood. Few have blurred these…

  • Rewind & Reboot: X-Men Origins: Wolverine

    Rewind & Reboot: X-Men Origins: Wolverine

    Much of what’s wrong with X-Men Origins: Wolverine can be traced right back to its confused conception, indeed beginning with its clumsy title. The ungainly prefix is clumsily bolted on solely for it to alphabetize adjacent to the three previous X-Men films on Walmart shelves, iTunes, Pay-Per-View, and torrent trackers. The two halves split by…

  • Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus

    Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus

    Terry Gilliam is burdened with a number of unfair reputations. First, as a visual stylist more than a storyteller or director of actors — the latter, at least, obviously refuted by the fact that many high-profile stars will repeatedly work with him for pennies. Second, he’s also thought of as an unpredictable hellion and spendthrift,…

  • Action Figures: G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra

    Action Figures: G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra

    It’s tempting to throw up one’s hands in despair that the well of source material for movies has dropped this precipitously low, to the level of plastic action figures. To be fair, trash (escapist or just plain trashy trash) has existed since the very first days of the medium. But cinema’s early conception as a…

  • Ang Lee’s Tall Tale: Taking Woodstock

    Ang Lee’s Tall Tale: Taking Woodstock

    Ang Lee’s Taking Woodstock is based on Elliot Tiber’s memoir Taking Woodstock: A True Story of a Riot, a Concert, and a Life, that purports to be the untold story of how the Woodstock music festival came to Bethel, NY, in August 1969. Tiber claims he was the crucial go-between that introduced the festival’s organizers…