Monday, September 10, 2018

The Sound of Music

I had the opportunity to see The Sound of Music on the big screen several years ago with the Megaplex Silver Screen Classics series and it was absolutely magical.  When I found out that it would be screened through the TCM Big Screen series I just had to see it again!  I simply couldn't resist the chance to see such an iconic musical on the big screen one more time.  Oh, how I love this movie!  I love every single thing about it and I waited with great anticipation for every one of those wonderful Rogers and Hammerstein songs:  "The Sound of Music," "Maria," "I Have Confidence," "Sixteen Going on Seventeen," "My Favorite Things," "Do-Re-Mi," The Lonely Goatherd," "Edelweiss," "So Long, Farewell," "Climb Ev'ry Mountain," and "Something Good."  Every single song is so instantly recognizable and I really had to try not to sing aloud (some people at my screening actually did sing along!).  I love the "Do-Re-Mi" scenes and the wedding scene because they remind me of a trip I took to Salzburg (I actually sang "Do-Re-Mi" when I visited the Mirabell gardens) but my very favorite scene is when Maria and Captain von Trapp dance the Landler because it is so romantic!  I think Christopher Plummer is so handsome in that scene.  I have seen this movie countless times (it was shown on network television last December) but there is something so special about seeing these old favorites on the big screen!  I had a smile on my face the whole time and I'm so glad I took advantage of seeing it again!  If you love his movie as much as I do, you have another opportuity to see it on Wednesday (go here for information and tickets).

Note:  I love this movie so much that it was disconcerting for me to see the Broadway touring company production because it is so different!

Sunday, September 9, 2018

Jurassic Park in Concert

I absolutely love the Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series and, as many of you know, I also love seeing outdoor performances.  So, as you can imagine, last night's concert featuring a screening of Jurassic Park with John Williams' iconic score played by the Utah Symphony at the Usana Amphitheatre was just about the best way to spend a late summer evening.  Out of the entire franchise I've always thought that the original film by Steven Spielberg is the best and seeing it again on the big screen confirmed my opinion.  John Hammond (Richard Attenborough) brings dinosaurs to life once again by using dinosaur DNA from the blood of prehistoric mosquitoes trapped in amber and builds a theme park in which to display them.  When one of his employees is killed, his investors bring Dr. Grant (Sam Neill), a paleontologist, Dr. Sattler (Laura Dern), a paleobiologist, and Dr. Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), a chaos theorist, to the park to assess the safety measures.  He also invites his grandchildren Lex (Ariana Richards) and Tim (Joseph Mazzello) to visit.  Of course the dinosaurs escape their enclosures and wreak havoc on the guests of the park.  For me this movie has always been about the dinosaurs (I think the characters are a bit underdeveloped) and they are amazing!  The special effects have definitely held up over time.  My very favorite scene is when Grant, Sattler, and Malcolm see the dinosaurs for the first time because there is such a sense of wonder on their faces and I think the orchestral theme played here does a lot to convey that awe and wonder.  Hearing it live gave me goosebumps!  I also liked the music during the scenes where the dinosaurs attack because it adds to the sense of urgency.  I loved this concert so much and I'm really looking forward to the rest of the Films in Concert series this season, especially Star Wars: A New Hope and Casablanca.

Saturday, September 8, 2018

Maroon 5 at the Vivint Arena

When I learned that Maroon 5 would be returning to SLC this fall, I had a stern talk with myself and decided that I probably didn’t need to see them again.  However, as the date of the concert approached, I felt really sad that I wouldn’t be there.  I love Maroon 5 and they always put on such a great show so, in a fit of madness, I got a ticket!  Best decision ever!  Aside from some parking issues downtown, it was a fantastic night.  Their 90 minute set included some songs from their latest album, Red Pill Blues, including "What Lovers Do," "Cold," "Don't Wanna Know," and "Wait."  They also performed a fun cover of Michael Jackson's "Rock With You" complete with a gigantic disco ball.  But most of the night was devoted to the hits and they played them one after the other to the delight of the crowd.  These included "Payphone," "This Love," "Misery," "Sunday Morning," "Animals," "One More Night," "Love Somebody," and "Moves Like Jagger."  My favorite moment came midway through the show when they played "Harder to Breathe."  I became a huge fan of Maroon 5 the very first time I heard this song on the radio so hearing it live is always amazing!  For the encore they played "Girls Like You," from the new album, with a cool intro and outro of "Forever Young" by Alphaville.  Then they played acoustic versions of "Lost Stars" and "She Will Be Loved" which were incredible!  They ended the show with a rousing rendition of "Sugar."  I always love Maroon 5 concerts because Adam Levine is such a showman!  With a guitar strung on his back and frequently dragging a microphone stand, he would strut along the V-shaped runway into the audience like he owned the Vivint Arena!  It was an incredibly high energy performance and I was very impressed with how great he sounds live!  I loved this concert and I am so glad that I caved in and bought a ticket!

Note:  The best part is that I didn't have to get up at the crack of dawn for school the next day!

Wednesday, September 5, 2018

The Smashing Pumpkins at the Vivint Arena

The last time I saw The Smashing Pumpkins, I was in the pit at the Great Saltair and it was absolutely epic!  I was considerably younger then.  Last night when The Smashing Pumpkins made a stop at the Vivint Arena, I may have been sitting in a comfortable chair but the concert was no less epic!  Not only did they play for over three hours but they dug deep into their vast catalog and played every one of my favorite songs and then some!  To begin with Billy Corgan took the stage alone for a haunting rendition of "Disarm" and then, when the rest of the band joined him, they played every song I wanted to hear (which is very rare):  "Rhinoceros," my favorite Pumpkins song, "Siva," "Drown," "Zero," "Eye," "The Everlasting Gaze," "Stand Inside Your Love," "Landslide," "Tonight, Tonight," "Cherub Rock," "1979," "Ava Adore," "Today," and "Bullet With Butterfly Wings."  They played covers of David Bowie's "Space Oddity" and Led Zeppelin's "Stairway to Heaven," both of which were fantastic.  They also threw in "Rocket," "Thirty-Three," a psychedelic version of "Soma," "Blew Away," "For Martha," "To Sheila," "Mayonaise," "Porcelina of the Vast Oceans," "Try, Try, Try," "The Beginning is the End is the Beginning," "Hummer," and "Muzzle" for good measure.  I loved it!  Every song featured a dazzling light show and visuals ranging from religious iconography to showgirls in Busby Berkeley type productions.  Corgan was in rare form with multiple costumes that were shiny and oh so bright!  This concert is definitely in my top ten of all time even though I did leave before the encore (it was almost midnight!).  I'm clearly not the same girl who danced in the pit over 20 years ago!

Monday, September 3, 2018

The Little Stranger

Yesterday I went to see The Little Stranger, another movie that is slow and contemplative but one that I thoroughly enjoyed.  In the summer of 1919, a young village boy (Oliver Zetterstrom) attends a garden party at the estate that once employed his mother as a maid.  Hundreds Hall, a venerable old estate held by the Ayres family for generations, makes quite an impression on the young boy as does Susan Ayres, the privileged daughter of the house who doesn't have long to live.  In the summer of 1947, that young boy, now the esteemed Dr. Faraday (Domhnall Gleeson), is called to Hundreds Hall, now in decline, to tend to a maid.  He meets Mrs. Ayres (Charlotte Rampling), who still holds sway over the village from her crumbling mansion, Roderick Ayres (Will Poulter), who is horribly disfigured and suffering from PTSD from the war, and Caroline Ayres (Ruth Wilson), a former nurse called home to tend to her brother who is chafing at her lost prospects.  Faraday begins treating Roddy's injuries and eventually insinuates himself into the uneasy household.  Is the ghost of Susan haunting the Hall or is there something more sinister at play?  In the tradition of the best Gothic horror stories, Hundreds Hall is suitably creepy and atmospheric as it slowly drives its inhabitants mad.  However, I found this movie to be more of a character study with some interesting social commentary on class divisions than a traditional horror movie.  The tone is more menacing than scary and those expecting a thrilling narrative might be disappointed.  Rather, the action is incredibly understated but I was captivated by Gleeson's steely performance of a man haunted more by the past than by the strange goings-on in the present.  This film is not for everyone but I recommend this spellbinding tale to fans of psychological thrillers.
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