Tuesday, April 30, 2019

ZNP With Tashena

During our recent road trip to Southern Utah, Tashena and I made a little detour to Zion National Park.  It was a really quick visit but I loved being among the red rocks!
The weather was absolutely perfect and the park wasn't very crowded!  It was a wonderful afternoon!

Saturday, April 27, 2019

Avengers: Endgame

Last night I saw Avengers: Endgame and I think it is an incredibly satisfying conclusion to a saga that has been eleven years in the making.  I loved it!  I laughed, I cried, and I cheered out loud multiple times!  After the catastrophic snap that destroyed half the population of the universe, the remaining Avengers, Iron Man/Tony Stark (Robert Downey, Jr.), Captain America/Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), Hulk/Bruce Banner (Mark Ruffalo), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Black Widow/Natasha Romanoff (Scarlett Johansson), Hawkeye/Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner), War Machine/James "Rhodey" Rhodes (Don Cheadle), Ant-Man/Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), Nebula (Karen Gillan), Rocket (Bradley Cooper), and Captain Marvel/Carol Danvers (Brie Larson), are left reeling in the aftermath (some more than others).  They want to punish Thanos (Josh Brolin) but, more than that, they want to reverse the effects of the snap.  They eventually devise a plan but will they be able to do whatever it takes?  This movie brilliantly weaves together multiple storylines which reference many events from the previous entries in the MCU (I definitely need to see this again because I am sure that I missed a few).  Each character has a rewarding emotional arc with moments of great poignancy and all of the actors, but especially Robert Downey, Jr., Chris Evans, and Scarlett Johansson, give highly nuanced performances.  To be sure, there are epic battles but I absolutely loved all of the intimate moments with characters I've grown to love over the years.  This movie does justice to all of them.  I enjoyed every minute and I highly recommend that you see it as soon as you can!

Note:  I don't know if this is a spoiler or not but there is no post-credits scene.  Almost everyone in my screening stayed until the very end and we felt a bit foolish!

Friday, April 26, 2019

Aladdin at the Eccles

When I went to New York on a theatre trip a few years ago, my roommate went to see Aladdin on a night that I saw a different show.  When we both got back to the hotel she raved and raved about it so, of course, I immediately wanted to see it.  It seems like I have been waiting forever but I finally had the chance to see this entertaining show last night!  It definitely did not disappoint!  In fact, I think I giggled throughout the whole run time and I may or may not have sung along to "Prince Ali" which is my favorite song from the movie.  The stage musical basically tells the same story as the movie with all of the amazing songs you remember (and a few new ones thrown in for good measure).  Aladdin (Clinton Greenspan) is a street urchin in the city of Agrabah where he ekes out a living as a pickpocket with his friends Babkak (Zach Bencal), Omar (Ben Chavez), and Kassim (Colt Prattes).  While in the marketplace he meets Princess Jasmine (Kaenaonalani Kekoa), who has run away from the palace because her father the Sultan (Jerald Vincent) wants her to marry a prince, and he falls in love with her.  Jafar (Jonathan Weir), the Grand Vizier, wants the throne for himself and learns that there is a magic lamp hidden in the Cave of Wonders that could help him but only a diamond in the rough can enter.  He enlists Aladdin's help but his plan backfires when Aladdin releases the Genie (Major Attaway) from the lamp and is given three wishes.  Wanting to impress Jasmine, Aladdin wishes to be a prince but he soon realizes that he must be himself if he wants to win the princess.  I really loved all of the colorful and sparkly costumes, the dazzling choreography, especially in "Arabian Nights," "Friend Like Me," "Prince Ali," and "High Adventure," and the incredible sets, particularly the Palace and the Cave of Wonders!  The special effects are so much fun and the magic carpet ride in "A Whole New World" is everything I hoped it would be!  Both Greenspan and Kekoa have wonderful voices but Attaway steals the show with all of his hilarious pop culture references.  It is a glitzy production worthy of Disney that is just so much fun to watch from start to finish and I highly recommend it, especially for children!  It runs at the Eccles Theatre through May 12 (tickets my be purchased here).

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Matilda at HCT

Two years ago I had the opportunity to see the Broadway touring production of Matilda and, unfortunately, I didn't like it very much. I found it to be really dark and sinister and, frankly, I wondered why it was marketed as a show for children. When HCT announced their 2019 season, I was not especially thrilled that this show was part of the lineup but I went to see it last night. HCT's production turned me into a fan because I absolutely loved what they did with it! Matilda Wormwood (Lucy White) is a precocious five year old with a penchant for reading and telling stories and, sometimes, being just a little bit naughty. She is ignored by her mother (Amelia Rose Moore), an amateur Latin ballroom dancer, and father (Ryan Simmons), an unscrupulous used car salesman, and is terrorized by Miss Agatha Trunchbull (Aaron Ford), the tyrannical headmistress of her school and the former Olympic champion in hammer throwing. With the help of a sympathetic teacher named Miss Honey (Bre Welch) and a little bit of magic, Matilda triumphs over the neglectful adults in her life! What I loved about this production is that the tone is much more lighthearted than the Broadway original and the adults are portrayed more like over-the-top caricatures rather than villains, especially Miss Trunchbull. Even the sets and costumes have a lighter color palette and I especially loved all of the colorful balloons used throughout. One of the things I really enjoyed about the Broadway production was the use of typography and the HCT version incorporates this through very clever projections. The library and the school yard sets, which come down from the ceiling, are fantastic. The big song and dance numbers, particularly "School Song" performed in a chain-link cage in the school yard, "Loud" performed by Matilda's mother and her Latin ballroom dance partner Rudolpho (Jeremy Egan), "Smell of Rebellion" performed by the children during a physical education class, and "Revolting Children" performed by the children in the classroom, are a lot of fun and feature innovative choreography. My favorite number was "When I Grow Up" which featured the children on swings that seemed to be held aloft by bouquets of balloons. This song is so poignant and it brought a tear to my eye. White is absolutely enchanting in the lead role and all of the children are incredible performers but, in my opinion, Bridget Maxwell steals the show as Lavender! Welch has a beautiful voice but I sometimes think that she is miscast. However, she is perfect in the role of Miss Honey and gives one of the best performances I have seen from her. The scenes with White (who is her niece) are so tender. I was very pleasantly surprised by my reaction to this show and I highly recommend it (go here for tickets and information).  It runs on HCT's main stage through June 15.

Note:  Don't forget about the lovely production of Steel Magnolias which is currently being performed in HCT's Jewel Box Theatre through June 1.

Monday, April 22, 2019

Easter Eggs

It has been quite a while since we have colored Easter eggs but Sean was really looking forward to doing it this year (he called me twice because I was three minutes late).  It was actually a lot of fun!
After coloring eggs we tried to have a BBQ but it rained almost all day!  Eventually my brother in law went outside and cooked the hamburgers and hotdogs and we ate everything inside.  It still tasted delicious!  In the evening we played Shanghai rummy which was really fun, as always!  I hope you had a lovely Easter filled with family and traditions!

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Prom 2019

Last night Tashena went to her last high school dance!  I can't believe that she will be graduating from high school in just a few weeks!
I have really enjoyed taking pictures of all her high school dances and I think she has always chosen such beautiful dresses.

Friday, April 19, 2019

Penguins

Is there anything cuter than a waddling penguin?  I submit that there is not so I have been eagerly anticipating Disneynature's newest documentary, Penguins, for quite some time.  I was able to see it last night and I absolutely loved it!  This time the focus is on a goofy Adelie penguin named Steve.  He couldn't be more endearing or entertaining as he travels with the rest of the males in his colony from the open ocean to a breeding ground in Antarctica during the spring thaw to build a nest, find a mate, and raise a family for the first time.  Steve has a penchant for getting lost which causes him to mistakenly join a group of Emperor penguins and attract the unwanted amorous attentions of an elephant seal!  He also must contend with the harsh Antarctic environment, the necessity of constantly feeding and supervising his chicks, and predators such as killer whales and leopard seals.  Steve's story is both humorous and compelling.  As with many Disneynature documentaries, it is very anthropomorphic with hilarious narration from Ed Helms and I especially enjoyed the commentary when Steve is courting his mate Adeline.  Antarctica is one of the most inhospitable places on Earth but it has a stark beauty (I want to go there someday) that is heroically captured by a team of filmmakers over a period of three years and the cinematography is simply stunning, particularly the underwater sequences.  Definitely stay though the credits to see how the filmmakers are able to get some of the more spectacular shots (and for more amusing narration depicting Steve as an actor trying to hit his marks).  I also really enjoyed the classic rock needle drops including Patti LaBelle's "Stir It Up" as Steve struts across the ice, REO Speedwagon's "Can't Fight This Feeling" when he courts Adeline, Average White Band's "Work to Do" as he makes a 100 mile trek to get food for his chicks, and Whitesnakes's "Here I Go Again" when he returns to the open ocean in the winter.  I highly recommend this enchanting documentary, especially if you love penguins as much as I do!

Note:  If you see Penguins during its opening week (April 17-23), Disneynature will make a donation to the Wildlife Conservation Network (WCN) to help protect penguins around the world.

Thursday, April 18, 2019

An Outing

Every month I have an outing with Sean where I pick him up from school and we go to Barnes & Noble to pick out a book and then go to Crumbl for cookies.  We went yesterday and we had so much fun (it took him over 45 minutes to choose a book).  I think I look forward to it just as much as Sean does!  We started this tradition at the end of last summer after we went to the move The Darkest Minds.  Sean absolutely loved this movie and when I mentioned that it was based on a series of books he immediately wanted to read them.  I took him to Barnes & Noble the next day so he could get the first book.  I told him that I would buy him any book that he wanted because I love the fact that he likes to read.  He took me at my word and, eventually, I had to limit it to once a month!  After one of our trips to the book store we drove past the the Crumbl store and, after Sean mentioned how good the cookies were, we decided to stop in.  I love the cookies so now that is a part of the tradition.  Sean usually gets a chocolate chip cookie and I get a sugar cookie or a snickerdoodle (when they are available).  I sure do love this kid and I love that he wants to spend time with me!

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

The Wind

I frequently find the wind to be a bit unnerving, especially when I am trying to fall asleep, so when I saw the trailer for an atmospheric thriller called The Wind I immediately wanted to see it (because I like to torture myself) and I did so last night.  Lizzy Macklin (Caitlin Gerard) and her husband Isaac (Ashley Zuckerman) have settled on a remote and desolate piece of land in the American frontier during the late 1800s.  She is initially very hard working, resourceful, and capable but soon the isolation starts to take a toll on her and she begins to sense a malevolent presence.  Her husband dismisses her fears (he thinks that she is simply being hysterical) but they become overwhelming when another couple, Emma (Julia Goldani Telles) and Gideon Harper (Dylan McTee), move nearby resulting in tragedy.  The story is very nonlinear, beginning with the mysterious death of Emma with flashbacks to when Lizzy and Isaac first move to their homestead and when Emma and Gideon arrive, and this serves to keep you guessing as to the cause of Lizzy's madness.  The tension builds and builds, although it does start to lose steam in the third act, with brilliant sound design where every creak in the floor, every rattle of the shutters, and every howl of the relentless wind is amplified to the point where you want to jump out of your seat!  Gerard is great in the role of a woman slowly being driven mad and her physical transformation is the best part of this film.  While not as frightening as The Witch or Hereditary, this is a disturbing psychological thriller that explores some interesting feminist themes and I recommend it.

Note:  In order to occupy her mind, Isaac reads Lizzy a passage from Frankenstein (which my seniors are currently reading).  I found the passage about the isolation felt by the creature to be particularly apt and I wonder how many members of the audience got the allusion!

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Transit

I am not very keen on the new releases this week so I have decided to check out a few independent films instead.  I started last night with Transit because the trailer was so haunting and I couldn't stop thinking about it.  Unnamed fascists have come to power in Europe and the city of Paris has been occupied.  Soldiers begin rounding up people for ethnic cleansing so Georg (Franz Rogowski) must flee the city as soon as possible.  He is asked by a friend to deliver two letters to a writer named Weidel but when he goes to his hotel room he discovers that Weidel has committed suicide.  One of the letters is from his estranged wife Marie (Paula Beer) and one is is from the Mexican Consulate giving Weidel and his wife exit visas, a wire transfer of money, and passage for both of them on a ship leaving from the port city of Marseilles.  Georg travels to Marseilles and impersonates Weidel to get the exit visa.  He is extremely affected by the refugees he meets in his hotel, at the consulate, and in the bar he frequents as he waits for the ship to depart and he feels tremendous guilt, especially about leaving behind a young boy he has befriended.  Soon he encounters Marie, who is in Marseilles with her lover (who has an exit visit and will soon leave her behind) and is desperate to find her husband to get the visa he has for her.  She doesn't know that her husband is dead or that Georg is impersonating him but keeps encountering him in her search.  Eventually Georg falls in love with her and offers to get her a visa without telling her how or what he has done which complicates the situation with her lover.  What makes this film so powerful is that, while it references many of the events of World War II, it is set in an indefinite time period without the Nazi iconography and I found that to be incredibly menacing because it could be happening now.  The soldiers are wearing riot gear instead of jackboots and there is a terrifying scene where a woman is dragged out of a hotel while the other refugees watch with relief that it isn't them being arrested.  The scenes in the consulate are filled with a desperation that is palpable and the tension is almost unbearable as the characters try to outrun the invading army.  All of the characters have multi-layered relationships with others but they are ultimately alone in their quest for survival and there are many existential themes explored.  Both Rogowski and Beers give compelling and sympathetic performances which will haunt you long after you leave the theater.  This film reminded me of Casablanca but with much higher stakes and I highly recommend it!

Monday, April 15, 2019

Ben-Hur

Yesterday I went to see Ben-Hur on the big screen as part of the TCM Big Screen Classics series and it was an awesome spectacle!  Messala (Stephen Boyd) is a Roman tribune who returns to Jerusalem as the new commander of the Roman garrison.  He has a joyous reunion with his childhood friend Judah Ben-Hur (Charlton Heston), a wealthy prince in Jerusalem.  Messala asks Judah to help quell the rebellion that is brewing in Jerusalem but they soon quarrel when Judah refuses to spy on his people.  During a military parade, a tile falls from Judah's house injuring the new governor and Judah, his mother, and sister are arrested.  Messala, wanting to curry favor with the governor, sentences Judah to be a galley slave while the fate of his family is unknown.  Judah vows revenge for this betrayal.  After several years, Quitus Arrius (Jack Hawkins), a Roman consul, is assigned to Judah's ship and notices his will to live.  Arrius has Judah's chains unlocked just before a battle allowing him to escape the sinking ship as well as rescue him.  In gratitude, Arrius takes Judah to Rome where he learns to drive a chariot.  Eventually, Judah returns to Jerusalem to seek his mother and sister.  When he, erroneously, hears that they are dead, he challenges Messala to an epic chariot race.  A parallel story to Judah's involves that of Jesus Christ and his birth, ministry, and crucifixion.  They have two brief but meaningful encounters with each other which allows Judah to forgive the Romans for what they have done to him and his family.  This movie is epic in every sense of the word.  It had the biggest budget of any movie up to that point with thousands of extras, horses, and costumes and a crew of 200 to create over 300 sets.  It was the highest grossing movie of 1959 and won 11 Academy Awards including Best Picture, Best Director for William Wyler, and Best Actor for Charlton Heston.  I thought it was amazing, especially the chariot race which is absolutely thrilling.  It was so much fun to see this again on the big screen and I highly recommend it!  You have one more chance to see it on Wednesday (go here for tickets and information).

Sunday, April 14, 2019

Rachmaninoff & Shostakovich

As a card carrying Russophile (I absolutely love Russia and have been there twice), I have been looking forward to this weekend for a long time!  Not only did I get to see Ballet West's production of Onegin on Friday night but I also got to see a Utah Symphony concert featuring the works of Rachmaninoff (my favorite) and Shostakovich last night!  I loved both the ballet and the concert so much!  The orchestra began with Dances of Galanta by Zoltan Kodaly.  I was unfamiliar with this piece but I really enjoyed the Hungarian folk music heard throughout and I loved the themes played by the woodwinds.  Next the orchestra continued with Concerto No. 4 for Piano and Orchestra by Sergei Rachmaninoff.  I love this piece so much, especially the second movement which is incredibly romantic and emotional but tinged with just a bit of melancholy.  Soloist Simon Trpceski played it brilliantly with a lot of expression.  He was so energetic and fun to watch!  He literally bounced up and down on the piano bench and his fingers seemed to fly up and down the keyboard.  The concert concluded with a powerful rendition of Symphony No. 12 by Dmitri Shostakovich.  This piece is quite dramatic and I really loved the themes played by the brass and the timpani, especially the triumphant conclusion.  It was an amazing evening of music and I thoroughly enjoyed myself!

Saturday, April 13, 2019

Ballet West's Onegin

Even though I studied British literature in college, I have a great passion for Russian literature and Alexander Pushkin is one of my favorite Russian authors.  I would have to say that The Captain's Daughter is my favorite piece by Pushkin but Eugene Onegin would definitely be a close second.  I love the opera based on the novel with music by Tchaikovsky (I wish Utah Opera would program it again) so I have been looking forward to Ballet West's production of Onegin since they announced their season.  I was lucky enough to see it last night and it was absolutely glorious!  I loved everything about it including the story, the music, the choreography, the performances, the sets, and the costumes.  A young girl named Tatiana (Katie Critchlow) is preparing for a ball in honor of her birthday with her mother (Emily Adams), her sister Olga (Jenna Rae Herrera), and friends from the countryside.  Lensky (Joshua Shutkind), a poet engaged to Olga, arrives with Onegin (Adrian Fry), his friend from St. Petersburg.  Onegin is worldly and sophisticated and Tatiana falls desperately in love with him.  She impetuously writes a passionate letter declaring her love to him and has her nurse deliver it.  Prince Gremin (Dominic Ballard) attends the ball and falls in love with Tatiana but she ignores him in favor of Onegin who, thinking her a silly girl who has read too many romantic novels, rejects her and tears up her letter.  Onegin soon grows bored with the company and flirts outrageously with Olga.  Lensky challenges him to a duel and Onegin ends up killing him.  Years later a disillusioned Onegin visits Prince Gremin in St. Petersburg and is shocked to discover that his friend has married Tatiana.  He realizes that he is in love with the beautiful princess and writes her a letter.  In a reversal in fortune, she rejects him and tears up his letter.  The magnificent music by Tchaikovsky is the perfect backdrop for this tragic love story.  It isn't as well known as some of his other more iconic scores but it is no less dramatic and passionate.  I especially loved the music during the duel because it is so heartbreaking.  The choreography is incredibly innovative.  I enjoyed the wild abandon of the folk dances in the countryside, particularly the leaps across the stage by the women in the ensemble, juxtaposed with the elegant and stately waltzes at the ball in St. Petersburg.  I was blown away by the tumultuous and acrobatic final Pas de Deux between Onegin and Tatiana.  Critchlow and Fry danced their roles brilliantly, executing some of the trickiest throws and maneuvers I've ever seen with such emotion!  The elegant sets and beautiful costumes in muted jewel tones transport the audience to imperial Russia for a few hours and it is a journey that I definitely recommend taking!  There are two more performances today at the Eccles Theatre (go here for tickets and more information).

Thursday, April 11, 2019

Storm Boy

When I saw the trailer for Storm Boy I thought it was so visually stunning that I immediately decided I wanted to see it.  I didn't hear anything more about the film or its release date so I kind of forgot about it.  Last night I was looking at the website for a movie chain that I sometimes frequent to see about getting advanced tickets for another movie and I saw that it was playing.  I spontaneously decided to see it and I am glad that I did because this lovely film about the bond between a boy and a wild pelican really touched me (at one point I was sobbing like a baby).  Michael Kingley (Geoffrey Rush) is a retired businessman whose former company, now controlled by his son-in-law (Erik Thomson), owns vast holdings of real estate.  He has been called to a shareholder's meeting to vote on a proposal to lease a tract of land to a mining company.  His granddaughter Maddie (Morgana Davies) angrily confronts him about the proposal and accuses him of not caring about the environment.  He then begins telling her about his childhood on an isolated beach in South Australia where his father Tom (Jai Courtney) brought him to hide from the world after the death of his mother and sister.  When young Michael (Finn Little) sees a group of pelicans who have been killed by hunters he discovers three newly hatched birds who will most likely die without their mother.  He decides to save them and, with the help of an aboriginal man (Trevor Jamieson) who lives nearby, he learns how to care for them.  His friendship with one of the pelicans (who he calls Mr. Percival after a character in Lord of the Flies) ultimately changes his life and changes his mind about the land deal.  I loved this movie so much!  It is a gentle and beautiful story that is told very simply.  Australia is one of the most beautiful places I've visited and the scenes on the beaches (it was shot in Coorong National Park) are absolutely breathtaking.  Courtney (who is hit or miss with me) gives a great performance and Little is so endearing as the young Michael.  I loved the scenes of him cavorting with the pelicans, especially when he is trying to teach them how to fly, and the scene where he lets them go back into the wild just about broke my heart.  This film is under the radar (at least in the SLC area) but it is definitely worth seeking out!

Tuesday, April 9, 2019

The Best of Enemies

Last night I went to see The Best of Enemies and, while there are flaws, I think it has a great message about listening to someone who has a different opinion to find common ground and this is definitely a message that is really needed right now!  This movie tells the true story of an unlikely friendship that develops when a "charrette," or an intensive community council where all parties involved come together to propose solutions and vote on a binding course of action, is held on school integration in the racially segregated city of Durham, North Carolina in 1971.  Ann Atwater (Taraji P. Henson), a civil rights activist, and C.P. Ellis (Sam Rockwell), the leader of the local Ku Klux Klan, are chosen as co-chairs of the council.  At first their interactions with each other are incredibly acrimonious but as they are forced to spend time together (they literally have to sit together at the same table during lunch) they begin to see each other as people rather than enemies.  They are finally able to find some common ground and there is a stand-up-and-cheer moment at the end of the movie that, well, made everyone in my screening cheer out loud.  The biggest criticism that I have read about this movie is that it focuses too much on Ellis' journey of redemption and, while I would have liked more insight into Atwater's character, I think that Ellis needed to make the bigger transformation.  Both Henson and Rockwell give fantastic performances and they both have several incredibly poignant scenes.  I really enjoyed this movie, despite what the critics say, and I recommend it to everyone.

Monday, April 8, 2019

Shazam!

The one and only time I ever waited outside of a theater door is when I saw the Broadway revival of She Loves Me a few years ago because I wanted to meet Zachary Levi.  He signed Playbills and posed for pictures with every person in line and I thought he was adorable. I have been looking forward to seeing him in the new superhero movie Shazam! and I absolutely loved his performance!  In 1974 a young boy named Thaddeus Sivana is magically transported to the Rock of Eternity where the Wizard Shazam (Djimon Hounsou) has been looking for a champion who is pure of heart to battle against the Seven Deadly Sins which have been unleashed into the world.  He is judged to be unworthy and sent back to Earth but in the present day the adult Sivana (Mark Strong) finds a way back to the Rock of Eternity to become the host for the Seven Deadly Sins.  Fourteen year old Billy Baston (Asher Angel), a troubled orphan searching for his birth mother, is placed in a group home along with Mary (Grace Fulton), Pedro (Jovan Armand), Eugene (Ian Chen), Darla (Faithe Herman), and Freddy (Jack Dylan Grazer) but he is not happy about being there.  When Billy saves Freddy from a group of bullies, he is summoned to the Rock of Eternity and chosen by the wizard to be his champion.  He is transformed into an adult (Zachary Levi) with all of the wizard's powers whenever he says his name.  With Freddy's help, he discovers all of his superpowers but lets them go to his head.  He is more concerned with his status as a YouTube personality rather than his responsibility as a hero. Sivana eventually discovers that the Wizard has a champion and challenges him but Billy must figure out what is worth fighting for before he can defeat him.  This movie is a really fun superhero origin story with a great message and I had a smile on my face the whole time.  Levi is so endearing in the title role because he is, essentially, playing a fourteen year old boy who happens to have superpowers.  Grazer is also fantastic as the disabled foster kid who has it all and the scenes where the two of them discover Shazam's powers are hilarious (and feature the song "Don't Stop Me Now" by Queen!).  The special effects and action sequences are great and I really liked all of the bright primary colors (as opposed to the dark color palette used in most of the DCEU movies).   I enjoyed this movie so much and I highly recommend it!

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Pet Sematary

I love Stephen King (I once argued the literary merit of his novels with one of my English professors in college).  I especially love his earlier novels and I read them all when I was an impressionable teenager.  All of them scared me but Pet Sematary terrified me, so much so that I slept with the light on for over a week after I read it in eighth grade.  The story about an ancient Micmac Indian burial ground haunted by a malevolent spirit known as the Wendigo was entirely believable to me because I grew up in eastern Canada and was very well acquainted with the folklore surrounding the Wendigo.  I was so unnerved by this book that I debated for quite some time whether or not I should see the 1989 adaptation.  I finally decided to see it and I was very disappointed because it replaced what actually made it scary with gore.  After similar deliberations I decided to see the new adaptation last night and it is both more and less faithful to the source material than the 1989 movie.  Louis Creed (Jason Clarke) and his wife Rachel (Amy Seimetz) decide to move from Boston to the rural town of Ludlow, Maine with their two children, Ellie (Jete Laurence) and Gage (Hugo and Lucas Lavoie), and their cat, Church.  Their house is surrounded by forests but it is also near a busy highway.  As Rachel and Ellie explore the forest they discover a cemetery used by the local children for burying their dead pets.  When Church is killed by an Orinco truck on the highway, Louis wants to bury him in the pet cemetery but the Creed's neighbor Jud Crandall (John Lithgow) shows him the ancient Micmac burial located beyond the cemetery and instructs him in the ritual of burying his cat.  Later that night, Church is discovered to be alive but much more aggressive.  When another tragedy strikes the family, Louis is grief-stricken and decides to make use of the burial ground again with catastrophic consequences.  The biggest difference from the novel is that the other child is killed (but that decision makes the third act even more terrifying, in my opinion, because it enhances the physical threat) and the ending is a bit hokey (although I loved the Starcrawler cover of "Pet Sematary" by the Ramones during this scene).  What is retained from the novel is the story of the Wendigo and the unsettling and dread-filled atmosphere of the burial ground which scared me as much as the novel did.  This version is definitely much more menacing than the 1989 movie and I just might need to keep the light on at night.

Friday, April 5, 2019

Spring Avalanche Trip

My Dad and I really like to go to at least one and sometimes two Colorado Avalanche games every season.  We went over Thanksgiving break and decided to take in another game in the spring.  I hadn't used any of my personal days off from school yet so we could basically pick any game we wanted.  I have seen the Avalanche play just about every team in the NHL except for the Winnipeg Jets so that is the game we picked.  It also happened to be the last home game of the regular season so we were hoping that it would be an exciting game with playoff implications.  It was on both counts!  The Avs only needed one point to clinch a playoff spot so they just needed to tie the game.  They got a lot of scoring chances in the first period but the Jets ended up with two goals (one of them should not have counted).  In the second period Tyson Barrie scored a beautiful goal to cut the deficit by one.  The crowd went crazy and we were giving high fives to everyone around us!  It was so much fun!  In the third period Carl Soderberg tied it up with 9:25 remaining.  The crowd went into hysterics at this goal because all we needed was a tie for the playoffs.  I've been to a lot of exciting games before but I don't know if I've ever seen the Pepsi Center this wound up!  With only 1:26 left in the game Colorado got a too many men penalty (which, in my opinion, is one of the stupidest penalties you can get) which left them down a skater at the end of the game.  Every time the Avs iced the puck (sent it down the ice to kill time in the penalty)  the crowd went absolutely crazy until the clock wound down.  The Avs had to start overtime with more than 30 seconds left in the penalty but Erik Johnson took a pass from Nathan MacKinnon to score the winning goal.  It was epic!  The Avs needed one point but ended up with two and are going to the playoffs!  It was such a great game!

Note:  This was my first chance to see our new goalie Philipp Grubauer in action.  He made 34 saves!  I love him!

Thursday, April 4, 2019

Sweat at PTC

Last night I went to see Sweat, the latest production at PTC which chronicles the demise of the industrial town of Reading, Pennsylvania when the once enviable jobs at factories are outsourced.  I didn't know anything about this play when I walked into the theater but I found it to be incredibly compelling.  The action takes place at a working class bar frequented by Tracey (Margot White), Jessie (Susanna Florence), and Cynthia (Nafeesa Monroe) who work the line at a local manufacturing plant.  Cynthia's estranged husband Brucie (Vince McGill) wanders in and out with a cautionary tale about how he lost his job at another factory when management wanted to cut costs and shut the workers out when the union took a hard line.  Stan (Christopher Duvall), a former factory worker severely injured on the job, is the bartender who lends a sympathetic ear.  Oscar (Xavier Reyes), the barback who is viewed as an immigrant because he is Hispanic, is trying to find a better job.  When Cynthia is given a promotion from the line to low-level management, Tracey, who also applied for the job, believes it is because Cynthia is African-American and she blames her when the factory wants to cut salaries and benefits and then locks them out.  Jason (Callum Adams) and Chris (Hassiem Muhammad), the sons of Tracey and Cynthia, respecively, who also work at the factory, blame Oscar when he crosses the picket line to take a job at the factory leading to tragedy.  What I found so interesting about this story is that the audience is clearly meant to sympathize with the workers who have given more than twenty years of their lives to a company that only cares about the bottom line but playwright Lynn Nottage also wants her protagonists to be held accountable for lashing out at the wrong people (Hispanics and African-Americans) instead of blaming corporate America.  This production is so well done and the ensemble cast is outstanding.  Every single character elicits sympathy and understanding even when expressing opposing viewpoints.  Almost all of the action takes place in one location and the choreography moving the characters in and out of the bar is very innovative.  The bar itself is fabulous with so much detail (I loved all of the sports pennants and neon signs for local beers).  I really enjoyed this production but it should be noted that there is an excessive amount of profanity (many people around me left at intermission) and there were several racial slurs that really upset me.  Sweat runs at PTC through April 13 (tickets may be purchased here).

Tuesday, April 2, 2019

The Mustang

Last night I had the chance to see The Mustang, a film that generated a lot of buzz at Sundance this year and rightly so!  It is a beautiful story about the redemption of a violent convict through his bond with a horse that is just as wild as he is.  Roman Coleman (Matthias Schoenaerts) has recently been transferred to a prison in Nevada after spending several years in isolation because of anger management issues.  A prison psychologist (Connie Britton) refers him to a rehabilitation program, run by the curmudgeonly Myles (Bruce Dern), in which convicts are used to train wild mustangs rounded up by the government to keep the population sustainable.  Successfully trained horses are sold at auction and unsuccessful ones are euthanized.  Myles pairs Roman with the wildest of the horses hoping that they will be able to tame each other (the resolution is beautiful but it might surprise you).  The more success he finds in the ring, the more Roman is able to make peace with himself and with his daughter (Gideon Adlon).  Schoenaerts gives an exceptional performance, one in which there is not a lot of dialogue but one in which body language and facial expressions show the full extent of Roman's pain.  He exudes a fury that is palpable which makes his transformation in the scene where he finally breaks down with his daughter all the more powerful.  The action is quite slow because the trust between Roman and the horse is developed very gradually, culminating in one of the most beautiful scenes in the film.  It is visually striking with the wide open spaces of the desert juxtaposed with the claustrophobic interiors of the prison.  I also really liked the score, especially a plaintive theme played by a guitar when Roman is in solitary confinement.  I was very moved by this film and I highly recommend seeking it out.

Monday, April 1, 2019

The Aftermath

I love books and movies about World War II.  I especially love romances set during World War II so as soon as I saw the trailer for The Aftermath I was almost giddy with anticipation for it to hit SLC theaters.  It finally reached my favorite art house theater this weekend and I had a chance to see it yesterday afternoon.  I really enjoyed it.  Colonel Lewis Morgan (Jason Clarke) is stationed in Hamburg with the British Forces tasked with rebuilding Germany at the end of the war.  He sends for his wife Rachael (Keira Knightley) to join him in a house requisitioned by the British government for their use.  Their reunion is chilly and it is slowly revealed that their son was killed during the Blitz and that they have never really resolved their feelings about his death.  Rachael is horrified when she learns that her husband has allowed the previous owners, Stefan Lubert (Alexander Skarsgard) and his teenage daughter Freda (Flora Thiemann), to remain in the house with them.  Both Rachael and Stefan resent each other's presence in the house and the atmosphere is incredibly charged. Lewis wants everything to go back to how it was before the war and is largely oblivious to the tension in the house as he deals with the tensions between the British Forces and the German citizens.  Eventually Rachael and Stefan bond over their love of music and they begin an affair.  This domestic betrayal mirrors a larger one leading to a dramatic confrontation.  It is a very standard story about a love triangle but what elevates it is the exploration of what happens when you have to live and work with someone who was once your enemy and about finding forgiveness for actions, large and small, committed during war.  I found it to be very compelling.  All three main actors give outstanding performances, especially Knightley during one particularly emotional scene.  Of course, the costumes and sets are exactly what you would expect in a historical drama and I was especially impressed with the overhead shots of the bombed out city.  If you have enjoyed other period pieces starring Keira Knightley (there are so many to choose from), I would recommend seeking this out.

Sunday, March 31, 2019

Dumbo

Last night I went to see Disney's remake of its animated classic Dumbo and, while I absolutely loved the flying baby elephant, I didn't love the movie.  Holt Farrier (Colin Farrell) returns to the Medici Brothers Circus after being wounded in World War I only to discover that the circus is in financial difficulty.  Max Medici (Danny DeVito), the ringmaster of the circus, has gambled on the purchase of Jumbo, a pregnant elephant, hoping that the novelty of a baby elephant will bring business.  He puts Farrier and his children Milly (Nico Parker) and Joe (Finley Hobbins) in charge of the elephants.  The baby, named Dumbo, is born with extremely large ears and is ridiculed during his first appearance in the ring causing Jumbo to go on a rampage.  Max is forced to sell Jumbo but Farrier's children discover that Dumbo can fly which brings business back to the circus.  This attracts the attention of the impresario V.A. Vandemere (Michael Keaton) who brings the circus to Dreamland, his elaborate amusement park, and has Dumbo perform with the aerialist Colette Marchant (Eva Green).  However, Dreamland is not all that it appears to be and the circus performers decide that they must rescue Dumbo and reunite him with his mother.  I found most of the acting in this movie to be flat and lifeless, especially the children.  Honestly, the CGI elephant is much more expressive than any of the actors and I absolutely loved Dumbo's character design, especially those big blue eyes.  I also found the story to be very convoluted with the addition of themes of corporate greed and animal cruelty to the simple story told in the original.  But, ironically, it is the simple story of a baby longing to be reunited with his mother that is the best part of this movie and I found the early scenes between Dumbo and Jumbo to be incredibly affecting.  I wish that they had stayed at the circus longer to develop that relationship more.  Once the action moves to Dreamland it becomes very bloated with thinly drawn characters and loses focus until the heartwarming ending between Dumbo and his mother.  Dumbo is just so adorable and endearing and his yearning for his mother is so poignant that I was willing to overlook its faults and I would recommend it.

Saturday, March 30, 2019

Fun at the Jazz Game

Tashena and I have been trying to get together for a Jazz game since January but with one thing or another we couldn't find a time that worked for both of us (she is so busy).  Since the regular season is ending soon (the Jazz have clinched a spot in the playoffs) I decided that I better get my act together and make it happen.  We went to the game last night and watched the Jazz play the Washington Wizards.  We always get to the arena early so that I can buy Tashena a shirt (this is tradition) and so we can get something to eat.  Because of the remodel of the Vivint arena there are so many great choices for dinner but I am partial to Hires (even though it is so expensive).  When the game started I mentioned to Tashena that I hoped the Jazz would win.  She answered, "Umm.  They're playing the Wizards!"  Apparently the Wizards don't have a very good record but they definitely gave the Jazz a run for their money and took the game to the final seconds which was a bit tense.  Tashena really likes Donovan Mitchell (whom she refers to as her husband) and he got an amazing breakaway to dramatically dunk the ball.  About halfway down the court he looked to see if anyone was close to him and got the biggest grin on his face when he saw that there wasn't!  Mitchell ended the night with 35 points to lead the Jazz to a 128-124 victory.  It was a great game but, honestly, I had such a good time just being with Tashena.  I haven't spent much time with her lately and I think we spent more time talking and laughing than we did watching the game.  She told me that I was embarrassing her about twenty times (mission accomplished), made fun of me for cheering every time Kyle Korver had the ball, and had me set up a Snapchat account so she could send me funny pictures!  It was such a fun night!  After the game she told me how glad she was that we were able to go!  I feel the same way!

Friday, March 29, 2019

Hotel Mumbai

Last night I went to a Thursday preview of Hotel Mumbai, the second movie starring Dev Patel this week (this is a good thing).  It is based on the 2008 attack of Mumbai where Muslim terrorists staged a coordinated attack on various locations throughout the city.  This movie focuses on the attack on the Taj, a luxury hotel where the guest is considered to be a god, and the heroism of the staff, who could have escaped through service exits, in trying to save as many guests as possible. Patel plays Arjun, a hotel waiter who is constantly berated by the head chef Hemnat Oberoi (Anupam Kher).  When the terrorists enter the hotel and shoot everyone in the lobby, both Arjun and Oberoi sequester a group of guests in the hotel restaurant, including Zahra (Nazanin Boniadi) and David (Armie Hammer) a socialite and her American husband, as well as Vasili (Jason Isaacs), a wealthy Russian businessman.  With Special Forces hours away in Delhi, they eventually realize that they will have to take matters into their own hands to save themselves and this involves many harrowing sequences as they try to elude the terrorists, especially when David attempts to go back to his room to rescue his infant son who is being cared for by a nanny (Tilda Cobham-Hervey).  This movie is intense and unrelenting.  The action sequences put the audience right in the middle of the attack but it is very graphic and there were times when I needed to look away.  There are also moments when the tension is almost unbearable, particularly when the nanny is hiding from a group of terrorists and trying to keep the baby quiet.  I sometimes wondered if the brutality was necessary but it highlights the incredible lengths to which the staff members go in order to keep their guests safe.  I was quite moved by their courage and heroism!  There is an incredibly poignant scene where a wealthy British guest asks that Arjun remove his turban because she thinks that he is also a terrorist and she is afraid of him.  Arjun, who is a Sikh, shows her pictures of his family and explains the religious significance of his turban which brings her to tears.  This moment of understanding during a terrorist attack motivated by hatred for those who are different makes this movie one of my favorites this year (Patel is brilliant in this scene).  I recommend it but it is difficult to watch.
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