Catching up on Movie Stuff....
In a post I made a few days ago, I had alluded to the fact that I had seen none of the movies nominated for the Best Picture Oscar, and only one of the twenty nominated acting performances. In an effort to not be totally ignorant while watching the Academy Awards show on Sunday night, Linda and I watched two of the Best Picture nominees over the weekend. These are going to be Quicky Capsule Reviews.
Three Stars from The Grandstander.
On the face of it, Sinners is not the kind of movie that appeals to me. I mean, there are vampires in it! However, the movie was nominated for sixteen Oscars, a record, everyone that we know who saw it simply raved about it, so we made it a point to see it, and after seeing it, all we could say was WOW. Simply a great movie, one that stays with you long after you see it. Michael B. Jordan plays a duel role as twin brothers, Smoke and Stack, who return to their home in the Mississippi delta - after being away for many years in Chicago, where they were involved in probably criminal activities - to open their own juke joint. In addition to booze and gambling, their joint is to feature authentic Mississippi Blues music. Some strangers, white Irish folks, show up and want to be a part of the scene. Smoke, or maybe it was Stack, resists, and these strangers then decide to make themselves a part of the scene anyway (this is where the vampires come in).
Yeah, yeah, vampires. Ridiculous, you say, and normally I would agree with you, but the way screenwriter and director Ryan Coogler tells the story, he won the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay, you buy into it completely. And the music! The blues music featured throughout the movie is simply terrific. It is as much a character in the movie as any of the actors.
By the way, all of this actors listed above are still one behind Kathrine Hepburn, who won four Oscars in her career.
Oh, and I promised you a book review, and I include it here because it its about the Movies.
As you can see from the subtitle of the book, it focuses on the rise of perhaps the three most prominent American film makers of the last fifty years, Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg, oh, and throw in a healthy dash of both Martin Scorsese and Brian De Palma, and you've got a book that movie lovers will thoroughly enjoy. Here is my take on the "stars" of the book. Spielberg comes across as the most normal and likeable, Lucas as odd, and Coppola as a total screwball in his we-have-to-do-this-my-way method of doing business. All are brilliant, but all of them are, shall we say, different than you and me.
The book is chockfull of stories about some of the greatest movies of our times: The Godfather, Jaws, Star Wars, American Graffiti, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Apocalypse Now, Taxi Driver, Raiders of The Lost Ark, and Raging BulI among others. I really enjoyed the book.
Three and One-Half Stars from The Grandstander.

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