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Resurrecting the Movies thread...

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serious crayons:

--- Quote from: Front-Ranger on September 10, 2010, 04:19:34 pm ---Another thing that was a thrill when I watched Eat Pray Love was hearing two (2!) Neil Young songs!! One was Heart of Gold. I don't recall which of the hundreds of worthy Young songs was the other. They didn't seem dated at all.
--- End quote ---

The other song was "Harvest Moon." I watched about half an hour of EPL when my son and I went to the theater together, saw different movies, and mine got out earlier.

I agree that Neil Young's music has remained remarkably undated. And of all the '60s rock musicians who are still working, Neil is the one who seems to have remained most relevant and with-it over the years.

Front-Ranger:
I saw Cairo Time tonight. A very appealing movie and Patricia Clarkson was wonderful in it. I haven't seen her often before but I loved her in Pieces of April a couple of years ago as a woman recovering from cancer. In this movie, the theme is much like I Am Love except in Egypt rather than Italy. Clarkson plays a woman who travels to Cairo to have a vacation with her husband, who works there. But when she arrives, her husband is away on business in Gaza, and sends a friend to host her until he can get back. Clarkson is entranced by the culture and timeless aura of Cairo and its people. I highly recommend it!

oilgun:

I'm finally watching this amazing Austrian film that I've read so much about.  It rates a well deserved 96% at Rotten Tomatoes.  Why it didn't win the Oscar for best foreign film is beyond me. One of the best films I've seen in quite a while, a must see!
 

from Roger Ebert's review:
How often, after seeing a thriller, do you continue to think about the lives of its characters? If you open up most of them, it’s like looking inside a wristwatch. Opening this one is like heart surgery.

http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090805/REVIEWS/908069995

Front-Ranger:

--- Quote from: serious crayons on September 10, 2010, 04:27:36 pm ---The other song was "Harvest Moon." I watched about half an hour of EPL when my son and I went to the theater together, saw different movies, and mine got out earlier.

I agree that Neil Young's music has remained remarkably undated. And of all the '60s rock musicians who are still working, Neil is the one who seems to have remained most relevant and with-it over the years.

--- End quote ---

Harvest Moon was covered by a chanteuse and Garrison Keillor on A Prairie Home Companion this past weekend. I liked it even better than when Neil sang it!

oilgun:

A privileged Montreal teen believes he’s the reincarnation of Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky and acts accordingly in high-concept teen comedy The Trotsky, from Canadian writer-director Jacob Tierney (Twist).

Sharing his radical hero’s birth name, Leon Bronstein (Jay Baruchel) keeps a bright red checklist in his bedroom that outlines his destiny. It includes ‘get exiled (twice), marry an older woman (preferably named Alexandra) and get assassinated (hopefully somewhere warm).’

After Leon organizes a hunger strike at his father’s garment factory, his capitalist père (Saul Rubinek) cuts off funds for private school. Enrolling at a public high school for his senior year, Leon brings new meaning to the words ‘student union’ – and conceives a social-justice theme for the school prom.

While fighting fascism as embodied by detention-dispensing Mrs. Davis (Domini Blythe) and dictatorial principal Berkhoff (Colm Feore), Leon must also battle student apathy among his peers, who’ve never heard of collective action. As his antics get him in trouble with the law, he meets retired activist turned disillusioned McGill professor Frank (Michael Murphy) and his gorgeous former student – named Alexandra, natch (Emily Hampshire) – who is the requisite nine years older than Leon.


A funny and very sweet film.  Jay Baruchel is hilarious and charming.  I laughed out loud several times. He has a recurring dream in which he's the baby in the famous baby-carriage-rolling-down-the-steps scene from Battleship Potemkin, lol!

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