Today’s Memorial Day Tributes on Television

Posted on May 28, 2012 at 10:00 am

Today’s tributes include:

A military movie marathon on TCM: “West Point,” “Germany Year Zero,” “PT 109,” “Darby’s Rangers,” “The Green Berets,” “Where Eagles Dare,” “The Guns of Navarone,” “The Dirty Dozen,” “The Bridge on the River Kwai,” “The Great Escape,” and “Kelly’s Heroes”

A Band of Brothers marathon on Spike TV.

On AMC: “Submarine Seahawk,” “Heartbreak Ridge,” “The Green Berets,” “Midway,” “Flags of Our Fathers”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7AZt-IUIhs
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Television

Coriolanus

Posted on May 28, 2012 at 9:00 am

B+
Lowest Recommended Age: High School
MPAA Rating: Rated R for some bloody violence
Profanity: Strong Elizabethan language
Alcohol/ Drugs: Drinking
Violence/ Scariness: Graphic battle violence, characters injured and killed
Diversity Issues: None
Date Released to Theaters: January 13, 2012
Date Released to DVD: May 28, 2012
Amazon.com ASIN: B0059XTUR2

Shakespeare’s play about a Roman general who survives battle only to take on the bigger battles of politics has been brought to screen by Ralph Fiennes, who directed and stars as the title character.  Contemporary costumes and weapons and Serbian locations underscore how little has changed in the 500 years since Shakespeare wrote the play and indeed in the more than 2000 years since the events depicted.

Caius Martius (Fiennes) is a general who returns home in triumph after defeating the Tarquins and rewarded by being given the new surname Coriolanus.  His fierce mother (Vanessa Redgrave in an incendiary performance) is proud and ambitious.  His wife (Jessica Chastain), is quietly devoted.  He calls her “my gracious silence.”  He is persuaded to go into politics, but his public statements come across as arrogant and ignorant.  He sees it as honesty and refusing to pander to the crowd but he is condemned as a traitor and exiled.  Furious, he goes to the other side, first offering to sacrifice himself and then joining forces to attack his own city.  Once again he faces the leader of the opposing forces (Gerard Butler).

Fiennes makes an impressive debut as a director, making good use of the locations to evoke the chaos of a war-torn world and its symbolism for what is most broken and bleakest inside the title character.  Redgrave matches his ferocity, helping us realize a depth of understanding for one of Shakespeare’s few lead tragic characters who never explains himself with asides or monologues.  Butler, as the antagonist who understands Coriolanus better than his family, his colleagues, and the political operators who want to use him, is the cracked mirror who provides the insight that Coriolanus fails to have for himself.  The single-mindedness and lack of introspection that served him — and Rome — so well as a general leave him defenseless when the war is over.

Parents should know that this film includes bloody battle violence with characters injured and killed.

Family discussion: What leaders in today’s world are most like Coriolanus?  Like those who encourage him to try politics?

If you like this, try: “Looking for Richard,” with Al Pacino working on a production of “Richard III.”

 

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Action/Adventure Based on a play DVD/Blu-Ray Pick of the Week War

Tonight: National Memorial Day Concert on PBS

Posted on May 27, 2012 at 6:51 pm

The National Memorial Day concert on the Capitol Building lawn will be broadcast tonight live on PBS.

The program will be co-hosted for the seventh year by Tony Award-winner Joe Mantegna (“Criminal Minds”) and Emmy Award-winner Gary Sinise (“CSI: New York”), two acclaimed actors who have dedicated themselves to veteran’s causes and supporting troops in active service. They will be joined by an all-star line-up including: distinguished American leader Colin L. Powell USA (Ret.); the multi-platinum rock band Daughtry; nine-time Grammy award-winner, singer and songwriter Natalie Cole; country music superstar Trace Adkins; “American Idol” finalist Jessica Sanchez; Emmy, Oscar and Tony award-winning actress Ellen Burstyn; Emmy and Golden Globe award-winning actor and Vietnam veteran Dennis Franz; celebrated film and television actress Selma Blair; and world renowned tenor Russell Watson; in performance with the National Symphony Orchestra under the direction of top pops conductor Jack Everly.

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Music Television

One Role: Two Actors

Posted on May 27, 2012 at 8:00 am

The Daily Beast was inspired by Josh Brolin’s spot on performance as the 1969-era version of the character played by Tommy Lee Jones in “Men in Black 3” to create a gallery of movies with two actors playing younger and older versions of the same character.  The most acclaimed are Robert De Niro and Marlon Brando as Don Corleone in the first and second Godfather movies.  I liked Ewan McGregor in Star Wars: The Prequel Trilogy but was never convinced he was the same character played by Alec Guiness in The Original Trilogy.  The one who comes closest to Brolin’s feat in replicating the older actor’s vocal patterns and movement was Rob Lowe, who nailed the young Robert Wagner in Goldmember.

It’s a cheat, but my favorite example is Peter O’Toole, who played the same historical character, the British King Henry II in 1964’s Becket and The Lion in Winter.

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Actors
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