Trailer: Paranoia with Harrison Ford and Liam Hemsworth
Posted on June 9, 2013 at 8:00 am
I’m a big fan of Joseph Finder, thriller-writer superstar, and this movie version of his book Paranoia looks terrific!
Posted on June 9, 2013 at 8:00 am
I’m a big fan of Joseph Finder, thriller-writer superstar, and this movie version of his book Paranoia looks terrific!
Posted on June 8, 2013 at 4:35 pm
How could I throw away a promising acting career for the monastic life of a cloistered nun?
I left the world I knew in order to reenter it on a more profound level. Many people don’t understand the difference between a vocation and your own idea about something. A vocation is a call—one you don’t necessarily want. The only thing I ever wanted to be was an actress. But I was called by God.
Mother Prioress Dolores Hart in the Preface to The Ear of the Heart
Delores Hart was one of the most successful young actresses of the early 1960’s. She starred in ten movies, with directors like George Cukor and Michael Curtiz, co-starring with George Hamilton, Montgomery Clift, and Elvis Presley. She appeared on Broadway and starred in the classic “Where the Boys Are.” And then she walked away from Hollywood and her fiancé to become a nun, joining the Abbey of Regina Laudis in Connecticut, a community of contemplative Benedictine women dedicated to the praise of God through prayer and work. The nuns of the abbey chant the Mass and full Divine office each day, while expressing the traditional Benedictine commitment to manual work and scholarship through various contemporary media and professional disciplines. The mission to praise God at all times is symbolized by the lyre on the abbey’s crest and by our motto, taken from the book of Judith – Non recedat laus: “Let praise never cease!”
Last year, a documentary about her called “God is the Bigger Elvis” was nominated for an Oscar. Now she has written a book about her life called The Ear of the Heart. It was a great honor to speak with her about her life and her book, and I was deeply touched by her open-hearted generosity of spirit. She speaks quietly, but she still has that lovely voice that was so captivating in her films.
She talked about how being in one place, with the same routine and the same people, can expand the spirit. “You have to start with how one perceives the world, reality. You can be in the same place, a place that is given for hospitality, for prayer, for finding God. Change comes because there is a mentality of looking for something different that will interest them, that will be more real — a new bauble, a new place to eat. But in a monastery, the continuity is such a blessing. You are going to the same place every day, sitting with the same people. The changes are the inner light of a person’s experience. The inner grasp of what life means. Every day you meet a new dimension — it may be the same person but you meet a new aspect of them.”
She quoted St. Teresa, who said that “prayer is the light of love between persons. God is love. Therefore, wherever you find God, you find the human experience of God. That’s why I carry my camera,” she said. She wanted to bring back to the convent the place and people she saw on her travels. She laughed when I asked her if nuns were funny. “A sense of humor is the top-notch gift for nuns. They always have a new take on something. You don’t have to be ugly or mean or dirty to have a funny sense of humor. The capacity to see the elements of humor in life itself. Finding the humor in life itself is what is funny.”
She spoke very warmly of Elvis. “I was 18 and he was 20 when we first worked together in “King Creole,” she said. He had so many fans that they had to say inside the hotel. He would take out the Gideon Bible and ask her what she thought about different passages. After she decided to become a nun he called to tell her he supported her choice and he continued to send greetings to her through a mutual friend who wrote to her regularly. “I did not have an in-depth relationship with him. We were too young. He wanted to be a really good actor. He wanted to be like James Dean. But Colonel Parker wanted the moola.” I told her of my fondness for the movie “Come to the Stable,” with Loretta Young and Celeste Holm as nuns. She told me that movie is inspired by the true story behind her order, and that Celeste Holm came to speak at the convent not long before she died.
She studied with two of the greatest acting teachers of the 20th century, Sanford Meisner and Uta Hagen. Their advice, to find the truth and be true to yourself, was important for acting and for life.
She was surprised and happy that people still know her films. “It was like I was moving completely out of any relationship with the movies,” she said. She never anticipated the technology — or the interest. “The experience of living in a monastic community allows you to see that every single moment is all you’ve got.”
Posted on June 7, 2013 at 11:20 pm
The Broadcast Film Critics awards for television will be given out on the Reelz Channel on June 16. Viewers will decide the winner of the best TV moment award. Was it the finale of “The Office?” The sad death on “Downton Abbey?” Daenereys’ dragon on “Game of Thrones?” The reveal — finally — of the mother Ted will be meeting — finally — on “How I Met Your Mother?” Cast your vote for the one you think deserves to win.
Posted on June 7, 2013 at 3:53 pm
Coming in September, produced by Martin Scorsese and directed by Luc Besson.
Posted on June 6, 2013 at 6:00 pm
Co-writer and star Vince Vaughn brings us what is basically a remake of his “Old School,” a sort of “Revenge of the Un-Nerds” with a little “Legally Blonde,” and a lot from pretty much every story about a group of assorted losers who show the cool kids how it’s done.
Vaughn and his “Wedding Crashers” bro-star Owen Wilson play Billy and Nick, best pals and partners in selling the ultimate in old-school technology, luxury watches. When their company goes under — even the receptionist uses her phone to check the time — it is clear that even the ability to “sell prosciutto to a rabbi,” remembering to compliment the buyer on his daughter’s gymnastics achievements, and a “Get Psyched ” mix with fist-pumping sing-alongs to Alanis Morrisette is no longer a sustainable business model.
It is also clear, with an Adam Sandler-esque notion that any mention of pop culture between 1980-95 is automatically endearing and funny, a complete waste of John Goodman and Will Ferrell, and a dumb joke about a child’s weight that no one is shooting very high, here. It has a numbingly predictable comeback-setback-comeback structure. But as dumb fun, it’s not too bad.
To the surprise of no one who has seen the title, our good-natured but immature watch salesmen apply for the intensely competitive internships at Google. To the surprise of no one who knows anything about the control freaks at Google or the concessions one must make to use the logo and setting of a real-life corporation, Google is portrayed very, very favorably. And to the surprise of anyone who’s ever seen a movie before, Billy and Nick prove themselves to be completely clueless losers but then, when they are put on the team of outcasts, their team spirit and oddball skills will save the day. Even if you haven’t, the English accent of the arrogant bad guy (nicely icy Max Minghella) is kind of a giveaway.
It is all pretty tired, with its fat jokes and crotch hits, and “Flashdance” pep-talks. Then there is an extended portrayal of a drunken visit to a pole-dancing club with lap-dances (three separate shots of the nerd-boy frantically trying to use the hand-dyer on the crotch of his pants) as the ultimate signifier of liberation and empowerment. And really, when will they notice that women can be funny, too? Rose Byrne, so magnificent in “Bridesmaids,” is relegated to the “hyper-competent girl who needs to slow down and enjoy life” role. Vaughn has made a movie about having the courage to adapt to change that is itself stuck in the 90’s. What word would Alanis Morrisette use about that?
Parents should know that this film includes very crude and raunchy humor, strong and vulgar language and explicit sexual references, pole dancers, lap dancing, drinking and drunkenness (portrayed as liberating), and drug humor.
Family discussion: What would be your answer to the blender question? Ask the people in your family about their toughest job interviews.
If you like this, try: “Old School” and “Legally Blonde”