101 Dalmatians: Behind the Scenes

Posted on February 9, 2015 at 8:00 am

The Pick of the Week is a Disney animation classic: 101 Dalmatians, which has a gorgeous new Diamond edition. For some behind-the scenes info about the film, check this out.

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Animation Behind the Scenes Classic For the Whole Family Movie Mom’s Top Picks for Families

Why “I Am the Walrus” is the Greatest Beatles Song Ever — According to Jon Friedman

Posted on February 8, 2015 at 4:10 pm

walrus smallMy publishing company, Miniver Press, is delighted to announce our newest ebook for Kindle, Goo Goo Ga Joob: Why “I Am the Walrus” is the Greatest Beatles Song of All Time, by Jon Friedman. Each of us has our favorite Beatles song, but Jon Friedman makes a convincing case for John Lennon’s twisted 4-minute and 36-second masterpiece, complete with its references to everything from Edgar Allen Poe to the Eiffel Tower — with a snippet of King Lear tossed in. iedman, the author of “Forget About Today: Bob Dylan’s Genius for (Re)Invention, Shunning the Naysayers, and Creating A Personal Revolution,” revels in the many mysteries and rewards of “I Am the Walrus.” What mysteries? OK — “everybody’s got one…everybody’s got one…everybody’s got one” WHAT? The author also puts the brilliance of “I Am the Walrus” into historic and cultural perspective. He notes that it, significantly, was the first Beatles recording following the death of their 32-year-old manager and close friend Brian Epstein, that it closed out The Beatles’ dabbling in psychedelia and that it presaged the band’s discontent with Abbey Road, their longtime studio.No matter what you pick as The Beatles’ No.1 song, you will enjoy reading this book — and you may even find yourself singing along to “I Am the Walrus” by the time you’ve reached the end.

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Books

The Jinx: HBO Series About a Millionaire Murderer

Posted on February 8, 2015 at 3:57 pm

Copyright 2015 HBO
Copyright 2015 HBO
Robert Durst, heir to a vast fortune from New York real estate, has had a life has been punctuated by tragedy. When he was seven years old, his mother was killed when she fell off the roof of their home, a possible suicide. He says he saw it happen, but as with much of what he says, it is not clear whether that is true. The other tragic deaths around him may have been murders he committed, though he has only admitted to one and for that one he was found not guilty by a jury.

Durst’s beautiful young wife, a medical student, disappeared in 1982, and her body has never been found. Eighteen years later, the case was reopened but the key witness was murdered. That case has never been solved. In 2000, Durst moved to Texas and began dressing as a woman, apparently not to transition but just as a disguise. The following year, his neighbor in Texas, an elderly man named Morris Black, was murdered, cut into pieces, and thrown into the bay. Durst, who was later found to have the neighbor’s drivers license, was tried for murder. He acknowledged that he had In 2003, used a paring knife, two saws and an axe to dismember Black’s body before dumping his remains in Galveston Bay, but said he had killed the man in self-defense. The jury found him not guilty.

The Jinx” is a new HBO documentary series from director Andrew Jarecki (“Capturing the Friedmans”) about the strange and murderous, probably multi-murderous, life of Durst, who was played by Ryan Gosling in All Good Things, also from Jarecki, who spoke to me about making the film. “If people say, ‘Why did you have her do that?’ We can say, ‘It actually happened.’ If they say, ‘It isn’t realistic,’ I say, ‘It happened. What’s your definition of realistic?’”

“The Jinx” is Jarecki’s documentary version of the story, with first-time interviews of Durst and his brother. It premieres tonight, February 8, 2015.

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Crime Documentary Television

Movies to Reconsider: Rogerebert.com’s “Unloved” Series

Posted on February 8, 2015 at 8:00 am

Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan make a great romantic movie team, don’t they? “You’ve Got Mail” and “Sleepless in Seattle” are two of the most popular romantic comedies of the 90’s. But hardly anyone loves — or even remembers — the third film they made together, the 1990 film “Joe Versus the Volcano,” written and directed by John Patrick Shanley, who also wrote one of the greatest romantic films of all time (“Moonstruck”) and the prestige drama “Doubt.” Ryan plays three different women who have encounters with Hanks’ character, a man with a fatal illness. It’s the subject of the latest in a wonderful “Unloved” series of tributes to neglected gems has by Scout Tafoya.

And over on Rogerebert.com Matt Zoller Seitz interviewed Shanley about the film.

Why did you decide to have all three significant women in Joe’s life be played by the same person, Meg Ryan?

I’ve found that many men and women, when dealing with different people, are always basically—in romantic situations—dealing with the one woman in their head that they’re struggling to get right, or the one man in their head they’re just struggling to get right. And I thought I could make that point very nicely by having three roles played by the same woman.

Might be time to give that movie another chance.

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