Monday, March 2, 2026
The Prince & Me
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Save the Last Dance
Year 18, Day 60 - 3/1/26 - Movie #5,260
BEFORE: February is over, but the romance chain still has a way to go - two more weeks at least. That damn Romance Groundhog saw his shadow this year, so we won't be ending this chain any time soon. Some more classics to get off the list, and maybe a couple of weird ones coming up in March. As promised, here are the actor links that will get me to the end of the romance chain: Julia Stiles, Miranda Richardson, Alfred Molina, Marisa Tomei, Claudia Wilkens, Amy Adams, Matthew Perry, Jon Tenney, Sean Bridgers, Jean Smart, Hayley Seat, Chris Pine, Lindsay Lohan, Jane Seymour and Parker Sawyers. I wish I could tell you what's going to happen after that but I can't, because I have no idea. I should probably work on that.
But I've finally gotten in sync with TCM's "31 Days of Oscar" programming, their topic today was "Oscar Goes Dancing" and my film today is about dancing, too. How about that? Now here's their line-up for tomorrow, March 2, which will be their Day 17, and the themes are "Oscar Goes on the Run" and "Oscar Goes a Few Rounds":
THE PLOT: A white midwestern girl moves from the Chicago suburbs to the city, where her new boyfriend is a black teen from the South Side with a rough, semi-criminal past.
AFTER: There's a reason I'm programming this film here, you know, this film has a reputation as a classic film made by MTV Films for the MTV generation, which is now officially OVER because the channel is going off the air after what, 45 years? Well, they had a good run, hell I still remember when all they played was music videos, and then a few years later, everything was a music video. But when the novelty wore off MTV turned to reality shows like "Teen Mom" and "Catfish" and now they only show music videos for 1 hour every week, the channel's programming has been absorbed into the giant sponge that is Paramount Plus ("One of US! "One of US!).
Well, in addition to the films "Election" and "Hustle & Flow", MTV Films also made THIS movie, about a white teen who dances ballet moving to Chicago and falling in love with a black classmate. This all comes about because Sara's mother died in a car crash and she was forced to move in with her father, who she barely knows, and he's a nightclub jazz musician in Chi-Town. Look, I'll be honest, this movie really isn't my thing, but it's bound to get some nominations for the Honky Awards at the end of this year, like "Best Romance (High School)" or "Best Romance (Inter-racial)" - yes, that's a category, and any other thing I notice that movies have in common on some level can be a category that I make up.
But a lot of this I just can't relate to, not the ballet stuff, not the hip-hop stuff, and I also never dated in high school, I waited for college to get started there. (So, yeah, it's my ex-wife's birthday, I'm not in touch with her but that doesn't mean I can't spare a thought for her today - also the Nets were playing the Cleveland Cavaliers, and my ex-in-laws lived near Cleveland.) There are so many other topics that this film touches on, like teen mothers, single mothers, dead mothers, then also gang-bangers, dance clubs, and dance tryouts. Interracial dating, infidelity, teen sex. To say this film is all over the place would be an understatement - I kind of wish there had been a little more focus, like maybe stop and think about what first and foremost a film should be ABOUT, and then realize that every thematic deviation from that is just kind of taking the film in a different direction, and you'll never get anywhere that way, at least I don't think so.
Sara starts having fights in gym class with Nikki, Derek's ex, and then Sara and Derek start getting it on, meanwhile Sara's father remains the most hands-off parent possible - maybe he just doesn't get bothered by much, I don't know. Derek and Sara also start dancing together, in a style that is a bit hip-hop and a bit ballet, and he convinces her to get back to her dream of studying dance at Juilliard, which she gave up after her mother died. Coincidentally, the people who audition ballet dancers for that school are coming to Chicago in about a month, so they agree to work out a routine for the "modern dance" portion of her interview. Perhaps this is the part she tanked the first time?
But Derek's friend Malakai, who is still involved in the gang lifestyle, pressures Derek to help him with a drive-by shooting, which takes place exactly when Sara's audition does, because of course, we need some kind of conflict, and Derek needs to make some kind of choice between his past and his future with Sara - don't forget he just got accepted to Georgetown, too, that university probably would not want to find out that the inner-city teen they just accepted is still causing mayhem in the streets. So Derek backs out of the gang shooting so he can be there for Sara, but really, he should have done that anyway, for his own college future's sake. OK, so we know Derek is going to Georgetown and quite probably Sara will be going to Juilliard, so with one in Washington DC and the other in NYC, what is the future for their relationship? Maddeningly, the film can't or won't tell us, so this all feels kind of unfinished, like the director just gave up halfway through and left it for the audience to figure out. I guess they made a sequel, but with a different cast and it seems that nobody watched it.
Directed by Thomas Carter (director of "Coach Carter")
Also starring Julia Stiles (last seen in "It's a Disaster"), Sean Patrick Thomas (last seen in "Till"), Kerry Washington (last seen in "The Six Triple Eight"), Fredro Starr (last seen in "Clockers"), Bianca Lawson (last seen in "Primary Colors"), Vince Green (last seen in "Hardball"), Garland Whitt (last seen in "Dolemite Is My Name"), Elisabeth Oas, Artel Great (last seen in "The Soloist"), Cory Stewart, Jennifer Anglin (last seen in "The Watcher"), Andrew Rothenberg (ditto), Dorothy Martin, Kim Tlusty, Felicia Fields (last seen in "Slice"), Ora Jones (last seen in "The Weather Man"), Tab Baker (last seen in "The Ice Harvest"), Kevin Reid, Mekdes Bruk, Ronnie Ray, Tai Davis (last seen in "Widows"), Karima Westbrook (last seen in "The Rum Diary"), Erica Hubbard, Whitney Powell, Brenda Pickleman (last seen in "U.S. Marshals"), Julie Greenberg, Anna Paskevska, Malaika Paul, Jennifer Echols (last seen in "Fathers' Day"), Ellie Weingardt, Safia Jalila
RATING: 4 out of 10 cafeteria lunch trays
Saturday, February 28, 2026
The House of Mirth
Year 18, Day 59 - 2/28/26 - Movie #5,259
BEFORE: It's the last day of February, so let's check the format stats for the month:
2 watched on Hulu: Cat Person, Good Luck to You Leo Grande
28 TOTAL
Elizabeth McGovern carries over from "The Wings of the Dove", and I'll post the links until St. Patrick's Day tomorrow. But first it's time to check the line-up for Day 17 of TCM's "31 Days of Oscar" programming, this is for Sunday, March 1, and the theme is "Oscar Goes Dancing". Hmm, that's going to fit right in with my film for tomorrow, I think:
I've seen seven of these 11, so that's good - "Swing Time" and everything after that, except for "The Red Shoes". Am I mistaken, or is there some actor linking going on here? Fred Astaire carries over from "Swing Time" to "Royal Wedding" and then "The Band Wagon", and Jane Powell carries over from "Royal Wedding" to "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers", and then Russ Tamblyn carries over from THAT film to "West Side Story". I think TCM made this same grouping of films a few years ago when they were doing a linking thing, and maybe just liked this order and wanted to repeat it? Anyway, I'm rising to 78 seen out of 189, which is 41.2% - my score went UP!
THE PLOT: A woman risks losing her chance of happiness with the only man she has ever loved.
AFTER: This story treads some of the same ground as "The Wings of the Dove", the two films are set around 1910 and are based on classic novels about class struggle, one written by Henry James and the other written by Edith Wharton. Wharton could be the female American version of Henry James, for all I know. Hell, they could the same person, for all I know. They both apparently excelled at writing about whatever the opposite of joy was, and of course one was European and the other American, so we've got every possible other thing carrying over as well - both films have a female lead character who has no way to improve her station unless she can get married to a richer guy, and she's having no luck with that. And in both stories the lead character is in a situation-ship with a man who has a job that doesn't make "enough" money - a reporter in the James book and a lawyer in this one.
Wait, there's more - in both cases the lead female is beholden to her aunt, who controls her financial reputation and gives her a small allowance. The difference comes when in "The Wings of The Dove" Kate takes action to try and get the money from a rich heiress's fortune and fails, and here Lily tries to get money in various other ways - by investing, by working in a millinery, and by inheriting money from her aunt, but nothing really works, except she DOES get $10,000 when her aunt dies, however it takes a long time to collect it, and Lily has outstanding gambling debts that need to be paid, so that inheritance is spent already, essentially. Supposedly she's going to get $9,000 of investment money from Gus Trenor, her friend Judy's husband, however after a night at the opera Gus reveals that this money is really his, he invested it on Lily's behalf, but he wants a little sumpin' sumpin' in return for that money, and Lily doesn't want to give it to him. OK, fine, but then he wants his $9,000 back.
That lawyer that Lily romances occasionally is Lawrence Selden, but he's got a couple other relationships going on, including an affair with Bertha Dorset, another one of Lily's friends. A random woman comes to Lily's door one day with love letters sent from Bertha to Selden, and Lily pays the woman $100. WHAT? I thought Lily was deep in debt, but she's got $100 to pay off a blackmailing stranger who found some love letters? She must really did this Selden guy, but how's he going to support a wife on a lawyer's salary? Again, WHAT? Were lawyers paid horribly back in 1910? These days lawyers tend to make a lot of money, but maybe things were different back then?
Still, Lily can't seem to catch a break - Simon Rosedale does propose to her, and he owns a bunch of fancy buildings, but Lily would seem to prefer to wait for her poor lawyer boyfriend to start making some bank. Bad move, Lily, you should have taken up Rosedale on his offer, you know what they say, "Buy land, they're not making any of it any more." Lily rejects Rosedale's proposal because reasons, and instead goes on a European cruise with the Dorsets. Sure, if you're short on cash, maybe a cruise will fix everything. Wait WHAT? HOW? She's just digging the hole deeper, isn't she? But she's desperate to get away from the bill collectors in New York. Very relatable.
On this yacht near Monte Carlo, Lily hangs out with George Dorset while Bertha seems to enjoy the company of a young poet. George freaks out one night when Lily doesn't make it back to the ship, and he accuses Lily of knowing about his wife's affair with this poet. Lily claims to know nothing, and when Bertha is confronted about it, she claims that Lily is having an affair with George. Sure, deny everything, admit nothing, then attack attack attack. Selden, meanwhile, arrives in Monte Carlo himself and starts hanging out with Carry Fisher, yet another friend of Lily's who seems to keep putting herself in-between Lily and any available bachelor. Man, it's rough out there, I suppose.
Fast forward a bit to New York, after the cruise, when Lily's aunt has died and the Dorsets are breaking up. Most of Lily's aunt's fortune goes to her cousin, Grace Stepney, and Lily is essentially homeless, but Carry Fisher invites her to stay with her at the Gormers' place. Again, Lily has two possible prospects for marriage, the divorced George Dorset, or Simon Rosedale, who proposed to her before and she turned him down. Well, she blows it with both of them, because George asks Lily for the truth about his wife's affairs, and she says she knows nothing (even though she BOUGHT those love letters from the blackmailer!) and then she offers to marry Rosedale, only now HE'S not into HER. Simon thinks Lily should use those letters to get Bertha to restore her social standing, but for some reason she won't.
Finally, Lily gets a J-O-B as a secretary and companion for socialite Mrs. Hatch, she needs the money, but working for a living isn't helping her social standing. What a commoner, working for a living. One of her responsibilities is to pick up Mrs. Hatch's sleeping medication, but Lily begins taking it herself to deal with all the troubles in her life. Mrs. Hatch breaks into society, but feels that keeping Lily employed would be a liability, so she fires her. Lily works that sewing job in a hat factory, but by now she's addicted to laudanum and doing a bad job. She tries to borrow money from Grace, her cousin who got most of her aunt's money, but is turned down.
It really doesn't make much sense here, but Lily burns the letters that Selden wrote to Bertha, letters which she could have somehow used to get either money or social status. Then she finally FINALLY gets her $10,000 of inheritance money, but she turns it right around and pays off Gus Trenor, so there goes most of the money, and remember she still has those gambling debts, too. But this is as close as she'll ever get to a blank slate, I suppose, so with the scales balanced, she overdoses and checks out. Selden figures out what she did for him and declares his love for her, just a bit too late.
I don't really understand why the title is "The House of Mirth", because there's really no mirth anywhere in this film. It's extremely depressing to have to watch this woman struggle to support herself and fail over and over again. It's relatable, but maybe a bit TOO relatable, especially if I have to dip into my savings account a little each month, just to finish paying my own bills. Maybe in Lily I see the need to improve my situation, coupled with the apparent inability to do so. Anyway, I base my score on how much I enjoyed a movie, and really there's no enjoyment here at all, either. Sorry.
Directed by Terence Davies
Also starring Gillian Anderson (last seen in "Boogie Woogie"), Eric Stoltz (last seen in "Brats"), Dan Aykroyd (last seen in "Dear Ms.: A Revolution in Print"), Anthony LaPaglia (last heard in "All-Star Superman"), Laura Linney (last seen in "Genius"), Terry Kinney (last seen in "Mile 22"), Eleanor Bron (last seen in "Iris"), Jodhi May (last seen in "Einstein and Eddington"), Penny Downie (last seen in "Breathe"), Pearce Quigley (last seen in "The Way Back"), Helen Coker (last seen in "Vanity Fair"), Mary MacLeod, Paul Venables (last seen in "Skyfall"), Serena Gordon (last seen in "GoldenEye"), Lorelei King (last seen in "Shining Through"), Linda Marlowe (last seen in "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy"), Anne Marie Timoney, Clare Higgins (last seen in "Bigger Than the Sky"), Ralph Riach (last seen in "Copying Beethoven"), Brian Pettifer (last seen in "Conspiracy"), Philippe De Grossouvre, Trevor Martin (last seen in "Othello"), David Ashton (last seen in "The Last King of Scotland"), Lesley Harcourt, Mark Dymond (last seen in "Die Another Day"), Pamela Dwyer, Kate Wooldridge, Graham Crammond, Roy Sampson (last seen in "Macbeth"), Alyxis Daly.
RATING: 3 out of 10 tableaux vivants
Friday, February 27, 2026
The Wings of the Dove
Year 18, Day 58 - 2/27/26 - Movie #5,258
BEFORE: It was a bit of a long road getting here, and I'm not even talking about this year's chain. This is one of the films that was on my old DVR, the one that crashed that I had to turn back in to the cable company, even though it was 75% full of movies. I lost over 45 movies that way, and some were easy to replace because they were still running on premium channels, but others were a bit rare and don't run very often, I think now there are maybe just 17 or 18 of those that I'm hoping get re-aired at some point. So I've been keeping an eye out for this one in the on-screen guide, but it hasn't popped up in the last year. I programmed it anyway, because it turned out this February to be one of those films that can serve as a valuable link to keep the chain going and make the connections between other films. So Ben Miles carries over from "Imagine Me & You" and this gets me one step closer to the end of the month.
I got lucky with "Much Ado About Nothing", PBS aired it on a Saturday night about five days before I had it programmed - but I couldn't expect to get lucky like that twice this month. So I relegated myself to watching this on YouTube or iTunes and paying $1.99 or $2.99 for that, but I did get "lucky" of a sort in that this was available on Pluto TV, so I could watch it without paying for it, I just had to endure a few commercials and the occasional unexplained sudden jump to the middle of the movie "Mo' Money" or an episode of "NCIS". (Jeez, this movie is really hard to follow, this Victorian romance has suddenly turned into a crime show...). Anyway, I soldiered through and now I can move this film from the list of films I lost that need to be replaced to the list of films I've seen, but don't have a digital copy of. So I'm still on the hunt for it, but there's no pressure or urgency to find it.
Let's get to the Day 16 line-up for TCM's "31 Days of Oscar" programming, this is for Saturday, February 28 and the theme is "Oscar Goes West". Well, I've seen a lot of Westerns, so here's hoping:
I think I've only seen four of these - "Stagecoach", "Shane", "McCabe & Mrs. Miller" and "The Wild Bunch", I guess that makes me a poser, I haven't seen most of the older ones. But I think I need to record "How the West Was Won", I've been putting it off for years and it's overdue. Now I just have to remember to set the DVR. This brings me up to 71 seen out of 178, which is 39.8% and I'm back down below the 40% benchmark.
THE PLOT: A woman who has been forced to choose between a privileged life with her wealthy aunt and her journalist lover befriends an American heiress. When she learns the heiress is attracted to her own lover and is dying, she sees a chance to have both the life she cannot give up and the lover she cannot live without.
AFTER: The topic of relationships and romances is a hefty one - February is coming to an end but my chain is scheduled to drag into March, past St. Patrick's Day even. That's fine, the list of romance-themed films is so long that the more movies I can take off the list, the better. At the same time, I need to leave enough films ON the list, and the RIGHT films, so I can still put a chain together next year, God willing. Hey, if I can't, I can just do a short one and devote half of February to Black History films, there's always that option. But usually enough films that fit the theme come on the list between April and December, giving me enough to work with. But this year I also took care to choose some films that have been taking up space for a LONG time, like "Cousins", "Roger Dodger", and today's film. Films from the 1990's, they've got to GO, I can't put them off another year, this is like clearance sale time.
With "The Wings of the Dove", there was this bit of a feeling, and it's not uncommon for me, to think, "Well, this film came out in 1997, surely I must have seen it then, or shortly thereafter, right? Well, I had no proof of that, because I only started rating films on IMDB in 2009, and so anything that's rated there when I sign in, I can confirm I've seen. Before that some things get a little hazy, because I'm 57 now, I can't be expected to remember every film I saw when I was in my 20's or 30's - my memory can't really be trusted, but you know, I might have seen "Much Ado About Nothing" before, but if I did, the plot sure didn't stick in my memory, and when I started watching it this week, I did NOT get that feeling of "Oh, wait, I've seen this one..." and I have to trust my gut sometimes. I also bought a lot of DVDs in the 1990's and a bunch of VHS tapes before that, so if I don't OWN a copy, that's another good sign that I haven't seen that film. Then once I started burning my own DVDs in 2004, I kept a database of everything I dubbed and burned, so if a film's not on that spreadsheet, chances are I haven't seen it.
I double-checked and triple-checked, so I'm 99% sure I have not seen "The Wings of the Dove" before. I didn't know one thing about the plot, I didn't get that deja vu feeling when I started watching it, and it's not in the database, it's not rated on IMDB, and I don't have a copy on the shelf. Great, because it's exactly the film I need to connect to the next film and close out the month. What a relief, I don't have to scramble at the last minute and find something to replace it. Also, it kind of fits in with the other films this week, going back to "Love Again" there's been a bit of a common thread about deception, like Rob not telling Mira he's been getting the texts she was sending to her dead boyfriend, or the couple in "Love Punch" pretending to be Texan-Americans in order to steal a diamond. Don John causing Claudio to think that Hero was being unfaithful, or Rachel not telling her husband that she had feelings for Luce. That all works for me, having a theme for the week is always great. I mean, it can't be "Classics Week" if we only have one Shakespeare play and one Henry James novel, even if tomorrow is based on another classic book, that doesn't fill up the week.
Anyway, the deception here in today's film involves Kate Croy setting up a rich American heiress with her own boyfriend, with the idea that if they should marry, he will inherit her money when she dies, and apparently she's got some kind of fatal illness that they couldn't cure back then. The film is set in 1910, when apparently everyone in London was hurting for money and desperate to not lose their castles or estates. To be fair, the wartime economy wouldn't hit for another couple of years, and larger families were still the norm, so if you weren't the first-born son you probably didn't inherit much, and you had to live in the smaller castle or (god forbid) the guest house on the manor. And that's it you were a man, for women it was even tougher, because it's not like a woman could hold a JOB or anything, heaven forbid, they were much too fragile then. JK, down with the patriarchy.
Kate lives with her aunt Maud, who controls the family fortune, so Kate can't marry her lover Merton, a lowly journalist, because he doesn't meet Maud's standards. Maud would rather set Kate up with Lord Mark. Kate keeps seeing Merton secretly, however, and Merton begs her to leave her aunt and move in with him, but then she'd be cut off and they'd both be poor. Kate also learns that Maud is supporting her father by sending him a few shillings each week, and if she were to run off with Merton, Maud would also stop doing that, so for the sake of her father and to not be poor herself, Kate breaks up with Merton.
A few months later, American heiress Milly comes through town, and forms a friendship with Kate, she even suggests that Kate come with her to her next stop, Venice. Lord Mark turns his attention to Milly because he's also running out of money, and if he were to marry Milly, that would vastly improve his situation. Lord Mark also reveals to Kate that Milly is very sick, and at this point Kate's gotten back together with Merton, so she hatches a plan to go to Venice with Milly, and since Milly seems to enjoy Merton's company, bring him along so that Milly will fall in love with him and leave her money to him when she passes.
However, Kate didn't plan on becoming jealous when watching Milly and Merton together. Kate lures Merton away one night to have sex with him, but Milly somehow suspects something, so Kate decides she needs to leave them together in Venice but return to London herself. The plan is going well until Lord Mark shows up and reveals the scheme to Milly - Kate must have told Lord Mark, but why? Milly still prefers Merton to Lord Mark, even after she knows about the plan, so it seems that without Kate around, the love between Merton and Milly became much more real, and you know, that can happen. But still Milly dies and leaves her money to Merton, so the plan worked, at least at first glance.
It all gets wrecked after the funeral, when Kate comes back to Merton's apartment and confirms that Milly did leave him a large amount of money. But Merton says he won't take the money, and if Kate wants to be with him, she must marry him without the money. Kate agrees to this, but only if Merton can tell her that he's not still in love with the memory of Milly. Which of course he is, the fake love became real love and so Kate learns that her scheme has completely backfired. Now she can't have the money and she can't have Merton, not the way she wants him, anyway. I think we can assume Kate thought that once Milly died and Merton had some money, either he'd be a more respectable husband that Maud would approve of, or at least he could support Kate if Maud didn't approve.
This is sort of reminiscent of that O. Henry story where the man buys his wife beautiful combs and she busy him a beautiful chain for his watch - only he sold his watch to buy her the combs and she sold her hair to buy him the chain. Nobody gets what they want - but at least here this happens to people who deserve it, it's bad karma coming back at them for trying to swindle Milly out of her money.
Well, I guess it's not a total loss, I mean Merton still has his newspaper job, he'll probably be very busy once World War I breaks out - and Kate has still got a chance at getting money from her Aunt Maud, if she's willing to marry the right man and make his life miserable and very long. And maybe they both learned a lesson about not swindling Americans out of their money, it only leads to everybody being unhappy.
Directed by Iain Softley (director of "Hackers" and "Inkheart")
Also starring Helena Bonham Carter (last seen in "Enola Holmes 2"), Alison Elliott (last seen in "The Phenom"), Linus Roache (last seen in "The Namesake"), Elizabeth McGovern (last seen in "A Shock to the System"), Charlotte Rampling (last seen in "Cleanskin"), Michael Gambon (last seen in "King of Thieves"), Alex Jennings (last seen in "The Phoenician Scheme"), Philip Wright, Alexander John (last seen in "Sense and Sensibility"), Shirley Chantrell (last seen in "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider - The Cradle of Life"), Diana Kent (last seen in "Star Wars: Episode IX - The Rise of Skywalker"), Georgio Serafini, Rachele Crisafulli,
RATING: 6 out of 10 pornographic etchings in the back of the bookstore
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Imagine Me & You
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Much Ado About Nothing (1993)
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Good Luck to You, Leo Grande
Year 18, Day 55 - 2/24/26 - Movie #5,255
BEFORE: After the previous snowstorm that hit the tri-state area, we lost power in several rooms for a few days - now we've been hit with an even bigger storm and so far we've kept our power, but we lost our internet and cable. Whose bright idea was it to have those two things come from the same provider? I can't continue to do this without both cable AND internet, I mean I could watch the movies that are already in my possession and on the non-popular DVD format, but the chain often needs streaming if it's going to continue. Also, the DVR I have won't even access the movies that it already recorded unless the entire system is working, someone really should be fired for designing a system that bad. I mean the movie is THERE, recorded on THIS device right in front of me, and I can't watch it because of an outage? That's an epic design flaw, right? I should at least be able to turn the unit on and watch the digital files on it while the main system is down, but that's not where we find ourselves. If my internet is down, I can still listen to all my music via iTunes, because all the files live on my computer. Just saying.
Emma Thompson carries over from "The Love Punch", and she'll be here tomorrow, too, at which point we're going to be faced with an 8-way tie of actors with four appearances, so that means there's no clear leader this year, we'll have to wait to see if any of them pop up frequently during the Doc Block - probably Bill Murray, given the way things are going with my documentary field tests.
Here's the line-up for Day 13 of TCM's "31 Days of Oscar", for Wednesday, 2/25. The two themes are "Oscar Goes Back for Even More (Remakes)" and "Oscar Goes to Church". Oh, great...
4:00 pm "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" (1941)
3:15 am "The Shoes of the Fisherman" (1968)
THE PLOT: A retired school teacher is yearning for some adventure, and some sex. She has a plan, which involves hiring a young sex worker named Leo Grande.
AFTER: Well, this is a twist on the typical person-hires-sex-worker or "hooker with a heart of gold" movies, because it features a woman hiring the services of a male prostitute. (Is "sex worker" really better than "prostitute"? I'm not sure...) The circumstances dictate that this is an older woman, someone who has not had sex in a long while, not since her husband died, anyway, and even before that, the sex wasn't that great, you know, because they were married a long time ago, things were different back then, also, they were British, so that's like a triple whammy of bad sex, I guess.
"Nancy" (not her real name) is very nervous in her first encounter with Leo, and then the second time they get together, she's more clinical, as in she's got a checklist of sexual things she's never done that she wants to get to. Well, sure, if you take away the romantic part then it's just a series of specific actions, positions to try and boxes to tick, err, so to speak. But that's taking all the fun out of it, isn't it? Leo understands this and tries to get Nancy where she wants to go, but by using dancing to music, and touching, and asking questions about her life, not just letting her try oral sex on a guy with no build-up.
If it's a bit cliché to depict an older British woman who never had an orgasm during sex with her husband, it's even more cliché to assume that someone is doing sex work because they failed at everything else, or because they were screwed up sexually in the past and are working through some things. Yet the latter is also where we find ourselves, obviously "Leo Grande" isn't this guy's real name either, but when Nancy does a little cyber-sleuthing in-between their encounters and figures out his real name, that's like a betrayal, a definite no-no in this relationship, which was supposed to be somewhat professional and also completely anonymous.
The tables get turned during their final meeting, because Becky, the waitress in the hotel cafe, recognizes Nancy as her former R.E. teacher back in high school. I had to look that one up - "R.E." stands for "Religious Education" and apparently that's a part of the curriculum in the U.K., since they don't have the same separation of church and state as we do, the government runs the Anglican church and so it's worked right into the school system. Parents can apparently opt their students out of R.E. but probably very few people do. Anyway the waitress obviously knows Nancy's real name, and then Nancy feels the need to apologize to Becky, for telling her that it was wrong for girls to dress like sluts and to behave morally upright at all times. Well, Nancy never really knew that she was going to hire a sex worker in the future, did she?
Despite a few bumps in the road, these encounters do change both participants for the better - Nancy still has some way to go on her sexual journey, but Leo has proven that the journey is worth taking - and even though Leo didn't want Nancy's help or advice when it came to re-connecting with his family, he does reveal at the end that he has been in touch with his brother, although not his mother, who basically has disowned him. This turned out to be a very simple story, but you know, sometimes all you need to make a movie is two actors and a hotel room.
This film premiered at Sundance in 2022, which of course is a January thing, and then it was nominated for four BAFTAs, which I think is a February thing - so very seasonally timely. A couple of the later sex scenes reminded me of the one Emma Thompson did in a movie called "The Tall Guy" with Jeff Goldblum back in the day - of course, in that one an upright piano was involved. I guess maybe it was just that the same actress held her arms above her head the same way while she was having a certain kind of sex...
Directed by Sophie Hyde
Also starring Daryl McCormack (last seen in "Twisters"), Isabella Laughland (last seen in "Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool"), Les Mabaleka, Lennie Beare, Carina Lopes, Charlotte Ware.
RATING: 6 out of 10 school essays copied from Wikipedia
