Kallie Cam - Fünf
2012-Jan-13, Friday 10:42 amFilm Log - Princess Tutu
2011-Aug-02, Tuesday 12:37 pmTitle: Princess Tutu
Year: 2002-2003
Rating: Full
Category: Magical Girl /Classic Fairy Tale / Ballet
Viewed On: August 2, 2011
Opinions: OK… I’m not going to lie. When I started watching this… I just wasn’t sure. I mean, it starts off really weird…you keep asking ‘why is this like this’ and ‘why is that like that’ and ‘wait, is she a duck or a girl or…and who’s the ghost guy?....what is going on!’ But as you watch the episodes, you get more and more captivated, and you realize that eventually the questions will be answered, so you should just watch and enjoy. In the end, it becomes heart-felt and wonderful and the parts that seemed the weirdest become the parts your most fond of. Duck teaches us a very valuable lesson too. That it’s okay to be yourself… even if it’s not exactly what you wish you were, it’s the only you there is.
Film Log - The Green Lantern
2011-Jun-24, Friday 12:40 pmYear: 2011
Rating: Full
Category: Comic Book Movie – DC Universe
Viewed On: June 24, 2011
Opinions: As with most of these comic book adaptations, a few things are changed. But in this case most of the changes only enhance the story. Hal Jordan is the essence of humanity, struggling at the place between striving for fearlessness & struggling with the true meaning of courage. The movie is very captivating with no low spots which cause attention spans to waver. The fantastical elements of the story are stunningly portrayed yet very realistic. As adaptations go, it's true to its source material and does very well as a stand-alone movie. I look forward to any sequels that may come from this :)
Film Log - The Way We Were
2011-Jun-08, Wednesday 12:41 pmRating: New
Category: Rom-Drama
Viewed On: June 8, 2011
Opinions: While I enjoy watching Robert Redford on the screen as much as any other gal, this movie wasn’t really worth watching. Seriously. Barbara Streisand's character is fairly annoying really. She’s very opinionated and very loud about it. Rob’s character is her opposite. Whereas Barb’s character for everything and struggles for it, he is laid back and easily capable of achieving what he wants. They’re opposite but they attract even if by accident. And even though they’re good together at times it never lasts. So they split… The End. Big whoop. If I wanted to watch relationship fail, I’d watch the Kardashians.
Peach Girl
2011-Jun-07, Tuesday 12:46 pmSeason 1, Disc 1
Viewed On: 2011, June 7
Film Category: Anime / Ordinary-HighSchool-Romantic-Drama
Opinions & Memorable Moments: Momo kicking bully ass was a great moment.
In this anime we see our protagonist Momo Adachi, a tan girl with red-blond hair (through no fault of her own, she has Ganguro looks). Her nemesis Sae Kashiwagi is a jealous conniving girl who dumps all over Momo’s opinions about clothes, bags, make-up, etc and then copies her. Momo realizes that any time she tells Sae about something she wants, Sae will go after whatever it is. Including guys. When Sae presses Momo about the guy that she likes, Momo tells her that she likes Kairi Okayasu - a popular playboy, who Momo finds attractive but she thinks she doesn’t have a chance with - instead of the guy that she really likes - her long-time crush - Tojigamori Kazuya “Toji”. Sae goes after Kairi immediately after Momo tells her this, but she gets rejected because Kairi knows she’s that type of girl. This wouldn’t be much of a blip on the radar if Kairi didn’t admit that he had noticed and liked Momo… on the next day of school, someone’s written Kairi and Momo’s name on the board under a heart, suggesting they are an item… which causes Kairi’s fangirls to go after Momo. They make the mistake of pushing too hard, and right when she’s about to kick some serious ass, Kairi makes an appearance from the sidelines…cheering for the fight. So, Momo goes to the source of the problem, smacking Kairi. Kairi then reveals that he’s the one who spread the rumor around school that they were together. When Momo confront Kairi about it, he tells her that they have kissed… when she gave him CPR. Two years ago at the beach, Kairi nearly drowned and Momo was a life guard on duty. Momo tells him that it was, in fact, the male lifeguard that gave him CPR. Despite his horror, Momo says that they have to stop the rumor from going around… to which Kairi says the only way to do that is to make it a fact. He takes advantage of Momo being stunned and kisses her. Despite her (eventual) protests, he maintains that if they are going out then no one can accuse her of being a slut. However, Momo finds him a bothersome pox and repeatedly refuses his advances… Toji has a conversation with Kairi to the point of ‘leave her alone if you’re just playing around’, to which Kairi replies that he’s not just messing around. Toji overhears Momo telling Kairi that she doesn’t want his attention because she’s liked Toji since Jr. High. Later, Toji tells Momo that he overheard that and that he likes her too. At this point, realizing that Momo likes Toji and not Kairi, Sae shifts her focus onto Toji… and oh the chaos that ensues.
If this is really what High School is like…then I’m so glad that I was home schooled -..-
Still, I have to say I find it amusing if not slightly intriguing. Momo is easy to identify with. People see her and make assumptions that are false. She’s fairly insecure, which most girls are deep down (even if it’s about something small). But she’s determined and doesn’t take crap from others… to a certain extent.
Unfortunately for Momo, Toji is fairly dense, not to mention stubborn, and he tends to believe the things that Sae tells him instead of Momo…
Sae is basically Momo’s foil. Where Momo is athletic, tan and fair haired, Sae is petite, fair skinned with dark hair. Also, where Momo is direct, Sae is deviously secretive. She’s a quick thinker, managing to achieve most of her goals even when she’s on the spot…but, she’s a horrible person.
At this point, my favorite character is Kairi. Even though he’s known as a play-boy, he doesn’t seem to actually like that status. Also, he’s very fun and affectionate… and though it can come off as though he’s just fooling around, I seriously doubt it. He’s also very persistent and unlike most people he seems very perceptive. He could see through Sae’s facade, not to mention he realizes that Momo isn’t the slut that everyone assumes she is. I secretly hope that Momo gives up on Toji and ends up with Kairi :3
Disc 1 is full of drama and ups and downs… and even though I’m not a fan of high school dramas when… it is mildly entertaining. I have a hard time understanding Sae. Honestly, it seems like she lives only to cause Momo misery. That could be because she’s wrapped up in her own insecurity and uses everything else as a smoke screen. Toji is infuriating and he really doesn’t deserve Momo as far as I’m concerned :| The anime itself is beautiful, graphics wise. The detail on the characters is really superb. Even if the story is pretty old and predictable...Then again, with a subtitle name like "Super Pop Love Hurricane" ... I guess you can't expect too much.
This certainly isn’t an anime worth owning, but I will be adding the rest of the season to my Netflix queue.
Film Log - Believe: the Eddie Izzard Story
2011-May-30, Monday 12:48 pmTitle: Believe: the Eddie Izzard Story
Year: 2009
Rating: Full
Category: Documentary- Biography
Viewed On: May 30, 2011
Opinions: Izzard has always been one of my favorite comedians or just one of my favorite people to listen to in general. So it’s no surprise that I found this docu-biography delightful. Clips of Izzard’s current struggle to develop original new comedy are dispersed with his life story and previous bits that are related to his life. Over-all, I would say this isn’t only worth watching, but worth owning as well.
The Taming of the Shrew - From Bad ...to Better
2011-May-13, Friday 12:49 pmStaring Elizabeth Taylor & Richard Burton
You know, I remember watching this a long time ago (or at least it seems like a long time ago). I know I was a teenager, and I was interested in Shakespeare’s plays. So, I compiled a list of movies based on his plays and watched many of them. And I can honestly say that this movie was one that I… really didn’t get.
I remember thinking that Katharina had just cause in being ‘shrewish’. I remember taking her side in the entire movie. I remember not liking Petruchio at all and I despised Baptista (Katharina’s father) even more. I remember feeling sorry for ‘Kate’ most of the way through, and at the end of the film, I couldn’t understand how anyone thought the film ended well. Of course, I was a teenage girl, and I really didn’t know much about the world, the context of the story, or characters that had multiple sides. I was used to villains, which had only one dimension. The nefarious knave who only wanted one thing… to be bad, and to defeat the good guy. At that age, I chalked it up to a silly story and moved on with my life.
I am so glad that I got the chance to watch it again. Now, as an adult (but still a baby to most :3), I can see things, understand things better. I now know that marriage during that time wasn't always about love, or ideal matches. I also know that in that day and age, a woman was her husbands property. If she was lucky, he was considerate of her. If not… then not so. Ever since I re-watched this (several times) I’ve been thinking about the backstory of it. What led up to it. And what Shakespeare may have been thinking when he wrote it.
Katharina, our untamed shrew, is so well played by Elizabeth Taylor… I can’t help but wonder if it’s just because she was such a good actress, or if some people are simple born to play certain roles. We first see Katharina as a raging maid in her father’s house. She’s down-right violent to anyone, including her younger sister who’s only offense is to actually gain the interest of the local men. I could very easily see Katharina’s tittle as ‘shrew’ earned simply and seeming without consequence. She seems a very smart girl. Her will is strong, and her tongue is sharp. Perhaps she realized that most men wanted to woo women and for women to be biddable. Perhaps, some unlucky fellow tried to woo her with weak poetry or simpering declarations of love. And perhaps this appeal was met with clear disdain. Perhaps this fellow said to his buddies, “That Katharina. Such a shrew!”, and that was all it took. And hearing her name associated with the term, perhaps Katharina expressed her hatred for the whole system by showing everyone just how much of a shrew she could be. She rages at her sister and her father, who both abide by the system she hates. They see no problem with the system, only with her. She loathes her father for favoring her sister. Still, Bianca may be the more clever between them. She is not a simple girl, and surely she knows that being fair and amiable is the best way to secure suitors…. something Katharina will not condescend to. Still, the girls’ father, Baptista, will not allow Bianca to wed until Katharina is wed first. Thus, the biggest dilemma to all. Katharina has no suitors because she is a shrew. She refuses to change herself to fit the system. Her father refuses to deter from tradition (oldest married first then the younger). Bianca cannot marry. Bianca’s suitors cannot even petition for her hand. A stalemate from all directions, and there’s nothing to do.
Enter Petruchio.
Petruchio is an exaggerated example of masculinity (at the time, that is). He drinks too much. He’s too brash. He’s too violent. He has no interest in women except for securing wealth. It’s obvious from the scenes of his home later in the movie that he doesn’t clean or manage his home very well at all. One might say that the only thing making Petruchio different from Katharina is that he is male, and therefore there are allowances made for his behavior. He is often seen as cruel and unyielding as well… I remember, when I was much younger, thinking he was bipolar. But there is method in his madness. Petruchio may be many things, be he’s obviously a dominant male. He believes that the man is the head of the house, and that the woman belongs to her husband. In that time, it was absolutely true. And while I still hold that the man is the head of the house, any man referring to his woman has his chattel is in for one hell of a knock-down drag-out tussle. He uses cruel kindnesses to “break” Katharina. He shows her how cruel and contrary he can be towards her as a reaction to her contrary behavior. When she disagrees with him, he lashes out. The first real test comes when he calls for tailors to make clothes for Katharina. They show her a cap, but Petruchio says that it isn’t fitting. Katharina is cross, saying that she wants the cap. He says he doesn’t want her to wear it and it’d please him if she wouldn’t. She refuses this, and he destroys it. Then he lashes out at everything in the room, tearing all the clothes up, claiming it doesn’t suit his wife. He claims that he does these things because the things the tailor is offering her isn’t good enough for her. But really, it’s punishment for her attitude. Unbeknonst to Katharina, he tells the tailor to make dresses for her anyway.
At last, the war between these two is made peace in the final act of the movie. In the night Petruchio goes to Katharina and tells her that they’re going to her father’s house, to the wedding of her sister, in finery. When she asks the time, he says it’s 7 in the morning. She says it’s 2 at most. He then says “It shall be 7 or I will not ride!” Then he reveals the crucial clue, letting Katharina see how she can live as the mistress of her home in peace - “Look, what I speak or do or think to do, you are still crossing of it.” And then Katharina sees that what he wants is for her to be agreeable to him. To him and to what he wants. And, maybe it’s not what she wants… but it is the world she lives in. And in order to live her life happily, she has to adapt to that. Before he can storm off in a huff, Katharina - quite demurely I might add - says “tis seven.” relenting to the rule of her husband. There are many parts after this in which Petruchio tests Katharina, and she passes each one of them well. In the part which he says that the sun is the moon, she agrees that it is the moon. He then calls her on it, saying it’s ‘the blessed sun’. She replies with, “Then, God be bless’d. It is the blessed sun. But sun it is not when you say it is not. And the moon changes even as your mind. What you will have it named, even that it is. And so it shall be so for Katharine.”
In the end, Petruchio and Katharine may never have the most smooth marriage, but there is room for peace and contentment between them. It is perhaps a much better match that Bianca’s secret elopement and eventual wedding to Lucentio, the fellow we see at the opening of the film who disguises himself as a professor. It’s doubly better than the marriage between Hortensio and the ‘lusty widow’. Because, for all his faults, Petruchio is never cruel to his ‘Kate’ just for the sake of being cruel. There are other themes and plots through the movie, but honestly they are so simple that I tend to pass them over for the twisted knots that Petruchio and Katharine weave. I can imagine that this couple do go on to some form of happiness. And perhaps the others do as well. In the end, Katharina makes her Petruchio happy with her, in front of God and everyone. Which is more than can be said for the other two couples. And I suppose that could be taken as a happy ending (you take what you can get).
I had to wonder, when I was watching this, if Shakespeare was not very aware of the harshness women faced in a man’s world… and if perhaps his plays reflected the plight of women on purpose. Women who were trapped within worlds of their own, but utterly dependent on men… Men who, many times, make mockeries and wagers of their own wives. Shakespeare’s women seem dynamic in their making, and this makes me wonder if perhaps he were in some secret confidence with many women. Either that, or he was very attentive to the women he did know.
For all these things, I enjoy this movie very very much. If only to see Elizabeth Taylor portraying such a vivid character arch for Katharina. She does it brilliantly and beautifully, much the way she lived her life. Perhaps it’s better to see it in this way: Petruchio didn’t shackle Katharina into a life she didn’t want… he showed her how small her world had been, and made it bigger. He showed her that she didn’t have to be the shrewish maid in her fathers house, and that she could - with some effort - adapt and become the mistress of her own house. If such a change can end in such an agreeable way, perhaps the story ends on a more hopeful note than even I had imagined.
Film Log - Thor
2011-May-12, Thursday 12:52 pmYear: 2011
Rating: Full
Viewed on: May 12, 2011
Category: Comic Book Movie – Marvel
Opinions: This move was amazing. The display of magic and magical abilities was phenomenal and the story was very touching and done perfectly, even though it could’ve been made redundant as it’s so basic. The only thing that really got me was the ending…because technically, Thor is supposed to be stranded on Earth, not Asgard. Still, I’m sure that the Marvel dream team knows what it’s doing, since they’ve been doing such a fantastic job with all of their stuff so far. The character of Loki and Thor are amazing when played off each other. To be honest, I don’t know that I actually like Thor much without Loki. The actor who plays Loki is incredible. He plays what could be a typical villain in a very understandable light. In fact, I’d dare to say that Loki is the only ‘villain’ thus far that I’m more sympathetic towards than the hero. I really can’t wait to see where they go from this… I just hope there’s more Loki in the future :)