One Sentence Movie Reviews: “Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man” (2005)
Leonard Cohen: I’m Your Man (2005): “What I said.”
Visions of Light (1992): “Whenever you feel that movies have nothing left to teach you, see this one.”
When in San Francisco, the staff of Kevin Smokler.com highly recommends a trip to see Love, Janis at the Marines Memorial Theatre. Love Janis is a condensed autobiography of the life of Janis Joplin told in a bifurcation of letters she wrote home from San Francisco to her family in Port Arthur Texas and her songs. One actress does the singing, the other the acting. The show uses this duality to probe the difficulty Joplin had with reconciling her private self, (a lonely, proud, self-concious woman from a tiny Texas town) with the superstar she became while still in her early 20s, a conflict, the show whispered, that ultimately killed her.
While this commentator felt lonely and self-concious about his own age while sitting in a room of folk who experienced the 60s instead of hearing about in on classic rock radio, his intrepid companion reminded him that, to most of the audience, Joplin was a lasting memory of their youth. Just as he wouldn’t want the audience peeing all over The Brat Pack and The Safety Dance, so should he not begrudge them their nostalgia. As she often does, the intrepid companion spoke wise.
The musicial itself is powerful, sweet and a rockin’ good time. Recommended as a fine evening out whether Joplin is memory or history.
Love Janis is playing now at the Marines Memorial Theatre in Union Square in San Francisco.
Clerks II (2006): “Doing nothing is what you make of it.”
A short list of my current projects. Also known as the remind-myself-I-have-a-job-even-though-I-work-in-jammies-and-eat-cereal-for-dinner-list.
1. Book proposal continues apace. Got some nice feedback from my agent this week.
2. An article for Fast Company which is turning out to be quite fun.
3. Book reviews for the LA Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. Much reading to be done on the plane out to Lollapalooza this week.
4. Piece for Dailysonic that will have to wait for my return home from Chicago.
5. Consulting for Mental Floss, The Idea Festival and a few private clients.
6. Going to a prom.
The Warriors (1979): “A good/bad movie is as enjoyable as a kinda good movie”
I have no good reason why but I love this version of The Safety Dance. Maybe because only one of them knows the lyrics.
“All great truths begin as blasphemies.” —George Bernard Shaw (via The Writer’s Almanac).
I did this commentary for KQED’s Perspectives on the closing of several Bay Area independent bookstores. I think I sound like I have a head cold.