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Category Archives: Escapes and Pleasures

“Hannah Arendt”

09 Tuesday Jul 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"France Ha", "Hannah Arendt", "Renoir", Barbara Sukowa, Christa Theret, Greta Gerwig, Margrethe von Trotta

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Hannah Arendt ****

One of the marks of a good film for me is when I leave the theater wanting to know more about something I have just seen.

Margarethe von Trotta’s Hannah Arendt definitely meets that criteria.

I think I had been vaguely aware of Arendt, at least some recollection of the controversy about her coverage for The New Yorker of the Eichmann trial in Israel. But I had not read any of her writings.

Now I know more. Certainly much more about that period in her life but also about this writer, thinker, and political theorist.

Seeing the film sent me on a quest to find out more (see this link for a brief, 2500 word overview of her writing and her life). And I suspect I will read more about her and at least one of her books.

This film largely focuses on one period in Arendt’s life, although there are flashbacks to earlier periods and references to other parts of her biography.

Barbara Sukowa is simply superb in her portrayal of Arendt, similar, I think, in the way that Daniel Day-Lewis was able to capture Abraham Lincoln in Steven Spielberg’s film.

I suppose someone who knows more about Arendt and her writing might not be as enthusiastic as I am about this film or might have some questions about von Trotta’s depiction of Arendt. But for a film about ideas to hold an audience almost spellbound for close to two hours is an achievement.

(My wife Ellen, who loves movies and is a pretty good judge of films, thought this one was the best film she’s seen this year.)

*                    *                    *                   *                   *                 *

We also saw two other films over the long holiday weekend, neither of which makes it into my top categories (4-5 stars).  Frances Ha tells the story of a 27 year old NYC single woman who is trying to find her place in the world. The best part of this film is the performance of the lead actress Greta Gerwig.  And I wanted to like Renoir but ultimately felt it did not do what Hannah Arendt did (make me want to know more about the title character). But there is a good performance by Christa Theret as Renoir’s model.

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Looking for Summer Reading Ideas?

07 Sunday Jul 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"MillersTime" Readers Favorit Reads in 2012, 2009, 2010, 2011

Ursula Klawitter/Corbis

Ursula Klawitter/Corbis

For those of you who may be looking for books to add to your summer ‘to read’ lists, I’m reposting links to the books MillersTime readers have said they enjoyed the most in the past few years.

Many of you have contributed to these lists and have mentioned their value. Today’s post is to make going back to those lists easy to do.

For those of you who don’t know about the lists, every year I ask MillersTime readers to send in the titles and a sentence or two about the books they’ve most enjoyed reading over the past year. The resulting lists have been a terrific source of ideas for others.

Take a look. Or a relook:

1.  The Books Most Enjoyed by MillersTime Readers in 2012

2.  The Books Most Enjoyed by MillersTime Readers in 2011

3.  The Books Most Enjoyed by MillersTime Readers in 2010

4.  The Books Most Enjoyed by MillersTime Readers in 2009

(PS – I hope folks are keeping a list somewhere of what you’ve enjoyed in 2013. After several years of trying to reconstruct my own ‘favorites’ for a year, I know my memory is beginning to make that task more difficult.)

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Best Films I’ve Seen in 2013 (so far)

03 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Best Films in 2013

I thought I’d list all in one place the films I’ve seen and rated (4, 4 1/2, or 5 stars) since the beginning of 2013. If you click on the film, that will take you to my mini review.

Four Stars

  • NO ****
  • 42 ****
  • A Hijacking ****
  • Happy People: A Year in the Tiaga ****
  • Flight ****
  • Rust & Bone ****
  • 20 Feet from Stardom ****

Four & a Half Stars

  • 56 Up ****1/2
  • The Gatekeepers ****1/2
  • Still Mine **** 1/2
  • Zero Dark 30 ****1/2
  • Barbara ****1/2
  • Mud ****1/2
  • Stories We Tell ****1/2
  • Fill the Void ****1/2

Five Stars

  • Amour *****
  • Oscar Nominated Short Films 2013  – Live Action *****
  • Best Short Documentaries 2013 – Short Subjects *****
  • The Hunt *****

(Please forgive the underlining. I can’t seem to remove it.)

If you’ve seen other films in 2013 that you’ve particularly enjoyed, please post their titles in the Comment section of this post.

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An Unusual Film: “Fill the Void”

30 Sunday Jun 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

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"A Separation", "Fill the Void", Hada Yaron, Rama Burshtein

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Fill the Void  ****1/2

The story told in this film is not particularly unusual.

After her older sister dies in childbirth, an 18 year old girl (Shira) is faced with a dilemma: does she accede to her family’s wish for her to marry her brother-in-law and become the mother to her sister’s baby, or does she resist and follow an inner voice that tells her not to do so?

There are other details and aspects to this story, which is a family drama as well as an individual one, that make Shira’s decision a difficult one, but this coming of age story about a young woman being thrust into a dilemma not of her own making seems familiar.

What makes this film unusual is the setting and the skill with which the director lets the story slowly unfold (too slowly?). It takes place within a modern day Hassidic family and community living in Tel Aviv. There are no heroes and no real villains, and there is no attempt to portray this ultra-Orthodox family and its community in a particular light.

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The audience is given a window into a way of life that is foreign to most of us yet has elements that are not foreign at all.

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The acting is superb, particularly that of Hada Yaron (Shira) who won the Best Actress Award at the 2012 Venice Film Festival for her wonderful portrayal of a girl torn between family and self.  The entire cast is also quite good.

Fill the Void was written and directed by Rama Burshtein, a woman who knows the Hassidic world. She lives within that community and has given us a window into it without prejudice. She has also given us a film that is beautifully filmed and constructed.

You don’t have to be Jewish to enjoy this film. You just have to like a good story, good acting, and good directing.

For me, the insight(s) Fill the Void gave me into a way of life about which I know very little and about a world rarely seen from the inside added to and made the film memorable. It reminded me of the Iranian film, A Separation, one of my favorite films from last year.

(For those of you living in the DC area, Fill the Void is currently being shown at the Landmark Bethesda Row Cinema and at AMC Lowes Shirlington 7.)

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Panda Gourmet: The Best Chinese Restaurant in Washington, Ever ?

22 Saturday Jun 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 5 Comments

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Best Chinese food in DC, Cold Chendgdu spicy noodles, Cumin beef/lamb, Dan Dan noodles, Panda Gourmet, Shaanxi noodles, Tim Ball, Tyler Cowen

The best Chinese restaurant Washington has had, ever.

So says Tyler Cowen, author of the DC metro area’s Ethnic Dining Guide, blogger atIMG_2682 Marginal Revolution, and author of An Economist Gets Lunch: New Rules for Everyday Foodies. Also, check out his Six Rules for Dining Out as well as Cowen’s brief review of (elegy to) Panda Gourmet.

For those of you who know of Cowen, you are familiar with his penchant for seedy, small, ethnic restaurants in the DC area. How he finds all of them and still keeps his day job as an economist at George Mason University and his prolific writing output is beyond me. But he is a treasure, despite (or perhaps because of) his sometimes over enthusiastic reviews or his opinionated posts.

For those of you who don’t know Cowen, click on some of the links in the first paragraph and Bookmark him. He stays ahead of all the other area restaurant reviewers when it comes to ethnic restaurants.

But what about Panda Gourmet?

That’s quite a statement Cowen made.

So far, I’ve made two trips to Panda Gourmet. The first was with my wife who states if she has to drive more than 14 minutes anywhere she prefers to take a plane.Thus, Panda gourmet’s location on New York Ave., NE near the corner of Bladensburg Road, NE certainly classifies as “geographically undesirable” in her mind. In fact, when I urged that we go Thursday for dinner, she gave me that look that only married men know. And when we got stuck in rush hour traffic, and it took us more than 30 minutes to go the five miles from our house, I knew she had one more confirmation in her mind of my foolishness(es).

Surprisingly, however, she gave the restaurant a chance (she does have the ability to forgive, especially if good food is involved), and three of the five dishes we ordered were outstanding, one was OK, and the fifth was disappointing. But the tastes were new, and there was no recrimination(s) on the way home.

DanDan.IMG_2672cumin.IMG_2669Specifically, we followed Tyler Cowen’s recommendations and ordered the cold Chengdu spicy noodles (pix left, outstanding, and not very spicy), Dan Dan noodles (outstanding, and probably the best we’ve had, to agree with Cowen), cumin beef (pix above, right, also outstanding and a new taste for us), Shaanxi noodles (OK and a different taste but not in the same outstanding category as the three previous dishes), and Rouge Mo – Chinese hamburger? – (which was disappointing).

The first three alone are reason(s) enough to go back for a second trial. Actually, I later discovered that we had ordered the wrong Shannxi noodle dish. The one Cowen suggested, and I had the next day (see below), also belongs in the outstanding category. Thus, to be fair, he was four for five, not a bad day at the ‘plate’ at all.

So the next morning, I invited my Chinese guru friend, Tim Ball, who comes from a family of Chinese restaurant people, to go with me to lunch at Panda Gourmet. Not only did I want his take on the place, I also wanted help with translating the menu in Chinese (the one only given to Chinese dinners). Tim Ball brought along a coworker whose ability to read Chinese is much better than his. Plus, I think he knew that if we had another person with us, we could justify ordering more dishes.

Tim Ball was seven for seven. A perfect batting average.

The Dan Dan noodles was the only repeat dish from the previous evening. “As good as I’ve had,” said my guru. Two vegetable dishes were a revelation to me, teaching me that perhaps another way to judge a restaurant is by how well they do veggies. String beans in ginger sauce and baby bok choy were simple and a wonderful complement to the other five dishes. Cumin lamb, not so different from the cumin beef we had the previous night, was a winner as was the Chengdu bean jelly salad. But the best of of all was the Shaanxi noodles, the ones Cowen had written about but we had misordered. That dish alone is worth the traffic jam to get to Panda Gourmet. We also had scallion pancakes which i used to sop up the various sauces.

photo(70) With nothing left and with the three of us struggling for the best words to describe what we had just consumed, Tim Ball declared, “I think I’ve just had the best Chinese food in DC.” Coworker Karen, new to the area, said she was going to bring her parents here when they visited next week. I got two containers to take home what remained of the Chendgu bean salad and the Shaanxi noodles (mah jong lian pi) sauce and began plotting my next visit to Panda Gourmet.

So was Cowen right?

I don’t claim to know if Panda Gourmet is the best Chinese food in DC ever. But I do agree it is the best there is now.

 

A few tips:

  • If you are coming from downtown DC, turn left off NY Ave onto Bladensburg Rd and then an almost immediate right at the Langdon Days Inn sign.
  • If you are coming into DC on NY Ave, just turn right into the Days Inn parking lot.
  • Don’t worry about not being able to read the menu that is only in Chinese. We discovered that the numbers on that menu correspond to the dishes on the English menu.
  • Be sure to order the Shaanxi noodles, which i don’t believe are on the English menu. Don’t get the Shaanxi noodle soup. You want the mah jong lian pi, the hand cut noodles (in the most wonderful sauce you can imagine).
  • You might want to try Xian dish Rouge Mo just to experience something different, but there are so many other dishes that are better, don’t stress if you have to miss it.
  • My wife is correct, this time, when she says Panda Gourmet is “geographically undesirable.” But then, once you get there, it’s worth the trip. I promise.
  • If you need someone to join with you for an outing to Panda Gourmet, I’m available at a moment’s notice.
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Join Us to Hear Oliver Sacks and Kay Redfield Jamison

18 Tuesday Jun 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"An Unquiet Mind", "Hallucinations, "Life After Death? A Current Controversy", "Nothing Was the Same", "Proof of Heaven, Kay Redfield Jamison, Oliver Sacks, Sicxth & I St.

Two of my favorite authors in one place, talking to each other!

sacksPhysician, neurologist, Professor of Neurology at NYU’s School of Medicine and popular author Oliver Sacks will be at DC’s Sixth and I St. Synagogue on Wednesday, July 17th at 7 PM to talk about his book Hallucinations.

Published in 2012 and soon to be released in paperback (July 2, 2013) and large print (July 6, 2013), Hallucinations draws on Sack’s “own experiences, a wealth of clinical cases from among his patients, and famous historical examples ranging from Dostoevsky to Lewis Carroll…(and) investigates the mystery of these sensory deceptions: what they say about the working of our brains, how they have influenced our folklore and culture, and why the potential for hallucination is present in us all.”

Kay.418490_342557112453890_506767284_nClinical psychologist, expert on bipolar disorder, Professor of Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and author* Kay Redfield Jamison will interview, or ‘converse’, with Sacks about his latest book and his views about this aspect of the brain and the wide ranging ways in which hallucinations are “part of the human experience.”

The interview/conversation will no doubt (hopefully?) include a discussion of Sack’s views that near death experiences, out of body experiences, etc. are related to how the brain works and are not what author Eban Alexander (The Proof of Heaven) writes and believes are in fact out of body experiences and ‘prove’ there are such things as journeys into the afterlife.

Jamison has said she has had a near-death experience and has said, “Mental illness can trigger religious revelations and visions — even out-of-body and near-death experiences”.

Ellen and I are going to Sixth & I on July 17th and have two additional tickets for two of you to join us. Let me know by email (Samesty84@gmail.com) if you are interested.

 

(*Jamison, who in addition to her more well known books, An Unquiet Mind, Manic Depressive Illness, Night Falls Fast, Exuberance, and Touched with Fire, has written what for me is one of the best memoirs I’ve read in many years, Nothing Was the Same, which, if you don’t know of it, bears checking out.)

(Also, see this earlier post on MillersTime, Life After Death? A Current Controversy where in Sacks and Alexander discuss their views on this topic and friend David P. Stang writes with great passion that Sacks doesn’t know what he’s talking about.)

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“Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now”

11 Tuesday Jun 2013

Posted by Richard in Articles & Books of Interest, Escapes and Pleasures, The Outer Loop

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"Future Shock", Douglas Rushkoff, Everything Happens Now

 

___

Usually I don’t focus too much on particular books on MillersTime, at least not until the year end post of Favorite Reads of the Year.

But I recently finished Douglas Rushkoff’s Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now and didn’t want to wait another six months before I wrote about it.

I want to be careful about over hyping the book, but I want to draw it to your attention.

For me, Rushkoff connects lots of pieces of what I feel personally about what is Rushkoff.IMAG0166happening in our lives with the advent of the Internet/digital age, in my life, in the lives of people around me, in our society, and in the direction of where we as people are headed. (I wrote about this topic in an earlier post, One Downside to our Smart Phones, iPads, etc.)

Rushkoff writes in the Preface about what he terms ‘”the new ‘now'”:

Our society has reoriented itself to the present moment. Everything is live, real time, and always-on. It’s not a mere speeding up, however much our lifestyles and technologies have accelerated the rate at which we attempt to do things. It’s more of a diminishment of anything that isn’t happening right now – and the onslaught of everything supposedly is.

He calls it present shock, and he explores how and why this is occurring and how it is affecting our lives. He focuses on five areas:

  • Collapse of the Narrative
  • Digiphrenia
  • Overwinding
  • Fractalnoia
  • Apocalypto

Don’t get stuck on the words. It’s his somewhat awkward terminology for how present shock is manifesting itself in our lives. But the book and Rushkoff’s explanations are not awkward. They are illuminating, and they make sense of what I think many of us are sensing.

I purposely read the book in hardback so I could underline what I wanted to highlight.

My book is a mess. There is barely a page that is not marked up, underlined, checked, etc.

In his analysis of what is happening in all aspects of our society, Rushkoff’s focus is not primarily to praise it nor damn it. He explains it.

Plus, he argues that we do have choices and writes about “what we human beings can do to pace ourselves and our expectations when there’s no temporal backdrop against which to measure our progress, no narrative through which to make sense of our actions, no future toward which we may strive, and seemingly no time to figure any of this out.”

I have always felt that when some new technology appears (TV, for example) that there is a period when we often over use it and then, hopefully, learn to make it ours rather than become a servant to it.

The advent of the Internet and digital age, with the computer, cell phones, social media, etc. feels more powerful, more intrusive, more all consuming, and thus the power that it holds over us, over me, is more powerful too.

Present Shock goes a long way toward explaining many things that I, for one, am feeling and am experiencing these days, and helps me both understand it and consider what perhaps I can do to exert some control over the parts of this new world that is bringing both great pleasures and some serious losses.

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Eating Well in Scotland

06 Thursday Jun 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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haggis, Lochleven Seafood Cafe, Ondine Restaurant, Rocpool Restaurant, Rogano Restaurant, Scotland

photo(68)

Now that you’ve seen Ellen’s photos from Scotland, and are no doubt in the planning stage of a trip there, I thought I’d add a bit about the food available in Bonnie Scotland (also known as “Alba” or “the greatest country on earth”, as the locals say).

It’s probably not a reason by itself to go to Scotland, but if you happen to be anywhere within an hour or two drive of Lochleven Seafood Cafe, make a reservation and don’t miss it. (It’s off A82 between Fort William and Glencoe on B863 on the north side of Loch Leven.)

Without a doubt this was our favorite meal in Scotland. It’s an unassuming place, with about 15 tables and simply the most fresh seafood, especially its shellfish, you will get anywhere. I’m certain two oysters spit at me as I was about to eat them.

Continue reading »

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Scotland Pix by Ellen Miller

03 Monday Jun 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Ellen Miller's Pictures of Scotland, Pictures of Scotland, Scotland, Scottish Highlands

Once again we all have the benefit of Ellen’s good camera eye and love of photography.

This time the results are from a recent trip we took, largely driving through the Scottish Highlands. We flew into Glascow, headed north and west by car to Loch Lomand, Inveraray, Oban, Isle of Eriska, Ben Nevis, Glencoe, Isle of Skye, Fort William, Invergarry, Loch Ness, Inverness and down to Edinburgh. We stayed at castles, usually for a couple of days at a time, making day trips once we roused ourselves from the life of being served.

In addition to the 15 pictures below, you can click on the links at the end of these pictures for two slide shows to see more. There are 119 of the Highlands and 53 from the cities, Glascow, Inverness, and Edinburgh. These 172 pictures are culled from the 1400+ Ellen took.

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“Stories We Tell”

30 Thursday May 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

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"Elemental", "Other Desert Cities", "Stories We Tell", Documentaries to Search Out, Eriel Deranger, Jay Harman, Rajendra Singh, Sarah Polley

Two films, both documentaries, to call to your attention.

Continue reading »

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Forever Friends

12 Sunday May 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures, Family and Friends

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Bush Sr., Caption Contest, Pink Socks

T_E.image

The winners* of the Bush Sr. Pink Socks’

Caption Contest enjoy the results of their

victory.

Much thanks to Gavin Lee for the photos.

 

socks1

socks3

*The third winner has yet to receive his prize, but I am hopeful he will send a picture once his pair arrives.

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Anyone Want to Join Me at Arena Stage?

10 Friday May 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"Other Desert Cities", Arena Stage

Other Desert Cities

Other Desert Cities, the play currently at Arena Stage (Mead Center) is scheduled to be here through the end of May.

Since my wife Ellen has already seen it, and I have two tickets for Sat., May 25 at 2 PM, I would be glad to have someone join me.

Peter Marks reviewed the play Wednesday in the Post. It also had a successful run in New York. See Ben Brantley’s review.

Let me know if you’re interested.

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If You Love Reading, Consider This

09 Thursday May 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Michael Dirda, Nabokov, On Reading" by Patricia Meyer Spacks, Reread

An idea for you to consider.

First, a bit of context.

As some readers of MillersTime may have noticed, I’ve been thinking about what I read, how I read it, and also about rereading.

Recently I spent a wonderful two hours at a Politics & Prose Bookstore discussion with the Washington Post‘s long time book reviewer Michael Dirda about “How to Read a Book”. Perhaps I will write more about that session and insights gained at a later date, but when I asked Dirda about rereading, he said, “Rereading is the best kind of reading.” He mentioned Nabokov’s view that “one cannot read a book: one can only reread it. A good reader, a major reader, an active and creative reader is a rereader.” (See my earlier post, Do You Reread?)

Dirda said, “The second time reading a book, it’s no longer the narrative, you know what’s coming, and it (the book) becomes more like poetry.”

That led me to Patricia Meyer Spacks’ book, On Rereading, and thus an idea this morning that I ask you to consider.

Sometime in the coming Fall (2013), I’d like to have an evening at the Millers with folks who are willing to participate in the following experiment:

Continue reading »

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We Have a Winner…

07 Tuesday May 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Caption Contest, Papa Bush's Pink Socks

obama-bush-library

…actually, three winners in the Caption Contest.

There was a tie for first place between:

Gosh darn it, I forgot to take off Barbara’s socks… Come to think of it, these undies are a little snug, too… (#4)

and

I’m pretty sure Laura said pink was the color to support breast cancer. Crap, what if she’s wrong and it’s actually gay rights?!  (#3)

Just missing a three way tie by one vote was

Forever a preppy…  (#1)

Taking into account the slight kerfluffle about an incorrect listing of “Forever a Preppy” (I first listed it as “Always a Preppy”), I have ordered three pair of pink socks with black polka dots to send to:

Tiffany L. of Denver, CO (#4)

Elizabeth M. of Miami Beach, FL (#3)

Robert W. of W. Hartford, CN / Palm Beach Gardens, FL (#1)

Prizes will be on their way as soon as I receive them.

(Personally, I liked # 2 the best: Who wears brown with pink before Memorial Day?)

Finally, one alert contestant questioned whether Papa Bush was wearing two different pant legs, one brown and one grey. Just the lighting, or is Bush Sr. on to something new? I’ll need help with this as one of the {many} challenges with which I struggle is a ‘slight’ color blindness in the brown, green, grey, blue areas.)

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Put This One on Your ‘To See’ List

06 Monday May 2013

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

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"The Hunt", Best Actor at Cannes 2012-Mads Mikkelsen, Director Thomas Vinterberg

The Hunt.image

The Hunt *****, the film shown at our Sunday Cinema Club yesterday, is not due to be released nationally until August, 2013.

If you keep a calendar, mark it and keep your eyes open for this film. I don’t know how widely it will be shown as it’s a Danish film with subtitles, not a prime candidate for the big movie houses. But it’s worth searching out.

Mads Mikkelsen, the “Tom Hanks’ of Denmark, according to Bob Mondello who spoke after the film was shown Sunday, won the Best Actor at the 2012 Cannes Film Festival. He’s simply terrific as Lucas in The Hunt.

But then so is Annika Wedderkopp, the very young actress who plays the role of Klara, a five year old who unleashes a storm of controversy in a small town and then is caught up in the witch-hunt that ensues.

And these are only two of the half-dozen to dozen actors and actresses who keep you enthralled.

You might note that I have not said much about the plot of The Hunt. Purposively.

The Hunt is a film to see without knowing too much about it. Simply, it is the story of a man whose life is in the process of being destroyed by a lie.

Written by Tobias Lindholm and Thomas Vinterberg and directed by Vinterberg, the film moves along quickly and absorbs you.

*                         *                          *                         *                       *

The members of the DC Cinema Club gave last month’s film, Twenty Feet From Stardom, a rating of 94.3% (Excellent-61% and Good 33%). They also gave it a Recommend rating of 97.1%.

Also, The Hunt is the third Danish film we’ve seen this year that has been simply outstanding. The other two were A Royal Affair and A Hijacking, each mini-reviewed on MillersTime previously. Those folks are doing something right.

It will definitely be on my Best of 2013 List.

And maybe let’s do a Miller’s dinner and chat about the film after it comes out. Let me know if you’re interested.

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