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Category Archives: Escapes and Pleasures

So Many Films, So Little Time?

23 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Argo, Christopher Waken, Colin Farrell, Films, Helen Hunt, John Hawkes, Sam Rockwell, Seven Psychopaths, The Sessions, William Macy, Woody Harrwlson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’ve seen two films in the past few days, neither of which I would have gone to if I had read the reviews. The first one (below) I saw because of a recommendation by a friend (ML) who knows film and theater and is a pretty reliable judge of what’s worthy. The second one appeared in our Sunday morning Cinema Club where we don’t know ahead of time what we’re going to see.

Both films are good; the second one is excellent. I’m not sure how to review them as neither of them ‘sound’ enticing. I kind of just want to suggest you put them on a ‘to see’ list, after noting the two titles.

But I’ll take a shot at saying something about each one for those of you who need to know more.

Seven Psychopaths ****

Psychopaths as comedians?  Yup.

Well I’m not sure they see themselves that way, and the story is a bit convoluted and sometimes not easy to follow but has to do with a guy who is writing a script for a film which he has tentatively titled “Seven Psychopaths,” tho he has no idea of anything beyond the title.

I won’t try to tell you what happens, but there are terrific performances by  an outstanding cast, particularly Colin Farrell, Woody Harrelson, Christopher Walken, and Sam Rockewell. Michael Pitt, Michael Stuhlberg and Abbie Cornish round out the cast of weirdos in this comedy/drama written and directed by Martin McDonagh.

There is a lot of violence and other unpleasantness, but somehow it all works, and as I left the theater, I found myself muttering, “It’s brilliant, I think.”

(Seven Psychopaths is in theaters now, at least in DC).

The Sessions *****

The one page handout we received walking into the Avalon Theatre Sunday morning told us the following:

“Based on on the poignantly optimistic autobiographical writings of California-based journalist and poet Mark O’Brien, The Sessions tells the story of a man confined to an iron lung who is determined – at age 38 – to lose his virginity. With the help of his therapists and the guidance of his priest, he sets out to make his dream a reality.”

We all raised our eyebrows upon reading that and wondered what was wrong with the folks who chose this film.

Ninety-Five minutes later we knew the choice was a terrific one, and although the explicit sexual scenes were a bit strong for a Sunday morning, the film was wonderful.

John Hawkes as Mark will no doubt be on everyone’s list for awards this year, and Helen Hunt and William Macy are good too. Writer and Director Ben Lewin also deserves to be amongst those nominated for awards.

You’re gonna have to take my word on this one.

(The Sessions opens nationwide on Friday, and in the DC area will be at Landmark’s Bethesda Row and E Street Cinemas.)

 

PS-Has anyone see Argo, and if so, is it as good as the ‘hype’ seems to indicate?

 

 

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An Evening of & with Janis Joplin

22 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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A Night with Janis Joplin, Arena Stage, Janis Jo[plin

Mary Bridget Davies as Janis Joplin and Sabrina Elayne Carten as Blues Singer in the Cleveland Play House production of One Night with Janis Joplin. (Pix by Janet Macoska/Arena Stage)

If you know and enjoyed Janis Joplin in the late 60s, early 70s, then you have just until Nov.4 to see DC’s Arena Stage’s production One Night with Janis Joplin.

It’s a good evening at the theater.

Actually, it’s largely a concert where Mary Bridget Davies sings many of Joplin’s best known songs, mixed with some of Joplin’s words and views on herself and life. Davies is energetic and recreates what Joplin presented in her very short lifetime.

In addition, Sabrina Elayne Carten plays the role of various blues singers and with her wonderful voice adds immeasurably to an understanding of what influenced Joplin as well as provides simply wonderful music.

The audience the night we were at Arena Stage (actually in their Kreeger Theater) joined in with Davies and with Carten, and at times it felt as if we were at a live concert (albeit with half the audience being middle age).

Randy Johnson, the writer-director, had the cooperation of the Joplin family and access to a great deal of material about Janis. Perhaps it is quarreling a bit, but what he chooses to present and to portray leaves out some of the more difficult and tragic parts of her life, but I guess that would have been a drama and not a concert.

Nonetheless, One Night with Janis Joplin is well worth the effort to see it.

 

(One Night with Janis Joplin premiered at Portland, Oregon’s Center Stage and is now on a national tour, which began at Cleveland’s Playhouse and will continue across the US and into Canada through 2014. So for those of you who live outside the DC Beltway and think MillersTime is only for DC folks, keep your eyes open for Janis/Davies in your area.)

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Tent of Nations: “We Refuse to be Enemies”

20 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures, The Outer Loop

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Dahler's Vineyard, Daoud Nasser, Nasser Speaking Tour, Tent of Nations

Two long-time friends (from the mid 60s), both teachers and former Peace Corp volunteers, have been involved with a project for a number of years called “Tent of Nations,” (TON). Kay and Bill Plitt have talked with me about Daoud Nasser, his family farm outside of Bethlehem, and the impact their involvement with Daoud and TON has had on their lives.

Tent of Nations is the story of the lives and struggles of the Nassar family who live on a farm and peace center just outside of Bethlehem and whose motto is “We Refuse to be Enemies.” The Nasser family bought this 100-acres almost a 100 years ago (1916), then registered it and have been living on it and farming it since the Ottoman Occupation.

For most of these 100 years, Jews and Arabs lived side by side and were able to get along reasonably well together. With the various outbreaks of war between the Arabs and the Israelis from 1948 on, and with the expansions of Israeli settlements, the Nasser farm has increasingly been the focus of dispute and tension.

Now the farm, Dahler’s Vineyard, is led by the grandson of the man who purchased the land in 1916. He, Daoud Nasser, a Palestinean Christian, has struggled to make this plot of land support his family and also serve as a peace center and educational project for “People from different countries to come together and build bridges of trust and hope.”

Daoud Nasser will be in Washington, speaking about his grandfather’s dream, his father’s vision, and his own struggle to find a way of peace in a land filled with conflict.

Thursday, Nov. 1, at 7 PM Daoud will speak at The National Cathedral on Wisconsin Ave., NW, Washington, DC in the Perry Auditorium, (take tower elevators to the 7th floor).

Some links to further info:

About Tent of Nations

About Daoud’s Washington appearance

Bill Plitt’s blog “Peace with Justice,” includes posts on his various trips to Tent of Nations

2012 Conference on Israel & Palestine, NYC, Nov. 10 –  “Education: How Can We Embrace Our Common Humanity?”

Other Daoud Naser speaking appearances around the US

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Two New Films – “Must Sees,” sez Ellen Miller

19 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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" "Detropia", " "Queen of Versailles, "A Royal Affair", "Oranges", Films, Movies, Searching for Sugar Man

For reasons I can no longer remember, I missed the first two of our movie club offerings this fall, but my trusty partner Ellen went and offers the following:

The DC Cinema Club has not disappointed in its first two offerings this fall.

The Oranges – a film about two families who’ve been closest of friends for years – is one of the best written, laugh-out-loud comedies I’ve seen in years.  The premise of the film – the prodigal daughter of one family, falls into a ‘relationship” with the father of the other – is a bit unlikely and unseemly, but the hilarity that ensues between spouses and siblings and the realizations by all brings this unpredictable film to a very entertaining and satisfying viewing.  In the days of “I can hardly remember the last film that I saw,” this one is memorable.  You won’t get it mixed up with anything else you’re going to see this fall.  Must see.

The Oranges, ATO Pictures. In English

(Our Cinema Club gave The Oranges a 79.2% positive rating – Excellent or Good.)

 

A Royal Affair – the second film offering this fall – was a stunning “period” piece that takes place mostly in the early 1800’s. It tells the true story of Denmark under the reign of the mad king Christian VII.  Guided by his personal physician and his Queen, both of whom are entranced by the new ideas of the Enlightenment, the story of political change in a backward country couldn’t be more stunningly told.  Overlay that with the intensity of a forbidden affair that ends in banishment and execution, and you have a real winner. Costumes, direction and production are all superb. Another must see.

A Royal Affair, Magnolia Pictures. In Danish, English and German with English subtitles

(Our Cinema Club gave A Royal Affair a 92.1% positive vote – Excellent or Good.)

 

Ed. Notes – Oranges is playing in the DC area at Landmark’s Bethesda Row Cinema, as is Searching for Sugar Man, if you haven’t seen that good one. A Royal Affair is coming to the DC area Nov. 9, tho I’m not sure at which theater(s).

Also, if you enjoy talking about movies and eating good food, the Millers have room at their table for two more folks to join in on a discussion of some recently seen movies, particularly Queen of Versailles but also Searching for Sugarman, Detropia, The Master, and whatever else you’ve seen in the last few months that is worthy of discussion. We’ll have a Sunday supper and discussion starting at 6 PM at our house in DC on Nov. 11. Let me know if you’re interested in joining us (Samesty84@gmail.com).

 

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Studio Theatre’s Current Production of “Invisible Man”

08 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"Invisible Man", Ralph Ellison, Studio Theatre

Astrid Riecken/For The Studio Theatre – Teagle F. Bougere in The Studio Theatre production of “Invisible Man.”

Bravo to The Studio Theater for bringing this production to DC.

About 50 years ago, Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man was part of my awakening to the realities of racism in this country.

In 1963, not long after reading it, I went to East Africa for a summer, and my understanding about racism was further enhanced by working with a multiracial group of American and Tanganyikan teenagers — all this in the larger context of East Africa. On returning to the US, the civil right movement was in full bloom: the March on Washington occurred the day I arrived back in the US.

But it was Ellison’s book with its powerful opening sentence, “I am an invisible man,” that truly began my awareness of what I had not seen nor understood when I grew up in Florida — a state as much a part of the South as Mississippi or Alabama.

I have since forgotten most of the details of Ellison’s book, but thanks to the invitation of a friend, we just saw a stage presentation of it at DC’s Studio Theater.

In Oren Jacoby’s adaptation of the book, every word of this production is Ellison’s as his ‘Invisible Man’ takes the audience on his journey from being a young man in the south to and through his true eduction in the north, largely in Harlem.

Not as powerful for me as the book, nonetheless this staging of Invisible Man is another way to understand what it is to be invisible and to understand what it is like to grow up being black in America.  Presented in a multi-media format, the ten actors and actresses (most playing more than one role) bring the book to life. Some scenes are very powerful; some are good; and some fall flat and seem unnecessary.

The first two acts are better than the third (which could use a bit of pruning), but even though this production is three hours long (with two intermissions) and is heavy on the dialogue and monologue, the audience seems to stay with it through the evening. That is in part because of the creative staging and the good use of music, lightening, set design, and video. It is also because the story is so nuanced, so layered, that each incident reveals another aspect about the black struggle to be visible.

Some of the acting is simply terrific. Teagle F. Bourgere, as the ‘Invisible Man,’ has the most demanding role as he’s on stage for the entire three hours. Whether it is because of how the role was constructed or because of his acting, I found myself wishing for a more powerful performance from him. Not so, tho, from the strong supporting cast. They are terrific.

Try to see it if you can. It’s a production you will remember.

Studio Theatre’s Invisible Man will be here for just another couple of weeks, ending with an afternoon performance on Oct.21. For tickets, check out the theatre’s website.

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Two Films to Consider

06 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Amy Adams, Clint Eastwood, Films, Joaquin Phoenix, Movies, Philip Seyomour Hoffmans, The Master, Trouble With the Curve

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Generally I post about small, independent movies, often ones that are not always easy to find but are usually worth the effort.  Today I post mini-reviews of two films that are easily found.

The Master ***1/2

The main reason to see this film is for the performances of Joaquin Phoenix and Philip Seymour Hoffman. Tho the title of the movie refers to Hoffman’s role as the charismatic leader of what is really a cult, it’s Phoenix’s portrayal of a lost soul, a drifter, the alienated alcoholic Freddy that makes The Master worth seeing.

The film follows Hoffman, Lancaster Dodd, as he tries to convert and give meaning to Freddy’s life and at the same time make sense of his own journey to lead the movement known as “The Cause.” Amy Adams, as his wife Peggy, also gives a strong performance as she seeks to support Dodd and convert Freddy.

For some reason The Master is not an easy movie to “get,” to know what the story and performances want you to learn or to take from it.  Some say it’s an indictment of Scientology and it’s founder L. Ron Hubbard, but I didn’t know that until I read about the film after seeing it. I suspect it’s about more than that.

I just don’t know exactly what that ‘more’ is.

 

Trouble With the Curve ***1/2

If you like baseball and don’t mind a somewhat predictable, mawkish story, then I think you’ll enjoy Clint Eastwood and Amy Adams in this film.

It’s a father-daughter story that held me throughout, even tho I could see what was coming, for the most part. Eastwood gives a solid performance as a crabby, aging scout (Gus Lobel) for the Atlanta Braves, and Adams, as his stubborn, ambitious, hurt daughter (Mickey), keeps up with Eastwood.

Trouble With the Curve has some similarities to Moneyball, but it departs from that good film as we get involved with the lives and struggles of Gus and Mickey.

Maybe this movie doesn’t have the subtleties and artfulness of many of the independent films I usually enjoy, but I liked it.

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Three Current Best Sellers. One Is Outstanding.

05 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"NW", "The Casual Vacancy, "This Is How You Lose Her", JK Rowling, Junot Diaz, Zadie Smith

 

 

 

 

 

One of the two wonderful things for me about ‘retirement’ is the freedom to choose each day what I will do with my time (the other thing is the freedom from the worries and from the pressures that my day job use to bring).  I can read in the morning, even in bed (my wife thinks that’s decadent), read all day if I want, and still have a bit of evening time to read too (and reading is only one of the great choices I have of things to do).

All that as lead to today’s post.

I have just finished the third of three of the current best selling fiction books. Actually, I didn’t finish the first one, the second I finished but found disappointing, and the third will be on my list of Best Reads of 2012.  Usually, I don’t write about books (or movies, etc.) that I haven’t enjoyed. So this post is a departure from my usual mini-reviews.

NW by Zadie Smith

I keep wanting to like Zadie Smith’s writing. She is a 37 year-old British writer who wrote White Teeth, The Autograph Man, On Beauty as well as numerous essays and short stories.

NW is her latest novel, a story about northwest London (where she grew up) and the range of people who live there. The early reviews were enticing, and so I tried again.

I didn’t even get half way through before I decided I didn’t want to spend any more time on it.  Although I found the form of the novel annoying, I am not against breaking the usual rules of writing, but, for me, her style got in the way of the story and what she had to say. In addition, I found myself not liking any of the characters, and after I put the book down and picked it up again after a week, I found myself still annoyed and resentful of the time I felt I was wasting.

Know, however, that Amazon’s editors choose NW as one of their Best Books of the Month (September, 2012). Generally, the reviews have been mixed, and NW is selling quite well.

(Zadie Smith will be at DC’s Sixth & I Synagogue Oct. 18 to talk about her new book as part of Politics & Prose Bookstore’s terrific series of discussions with current authors.)

 

The Casual Vacancy by JK Rowling

This first non Harry Potter book by JK Rowling has gotten an enormous amount of press in the UK and in the US too.

Not for children, this novel focuses on a small town in England (the fictitious Pagford) and about a dozen of its inhabitants, those who have ‘made it’ or ‘want to make it’ and some who have not and never will ‘make it.’

The story starts a bit slowly and then picks up perhaps half way through, and the reader is held by Rowling’s ability to tell a story.

For me, however, there were simply too many characters, and I continually had trouble remembering them apart. A few stood out, particularly the younger, adolescent ones, but as the novel ‘progressed,’ I found, as in NW, I didn’t like any of them, and the story (and their stories) was simply depressing.

The Casual Vacancy is already at the top of the bestseller lists in the UK and here.  I suspect the selling success of the novel is because of the enormous audience Rowling has built over the past years. I will be curious if readers find it a successful book on its own.

I kept wanting to like it, but in the end, I didn’t.

 

This Is How You Lose Her by Junot Diaz

Junot Diaz is the Pulitzer Prize winning author of The Brief Wonderous Life of Oscar Wao, a book I remember enjoying, tho as is happening with increasing frequency, I could not tell you too much about it.

I will remember This Is How You Lose Her, at least the characters and images it depicts.

It is a small book with nine very short stories, yet it feels as if it is all one story, the life and loves of its repeating main character Yunior.  And he’s not the only character who is wonderfully portrayed. Each story has someone whom you will remember. Some of them you might even like, despite their behaviors.

What makes This Is How You Lose Her so memorable for me is Diaz’s voice, his ability to tell you a story, describe a person, paint a picture, or sketch a way of life that feels real and true, even if you do not know much about it (nor even know all the Spanish words he uses) or like the behaviors of those depicted.

I suspect much in these stories is autobiographical, particularly the final one, The Cheater’s Guide to Love.  But it is the way he tells this (his?) story that is fresh and memorable.

(Diaz will appear at the Sixth & I Synagogue in DC, Oct. 22.)

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A Comeback for Sam Wo’s?

28 Friday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Inside Scoop, Sam Wo's Chines Restaurant

 

At least a few MillersTime readers are fans of Sam Wo’s Chinese restaurant in San Francisco’s (dwindling?) Chinatown, and thus here is the latest ‘breaking’ news about the possibility of the 100+ year old restaurant returning to ‘serve.’

According to Inside Scoop, “the Bay area source for breaking restaurant news,” a comeback is underway:

It has been nearly six months since Chinatown institution Sam Wo was forced to shut down. Through the summer, there was been nary a whisper at the two-story restaurant. But things are finally moving forward.

Earlier this month, with the help of pro-bono work from the Chinatown Community Development Center, the Department of Building Inspection finally gave the green light for Sam Wo to proceed with renovations. With that approval in place, now it’s a matter of getting the money needed for the remodel, which is expected to be around $100,000.

This weekend, the newly formed “Save Sam Wo Coalition” will hold the first of many fundraisers to raise money for the many renovations required to bring the restaurant up to code and reopen, like a fire escape and improved kitchen facilities. Among the members of the coalition are Board of Supervisors president David Chiu, Entertainment Commissioner Steven Lee, and of course Sam Wo owner David Ho and his daughter, Julie. Chinatown neighborhood leaders like Reverend Norman Fong are also involved.

According to City Hall, donations to the “Sam Wo Reconstruction Fund” can be mailed to PO BOX 34249, San Francisco, CA 94134. Furthermore, if you’re interested in volunteering for future fundraisers, contact Commissioner Lee at steven.lee.ventures@gmail.com.

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If You Enjoy or Love Reading…

27 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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" J.K. Rowling, " J.R. Moehringer, "Sutton, "The Casual Vacancy, new fiction

If you enjoy or love reading, then September 2012 is a good time for you.

I’ve reviewed two books recently by first time writers, both about 30 years of age, that I believe are worthy of your time and attention. Tanya Chernov has written a deeply emotional and honest memoir about her odyssey during and following her beloved father’s death — A Real Emotional Girl. Kevin Powers’ novel about three young soldiers experiences in Iraq and what one of them experiences after he returns home — The Yellow Birds — is perhaps the Iraqi war’s equivalent to some of the best novels about Vietnam, WWI & WWII.

Now there are two more new books, this time from well established writers, for your consideration, ones I have not read but have been looking forward to reading and will begin as soon as I finish this post. (Note to wife: if you are unable to reach me in the next few days, just leave a message…)

J.R. Moehringer, author of the wonderful memoir, and one of my favorite books from a few years ago, The Tender Bar (he also wrote, with Andre Agassi, the wonderfully insightful and honest book of Agassi’s life, Open), has just published Sutton, an historical novel about Willie Sutton.

J.K. Rowling, we all know what she’s written, has also just published a novel. Her The Casual Vacancy is not a children or teen story, tho some of the main characters in this adult novel are indeed teenagers.

For those of you whose lives do not regularly include listening to NPR and Fresh Air, I link below to two programs that were aired this week, one with Moehringer and one with Rowling. Neither seem to contain ‘spoilers,’ but both will whet your appetite I suspect for the books themselves. Additionally, there are book reviews out this week in various publications about both novels.

NPR: Steve Inskeep Interviews J.K. Rowling. When click on this link, you will find a partial transcript of the interview but even better, there is a link (on the link) to the entire 26:45 minute interview with Rowling (scroll down and look for “Hear an Extended Interview” on the left-hand side of the page).

Fresh Air: Terry Gross interviews J.R. Moehringer. Again, once you open this link, look near the top of the page for the additional link to the 38:39 minute interview.

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“The Yellow Birds” by Kevin Powers, As Good As “Johnny Got His Gun?

26 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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classic war novels, Kevin Powers, The Yellow Birds

I read this novel twice, the two readings within a few days of each other.

Rarely do I read a book twice, tho I’m beginning to rethink that and already know the book I’m going to read again soon (Tanya Chernov’s This Emotional Girl. See earlier review).

The Yellow Birds is the first novel of Kevin Powers, who as a 17 year old (?) joined the US Army and then served in Iraq in 2004/5. His novel takes place over a time period of about five years, from before the main character deploys to Iraq to the three or four years after he returns to Virginia, where he was born.

The novel has already been compared to, or put into the same category as, Stephen Crane’s The Red Badge of Courage,  Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front,  Norman Mailer’s The Naked and the Dead, and Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried & Going After Cacciato.

Continue reading »

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Why (I) Write?

20 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures, Family and Friends

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Michael Winerip, Reason(s) to Write

Curious how one thing leads to another.

The other day a friend sent me a link to an article by NY Times writer Michael Winerip, When Stars Were Just a Stamp Away.

Knowing that I love both baseball and good writing, HS sent along this article as he does others routinely. I loved it.

I’d never heard of Michael Winerip (how come?) and initially thought the article was simply another example of the wonderful intersections of good writing about baseball, family, and life.

But as I reread the article and the comments on the article (tipped off again by HS), I found myself curious about the author and began thinking about what he wrote at the end of the article, about why he and his father (and maybe his son?) write:

“I think that’s why my father wrote, and why I write, and the reason maybe my son will. We hope to create something more than what we are, something that might endure, even though in the end, it may just be a clever one-liner.”

Continue reading »

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“Detropia” – A Wake Up Call to America?

18 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Detropia ****

Here’s another small film, documentary, that is worthy of your attention – Detropia

Many of us probably know a bit about the decline of Detroit (population one-third to one-half of what it was, unemployment between 30-50%, acres of abandoned housing, businesses, etc.). In fact, as this film points out, Detroit, once the fastest growing city in the US, is now the fastest shrinking city in the country.

And, if you’ve focused at all on Detroit, a few other images might come to mind: a heavy, black population with nowhere to go, a new, young, population now living in downtown Detroit, and a wealthy older, white population still living in the surrounding suburbs.

If one picture is worth a thousand words, what is 90 minutes of video worth?

Rubble Porn? Ruin Porn? (new terms to me). A visual, “urban obituary”?

Certainly there are numerous shots of decay and hopelessness. But there is more here.

Heidi Ewing and Rache Grady, the filmmakers, have found three individuals to tell you what living in Detroit is like today for some of those who are (still) there — Tommy Stevens, a former teacher and long time owner of the Raven Lounge, George McGregor, a long time auto worker and union veteran, and a young blogger, Crystal Starr. Each has a particular perspective on what remains, and we see through their eyes what has happened to the largely working and middle class African American parts of Detroit and what it feels like to live there today.

The documentary doesn’t offer any solutions or even suggestions about what could be done to save the city. But it does attempt to show why some folks have stayed there, despite what has happened.

If there is any lesson Detropia seeks to offer, it is probably a wake up call for others in the country to know what can happen to our cities. Whether those watching the film come away with that lesson is not so clear to me.

I’ll be interested in what others think once they see it.

 

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Two Invitations to Join Me…

15 Saturday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Washington Nationals, Zadie Smith

Two opportunities to join me at no cost to you:

1. Washington Nationals vs Los Angeles Dodgers, Tuesday, Sept. 18, 7:05 PM in Washington, DC.

2. Zadie Smith, author, whose newest book NW was just published, will speak at Sixth & I Synagogue, Thursday, Oct. 18 at 7 PM.

If you are interested in joining me for either of the above, email me at Samesty84@gmail.com.

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Fire in the Ashes: Kozol Persists

12 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Death an an Early Age, Fire in the Ashes, Jonathon Kozol

Fire in the Ashes: Twenty-Five Years Among the Poorest Children in America, by Jonathon Kozol

Jonathon Kozol’s still at it.

Tho he turned 76 last week, he hasn’t lost any of the fire and outrage he’s had since his first experiences in the Boston public schools in 1964.

Thirteen books later (Death at an Early Age was his first one), he continues his crusade to wake up America to the injustices that our public schools and our public policies foist on poor kids and their families.

In his newest book, Fire in the Ashes, Kozol writes about the children (many now in their 20s or older) and the parents he got to know in the infamous Martinique welfare hotel in NYC (” a hell on earth…the cesspool, the worst place in the world you could be with children,” according to one parent who lived there).

Fire in the Ashes is their story. “What happened to these children? What happened to their families? Some prevailed, a few triumphantly. Most survived, even at a rather modest level of survival. Others did not,” he writes in the introduction.

Continue reading »

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The Best of MillersTime – Summer 2012

06 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Articles of Interest, Escapes & Pleasures, Family & Friends, GoSox, Millerstime, MillersTime.net, The Outer Loop

No doubt, some, many, all of you have been away for some, part, or all of the summer and consequently have not had a chance to partake of various postings on MillersTime.

To give you another opportunity to so do, here are some of the articles/photos, etc. that either seemed to draw the most interest or that I particularly liked writing and posting:

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