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Category Archives: Escapes and Pleasures

Summer Read(s)

27 Friday Jun 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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" J.K. Rowling, "Casual Vacancy", "Cuckoo's Calling", "The Silkworm", Harry Potter, Robert Gailbraith, Whodunits

BOOK-master180

If you’re looking for a book or two to add to your summer book bag and travels, and if you enjoy thrillers/mysteries/crime/detective/whodunit stories, Robert Galbraith, who is actually J.K. Rowling, has a new one just out.

Yes. That J.K. Rowling, the Harry Potter lady.

If you missed it, Rowling has turned her pen (computer?) to detective stories, and The Silkworm is the second in a series (reported to number seven). I reviewed her first one, Cuckoo’s Calling, earlier on MillersTime and wrote:

It’s good.

Maybe not as good as an Agatha Christy mystery, but if you’re looking for something along the line of a Steig Larsson book, you’ll probably like it, tho it’s not quite as good as Larsson’s first one, The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo.

The Silkworm is perhaps a bit better than Cuckoo’s Nest, but then when one races through one of these page turners, I’m not sure it’s about good literature, but more about entertainment.

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“The Case Against 8”

15 Sunday Jun 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"The Case Against 8", Ben Cotney, David Blakenhorn, David Boies, Jeff Zarillo, Kris Perry, Paul Katami, Proposition 8, Ryan White, Same-Sex Marriage, Sandy Stier, Ted Olsen

http://www.timewarner.com/sites/timewarner.com/files/blog/images/case-against-8-header.jpg

The Case Against 8 ****1/2

We didn’t know much about this documentary when we went to see it last night. We were just looking for a film that we’d enjoy.

When we left the theater, we felt as if we had hit the jackpot.

Not only were we totally absorbed by the almost two hour film, we happened to attend the night the two directors, Ben Cotner and Ryan White, and two of the four plaintiffs, Kris Perry and Sandy Stier, were present and answered audience questions about the film and about themselves.

First, the film.

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A Special ‘Voice’ Writes a ‘Memoir’

10 Tuesday Jun 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"Another Roadside Attraction", "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues", "Still Life with Woodpecker", "Tibetan Peach Pie", Skinny Legs and All", Tom Robbins

What bothers most critics about my work is the goofiness. One reviewer said I need to make up my mind if I want to be funny or serious. My response is that I will make up my mind when God does, because life is a commingling of the sacred and the profane, good and evil. To try and separate them is a fallacy.

-Tom Robbins

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I suspect that not many readers of MillersTime are Tom Robbins’ fans (author of Another Roadside Attraction, 1971, Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, 1976, Still Life with Woodpecker, 1980, Jitterbug Perfume, 1984, Skinny Legs and All, 1990, B is for Beer, 2009 and a collection of essays, reviews and short stories, Wild Ducks Flying Backwards, 2005).

And to be truthful, I can’t say as I can recall which of those I read and which ones I read about or never actually read. (My memory, never one of my strengths, is beginning to falter a bit.)

But what I always loved about Robbins’ writing was his voice, a voice so distinctive and so different from most writers that I have trouble naming writers so gifted. Two that do come to mind are Dylan Thomas and Junot Diaz (Brief Wonderful Life of Oscar Wao, 2007 and, particularly, This Is How You Lose Her, 2012).

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“Ida” – Look for This Film

26 Monday May 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"Ida", Agata Trzebuchowska, Agneta Kulesza, Eisiskes, Pawel Pawlikoski, Poland 1962

large_8F83ceVQBqcGHZ8aglA6kevKa3g

Ida *****

I’ve got another film for you.

It probably won’t be around for long (pity). And it may not even show up where you live. But if you can find it somehow (Netflix?), go out of your way to watch it. I think it’s probably best to see it on as big a screen as possible, but however you can see it, I suspect you’ll be enthralled.

At least we were.

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“Finding Vivian Maier”

11 Sunday May 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"Finding Vivian Maier", Documentary Film, John Maloof, Photography

self.portrait.1029

                        Self-Portrait – October 18, 1953, New York, NY

Finding Vivian Maier *****

It seems as if it’s been a while since I’ve seen a film I wanted to write about and to recommend for your consideration, only one in March (Child’s Pose) and one in April (The Rocket). Even our movie club seems to have hit a dry spell.

Yesterday, however, we saw one that I can enthusiastically suggest you add to your ‘to see’ list, Finding Vivian Maier.

It is several stories.

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“The Goldfinch” and the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction

18 Friday Apr 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

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"Favorite Books of MIllersTime Readers in 2013", "Goldfinch", "Stoner", "The Absolute True Diary of a Part-Time Indian", "The Dinner", "The Lowland", "The Son", Donna Tartt, Herman Koch, Jhumper Lahiri, John Williams, Philipp Meyer, Pulitzer Prize, Sherman Alexie

goldfinch

A dear friend with whom I often discuss books and many other topics wrote me the other day, upon hearing that Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch had just won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, saying, “I guess that means we have to read it.”

At the time of her email, I was 82% finished with the almost 800 page novel (I knew that because my e-reader tells me how much I have read). I finished The Goldfinch the next morning and wrote back the following:

Too long.

Includes too much about stuff I don’t really need to know so much about (addictions, alcohol, drugs).

Needs to be at least 200 pages shorter (700+ pages in all).

Found myself forcing my eye down the page quickly numerous times.

Almost tossed it at several points.

Glad I didn’t.

With all its faults, there is enough of value to make it worth one’s time.

Especially the final 10%.

When I finally began to read it about a week ago, it was largely because one contributor to MillersTime Favorite Reads of the Year had put it in his list. Given its length, I wasn’t sure I wanted to devote that much time to one novel, but I carved out most of three or four days and began reading.

It read quickly, and I found myself engaged in the story. Then, about half way through, it began to drag, and I found myself skimming, mostly wanting to know (and fearing) what would happen to the main characters. Fortunately, I didn’t quit.

The Goldfinch is a story about grief, about art, about adolescence (and about a number of other stages of life), about friendship(s), about what’s important in life, about mother-son relationships, about father-son relationships, about decisions, disastrous and not so disastrous ones, it’s about the heart, about the mind. It asks the reader for some suspension of disbelief. And it asks for much of the reader’s time.

It’s also well written and has enough sense of mystery about the outcome of the characters that once begun, it carried me along.

Whether it deserves the Pulitzer for fiction more than its competitor, Philipp Meyer’s The Son, a lengthy four generation, historical saga about two Texas families, one white, one Mexican, I guess has been decided, at least by the Pulitzer judges. But I enjoyed The Son very much.

If you are looking for shorter novels, I have recently thoroughly enjoyed several other suggestions by MillersTime readers, including Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie‘s Americanah, Sherman Alexie’s The Absolute True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, Herman Koch’s The Dinner, Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Lowland, and a much older one, recently recommended, Stoner by John Williams.

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“The Rocket” – A Boy Cursed?

10 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"The Rocket", Beasts of the Southern Wild, Laos

The Rocket.110433_gal

The Rocket ****1/2

The screening of this film is what our Sunday morning Cinema Club does best: offers films that one is unlikely to see elsewhere but rewards the audience with a good drama, well told, that reveals life and struggles beyond our own, often narrow shores and brings to the screen unknown talent.

The Rocket tells a story of a young Laotian boy and his struggles to overcome the label of being cursed. Along the way, the audience is treated not only to a good drama but also to insights about a land cursed by war, the effects of war and the building of a dam.

The acting, especially by the two youngest characters, Ahlo and Kia, is terrific, but all the performances are good.

In some ways, The Rocket reminded me of Beasts of the Southern Wild, but I also liked it because it took me to a world I barely know and made that world more understandable.

You’ll have to look for this film, but if it shows up where you live, you’re in for an hour and a half treat.

For a short trailer, click on this YouTube link.

*                    **                    **                    **                    *

Update – 4/13/14 – Our Cinema Club gave the film a rating of 94.57% (excellent/good) and 96.59% would recommend it to a friend. Also, if a friend suggests you see the Swedish film We Are the Best, you might want to reevaluate that friendship.

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Two Good Reads, an Invitation & a Request

30 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 3 Comments

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"Composing a Further Life", "Composing a Life", "Stoner", John Williams, Mary Katherine Bateson

Usually I don’t post much on this website about books I’m reading, saving any comments or reviews for the end of the year listing of Books Most Enjoyed by MillersTime Readers.

But I have just finished two books, one fiction and one nonfiction, that I particularly enjoyed, each for different reasons, and thus didn’t want to wait until December to write about them.

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One Play, Two Movies and…

24 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 4 Comments

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"Child's Pose", "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time", "The Grand Budapest Hotel", "Water by the Spoonful", Berlin Film Festival prizes, The Studio Theatre

One play, two films, and a heads up about a play that is coming to NY:

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Unknown Knowns?

21 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 4 Comments

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"The Fog of War", "The Unknown Known", documentary films, Donald Rumsfeld, Errol Morris, Robert McNamara

Rumsfield.107386_gal

Oscar winning documentary filmmaker Errol Morris (The Fog of War, The Thin Blue Line) has made a documentary focusing on Donald Rumsfeld’s life in government, largely, though not exclusively, on his role as Secretary of Defense in the George W. Bush administration.

(Morris’ The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara, won an Academy Award as Best Documentary in 2003. I did not see it, but by many accounts it was an insightful, powerful film in which Morris was able to draw out McNamara about his role in the Vietnam War. One reviewer, Fred Kaplan, The Lies of The Fog of War, praised Morris for his ability to capture McNamara’s introspection, However, Kaplan also writes about the many “instances of McNamara’s mendacity” in that documentary.)

Along with Ellen and several friends, last night we saw a pre-release of Morris’ new film, The Unknown Known. If you plan to see this documentary, soon to be released nationwide, stop reading now as there are spoilers in what follows.

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A Fantasy, Partially Fulfilled

12 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 4 Comments

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"Elsa & Fred", "The Immigrants", "The Mountain", "Words and Pictures", Miami International Film Festival

Four Films in 26 Hours

Miami Film Festival.photo For some time now I’ve wanted to attend one of the premier film festivals (Sundance, Tellerude, Toronto, etc.) and immerse myself in five or six days of nonstop film watching.

I got a taste of that this past weekend when I was in Florida, taking in a few Sox spring training games and visiting my soon departing Miami daughter.

A couple of months ago said daughter sent me the program for the March 2014 Miami International Film Festival, and without much planning or investigating, I quickly chose four films that sounded of interest and got tickets.

How was it?

I loved it.

I saw one film Friday night at 7 PM and three the next day, at 1:15, 3:30, and 7 PM.

The films were all very different, but all four were enjoyable and entertaining. None will win awards, I suspect, but there is something I continue to enjoy about not knowing before hand much about what I’ll see.

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2014 Oscar Nominees, Best Live Short Films

20 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"2014 Oscar Nominated Best Documentary Films ( A & B)", "2014 Oscar Nominated Best Live Action Short Films", Oscars

As I wrote in a previous post about our Cinema Club, I find I am increasingly enjoying seeing films about which I know nothing in advance. Assuming someone has filtered out the bad ones, there is just something enjoyable about being totally open to what is presented.

I experienced this again when I saw the five 2104 Oscar Nominees for Best Short Live Films. These five ranged from seven minutes to 30 minutes in length (total time for all five is 108 minutes). I found two of these five quite absorbing, one, had it ended better, could have been excellent also, and two were just fair, in my unschooled opinion.

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“Particle Fever” – A Film You Probably Won’t See, Unfortunately

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"Particle Fever", "The Lunchbox", "Tim's Vermeer", DC Cinema Club, Films

particle_fever_-_p_-_2013.jpg

Particle Fever *****

Five stars for a 99 minute documentary about science, about the Large Hadron Collider, about the search for the Higgs boson, and about the ‘rivalry’ and lives of theoretical and experimental (?) physicists?

Yes.

And we never would have seen this film if we had read about it in advance.

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2014 Oscar Nominated Documentary Short Program (A & B)

13 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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"CaveDigger", "Facing Fear", "Karama Has No Walls", "Oscar-Nominated Documentary Short Films", "The Lady in Number 6", Films to Consider, Prison Terminal: The Last Days of Private Jack Hall"

Last year, at the urging of several ‘film friends’ and breaking with my prejudice against seeing short films, I found I thoroughly enjoyed both the 2013 Oscar-Nominated Documentary Short Films and the 2013 Oscar Nominated Short Live Action Films.

In fact, much to my surprise, both of those made it into my top category (five stars) of films seen throughout last year.

So, of course, I am returning to see the ones nominated in both categories this year. Reviewed below are the Documentaries, divided into two shows, Program A & B. You can see both A & B, currently in DC at the West End Cinema and at other independent theaters here and around the country, with a half hour break between the two and a discount for seeing them both. If you only have enough time for one of the Programs, see Program B.

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The Two Indias I Know

11 Tuesday Feb 2014

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures, Family and Friends

≈ 9 Comments

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"Beyond the Beautiful Forevers", Bengaluru/Bangalore, Chennai/Madras, Gujarat, India, Kolkata/Calcutta, Kutch, Mumbai/Bombay, The Experiment in International Living

In January, Ellen and I were in India, Ellen as a co-host for a conference in Bengaluru (Bangalore) on corruption and transparency and both of us for a celebration of 50 years knowing and being part of an Indian family.

For me, there have always been two Indias, and I think Ellen has captured some of both in her photos below and in a slide show of additional pictures.

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