Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse is the Blu-ray Pick of the Week

spiderman across the spiderverse

Superhero fatigue is real. I’ve grown so tired of the MCU and the DCEU I can hardly stand it. And this is coming from someone who considers himself a fan. I’ve loved a lot of the MCU. They are entertaining diversions. I love the way they are interconnected so that each film builds up to a big Avengers movie now and again. But at some point, it all started to feel like homework. I have to watch this film and this series just to understand what is happening in this movie. And now it seems like every movie spends most of its runtime calling back to older movies or setting up some future film.

Movies, especially popcorn movies shouldn’t feel like this much work. I watched the first Avengers movie having never seen any of the previous films, and it didn’t matter. I’m sure I missed a few things, but I still had a great time at the movies. Could I do that now?

When Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse hit theaters in 2018 it felt like a breath of fresh air. It was so original and interesting. It took familiar characters and did something new. It was completely different visually from the MCU and wildly entertaining.

The sequel Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse doesn’t reinvent that wheel, but it still feels fresh. It is easily my pick this week. As with all big-budget releases this one is coming out in a variety of formats with various extras.

Also out this week that looks interesting:

Star Trek: Picard – The Final Season: I am not a huge Trekkie. I loved the original series when I was a kid and watched some of The Next Generation when it came out, but I wasn’t religious about it. I’ve seen all the movies but none of the other series. My wife and I enjoyed the first season of Picard, but not enough to bother with the second or third ones. I’m sure we’ll eventually get to them.

Harley Quinn: The Complete Third Season: I’ve heard good things about this animated series, but have yet to watch it.

Black Circle: The synopsis for this film reads “The lives of two sisters change dramatically since they were hypnotized by a mystical vinyl record from the 1970s”. Sounds fun.

Links of the Day: Bob Dylan Biopic, Wilco, Killers of the Flower Moon, Dave Matthew & Van Morrison

It’s not just you — movies are getting longer: NPR

‘A Complete Unknown’: Cast, Plot, and Everything We Know About the Timothée Chalamet-led Bob Dylan Biopic: Collider

Wilco review – guitar fireworks fused with complex emotions: The Guardian

Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon Confirms Release Date: CBR

Watch Bob Weir Make His Dave Matthews Band Debut At Berkeley Greek In 2016: Jambase

Van Morrison joined by Rolling Stones’ Ronnie Wood in surprise appearance at Irish music festival: Gold Radio

The Who – New York, NY (04/06/68)

The Who
April 6th 1968
Fillmore East, New York



rough audience recording
CDR (trade) > flac

Also includes what is labeled as a AUD/SBD recording with no notes.

  1. Substitute (2’09)
  2. Pictures Of Lily (2’37)
  3. Relax (10’53)
  4. I’m A Boy (3’30)
  5. C’mon Everybody (2’59)
  6. A Quick One While He’s Away (11’19)
  7. My Way (2’18)

time : 35’45

Notes : Can’t remember where&when I downloaded it, thanks to the forgotten previous sharer !
Reseed from DVDR archive, checksum files was ok, but one track, wrongly named, needed correction and then I recreated a new checksum. No other change.

Audience recording, hissy but pretty good though, for the age.
Relax is the same as the famous SBD version (but complete here), while some others tracks are different (as the latter half of the bootleg SBD is the 5th).
For a detailed explanation, read Date Correction.txt

The Rolling Stones – London, England (03/14/71)

The Rolling Stones
03/14/71
Chalk Farm Roundhouse (2nd Show)
London, England

Art indicates this is from a bootleg entitled London Roundhouse. There is no other source info.

Jumping Jack Flash
Live With Me
Dead Flowers
Stray Cat Blues
Love In Vain
Prodigal Son
Midnight Rambler
Bitch
Introduction
Honky Tonk Women
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction

Bonus Tracks: Leeds, England (03/13/71)

Little Queenie
Brown Sugar
Street Fighting Man

The Friday Night Horror Movie: The Innocents (1961)

The Innocents

Based upon The Turn of the Screw by Henry James The Innocents stars Deborah Kerr as Miss Giddens a young woman who takes her first job as a governess for two children at a large country estate.

At first, things seem absolutely perfect. The estate is wonderful, the house is beautiful and there are lovely gardens and a pretty little lake that you can take a rowboat out on. Mrs. Grose (Megs Jenkins) the housekeeper is kindly and the children – Miles (Martin Stephens) and Flora (Pamela Franklin) are adorable.

She actually doesn’t meet Miles at first for he is away at school but Flora seems like an angel. They get along marvelously. Flora keeps saying that Miles will return home soon, but that can’t be correct for the term has just started. When he does arrive shortly thereafter – expelled from school – we know strange things are afoot.

Miss Giddens never seems to sleep well, she tosses and groans all night. She hears whispers echoing through the house. She sees visions of a man and a woman wandering about the grounds. When she describes them to Mrs. Grose she finds they look just like the former governess and groundskeeper both of whom died at the estate.

I won’t spoil where it goes from there, but it does go to some very interesting places. But what makes The Innocents so wonderful isn’t just the story but the filmmaking. It is shot in beautiful black and white that often uses a deep focus allowing people and objects in both the foreground and background to remain sharp. Director Jack Clayton uses this to great effect often placing a character very close to the camera while allowing someone much farther back to react.

It makes great use of light and shadow. The house is both enormous and claustrophobic, enchanting and terrifying. It has some of the best sound design I’ve ever heard in a movie. The musical score consists mostly of a hauntingly beautiful little melody that is played over and over, and sometimes sung and hummed by the children. The house is full of strange noises. There are footsteps and whisperings, creaks, and insects buzzing, and the constant howling of the wind. I’d love to see this film in a large theater with a great surround sound system for I know these noises would come from everywhere to great effect.

It isn’t a particularly scary film, but it is full of dread and a sinister mood. There is a lot of bubbling beneath the surface of the film. Miss Giddens comes from a small home in the country. Her father is a minister and she’s been quite sheltered. When she learns about the former governess having an affair with the groundskeeper she is quite shaken. When she finds out it was the children who caught them in the act she is completely shocked.

Quite a few people have pointed out that her visions of ghosts and her fear that the children are being possessed and need to be protected at all costs come from her own repressed sexuality.

I’m not smart enough for all of that, but I can say there is a lot to come away with and unpack.

This was a wonderful way to start my Great British Cinema month.

Great British Cinema

I haven’t done a theme of the month in a while. I spent the summer sort-of casually going through my life in movies chronologically, but I haven’t been steadfast about it. I’ll probably continue to do that for the remainder of the year (or until I’m finished whatever comes first) but again I’m not gonna try that hard. But before we move into 31 Days of Horror and then Noirvember I did want to do one more new theme.

A few months back the Criterion Channel did a thing where they showed a bunch of British Noirs. I really liked the ones I watched. I’m obviously a big fan of film noir but in some ways, it seems a very American genre. And yet it is also very nebulous. No one seems to be able to completely define exactly what a film noir is and thus it is a genre that can fairly easily be applied to all sorts of films from all sorts of places.

What I loved about those films is that they were very much film noirs, but they were also distinctly British. That got me thinking about British films and that led me to make this month’s theme.

For the month of September, I’m going to watch as many British films as I can. Now British cinema is a very big box to play in so I’m going to try and narrow it down a bit. I do mean films financed by, produced by, made by, and starring British people. I don’t want American films set in Britain.

I’m looking for films that feel distinctly British, even if I don’t know exactly what that means. I’m less interested in Harry Potter and James Bond and more interested in Ealing comedies and Hammer horror.

But honestly, we’ll just see how it goes. Who knows what I’ll wind up watching and talking about. If you are British or are just a fan of British cinema please chime in and let me know your recommendations.

Also, yes, that is my title for this theme “Great British Cinema”. I was aiming for a play on Great Britain but couldn’t quite make it work. Nothing else worked either. My wife suggested Brit-ember like British and September bumped into each other but that seems silly. If anybody has a suggestion, I’m all ears.

Links of the Day: August 28, 2023

Nancy Pelosi on Dylan, the Grateful Dead, a wild night in Argentina — and the healing power of music: LA Times

Every cameo that Alfred Hitchcock made in his films: Yardbarker

Grateful Dead releases live track from upcoming ‘Wake of the Flood’ 50th anniversary edition: KSIX

NH filmmaker commemorates 1973 rock concert: NHBR

Revisiting Wilco & Bob Weir’s Masterful ‘Dark California Stars’ Performances: Jambase

The Friday Night Horror Movie: The Stuff (1985)

the stuff

Late at night, in a snow-covered quarry, a man comes across a bubbling puddle of white goo seeping out of the ground. “What is this?” he asks himself and then proceeds to eat it. Yummy.

Thus begins The Stuff a very silly, messy, and deeply weird movie from the warped mind of writer/director Larry Cohen.

The Stuff, as the white goo is called is packaged and sold as a low-calorie, completely organic ice cream substitute. It has become incredibly popular, so popular in fact that the big ice cream companies have become nervous. They hire former FBI agent turned industrial saboteur David “Mo” Rutherford (Michael Moriarty) to spy on The Stuff Company and figure out exactly what’s in it so they can start making the stuff themselves.

He teams up with Chocolate Chip Charlie (Garrett Morris) a junk food mogul, Nicole (Andrea Marcovicci) an advertising exec who helped sell The Stuff to the masses before she realized exactly what it is, and eventually a young boy named Jason (Scott Bloom) who sees The Stuff independently moving inside his refrigerator and takes it upon himself to start smashing the stuff in a grocery store.

Together they come to realize that The Stuff is a living organism that turns humans into zombie-like creatures before completely consuming them. They’ve got to find out where The Stuff is coming from and find a way to destroy it before it destroys humanity.

I’m making that plot sound more coherent than it actually is. So much of what happens doesn’t make any kind of sense. The plot jumps around from place to place, event to event without any connective tissue allowing our heroes to take leaps that they couldn’t logically make. It’s really pretty ridiculous.

But it works. Mostly because of Michael Moriarity’s completely odd and off-kilter performance and the wonderful production design. There is a great mix of miniatures, puppets, and back projection to make The Stuff look menacing (it never actually does look menacing – it is about as scary as The Blob and just as fun).

The cast includes Danny Aiello as an FDA official who is terrified of his dog for some reason, and Paul Sorvino as an ultra-conservative and totally nuts military Colonel.

The Stuff isn’t a good movie by any stretch but it makes for a wonderful Friday Night Horror movie if you’re in the mood for a totally mid-1980s bit of silliness.