Thursday, March 30, 2023

Days of Wine and Roses (1962) - Springtime for Classics


Director
Blake Edwards

Cast
Jack Lemmon - Joe Clay
Lee Remick - Kirsten Arnesen-Clay
Charles Bickford - Ellis Arnesen
Jack Klugman - Jim Hungerford
Debbie Megowan - Debbie Clay
Jack Albertson - Trayner


The crutch of booze is really no crutch at all. It has certainly lead millions to believe otherwise. Certainly, millions of people will attest just how low it will drag a person down. 
This is the premise of the 1962 psychological drama "Days of Wine and Roses," directed by Blake Edwards ("Breakfast at Tiffany's," "The Pink Panther") and staring Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick. 
I mentioned in my review of "A Face in the Crowd," which also stars Remick, that I'm on a sort of "classics kick" this spring. I'm eager to watch and comment on a long list of classic movies. What I didn't mention is that I'm particularly interested in watching classics staring actor and comedian, Jack Lemmon. There'll be a bunch of Lemmon flicks on this platform in the days to come. So, you're welcome!
He's definitely one of my favorite actor and comedians of all time. Lemmon has an impressive and versatile knack for playing a fellow who can loosen up, and maybe be a bit of a pushover as he did in "The Apartment" or a compulsive person as seen in his role in "The Odd Couple." He can play an edgy protagonist like he did in "The Prisoner of Second Avenue." The way he can mouth off into a frustrated tirade, especially when fellow comedian Walter Matthau is at the receiving end, is hilarious. Nobody can toss a tirade like Lemmon. It's the Lemmon touch!
My introduction to Lemmon was the 1968 movie "The Odd Couple" with Walter Matthau. And if you ask me, it's a great introduction. If you don't ask, it's still a great introduction. 
I have never seen him in such a dramatic role like his performance in "Days of Wine and Roses." 
In this movie Lemmon plays a public relations executive in San Francisco named Joe Clay. He happens to meet a cute secretary named Kirsten Arnesen (Lee Remick) who comes across as arrogant. However, she agrees to go out with Joe, who happens to enjoy a drink or two...or three... or four for the sake of having a good time. Why else would anyone drink? 
Kirsten, however, doesn't drink at all. She relies on chocolate as a means to make herself feel good. To her, it tastes better than alcohol.
Joe coaxes her to try drinking socially, introducing her to Brandy Alexander - a chocolate flavored brandy-based dessert cocktail with cognac, crème de cacao, and cream.
After a few Brandy Alexanders, Kirsten admits the drinks make her feel good. 
They go out on a few more dates for some evening cocktails before Kirsten takes Joe to go meet her father, Ellis Arnesen (Charles Bickford). He runs a nursery and landscaping business out in San Mateo. 
Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick in "Days of Wine and Roses."
He's a bit weary of Joe as any father would be towards his daughter's suitor. Just before leaving, Kirsten drops the bomb that she and Joe got married. 
By the time their daughter, Debbie, is born, Joe and Kirsten have fallen into alcoholism. 
It affects Joe's performance at work resulting in his inability to keep a job. This poor performance on the work front goes on for a few years, losing one job after another. 
And as Kirsten is a stay-at-home mom, she takes up drinking as a means to pass the time. 
While meandering along the sidewalks one afternoon, Joe catches his reflection in a store window and he doesn't like what he sees. 
The sight of himself, drunk and dejected, ignites within him a desire to clean himself up and lay off alcohol. 
He tries to persuade Kirsten that they need to stop drinking, and she reluctantly agrees. 
Together, they go to work at Ellis's nursery with a good start at sobriety. 
One rainy night, Joe sneaks in a bottle of booze into their bedroom (and hides an extra bottle in the greenhouse) so he and Kirsten can have just a little nightcap.
This "little" nightcap turns into an all-out binge. 
After they polish off the first bottle, Joe goes to find the second bottle hidden in a pot inside his father-in-law's greenhouse. 
He becomes frantic when he can't find it, destroying pots and plants until it turns up. 
After passing out on the greenhouse floor, Joe wakes up to find himself in a strait jacket and committed into a sanitarium. 
From then on, he swears to stay sober and joins an Alcoholics Anonymous group thanks to the help of a reliable sponsor, Jim Hungerford (Jack Klugman).
While Joe makes a sincere effort to sober up, Kirsten is unwilling to join AA and doesn't want to stop drinking as she thinks she has it under control. Neither does she think she has the will power like Joe does. Her love for chocolate may have been a sign that she has an addictive nature.
When Kirsten disappears for several days on a drinking binge, Joe finds her checked into a motel, passed out drunk. 
He tries to encourage his wife again to clean herself up for the sake of their marriage and their daughter. But Kirsten refuses. After smelling alcohol on her breath, and seeing all the booze in the room, Joe falls off the wagon and gets drunk. 
So much so that he breaks into a nearby liquor store and attempts to steal a bottle before the owner catches him. 
Back in the sanitarium, Joe realizes, thanks to the painful advice from Jim, that if he is going to conquer alcoholism, he's going to have to avoid all occasions to drinking including Kirsten. It's a painful truth which he brought upon himself.
A year later, as Joe has been sober and taking care of Debbie, Kirsten pays him a visit at his apartment. She hasn't had a drink in two days. Kirsten tries to reconcile with Joe, but he says he can only take her
back if she cleans herself up and quits drinking once and for all. He wants her back more than anything. And Debbie sorely misses her mother. For Kirsten, it's not that easy, not even for her daughter and her marriage. 
"Days of Wine and Roses" is an accurate depiction of human nature, and to the extent a person must sacrifice to conquer vice. 
The film is predictable because alcoholism, or any other attachment and dependence to whatever pulls us from grace, is predictable. 
In this movie, Joe is the one who brought alcohol into Kirsten's life, and together they brought it into their marriage. But redemption is like walking against an escalator. It's slow, tedious and difficult, but not impossible.
There are a few references to Looney Tunes as these cartoons are seen playing on television a few times throughout the movie. When Kirsten gets drunk and ends up accidentally causing a fire in the apartment, she's watching a Looney Tunes cartoon at the time. 
I can guess what this might mean. Both characters treat life and their responsibilities as parents as seriously as a children's cartoon when they drown themselves in booze. They're as irresponsible as children.
Lemmon has a lot of emotions to convey, which he manages to do naturally. He starts off as trying to be charming, then shifts to being a pitiful drunk at rock bottom. His character goes through the turmoil of alcoholism which involves despair, fear, reformation, regret and heartbreak.
He has to play a character who goes through the dilemma of allowing his passions and desires to control his reason. And that's relatable to everyone. It's not easy to watch. 
One thing I did miss is Jack Alberson's role in this movie. Albertson is known for playing "Grandpa Joe" in "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory" 
"Days of Wine and Roses" is likely a familiar tale for a vast amount of people. It's relatable and real from beginning to end. The subject of alcoholism is treated as bluntly and straightforward as it ought to be. It doesn't end on a particularly happy note as I'm sure alcoholism takes something away from its victims each time, which they may not realize until they sober up. 

Monday, March 27, 2023

Citizen Kane (1941) - Springtime for Classics

I don’t know how to run a newspaper, Mr. Thatcher. I just try everything I can think of.

Director
Orson Welles

Cast
Orson Welles - Charles Foster Kane
Joseph Cotten - Jedediah Leland
Ruth Warrick - Emily Monroe Norton Kane
Dorothy Comingore - Susan Alexander Kane
William Alland - Jerry Thompson
Erskine Sanford - Herbert Carter
Ray Collins - Jim W. Gettys
George Coulouris - Walter Parks Thatcher


I feel presumptuous and bold to pass judgement, good or bad, on a film of this caliber. 
Orson Welles's famous drama "Citizen Kane" has been discussed by probably thousands of more well-rounded writers and critics long before me. 
One of my "mortal sins" of being a movie aficionado, and one I am publicly confessing here for all to see, is that this is the first time I have watched it. 
It wasn't because of any lack of interest in the film. I simply never watched it until now. Still, it's only a movie. 
I call my lack of viewing this film a cinematic "mortal sin" because "Citizen Kane" is often referred to as "the greatest movie ever made" by different publications from around the world, film enthusiasts, critics, and such. It's certainly sitting high up among the loftiest of cinematic pedestals with other titles such as "Gone with the Wind" and "The Godfather." But "Citizen Kane" seems to have achieved some sort of accomplishment of being the movie of all movies, even greater than those I've mentioned. In other words, it holds the highest standard of films untouched by another other movie ever made before or since. Some have come close though, but I can't think of any other title that may have surpassed "Citizen Kane" as far as production and storytelling perfection go. 
Ever since diving into movie viewing for the sake of this blog, "Citizen Kane" has been a title I felt I needed to see. So, better late than never.
Orson Welles plays media giant, Charles Foster Kane, whose life is portrayed in a series of flashbacks. 
The film begins at the last moment of his life, secluded in his palatial Florida home called Xanadu. The first word we hear him say is his last - "Rosebud." After whispering his final word, he drops a snow globe which shatters on the floor. 
A news reel then broadcasts the life and death of Kane, which reaches eyes and ears around the world. 
While his life is a sensational story, his last word is a sensational mystery. What did he mean? What or who is "Rosebud?" 
Reporter Jerry Thompson (William Alland) investigates its meaning by interviewing those who knew Kane. Friends. Wives. Colleagues. Associates. 
Throughout the film, we see Kane's life told through stories and flashbacks as Thompson investigates what kind of person Kane was, and who or what "Rosebud" is. 
The most notable part of his humble beginning occurs in the 1870s when gold is discovered in a mine that belongs to Kane's mother, Mary (Agnes Moorehead).
She hires banker Walter Parks Thatcher (George Coulouris) to establish a trust providing an education for young Charlie Kane, and to become his legal guardian. 
Kane doesn't initially take to Thatcher and hits him with his sled. 
Years later, Kane eventually gains control of his trust along with the mine's productivity and his legal guardian's investments. This makes him incredibly wealthy.
Immediately, I was completely invested in Charles Foster Kane. A person's life can be interesting for any number of reasons, whether they were the worst of people, the most influential of people, the saintliest of people, or seemingly the most ordinary of people.  
Orson Welles as Charles Foster Kane.

A "No Trespassing" sign opens the film, hanging outside Kane's estate. But the camera passes it to gsin in-depth insight into his public and private life. 
The approach and method in telling this dramatic story is novel for its time. Only the important aspects of his life are played out. Nothing seems superfluous or showy. Though the story spans a lifetime, every part melds into each other all for one purpose. In the end, only the audience is given closure. 
I probably have to watch this movie again as I have a feeling that there's a lot I missed. If only I had watched "Citizen Kane" years before. 
Still, after this initial viewing I can see why it's called the greatest film ever made.
There's so much depth and a fair share of mystery when it comes to the story. It seems that mystery still lingers. 
Its depth comes across strongly through the great composition and juxtaposition of various shots, and the way Kane's life, starting as a sort of eulogy depicted through news reels, is told in flash backs. There's a lot to take in. Something tells me it'll take a while to really grasp the purpose this film as it's intended to be understood. 
Kane is certainly a mysterious character that has been the topic of speculation and intrigue all these years. Perhaps, that's what has kept audiences fixated on "Citizen Kane." 
The story takes inspiration from media giant William Randolph Hearst who owned the largest newspaper chain in America and has had a lasting footprint in American journalism.
Kane is the semi-rare but quintessential rise of personality. And this mark of Kane is permanently burnt into American pop culture. 
So much has been said about this one movie that it's just as overwhelming as writing about it. The movie has been dissected, analyzed. parodied, mocked, and quoted so many times on so many platforms. In fact, I was rather surprised a few months ago when I mentioned the title to someone, and they had never heard of it.
Thanks to its mainstream place in pop culture, I already knew what "rosebud" refers to long before seeing "Citizen Kane."
"Rosebud" is the innocence and safety of this powerful man's life. It's a gem among the corruption wrought by fame and wealth. It's the part of his life he yearns for most despite the wealth and publicity that followed him even after his death. He used it to attack Thatcher when they first met. Since then, it remained his true source of comfort. 
It's Kane's by-gone days that he'll never get back. There are hints dropped along the way as to the significance of "Rosebud," most of which indicate Kane's dislike of wealth.
In one scene, he tells Thatcher, "You know, Mr. Thatcher, if I hadn't been very rich, I might have been a really great man."
Later, Kane states, "I always gagged on that silver spoon."
Some of these comments are a bit tongue-in-cheek, but there's still truth to them.
And in the last scene, as all of Kane's priceless valuables are cataloged and crated up while workers incinerate his excess belongings, the last line spoken is "Throw that junk in." All Kane's grandeur boils down to junk that feeds the flames, only to become ash. 
Yet, at the same time, Kane knows the extent of his influence and power as great as it is.
Things are tumultuous between Kane and his first wife, Emily Monroe Norton Kane (Ruth Warrick).
As she says to him "Really Charles, people will think...," he cuts her off and says, "...what I tell them to think."
Even though I had only just seen it for the first time, in my head it was among the top films every person should see in their lifetime. 
I've been thinking about it since watching it last week. I'm probably the millionth viewer wondering what it's really about. Or, maybe, I'm reading too much into it.
There's a mystery about it all, but I can't quite put my finger on it. I'm positive I need to watch "Citizen Kane" again, which I will definitely do. 

Wednesday, March 22, 2023

A Face in the Crowd (1957) - Springtime for Classics

Springtime for Classics (2023)

Spring is upon us though my local weather would suggest otherwise. I certainly have a lot going on this season, including the arrival of a new baby... coming soon. 
In the meantime (while I still have some meantime left) I want to kick back every so often when I'm able to this spring and watch the classic movies. 
By "classic," I mean films that have a timeless quality to them. These are films that came out 40, 50, 60 + years ago and have withstood time. Some of these classics probably couldn't be made today because their stories, portrayals, and depictions make some people's "progressive" tummies hurt. To hell with trigger warnings.
But I'm not watching them for that reason. I'm watching them precisely because they're considered "classics," and rightly so for the most part. 
For me, these classics were filmed prior to 1980. I have to have a cutoff date somewhere though I may break that "rule" once in a while. 
Some are more talked about than others. Some were controversial for their time. Others were just emotional grabbers. Some are loved simply because of an actor or two who just nailed their respective role, and then some. And some simply deserve much more attention, which may have waned as the decades progressed. That happens.
I'm picking these cinematic classics up as I find them. There are titles I have seen before, and I am anxious to comment on. Otherwise, I'm mostly interested in watching those I've never seen before. 



Director
Elia Kazan

Cast
Andy Griffith - 'Lonesome' Rhodes
Patricia Neal - Marcia Jeffries
Walter Matthau - Mel Miller
Lee Remick - Betty Lou Fleckum
Anthony Franciosa - Joey DePalma
Marshall Neilan - Sen. Worthington Fuller


"A Face in the Crowd" is a title I've heard of but have never seen before. Honestly, I never gave the film any thought until I stumbled upon it at the library. 
It has been praised quite extensively since its release in 1957. Although, at that time, many folks on the right didn't like it as much as audiences on the left. 
The movie is based on Budd Schulberg's short story "Your Arkansas Traveler" found in his collection of works, "Some Faces in the Crowd." Schulberg wrote the screenplay for the film adaptation. 
"A Face in the Crowd" takes place in rural Arkansas during the 1950s. The story begins as radio journalist Marcia Jeffries (Patricia Neal) visits a prison in search of a talented inmate to perform whatever talent they might have on her show. 
She finds a loquacious guitar playing drifter named Larry Rhodes (Andy Griffith) who has a lot of small-town charm, humor and personality. 
He agrees to sing and play his guitar on Jeffries' program. 
Listeners love his performance and down-to-earth philosophy so much that Rhodes gets his very own radio show. 
Jeffries also gives him the nickname "Lonesome." 
With the help of the station's staff writer, Mel Miller (Walter Matthau), Rhodes garners a lot of popularity in the Memphis area. 
His program includes ad-libbed chats mixed with his ribbing of politicians. 
After he makes fun of the mattress company that's sponsoring his show, resulting in their pulling ads, his audience protests by burning mattresses in the streets. 
However, the mattress company sales go up substantially after Rhodes pokes fun at them. 
So, he returns to television and his personality gains an increasing audience. 
Rhodes also begins an affair with Jeffries. The romantic tension between the two begins pretty much the moment they met. 
He ends up starring in a show broadcasting out of New York, sponsored by an energy supplement called Vitajex, all thanks to an eager mattress worker named Joey DePalma (Anthony Franciosa) who helps get him in this successful situation.
With his increasing fame and influence, Rhodes becomes more and more arrogant. 
His influence grows to such an extent that he's called to assist with improving the public image of California Senator Worthington Fuller (Marshall Neilan). 
Meanwhile, as Jeffries proposes to Rhodes since the two are clearly in a relationship, Rhodes ends up marrying a 17-year-old blond-haired, blue-eyed baton twirling drum major named Betty Lou Fleckum (Lee Remick). Fleckum is smitten by him and caught his eye during a rally in his honor. 
The two elope in Mexico much to the heartbreak of Jeffries. 
However, Jeffries and Rhodes enter a profit-sharing agreement as she's the one who discovered him. 
His ego inflates drastically which works against him. Also, Betty Lou ends up cheating on Rhodes with DePalma. 
Jeffries soon realizes that Lonesome has become a sort of Frankenstein creation as far as personality, media and influence goes. And she deems herself responsible. This "monster" got away from her. 
Jeffries' finds herself in an instance where she can stop him for good. And that's what she does.

My Thoughts
 
Andy Griffith as 'Lonesome' Rhodes in "A Face in the Crowd."
Rhodes starts off by gaining the esteem of audiences before they realize he is far from deserving of it. His audience, though, put him on his grand pedestal.
Back then, "A Face in the Crowd" was seen as a critique of Capitalism by those who praised the movie. It was critiqued by the right for precisely that reason, as well as for being skeptical of government and media. 
However, those who didn't care for it still praised the director, Elia Kazan, for turning in eight Communists to the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1952. To that, I'll quote Chesterton who said, "There is a thought that stops thought. That is the only thought that ought to be stopped.” 
I have previously seen another of his well-known pictures, "On the Waterfront" (1954) before. And I consider it one of my favorite flicks. That was nearly 20 years ago.
He's directed some other well-known movies such as "East of Eden," "A Streetcar Named Desire," "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" and "Gentleman's Agreement." 
There's a line in "A Face in the Crowd" that sums up Kazan's kind of storytelling. 
"People are fascinating wherever you find 'em." 
While I'm not too familiar with Kazan nor his work having only seen two movies, one of which was 20-years ago, it seems like he's the Norman Rockwell of movie making. Underneath the good ol' American way of life lies an array of hidden things - thoughts and desires. Some of these things can be truly disquieting.
The cultural tables have certainly turned in modern society. Today, the counterculture is the Conservative. They're the new hippie. Tradition and high standards are the counterculture. Morality and decency are the counterculture. The nuclear family holding society together at the seams is the counterculture.  
At the time of this film, the "beat generation" was the counterculture. "Beatniks." 
They rejected the narrative values of the time. They rejected economic materialism and immersed themselves in psychedelic drugs and sexual "liberation." It morphed into the hippie movement of the 1960s and 1970s. The left was down with the system. The right supported the system. Today, we have the "woke" left. 
I can see Conservatives today, in 2023, loving "A Face in the Crowd" for the reasons Conservatives of the day critiqued it. 
Today, Conservatives are weary of government and especially the mainstream media which has mostly become nothing short of a mouthpiece for left-wing politics. 
"A Face in the Crowd" shows how easily manipulated audiences can be when tuned into the media. 
Again, Conservatives are today's counterculture skeptical of leadership and the left-leaning influence the media has gained over audiences. In our current politically driven society where politics is a god, "A Face in the Crowd" is a film that likely would appeal to a whole different audience today than it did in 1957. 
"Lonesome" is his own man. Initially he says what the "ordinary" folks want to hear, but not what sponsors and producers want them to hear. He quickly becomes, as the movie states, "the voice of grassroots wisdom." It culminates to Rhodes giving political advice in order to transform the California Senator into a sellable product that the masses can only think will benefit themselves. 
"Did you ever hear of anyone buying any product - beer, hair rinse, tissue - because they respect it? You gotta be loved," Rhodes tells Sen. Fuller. 
Rhodes soon becomes part of the system he initially critiques. That is, he becomes part of the establishment that strives to "influence the masses" for their own gain at the cost of the masses. 
"This whole country's like my flock of sheep," he says late in the film. "Those morons out there? Shucks, I could take chicken fertilizer and sell it to them as caviar. I could make them eat dog food and think it was steak. You know what the publics' like? A cage of guinea pigs! Good night you stupid idiots. Good night, you miserable slobs. They're a lot of trained seals. I toss them a dead fish and they'll flap their flippers." 
Walter Matthau, Patricia Neal, and Andy Griffith.
Today, it's called "bigotry of low expectations." And there's one political side that depends on it. 
There's also a subtle but apparent sensuality that manifests throughout Lonesome's gradual rise to fame. 
It's seen when he visit's Jeffries in her hotel room. He leaves his suitcase outside her room. It's seen again when he first sees Betty Lou twirling her baton. Later, when he visits Marcia again, she's wearing into a black négligée.  
This movie is Andy Griffith's film debut and his performance is nothing short of phenomenal. He puts so much energy and emotion into his role that I'm struggling to find a performance to compare his to. And the organic transition his character goes through is superb. Lonesome goes from likeable to dejected and unlikeable. 
It's also actress Lee Remick's film debut as well. She went on to star in some notable films such as "Anatomy of a Murder" (1959), "Days of Wine and Roses" (1962) and "The Omen" (1976). Incidentally, "Days of Wine and Roses" which also stars Jack Lemmon, is on my "to watch" list for spring. 
"A Face in the Crowd," reminds me of the 1979 movie "Being There" which has the same sort of premise as far as "influencers" go, as the kids say nowadays. It also reminds me a little of the 1994 movie "Forrest Gump." Maybe it's that southern aspect used in both films.
Like Kazan calling out, or rather cancelling, those Communists back in the 1950s, so does "A Face in the Crowd" call out the powers that be, the elites, the demagogues who consume public trust and produce an intentional general mindlessness among audiences. They run the risk of failing to see that their American way of life is under constant threat by such elites who have nothing whatsoever in common with them, nor have any concern for their well-being. It's all for their own self-gain. 
It's like what William Gaines, founder of "Mad Magazine," once said.
“Don’t believe in ads. Don’t believe in government. Watch yourself - everybody is trying to screw you!”

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance With Somebody (2022) - My Thoughts Real Quick

The biographical film "Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody," released in December 2022 and directed by Kasi Lemmons, tells the career story of famed singer and actress Whitney Houston.
When it comes to biopics, I appreciate the one's that focus on the particular part of a subject's life that best conveys why they're significant. Such depictions can still convey a lot about a notable person for the audience to walk away with. 
When movies depict someone's entire life, though it can be just as informative, it also runs the risk of clouding the reason why they have a biopic about them in the first place. 
This movie focuses on Houston's career from beginning to end. 
While I know very little about Houston, outside of recognizing some of her songs, and having seen her in the film "The Bodyguard" with Kevin Costner, I learned a few things about the singer just by watching this flick. 
For instance, I didn't know that she was bisexual. But as the film is really centered on her rise to fame, I don't find that detail all that interesting as it's a secondary detail. I also didn't know about her tumultuous relationship with her father. I mean, not that I cared to know about it. It's just there. Those personal details are telling, but the focus of the entire film is her rise to the level of success she achieved. That's what I find most interesting - how a person can rise to such a level that they become a household name and make an impact in a particular field or industry. 
Houston, nicknamed "The Voice," is among the bestselling musical artists of all time. She sold over 200 million records worldwide. And she's ranked at number two on Rolling Stone's 2023 list of all-time greatest singers following Aretha Franklin.
Naomi Ackie does a great job in the lead role as Houston. Her performance is sharp as she portrays the singer's personality and demeanor which changes from soft and humble-like to torn and broken as her rise to world- renowned celebrity singer grows. 
The film showcases how extremely talented she was, and how she had a voice of gold. 
However, it's just a showcase of her rise to fame and nothing more. It shows one event during her career after another. It doesn't get too personal outside of her romantic relationship with her friend and former lover Robyn Crawford (Nafessa Williams), her ups and downs with her former husband Bobby Brown (Ashton Sanders), the support she had from her producer Clive Davis (Stanley Tucci), and the relationship she had with her parents. 
She had an amazing talent which made her famous and that certainly affected those around her in different ways. That's the extent of the film.
Outside of that, there's nothing much to take away about the life of Houston. 
Aside from the acting, the singing is amazing and entertaining. Otherwise, the film breezes through her career. This happened, and then that happened, and after that, this other thing happened. The end. 
It feels, overall, like a quick story. As safe and thoughtless a comment as it is, my only thought at the end of the movie was "well, that was interesting." It's the same thought I would have if I had watched a 40-minute T.V. biography on Whitney Houston. 

"My Thoughts Real Quick"
I tend to put in more effort on my site 1000daysofhorror.com while this blog gets much less traffic. In an attempt to remedy that, and write more posts especially on new releases, I plan to jot down my thoughts rather than write up lengthy reviews.
Oh, there will still be lengthy reviews on older films. But for newer releases, they'll be quick. 

The Shop Around the Corner (1940)

" There might be a lot we don't know about each other. You know, people seldom go to the trouble of scratching the surface of thing...