good thing

Oct. 22nd, 2007 03:11 pm
[personal profile] rm
Gluten-free croissants, pain au chocolat and raspberry biscuits have just been mail-ordered.

The funny part?

The bakery on the long list of things that are not allowed in the bakery for those with multiple food restrictions informs us that the croissants are free of lupine contamination.

Because wolves in my food is my biggest problem.

WTF?

Re: .

Date: 2007-10-22 08:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
It's amazing to me how often films shot in New York (this was) don't even look like New York -- as if there is an attempt to anonymize the real city (or, for example, the way a municiple building on Wall Street was transformed into 71st and York in the recent Bourne film). In this all the locations were pretty much what they said they were and recognizeable (I've been in that hotel at the end a dozen times and the interior and the exterior were an actual match). And yeah, the homes were dead on -- speaking of which, how fascinating was it that we saw where everyone lived except our hero?

...?

Date: 2007-10-22 09:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keith418.livejournal.com
And how amazing was it that there was no romantic love interest for him at all? See, this is usually where the idiots start to mess things up. Not this time. I have to wonder if some of this isn't influenced by a kind of "Post-Sopranos" maturity. Have the stakes been raised and the level of detail the audience can deal with been expanded in the wake of Tony and company? I hope so.

The scene after his other brother appears, where he talks to his son in the car, struck me as the place at which the film could have gone off the rails. Does Michael just want to believe his kid won't end up burdened with the same problems? Or, instead, does the child actually have the resilient qualities he describes? I think the child actor was so good that we might well believe the latter and not right it off to the former. Again, like good European films, the smaller parts were all well played.

As I think about it, I also recall the moment at which the child's mother's partner tells her (sotto voce) to "let it go" over the waffle issue. This was another indicator of how observant the people making the film were when it comes to these kinds of details - so often missing in Hollywood films entirely, but present in HBO programs like The Sopranos or The Wire.

Re: ...?

Date: 2007-10-22 09:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rm.livejournal.com
I thought the kid was excellent. I felt like there was a constant sense of him beliving in his beloved book entirely and also knowing that it wasn't real and trying to make sense of the way other people respond to him about the book, which is either never what he wants or never what he instinctively knows is appropriate.

.

Date: 2007-10-22 09:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] keith418.livejournal.com
He definitely carries that frustration of trying to get the adults around him to see what's important about this book. When I was a kid, I knew that frustration. I also liked his dad remarking that as soon as he finishes the book, he knew his son would be on to something else. It revealed how much of this film was drawn from observed reality.

More good stuff on the film here.

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