Monday, December 13, 2010

Home for the Holidays

This past weekend I ended up going to two holiday parties and separately watching both parts of the John Hughes/Chris Columbus latch-key kid manifesto known as Home Alone. Having not watched either film since I was a child, I had actually forgotten just how much I loved these movies. When the films were released in the Christmases of 1990 and 1992, I doubt my 6-year-old self had any greater joy in the world than seeing Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern getting ruthlessly maimed by the precocious wise-cracking Macaulay Culkin. It's actually pretty clear watching them now why the first one was the third highest-grossing film of all time at its release, and was possibly the greatest cinematic event to children of my generation. It's a remarkably well-made film with a kick-ass soundtrack that succeeds in taking one of the most ridiculous premises of all time and almost making it seem plausible. So much so in fact, that my friends and I would go into my garage and piece together random stuff to try and come up with booby traps we could lay in case an intruder ever entered my house, which in hindsight, would most certainly have all failed against any motivated adult criminal.

So as a responsible adult now, I feel like it's my duty to go through and see what other lessons are to be learned from these films. This is what I learned. . .

1) Peter and Kate McCallister are terrible terrible parents

The fact that they unwittingly abandoned their son while rushing to catch an international flight might be chalked up to simple bad luck, but the fact that they did it two years in a row borders on criminal negligence. I'm frankly surprised that the police that the McCallisters plead their story to in the sequel don't immediately call child protective services. I could write a 9/11-style report on the levels of systemic parental failings that had to occur to allow the plots of these films to happen. Ignoring the fact that they punish their children for mundane sibling bickering by putting them in solitary confinement in the attic, they then neglect to even wake them up in the morning, they fail to notice his absence in the airport shuttle or the security line at the airport, and don't bother to double check that all their children have boarded before selfishly making their way to their luxurious first class seats, as they also apparently despise their children so much that they buy first class plane tickets for themselves while completely segregating their children in coach. As a result they can't even verify the absence of one of their kids until they're halfway across the Atlantic.

So how did the film convince my 6-year-old self that the parents in it are not the neglectful monsters that they are? First, John Heard and Catherine O'Hara are both so ridiculously likable that they seem incapable of being anything other than kind and well-meaning (they secretly love their kids - they just need two years of botched vacations to make them realize it!). Secondly, the film makes it seem like the McCallister family is so large and unwieldy that mistakes like this are just bound to happen. Never mind the fact that all of their other children are complete assholes. In actuality, the McCallister clan is comprised of two sets of parents with 4 or 5 kids each (something I strangely never picked up on when I watched these films as a child). Supervising children can be tough, but I've watched enough "Jon and Kate Plus 8" to know that even the most incompetent of parents can keep track of five fucking kids. And lastly, it totally relies on the incompetence of all of the service employees that Kevin deals with, who fail to notice how insane it is that a 10-year-old child is flying, buying groceries, riding in cabs, going up to the observation deck of the World Trade Center, and checking into hotels completely without supervision. Sure, it's easy enough to be fooled by the charms of a precocious, well-spoken child with a plausible back story, but the only character who even remotely tries to intervene is Tim Curry's cartoonishly evil hotel concierge.

2) Large Irish-Catholic families are a logistical nightmare

The McCallisters hardly seem able to get their children in one place long enough to eat dinner, let alone get them all on the same trans-Atlantic flight. The McCallister house is so unruly in fact, that in the opening of the film they fail to notice the suspicious-looking man standing in the foyer of their home doing a terrible job impersonating a Chicago police officer while he cases the joint for a robbery. If there's a better case for the use of birth control, I'd like to see it.

3) American Airlines sucks

For as much product placement as there is in these two films for the airline, you'd think somebody would have noticed how badly the airline and its staff come off. They completely ignore the standard airline practice of making sure that all minors are either accompanied by their guardians or are escorted by airline staff. They're also totally unable to help a distraught mother find a single open seat on any flight going from the sixth busiest airport in the world to the third (which incidentally happens to be that airline's hub). The only thing that can be said about American Airlines is that the Mrs. McCallister is so happy with her service that she apparently doesn't even bother looking into flights from other airlines.

4) Sadistic physical abuse and torture are okay when somebody is trying to break into your house or a toy store for which you have a mild attachment, and are preferable to contacting law enforcement

By Warner Bros-style cartoon violence standards, none of the cruelties that Kevin McCallister sets against the Wet Bandits are anything particularly egregious. However, in a world where people don't collapse into a pancake and pop up like an accordion when hit with a heavy objects, the pain that he inflicts on the home invaders is nothing short of psychotic (and their ability to endure it is inhuman). Of the traps that Kevin sets for Marv and Harry, the most painful would probably include: being shot in the genitals with an air rifle; having your scalp incinerated by a blow torch; stepping on broken glass and rusty nails with bare feet; and blunt force trauma from countless paint cans, bricks, and lead pipes. Assuming that any person could survive that level of abuse, the joy that Kevin takes in it is truly perverse. Really, how much different would it be for him to chain the two of them to pipes and tell them to saw off their own legs or strap them in a chair and start drilling their teeth. Though I suppose they probably deserve it for continuing to try and break into a house that they know is occupied by this remorseless Rambo child, rather than seeking the medical attention that they both desperately need.

5) Frightening, vagrantly-looking loners are actually just kind, misunderstood souls who will save you when the people you've been torturing all night have you trapped

Kevin is initially terrified by his bearded snow shoveling neighbor, just as he is by the creepy Irish pigeon lady he meets in Central Park in the second film. But he soon learns not to judge these people by their appearance. He learns that the snow shovel man is just giving him threatening looks because he's sad and misses his estranged son, and that the derelict bird lady of Carnegie Hall is actually not a vile pitri dish of contagious disease, and that she doesn't suffer from severe mental illness. Contrary to every episode of "Law & Order: SVU" I've ever seen, reclusive strangers that are inexplicably friendly to small children are generally just watching out for them until their parents get back.


Actually I think this video pretty well sums up my feelings on these movies. . .


Sunday, March 7, 2010

Blogging The Oscars

8:30 - NPH musical numbers always deliver

8:40 - Joke about Christoph Waltz hunting Jews - cut to Ethan Coen

8:42 - Clooney faking (?) being mad about jokes at his expense

8:50 - Christoph Waltz gives surprisingly earnest speech. Mak

9:08 - Crazy Heart Song wins. Is T Bone Burnett high? Where's Woody Harrelson?

9:20 - Hurt Locker writer gives moving speech that makes me feel bad for rooting for Quentin Tarantino.

9:30 - Is any part of Molly Ringwald's face still organic?

9:40 - John Hughes montage showcases many great films, none of which were ever noninated for Academy Awards. Too little too late.

9:45 - Cadre of John Hughes actors reads like a cautionary tale for how not to age gracefully

9:50 - Ben Stiller presents makeup award dressed in Na'Vi makeup. Funniest thing Ben Stiller has done since Zoolander

9:55 - Is it just me or is the queueing off music weirdly sad?

10:00 - Precious writer might be drunk. . . or on ludes. Either way good job getting him off the stage before he falls over.

10:25 - Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner introduce horror montage. Are they aware that Twilight isn't actually a horror film?

10:32 - Hurt Locker winning sound awards is my Oscar pool Waterloo

10:39 - James Taylor sings Beatles song to death montage. RIP John Hughes, David Carradine, Dom Deluis. Wait, what's MJ doing in this thing?

10:49 - Interpretive dance medley includes pop-and-lock routine to atonal Hurt Locker score.

11:06 - The Cove wins best documentary. In case you're curious, the guy accepting this award IS the Indian guy from Short Circuit.

11:15 - On my 5th bright blue Avatar-themed cocktail. . . and I think I'm pretty much checked out. This thing needs to end soon.

11:32 - The Dude wins. Starting to get the feeling that Jeff Bridges is never actually acting.

11:49 - Sandra Bullock reprises her last night's Razzy award win. Continues to blur line between these two awards.

11:55 - Kathryn Bigelow wins victory for female Hollywood directors everywhere. All three of them.

11:58 - Hurt Locker closes the deal. Now all Avatar has to show for its achievements is its legions of worldwide fans and record-setting grosses.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Pre-Gaming the Oscars

Though I've more or less ignored my blog for the last year, this years Oscars are so ridiculous, I'd be a chump not to write a post on them. From everything I've read about the ceremony, it will be nothing short of the most shameless exercise in least-common-denominator pandering you've ever seen. 2 hosts. 10 Best Picture nominees. Preferential ballots. No lame Melissa Etheridge songs. I'm just shocked they didn't ask Larry the Cable Guy to host.

Of course, with that said, I am mostly (mostly) pretty happy about the nominees and predicted front-runners. So here goes with the prognosticating. . .

Best Picture
Cynical Prediction: Avatar
Idealistic Prediction: Inglourious Basterds

Although The Hurt Locker is probably more likely to upset Avatar in this one, I'm much more entertained by the possibility of Basterds stealing Cameron's thunder, and the preferential ballot system completely leaves open the possibility of something whacky like that happening. Though with that said, you'd have trouble making the argument that Avatar isn't the greatest cinematic achievement in the last decade at least. You know, for whatever that's worth.

Best Director

Cynical Prediction: James Cameron for Avatar
Idealistic Prediction: Kathryn Bigelow for Hurt Locker

At this point a Best Director seems like a inadequate award to give Cameron anymore (he's clearly just holding out for a lifetime achievement award anyway). Might as well give it to someone that'll actually appreciate it. Also this is clearly one of those situations where the award is meant to compensate for earlier achievements that were overlooked.

Best Actor

Cynical Prediction: Jeff Bridges for Crazy Heart
Idealistic Prediction: Jeff Bridges for Crazy Heart

Speaking of earlier works being overlooked, I enjoy how Jeff Bridges can just play the Dude in a serious film and it's instant Oscar bait.

Best Actress

Cynical Prediction: Sandra Bullock for The Blind Side
Idealistic Prediction: Anybody but Sandra Bullock

I'm still not positive that I didn't accidentally watch a bad lifetime TV movie when I thought I was watching The Blind Side, but the fact that Sandra Bullock is even nominated for this award is proof that women cannot get a fair break in Hollywood. May I remind you that Sandra Bullock also starred in this film last year.

Best Supporting Actor

Cynical Prediction: Christoph Waltz for Inglourious Basterds
Idealistic Prediction: Christoph Waltz for Inglourious Basterds

Not sure how Tarantino made a film about the joys of killing and torturing Nazis with the most likable and entertaining Nazi Jew hunter ever filmed, but I think he owes a pretty serious debt to Waltz.

Best Supporting Actress

Cynical Prediction: Mo'Nique for Preciousbasedonthenovelpushbysapphire
Idealistic Prediction: Mo'Nique for Preciousbasedonthenovelpushbysapphire

If there was a better portrayal of a child-abusing, welfare-scamming deadbeat mom this year, I'd like to see it.

Best Original Screenplay

Cynical Prediction: The Hurt Locker
Idealistic Prediction: Inglourious Basterds

While Hurt Locker is a poignant and ridiculously suspenseful look at the vagaries of modern guerilla warfare, Inglourious Bastards finds a poetic way to kill Hitler in three separate and distinct ways. Advantage Basterds.

Best Adapted Screenplay

Cynical Prediction: Preciousbasedonthenovelpushbysapphire
Idealistic Prediction: Up In the Air

From all the Oscar predictions I've bee reading, it seems like I'm the only person in America that still thinks Up In the Air is as good as it was when I saw it, and the script is damn near pristine. Though to be fair Preciousbasedonthenovelpushbysapphire was a good deal better than I was expecting it to be.

Best Cinematography

Cynical Prediction: Avatar
Idealistic Prediction: Avatar

Avatar stands as the first film I've ever seen to take 3D photography from the level of gimmick to the level of artistry (I mean, how good is the 3D rack focus on the water droplet in the first scene?). Case closed.

Best Editing

Cynical Prediction:
The Hurt Locker
Idealistic Prediction: Avatar

Not gonna lie. Hurt Locker is a bit of an editor's wet dream. But the sheer thought of an editor having to pull together anything as staggering as Avatar and tell that story as well as they did is mind-boggling.

Best Art Direction


Cynical Prediction: Nine
Idealistic Prediction: Avatar

I wouldn't be surprised if Nine won this one, just because it's the kind of film where half of the Academy voters probably worked on the film (and frankly this is a movie that doesn't have much else going for it other than the art direction). But Avatar stands as the only film that successfully created a world so immersive that it's literally making kids depressed that they can't live there. Advantage Avatar.

Best Costume Design

Cynical Prediction: Coco Before Chanel
Idealistic Prediction:
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus

Surprisingly I've actually seen the majority of these films. And while I will readily admit that Coco Before Chanel is a damn near perfect film for and about costume design, I'd really just like to see Terry Gilliam get some love one of these days.

Best Original Score

Cynical Prediction: Avatar
Idealistic Prediction: Up


I'm gleefully surprised that Up appears to actually be the front-runner for this one. Though wouldn't be surprised to see Avatar do a full sweep.

Best Song


Cynical Prediction: "The Weary Kind" from Crazy Heart
Idealistic Prediction: "The Weary Kind" from Crazy Heart

I hardly thought that this was the best song in the film, but it's definitely the best of the field here. This also makes me disappointed that they're not performing the songs this year. A Jeff Bridges/Colin Ferrel country duet always brightens my evening.

Best Makeup

Cynical Prediction: Star Trek
Idealistic Prediction: Star Trek

It's a pretty weak field this year (since the best makeup work these days seems to be done in computers) but I wouldn't mind seeing Star Trek walk away with something.

Best Sound Mixing

Cynical Prediction: Avatar
Idealistic Prediction: Avatar


Ordinarily these sound awards just seem arbitrary to people without extensive training in audio engineering, but c'mon. . .

Best Sound Editing


Cynical Prediction: Avatar
Idealistic Prediction:
Avatar

See above.


Best Animated Film

Cynical Prediction: Up
Idealistic Prediction:
Up

Alright. I admit it. Even I am getting bored with Pixar winning this every time. Though until somebody makes anything better, that's just the way it's gotta be.

Best Foreign Language Film

Cynical Prediction: The White Ribbon
Idealistic Prediction: Something not about German guilt and anxiety.

As usual, this field is almost entirely composed of films that I couldn't find a theater to see if I wanted to (and naturally I've seen none of them). But the synopsis of this film reads like a perfect storm of qualifications for a foreign film Oscar,

Best Documentary

Cynical Prediction: The Cove
Idealistic Prediction: One of the ones that was too obscure for me to have seen

I've only seen two of the films nominated in this category, and both essentially amount to cinematic versions of rants you might hear from an unkempt grad student at Phish concert. With that said, The Cove was by far the superior of the two, and actually succeeded in giving me information that I didn't already know and making me feel guilty about having enjoyed Sea World as a child. Advantage Cove.