Monday, December 26, 2016
Thursday, December 22, 2016
It's a Wonderful Life (Frank Capra, 1946)
(Warning--plot and narrative twists discussed in explicit detail)
I do think Frank Capra's best-known film is some kind of masterpiece.
Thursday, December 15, 2016
Hell or High Water (David Mckenzie)
Cops and robbers
David Mackenzie's Hell or High Water, from a script by Taylor Sheridan (Sicario) turns on a terrifically compelling premise: that brothers Toby and Tanner Howard (Chris Pine and Ben Foster respectively) are so financially threatened by the reverse mortgage loan lent them by a bank--the fictional Texas Midlands--for their recently deceased mother's treatment that they've taken to carefully robbing that same bank's smaller branches (teller's drawers only; no vaults, no bundles, no large bills) to repay the loan.
Thursday, December 08, 2016
Moana (Ron Clements, John Musker)
Thursday, December 01, 2016
Martial Law Movies
Martial Law Movies
Rodrigo Duterte on former president Ferdinand Marcos (italics mine): "President Marcos was a president for so long and he was a soldier. So that’s about it. Whether or not he performed worse or better, there is no study, there is no movie about it. It’s just the challenges and allegations of the other side which [are] not enough"
Well then!
For studies let me recommend a few titles: Ferdinand Marcos and the Philippines by Albert F. Celoza; The Marcos Dynasty by Sterling Seagrave; and The Conjugal Dictatorship, by Primitivo Mijares, who worked for Marcos, turned against him, disappeared shortly after the book was published.
In literature there's Lualhati Bautista's Dekada '70; Emmanuel Lacaba's Salvaged Prose and Salvaged Poems; and Ninotchka Rosca's State of War.
And more, much more; I'm only citing titles I'm familiar with.
As for movies--in ascending order, my incomplete unobjective totally off-the-cuff list of titles that do in fact deal with the Martial Law Era.
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