dual personalities

Category: Movies

Par for the course

by chuckofish

As predicted, I had a very quiet long weekend. Daughter #1 got a lot done while she was here, but I spent the weekend reading and napping. No matter how much I nap, though, I never feel less fatigued. This is problematic and annoying, but par for the chemo course.

I re-read Rest and Be Thankful by Helen MacInnes, published in 1949, a novel which I found not to be dated, still relevant and very enjoyable. I started Wildfire at Midnight by Mary Stewart (1956). We watched Hatari (1962) on two nights so we could maintain our 8:30 bedtime.

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You gotta love those baby elephants!

On Sunday night the boy brought the wee laddie over for a Labor Day barbecue. (Little Lottie was under the weather and stayed home with her mother.)

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Best Book Ever

It is always fun/interesting to see one twin without the other. The wee laddie was well behaved and mellow, but we did have to have a lesson in not playing “catch” with the tator tots at the dinner table.

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Daughter #1 headed back to Mid-MO on Monday morning and I continued with my reading/napping routine.

Can’t quite believe it’s September. I have a very busy week at work–here’s hoping I can get through it without too much ado. How is your week shaping up?

“Come a-shootin”*

by chuckofish

Well, a long weekend is upon us and I, for one, am looking forward to it. As usual, I won’t be doing much and that’s okay.

Last week I watched a couple of good westerns, which I had never seen (or at least don’t remember seeing). The Westerner is a 1940 American film directed by William Wyler and starring Gary Cooper, Walter Brennan and Doris Davenport. Brennan won his third best supporting actor Oscar for his portrayal of Judge Roy Bean. Cooper plays a saddle tramp who tricks the judge out of hanging him and then tries to help the homesteaders.

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The script is good, the direction is great and it is a real pleasure to watch Gary Cooper ride around on the range. Back in the day, actors who appeared in westerns knew how to ride. (This is not the case in recent years and it is embarrassing to watch an actor try to maneuver a horse when he doesn’t know how.) Cooper grew up on a ranch in Wyoming and he he is truly one with the horse. Walter Brennan wasn’t so bad himself.

The other movie I watched, also about cattlemen vs. homesteaders, was Blood on the Moon (1948). Directed by Robert Wise and starring Robert Mitchum, Walter Brennan and Robert Preston, it is kind of a western film noir, dark and mysterious.

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In a plot twist, the cattlemen are not even the bad guys.

Anyway, I liked both films, so if you are in the mood for a good western, you might try either of these lesser known ones.

I have to admit, I have also been watching Jim Gaffigan stand-up comedy specials, which are available on Amazon Prime.

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He is an American stand-up comedian raised in Indiana and he is hilarious and G-rated. Gaffigan’s style is largely observational, and his principal topics relate to laziness, eating and parenthood. He is not political. He makes me laugh.

Comfort is where you find it.

Daughter #1 is coming home for the long weekend and will keep me company as I don’t do much. Hopefully the wee babes will come over for a visit. What are you going to be up to this weekend?

*Judge Roy Bean in The Westerner

“His heart is a feather. In all kinds of weather. He sings his cattle call.”*

by chuckofish

Did you know that tomorrow is the National Day of the Cowboy? Well, it is. And, of course, it is one of my favorite days.

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I will spend the weekend indulging in a favorite activity, i.e. watching cowboy movies…

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Howard Hawks’ Red River (1948)

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Chisum (1970)

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Lonesome Dove (1989)

“It’s a funny life,” Augustus said. “All these cattle and nine-tenths of the horses is stolen, and yet we was once respected lawmen. If we get to Montana we’ll have to go into politics. You’ll wind up governor if the dern place ever gets to be a state. And you’ll spend all your time passing laws against cattle thieves.” ― Larry McMurtry, Lonesome Dove 

Most westerns aren’t even really about cowboys, so you have to give it some thought.

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Junior Bonner (1972)

Life is a journey and it ain’t for sissies. It’s a hard struggle, and perhaps the cowboy personifies that struggle. Whatever. It works for me.

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*Tex Owens, “Cattle Call”

Ride, boldly, ride*

by chuckofish

My dear DP is here now in flyover country to spend some time with me. It’s not like we are having “super fun” exactly, but we are having quality one-on-one time like we haven’t had in years and years. That is a great blessing.

She is also giving some respite to the OM who has been forced by our present circumstances to shoulder more than his usual burden of responsibilities. [Plus, in the last few weeks the air conditioning went out, the garage door needed adjusting and now the dryer vent has come undone for the umpteenth time and we have had to call in the auxiliary troops again.] C’est la vie. He reminds me sometimes of Arthur Hunnicutt trudging off to get Croton Oil or gunpowder or soap in El Dorado (1967) for the beleaguered gang in the sheriff’s office.

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But he’s been great and I am grateful. And today is the OM’s birthday! I’m afraid it got a little lost in the shuffle, although daughter #1 sent him a card…

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…and then daughter #2 sent him the same card! There will be no big party to celebrate, but maybe we’ll watch Bullitt (1968) and get Chik-fil-A. I could maybe go for that too.

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The wee babes don’t get back into town until tonight, and they are coming over tomorrow 🎉🎉, so perhaps there will be cake and a few presents. It’s always a party when they come over!

In the meantime, here are some pics from their visit to Sarasota.

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Aren’t they getting so grown up?

L’Chaim to the OM tonight!

*Edgar Allan Poe

What’s playing at the Roxie?

by chuckofish

Happy Friday! It has been a long week back at work and I am looking forward to not doing a lot this weekend.

The wee babes are in Florida with their parents where the wee laddie will be sporting the latest in toddler fashion–a “tractor hat” which I knew would hit the sartorial sweet spot for the boy who loves all things tractor.

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I’ll be trying to get the house ready for a visit from my DP next week.

Maybe I’ll catch up on some more 1939 movies. Last week I watched Only Angels Have Wings (1939) which was very good. I have been on a bit of a Cary Grant kick recently…

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…and I’m thinking it may be time for Gunga Din (1939)…Tonight TCM is showing this lineup of 1939 movies:

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Anyway, however you slice it, the weekend is nearly here! Huzzah!

“I haven’t lost my temper in 40 years”*

by chuckofish

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Tomorrow is the 4th of July–let’s whoop it up some!

In the morning TCM is playing some great John Wayne movies…

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…and that night they’re showing some appropriate musicals…

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We will probably be taking it pretty easy here in our flyover neighborhood. We won’t be attending Fair St. Louis or anything big like that. (We’ll watch the parade on TV.) But the OM will fire up the barbecue and the wee babes will come over for awhile. (They have new outfits.)

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We’ll dig out the sparklers and bang some pots and pans. Maybe we’ll play some patriotic music…

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And let’s all say a prayer:

Lord God Almighty, in whose Name the founders of this country won liberty for themselves and for us, and lit the torch of freedom for nations then unborn: Grant that we and all the people of this land may have grace to maintain our liberties in righteousness and peace; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. (Collect for Independence Day, BCP)

There are a lot of movies with 4th of July scenes, but lists almost always forget the classic finale of McClintock! (1963) wherein John Wayne spanks Maureen O’Hara and everyone cheers. Here’s another great scene featuring our quintessential American hero.

Have a good one. Make good choices.

*John Wayne in McClintock! (1963)

Wild Thing. You make my heart sing. You walk everything.

by chuckofish

Well, I was too sad to watch a Doris Day movie last night, so I watched Major League (1989). I am not ashamed to say that I laughed out loud through the whole thing.

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I had never seen this baseball film classic. It was quite amusing.

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You’ve got Charlie Sheen at the beginning of his career, Wesley Snipes, Tom Berenger (remember him?) and a bunch of other guys…plus Bob Uecker playing the voice of the Cleveland Indians, sportscaster Harry Doyle.

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“Just a bit outside”

Chief Wahoo may be gone now, but he lives on in this highly insensitive movie.

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So if you are looking for a few good laughs, check out Major League. You’ll be glad you did.

Meanwhile the Blues are back in town, playing the Sharks in the NHL playoffs. The town is buzzing. Go Blues!

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(NHL.com photo)

“Happy Soap saved my life.”*

by chuckofish

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Doris Day died. Even though she was 97, I am still very sad. I have written about DD before. She was one of those people who was really good at everything she did–exceedingly competent. She could sing, she could dance, she was funny, and she always looked great–perfectly groomed–doing it. And you didn’t hate her either, because she didn’t appear to take her beauty too seriously.

She made everything look easy and I think that’s one of the reasons she was always underrated and never won an Academy Award etc. And she didn’t wear her suffering on her sleeve. She had a work ethic.

Well, her life has been picked apart and criticized and psychoanalyzed by many, many people–some of them the kind of fans who resent it when the object of their passion declines to be interested in them or even pretend to care anymore. Why should she? She retired thirty-something years ago. Let it go.

A couple of old guys were talking about Doris in the hallway of my flyover institute yesterday. They were saying how much they had loved her back in the day. One of them said, “I always thought she would have liked me, if we ever met…” Yes, Terry, you would have had a shot with Doris Day…but that was one of the secrets of her success, right? She seemed attainable!

Well, she brought a lot of joy into my life and she will continue to entertain people long after her death.

By the way, John Updike was a big fan too. She fascinated him and he wrote a novel whose main character is based on her–In the Beauty of the Lilies, published in 1996. And he wrote this poem:

HER COY LOVER SINGS OUT

Doris, ever since 1945,
when I was all of thirteen and you a mere twenty-one,
and “Sentimental Journey” came winging
out of the juke box at the sweet shop,
your voice piercing me like a silver arrow,
I knew you were sexy.

And in 1962, when you
were thirty-eight and I all of thirty
and having a first affair, while you
were co-starring with Cary Grant in That Touch of Mink
and enjoying, according to the Globe,
Doris’ Red-Hot Romp with Mickey Mantle,
I wasn’t surprised.

Now in 2008 (did you ever
think you’d live into such a weird year?)
when you are eighty-four and I am seventy-six,
I still know you’re sexy,
and not just in reruns or on old 45 rpms.
Your four inadequate husbands weren’t the half of it.

Bob Hope called you Jut-Butt, and your breasts
(Molly Haskell reported)
were as big as Monroe’s but swaddled.
Hollywood protected us from you,
they consumed you, what the Globe tastefully terms
the “shocking secret life of America’s Sweetheart.”

Still, I’m not quite ready
for you to breathe the air that I breathe.
I huff going upstairs as it is.
Give me space to get over the idea of you –
the thrilling silver voice,
the gigantic silver screen. Go
easy on me, Clara, let’s take our time.

–John Updike in “Endpoint and Other Poems”

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Into paradise may the angels lead you, Doris. At your coming may the martyrs receive you, and bring you into the holy city Jerusalem.

(Mark your calendar for June 9 when TCM will show Doris Day movies all day.)

*Beverly Boyer (Doris Day) in The Thrill of It All (1963)

Counting every blessing

by chuckofish

We have a had an extremely wet winter and spring. Yes, the trees have been beautiful and the grass is lush, but the flooding has been bad.

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The eye shall look, the ear shall hark

To the hills, the doings in the hills,

And rivers mating in the dark

With tokens from the hills.

Now what is weak will surely go,

And what is strong must prove it so—

Stand fast in the lowlands, lowlands,

Lowlands under the hills!

(Rudyard Kipling, from the poem “The Floods”)

There is more on the way.

If this puts you in the mood to watch a disaster movie, here’s quite an exhaustive list of choices including a few about floods. I have seen Noah (2014) starring Russell Crowe and it is a pretty terrible movie. It seems odd to me that, considering it is based on the biblical story of Noah and the Ark, there is nary a mention of God in the whole thing. I think I would rather watch The Bible: In the Beginning (1966) which includes the Noah story from Genesis. You remember, John Huston plays Noah.

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As I recall, it is overly long and a tad boring at times, but I may have to check it out…

Meanwhile, we will hope and pray that the cresting rivers here in Missouri and our surrounding states do not wreak too much havoc with our neighbors and their lives.

When in doubt

by chuckofish

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“Wait on the Lord” is a constant refrain in the Psalms, and it is a necessary word, for God often keeps us waiting. He is not in such a hurry as we are, and it is not his way to give more light on the future than we need for action in the present, or to guide us more than one step at a time. When in doubt, do nothing, but continue to wait on God. When action is needed, light will come.”
― J.I. Packer, Knowing God 

While we’re waiting, we can watch Paul Newman movies. He is the Star of the Month on TCM!

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I am not being glib. Sometimes binging on well-loved movies is the way to go.

(The painting is by J.M.W. Turner)