Tuesday, December 31, 2024

2024 Year in Review

Books were my number one media preoccupation this year. I managed to read 48 of them, more than double last year’s total and well above my previous record (38 in 1998). So this year for the first time I’m able to list my eight favorites (plus a bonus) among everything I read in the last 12 months:

Thanks to KCK Public Library’s access to Hoopla, I was also able to finish around 170 graphic novels. My eight favorites:

  • Black Dog: The Dreams of Paul Nash
  • Through Clouds of Smoke: Freud’s Final Days
  • Bad Dreams in the Night
  • Macanudo: Optimism Is for the Brave (and two others)
  • Banned Book Club
  • Paper Girls
  • The Secret to Superhuman Strength
  • It’s Lonely at the Centre of the Earth

Movie-wise, the results weren’t as good. Only three movies made it to a three-star rating, and nothing got a full four. So I’ll leave out the top eight this year and hope for better in 2025.

Friday, December 27, 2024

Review – Joker: Folie a Deux

If you let Charles Manson rewrite Chicago and then stirred in just enough comic book allusions to vaguely connect it to the DCEU, this is what you’d get. Surreal musical meets grimly violent crime drama meets art house message piece meets big budget Hollywood fiasco. If you want the live, at-home Joker 2 experience, take a messy shit on a paper plate and stare at it for two hours. At least that version won’t involve as much singing. Wish I’d skipped it

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Review – An American Christmas Carol

I suppose it’s unfair to expect the relocation of Dickens’s famous story to Depression-era small town USA to be anything but grim. Unfortunately the script is so ham-handed that it’s hard to appreciate what might in other hands have been an intriguing twist. Henry Winkler stars in the Scrooge role, though in 1979 he was better suited for the flashbacks than for the main drama. See if desperate

Monday, December 23, 2024

Review – Civil War

As a drama about combat photojournalism, this actually works reasonably well. The trouble is that it keeps raising questions that it refuses to answer. It’s difficult if not impossible to tell who’s fighting whom, let alone what they’re fighting about. That’s either a deliberate point about the irrationality of war or the incidental effect of not wanting to choose sides in the current and sadly all too real state of unrest in this country. In either event, the ambiguity proves distracting. Are the soldiers on one side more country-fied than the other? Is the President meant to seem Trump-ish? The guesswork detracts from what might otherwise have been a good job of storytelling. Mildly amusing

Review – Lost Soul

If you ever got stuck sitting through the Brando/Kilmer version of The Island of Doctor Moreau and found yourself wondering how the hell the movie even got made, here’s a documentary that actually answers that largely-rhetorical question. Of course “Brando/Kilmer” should probably be enough to explain how a production could go oh so terribly wrong. Stir in an inexperienced director and a string of bad decisions even beyond the casting, and it’s a wonder the movie wasn’t even worse than it was. Mildly amusing

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Review – Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

If  revenge plot is pretty much your story’s only reason for existence, then it needs to work. So often it doesn’t, but here it does. Though this is the first Mad Max movie with no Max in it, the hero from the last one proves to be enough to stick the car chases and explosions together into something entertaining if not exactly edifying. Mildly amusing