Monday, December 15, 2008

Role Models

Directed by David Wain
Released in 2008.

Didn't like it! Didn't like it! Too predictable! Didn't enjoy the whole fantasy game aspect. Ugh! Too predictable, not funny enough. Depended too much an bawdiness and profanity. I'm the last person to object to those two things in and of themselves but you have to give me more if you want me to laugh with your movie. Saving grace: Paul Rudd of course!

Zack and Miri Make a Porno

Directed by Kevin Smith
Released in 2008.

I really enjoyed the movie. Romantic comedy is quite a departure for Kevin Smith but then this romantic comedy is in some ways quite a departure from the genre itself. Two friends fall in love while they make a porno to make ends meet. It's very po-mo and extremely irreverent, not to mention a great set up for comedy. But it was a let down in other ways since the logic of the romantic comedy genre had to win over and in the end the porno subplot was quite unceremoniously thrown into a closet so that the hero and the heroine could have their perfectly cliched, foot-popping moment. Gag!

The Bluest Eye

Written by Toni Morrison
Published in 1970.

Morrison's command over the English language is exquisite. The novel was an absolute pleasure to read, a veritable masterpiece. Another book written from the eyes of children, it examined racism, both self-inflicted and otherwise, that blacks were a victim of in the America of the 70s. Careful thought and deep feeling is apparent in the construction of every phrase of that book. It put me in awe of Toni Morrison.

A Fraction of the Whole

Written by Steve Toltz
Published in 2008.

Extremely funny. Extremely long. The only reason I would reread it though is that it is about an unadjusted genius who spends his life from beginning to end without fully tapping his potential or doing anything significant at all. Oddly comforting, I have to say.

Funny Boy

Written by Shyam Selvadurai
Published in 1994.

Very touching book about a young boy coming to terms with his sexuality and with the ethnic tensions in Sri Lanka. Written from the point of view of the young protagonist, the book, without masking the cruelty of the ethnic riots in Sri Lanka, manages to undercut ethnic loyalties with the cross-ethnic relationships that evolve almost surreptitiously – against everyone's wishes, even those in the relationships – and gives some hope for the success of the ties of humanity over the ties of ethnicity, if not in the Sri Lanka of the novel, then in some other time or place.