Category Archives: Love and Life

The MovieNight that wasn’t to be.

Life is unpredictable.

On Wednesday morning I was riding to Brooklyn for a meeting. I was psyched to be riding again after a long winter of awful weather, during which my riding had been mostly confined to quick trips to the East River Park, with Flea in his basked on the front of my bike. Sure, there was a bit of drizzle about, but I figured the fresh air would do me good, even if it was a bit moist. I had put on my tights, my fluorescent green Pearl Izumi  jacket, fingerless gloves, crazy iridescent blue sneaks, and my helmet. Helmet, helmet, helmet! Thank God. I was headed down the Bowery towards the Manhattan Bridge, going at a nice pace. My lungs were starting to work, my heart-rate climbing. I’d be in Fort Greene in no time.

A few blocks south of Houston, in a shared roadway (bikes and motor vehicles use the same space-no dedicated bike lane), I moved a bit further into the road to go around some orange traffic cones, and I was suddenly struck by a speeding van. Just remembering this sensation is terrifying… the OMG moment, when you realize that you are about to die, flying through the air uncontrollably, but somehow trying to contort your body so that you can escape further impact with the van, and not get run over by the turning wheels. I don’t know the ratio of pure luck to shear willpower, but I managed to propel myself away from the vehicle. Spinning, and spinning and bouncing and bouncing. My head hit the pavement hard. I mean HARD. My helmet was so effective in diffusing the impact, that I kind of fell in love with it at that second. I remember the feeling… it was like Thank you, Helmet!

I never lost consciousness, but jumped up off the ground in the way that most adrenalin-fueled accident victims do, and scrambled to the side of the road, whereupon it seemed foolish not to lie back down right away. I was having a hard time getting enough air in my lungs. The wind had been knocked right out of me. Some kindly passersby came to my aid. One pillowed my head with her handbag, while the other dialed 911 and collected the spilled contents of my pockets from the roadway. An ambulance arrived quickly and I was hit this time with a barrage of questions, I guess to determine whether I had sustained any head injuries. I proudly answered all questions correctly, and asked the van driver (he stopped) to lock my bike up… the instructions included removing the front wheel, which is funny, because the police arrived just as he was doing that, and assumed he was a petty thief, taking advantage of a confused situation. I found it laughable, but the police were intent on being serious.

A few moments later, after a scream-out-loud transfer to the inside of the ambulance, I managed to call Zofi, and Pat, who I had intended to meet in Fort Greene. I kind of knew that I was going to be OK at that point and planned to carry on with MovieNight the next day. As you probably know, things are never quite as simple as you expect them to be. After x-rays, a sonogram, a CT scan, and more x-rays, it seemed that my injuries were limited to a broken clavicle, and lots of bruising, most painfully on my spinal lumbar nerves. My neck was fine, and my blood pressure normal. I could go home right away. Well, I could if I passed a simple standing up and walking test.

Even with a healthy dose of Morphine in me, standing up turned out to be more painful than I could have imagined. The pain (mostly in my back) was excruciating, and I felt a rush of dizziness and nausea, that made me cry. Cry. I usually reserve my crying for something which doesn’t really warrant it, like a cheesy pet-food commercial or the last scene of Rabbit Hole, but I was overtaken with a feeling of helplessness now, and crying seemed ok.

Anyway…

There’s no need to elaborate further here on my hospital stay (I could, but I won’t), and you know that MovieNight didn’t happen this week, but I wanted to say thanks to all of you lovely people who reached out to me and Zofi with words, deeds, things, in support (it was funny how many of you suggested that I enjoy the painkillers. I’ve learned that enjoying painkillers works best when you start off without pain). Of course, I feel lucky that that spot on the Bowery is not marked with a white “ghost bike”, but more than that, I feel loved. Uh oh… might have to cry again. : )

White Material: MovieNight material?

I watched White Material a few weeks ago from an unusual vantage point: I had succumbed to my first cold in over a year, and since I had just completed a satisfying number of paid assignments, I saw no plausible reason to not languish in my sick-bed for one or two days until I started to feel better. After all, rest is the best treatment for the common cold, unless you simply can’t afford to take the time to be sick… in which case one might consider striking a Faustian bargain with the diabolical concoction, Theraflu. I actually considered taking that route, until I found myself standing in Duane Reade, looking at the list of ingredients and cautions on the Theraflu packaging. No thanks. Not this time.

Wait. What’s this got to do with White Material? I’m just setting the scene, so that you might understand my initial appraisal of White Material. As I lay in bed watching the movie on an aging, non-flat-screen TV, my on-and-off feverish near-delirium allowed me an intimate connexion to this story of the the absurd sequence of events which accompany the demise of colonial authority. The non-linear narrative style took some time to sync-in to, but the pieces started fitting together soon enough. In the end, I was left feeling that the situation in this symbolic, unspecified African country was near hopeless. Not good MovieNight material, I thought.

In the days that followed, though, scenes remembered from White Material tracked me like the soulful eyes of a begging dog, and I realized that I had to share this one. Judging from the number of unoccupied seats (none!), I did the right thing. Of course, White Material was not a feel-good experience, and not to everyone’s taste! In one amusing MovieNight moment, Flea started growling and barking at a particularly menacing-looking group of rebels (ah… the reality of Blu-ray) and one first-time (and last?) guest heckled, “Yeah. I know. Terrible movie, right?” Ya think?

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L’enfant. Qui?

Part II of our Belgian mini-season featured a heart-wrenching work from the talented Dardenne brothers, for whom this represented a second win at Cannes. Their films are always gritty, set in an environment of soggy, gray weather, and bleaker circumstances, but somehow the spirit of their characters manages to shine out of this murk. This is compelling cinema. This was MovieNight.

As to the question above… who was the child? The movie was not entitled “Le bébé” if that gives you a clue.

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In the midst of “The Silence”, a perfectly-poured, convex-meniscus martini, caught on camera!

And here’s the proof (90 proof, that is… Plymouth)

Of course we knew this would happen… not the martini – its volumetric perfection (in the virtual dark) was unexpected. The napkin below remained unbesmirched by liquid, at least until the first sip. Still… there you have it, olives and all.

More than once, a lesson has been taught, but persistently (naively?) this lesson remains unlearned. What am I talking about? Last week, we had an minor influx of Swedes and, having not yet selected a feature for this Thursday night, I somewhat stereotypingly promised them a Bergman movie next time. We were well overdue for a Bergman anyway. The thing that we just knew would happen? Not one Swede in the house.

The notion of showing Bergman to the Swedish reminded of the time that my mother made spaghetti and meatballs for a crew of Italian-Canadian bricklayers who were bivouacked in our basement during the construction of our new home in Canada in the sixties. Although it tasted good, it didn’t seem authentically Italian, even to a nine year old. The bricklayers were polite and ate it all up. Laying bricks is hard work.

Happily, we had a house full of Russians and The Silence remains a masterpiece, Swedish audience or not.

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Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, but the raffle prize goes to Lavanya!

Two little girls from Little Rock

Howard Hawks’ delicious musical treat finished off our season in grand style. One can easily imagine Gentlemen Prefer Blondes turning up on Channel 13 on a Saturday night (followed by a bad short, and a terrible indie… where do they find them?), but without the MovieNight family sharing the viewing experience, how much fun would it be? This was perfect!

Our raffle prize was won by Lavanya, who was traveling, and was unable to attend the finale. When she bought her tickets the week before, she confided that she was feeling lucky about this, having grown up in India, where Gentlemen Prefer Blondes was required viewing for her and “all us Indian girls”.  A good omen. Perhaps next year, we should wind up with a Bollywood feature. The winning ticket no. was 8003, just in case you’re wondering. And where was Tory this year?

It wasn’t just the season finale that made for a festive night… earlier in the day, Zofi graduated from Hunter College, Magna Cum Laude. How about them apples?

See you in September…

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The Night of the Iguana: A poem, Rum Coco, the Raffle, and CHOCKA.

Nano finishes his final poem

How calmly does the olive branch
Observe the sky begin to blanch
Without a cry, without a prayer
With no betrayal of despair

Some time while light obscures the tree
The zenith of its life will be
Gone past forever
And from thence
A second history will commence

A chronicle no longer gold
A bargaining with mist and mold
And finally the broken stem
The plummeting to earth, and then

An intercourse not well designed
For beings of a golden kind
Whose native green must arch above
The earth’s obscene corrupting love

And still the ripe fruit and the branch
Observe the sky begin to blanch
Without a cry, without a prayer
With no betrayal of despair

Oh courage! Could you not as well
Select a second place to dwell
Not only in that golden tree
But in the frightened heart of me

Nonno’s (Cyril Delevanti) final poem, the completion of which seemingly clears his road to death, is the crowning moment in the always wonderful The Night of the Iguana. Tennessee Williams was a playwright, and his works are by definition theatrical. Yet this play, an exceptional cast of actors, beautiful location photography, and most of all, a director (John Huston) with a wicked sense of humor, combine to give the film version a life of its own.

Although I have seen this film more than ten times (and shown it an unprecedented four times at MovieNight!), I hadn’t seen it for a couple of years… I fell in love with it all over again last night. Maybe we’ll show it again next season?

In an attempt to bring back a more party-like atmosphere in the wake of a spate of quite heavy films, we offered a special theme cocktail; the Rum Coco (golden rum, coconut water, agave syrup, and lemon juice). Some say that Williams meant the rum coco as a metaphor for decay, but we see it as a metaphor for “OK!” Well, you know what I mean.

Last night also saw the unanticipated (to some) return of the MovieNight Season Raffle Prize. 3 tickets were sold.

We now have a good supply of Danny Bo’s CHOCKA frozen chocolate vodka (both milk and dark versions); a decadent treat available at the Bowery Hotel Bar, and MovieNight.  Yummy.

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