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Welcome To The Future

As you may notice, I’ve been doing a little housekeeping around here, including updating this blog’s look. It’s not a huge departure from the old design, but I think it’s a little fresher and more modern. Hopefully you agree.

I took the opportunity as well to roll in some of the new, emerging bleeding-edge Web design tools that have been percolating recently, namely Web Fonts (via the Google Font API) and a sprinkling of CSS3 to provide things like text shadows and rounded corners. Browser support for these technologies isn’t ubiquitous yet (though users of most modern browsers should be able to see it just fine); in a way this returns Just Well Mixed to its roots, because when I launched this site in January 2002 it was completely standards-based in a time when standards support in browsers was abysmal. Support for the standards that were avant-garde eight years ago is a lot better now, but there are new standards emerging, so it’s only fitting that JWM hoist a flag for them early as well.

Onward!


Behold The Power Of Low Expectations

Saw this ad on Facebook today:

Champion!

Ladies: if all a guy has to do to “be your champion” is make you a mix tape, you really need to raise your standards a bit.

P.S. Do people even make mix tapes anymore? Does anyone under the age of 25 or so even know what a “mix tape” is?


Fun With Spam: How To Tell That Twitter Has Gone Mainstream Edition

How can you tell that Twitter has reached the consciousness of the mainstream?

Spam screenshot

Because the spammers are now posing as Twitter in their phishing schemes. In The Old Days™ they posed as your bank.

Does this mean I actually have to dust off my Twitter account? God, I hope not.

I am, however, definitely going to start referring to myself as “Twit 81-284” in all my official communications.


The Baader Meinhof Complex

The Baader Meinhof Complex poster

With homegrown terrorism bubbling into the news in America again, now seemed like an opportune time to check out a movie I’d been hearing good buzz about since it hit the awards circuit last year.

The Baader Meinhof Complex (Der Baader Meinhof Komplex) tells the story of Germany’s most notorious domestic terrorist group, the Red Army Faction (abbreviated RAF) — a group of disaffected leftists who paralyzed German politics with violence for nearly the entire 1970s, known in popular jargon of the time as the “Baader-Meinhof gang” after two of its leaders, Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof.

For Americans unfamiliar with German history, it can be hard to understand the impact the RAF had. America had its own left-wing terror groups during that period, such as the Weather Underground, but in comparison they were amateurish affairs, fringe operations at best. The RAF, on the other hand, was brutally central. Bombing government offices, robbing banks, kidnapping and assassinating political figures they opposed — all in the name of a fiery leftist creed that poked uncomfortably at the guilt Germans still felt about succumbing to Nazism — they left an indelible impression on German politics of the era.

This is, as you might imagine, a touchy subject for a German film to address, even today. Not quite as touchy as 2004’s Downfall (Der Untergang), which touched on a wire even more live — the memory of Adolf Hitler himself — but touchy nonetheless. It was easy to imagine it going off the rails in two directions: either glossing over the real social issues that made many Germans of the time sympathetic to the RAF’s aims to paint them as nihilistic, one-dimensional villains, or going too far in the other direction and glamorizing them as misunderstood youth who weren’t terrorists so much as kids who accessorized their hip ’70s outfits with submachine guns and TNT.

I was encouraged, therefore, to hear that the film was written and produced by Bernd Eichinger, who had also written and produced Downfall; his success at making Hitler a complex, three-dimensional figure in that film seemed to bode well for this one. Additionally, he had assembled a superb cast: Moritz Bleibtreu, who was so good in Run Lola Run (Lola Rennt), for the key role of Andreas Baader; Martina Gedeck, who was similarly good in The Lives of Others (Das Leben des Anderen), which looked back at East Germans’ lives under constant state surveillance, for Ulrike Meinhof; and Bruno Ganz, who unforgettably played Hitler in Downfall, as a policeman chasing them down.

On paper, it seemed like it couldn’t miss.

So what went wrong?

It’s not that The Baader Meinhof Complex is a bad film. It’s just that it’s not particularly good, either.

Now, don’t get me wrong. It’s competently made. It tells the story of the rise and fall of the RAF effectively, from a factual perspective. As a period piece — a recreation of Germany in the early ’70s — it’s simply gorgeous. And that last bit is important — much of the power of the RAF came from the aura of “radical chic” that surrounded it, so any telling of its story has to communicate how a scraggly group of angry terrorists could also be so dangerously cool.

Where The Baader Meinhof Complex falls down is somewhere deeper: it doesn’t know what story it wants to tell.

When it starts, it seems to be building its story around the character of Ulrike Meinhof. We see Meinhof — an established, establishment journalist, sort-of-happily married, who publishes vaguely leftist articles of the kind that can be read aloud at black-tie dinner parties to polite applause — respond to an impending visit to West Germany by the Shah of Iran by writing in protest of the Shah’s treatment of his people. When the Shah actually arrives, he is met by placard-wielding protesters, whom the German police brutally crack down upon; at the climax of the violence, one demonstrator is shot dead by an undercover policeman in cold blood.

(The film doesn’t dwell on his identity, but the murdered man was a student named Benno Ohnesorg, and after the Cold War ended it was revealed that the policeman who killed him was secretly an agent for Communist East Germany — leading to speculation that the murder was deliberately intended to inflame the situation in the democratic West.)

These riots, and the merciless police response to them — along with an assassination attempt on a leftist student leader and the collapse of her marriage — lead Meinhof to begin to question her bourgeois assumptions. She starts to wonder if writing articles in fashionable magazines will ever lead to meaningful change in society. Then she goes to cover the trial of a pair of young arsonists — Andreas Baader and his girlfriend, Gudrun Ensslin, who had burned down a department store in a muddled protest against capitalist materialism — and finds a new direction in their commitment to direct, violent action, compared to which her own muddy liberalism seems wanting. (As do her mousy, bookish personality and bourgeois commitment to marriage and children, when placed next to Baader and Ensslin’s wild charisma and swinging sexuality.) Falling under their spell, she gradually goes from fellow-traveler to full-fledged terrorist herself.

This is an interesting story, and the dynamic between Baader, Ensslin and Meinhof has lots of drama in it. Although the RAF came to be known colloquially as the “Baader-Meinhof gang,” in the movie’s telling, it was Ensslin who was the real shaper of its ideology and tactics; Meinhof’s middle-class background made her a more effective spokesperson than terrorist, and Baader was motivated more by an anti-social personality and desire for cheap thrills than by politics.

But at some point, the movie decides it doesn’t want to be about Meinhof after all; it wants instead to be a comprehensive history of the RAF. And the problem there is that much of the RAF’s later history happened after Baader, Ensslin and Meinhof had all been rounded up and locked away in prison, driven by angry young people who barely (if at all) knew them taking up the RAF “brand” in their absence. So we spend the second half of the movie cutting awkwardly between scenes of RAF attacks being planned and carried out by characters we don’t know or recognize, while the characters we do know — Baader, Ensslin and Meinhof — sit in maximum-security cells, arguing with each other as events beyond their control swirl outside.

These two stories running alongside each other are then further complicated by the introduction of a third story, that of Ganz mobilizing all the resources of the national police to defeat the RAF. He’s effective enough in the role, but it never connects properly with the other two stories; his character is too senior to be out in the field confronting the RAF directly, so we get lots of scenes set around conference tables with people debating how to respond to the terrorists. This might be an accurate depiction of how things were at high levels of government, but as a storytelling device, it’s weak. The audience would be better served by following a cop dealing with the RAF’s grisly terror campaigns on the street, even if that character was a composite of many real people. Heck, you can see how that story — a cop trying to bring down a terror cell that many members of the public sympathize with — could be a movie all by itself.

By trying to jam all these stories together, The Baader Meinhof Complex ends up feeling like a bit of an overstuffed sandwich, rather than a cohesive narrative. The cast give good performances, but they’re let down by the script, which would have been better had it picked one story and stuck with it. Which takes a film that should have been spectacular and turns it instead into a bit of a missed opportunity.

(The poster sure is a knockout, though.)


Introducing Rogue Repairman Productions

Rogue Repairman Productions logo

Ever since I announced I had left my old gig, I’ve been getting occasional emails from people asking what I’m up to now. So I figured I should post something about that.

I’ve started my own business. Rogue Repairman Productions is focused on one thing: making technology suck less for the people who use it. I’ve started working with a few clients to make that a reality for them. If you’re interested in making it a reality for you too, drop me a line at my new business e-mail address.

The gorgeous Rogue Repairman logo was designed by Shikha Savdas, a graphic designer and friend of long standing. She’s just extraordinarily talented; if you have graphic design needs you really should give her a call.

There’ll be more news coming out of Rogue Repairman Productions soon. Consider yourself warned.


There Aren’t Many Songs That Can Make Me Cry

… but one of them is “Breathe Me,” by Sia.

Partly this is because of how it was used to close out HBO’s outstanding drama series, Six Feet Under, one of the best television series of the 2000s. The rest is a quirk of timing.

If you never caught it, Six Feet Under was a show about death. Or, more precisely, about how death affects the living, viewed through the eyes of a family of undertakers, whose family business it was to attend to the deceased and provide rituals through which their survivors could start to cope with their grief.

It was a great show, but its high point was undoubtedly its final episode, which showed — in seven minutes — how each of the characters we had watched over five seasons grew old and, over the next eighty years, died. Behind that entire sequence, “Breathe Me” played in the background. It was brilliant television.

I found this sequence tremendously affecting when I originally watched it back in August of 2005. But it became even more so for me a few weeks later, when my mother died. To this day I still remember sitting in the hospital, after the doctors had told me that there was no hope. In my head, as I wrestled with this fact — as I attempted to come to terms for the first time with the cold truth of mortality — this song, still fresh in my memory, played.

So yeah, it makes me cry, even now, nearly five years later. And I imagine it probably always will.

You got a problem with that?


Rackspace Cloud Servers

Rackspace Cloud Servers Setup

This is just a quick note to tell you that I’ve been tinkering with Rackspace’s new-ish Cloud Servers offering. (I say “new-ish” because it appears to be the fruit of Rackspace’s acquisition of another hosting company, Slicehost.)

Cloud Servers is simply the slickest virtual private server (VPS) offering I’ve ever seen, offering a much nicer out-of-the-box experience than its main competitor, Amazon EC2.

Getting a new virtual server set up via Cloud Servers is literally as easy as 1-2-3:

  1. Choose an operating system from one of 14 different Linux distributions (or six flavors of Windows Server, if you swing that way)
  2. Choose how much RAM and disk you want your server to have
  3. Wait for one or two minutes, then receive an email with the IP address and root password for your new VPS

That’s all there is to it. And you make the choices through the slick, easy-to-understand admin interface shown above, so there’s no need to plow through an arcane API or hunt down third-party tools just to spin up an instance. Hard to get much easier than that.

And the best part is that you don’t have to pay anything up front — there isn’t even a fixed monthly fee: you get charged an hourly rate (based on the RAM/disk configuration you chose) for each hour your VPS runs. So if your needs are light or temporary, you can pay for only what you need. And even if you leave it running 24/7, the amount the hourly fees add up to is quite competitive to the flat monthly fees other hosts charge for similar service. A Linux VPS with 512MB RAM and 20GB disk, for instance, nets out at around $20/month.

Of course, first impressions are only part of the story, so there’s still a possibility that the shine will come off Cloud Servers after I’ve lived with it for a while. But as of this writing, color me impressed.


Presenting: Classic NASA Photography, Formatted To Use As Palm Pre Wallpaper

Saturn V Launch

So I’ve got this phone, the Palm Pre, which is a pretty great device (and getting better every day).

I wanted to customize it a bit, so I started looking around for downloadable wallpapers. Turns out there aren’t many. So I decided to pitch in and help change that a little bit.

For source material, I turned to GRIN — NASA’s database of “Great Images in NASA,” which contains tons of stunning high-resolution photos from the history of American manned space flight, some of which are among the iconic images of the 20th century. These pictures are great in their own right, and because they were produced by the Federal government, the copyright on them has already been turned over to the public.

So I went through the database, found 58 of the most striking images, and reformatted them (via scaling and strategic cropping) to fit the 320×480 display of the Pre. Result: perfect wallpapers that look stunning on the Pre’s bright screen.

Once you’ve put in the work to assemble something like that, you may as well share it with the community. So here’s the set, hosted on Flickr. And here’s a slideshow of the complete set:

Feel free to download the ones you like and use them on your own Pre — or any other device with a 320×480 display!


Move Out!

The Lone Wanderer (and Dogmeat)

Most people who are in the (tiny) audience of this blog already know this, but just in case, I figured I should say something here: as of today, I am no longer working at Change to Win.

It’s an amicable parting driven by budget requirements. The Great Recession has hit everybody hard, including the labor movement.

So what comes next? I am working on that right now. With a little luck I will have some announcements for you shortly.

In the meantime, here’s my résumé — I’m especially interested in contract/consulting projects, so if you see anything there that appeals, feel free to contact me.

Onward!


I Told You So: Chloë Sevigny Edition

I Called It

I told you a little under a year ago that the work that actress Chloë Sevigny has been doing on HBO’s Big Love was worthy of winning awards.

So it was cool to see a few days ago that Golden Globe voters agree, giving her the award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Series, Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for Television.

Chloe Sevigny

Big Love just started its fourth season. To check it out, tune into HBO Sunday nights at 9PM.


Dear Democrats: This Is What Massachusetts Voters Were Telling You Yesterday

Nut Up Or Shut Up

UPDATE (Jan. 22): Or, said another way:


Tech’s Person of the Decade

It has to be Steve Jobs.

Steve Jobs

Why?

Here’s where Apple was in June 1997, just before Jobs’ return:

Wired cover, June 1997

And here’s where Apple’s been over the last decade, under his leadership:

Apple stock, 2000-2009

The blue line is Apple’s stock value. The other lines are the stock values of the biggest companies viewed as their direct competitors in January 2000. (And the Dow Jones average, to illustrate how well Apple has performed relative to the market as a whole.)

Notice how a share of any of those competitors is worth less (in some cases, much less) today than it was in January 2000 — while a share of AAPL is worth more than 700% more.

That’s not an accident. Apple in the 2000s managed to grow their core business — desktop and laptop computers — while at the same time moving swiftly enough to seize a dominant position in three new businesses that didn’t even exist in 1999: portable music players (iPod), downloadable media (iTunes Music Store), and personal smartphones (iPhone). All of which promise to be enormous businesses in the 2010s and maybe even beyond.

It’s just astounding performance for a company that was widely considered to be on its last legs a little more than ten years ago. (The joke back then was that Apple’s only hope was to become “Snapple” — by selling itself to Sun Microsystems. Today Apple leads the industry; Sun, on the other hand, no longer exists.)

Jobs is not a uniformly admirable leader; he continues, for instance, to lead Apple to restrict the rights of its customers, even as the industry as a whole has begun shifting away from such counterproductive decisions. And not every product he has touched has turned to gold (see: G4 Cube).

But looking at Apple strictly from a business perspective, it’s hard to think of a success story from the 2000s more impressive than the one he engineered there.


I Am Ozymandias, King of Nerds

Many, many weeks before December 8: A WebOS update breaks the New York Times’ application for Palm smartphones.

December 8: I bitch about how the Times never got around to fixing it.

Exactly two weeks after December 8: I check for updates on my Pre and discover that, in the first update to the app since its release, they have fixed it.

Now, I’m not saying that my post is what caused them to get off their duffs and finally fix the thing.

What I am saying is: you’re welcome.

😛


Ten Movies From ’70s Hollywood You Need To See (If You Haven’t Already)

I was discussing with a friend via instant message (note for younger readers: “instant message” is how old people chatted online before Twitter was invented) today how I’d recently seen the documentary version of Peter Biskind’s book Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, a book I’ve been meaning to read forever. Both the book and the documentary take as their subject the explosion of creativity that came out of Hollywood in the 1970s — a period that, while brief, was pivotal in establishing on these shores the idea that film could be taken seriously as art rather than just being another disposable popular entertainment. (We came late to that line of thinking; it was pioneered by the French New Wave filmmakers of the ’50s and ’60s, whose work was a major influence on ’70s Hollywood.)

Anyway, said friend mentioned to me that he wasn’t really sure why the “New Hollywood” of the ’70s gets the critical worship it routinely receives, since he found many of the films from that period that he’d seen to be terrible.

Part of the explanation for this reaction can be found in the Easy Riders, Raging Bulls doc, which tells the story of how a wave of young directors found its voice and then, intoxicated on their own talent and success (and, um, lots of drugs), fell from brilliance into self-indulgence. For one example, look to the career of Martin Scorsese, who was vaulted to prominence by his debut film, Mean Streets (1973), but a few years later found his reach exceeding his grasp with New York, New York (1977) — a musical. Yes! A Martin Scorsese musical! Starring Liza Minnelli (!!!).

Which raised a question: if your conception of New Hollywood was formed by the products of its burning-out, what should you see to understand the flip side — the sparks that lit the fire in the first place?

I started to suggest some movies that he should check out to get an idea of why the critics regard this period as such a milestone, and then it occurred to me that among people in our age bracket there are probably quite a few people — basically everyone who isn’t a movie nerd — who are in the same position as him. And that’s a shame, because it means you’ve been missing out on some great movies!

The movies that came out of New Hollywood are fascinating on two levels. First, there are a whole lot of genuinely brilliant movies when you simply take each on its own merit. And second, when you look at them chronologically, in the order they came to theaters, they collectively form a record a generation’s disillusionment — of young people coming of age in the mid-60s riding a wave of optimistic idealism, reveling in breaking taboos and shocking their elders, only to see their hopes lost in the quagmire of Vietnam, the crimes of Richard Nixon, and the murders of Martin Luther King and Robert F. Kennedy. By the end, their idealism gone forever, they had retreated into cynicism and near-paranoia, making films that called into question the very legitimacy of American society itself.

I made a start at trying to explain all this to my friend via IM, but that is not a medium that is particularly suited for such things. So I thought I would post my suggestions here so they could be of use to everyone who wonders why movie critics so routinely look back to the ’70s for examples of great filmmaking.

Before I begin, some notes:

  • These movies are all movies that I think hold their entertainment value today. In other words, this is not a menu of broccoli and Brussels sprouts. These are movies that I’m recommending because I think you will enjoy them, not because I think they’re good for you. (For this reason, for instance, I omitted Easy Rider, which, while it is still a great movie and well worth watching, is very much a product of its times.)
  • This is not a comprehensive list. It’s not “the best movies of the ’70s”, it’s “a selection of the movies from the ’70s that I recommend.” I’m leaving lots of good stuff out. If you like something you picked up from this list and want more like it, follow my advice from 2006 and look for other movies by the same director and/or screenwriter. (To make this cross-referencing easy, I’m listing both director and screenwriter with each suggestion, with links to their IMDB filmographies.) Additionally, Wikipedia has a pretty good list of major films from the New Hollywood period.
  • When people talk about “’70s Hollywood”, they’re not talking about the 1970s in a strictly chronological sense. They’re talking about a period that ran from the mid-1960s (when the old studio system finally collapsed) to 1977 or so (when mega-blockbusters like Jaws and Star Wars put the bean counters back in control). “The Seventies” is just a convenient way to refer to this span of time. So don’t get all flummoxed when you see movies on this list that were made a couple years before the 1970s proper.

(One final note: I’ve embedded the trailer for each movie along with its listing. If you’re reading this via Facebook or through a feed reader, you may have to click through to read it on my blog to see the videos.)

OK! Enough preamble, let’s get to the suggestions.

Bonnie & Clyde (1967)
Director: Arthur Penn
Screenwriters: David Newman & Robert Benton; uncredited assistance from Robert Towne

“They’re young. They’re in love. They kill people.”

If there can be said to be any single movie that announced to the world that Something Different was going on in Hollywood in the late 1960s, that movie was Bonnie and Clyde. Inspired by the innovations of the French New Wave, Arthur Penn and Warren Beatty set out to make a movie unlike anything American audiences had ever seen — something that would tackle head-on the taboo subjects that the studios had banned from their movies via the “Hays Code,” all the way back in 1934.

(The Hays Code was Hollywood’s first attempt to regulate “decency” in its content. As early films became more and more adventurous in exploring subjects like sex and violence, and stars’ indiscretions with sex and drugs started to become national news, the studios worried that a conservative cultural backlash could end up saddling them with government regulation. To head that off, they developed the Hays Code, a set of standards for what content was acceptable in a studio film, and voluntarily pledged that all their films would abide by it. Even by the standards of the 1930s the Code was quite constraining — it outright banned any story that would “lower the moral standards of those who see it,” as well as any story that presented criminals in anything resembling a sympathetic light — and by the 1960s its strictures were hopelessly out of sync with the culture at large.)

This could have been a recipe for disaster; in less capable hands, it’s not hard to imagine such an impulse leading to a schlocky exploitation film rather than a classic. But Penn and Beatty were smart enough not to fall into that trap. Instead, they took the real-life story of two-bit bank robbers Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker and turned it into a metaphor for the seismic changes that were rippling through American youth culture at the time. They start off on their crime spree not because they’re accomplished crooks, but because they’re dumb kids looking to make a quick buck and have some fun in the midst of the grinding Great Depression. As violence starts to become a bigger and bigger fact of their lives, you can feel their claustrophobic sense of losing control, of the wheels starting to come off of the car as it flies down the highway. And then it all comes to a head in a conclusion that was frankly shocking for 1967 America — and while we’re considerably more jaded moviegoers than they were, it still makes an impact even today. (Don’t worry, I won’t spoil it for you.)

They’re criminals and murderers, but they’re also kids in love. It’s hard not to root for them to make it all work out, somehow. That reaction — identifying with an “anti-hero” — is is exactly the sort of audience reaction the Hays Code had struggled so mightily to prevent. But Bonnie and Clyde takes you there, and does so with such style and wit that it’s easy to see why other filmmakers found themselves lining up to go there after seeing it themselves.

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)
Director: George Roy Hill
Screenwriter: William Goldman

“They’re taking trains… they’re taking banks… and they’re taking one piece of luggage.”

Where Bonnie & Clyde looked at the anti-hero through the lens of doomed romance, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid approaches it from a different perspective — that of male friendship. Butch and Sundance, played by Paul Newman and Robert Redford, are the leaders of the Hole in the Wall Gang, a gaggle of late 19th Century crooks who specialize in robbing trains. The two men’s personalities complement each other perfectly; Butch is the grand schemer, Sundance the wary realist. As played by Newman and Redford they have an easy, effortless charisma that makes them great fun to watch together. Their increasingly improbable plans (and the increasing sophistication of the law in the previously lawless West) lead them through a series of failures and setbacks, finally driving them all the way to Bolivia in a desperate bid to find someplace where a fellow can make a decent living robbing banks in the 20th Century.

On top of the great performances, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid offers gorgeous Western scenery, a good mix of humor and action, and an ending that’s unexpectedly moving. But the main draw of the film is right there in the title — seeing two of the best actors of their generation sparring with each other at the top of their form.

The Wild Bunch (1969)
Director: Sam Peckinpah
Screenwriters: Walon Green and Sam Peckinpah

“They came too late and stayed too long.”

Sam Peckinpah was a poet. His medium was violence.

Not real-life violence, of course, but screen violence, which he depicted in a frank, unflinching manner unlike anything ever before seen in film. But unlike many action directors working today, to Peckinpah violence was not the point of a story; it was the punctuation. He viewed it without sentiment, without romance or mythmaking; it was simply a cold fact of a harsh world.

The Wild Bunch is a great example of this. It’s a Western, but unlike the John Wayne Westerns that had colonized the American imagination for decades, it is a Western viewed without nostalgia, without airbrushing out the hard facts of life on an untamed frontier.

That life is one that has no room for old men; and the protagonists of The Wild Bunch are getting old. Led by Pike Bishop — played unforgettably by William Holden — they were great gunfighters in their day, but civilization is starting to come to the West and their day is unmistakably ending. But a man still has to eat — even a man who earns his living by the gun; even when the world no longer needs such men, or at least, no longer thinks it does.

The Wild Bunch is a modern classic, a reinvention of the Western for an age exhausted by a seemingly endless war, an age that saw promises of glory and honor as sales pitches for war in the same way that promises of minty freshness were sales pitches for mouthwash.

Jeremiah Johnson (1972)
Director: Sydney Pollack
Screenwriters: John Milius and Edward Anhalt; uncredited assistance from David Rayfiel

“His mountains… his peace… his great hunts… his young bride.

With all of that, it should have been different.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzjN8YJt55g

Jeremiah Johnson is about solitude, and determination, and failure. Among other things.

It’s a story of a man — the titular Johnson, played by Robert Redford — who, sometime in the middle of the 19th Century, turns his back on civilization and heads into the mountains, aiming to carve a life for himself out of the wilderness.

His journey is hard and long, but he grows; he meets challenges, but (for the most part) overcomes them. He finds joy in unexpected places, sees it snatched from his grasp by unpredicted forces, and finds an unforeseen legend growing around himself as he metes out retribution. In the end he is hardly recognizable as the same man who wandered into the mountains at his journey’s beginning. He has become the mountain man he wanted to be; but the cost to acquire that identity has proven to be higher than he anticipated.

This is not a film that’s driven by dialogue. The characters are almost universally taciturn. Yet we come to feel we know them nonetheless; they express themselves through their actions, not through words. You won’t come away from this movie with a particular speech or catchphrase stuck in your memory; what you will remember are the vast, forbidding vistas, and the brief moments of connection, and the silences that fill the spaces in between.

American Graffiti (1973)
Director: George Lucas
Screenwriters: George Lucas, Gloria Katz, Willard Huyck

“Where were you in ’62?”

Now that the long national nightmare of the Star Wars prequels is finally over, it might seem that the evidence is simply overwhelming that George Lucas is an awful director.

Well, it is, and he is. But even a stopped clock can be right twice a day, and even an awful director can turn out a good movie. And that’s what Lucas did when he made American Graffiti.

Maybe it’s because the story is based on a scene that Lucas himself participated in as a young man — cruising and racing cars in early ’60s Modesto, California. Maybe it’s because of the great cast he assembled, including Ron Howard, Richard Dreyfuss, Harrison Ford, Paul Le Mat, Cindy Williams, and Mackenzie Phillips. Maybe it’s because he had yet to sell his soul to Satan for a Burger King merchandising tie-in. Who knows.

Whatever the reason, American Graffiti is a gem, a keenly observed portrait of a particular moment in time — the moment just after the ’50s ended and just before anybody realized it. It’s also a portrait of a particular stage in life — the stage when high school is ending, and every senior knows life is about to change radically, but hasn’t quite figured out how, or even why. It’s about the shiver that runs down your spine when you find yourself standing on the precipice of The Future.

I don’t know how someone as profoundly untalented as George Lucas made a movie like this. But make it he did, and I’m grateful for it.

Not grateful enough to forgive him for The Phantom Menace, mind you. But still, pretty grateful.

The Last Detail (1973)
Director: Hal Ashby
Screenwriter: Robert Towne

“No #@!! Navy’s going to give some poor !#!@ kid eight years in the #@!% brig without me taking him out for the time of his #$@! life.”

The plot of The Last Detail is incredibly simple: a young sailor, convicted of a petty crime, is being shipped off to military prison, and two other sailors are assigned to make sure he gets there.

But what makes The Last Detail special isn’t the plot. It’s the performances — especially the lead performance by Jack Nicholson, who plays one of the two guards, the salty, cynical NCO “Bad Ass” Buddusky. At first Buddusky sees the assignment as just a way to get out of the tedium of life on the base for a while, but as he gets to know the young sailor on his way to the brig, Seaman Meadows (played with wide-eyed innocence by Randy Quaid), he finds himself sympathizing with the kid’s plight. The military justice system has given him a raw deal, a tough sentence that’s wildly out of line with the actual severity of his offense.

Buddusky hadn’t planned on Meadows’ story getting underneath his weathered hide. But once it does, he finds himself in the awkward position of having to carry out his orders anyway. Or does he? Maybe he should just turn away for a moment and let Meadows slip away, orders be damned. Or maybe he should use the few days they have before they’re expected to report in to give Meadows one last good time before he hears the cell door slam shut.

As a character, Buddusky is right in Nicholson’s wheelhouse — tough and no-nonsense, but with a bit of humanity peeking out from underneath the armor. But Nicholson doesn’t phone the performance in. Instead, he invests it with subtle humanity, bringing us into Buddusky’s head as he struggles with the conflict between his duty and his sympathy. And neither of those concepts is untarnished, either — sympathy pushes him to defy his orders and risk his own freedom, while duty seems hollow in a military demoralized by the long, grinding decay of Vietnam. All of which makes the conclusion especially powerful and poignant.

Jack Nicholson has long held a reputation as one of the great actors working in movies today. Performances like the one he gave in The Last Detail are a big part of the reason why.

The Conversation (1974)
Director: Francis Ford Coppola
Screenwriter: Francis Ford Coppola

“Harry Caul is an invader of privacy. The best in the business. He can record any conversation between two people anywhere.

So far, three people are dead because of him.”

Francis Ford Coppola’s towering achievement is, of course, the Godfather trilogy, especially its first two chapters. The Godfather and The Godfather Part II are landmark New Hollywood films in their own right.

So why am I not including them here? Because everybody’s already seen them, that’s why. And because they’re not the only great work Coppola did during the New Hollywood era. For proof, one need look no further than The Conversation.

The Conversation is a different kind of movie than the Godfather films were. Where the Godfather films were panoramic epics, The Conversation takes us inside the mind of a man whose life is lived almost entirely in his own head — Harry Caul, played by Gene Hackman.

Harry Caul is a surveillance expert. He makes his living eavesdropping on people. He stays sane doing this work by telling himself that he’s not doing anything directly to the subjects of his surveillance — he’s only listening. But his work has made him a zealous guard of his own privacy, to the point where he has essentially withdrawn from contact with other human beings.

Then one day he takes a job to listen in on a woman and a man conversing in a park, and overhears something that leads him to question the rationalizations he has constructed so meticulously. He starts to worry that his surveillance of the couple in the park will lead to their deaths. And when he tries to prevent that from happening, he finds himself wondering if he has not put his own life on the line by doing so.

The Conversation is a cautionary tale that has only become more relevant in the years since its release. Our privacy is infinitely more threatened today than it was in Harry Caul’s day; we live our lives on easily monitored electronic networks, and carry cell phones that betray our location to our wireless provider — and anyone they care to share the information with — each time they reach out to a cell tower.

Somewhere, deep in the bowels of the national security bureaucracy, there lives an army of modern-day Harry Cauls, reconstructing motivations and betrayals from a tangled web of ones and zeros. Coppola’s film prompts us to think about them — and ask whether the intelligence they glean is worth its cost, both to us and to them.

The Sugarland Express (1974)
Director: Steven Spielberg
Screenwriters: Hal Barwood, Matthew Robbins

“The true story of a girl who took on all of Texas…and almost won.”

Steven Spielberg is maybe the best-known director in the world today. And he built that reputation by making special-effects epics that push the technical boundaries of filmmaking.

But before all that, before Steven Spielberg became STEVEN! SPIELBERG!, he was just another young director full of ideas. And in 1974 he released his first major studio picture, The Sugarland Express.

The first thing that’s fascinating about The Sugarland Express is that it’s not a special-effects epic. It’s not the sort of thing people think of today when you say “Steven Spielberg” to them. It’s a character study of two people — a young couple facing the prospect of having their child taken away from them by the state, and willing to go to nearly any length to keep that from happening.

The second thing that’s fascinating about it is how completely it succeeds. The couple, played by William Atherton and Goldie Hawn — whose performance here is especially rich and nuanced, and will surprise you if your image of her is as a gum-popping blonde with a vacant stare — are simple people, but warm and winning. You see the logic that leads them down the road that ends with half the cops in the state of Texas on their trail, even as you shake your head at it. But the cops — the men who are chasing Our Heroes in hopes of breaking up their family — are multidimensional and human too. The Sugarland Express is about how often all of us find ourselves pawns on the chessboard of fate.

To be sure, it’s not a completely uncharacteristic film for Spielberg to have made. Visually there are moments where you can see embryonic Spielbergisms peeking out for the first time; its visual style will be familiar to anyone who knows Spielberg’s later pictures. And the theme of a family being threatened by outside forces is one that Spielberg would later come back to again and again.

But it’s small and personal in a way that future Spielberg productions are not — and, after he became the World’s Greatest Living Director, perhaps never could be again.

Is it the best film Steven Spielberg ever made? Probably not. But it’s still damn good.

The Parallax View (1976)
Director: Alan J. Pakula
Screenwriters: David Giler and Lorenzo Semple Jr.; uncredited assistance from Robert Towne

“There is no conspiracy. Just twelve people dead.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r6sI1xUlXV8

In genre, The Parallax View is a political thriller. But as an experience, what it is about can be summed up in one word: paranoia.

Warren Beatty plays Joe Frady, a newspaper reporter whose career is going nowhere. When a political candidate is gunned down during a rally at Seattle’s Space Needle, Frady gets a tip from an old lover that there is more to the assassination than meets the eye. He starts digging, and begins discovering things — disturbing things — about the case, the candidate, and a company called Parallax.

And as he digs, all around him, people start to die.

The plot of The Parallax View is good enough, as these things go. But what makes the movie great aren’t the details of its plot; it’s the atmosphere. The movie captures better than any other I’ve seen what it must feel like to feel dark clouds of paranoia gathering around you. Is what you’re seeing real? Can you believe your own eyes? What do you do when your mind tells you one thing and the rest of the world tells you something different? And is it true that just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean that someone really isn’t out to get you?

It all builds to a conclusion that is simultaneously unbearable and inevitable. To its credit, unlike the vast majority of conspiracy-theory movies, The Parallax View doesn’t pull back from its own logic at the end to produce a deus ex machina happy ending and send audiences out of the theater whistling a happy tune. It follows its logic all the way to the end of the road — even though it produces an outcome that flies in the face of what audiences expect from a Hollywood movie, and from a character played by a star on the level of Warren Beatty.

It’s a challenging movie. But it’s provocative, and compelling, and memorable too.

Network (1976)
Director: Sidney Lumet
Screenwriter: Paddy Chayefsky

“Television will never be the same.”

Network was so shockingly, scathingly brilliant — so prescient about where America was going, and so hilarious about how it was going to get there — that even though almost nobody you know has actually seen it, everybody you know can reel off quotes from it. Even if they don’t know that’s what they’re doing.

The central figure of the movie is Howard Beale, an over-the-hill TV news anchor who has just been told as the movie opens that he’s losing his job anchoring a low-rated nightly news program. Despondent, he announces live on the air that since his job is the only thing in his life that has any meaning, on his final night on the air he will put a pistol in his mouth and blow his brains out.

His producers freak out. They think it’s a disaster. They throw him out of the studio with orders to never come back practically as soon as the “on air” light goes out. But then they’re persuaded to bring him back, ostensibly to apologize for his behavior, and his return — in which, far from apologizing, he launches into an even more unhinged diatribe — scores incredible ratings, sending his producers a message they can’t ignore: if Howard Beale wants to immolate himself on the air, America wants to watch.

And so begins Howard Beale’s new career, not as a TV journalist, but as a kind of deranged prophet, a mad Jeremiah urging America to join him in throwing open their windows and screaming “I’m mad as hell, and I’m not going to take it any more!”

What exactly is Beale so mad about? Even he seems not to know. But it makes great TV.

Network was made in a media age that’s scarcely recognizable today — an age before cable, before 24-hour news, before the Internet. In 1976 “television” meant ABC, CBS, NBC, and maybe a local independent station or two showing grainy black-and-white Creature Features. But even in such an age, screenwriter Paddy Chayefsky recognized the seeds of the media Panopticon we are all imprisoned in today. He saw coming at him a world where passion trumps reason, where celebrity is valued more highly than integrity, where people will line up to follow a madman if he amuses them enough. And he set out with razor-sharp wit to cut that world to ribbons before it stepped on us all.

A quick glance at the TV will show you that he didn’t succeed at that. But what he did succeed at was making a depiction of that world so darkly insightful, so scathingly hilarious, that it struck the mediasphere with incredible force and left an indelible impression. And even now, more than thirty years later, faint echoes of its impact are still being heard, and felt.


Not Exactly A Triumph of Prognostication

“Cyndi Lauper will be around for a long time,” says Paul Grein, an editor at Billboard. “Madonna will be out of the business in six months. Her image has completely overshadowed her music.”

From Time Magazine, March 4, 1985.

(Hat tip to Paul Krugman, of all people, for digging the story out of Time’s archives.)


Dear New York Times

Please fix your WebOS app:

NYT WebOS app is borked

It looked fine on release, but a routine WebOS update months ago broke the layout and none of your developers have apparently cared enough in the intervening time to take five minutes and fix it.

Which is pretty f#@$ing weak.

UPDATE (Dec. 22): it’s fixed. Finally.


I Suppose It Depends On What You Mean By “Deal”

I’m a huge fan of Amazon’s MP3 store. Downloadable music, in universally-playable MP3 format (i.e. works with everything, not just with the iPod), with no DRM, for a reasonable price is a pretty compelling proposition. And every day they offer a different album as the “Daily Deal” for a steeply discounted price (usually $2-3), which has provided me a bunch of opportunities to build out my music collection.

That being said, I’m not sure in what universe this qualifies as a “deal”:

Not A Deal, Really

I’m pretty sure they use tracks from this album (like the Chipmunk-ed cover of Beyoncés “Single Ladies”) as torture devices at Guantanamo Bay.

So if you’ve been looking for an opportunity to spend $3.99 to feel like a prisoner of war, today’s your lucky day!


Learning the Hard Way

Seen yesterday:

Doors Lock at 4PM

Today, somewhere, a programmer is finally realizing why it’s important that your time-handling routines account for Daylight Saving Time…


Dogs And Cats! Living Together! MASS HYSTERIA!

Strange bedfellows, Windows 7 release day edition:

Linus Says "I Heart Windows 7!"

Question: How can you tell if you’re a nerd?

Answer: You know why this picture is funny.

(For everybody else, context here.)


On Happiness, And How To Get It

Fill your bowl to the brim
and it will spill.
Keep sharpening your knife
and it will blunt.
Chase after money and security
and your heart will never unclench.
Care about people’s approval
and you will be their prisoner.

Do your work, then step back.
The only path to serenity.

Tao te Ching, Stephen Mitchell translation, verse 9


America Can, Should, Must, And Will Blow Up The Moon This Friday

LCROSS

What good is a space program if you can’t use it to blow something up occasionally?

NASA will remind us of this timeless lesson on Friday, when their LCROSS satellite bombs the moon to see if there’s water hidden below the lunar surface:

LCROSS launched with the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) aboard an Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on June 18, 2009 at 2:32 p.m. PDT. The LCROSS shepherding spacecraft and the Atlas V’s Centaur upper stage rocket executed a fly-by of the moon on June 23, 2009 and entered into an elongated Earth orbit to position LCROSS for impact on a lunar pole. On final approach, the shepherding spacecraft and Centaur will separate. The Centaur will act as a heavy impactor to create a debris plume that will rise above the lunar surface. Projected impact at the lunar South Pole is currently: Oct 9, 2009 at 4:30 a.m. PDT. Following four minutes behind, the shepherding spacecraft will fly through the debris plume, collecting and relaying data back to Earth before impacting the lunar surface and creating a second debris plume.

Translation: “We’re gonna shoot a missile into the Moon, then fly through the dust cloud and see what we kicked up.”

At first glance, that may sound like a silly idea. But Popular Mechanics offers a pretty convincing list of reasons why it’s actually a pretty good one:

LCROSS is a Class D mission, denoting one with the highest risk of failure. Once-in-a-lifetime missions and those with human passengers are considered Class A missions, and carry a high cost in time and money to ensure that the equipment won’t fail. The extra testing, custom-built gear and redundant equipment drives up costs to levels that give even members of Congress pause. NASA could launch more risky missions like LCROSS instead of just a handful of marquee ones, and reap more rewards even if some fail.

The cost of LCROSS is about $79 million–cheap in the spaceflight world–and its planners delivered it on budget and on time…

LCROSS has a specific scientific mission and a payoff that is almost immediate. In 1998 a probe called Lunar Prospector spotted tantalizing signs of hydrogen in craters at the lunar poles. But no one’s entirely sure if the hydrogen is the chemical signature of water ice, possibly deposited by comets and meteors. LCROSS should not only confirm that water-ice is on the moon, but in what quantities…

LCROSS will create a 6-foot-deep crater inside another crater on the south pole. The moon has suffered much worse from the cosmos, and this latest gouge pales in comparison…

There is nothing pristine about the moon. It’s lifeless surface is cluttered with spent probes, landing craft, seismic sensors and moon buggies. Every time an Apollo mission took off, the crew threw out all unneeded equipment to save weight on the return. The idea that the moon will somehow be ruined by LCROSS is bizarre.

While the idea of blowing up the moon may be new to NASA and Popular Mechanics, HBO’s Mr. Show was waaaaay ahead of them:

If you want to watch LCROSS smash into the moon, you can drag a telescope into your backyard — you’ll need a 10-inch telescope or larger to see the impact — or, for the less geekily inclined, NASA will be Webcasting it live starting at 6:15 AM Eastern time Friday.


Senate Finance Committee Rejects Public Option: A Reaction

Ignignokt Gives the Finger

Context.


Still At Large

Osama bin Laden

For 2,292 days.

So far.


Harry Patch (In Memory Of)

Harry Patch was Britain’s last surviving combat veteran of World War I. He lived for 111 years, passing away on June 25.

Over the last decade of his life, as the number of surviving Great War veterans dwindled to a handful, he ended a lifetime of silence about his experiences amidst the horrors of the Western Front:

He remembered the fear and bewilderment of going “over the top”, crawling because walking meant the certainty of being mowed down by the German machine guns. As his battalion advanced from Pilckem Ridge, near Ypres, in the summer rain of 1917 the mud was crusted with blood and the wounded were crying out for help. “But we weren’t like the Good Samaritan in the Bible, we were the robbers who passed them by and left,” said Patch.

As his unit came across a member of the regiment lying in a pool of blood, ripped open from shoulder to waist, the man said: “Shoot me”. But before anyone could draw a revolver, the man died with the word “Mother” on his lips. “It was a cry of surprise and joy,” recalled Patch, “and I’ll always remember that death is not the end.”…

At 10.30pm on September 22 his five-man Lewis gun team was crossing open ground single file on the way back to the support line when a shell exploded, blowing the three carrying the ammunition to pieces. Patch was hit in the groin, and thrown to the ground. Waking in a dressing station he realised that, although very painful, his wound was little more than a scratch.

To honor Patch’s memory, the band Radiohead have released a haunting new song titled “Harry Patch (In Memory Of)”. That’s it embedded at the top of this post; click here for video if your reader doesn’t show it.

You can buy this track for £1 (about $1.66) from Radiohead’s Web site. The band is donating all proceeds from the sale of “Harry Patch (In Memory Of)” to the Royal British Legion, a British veterans’ charity.

UPDATE (August 10): Radiohead’s lyrics are taken from Harry Patch’s own words; you can read more of them in his autobiography, The Last Fighting Tommy.

Wondering why British soldiers came to be called “Tommies”? Here’s your answer.


Why I Take The Subway to Work

Discounted?

Discounted!