The only movie I saw in movie theaters this year, and the
most enjoyable movie I saw this year, was Star Trek: Into Darkness. J. J.
Abrams’s reboot of Star Trek is the best thing to happen to the franchise since
Star Trek: The Next Generation. But the rest of my movie viewing tended to be
of classics, which I find increasingly reliable for stimulation (blog). After
hearing philosopher Slavoj Zizek discuss Possessed (1931) in the following clip
from The Pervert’s Guide to Cinema, I had to check it out. (Discussion of
Possessed starts after the intro and finishes at 3:16 when he starts talking
about The Matrix.)
In Possessed, a short and fast-paced film, Joan Crawford plays a
factory worker who becomes the kept woman of a city gent (Clark Gable). At first,
she’s just out for his money, and even tells him so, but she ends up falling in
love and desiring marriage even though the ensuing scandal would harm his chances
of being elected governor. It doesn’t sound like anything special, but like all
great films, it covers a lot of ground, as the back cover of the DVD summarizes
so well:
“This pre-Code scorcher…expertly mixes greed, ambition, politics and sex into a frank portrait of a world where men have power and women have a sell-by date stamped on their flesh.”
I fared less well in television this year, falling even
further behind with series I love like Game of Thrones and Mad Men. These are
on hold until my wife and I can find time to sit down together and watch them--which
means the situation is dire. On my own, I did find time to watch both seasons
of Rome. The shifting fortunes of soldiers Titus Pullo and Lucius Vorenus were
entertaining, and it was interesting to watch the fall of the Roman Republic as
the House of Caesar rose, but I enjoyed most the character of Atia of the Julii.
She schemes for her family’s power with such lovable simplicity that the sore
price she pays in the end, as her son finally rises to become Emperor Augustus,
makes her tragic. Here is Polly Walker in full flurry as Atia the Amoral:
In video games, I played through The 3rd Birthday, a
sci-fi shooter and spin-off from the Parasite Eve series, on my trusty PSP, and, in a sudden
burst of activity, I busted out the old PS2, scraped the crust out of its
crevices, and finished off Silent Hill 2--a game I began seven years ago way
back in 2006. I got the suicide ending, which apparently means I play on the
edge with no regard for danger. I would have expected to get the chickenshit
ending, but this is much cooler.
Comics suffered the worst this year since I have yet to find
an economical and convenient way to buy them in Japan. However, I did read
through the graphic novel of the Spider-Man classic Kraven’s Last Hunt, and it
proved to be as engrossing as it was when I was a kid scouring the shelves for
single issues at Day & Palin in Farmington, IL. When Kraven the Hunter
decides it’s time to kill Spider-Man and take his place, we readers get a deep
look into the psyches of the two, their darkness and strength.
All in all, as 2013, the Year of Dwindling Free Time, draws
to a close, I count myself blessed. I can never read enough or absorb enough
music, but increasingly I find that other forms of entertainment like movies,
TV and video games can take a backseat to everything else. Much better to spend
time with my family, say by talking with my wife over a bottle of Sangria or
using Tomica cars to knock down Transformers with my son.
thumbs up brother!
ReplyDeleteThanks, man!
ReplyDelete