Well, none of us is getting any younger. And Hollywood
actresses, who’ve always relied on youth and beauty to fuel their careers, know
better than most that ageing is tantamount to career suicide. Ten years ago,
Amy Schumer went so far as to join with gal pals Tina Fey, Julia Louis-Dreyfus,
and Patricia Arquette in a darkly comic video short, all of them desperate to
stave off the approach of their so-called “Last F**kable Day.”
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Baby Jane Grows Up
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Dreams and Reality on “Revolutionary Road”
Revolutionary Road strikes me as a curious name for a novel,
or a movie . . . or a street address. When I think of its implications, I
conjure up a battlefield, with a lot of Minuteman types carrying muskets and wearing
their hair in a pigtail. But Revolutionary Road is the title of the 1961
debut novel by Richard Yates that has nothing overt to do with the American
Revolution of 1776. Rather, it’s a domestic drama set in the leafy suburbs of
Connecticut circa 1955. The young couple who decide to start their family in a
big white house on Revolutionary Road are hardly revolutionary in the military
sense. Nor are they, really, American patriots. But after some thought I’ve
come to see Frank and April Wheeler as yearning for their own private revolution,
one that will raise them high above their earthbound suburban neighbors.
What is revolutionary about Revolutionary Road? It focuses in on a married couple determined to live a life of their own choosing. April, a frustrated local actress, is the one who comes up with the plan for her husband to quit his workaday job so the family can move to Paris and discover their bliss. Frank at first resists his wife’s urging but soon comes to accept the idea that in Paris he’ll intuit how to really put his undefined talents to use. They make plans and tell all their neighbors . . . but reality gets in the way. And the couple eventually discover that their thinking is not so in sync after all. The ending, when it comes, is tragic, and the final scene gives the family (and us) little solace.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Laughing It Up with George Schlatter
I was delighted to see, on the People magazine site,
an article about George Schlatter. George who? It seems there’s a brand-new
documentary, Sock It to Me: The Legend of George Schlatter, now coming
onto the market to celebrate Schlatter’s 96th year. Back
when I was a college kid, Schlatter was the producer of a little sketch comedy
show called Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In. As a one-off TV special that
aired on September 9, 1967, the show generated such buzz—especially among
young audiences—that it returned as a weekly series, replacing the once-huge Man
from U.N.C.L.E, at the beginning of 1968. It ran until July of 1973, when
its youthful sexiness finally ran out of steam.
Keep on trucking, George!
Friday, April 17, 2026
Bloody Good Show: The Godfather, Part II
It’s been a long time—easily 50 years, in fact—since I saw
the second Godfather film. I know that, snob that I was, I didn’t see
the first Godfather when it debuted, because I was too arty back then to
be interested in crime dramas. It wasn’t until a friend with impeccable
intellectual credentials told me that The Godfather was essential
Americana that I discovered for myself the brilliant picture that Francis Ford
Coppola had given us of the underside of the American dream. As it turned out, Godfather
II would be a feather in the cap of my former boss, Roger Corman. It won
six Oscars, including several for Corman alumni. Francis Ford Coppola , who got
his start fresh out of film school as Roger’s assistant, took home statuettes
for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay, while Robert De
Niro (who’d been featured in Corman’s Bloody Mama) was honored with the
Best Supporting Actor Oscar for playing the youthful Vito Corleone. Moreover,
Corman graduate Talia Shire became a Best Supporting Actress nominee for her
role as the godfather’s sister.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Hailing Mary (and Wes Anderson)
Over the past weekend, I watched two movies that made a strong visual impression on me. At a massive local cineplex, I saw Hollywood’s very welcome new Netflix blockbuster, Project Hail Mary. At home on my couch, I enjoyed re-watching what is probably Wes Anderson’s most significant film, 2014’s The Grand Budapest Hotel.
Project Hail Mary was of great interest to me both because there are several engineers (and an engineer-to-be) in my life and because many of my current screenwriting students—a group with a wide range of aesthetic tastes—are enthusiastic about this film. I have not read the novel on which the film is based, and I admit that the scientific (and pseudo-scientific) aspects of the plot leave me completely boggled. But it boasts a bravura solo performance by Ryan Gosling as a reluctant astronaut stuck in space, as well as an eclectic score I often found enchanting. Beyond this, Project Hail Mary enjoys the advantage of a wonderful visual sense. Even when I had no idea what was going on, I enjoyed basking in the glow of the film’s otherworldly cinematography.
Friday, April 10, 2026
Gobbling Up the Ham in “Spamalot”
Lovers of outrageously silly comedy all know about Monty
Python. This zany troupe was founded in 1969 by six talented Brits who were all
graduates of Oxford or Cambridge. The British taste for low humor had
previously given birth to The Goon Show (a 1951-1960 radio broadcast
that launched the career of Peter Sellers, among others) and Beyond the
Fringe (a slightly more satirical revue that gave the world Dudley Moore
and three other talented chaps). The
Pythons were formed in 1969, first starring in a BBC sketch comedy that lasted until
1974. Their first movie, And Now For Something Completely Different, was
a compilation of comic sketches that hit the big screen in 1971. Next they
decided to try on a film that had something of an actual plot. The much-loved
English legends of King Arthur seemed ripe for spoofing, and so Monty Python
and the Holy Grail was launched (to the sound of coconut shells being
clapped together) in 1975.
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Seeing Double: “Cat Ballou”
I loved running across the factoid that Michael B. Jordan’s
performance(s) in Sinners marked the second time that a Best Actor Oscar
went to someone playing twins. (The most
famous literary work featuring two lookalikes is Dickens’ A Tale of Two
Cities, in which Sydney Carton nobly sacrifices himself to the bloodthirsty
mob because of his close physical resemblance to French aristocrat Charles
Darnay. Several film adaptations have been made, notably the 1935 epic starring
Ronald Colman, but I gather no actor has ever played both roles.)









