At Home He's a Tourist

He fills his head with culture/ He gives himself an ulcer.

Tuesday, September 16, 2003

Boss says I need to keep D.B. busy. True, the latter is spending most of the day reading magazines and playing Yahoo! word scramble, but honestly there isn't much for her to work on. Makes me wonder if I'm supposed to be conceiving of new and exciting collection development projects on my own initiative.

I thought that by going into Le Divorce with low expectations I might be pleasantly surprised, but instead I was bored stiff. As the audience was leaving, a sorority gal (or someone who happened to have three greek letters on her butt) said to her companions, "That was a waste of two hours." Of course sorority girls would probably say the same thing about top of the line Merchant-Ivory product like Room With a View, but in this case their reaction was justified. Le Divorce was much more interested in making cross-cultural comparisons between France and America than in portraying complex characters or telling an engrossing story. And these comparisons were pretty trivial; I couldn't care less that French women like scarves or prefer their sugar in cubes. The ending was particularly clumsy, when the movie jolts suddenly from a comedy of manners to a thriller.

Later I saw on DVD another Miyazaki, Castle in the Sky. It's more exciting and clever than Kiki's Delivery Service, sort of like the anime Metropolis in its odd combination of futurism and 1920s nostalgia, with dirigibles, steam engines, and Model Ts occupying the same world as ray guns and floating cities. Like Mononoke and many other anime films, environmentalism is one of its prevalent themes, as a beautiful floating island is threatened by the military-industrial complex. Recommended.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home