A Scene That I Love: The Merciful Dinosaur and the Meteor From The Tree Of Life


The scene from The Tree of Life is a reminder that empathy is not just a human trait and that no one and nothing will be here forever. This is one of my favorite scenes from this film. I don’t claim to understand everything about The Tree of Life but I’m still moved every time that I watch it.

Lisa Marie Reviews An Oscar Nominee: Marty Supreme (dir by Josh Safdie)


Leave it to Josh Safdie to make an anxiety-ridden film about ping pong.

That’s not a complaint, by the way.  Both with his brother Benny and working solo on this film, Josh Safdie has proven himself to be a master at making anxiety compelling.  Much more so than Benny’s 20205 offering, The Smashing Machine, Josh’s Marty Supreme keeps you off-balance.  Marty Supreme may be set in the 50s but it’s deliberately shot in the gritty style of 70s-era Scorese and Lumet.  Meanwhile, the background music is largely made up of classic songs from the 80s.  Timothee Chalamet may play the title role of Marty Mauser, a shoe salesman who also happens to be a ping pong champion.  And the film may also feature recognizable actors like Odessa A’Zion, Gwyneth Paltrow, Fran Drescher, and Emory Cohen (remember him?).   But the majority of the cast is made up of people best-known for not being actors.  Shark Tank co-host and aspiring lead of Canada Kevin O’Leary plays Paltrow’s husband and Marty’s occasional sponsor.  Director Abel Ferrara plays a gangster who is searching for his dog.  Penn Jillette plays a New Jersey farmer who shoots first and asks questions later.  David Mamet, Isaac Mizrahi, early internet sensation Ted Williams, former New York mayoral candidateJ ohn Catsimatidis, rapper Tyler The Creator, and performance artist Sandra Bernhard all show up in small roles, creating a very New York atmosphere that somehow feels both familiar and artificial.  Watching the movie is like living the tourist’s dream of traveling to New York, seeing your favorite Manhattan celebrities hanging out in Brooklyn, and then having them curse you out for owing them money.

As is to be expected from a Safdie film, Marty Mauser is not always a sympathetic protagonist.  He’s been having an affair with the married Rachel (Odessa A’Zion) but, even after he finds out that Rachel is pregnant, that doesn’t stop him from having a purely sexual relationship with former actress Kay Stone (Gwyneth Paltrow), the wife of businessman Milton Rockwell (Kevin O’Leary).  Marty thinks that he’s the world’s best ping pong player, which is why he has a hard time accepting being humiliated at the hands of Japan’s champion, Endo (Koto Kawaguchi).  Marty’s efforts to return to Japan for a rematch lead to an at times dizzying array of complications.  Marty is the type who will steal his lover’s necklace just to return it and apologize after learning that it was only worth two bucks because it was costume jewelry.  Fortunately, Marty is played by Timothee Chalamet, who gives such an energetic and charismatic performance that it’s hard not to be charmed by the character even while his actions might upset, annoy, or even offend you.  The film never claims that Marty is the best ping pong player in the world.  Only Marty claims that.  Instead, the film shows just how unshakeable Marty’s belief in himself is.  It’s hard not to like someone who refuses to accept defeat.

In many ways, Marty is a quintessential American figure.  He believes in himself and he’s not going to apologize for it.  Both the character and the film celebrate the individualism that make America unique.  That 50s setting really does make sense.  Marty truly is the post-war American, dedicated and unapologetic.  And, in that context, the film’s “stunt” casting, for lack of a better description, makes sense as well.  David Mamet, Kevin O’Leary, Penn Jillette, Abel Ferrara, John Catsimatidis, and so many of the other familiar faces that float through Marty Supreme: they’re all people who have gone their own way, even at the risk of alienating the establishment.

Marty Supreme was nominated for 9 Oscars but failed to win any of them.  Indeed, the amount of negative stories that were breathlessly reported about the film’s director and lead actor after the nominations were announced indicates that there was an organized whisper campaign against the film.  (In a sad sign of the time, there was a good deal of negative backlash online from the dishrag brigade, who were upset that the film’s lead character was Jewish.)  Despite being the best of the nominated films, Marty Supreme lost to One Battle After Another.

Join #MondayMania For A Sister’s Nightmare


Hi, everyone!  Tonight, on twitter, I will be hosting one of my favorite films for #MondayMania!  Join us for 2013’s A Sister’s Nightmare!

You can find the movie on Prime and then you can join us on twitter at 9 pm central time!  (That’s 10 pm for you folks on the East Coast.)  See you then!

Celebrate Dinosaur Day With Devil Dinosaur!


The first recorded discover of dinosaur fossils occurred in 1820 and, since then, dinosaur remains have been found on all seven continents.  Richard Owen, an English anatomist, came up with the word “Dinosauria” in 1842. The word comes from the Greek word “deinos,” meaning terrible or fearfully great, and “sauros,” meaning reptile or lizard. He applied the term to three animals that fossilized bones had been found of over the previous few decades.

Today, we celebrate Dinosaur Day with Devil Dinosaur!

Devil Dinosaur and his sidekick, Moonboy, were created by Jack Kirby in 1978.  Marvel comics put out 9 issues of Devil Dinosaur, all written and penciled by Kirby, before canceling the series.  Despite the end of his own title, Devil Dinosaur continued to appear in other comics as an occasional guest star.  In 2015, Devil Dinosaur got a second series, Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur, which ran for 47 issues.

Here are the nine covers of Devil Dinosaur!

 

Monday Live Tweet Alert: Join Us for 2 Lava 2 Lantula!


As some of our regular readers undoubtedly know, I am involved in hosting a few weekly live tweets on twitter and occasionally Mastodon.  I host #FridayNightFlix every Friday, I co-host #ScarySocial on Saturday, and I am one of the five hosts of Mastodon’s #MondayActionMovie!  Every week, we get together.  We watch a movie.  We snark our way through it.

Tonight, for #MondayActionMovie, the film will be 2 Lave 2 Lantula!

If you want to join this watch party, just hop onto Mastodon, pull up 2 Lava 2 Lantula on YouTube, start the movie at 8 pm et, and use the #MondayActionMovie hashtag!

Enjoy!

Late Night Retro Television Review: Degrassi: The Next Generation 2.19 “Fight For Your Right”


Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sunday, I will be reviewing the Canadian series, Degrassi: The Next Generation, which aired from 2001 to 2015!  The series can be streamed on YouTube and Tubi.

Oh no, Emma’s got a cause!

Episode 2.19 “Fight For Your Right”

(Dir by Chris Deacon, originally aired on February 2nd, 2003)

This episode is a good example of Emma being the worst.

Emma and Ashley approach Principal Raditch and tell him that they don’t want genetically modified foods in the cafeteria.  Raditch tells them to buzz off, which is the right response when you consider that Raditch is probably just following the orders of the school board.  Emma responds by standing outside the school and handing out flyers that announce that Sheila the lunch lady is “poisoning” the students with the food she’s serving.

Now, to me, this is the moment that Emma goes from being a young idealist to being arrogant brat.  Sheila works for the school.  She’s a lunch lady.  I doubt she lives in a nice big house like Emma.  Sheila probably needs the job.  Emma is accusing Sheila of poisoning people.  When Ellie sensibly points out that saving money with GM food — as opposed to the expensive organic crap that Emma wants the school to serve — allows Degrassi to give free meals to poor students, Emma accuses Ellie of not caring about the fact that the students might get cancer in 20 years.  Principal Raditch finally comes out and tells Emma that she’s not allowed distribute “propaganda” on school property.

And again, it seems to me that Radtich is within his rights.  Number one, why isn’t Emma in class?  Number two, Emma is accusing a school employee of being a potential murderer.  Number three, Emma is causing a disruption on school property.

The show disagrees with me.  The show wants me to say, “Yay, Emma!”  Even when Emma goes into the cafeteria and accidentally starts a food fight by knocking Toby and JT’s lunch on Jimmy, we are meant to be on Emma’s side.  When Emma gets offended at Raditch’s insistence that she apologize to Sheila, we’re meant to be on her side.  One thing that we don’t see is who gets stuck cleaning up the cafeteria after the food fight.  I’m going to assume that it was probably the same Sheila that Emma accused of poisoning the students.

Emma is suspended for the day so she stands across the street and holds a sign, claiming that her right to free speech has been violated.  Raditch tells Emma that if she doesn’t apologize on the next day’s video announcement, she’ll be suspended for a week.

At home, Emma asks Snake what she should do.  Snake encourages her to …. NOT APOLOGIZE!  Well, he doesn’t directly say that but he doesn’t say that she should apologize either.  Snake, in case you had forgotten, is not only Emma’s teacher but also her stepfather.  Spike is on a trip so he’s the only parent at home.  Snake, at this point, should be saying, “This is a dumb protest and you should at least apologize to Sheila.  No matter what else happens, you’re not getting your organic food in the cafeteria so there’s nothing to be accomplished with any of this.”

Instead, the next morning, Snake just sits there with a big dumbass grin on his face when Emma goes on the video announcements and refuses to apologize.  Okay, Snake, do you think it’s cool that a school employee has been accused of poisoning the students?  Oh, and Snake — are you the one who is going to call Spike to tell her that you got her daughter suspended from school for a week?  Spike, who had to fight so hard for the right to go to school when she was pregnant with Emma, will certainly appreciate hearing that!

Seriously, Emma is the worst!  But the only she’s the worst is because this show was convinced that she was the best.  One gets the feeling that Emma’s character was a case wish-fulfillment for the show’s writers.  Imagine a world where you can be obnoxious and self-righteous and everyone loves you for it!

There is a B-plot and, to be honest, it probably should have been the A-plot.  Spinner, jealous that Jimmy’s parents buy him everything, steals Jimmy’s CD player and attempts to sell it.  When Jimmy finds out, he overturns a trash can.  Spinner takes a job at the cafeteria to earn money and gives Jimmy back the CD player.

“You are my best friend!” Spinner says.

“Was,” Jimmy replies.

Oh my God!  Spinner and Jimmy, no!  Actually, Spinner and Jimmy were always ending their friendship and then eventually restoring it.  They’ll be fine.  Still, their storyline was a lot more interesting than Emma’s latest crusade.

When in doubt, always focus on Spinner.  That’s a lesson the writers should have taken to heart.

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 5/25/26 — 5/31/26


It’s hard to believe that it’s June already.

I’ll be on a much-needed vacation during the upcoming week but I’ve already got so many movie reviews scheduled to drop that I doubt anyone will notice.  My Retro Television Reviews will return on June 8th!

Films I Watched:

  1. Blue Moon (2025)
  2. The Cannonball Run (1981)
  3. Christy (2025)
  4. The Dating App Nightmare (2026)
  5. Deadly Fiancee (2024)
  6. Deadly Sorority (2017)
  7. Death at the Dinner Party (2026)
  8. High-Ballin’ (1978)
  9. I Have to Kill My Neighbor (2026)
  10. I Was A Shoplifter (1950)
  11. Is This Thing On? (2025)
  12. The Jerk (1979)
  13. Joysticks (1983)
  14. The Last Showgirl (2024)
  15. Lavalantula (2015)
  16. The Longest Day (1962)
  17. Marty Supreme (2025)
  18. Megaforce (1982)
  19. Mortal Passions (1989)
  20. Nouvelle Vague (2025)
  21. Pursuit to Algiers (1945)
  22. Seedpeople (1992)
  23. Smokey and the Bandit (1977)
  24. Tora!  Tora!  Tora! (1970)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Diff’Rent Strokes
  2. Election Day Coverage
  3. George Gently
  4. Good Times
  5. Ken and Barbie Killers: The Lost Murder Tapes
  6. Kyōryū Sentai Zyuranger
  7. Night Flight
  8. Seinfeld
  9. Susan Smith: Sex Behind Bars
  10. Untold: The Liver King

Live Tweets:

  1. Lavalantula
  2. Deadly Sorority
  3. Joysticks
  4. The Jerk
  5. Seedpeople

4 Shots From 4 Films:

  1. Bob Gale
  2. Peter Cushing
  3. Vincent Price
  4. Gordon Willis
  5. Josef von Sternberg
  6. Howard Hawks
  7. Clint Eastwood

Scenes I Love:

  1. 28 Days later
  2. The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
  3. The Skull
  4. Dr. No
  5. Revenge of the Creature
  6. Planet of the Apes
  7. Dirty Harry

Songs of the Day:

  1. Johnny Cash
  2. The Ventures
  3. Christopher Lee
  4. Monty Norman
  5. Moby
  6. Ennio Morricone
  7. Lalo Schifrin 

Music Videos of the Day:

  1. Sammy Hagar
  2. Big Mountain
  3. Nine Inch Nails
  4. Maggie Estep
  5. Michael Bolton
  6. AC/DC
  7. Corey Hart

Artworks of the Day:

  1. Memorial Day At Freeman Park
  2. Won’t You Give My Boy A Chance To Come Home
  3. Scandal!
  4. Thunderball
  5. Whitney, My Love
  6. Bad ‘ Un
  7. Clint Eastwood

Heroes and Villains Of The Day:

  1. Monkey D. Luffy (One Piece)
  2. Emilio Barzini (The Godfather)
  3. Leo Kessler (10 to Midnight)
  4. Senku Ishigami (Dr. Stone)

Links From Last Week:

  1. Happy 96th Birthday To “Dirty Harry” Himself – Clint Eastwood! Here Are My Favorite Films…
  2. Number 11

News From Last Week:

  1. Editor Marcia Lucas Dies At 80
  2. Actress Kelly Curtis Dies At 69

Links From The Site:

  1. Arleigh reviewed Normal and Band of Brothers!
  2. Brad reviewed All About Ah Long, An Unfinished Life, and Mekko!
  3. Erin reviewed One In Million: The Ron Lefore Story and Molokai: The Story of Father Damien!
  4. Erin shared some Memorial Day images, thoughts on a squirrel, thoughts on the rangers losing, thoughts on the Rangers winning, and some election day covers!
  5. Erin profiled Kirk Wilson, The Worlds of Fantasy, Physical Culture, Richard Lillis, Paris Nights, Detective Yarn Magazine, and Clifford Benton!
  6. Jeff reviewed Stormswept, Mortal Passions, Sins of Desire, and Billy Idol Should Be Dead!
  7. I shared my thoughts on the culture!
  8. I shared my May Oscar Predictions!
  9. I reviewed Brainstorm!
  10. I reviewed Homicide, Saved By The Bell, Baywatch, Freddy’s Nightmares, St. Elsewhere, Hunter, Decoy, 1st & Ten, The Love Boat, Pacific Blue, Saved By The Bell: The New Class, CHiPs, Crime Story, and Degrassi!

Click here for last week!