Lisa’s Week In Review: 11/12/18 — 11/18/18


The holidays approach!

Movies I Watched:

(TCM did a Billy Jack marathon on Wednesday!  I was up until 5 in the morning, live tweeting it!)

  1. The Born Losers (1967)
  2. Billy Jack (1971)
  3. Billy Jack Goes To Washington (1977)
  4. Bring It On (2000)
  5. C-Man (1949)
  6. Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald (2018)
  7. The Girl In the Spider’s Web (2018)
  8. Hotel Artemis (2018)
  9. I Was A Communist For The FBI (1951)
  10. Loan Shark (1952)
  11. The Man With My Face (1951)
  12. Shoot To Kill (1947)
  13. Suspiria (2018)
  14. Teenagers Battle The Thing (1958)
  15. The Trial of Billy Jack (1974)
  16. Undertow (1949)
  17. You Again (2010)

Television Shows I Watched:

(As you may notice from looking at the list below, I watched a lot of old TV shows on MeTV this week.)

  1. 911
  2. American Horror Story Apocalypse
  3. Antiques Roadshow
  4. Benson
  5. Charmed
  6. Clique
  7. Dancing With The Stars
  8. Dennis The Menace
  9. Doctor Phil
  10. Bewitched
  11. Face the Truth
  12. Father Knows Best
  13. Ghost Whisperer
  14. Gilmore Girls
  15. The Good Doctor
  16. Hazel
  17. Hell’s Kitchen
  18. I Dream of Jeannie
  19. Jamestown
  20. King of the Hill
  21. Last Call With Carson Daly
  22. Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath
  23. The Partridge Family
  24. Party of Five
  25. Sabrina, The Teenage Witch
  26. Seinfeld
  27. Shipping Wars
  28. Soap
  29. South Park
  30. Survivor 37
  31. The Walking Dead
  32. Welcome Back Kotter
  33. The Woman in White
  34. You

Books I Read:

  1. Degrassi Extra Credit #3: Missing You (2007) by J. Torres and Eric Kim
  2. Degrassi Extra Credit #4: Saftey Dance (2007) by J. Torres and Steve Rolston
  3. Season Finale: The Unexpected Rise and Fall of the WB and UPN (2007) by Suzanne Daniels
  4. Suddenly Last Summer: Degrassi Extra Credit #2 (2007) by J. Torres and Ramon Perez
  5. Turning Japanese: Degrassi Extra Credit #1 (2006) by J. Torres and Ed Northcott

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Armin van Buuren
  3. Avicii
  4. Backstreet Boys
  5. Big Data
  6. Bradley Cooper
  7. Britney Spears
  8. The Chainsmokers
  9. The Chemical Brothers
  10. Elle King
  11. Ellie Goulding
  12. Hozier
  13. Jakalope
  14. Lady Gaga
  15. Margo Price
  16. Moby
  17. Saint Motel
  18. The Spice Girls
  19. Subsonica
  20. Talking Heads
  21. Tiesto
  22. The Ting TIngs

Links From Last Week:

  1. On SyFy Designs, I posted: My Friend John, Bring It On, Santa Claus Conquers The Martians, and The Importance of Tradition, and My Favorite Year.
  2. On Reality TV Chat Blog, I reviewed the latest episode of Survivor!
  3. On my music site, I shared music from: La Casa Azul, Geri Halliwell, Subsonica, The Chemical Brothers, Ellie Goulding, The Ting Tings, and Sabrina Carpenter!
  4. From Erin’s photography site: View of White Rock Lake From The Pool, Looking At White Rock Lake, Empty, Flowers, Yellow, Bench, and Lookout Park!
  5. From Days Without Incident, Leonard shares Music: Paradise Circus (Gui Boratto Remix) by Massive Attack
  6. Fall CMBA Blogathon – Outlaws…
  7. The Last Soldier
  8. Who Gets To Live In Victimville?
  9. New suspect in D.B. Cooper skyjacking case unearthed by Army data analyst; FBI stays mum
  10. My sons have autism – so Stan Lee’s superheroes were invaluable to them
  11. RIP William Goldman
  12. Book Review: Exiled in America: Life on the Margins of a Residential Motel (Dum)
  13. Stan Lee: An Inspiring Life
  14. Kickin’ The Willy Bobo With…Christofer Nigro

Links From The Site:

  1. Erin shared the following artwork: The Spitfires, The Wow Factory, The Figure In the Dusk, Planet Stories, Take A Murder, Darling, The Motel, and Dead Stop!
  2. Gary paid tribute to Stan Lee and Roy Clark and he reviewed The Sands of Iwo Jima, Bait, Tarzan, and Mandingo!
  3. Jeff also paid tribute to Stan Lee and shared the following music videos: True Faith, Don’t You Want Me, Heart and Soul, Shout, Everybody Wants To Rule The World, Ball of Confusion, and Night Boat to Cairo!
  4. I reviewed Hotel Artemis and, for Noirvember, The Hitch-Hiker, Undertow, Shoot To Kill, The Man With My Face, I Was A Communist for the FBI, Loan Shark, and C-Man!
  5. Ryan reviewed One Dirty Tree and Accursed, along with sharing his weekly reading round-up!

Check out what I accomplished last week by clicking here!

 

30 Days Of Noir #18: C-Man (dir by Joseph Lerner)


At the center of the 1949 film, C-Man, is a man named Cliff Holden (Dean Jagger).  When we first see Cliff, he’s cheerfully walking down the street in New York City, looking pretty happy underneath his new fedora.

And really, why shouldn’t Cliff be happy?  He’s a U.S. Customs agent!  He investigates crimes and tracks down smugglers and, perhaps most importantly, his best friend is a customs agent as well!  Who wouldn’t want to work with their best friend, right?  Anyway, Cliff eventually reaches his office and he discovers that nobody else appears to share his good mood.  For that matter, Cliff’s step losing its cheerful spring when he finds out that his best friend has been …. MURDERED!

His friend was investigating the theft of a very valuable necklace.  The Treasury Department has reason to believe that an international criminal named Matt Royal (Rene Paul) will be smuggling that necklace into the United States.  Looking to not only avenge his friend but also protect the reputation of the United States, Cliff takes over the case.  Using the name William Hannah, he flies out to Europe so that he can then board the same plane that Royal will be taking to the States.

While Cliff/William is waiting at the airport, he meets a Swiss woman, named Kathe van Bourne (Lottie Elwin), who is flying to New York so that she can be reunited with her fiancée, Joe.  However, after they board the plane, Kathe is suddenly taken ill.  Luckily, there’s a doctor on the plane, a courtly gentleman named Doc Spencer (John Carradine).  Spencer takes Kathe to the back of the plane to examine her and, while no one’s looking, he hides the necklace underneath a bandage that he wraps around her head.

Back in New York, Royal is pulled off the plane and thoroughly searched.  When it’s discovered that he doesn’t have the necklace, Cliff realizes what has happened.  However, Kathe has already been taken off in an ambulance and, when Cliff goes to Joe’s apartment, he discovers that Joe has been murdered….

C-Man is a film that kind of sneaks up and takes you by surprise.  That it was an extremely low-budget production is obvious from the minute the movie starts.  The black-and-white images are grainy.  The sets are small and sparsely furnished.  The whole film has a rather cheap and ragged feel, as if it might burst into flame and dissolve at any moment.  And yet, that low-budget feel works perfectly for the story that C-Man is telling.  Despite the oddly cheery narration that’s provided by Dean Jagger, this is a sordid tale about people on the fringes of society.  Watching C-Man feels like taking a trip to all of the places that most tourists would never want to visit during their trip to New York City.  For instance, when Cliff searches for the alcoholic Doc Spenser, his search leads him from one liquor store to another and it’s obvious that some of the desperate souls that Cliff passes on the streets weren’t actors.

Gail Kubick’s pounding and relentless score adds to the film’s overall dreamlike feel and Joseph Lerner’s direction is just quirky enough to keep things interesting.  (When one character is bludgeoned to death, the film suddenly starts to spin as if the viewer has become trapped in the killer’s madness.)  Dean Jagger seems a bit miscast as a the tough customs agent but the actors playing the criminals are all properly menacing.  Harry Landers, as the most violent of the jewel thieves, makes a particularly threatening impression.

All in all, C-Man is a surprisingly effective poverty row noir.

Weekly Reading Round-Up : 11/11/2018 – 11/17/2018, Three Beginnings And An Ending


Ryan C.'s Four Color Apocalypse

This week, we take a brief side-step away from our usual small-press “turf” to have a quick look at four high-profile mainstream comics now available on your LCS shelves — three are alphas, one’s an omega.

The Green Lantern #1  marks DC’s latest attempt to revive the flagging critical and commercial fortunes of their premier cosmic super-hero, and while the sort of “back-to-basics” approach being undertaken by writer Grant Morrison and artist Liam Sharp may be precisely what the character needs (not having read a contemporary GL story is probably a couple of decades I’m really not in much position to judge), a dose of some sort of ambition would probably go a long way, and this book has precisely zero of that. It’s hard to believe that the same guy responsible for such thought-through and intricate mind-fucks as The InvisiblesThe FilthFlex Mentallo, and Nameless

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Music Video of the Day: Night Boat To Cairo by Madness (1979, directed by ????)


From the very early days of music videos (this was back when they were still called “promotional videos”), comes the much beloved video for Madness’s Night Boat To Cairo.

The video was hastily put together to help promote the release of Madness’s Work, Rest, and Play EP, which explains the video’s improvised, deliberately messy feel.  The video, which featured the members of the band dressed like stereotypical British explorers, takes place in front of a chroma keyed backdrop of an Egyptian backdrop.  While the band runs around the set, the lyrics of the song appear bouncing ball style.  It may not be the world’s slickest music video but it feels perfect for Madness.

Night Boat To Cairo was an early hit for Madness, peaking at #6 in the UK music charts and becoming the song with which they traditionally end their shows.