Lisa Marie’s Oscar Predictions for August


It’s time for me to do my monthly Oscar predictions.  Again, as I’ve said in the past, the majority of these predictions are based on a combination of instinct and wishful thinking.  However, the picture may become a bit clearer as early as the end of this week.  With the Venice and Telluride film festivals right around the corner and Toronto also swift approaching, critics are finally going to get a chance to see some of the contenders and, as the early reviews come in, it should be easier to pick the probable nominees from the also-rans.

Personally, I will curious to see how people react to Jane Campion’s The Power of the Dog.  Among the other possibilities that we’ll be hearing about: Spencer, King Richard, Dune, The Lost Daughter, The Last Duel, and Belfast.

If you’re curious to see how my thinking has developed, check out my predictions for March and April and May and June and July!

Best Picture

Belfast

Blue Bayou

CODA

House of Gucci

A Journal For Jordan

Mass

The Power of the Dog

Soggy Bottom

The Tragedy of MacBeth

West Side Story

 

Best Director

Pedro Almodovar for Parallel Mothers

Jane Campion for The Power of the Dog

Joel Coen for The Tragedy of MacBeth

Ridley Scott for House of Gucci

Denzel Washington for A Journal For Jordan

 

Best Actor

Clifton Collins, Jr. in Jockey

Benedict Cumberbatch in The Power of the Dog

Udo Kier in Swan Song

Will Smith in King Richard

Denzel Washington in The Tragedy of Macbeth

 

Best Actress

Jessica Chastain in The Eyes of Tammy Faye

Penelope Cruz in Parallel Mothers

Jennifer Hudson in Respect

Lady Gaga in House of Gucci

Kristen Stewart in Spencer

 

Best Supporting Actor

David Alvarez in West Side Story

Bradley Cooper in Soggy Bottom

Andrew Garfield in The Eyes of Tammy Faye

Jason Isaacs in Mass

Jesse Plemons in The Power of the Dog

 

Best Supporting Actress

Ann Dowd in Mass

Kirsten Dunst in Power of the Dog

Marlee Matlin in CODA

Ruth Negga in Passing

Alicia Vikander in Blue Bayou

Titans S3 Ep5, “Lazarus”, Review by Case Wright


What is family? “Lazarus” (Dir. Boris Majsovski- 1st Time directing) and written by Bryan Hill (Ash vs Evil Dead) attempts to answer this and it’s more fluid than we might be comfortable with. We all have our “Significant Others”: those whom we count on for identity and love. We lose them, we have nothing. “Lazarus” forces us to look at this truth as a shifting entity driven by pride, ambition, and revenge.

Jason Todd (Curran Walters) is the best anti-hero television has seen in a decade. This episode is the full origin story of a rebirth of Jason to Red Hood and the shift of family from Jason Todd as the adoptive son of Bruce Wayne to Red Hood whose father is Jonathan Crane.

We begin at the last episode, seeing that Jonathan Crane is manipulating Jason/Red Hood as part of his plan of revenge against Batman and Gotham herself. What brought Jason to be Red Hood and abandon all the family that he ever knew and valued? Jason lost the faith of the one man whom he needed: Bruce Wayne. As we found out later, Bruce was already in the process of replacing Jason because Jason had succumbed to fear. After Deathstroke defenestrated him, Jason was hesitant and afraid. This was most evident when Jason tried to intimidate one of Joker’s henchmen who’d been recruiting kids for his Joker gang and Jason got a thorough beat down.

Jason knew that Bruce had lost faith in him as Robin. Bruce benched Jason unless he could go to a therapist to help him deal with his fear. Well, it didn’t work the way Jason wanted it. Bruce declared to Jason that he thought of him as a son, but fired him from being Robin. In that instant, Jason gained family, but Robin lost it. For these heroes, their truest selves are when they wear the cape, losing Robin was Jason’s Total Loss.

Bruce’s firing, sends Jason to Dr Jonathan Crane AKA Scarecrow because he wanted a chemical cure for his fear. Jason trades all knowledge of Batman and the promise of freeing Crane from Arkham in exchange for a formula that would free him of all fear. Jason rents out a lab and Breaks Bad! The formula works….too well. It caused him to face the Joker alone and get killed.

Apparently, death can take holiday because Crane knows a mini-Lazarus pit and tosses Dead Jason into it, bringing him back to life fully the son of Jonathan Crane. Jonathan, unlike Bruce and Dick, who failed him spectacularly – delivers. He gives him the anti-fear super juice and sends him out to run amuck in Gotham. Like the photo below, Jason has a new father at his back. Some critics have assailed Lazarus as humanizing Jason; No, the fact that we can empathize with Jason’s grudge and his subsequent choices is OUR Rorschach test and reflects our own humanity and self-image.

This is what makes the show so great. It’s not just action or source material. They bring you into the dark world where heroes exist and like Watchmen, it’s not such a great place. The heroes are flawed and, in reality, the most honest cape was Red Hood; well, until he killed Hank. I still miss him and I think I know why. He’s the most like myself. Oh well, maybe I’m like Jason Todd and could use some couch time for 150/hour with a 15 buck co-pay?

Music Video of the Day: Lucille by Rockestra (1979, directed by ????)


Who were the members of Rockestra?  Rockestra was a supergroup, put together by Paul McCartney for at least two concerts, one of which was a 1979 benefit concert for the People of Kampuchea and one of which was a 1981 MDA telethon.  The video above is from the Concert For The People of Kampuchea and featured Rockestra covering Smokey Robinson’s Lucille.  This video was also the 32nd video to be played on MTV.

Among the members of Rockestra:  John Bonham, Billy Bremner, Gary Brooker, Howie Casey, Tony Dorsey, Dave Edmunds, Steve Holley, James Honeyman-Scott, Steve Howard, Kenney Jones, John Paul Jones, Laurence Juber, Denny Laine, Ronnie Lane, Linda McCartney, Paul McCartney, Robert Plant, Thadeus Richard, Bruce Thomas, and Pete Townshend!

Enjoy!

The First Videos Shown on MTV:

  1. Video Killed the Radio Star by the Buggles
  2. You Better Run by Pat Benatar
  3. She Won’t Dance With Me by Rod Stewart
  4. You Better You Bet By The Who
  5. Little Suzi’s On The Up by PH.D
  6. We Don’t Talk Anymore by Cliff Richard
  7. Brass in Pocket by Pretenders
  8. Time Heals by Todd Rundgren
  9. Take It On The Run by REO Speedwagon
  10. Rockin’ in Paradise by Styx
  11. When Things Go Wrong by Robin Lane & The Chartbusters
  12. History Never Repeats by Split Enz
  13. Hold On Loosely by .38 Special
  14. Just Between You And Me by April Wine
  15. Sailing by Rod Stewart
  16. Iron Maiden by Iron Maiden
  17. Keep On Loving You by REO Speedwagon
  18. Better Than Blue by Michael Johnson
  19. Message of Love by The Pretenders
  20. Mr. Briefcase by Lee Ritenour
  21. Double Life by The Cars
  22. In The Air Tonight by Phil Collins
  23. Looking for Clues by Robert Palmer
  24. Too Late by Shoes
  25. Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around by Stevie Nicks and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
  26. Do Ya Think I’m Sexy by Rod Stewart
  27. Surface Tension by Rupert Hine
  28. One Step Ahead by Split Enz
  29. Baker Street by Gerry Rafferty
  30. I’m Gonna Follow You by Pat Benatar
  31. Savannah Nights by Tom Johnston

TV Review: The Walking Dead 11.2 “Acheron Part II” (dir by Kevin Dowling)


As a show, The Walking Dead has lately suffered a bit from the fact that there’s only so much you can do when civilization has collapsed and the world is full of zombies who only care about eating every living they come across. You can set up a little community of the living, one that will inevitably collapse because death is an unavoidable part of life and all it takes is one zombie to start an outbreak. You can keep moving, which might keep you alive for a little bit longer but still, death is inevitable. Or you can go batshit crazy and set yourself up as a dictator, which means that you’ll soon be as dangerous, deadly, and feared as the undead.

The lack of choice when it comes to what to do during a zombie apocalypse is one of the key parts of the genre and the best zombie films — like Romero’s Dead films for example — explore what happens to people when they find themselves in a hopeless situation. From Night of the Living Dead to Survival of the Living Dead, George Romero always remained consistent in that the undead were ultimately going to win. You simply can’t outrun death.

The first few seasons of The Walking Dead managed to capture that feeling of inescapable doom perfectly. However, now that The Walking Dead has started its eleventh season, it’s hard not to notice that there don’t seem to be any new stories left to be told. The Walking Dead has done it all and the series now often feels as if it’s just repeating itself. Last night’s episode was well-directed and well-acted (particularly by Lauren Cohan, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, and Josh McDermitt) but it just all felt a little bit too familiar.

Once again, we had Maggie and Negan coming to an uneasy truce while seemingly trapped in an inescapable location by a bunch of walkers. Even Maggie’s decision to leave Gage to be killed by the walkers felt like a replay of the same stuff that Rick used to do in almost every single episode. I felt sorry for Gage but I could see Maggie’s reasoning, just as I could understand Negan’s reasoning for leaving her behind last episode. It’s a dark world where only the ruthless and unsentimental survive. We already knew that, though. A few season’s ago, Gage’s death would have been shocking but, after 11 seasons, everyone watching should have known Gage would eventually end up dead. Darryl, of course, saved everyone because that’s what Darryl does. At the end of the episode, we met a new group of masked villains, the Reapers. And, again, we’ve been through all this before. There’s always a new group of villains showing up and they always announce their presence by killing a minor character. Sorry, Roy. The plot mechanics demand that you die.

Meanwhile, Eugene, Princess, Ezekiel, and Yumiko have been accepted as citizens of the Commonwealth which …. hasn’t this happened before? Again, it all felt very familiar and rather expected, right down to the sudden introduction of a woman claiming to be Stephanie, the woman that Eugene was trying to find. At this point, it’s pretty obvious that the woman is not really Stephanie and Stephanie probably doesn’t exist but was instead an elaborate ruse that the Commonwelath came up with to trick Eugene.

The sad truth of the matter is that all shows eventually run out of stories to tell and they end up recycling. Just think about the final three seasons of The Office, where everyone was suddenly developing an unrequited crush on a coworker in an attempt to recreate some of the Jim/Pam magic of the first four seasons. Running out of new stories to tell is especially likely to happen when your entire show revolves around how impossible it is to avoid death. As well-directed and well-acted as last night’s episode was, it still left me with the feeling that The Walking Dead has run out of new stories. The actors will always hold my interest but, from a narrative point of view, it’s definitely time for this apocalypse to come to an end.

Music Video of the Day: Savannah Nights by Tom Johnston (1979, directed by ????)


The 31st video played on August 1st, 1981, MTV’s first day of broadcast, was the video for Tom Johnston’s Savannah Nights. Unfortunately, you’re going to have to click on Watch On YouTube to watch this video because the person who uploaded it has disabled the playback option. But it’s worth it. This is a banging song and a great performance clip!

Tom Johnston is best-known for being one of the co-founders of the Doobie Brothers. For a band with a, let’s face it, rather silly name, there were a lot of talented people involved with The Doobie Brothers.

The First Videos Shown on MTV:

  1. Video Killed the Radio Star by the Buggles
  2. You Better Run by Pat Benatar
  3. She Won’t Dance With Me by Rod Stewart
  4. You Better You Bet By The Who
  5. Little Suzi’s On The Up by PH.D
  6. We Don’t Talk Anymore by Cliff Richard
  7. Brass in Pocket by Pretenders
  8. Time Heals by Todd Rundgren
  9. Take It On The Run by REO Speedwagon
  10. Rockin’ in Paradise by Styx
  11. When Things Go Wrong by Robin Lane & The Chartbusters
  12. History Never Repeats by Split Enz
  13. Hold On Loosely by .38 Special
  14. Just Between You And Me by April Wine
  15. Sailing by Rod Stewart
  16. Iron Maiden by Iron Maiden
  17. Keep On Loving You by REO Speedwagon
  18. Better Than Blue by Michael Johnson
  19. Message of Love by The Pretenders
  20. Mr. Briefcase by Lee Ritenour
  21. Double Life by The Cars
  22. In The Air Tonight by Phil Collins
  23. Looking for Clues by Robert Palmer
  24. Too Late by Shoes
  25. Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around by Stevie Nicks and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
  26. Do Ya Think I’m Sexy by Rod Stewart
  27. Surface Tension by Rupert Hine
  28. One Step Ahead by Split Enz
  29. Baker Street by Gerry Rafferty
  30. I’m Gonna Follow You by Pat Benatar

Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 8/23/21 — 8/29/21


My thoughts are with everyone who lost a loved one at Kabul Airport this week.  Peace be with you.

Films I Watched:

  1. The Assignation (1953)
  2. The Big Shave (1967)
  3. Case Study: Barbiturates (1969)
  4. Case Study: LSD (1969)
  5. Doomsday Mom: The Lori Vallow Story (2021)
  6. Flash Gordon (1980)
  7. Fragment of Seeking (1946)
  8. The Good Loser (1953)
  9. Hired! (1940)
  10. Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978)
  11. The Lady Vanishes (1938)
  12. Lifeguard (1976)
  13. On the Edge (1949)
  14. Picnic (1949)
  15. Road House (1989)
  16. Saturday Night Fever: The Ultimate Disco Movie (2017)
  17. Sell the Difference (1955)
  18. Social Courtesy (1951)
  19. Spirit Riders (2015)
  20. Survival of the Dead (2009)
  21. Usher (2000)
  22. White Fire (1985)
  23. The Wormwood Star (1956)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. America Justice
  2. Bachelor in Paradise
  3. Bar Rescue
  4. Big Brother
  5. Dragnet
  6. Hell’s Kitchen
  7. I Lived With A Killer
  8. It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia
  9. Last Man Standing
  10. Lonesome Dove
  11. The Office
  12. Real Life Catholic
  13. Reasonable Doubts
  14. Silk Stalkings
  15. 60 Minutes
  16. South Park
  17. Talking Dead
  18. The Ultimate Surfer
  19. The Walking Dead
  20. Women of Grace

Books I Read:

  1. Shooting Midnight Cowboy (2021) by Glenn Frankel

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Aimee Mann
  2. Bob Dylan
  3. Britney Spears
  4. Coldplay
  5. Kanye West
  6. Kedr Livanskiy
  7. Lana del Rey
  8. Lara Snow
  9. Lorde
  10. Muse
  11. Peggy March
  12. Pixies
  13. Public Broadcasting Service
  14. The Rolling Stones
  15. Saint Motel
  16. The Ting Tings

Trailers:

  1. Spencer
  2. The Power of the Dog
  3. Mayday
  4. Spider-Man: No Way Home

News From Last Week:

  1. Ed Asner, Emmy-Winning ‘Lou Grant’ and ‘Mary Tyler Moore Show’ Star, Dies at 91
  2. Marilyn Eastman, Night of the Living Dead actress, passes away
  3. Charlie Watts, Rolling Stones Drummer, dies at 80
  4. How underground arm-wrestling mania is slamming NYC streets
  5. Comedy Central Pussies Cancel ‘Diversity Day’ Episode Of “The Office”
  6. Vice begins a new round of layoffs as company shifts to video
  7. Afghan Film Progress Obliterated By Taliban Takeover — Special Report From Afghanistan
  8. Nirvana Sued By Baby From Nevermind Album Cover

Links From Last Week:

  1. Spike Lee’s New Documentary Gives a Notorious 9/11 Conspiracy Theorist His Biggest Platform Ever
  2. Nirvana baby Spencer Elden is poster child for our victim culture
  3. RIP Ed Asner…A Legend Is Gone…An Homage And My Signed Reaction To His Iconic “You Got Spunk…I HATE Spunk” Quip…

Links From The Site:

  1. Leonard shared the trailer for Spencer!
  2. Erin shared Film Fun, Suburban Interlude, Tramp Girl, Bold Desires, Abnormal Wife, The Big Caper, and Big Beverage!
  3. Jeff paid tribute to Charlie Watts and shared music videos from Shoes, Stevie Nicks, The Charlie Watts Quintet, Rod Stewart, Rupert Hine, Split Enz, and Pat Benatar!
  4. I wrote about the terrible Climate Pledge commercial and I reviewed Lifeguard, Doomsday Mom, and Dead In the Water.  I shared Part One and Part Two of my week in television.

More From Us:

  1. Ryan has a patreon!  Consider subscribing!
  2. For SOLRAD, Ryan reviewed Orwell.
  3. On my music site, I shared songs from Peggy March, Bob Dylan, Rolling Stones, Aimee Mann, Lana Del Rey, Kedr Livanskiy, and Pixies!
  4. I reviewed Big Brother for the Big Brother Blog!
  5. At Reality TV Chat Blog, I shared Week 7 Veto Meeting Results, Campaign Notes, It’s Time To Open Up The Diary Room For Week 7, About Tonight, Week 8 Nominations and High Rollers Room, and Week 8 Veto Update!
  6. At Pop Politics, Jeff shared The Thing About Joe, In Memory of Charlie Watts, Herschel Walker is Running, Resign Joe, If I Could Do 2020 All Over Again, Hurricane Ida, and An Early Football Prediction!
  7. On her photography site, Erin shared Moon Peeking Through, Sunset, Richland, Richland Statue, Carts, Abandoned, and Church Sign!
  8. At Days Without Incident, Leonard shared the trailer for Spencer!

Want to see what I did last week?  Click here!

Music Video of the Day: I’m Gonna Follow You by Pat Benatar (1980, directed by ????)


The 29th music video played MTV on its first day of broadcast, August 1st, 1981, was the video for Gerry Rafferty’s saxophone classic, Baker Street.

Baker Street was followed by Pat Benatar’s I’m Gonna Follow You, the video of which featured Benatar singing while walking around a seemingly deserted city.  Benatar is effortlessly soulful and sexy in this video, putting most of today’s so-called pop divas to shame.

Enjoy!

The First Videos Shown on MTV:

  1. Video Killed the Radio Star by the Buggles
  2. You Better Run by Pat Benatar
  3. She Won’t Dance With Me by Rod Stewart
  4. You Better You Bet By The Who
  5. Little Suzi’s On The Up by PH.D
  6. We Don’t Talk Anymore by Cliff Richard
  7. Brass in Pocket by Pretenders
  8. Time Heals by Todd Rundgren
  9. Take It On The Run by REO Speedwagon
  10. Rockin’ in Paradise by Styx
  11. When Things Go Wrong by Robin Lane & The Chartbusters
  12. History Never Repeats by Split Enz
  13. Hold On Loosely by .38 Special
  14. Just Between You And Me by April Wine
  15. Sailing by Rod Stewart
  16. Iron Maiden by Iron Maiden
  17. Keep On Loving You by REO Speedwagon
  18. Better Than Blue by Michael Johnson
  19. Message of Love by The Pretenders
  20. Mr. Briefcase by Lee Ritenour
  21. Double Life by The Cars
  22. In The Air Tonight by Phil Collins
  23. Looking for Clues by Robert Palmer
  24. Too Late by Shoes
  25. Stop Draggin’ My Heart Around by Stevie Nicks and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
  26. Do Ya Think I’m Sexy by Rod Stewart
  27. Surface Tension by Rupert Hine
  28. One Step Ahead by Split Enz
  29. Baker Street by Gerry Rafferty