Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 4/17/23 — 4/23/23


This has been a long week.  Not only did I have to put up with two days straight of people coming out to the house to repair things but there’s also currently a road crew working on my street.  They started their work on Thursday and apparently, they’re going to be here for about a month.  It’s stressful.  Now, when I leave in the morning and come back in the afternoon, I have to take a series of detours just to reach my own house.  I’m going to have the worst headaches until they all go away.

Anyway, on a better note, here’s what I watched, read, and listened to this week!

Films I Watched:

  1. An American Hippie In Israel (1972)
  2. The Astral Factor (1976)
  3. Beyond Desire (1995)
  4. The Burning (1981)
  5. Coffee Shop (2014)
  6. Death Wish 3 (1985)
  7. Fast Times At Ridgemont High (1982)
  8. The Feminist and the Fuzz (1971)
  9. Galaxy Invader (1986)
  10. Let It Ride (1989)
  11. See The Man Run (1971)
  12. Sign O The Time (1987)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Are You Being Served?
  2. Barry
  3. Beavis and Butthead
  4. Beef
  5. Dynaman
  6. Farmer Wants A Wife
  7. Half Nelson
  8. Hang Time
  9. The Love Boat
  10. The Old Guys
  11. Survivor
  12. Tulsa King
  13. Waco: The Aftermath
  14. Yellowjackets

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Amy Winehouse
  3. Armin van Buuren
  4. Ashlee Simpson
  5. Avici
  6. The Black Keys
  7. Britney Spears
  8. Cannons
  9. The Chemical Brothers
  10. Christina Aguilera
  11. Chromatics
  12. Dillon Francis
  13. Garbage
  14. Haim
  15. Jessica Simpson
  16. Johnny Cash
  17. Muse
  18. Prince
  19. Radiohead
  20. Saint Motel
  21. Sophie B. Hawkins
  22. Stacie Orrico
  23. Talking Heads

Live Tweets:

  1. Fast Times At Ridgemont High
  2. The Burning

News From Last Week:

  1. Actor Dale Meeks Dies at 47
  2. Comedian Barry Humphries Dies at 89
  3. ‘She used to be funny. Now she’s just a joke’: Curb Your Enthusiasm star Cheryl Hines is SLAMMED by fans as a ‘disgraceful hypocrite’ for supporting ‘pathetic’ anti-vaxxer husband RFK Jr’s Presidential bid
  4. Elon Musk, Stephen King tussle on Twitter over blue checks, Ukraine: ‘How much have you donated?’
  5. Jeff Shell Ousted at NBCUniversal for ‘Inappropriate Relationship’
  6. Box Office: ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Dominates Again as ‘Evil Dead Rise’ Scares Up $23.5 Million Debut

Links From Last Week:

  1. Happy 86th Birthday Jack Nicholson! Celebrating An Icon’s Greatest Films!
  2. Tater’s Week in Review 4/22/23

Links From The Site:

  1. I shared music videos from Stacie Orrico, Prince, Amy Winehouse, Cannons, Ashlee Simpson, Johnny Cash, and Jessica Simpson!
  2. I reviewed Beyond Desire and The Feminist and the Fuzz!
  3. I shared my week in television and I reviewed Hang Time, Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, City Guys, Half Nelson, and California Dreams!
  4. Erin shared Drag Me Down, Ride the Red Earth, The Surrender of Santa Anna, The College Crowd, The Smuggled Atom Bomb, Death and Taxes, and Joy Street!

More From Us:

  1. For Horror Critic, I reviewed The Astral Factor!
  2. For Reality TV Chat Blog, I reviewed the latest episode of Survivor!
  3. At my music site, I shared songs from Cannons, Haim, Chromatics, Radiohead, Muse, Johnny Cash, and Jessica Simpson!
  4. At her photography site, Erin shared The Look, Blue, Squirrel In Black and White, Heading For The Water, Fountain, Just Visiting, and Dollhouse!

Do you want to see what I did last week?  Click here!

Retro Television Reviews: The Feminist and the Fuzz (dir by Jerry Paris)


Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Sundays, I will be reviewing the made-for-television movies that used to be a primetime mainstay.  Today’s film is 1971’s The Feminist and The Fuzz!  It  can be viewed on YouTube!

At first glance, Jane Bowers (Barbara Eden) and Jerry Frazer (David Hartman) don’t have much in common.

Jerry is a cop, though he’s attending night school with the hope of someday becoming a lawyer.  Jerry is an old-fashioned law and order man.  He expects the law to be followed.  He’s also the type who definitely believes that there are clear differences between men and women.  As he explains it, there are some thing that men are just better at.  Jerry is dating Kitty (Farrah Fawcett), who works as a waitress at the local Playboy Club.

Dr. Jane Bowers is a pediatrician and a proud feminist, one who takes it personally when a cop like Jerry refuses to give her a parking ticket just because she’s a woman.  She wants to be treated as an equal in all matters.  She’s dating Wyatt Foley (Herb Edelman), an attorney who still lives with his mother and who constantly goes out of his way to let everyone know that he’s an ally.  Jane’s best friend is Dr. Debby Inglefinger (Jo Anne Worley), who has decided that it’s time to lead a protest at the Playboy Club.

The only thing that Jerry and Jane have in common is that they both desperately need an apartment but apparently, apartments were not easy to find in San Francisco in the early 70s.  Fortunately, a hippie (Howard Hesseman) has just been evicted from his apartment because the landlord (John McGiver) didn’t like the fact that he was constantly having overnight guests.  Jane and Jerry both end up at the apartment at the same time, with Jane getting offended by Jerry’s refusal to give her a traffic ticket.  (Jerry makes the mistake of saying that he’s going to let her off “with a warning.”  He wouldn’t give a warning to a man!  Seriously, though, who in their right mind would actually demand a ticket?  Those things cost money.)  Even though they take an instant dislike to each other, Jane and Jerry still decide to pretend to be husband and wife so that they can rent the apartment together.  With their busy schedules, they figure that they’ll never have to see each other.  They won’t even know the other is around.

Of course, it doesn’t work out like that.  Jane allows Debby to hold a consciousness raising meeting at the apartment.  (Future director Penny Marshall appears as a participant.)  Meanwhile, Jerry lets a prostitute (Julie Newmar) stay at the apartment, just to keep her off of the streets for the night.  The landlord is getting suspicious.  So, for that matter, is Jane’s father (Harry Morgan).  And, as you probably already guessed, Jerry and Jane are falling in love.

With its hippies and its militant feminists and its jokes about the Playboy Club, The Feminist and the Fuzz is a film that practically yells, “1971!”  Unfortunately, script’s attempt to turn the film’s rather predictable plot into a Neil Simon-style jokefest never quite works.  The “humorous” dialogue feels forced and the film’s 75-minute run time doesn’t do it any favors, as we never really have the time to get to know Jerry or Jane as human beings.  Instead, they just remain “The Fuzz” and “The Feminist.”  As a result, it’s not that easy to care about whether or not they actually get together.  Some of the supporting performances are amusing.  Barbara Eden manages to avoid turning Jane into a caricature of a humorless activist but poor David Hartman is stiff as a board and in no way convincing as a veteran cop.

The main thing I took away from this movie is that the Playboy Clubs were exceptionally tacky.  Way back in 2011, NBC actually tried to air a drama series that took place at a Playboy Club in the 60s.  (This was when every network was trying to come up with the next Mad Men.)  The pilot started with creepy old Hugh Hefner assuring the viewers that, “Everybody who was anybody wanted to be a member of the club.”  I mean, seriously?  What a strange world.

Music Video of the Day: (There’s Gotta Be) More To Life by Stacie Orrico (2003, dir by Dave Meyers)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MvzgefsfKE

No one’s having a good time in this video!

Indeed, there does have to be more to life.  That was a true sentiment in 2003 and it’s a true sentiment 20 years later.  People are still trying to figure out what else they can get out of life.  I think the answer is different for everyone.  That said, if you’re standing in your front yard while your significant other impotently yells at a repo man who is trying to take away your baby’s crib …. I don’t know if there’s really anyway to come back from something like that.  You might want to find a new partner because the one you’ve got obviously isn’t holding up their end of the deal.

Enjoy!