Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 7/3/23 — 7/9/23


This week, I celebrated the 4th of July with my sisters, I binged a lot of television to get caught up for Tuesday’s Emmy nominations, I read a lengthy and heavily detailed book, and I also watched quite a few films.

I’m tired.

Check out what I watched, read, and listened to this week while I go get some sleep.

 

Films I Watched:

  1. 12 Days of Christmas Eve (2022)
  2. Elmore Leonard: But Don’t Try To Write (2022)
  3. Father of the Bride (2022)
  4. Graduation Day (1980)
  5. High & Outside: A Baseball Noir (2018)
  6. Inside High Noon Revisited (2022)
  7. Jerry and Marge Go Large (2022)
  8. Jesus Revolution (2023)
  9. Kemper: The CoEd Killer (2008)
  10. Over The Top (1987)
  11. Pamela, A Love Story (2023)
  12. Prey (2022)
  13. The Princess (2022)
  14. Shania Twain: Not Just A Girl (2022)
  15. Sheena (1984)
  16. Sick (2023)
  17. Still: A Michael J. Fox Movie (2023)
  18. The Zebra Force (1976)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. 60 Days In
  2. Big Beasts
  3. City Guys
  4. The Crown
  5. Daisy Jones & The Six
  6. Dead To Me
  7. Diff’rent Strokes
  8. The Diplomat
  9. House of the Dragon
  10. Fleishman Is In Trouble
  11. Forgive or Forget
  12. The Last Of Us
  13. The Last Thing He Told Me
  14. The Love Boat
  15. The Master
  16. MH370: The Plane That Disappeared
  17. Midnight Special
  18. The Old Man
  19. Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields
  20. Real Time With Bill Maher
  21. Rollergames
  22. Slasher: Ripper
  23. Trainwreck: Woodstock ’99
  24. Welcome Back, Kotter

Books I Read:

  1. The Shards (2023) by Bret Easton Ellis

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Britney Spears
  2. Camila Cabello
  3. Carrie Underwood
  4. Felony
  5. Gwen Stefani
  6. The Hues Corporation
  7. Kelly Clarkson
  8. No Doubt
  9. Olivia Roridgo
  10. Taylor Swift

Live Tweets:

  1. The Zebra Force
  2. Over The Top
  3. Sheena
  4. Graduation Day

Trailers:

  1. Killers of the Flower Moon
  2. Bob Marley: One Love

News From Last Week:

  1. The good version of TweetDeck is back, but for how long?
  2. Privacy expert issues warning about Threads, Meta’s Twitter competitor
  3. How Jim Caviezel’s Faith-Based ‘Sound of Freedom’ Became This Summer’s Unlikely Box Office Hit
  4. Box Office: ‘Insidious: The Red Door’ Dethrones ‘Indiana Jones 5’ With $32.6 Million Debut
  5. ‘The Flash’ Struggles Toward the Finish Line at the Global Box Office
  6. The Good Doctor’ actor Hill Harper is inching toward a potential Senate bid in Michigan, report says
  7. Actor Eduardo Verástegui may run for president of Mexico, says conservative party there ‘is dead’

Links From Last Week:

  1. Fashionistas! Let’s celebrate National Fashion Day!
  2. Exploring Gritty 70’s Cinema With “Straight Time!” Dustin Hoffman Fires Himself!
  3. Tater’s Last Couple of Weeks in Review 7/7/23

Link From The Site:

  1. Jeff shared music videos from Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen, Beck, Ringo Starr, The Backbeat Band, ZZ Top, and Alice In Chains!
  2. Jeff shared a scene from Stripes!
  3. Erin shared Mammoth Detective, Cartoon Humor, Man To Man, Bedside Manner, The White Bikini, Ribbon, and True Cases of Women In Crime!
  4. Erin invited us to celebrate Bikini Day and International Kissing Day!
  5. Erin wished everyone a happy 4th of July!
  6. Erin shared a scene from A Boy Named Charlie Brown!
  7. Erin shared some vintage fireworks, The Covers of Ace G-Men Stories, 42 Texas Ranger homeruns, and celebration of rural America with the pulps!
  8. Erin reviewed A Baseball Noir!
  9. I shared a music video from Lady Gaga!
  10. I reviewed Hang Time, Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, City Guys, The Master, and Welcome Back Kotter!
  11. I shared my week in television!
  12. I shared a scenes from Shaft and Tropic Thunder!
  13. I paid tribute to Jean Cocteau, Michele Soavi, and films featuring fireworks!
  14. I reviewed Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway and Detective Knight: Independence!
  15. I shared an AMV of the Day!

More From Us:

  1. At Days Without Incident, Leonard shared music from Cymande!
  2. At her photography site, Erin shared Ribbon, Happy 4th of July, Red Flowers, Caddo Lake, Armadillo, Spring Creek Nature Trail, and Spring Creek Nature Trail 2!
  3. At my music site, I shared songs from Taylor Swift, Hues Corporation, No Doubt, Britney Spears, Gwen Stefani, Carrie Underwood, and Olivia Rodrigo!

Check out last week by clicking here!

 

Retro Television Reviews: Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway (dir by Randal Kleiser)


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 1976’s Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway!  It  can be viewed on YouTube!

Dawn Wetherby (Eve Plumb) is fifteen years old.  She’s naive.  She’s innocent.  She’s …. well, let’s just be honest and admit that she’s not particularly bright.  Sick of being embarrassed by her alcoholic mom (Lynn Carlin), Dawn decides to hop on a bus and travel to Hollywood.  Maybe she can make a new life for herself in California.

Of course, it doesn’t take long for Dawn to discover that Los Angeles is not a city where dreams magically come true.  It’s a tough and harsh town and it’s not like Dawn has any money or any particular skills.  When she tries to get a job, she’s told that she’s too young.  When she tries to rent a room, she’s told that ten dollars is not enough to cover two weeks rent.  When she gives a dollar to a boy who says that he needs it, he responds by mugging her for the rest of her cash.  A prostitute named Frankie Lee (Marguerite DeLain) takes some sympathy on Dawn and tells her to call if she ever wants to make some money.

Eventually, a nasty cough leads to Dawn going to the free clinic.  That’s where she meets Alexander (Leigh McCloskey).  Alexander is a teen runaway, just like Dawn.  However, Alexander also can somehow afford an apartment and food to eat.  Alexander invites Dawn to live with him and Dawn, realizing she has no where else to go, agrees.  Alexander offers to look after her but, after Dawn discovers that Alexander makes his money by working as a male prostitute, Dawn decides that she needs a job of her own.

It’s time to call Frankie Lee!  And it’s time for Frankie Lee to introduce Dawn to Swan (Bo Hopkins), a pimp who lives in a nice house and who offers to put Dawn to work….

Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway is an earnest film that was obviously made with the best of intentions and which actually did have something say, in its melodramatic way, about the dangers of running away from home and trying to make it on your own when you’re not even old enough to drive.  That said, I imagine that most people who go through the effort to track down this film will do so because it stars The Brady Bunch‘s Eve Plumb as an underage runway who ends up walking the streets and taking men back to her motel room.  The movie might as well be called Jan Brady Goes Bad, because Eve Plumb does essentially give the same performance that she gave when she was playing the whiniest member of the Brady Bunch.  There’s nothing tough or streetwise about her, which works for the first half of the film but not during the second half.  Once Dawn has been on the streets for a bit, you would expect her to toughen up a bit but she still comes across like she’s mad at Greg and Bobby for tying up the phone.  Dawn goes through a lot and becomes a bit jaded as a result but, every time she speaks, you expect her to exclaim, “Why does Marcia get to runaway from home but I don’t?  It’s not fair!”  Far more impressive are the performances of Bo Hopkins and, in the role of Dawn’s probation officer, George Stanford Brown.  William Schallert also has a good bit as Dawn’s first client, who ends up feeling so sorry for Dawn that he just give her twenty dollars and then tells her to go back home.

Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runway is one of those film that was obviously designed to make parents worry about their kids.  It seems to be asking, “Do you know where your children are tonight?”  In 1976, I imagine they were busy watching Jan Brady try to make it on the mean streets of Hollywood.

Scenes I Love: The Opening of Shaft


Today is the birthday of Richard Roundtree so, of course, today’s scene that I love could only be the classic opening of 1971’s Shaft.

By doing something as simple as walking down a street in New York, Roundtree shows us exactly who Shaft is and why Shaft does what he does.  This is one of those scenes that’s been parodied so many times that it’s actually surprising to rewatch and see how just defiant and sexy Richard Roundtree’s confident strut actually was.

On another note, I enjoy seeing all of the names of the movies that were playing on 42nd Street when this scene was filmed.

Music Video Of The Day: Theme From Mission: Impossible by Adam Clayton & Larry Mullen Jr. (1996, directed by Kevin Godley)


Today’s music video of the day comes from the two less annoying members of U2, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen.  Their re-interpretation of the Mission: Impossible theme was recorded for the first film in the series, bringing the franchise into the 90s.  I am old enough that I can remember when the first Mission: Impossible film was released.  I don’t think anyone expected the series to become what it currently is.

This video was directed by Kevin Godley, who has also worked with Fine Young Cannibals, Bryan Adams, Blur, and Hozier.

Enjoy!