Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 7/17/23 — 7/23/23


Eh.  I don’t even want to talk about this week.  Maybe I’ll be in the mood to talk about this week next week but hopefully, when next week comes around, I will have moved onto other things.  It’s nothing to be too concerned about.  It’s just that some weeks are crappy and, as a result, you don’t want to talk about them when they end.  You just want to move on!

I will say this.  If you’re a billionaire who wants to run a social network, build it up from scratch.  Be there from the start and be clear about what you’re planning.  Don’t buy another popular site and then ruin it just so you can then force everyone onto your site.  I mean, really, I’m not difficult to please.  All I ask is that people be polite and give fair warning before changing everything.

*SIGH*

Anyway, here’s what I watched and listened to this week.  Yes, I decided to avoid the crowds as far as Barbie and Oppenheimer are concerned.  I’ll see them this upcoming week, after I get my car inspected.

(Don’t even get me started on how I feel about car inspections.)

Films I Watched:

  1. Convoy (1979)
  2. The Creeping Terror (1964)
  3. The Frozen Ground (2011)
  4. Killer Elite (2011)
  5. Overkill: The Aileen Wournos Story (1992)
  6. Texas Killing Fields (2011)
  7. The Untouchables (1987)
  8. White Line Fever (1975)
  9. Winter of Frozen Dreams (2009)

TV Shows I Watched:

  1. City Guys
  2. Claim to Fame
  3. Degrassi High
  4. Fantasy Island
  5. Happy Hour
  6. The Love Boat
  7. The Master
  8. Night Music
  9. The Simpsons
  10. Stars On Mars
  11. Welcome Back Kotter

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Backstreet Boys
  3. Bjork
  4. Billie Eilish
  5. Britney Spears
  6. The Chemical Brothers
  7. Christina Aguilera
  8. Crystal Method
  9. Dillon Francis
  10. Felony
  11. The Five Stair Steps
  12. The Four Tops
  13. Gwen Stefani
  14. Human Nature
  15. In This Moment
  16. Jakalope
  17. Kedr Livanskiy
  18. Lady Gaga
  19. Michael Fredo
  20. Muse
  21. Poppy
  22. Rolling Stones
  23. Saint Motel
  24. Sophie B. Hawkins
  25. Spice Girls
  26. Taylor Swift
  27. Tony Bennett
  28. The Wallflowers
  29. The Who
  30. will.i.am

Live Tweets:

  1. Killer Elite
  2. The Untouchables
  3. White Line Fever
  4. The Bat

Trailers:

  1. The Marvels

News From Last Week:

  1. Tony Bennett dies at 96
  2. Twitter is being rebranded as X
  3. ‘Barbie’ Box Office to the World: The Pandemic Is Officially Over
  4. Oppenheimer box office collection Day 1: Christopher Nolan’s film delivers biggest Hollywood opening of the year

Links From Last Week:

  1. Tater’s Week in Review 7/21/23
  2. Did Mickey Rooney Really Have A “Potato Fantasy” Restaurant? The Answer Is Here!
  3. La lune

Links From The Site:

  1. Jeff shared music videos from Slash, Tony Bennett, Phil Collins, Metallica, Aerosmith, The Clash, and Jane Birkin!
  2. Erin shared The Broken Vase, Bedtime Stories, Secret Session, A Picture of the Moon, Parole Chief, Miss Understanding, and Argosy!
  3. Erin shared a pulpy view of the Moon!
  4. I shared my week in television!
  5. I paid tribute to Paul Schrader!
  6. I shared a scene from The Taking of Pelham One Two Three!
  7. I reviewed Murder In New Hampshire, Hang Time, Fantasy Island, The Love Boat, City Guys, The Master, and Welcome Back Kotter!

More From Us:

  1. At Days Without Incident, Leonard shared Can You Hear The Music?
  2. At her photography site, Erin shared Searching, Spring Creek, The Return, Moon, Missing Winter, Dallas In The Distance, and Tower in Dallas!
  3. At my music site, I shared songs from Poppy, Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, In This Moment, Backstreet Boys, Billie Eilish, Spice Girls, and The Rolling Stones!

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

Retro Television Reviews: Murder In New Hampshire: The Pamela Smart Story (dir by Joyce Chopra)


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 1991’s Murder In New Hampshire: The Pamela Smart Story!  It  can be viewed on YouTube!

When Pamela Wojas (Helen Hunt) first became engaged to Gregg Smart (Hank Stratton), she thought that they would never get older or settle down to a conventional life.  She thought that Gregg would always have long hair and that they would spend the rest of their lives following Van Halen around the country.  But then Gregg got a job with a New Hampshire insurance company and he cut his hair.  And then Pam failed in her attempts to get hired by the local news station and instead, she ended up accepting a job as the part-time media director at a local high school.

Pam spearheaded the school’s anti-drug campaign and ended up working closely with two students in particular, Billy Flynn (Chad Allen) and Cecelia Pierce (Riff Reagan).  Billy and Pam bonded over their shared love of Van Halen and soon, they were having an affair.  Was Pam just trying to relive her youth or was she already setting up Billy to murder her husband?

Based on the true story that also inspired Gus Van Sant’s To Die For, Murder In New Hampshire jumps back and forth through time.  The film opens with Gregg being shot and killed by Billy and one of his friends.  It then cuts to a courtroom, where a prosecutor (Howard Hesseman) tells the jury that Gregg was murdered on the orders of his own wife.  A very conservatively and modestly-dressed Pam sits in the courtroom and provides quite a contrast to the far more wild and hedonistic Pam who we see in the film’s frequent flashbacks.  While Gregg settles comfortably into life as a suburban insurance agent, Pam continually tries to hold onto her past.  While Gregg wins awards for selling the most insurance, Pam tells Billy that Gregg beats her and that he’s dangerous.

It’s difficult to watch Murder In New Hampshire without comparing it To Die For.  They both tell the same story and they even use the same flashback structure.  But if To Die For presented Nicole Kidman as being a soulless killer who was driven by her obsession with being a star, Murder In New Hampshire suggests that Pam’s main motivation was that she just couldn’t handle the idea of settling down and living a conventional, suburban life.  As well, To Die For presented Joaquin Phoenix’s gunman as being someone who was essentially incapable of thinking for himself.  In Murder In New Hampshire, Billy is far more active character.  Though he is undoubtedly manipulated by Pam, Billy is still portrayed as someone who made his own decision to get involved in Pam’s schemes.  If To Die For is a stylized satire of the true crime genre, Murder In New Hampshire is the epitome of what was being satirized.

That said, Murder In New Hampshire is a good example of the true crime genre, largely due to Helen Hunt’s wonderful performance as Pam Smart.  Hunt plays Pam as someone who has never grown up and who is so scared of being required to that she’ll even resort to murder to pull it off.  While Murder In New Hampshire never quite escapes the shadow of To Die For, it’s still an effective film when taken on its own terms.

Music Video of the Day: Beautiful Dangerous by Slash, featuring Fergie (2010, directed by Rich Lee)


Since today is the birthday of guitar god Slash, today’s music video of the day is for the third single to be release from Slash’s self-titled debut solo album.  Slash told The Sun that this song began as a piece of music that he wrote as “a score for a scene in a strip club” and he decided to have Fergie provide vocals after hearing her cover Heart’s Barracuda.

The video features Fergie as an obsessed fan of Slash’s who apparently ends up killing him.  Slash said that the idea for the video came from Fergie herself.  The video was directed by Rich Lee, who has also done several videos for The Black-Eyed Peas, Eminem, Lana del Rey, and others.

Enjoy!