Today’s music video of the day is another emotional music video from Tove Lo. This is what I like whenever I watch a move about …. well, a movie about anything. It’s not that hard to make me cry.
Enjoy!
Try to play it cool I like you Have me in your hand Just like that Wish I never told ya It’s killing me to wonder
You give, you give me
Empty promises of love You’re an honest man when you’re drunk Wish I never asked ya But it’s killing me to wonder How long How long
How long have you loved another While I’m dreaming of us together She got the best of you Part of me always knew How long have you tried to end it While I’m blaming myself to fix it How long How long
Listen to my fears Not my friends They don’t tell the truth They like you Wish I never told ya (but I told ya) It’s killing me to wonder (I wonder)
You give, you give me
Empty promises of love You’re an honest man when you’re drunk Wish I never asked ya But it’s killing me to wonder How long How long
How long have you loved another While I’m dreaming of us together She got the best of you Part of me always knew How long have you tried to end it While I’m blaming myself to fix it How long How long I need to know how How long have you loved another While I’m dreaming of us together How long
I know love isn’t fair I know the heart wants what it wants There’s no way to prepare For burning brutal rejection I know it takes some time To feel the pain of loosing a lie
How long have you loved another While I’m dreaming of us together She got the best of you Part of me always knew How long have you tried to end it While I’m blaming myself to fix it How long How long I need to know how How long have you loved another While I’m dreaming of us together How long How long
This week’s episode of Pam & Tommy was a definite improvement on last week’s, largely because it didn’t feature Seth Rogen wandering around with a “poor me” expression on his face. Last week, far too much time was devoted to Rogen’s sad sack portrayal of Reed Gauthier, who the show insists on trying to make a sympathetic character even though he was essentially just a thief who tried to make a lot of money by stealing and then selling someone else’s private sex tape.
Reed was nowhere to be found in this week’s episode. Instead, the narrative focused on how Pam and Tommy’s sex tape became a national story. Not surprisingly, it all turned out to be Tommy Lee’s fault. When the show opens, Jay Leno won’t make jokes about the sex tape because it’s not something that Uncle Jim and Aunt Susie in Duluth have heard about. The LA Times won’t run a story on it because the editor says that it’s not real news. With Pam preparing for the opening of Barb Wire and Tommy working on his new album (and very much aware that his label no longer views him or the band as being a top priority), it appears that there’s a chance that Pam and Tommy can ride this out.
But then Bob Guccione the publisher of Penthouse, gets his hands on the tape and Tommy and a bunch of lawyers decide to file a lawsuit to keep him for publishing stills. Pam has her doubts but Tommy and the lawyers do what they want. Guccione responds by saying that he had a first amendment right to publish pictures from the sex tape. The L.A. Times discovers, from the court filings, that the sex tape was stolen from Pam and Tommy and that it’s being sold without their permission. With the story going national, Jay Leno realizes that Duluth now know all about it. On top of all that, Pam learns how to use a search engine!
It was a busy episode. And, in contrast to the nearly hour-long episodes that proceeded it, it was only 32 minutes long. A half hour is the perfect amount of time to spend with Pam & Tommy. Spending more than half an hour with them means dealing with the fact that Tommy’s a moron and Pam really does seem to think that she’s going to win an Oscar for Barb Wire. Spending just 30 minute with them means that both characters get a chance to present their cases without wearing out their welcome. Sebastian Stan and Lily James both gave good performances in this week’s episode, with Stan portraying Tommy as being a manchild who is in deep denial about the fact that the 80s are over while Lily James captured Pam’s need to try to keep everyone happy. It’s Pam who instinctively knows the right way to deal with Guccione but she’s ignored by Tommy and his team of lawyers. As Pam’s publicist puts it, women are taught from an early age to always say yes and to agree with men, even when they know that the men doesn’t have the slightest idea what they’re talking about.
That said, Pam & Tommy is still definitely a flawed vehicle. For every moment that works, there’s a moment or a line of dialogue that just tries too hard. Particularly in the scenes with Jay Leno, Pam & Tommy felt like it was one Nathan Lane cameo away from turning into a Ryan Murphy production. Five episodes in and the main problem remains that Pam & Tommy continues to struggle to convince the audience that it’s telling a story that needs to be stretched out of over 8 episodes. If ever a true story was meant to a 90-minute TBS production, this is it.
For as long as I can remember, I always wanted to fall in love with a gangster.
*cue Layla piano coda*
How I Fell In Love With A Gangster is a three hour Polish film, one that the audience is told is based on the true story of Nikodem ‘Nikos’ Skotarczak (played by Tomasz Wlosok), a career criminal who became a bit of a celebrity in Eastern Europe during the late 80s and 90s. The film follows Nikos from his unhappy childhood in Poland to his time as one of Eastern Europe’s most notorious car thieves. He assembles his own crew and, while he does steal a lot of cars, he also seems to be a rather amiable criminal. He’s not the type of criminal who kills people or who even threatens to kill people. Instead, he’s just looking to make some extra money, have a good time, and defy anyone who would try to tell him what to do. He’s the type of criminal who would rather deal with trouble by escaping out a window than by drawing a gun. At least from the way that he’s portrayed in the film, it’s hard not to like him. As more than one character points out, he’s hardly a gangster.
Unfortunately, things change. Nikos does a few stints in prison. Each time he gets out, he discovers that the underworld had become a bit more violent and that it’s becoming increasingly more difficult to stay loyal to his old business associates. He may not be a gangster but the people around him definitely are. The cops are still after him. Two rival gangs expect him to support them in a gang war. Nikos just wants to snort cocaine, spend time with his latest wife, and try to be a good father but none of that turns out to be as easy as he was hoping. Also haunting Nikos is his own belief that his family has been afflicted with a death curse. Every six years, one of his relatives dies violently. Eventually, Nikos believes, it will be his turn.
It’s a bit of an odd film. The story features a framing device, in which a young reporter interviews an older woman who was in love with Nikos. The majority of the film is told in flashback but, throughout the flashbacks, Nikos’s friends and business partners often break the fourth wall and talk straight to the audience. Occasionally, this is used to good effect but it still leaves the viewer wondering just who exactly is telling the story. The film’s 3-hour running time also feels excessive. For every scene that really works (and there are quite a few), there are other scenes that are a bit too derivative of other gangster films. As soon as Nikos partnered up with a criminal named Silvio, it was obvious that the audience had reached the part of the film where the clever and honorable criminal mastermind would have to deal with an out-of-control subordinate.
Flaws and all, the film did work for me. A lot of that was due to Tomasz Wlosok’s charismatic performance as Nikos. Over the course of the film, Nikos went from being a fun-loving, hyperactive criminal to being a rather sad and defeated middle-aged man, isolated from his former associates and waiting for fate to intervene. Wlosok was never less than compelling in the role. Though the soundtrack was occasionally a bit too on-the-nose, the use of Moby’s One Of These Mornings added a certain poignance to the film’s final scenes. Finally, the film itself looked great, providing a nice contrast between the industrial drabness of communist-controlled Eastern Europe and the neon-infused glory of Nikos’s life as a criminal. In the end, Nikos emerges as a tragic figure, a man who just can’t understand how or why the underworld has suddenly become such a dangerous and unforgiving place.
If this music video from Dillon Francis doesn’t make you happy, I don’t know what to tell you. Who can’t enjoy a video about someone who finds a new confidence and a love for dancing?
The gentleman in the video is played by John Gemberling.
Ivan Reitman, R.I.P. I just heard that the influential Canadian director passed away yesterday.
This has been a busy week. We started with the Oscar nominations and the Olympics. We’re ending with the Super Bowl. We’re finishing up what’s left of 2021. I almost feel like next week will be the first week that 2022 actually feels like 2022.
Anyway, I’m obviously too tired to have coherent thoughts so let’s just move on to what I watched and listened to this week!
As I’ve said many times on this very site, the Super Bowl is pretty much all about the commercials for me. This year, there was a few commercials that I liked but, for the most part, the selection was pretty bland. Usually, I pick anywhere between 8 to 10 favorite Super Bowl Ads. This year, there’s only six that really made much of an impression on me.
And here they are:
6. Frito Lay — Push It!
Sloths are so cute!
5. Amazon — Mind Reader
Why is Alexa trying to destroy Scarlett Johansson’s marriage!?
4. All-Electric Chevy Silverado — New Generation
To be honest, I got kind of sick of all of the electric vehicle commercials that aired this year. Most of them felt …. a little insincere. But I did like this one, just because it reunited The Sopranos’s Meadow and Tony. Jr. It’s good to see that they’re still with us, regardless of what happened to Tony at the end of the series. I’m not sure how Tony would feel about his daughter driving an electric truck, though. “Gary Cooper didn’t need no charging station.”
3. Planet Fitness — What’s Gotten Into Lindsay?
Of course, if anything bad happens to Lindsay, we know who to blame.
2. Budweiser — A Clydesdale’s Journey
The horse survived! I had tears in my mismatched eyes.
Salesforce — “The New Frontier”
I’m not sure what exactly Matthew McConaughey is selling here but he’s one of the few people who can pull off lecturing from a hot air balloon. As I watched this commercial, I considered that if McConaughey had run for governor, he could have floated around the state, campaigning from his balloon. Instead, we’re stuck with Beto and his skateboard. Oh well. Miss opportunities.
The Super Bowl just ended so I guess it’s time to recap the reaction of the members of the TSL Team who watched and tweeted about it. Jeff, Erin, Case, Leonard, and I all watched and …. I don’t know. The game kind of sucked this year. I didn’t care about the game and I thought that commercials were kind of boring.. Case thought the commercials were depressing. Leonard got so bored that he left for ice cream. Jeff and Erin are mad that the Bengals lost. Even though it wasn’t as bad as last year, there was still weren’t as many movie commercials as in the past.
I think our collective reaction can be summed up as this:
If this aired during the Super Bowl, I missed it. Regardless, here is the DC — The World Needs Heroes trailer, which features scenes from several upcoming DCEU films.