Lisa Marie’s Week In Review: 1/13/25 — 1/19/25


Rest in Peace, David Lynch.

Twin Peaks The Return Part Three (2017, dir by David Lynch)

Movies I Watched:

  1. Alone in Venice (2025)
  2. Amazing Racer (2009)
  3. The Bishop’s Wife (1947)
  4. Call To Danger (1973)
  5. Class of 1984 (1982)
  6. Dark Star (1974)
  7. Dead Before They Wake (2025)
  8. Excalibur (1981)
  9. Here Comes Mr. Jordan (1941)
  10. Inchon (1981)
  11. Laws of Man (2025)
  12. Mortuary (1983)
  13. The Murders in the Rue Morgue (1986)
  14. Nemesis (1992)
  15. Priceless (2016)
  16. Reagan (2024)
  17. Starman (1984)
  18. Straight To Hell (1947)
  19. Trading Places (1983)
  20. Wanted: Dead or Alive (1987)
  21. What Did Jack Do? (2017)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. Abbott Elementary
  2. Check It Out
  3. CHiPs
  4. Dark
  5. Degrassi High
  6. Fantasy Island
  7. Friday the 13th: The Series
  8. Girls Gone Wild: The Untold Story
  9. Hell’s Kitchen
  10. Highway to Heaven
  11. Homicide: Life on the Street
  12. Kitchen Nightmares
  13. The Love Boat
  14. Malibu CA
  15. Miami Vice
  16. Monsters
  17. Pacific Blue
  18. Special Force: World’s Toughest Test
  19. St. Elsewhere
  20. The Starlet
  21. Welcome Back, Kotter
  22. Who Wants To Marry A Multi-Millionaire

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Adi Ulmansky
  2. Angelo Badalamenti
  3. Ashlee Simpson
  4. The Chemical Brothers
  5. Chromatics
  6. Chrysta Bell
  7. David Lynch
  8. Goblin
  9. The Hospital
  10. Jessica Simpson
  11. John Carpenter
  12. Julee Cruise
  13. Lindsey Stirling
  14. Primitive Radio Gods
  15. Rialto
  16. Saint Motel
  17. Skrillex
  18. Tiesto
  19. The Ting Tings
  20. TTSSFU
  21. X

Live Tweets:

  1. Nemesis
  2. Wanted: Dead or Alive
  3. Class of 1984
  4. Mortuary

News From Last Week:

  1. Visionary Director David Lynch Has Passed Away
  2. Actress Joan Plowright Dies
  3. Actor Bob Uecker Dies
  4. Director Jeannot Szwarc Dies
  5. Comedian Tony Slattery Dies After A Heart Attack
  6. The TikTok Ban Is Off Again

Links From Last Week:

  1. Tater’s Week in Review 1/17/25
  2. The Serenity Of Malibu Waves…A Peaceful Oasis Destroyed…How You Can Help…
  3. “Live Wire”

Links From The Site:

  1. Arleigh reviewed Monster and Van Helsing!  He shared an AMV of the Day and two songs of the day, from Joe Satriani and The HU.  He shared a scene from Mr. Inbetween and paid tribute to Assassin films!  He shared the trailer for Daredevil: Born Again!
  2. Brad reviewed Voyage, The Untouchables, Vampires, Sling Blade, Shane, Conviction, and Enough!  He shared a scene from Ace Ventura and paid tribute to David LynchHe wrote about Charles Bronson: The Musical.
  3. Erin reviewed Hitting For The Cycle and paid tribute to Bob Uecker!  She shared the covers of Real Men and Mural of Martin Luther King, Jr., Master Detective, Gang Mistress, Amazing Detective Tales, Women Without Men, Gretta, and Ginger!
  4. Jeff reviewed 48 Hours, Beverly Hills Cop, Trading Places, Memoirs of an Invisible Man, Cops and Robbersons, Excalibur, and Phantom Punch!  He reviewed a game and shared great moments in television and comic book history!
  5. I shared music videos from TTSSFU, Rialto, Skrillex, The Hospital, Tiesto, X, and Chrystabell!
  6. I shared songs of the day from The Chemical Brothers, The Supremes, Angelo Badalamenti, Jessica Simpson, and Janis Joplin!
  7. I shared my week in television!  I also reviewed Degrassi High!
  8. I paid tribute to John McNaughton, 1963, John Carpenter, bootleggers, John Boorman, and Edgar Allan Poe!
  9. I shared scenes from Airplane!, Earthquake, They Live, Deliverance, and Tales and Tellers!
  10. I reviewed When it Rains In LA, Gravity, Alone in Venice, Alice Adams, Laws of Man, Mississippi Burning, Dead Before They Wake, The Elephant Man, Dark Star, Starman, The Man, Here Comes Mr. Jordan, Notorious, The Bishop’s Wife, Eraserhead, and Nomadland!

Click here for last week!

Lisa Marie Reviews An Oscar Winner: Nomadland (dir by Chloe Zhao)


In 2020’s Nomadland, Frances McDormand stars as Fern.

Fern had a job working in an U.S. Gypsum plant in Nevada but, after years of steady employment, she’s laid off.  Recently widowed and struggling to pay the bills, Fern sells almost everything that she owns and moves into a van.  She travels across the country, taking work where she can find it and hanging out at other camps with self-styled “nomads.”  She meets Bob Wells, the real-life guru of the van-dwelling, nomad lifestyle.  She forms cautious friendships with other people who have decided to spend their lives in their vans, traveling from one location to another.  Some of them are people who have fallen on hard times.  Some of them are just people who don’t want to be tied down.  One thing that becomes clear about Fern is that, while she’s a kind and caring soul, she’s also not one to allow people to get too close to her.  She values her independence.

The film becomes a portrait of people who have been largely forgotten by conventional society but who have created a society of their own.  (Fern may occasionally work at an Amazon warehouse but one gets the feeling that she would never order anything from there herself.)  The film centers on Frances McDormand’s performance as Fern but most of the people that she meets are played by actual nomads.  Director Chloe Zhao directs in documentary fashion, emphasizing the natural beauty of America and the lined but strong faces of people who are determined to live life their own way.

Nomadland can seem like a curious best picture winner.  It’s almost plotless and, at time, the film itself can seem a bit heavy-handed in its portrayal of the nomad lifestyle.  (I value my independence but I doubt that I could handle living in a van.  And, even if I could handle it, I wouldn’t want to.)  Even though it’s only been a few years since Nomadland won its Oscar, it sometimes seems as if it’s become one of the forgotten Best Picture winners.  Some of that is because Nomadland won during the COVID pandemic, at a time when the release a lot of the films that were expected to be big Oscar contenders (like West Side Story and Top Gun: Maverick) were moved back so they could be released in theaters.  While Nomadland did get a limited theatrical release, most people who watched it did so on Hulu.  The 2020 Best Picture nominees were films that probably would not have been nominated in a different year and Nomadland, with its cinema verité style, is far more lowkey than the typical dramatic Oscar winner.  Fairly or not, the film’s reputation has also suffered due to the failure of director Chloe Zhao’s The Eternals.  Nomadland is perhaps now best known as being a part of a cautionary tale about what happens when a director makes an acclaimed film and then gets hired to do a Marvel movie.

(You have to feel bad for Chloe Zhao, who was the second woman to win the Oscar for Best Director but who was given the award as a part of perhaps the worst ceremony in the history of the Oscars.  So determined were the producers to end on the triumphant note of Chadwick Boseman receiving a posthumous Oscar that both Zhao and Nomadland‘s victories were treated as distractions.  And then, of course, Boseman didn’t even win the Oscar.  It was an awkward night all around.)

That said, I can understand why Nomadland was embraced when it was released.  It came out at a time when people were not only scared of getting COVID but also having to deal with the government’s heavy-handed approach to dealing with the pandemic.  Living off the grid and away from society was something that looked very attractive to a lot of people back then.  Future film students may be confused as to why Nomadland was so honored but it was definitely a film of its time.  People forget (or willfully choose to ignore) how crazy things felt during the pandemic.  When Fran told the world to leave her alone, she spoke for many.

 

Retro Television Review: Homicide: Life On The Street 2.4 “A Many Splendored Thing”


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 Homicide: Life On The Street, which aired from 1993 to 1999, on NBC!  It  can be viewed on Peacock.

This week, season 2 of Homicide comes to a close with an episode directed by John McNaughton, of Henry: Portrait of A Serial Killer fame.

Episode 2.4 “A Many Splendored Thing”

(Dir by John McNaughton, originally aired on January 27th, 1994)

The second season finale of Homicide opens with Bolander in a good mood and Munch feeling that life is pretty much pointless.  It’s a reversal from what we’ve seen over the last few episodes of Homicide and, as annoyed as I got with all the storylines about Bolander’s private life, I was still happy to see Bolander happy in this episode.  As an actor, Ned Beatty’s performance is a lot interesting when Bolander is looking forward to the future.  By that same token, Richard Belzer always seemed to be trying to hard whenever it came to playing Munch’s happiness.  Belzer was born to play a cynic and, in this episode, he delivers his lines with a bitterness that is both funny and authentic.

Bolander is dating Linda and I have to admit that, despite my initial weariness, I really like Ned Beatty and Julianna Margulies as a couple.  Bolander and Linda go on a double date with Kay and Danvers.  Awwww, two couples in love and having dinner together!  How sweet!  Uh-oh, here comes Munch….

While Munch is ruining Bolander’s date, Bayliss is getting in touch with his own dark side.  An investigation into the S&M-related death of a young woman leads to Bayliss and Pembleton arresting a man who killed her during rough (but consensual) sex.  Bayliss and Pembleton spend their investigation in Baltimore’s red light district.  Bayliss claims to be disgusted by the whole scene, leading to Pembleton calling him out for being judgmental.  Pembleton tells Bayliss that he can’t be a good detective unless he’s really in touch with every aspect of his existence.  After the murder is solved, the woman’s co-worker, Tanya, gives Bayliss the gift of a leather jacket.  Tanya is played, in a very good performance, by the actress Adrienne Shelley.  Tragically, Shelley herself would, 12 years later, be murdered in her New York apartment.  And while it’s tempting to write about the irony of Shelley appearing on a show like Homicide, I’d rather recommend that everyone see Waitress instead.  It was the second feature film that Shelley directed and it is very good.

Finally, Lewis investigates a man who committed murder because he felt someone had taken his favorite pen.  Lewis searches for a deeper motive but in the end, it really was all about a pen.  Lewis, I’ve noticed, always seems to get the cases that show just how random life and death can truly be.

The second season of Homicide ends with Lewis giving Felton a pen, Bayliss putting on his new leather jacket and walking the streets of Baltimore, and Munch, Bolander, and Linda watching fireworks explode over the harbor.  It’s a good way to end a season.  As dark as the show was (and as dark as this particular episode was), the season ends on a note of hope.  There is happiness out there for those willing to look for it.

 

 

Film Review: Eraserhead (dir by David Lynch)


Jack Nance in David Lynch’s Eraserhead

I’ve been thinking about Eraserhead ever since I first heard the news about David Lynch’s passing.

Filmed in harsh but beautiful black-and-white and first released in 1977 (after a production period that lasted for seven years), Eraserhead tells the story of Henry Spencer (Jack Nance), an awkward young man who has the haircut that gives the film it’s name and who wanders through the film like an alienated character in a Kafka story.  He lives in an industrial landscape and almost every scene seems to have the sound of machinery droning away in the background.  He lives in an dark apartment and it appears that there’s a woman living in a radiator who sings that, “In heaven, everything is fine,” while stomping on sperm creatures.  Occasionally, a mysterious woman in the hallway talks to him.  Henry doesn’t seem to have a job or any sort of interests.  He doesn’t really have much of a personality.  Jack Nance, who would go on to become a member of David Lynch’s regular ensemble, has a permanently dazed expression on his face.  It’s hard not to feel sorry for Henry, even if he isn’t quite sympathetic.  In Heaven, everything is fine but in Henry’s world, it’s much different.

Henry has a girlfriend named Mary X (Charlotte Stewart).  Mary lives with her parents in an apartment near the train tracks.  When Henry goes over to her place for dinner, her father shows off how he can’t feel anything in his arm.  Eating a piece of chicken becomes awkward when it appears to be alive and bleeding.  Mary seems to have some sort of seizure.  Mary’s mother informs Henry that Mary has had a mutant baby and Henry must take care of it.  The baby (represented by a grotesque puppet) has no arms or legs or, it would appear, skin.  It cries constantly, despite Henry’s attempts to care for it.  The baby is the only truly sympathetic character in the film.

Eraserhead is often described as being a film that’s difficult to understand but, by Lynch standards, it’s not that hard to figure out.  Lynch himself said that the film was fueled by his own anxiety over being a father and, throughout the film, Henry tries to take care of the baby but everything he does just makes things worse.  As is often the case with Lynch’s film, many viewers get caught up in wondering why when they should just be paying attention to what happens.  Why is the baby a mutant?  Because it is.  Why does Henry live in the middle of an industrial park?  Because he does.  Who is the scarred man who appears at the start of the film and who apparently pushes the levers that lead to Mary’s pregnancy?  Again, it’s less important who he is and more important that he’s there and now, Henry is a father despite being woefully unprepared.  Even if the viewer learned the scarred man’s identity (or if Henry even learned of his existence), it wouldn’t change Henry’s situation.  (Technically, of course, the man is Sissy Spacek’s husband and frequent Lynch collaborator, Jack Fisk.)  Eraserhead is a visually surreal film but it’s also an very emotionally honest one.  Henry may be stuck in, as Lynch once put it, a “dream of dark and disturbing things,” but his fears and his anxiety are portrayed realistically  That emotional honesty is something that would appear in all of Lynch’s work and it’s why he was one of our most important filmmakers.

Sadly, David Lynch is now gone.  So is Jack Nance.  But their work will live on forever.

Eraserhead (1977, dir by David Lynch, DP: Frederick Elmes, Herbert Cardwell)

Scenes That I Love: Vincent Price Performs The Raven


As today is the anniversary of the birth of Edgar Allan Poe, today’s scene that I love features Poe’s most famous interpreter, Vincent Price, reciting and performing The Raven.  This scene comes from a 1985 television special that was called The Teller and the Tale.

 

4 Shots From 4 Films: Special Edgar Allan Poe Edition


by Debbie Hughes

4 (or more) Shots From 4 (or more) Films is just what it says it is, 4 (or more) shots from 4 (or more) of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 (or more) Shots From 4 (or more) Films lets the visuals do the talking.

216 years ago today, Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston, Massachusetts.  From his humble beginnings as the son of two struggling actors, Poe would go on to become one of the first great American writers.  (It’s been said that, when Charles Dickens first traveled to the United States in 1842, he specifically wanted to meet Edgar Allan Poe.  Unfortunately, it appears that popular story my not be true but it’s still a good story.)  Poe was controversial in life and even his death generated more questions than answers but no one can deny his strength as a poet and as a prose writer.  Both the detective and the horror genres owe a huge debt to Edgar Allan Poe.

Today, in honor of Edgar Allan Poe’s legacy, TSL presents 4 shots from 4 films that were inspired by the work of Edgar Allan Poe!

4 Shots From 4 Films

The Fall of the House of Usher (1960, dir by Roger Corman, DP: Floyd Crosby)

The Raven (1963, dir by Roger Corman, DP: Floyd Crosby)

The Masque of the Red Death (1964, dir by Roger Corman, DP: Nicolas Roeg)

The Pit and the Pendulum (1990, dir by Stuart Gordon, DP: Adolfo Bartoli)

Music Video of the Day: Sublime Eternal Love by Chrystabell and David Lynch (2024, dir by David Lynch)


For today’s music video of the day, we have one of David Lynch’s final short films.  From his collaboration with Chrystabell, here is the haunting Sublime Eternal Love.

Enjoy!

Late Night Retro Television Review: Check It Out! 3.4 “I’m Okay, You’re A Spy”


Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past!  On Saturdays, I will be reviewing the Canadian sitcom, Check it Out, which ran in syndication from 1985 to 1988.  The entire show is currently streaming on Tubi!

This week, Howard’s paranoid and with good reason!  They are all out to get him….

Episode 3.4 “I’m Okay, You’re A Spy”

(Dir by Alan Erlich, originally aired on October 17th, 1987)

After the new stockboy, 12 year-old Brad (played by T and T‘s Sean Roberge), shows Howard a newspaper article about how the company that purchased Cobb’s has been sending corporate spies into its stores to evaluate management, Howard gets extremely paranoid.  He becomes convinced that there must be a spy in the store.  He gathers Brad, Leslie, Christian, Viker, and Marlene into the stockroom and asks them if they’ve noticed anyone strange in the store.  He also suggests that any one of them could possibly be the spy.

Or maybe — just maybe — the spy is the new butcher who keeps asking Howard all sorts of questions about the other employees.  He would seem to be the most likely suspect and we know it’s him because the episode opens with him getting his assignment and talking about how he can’t wait to get Howard Bannister fired.  Howard, of course, is so paranoid about the possibility of there being a spy in the store that he expresses all of his fears and frustrations to the spy.  In other words, this is yet another episode episode where Howard is a complete moron.  The previous season was split evenly between episodes where Howard was competent and episodes where Howard was an idiot.  The episodes featuring stupid Howard were always funnier than the episodes featuring smart Howard so I think the showrunners made the right decision to focus o Howard’s stupidity in the third season.  No one wants to watch a show about a good boss.  What fun is that?

(It’s kind of like how we loved The Office when it was all about Michael screwing up but, when it became about new boss Andy proving himself, we all tuned out.)

It turns out that not everyone at the new corporation is supportive of the whole spy thing.  T.C. Collingwood comes to the store and informs Howard that his butcher is the spy.  Howard replies by giving the spy a lot of work to do.  I guess that’s one way to handle it but it doesn’t change the fact that Howard told the spy that everyone at the store was incompetent and should be fired.  This episode makes less and less sense the more that I think about it.  Can’t corporate just look at whether or not the store had made any money and use that to determine whether or not Howard’s doing a good enough job?  This episode didn’t make much sense.

Incidentally, Edna was on vacation during this episode.  How many vacation does Edna get in the year?  It seems like she’s never at the store.  I have a feeling that Howard is going to run off with T.C. Collingwood at some point in the new future.  Maybe that’s for the best.  At least then Edna wouln’t have to flee to Florida every month.

Next week ….  Howard wants to be a TV star!  We’ll see what happens.

 

Lisa Marie’s Week In Television: 1/12/25 — 1/18/25


“Brandon, you are not ready to be my head chef.”

Oh my God, did Chef Ramsay really just say that!?  I’ve watched a lot of episodes of Hell’s Kitchen but I don’t think any elimination has taken me as much by surprise as the elimination of Brandon this week.  Brandon is who I expected to win this season and I know that I’m not alone in that.  That said, Brandon did struggle at service.  Of all the chefs to receive black jackets, Brandon struggled the most and, even more importantly, Brandon was really the only one to struggle.  Ramsay didn’t have much of a choice but I have a feeling Brandon will return in a future season.

Speaking of Chef Ramsay, I also caught the second part of the Kitchen Nightmares premiere.  I’m glad that Ramsay apparently thinks that he’s fixed that restaurant but I can promise that there is no way I would ever voluntarily eat at any establishment featured on this show.  I don’t care if it’s clean now.  Once a rat trap, always a rat trap.

This week’s episode of Abbott Elementary surfaced in comparison to last week’s but that’s to be expected considering the brilliance of last week’s show.  I still laughed at Ava trying to figure out what it’s like to “date the poors.”

On Peacock, I watched the three episode documentary Girls Gone Wild: The Untold Story and yes, that was certainly disgusting and disturbing,  It was even worse than Hulu’s Jerry Springer: Fights, Camera, Action, which I also watched.  I guess I felt like catching up on some sordid history this week!

Speaking of sordid, Who Wants To Marry A Multi-Millionaire is on YouTube.  I watched it and I have to admit that I laughed when the “millionaire” came lurching out and started speaking in a voice that sounded exactly like Bill Hader’s.  Who Wants To Marry A Multi-Millionaire was a one-time, two-hour special that aired in 2000.  The man behind this fiasco (the marriage was annulled, the millionaire was not a millionaire but just a guy who was the subject of multiple restraining orders) went on to create The Bachelor.

Also on YouTube, I found all six episodes of The Starlet, a reality competition show where aspiring actresses competed for a walk-on role on One Tree Hill.  Stop laughing, it was a real show.  I vaguely remember watching it when it first aired.  I watched it a second time on Monday because I was bored.  One of the judges was Faye Dunaway.  Faye was surprisingly nice.  The mean judge was Vivica A. Fox.

Case and I are continuing to watch Dark, on Netflix.  What a fascinating and macabre show!  I recommend it to anyone reading.

I watched the latest episodes of Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test but I don’t remember a damn thing about them, other than it amused me how everyone pretended to be taking everything so seriously.

And, as always, I watched the shows that I review on a weekly basis.  I’m not going to sit here and list them all because I’m tired.  But you can find all my reviews on this site.  Yay!