Yesterday Sumana and I happened to rewatch the "Wes Anderson horror trailer" SNL sketch and I can now see it's basically just parodying The Royal Tenenbaums. Truly a touchstone.
Sun Apr 05 2026 20:09 March Film Roundup:
News You Can Bruise[Archives] |
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Yesterday Sumana and I happened to rewatch the "Wes Anderson horror trailer" SNL sketch and I can now see it's basically just parodying The Royal Tenenbaums. Truly a touchstone.
Sun Apr 05 2026 20:09 March Film Roundup:
I did like all the party members in this movie although I sense some major scenes were cut from the film or the screenplay, because two of them didn't get their Black Mirror episode. It was good to see Asim Chaudhry again after Taskmaster.
Sun Mar 08 2026 10:36 February Film Roundup:
Saw this on a date with Sumana and we were both primed by modern rom-coms for the psychologist to be portrayed as a comic-relief blowhard, but her advice was actually pretty sensible! Later on we learned from IMDB trivia that the psychologist was played by a real therapist who was improvising a therapy session with Jill Clayburgh. Classic '70s improv/Method acting; I love it. The therapist, Penelope Russianoff, also cashed out on her sudden fame with a tie-in self-help book. Another classic move!
Coward was pretty cranky about the adaptation of his screenplay and claims the ending ruined the best thing he ever wrote, which a) the movie ending is way better than his original ending, b) if I thought this was my best work I wouldn't brag about it.
The most thriller-y part of the movie was the exciting middle sequence with Guillermo del Toro. And the part I hope comes directly from Vineland is that the protagonist bumbles through the entire movie having no idea what's happening and no effect on the plot, but ends up saving the day retroactively by having been a loving and supportive father.
This month the Television Spotlight shines on both versions of Guy Montgomery's Guy Mont-Spelling Bee, a comedian panel show themed as a volatile and often unfair spelling bee. Sumana and I met Guy with the infamous season 2 of Taskmaster NZ and he has the same kind of sinister charm necessary to be a Taskmaster himself, or (as seen here) any kind of game show host. Since the entire New Zealand comedy scene seems to be about as big as Dropout, it was a relief when Guy moved the show to Australia and got a wider variety of... wait, people are showing up in both versions? I just don't know, man.
Sat Feb 07 2026 11:55 January Film Roundup:
Paperhouse isn't the kind of film I usually watch, but it was so creative and such a pleasant surprise that I had to give it the nod.
Games
The Crummy.com Game of the year is my new anti-doomscrolling game, Lost For Swords. It's a real hidden gem of tactical positioning. Apart from that I haven't spent much time playing new games. I'm glad Caves of Qud made it to 1.0 though.
Literature
The Crummy.com Book of the Year is Shadow and Claw by Gene Wolfe. I'm not wild about the plot but the worldbuilding is amazing and he's so damn good at putting sentences together. I've had the tetralogy on my shelf for a while and will probably read the other two books this year.
Runners-up:
My accomplishments
I dunno, not a lot, it feels like. I kept the lights on. I sold a Ravy Uvana story, "People of the Consortium of Worlds v. Rax, God of Misery", to Analog, and it was published in the final issue of the year. Two already published Ravy Uvana stories ("Stress Response", and "Meat") appeared in Chinese translation in Science Fiction World.
My procedural work appeared in Output, edited by Lillian-Yvonne Bertram and Nick Montfort.
I now work full-time at Bookshop.org and in 2025 I worked on a couple big projects, primarily the ebook store and reading system.
Thanks to the deadlines of my writing group I finished three new stories: "The Spare", "The Arcade, The Marble, The Door", and "We're From The Help and We're Here to Government". The Constellation Speedrun is still sitting around waiting for me to get an agent. I've got two new novel ideas but it's a struggle to get anything on the page.
Mon Jan 19 2026 11:30 The Crummy.com Review Of Things 2025:
Review of Things 2025? Yeah, I'll review some things 2025: generally speaking, 2025 sucked. And 2026 doesn't look much better. At least we have art. In 2025 I watched 40 films for the first time and almost half of them were good enough to be recommended on Film Roundup Roundup. Here's my top ten for the year:
Anyway, dames. This movie's got 'em, and it's even a bit wholesome in a comedically sexist 1958 way, since Tony Curtis is lusting after his real-life wife. But even as the actors on screen went through their shenanigans and mixups that could have been avoided with some basic communication, I couldn't stop thinking about the Arctic research station and the stir-crazy flyboys we see in the first part of the movie. Even if you don't go full The Thing, there's got to be a more interesting movie there.
In my original #💯🦫 review I complained that the first 30 minutes of the film are "an aimless mess of laughs" and that's true if you haven't seen the movie before—i.e. it's still basically true. But this time I can see the aim: the first 30 minutes are the movie's tutorial. Sort of like in What's Up, Doc? the first act is there to show you that this movie operates by Looney Tunes cartoon logic. That's why you have rabbits at the start of the movie even though they don't play a big role later on: rabbits are the tutorial animal.
I'm pointing today's Television Spotlight on Pluribus, the beautiful and depressing show where they give Vince Gilligan Apple TV money. I recommend Pluribus, but having completed the first season, I think you can wait a while to get into it. It goes at its own rate, and the two-year-or-longer wait while they write and film the second season is really messing up the pacing.
This month Sumana and I also watched the 2002 PBS reality miniseries Frontier House, and had a good time watching people put up log cabins and mow hay. Pretty interesting to watch people from the dial-up era talk about getting away from the distractions of modern life. It was ever thus, I guess.
Thu Jan 01 2026 19:29 December Film Roundup:
I've mentioned before that I often go to the Museum of the Moving
Image looking for hidden gems, films I've never heard of but which
turn out to be something really special, and Claudine is one of
those for me.
Halfway through Please Turn Over, safely ensconced in
framing devices, the actors get to do some Unfaithfully
Yours-style acting and play the polar opposites of the milquetoast
characters they established outside of the framing devices. This is
the most fun part of the film... except, I would argue, the
ending. That's where Jo's parents tell her that although she has
slandered them and her entire town, ruining everyone's reputation,
they're proud of her for getting her novel published. Now that's
supportive!
I saw What's Up, Doc? at the museum and it was pretty much
nonstop laughs from the audience. It includes a car chase that's so
funny it took a good three minutes before I noticed "this is a car
chase in a 20th-century Hollywood comedy, those are boring" and
another two minutes until I actually got bored. Unfortunately, it kept
going for like three minutes after that. Apart from that, a stellar
movie that accomplishes something normally thought
impossible—recapturing a dead genre of film without emplying
revisionism, nostalgia, or ironic distance. This isn't even a
period piece: it's a real screwball comedy set in 1972. It's great
stuff. Barbra Streisand really elevates the comedy, a phenomenon I've
dubbed "the Streisand Effect."
I did find one part of the movie hard to read initially: I didn't get why Judy is so cruel to
Eunice. The movie itself isn't cruel to Eunice—she and Howard
achieve a Billy Wilder-esque mutual cheating arrangement and she ends
up with Max from The Muppet Movie. Then it clicked: Judy is
Bugs Bunny, and Eunice is her Elmer Fudd. I spent the whole
movie thinking Howard was Elmer Fudd, but he's actually... a really
big carrot, I guess?
Tue Dec 02 2025 21:42 November Film Roundup:
Between this and Tampopo and Supermarket Woman I feel like I'm getting a glimpse at a hidden Japanese trucker culture that only shows up in movies. I don't remember any highly customized trucks or restaurant brawls from my trip to Japan, although there was a poster at a rest stop asking you not to park your compact car into a parking space intended for a bus. Exactly the sort of thing a "Compact Car Rascal" would do.
Anyway, the movie's fun, but I don't think I could handle nine more in the series since Wikipedia says they all have the same plot. I have watched a ton of Fast and the Furious movies though, and those don't have any plot at all, so who knows?
Then there's the brief flight of fancy where the arcade owner (who's not sleazy enough to be funny and not emotion-y enough to be sympathetic) claims to the town worthies that his arcade is no den of sin, but a place of learning where he teaches computer science to underprivileged girls, creating new opportunities for women in STEM. The chalkboard behind him has a flowchart of the sort you'd draw if you'd looked at a book about data processing several weeks ago.
The games themselves are filmed well, and it's pretty cool to have a tournament machine where the competitors must control a joystick that's as big as they are. But... the only joke in this supposed comedy which I would classify as "funny" is the way King Vidiot's groupies mutter the Burgertime song in unison as they shuffle around like zombies. That's, like, a Futurama-level joke.
In possibly the greatest movie endorsement in cinema history, first-time actress Charlotte Burke never appeared in another film because (via the director via IMDB trivia) "she really loved Paperhouse so much, that she never wanted to do anything else and was done with acting."
I also love that they brought Douglas Trumbull out of retirement for one... more... job. Although I don't think this movie came up when I saw him in person at the ST:TMP screening in 2020. Disjunct audiences, I guess.
Wed Nov 05 2025 20:36 October Film Roundup:
Overall this was fun; I was thinking it would be a fast-paced picaresque trip through Soho, but it went slowly back and forth between just a few different locations, adding layers of complexity to the characters each time.
I'm reminded of Very Bad Things (1998), a comedy that has a similar relentless focus on everything going wrong, which I really disliked when I saw it on a free student preview ticket. After coming out of the theater having enjoyed After Hours I wondered if I just wasn't in the mental space to enjoy a comedy as dark as Very Bad Things.
But After Hours, although dark, isn't misanthropic. When the worst thing in this movie happens, the community rallies. When someone incorrectly thinks Paul is a burglar, the community rallies again (admittedly, by forming a lynch mob and hunting him down). It's much more positive. My point is that Very Bad Things still sucks, 27 years later. I'll never forget!
In news of TV Spotlight, Sumana and I have caught up on "For All Mankind", Ron Moore's second TV show about how you should never install the software updates. We're enjoying the alt-history even though its treatment of the Internet got really weird in the fourth season. I will say I like the "this space base is really cramped and we're starving/going crazy" setups better than the "there are a lot of people on this space base and we're causing soap opera drama for each other" setups, but they are switching back and forth between them pretty reliably as humanity expands through the solar system.
(1) Tue Oct 07 2025 20:44 September Film Roundup:
Old video game watch: as soon as I saw the Doom II arcade game in the convenience store I thought "this prop that had to be created specifically for the movie does not bode well for this convenience store in a film that both critiques and celebrates action-movie violence." Maybe not in those words.
I dunno. The whole thing makes very little sense, but the music was good, and in that respect it sets the tone for the entire "singing cowboy" genre. I would judge the old movie racism level in this one as medium, but I think their heart was in the right place?
(1) Sun Sep 07 2025 09:41 August Film Roundup:
Also like The Afterlight, Ragtag was born of a
director deciding to watch a ton of movies during lockdown. And
presumably torrenting them all because how else are you going to get
all that footage into Final Cut Pro? Hey, I'm not judging.
Sun Aug 10 2025 11:20 July Film Roundup:
I feel like "ditz" implies a level of absent-mindedness, like Lucy Ricardo. But so far the distinguishing feature of Judy Holliday's characters is that they believe women are equal to men. Not in an overtly militant way, just always acting from a position of equality with all other human beings. The world throws a lot of bullshit in their path to try to dissuade them from this attitude, but they ignore or plow through it. A more recent version of this character might be Elle from Legally Blonde (2001).
You could say that this belief is fine in 2001 but naive in 1956, and Laura in The Solid Gold Cadillac is pretty easy to manipulate, which I guess is where "ditz" comes from. But since these are feel-good comedies and not the real 1950s, Laura's stubbornness wins through and she is proven correct. So really, she has an accurate view of the universe in which she lives.
Apparently the screenplay was toned down from something more "frank", so you're left with a kitchen-sink dramedy that's extremely tame by today's mega-frank standards. Whereas The Solid Gold Cadillac still feels fresh, and It Should Happen To You feels maybe even more transgressive than before in its portrayal of low-stakes feminine obsession.
Sun Jul 06 2025 09:03 June Film Roundup:
Available for cheap as an EPUB or PDF!
Fri Jun 20 2025 13:41 The Coffeeshop AU:
My metafictional Great Gatsby fanfic "The Coffeeshop AU" is published in Solsitita issue #3, the appropriately named "Coffeeshop!AU" issue:
"He's in love with Daisy," said Jordan, with as much
certainty as if she'd added the tags and written the
content note herself. "Maybe Tom," she hedged, "but
Tom's an asshole. Daisy's nice enough." This belief of
Jordan's — that Daisy was any less obnoxious than Tom
— was the first of many alarms I missed as I dropped
like a flipped coin on the unalterable trajectory of my
relationship with her.
Fun monsters, though. The vampires in Sinners are very zombie-ish, and seem to have some kind of hive mind, which makes them pleasingly Borg-like and also feeds into their creepy Manson Family thing.
Bonus: I can't think of another movie that makes you look at the title of the movie for as much screentime as this one does, because it's painted on the side of Waldo's biplane. This film is famous for coining the unforgettable catchphrase, "There's Waldo!"
Thu Jun 05 2025 07:05 May Film Roundup:
I've been putting off writing this for several days now, so short reviews written first thing in the morning will have to do.
Sat May 03 2025 14:19 April Film Roundup:
Though this wasn't the only thing the movie was going for, I thought it was at its best in scenes like the opening one, achieving a cozy feeling of being in a quiet restaurant with colorful characters from different walks of life. It's a bit anthology-ish, and felt hit-and-miss in a way that I think bodes well for just watching the TV show.
Since this was a short one, I'll also mention that Sumana and I have been watching a lot of the now-on-hiatus ABC show "Holey Moley," which features a real sports anchor commentating an infernokrusher miniature golf tournament. It's a real "America: The Good Parts" kind of show: a celebration of different kinds of people with diverse skills, who can improvise in ridiculous situations and are willing to charge headlong into seemingly impossible problems. The contrast between the fine motor control necessary to sink a putt and the broad slapstick involved in running up a glycerin-soaked ramp never gets old, or at least it hasn't yet.
Tue Apr 01 2025 19:02 March Film Roundup:
One of those months where I realize I'd better see a movie quick if I want to have a Film Roundup, and here's the movie:
I'll start by tooting my own horn, because why not. I had two stories published in 2024: "Expert Witness" (A Ravy Uvana Story) in Analog and "The Blanket Thief" (cozy fantasy) in the Winter 2024 issue of Baubles From Bones. You can hear me read "Expert Witness" on the Analog podcast.
I gave a talk at PyCon US, How to maintain a popular Python library for most of your life Now, on to things not created by me. The Crummy.com Game of the Year is Balatro, a game that doubles down on the part of roguelikes I enjoy the most: the clever creation of wacky, game-breaking combinations from randomly presented choices. Honorable mention to Slice & Dice, the roguelike I have on my phone to stop myself from doomscrolling.
Other games of note: Animal Well and Baldur's Gate 3. I was really into BG3 and played it exclusively up until the point of my Japan trip, but when I came back the spell had been broken and I can't get back into it to finish it.
The Crummy.com Book of the Year is Between Silk and Cyanide by Leo Marks. The story of the codebreakers of Bletchley Park has been well told, but I'd never before considered the parallel story of the people creating codes for Allied intelligence to use. This memoir was a fascinating look into bureaucratic infighting; logistics nightmares; the simultaneous invention of one-time pads; and the difficulties of trying to give cryptographic training to a rotating cast of strong-willed characters who, Wikipedia will tell you, frequently do not survive the war.
I spent a lot of 2024 reading comic crime novels for research. I read a bunch of Donald Westlake's Dortmunder books (Drowned Hopes stands out but I don't recommend that as your first one), Colson Whitehead's Harlem Shuffle and Crook Manifesto, Kyril Bonfiglioli's art scam trilogy (I tried to watch Mortdecai (2015) but couldn't get through the first friggin' scene), and the first three of Sarah Caudwell's academic/lawyer murder mysteries.
Also of note: the manga Yokohama Station SF, The Kamogawa Food Detectives by Hisashi Kashiwai, old issues of the trade publication The Soda Fountain, and the really funny The Husbands by my friend Holly Gramazio.
Sat Mar 15 2025 11:19 The Crummy.com Review of Things 2024:
It took me til March, but I pulled it off this year! Here are the best media I experienced (or created) in 2024:
without with burning out", and I was honored with the Python Software Foundation Community Service Award. I wrote two as-yet-unpublished stories in 2024, "A Tomorrow Problem" and "Cause of Action" (both in the Ravy Uvana universe).
Great location shots of 1960s West Berlin, similar to what you see in Assignment K but in a better movie.
While discussing this film with Sumana afterwards I had cause to look at the Film Roundup Roundup films for 1990, and I hereby propose that Quick Change, Mo' Better Blues and Gremlins 2: The New Batch are all taking place at the same place and the same time. IMDB trivia backs me up: "The bank was located at 101 Park Avenue, just across the street from 100 Park Avenue were Gremlins 2 was filmed." Quite a busy weekend at 40th and Park!
IMDB trivia also says that Ron Howard turned down the chance to direct because he couldn't find a character to root for in this movie. This explains Ron Howard's directorial style as much as the Ron Howard/Billy Wilder anecdote explains Billy Wilder's. PS: if you're stuck, you can always root for the punctilious bus driver. He's just trying to keep the city running!
(1) Sun Mar 09 2025 10:29 February Film Roundup:
The Batman Returns screenplay doesn't really need Batman at all, though the marketing surely does. This could easily be the story of Catwoman and Penguin attempting to team up and then destroying one another. When he is on screen, Michael Douglas has the same blasé attitude towards the part which he'd display (I have to admit) to greater effect in Birdman (2014).
I didn't know Christopher Walken was in this, but he Walkens his way through this movie and it's a treat. One of the most Tim Burton-compatible actors. Speaking of Burton, I've seen enough of his movies now that certain aesthetic choices are repeating. I guess I'd classify him as a wackier version of David Lynch? He really puts his id on the screen, but not in a way that's terribly hard to figure out. Spirals and stripes; the guy loves spirals and stripes.
And I just realized this while writing this Film Roundup: the scene in Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl where they're tracking the gnomes through the sewers is a clear reference to the part of Batman Returns where Batman is tracking the penguins through the city streets. The UI is the same and really, the penguins in this movie should've used the sewers. Good call, Feathers McGraw.
Mon Feb 03 2025 12:05 January Film Roundup:
The CHANGELOG for 4.13.0 is quite large so I'm writing this blog post to highlight just the most important changes, specifically the changes most likely to make you need (or want) to change your code.
Deprecations and backwards-incompatible changes
More importantly for backwards compatibility, setting an HTML
attribute value to This means that some programs that modify documents will generate
different output than they would in earlier versions of Beautiful Soup,
but the new documents are more likely to represent the intent behind the
modifications.
To give a specific example, if you have code that looks something like this:
To quickly get the old behavior back, change code like this:
In the future, the 'html5' formatter may be become the default HTML
formatter, which will change Beautiful Soup's default output. This
will break a lot of test suites so it's not going to happen for a
while.
New features
The text of these warnings has been revamped to explain in more
detail what is going on, how to check if you've made a mistake,
and how to make the warning go away if you are acting deliberately.
If these warnings are interfering with your workflow, or simply
annoying you, you can filter all of them by filtering
Sun Feb 02 2025 14:34 Beautiful Soup 4.13.0:
After a beta period lasting nearly a year, I've released the biggest update to Beautiful Soup in many years. For version 4.13.0 I added type hints to the Python code, and in doing so uncovered a large number of very small inconsistencies in the code. I've fixed the inconsistencies, but the result is a larger-than-usual number of deprecations and changes that may break backwards compatibility.
DeprecationWarning is issued on use for every deprecated method, attribute and class from the 3.0 and 2.0 major versions of Beautiful Soup. These have been deprecated for at least ten years, but they didn't issue DeprecationWarning when you tried to use them. Now they do, and they're all going away soon.
True will set the attribute's value to the
appropriate string per the HTML spec. Setting an attribute value to
False or None will remove the attribute value from the tag
altogether, rather than (effectively, as before) setting the value
to the string "False" or the string "None".
checkbox1['checked'] = True
checkbox2['checked'] = False
Then a document that used to look like this (with most browsers
treating both boxes as checked):
<input type="checkbox" checked="True"/>
<input type="checkbox" checked="False"/>
Will now look like this (with browsers treating only the first box
as checked):
<input type="checkbox" checked="checked"/>
<input type="checkbox"/>
You can get the old behavior back by instantiating a TreeBuilder
with attribute_dict_class=dict, or you can customize how Beautiful Soup
treats attribute values by passing in a custom subclass of dict.
None and False, and you would have
found the tags which did not have that attribute set at all.
find() methods or creating a SoupStrainer,
if you specify the same attribute value in attrs and the
keyword arguments, you'll end up with two different ways to match that
attribute. Previously the value in keyword arguments would override the
value in attrs.
tag.encode(formatter='html5')
to this:
tag.encode(formatter='html5-4.12')
ElementFilter class encapsulates Beautiful Soup's rules
about matching elements and deciding which parts of a document to
parse. This gives you direct access to Beautiful Soup's low-level matching API. See the documentation for details.
PageElement.filter() method provides a fully general way of
finding elements in a Beautiful Soup parse tree. You can specify a
function to iterate over the tree and an ElementFilter to determine
what matches.
NavigableString class now has a .string property which returns the
string itself. This makes it easier to iterate over a mixed list
of Tag and NavigableString objects.
UnusualUsageWarning, which is a superclass
for all of the warnings issued when Beautiful Soup notices something
unusual but not guaranteed to be wrong, like markup that looks like
a URL (MarkupResemblesLocatorWarning) or XML being run through an HTML
parser (XMLParsedAsHTMLWarning).
UnusualUsageWarning, without worrying about losing the warnings
Beautiful Soup issues when there *definitely* is a problem you
need to correct, such as use of a deprecated method.
UnusualUsageWarning if the user tries to search for an attribute
called _class; they probably mean class_.
Mon Jan 20 2025 07:39:
“Experience keeps a dear school, yet Fools will learn in no other.” —Benjamin Franklin
Enjoy glimpses of amazing things that were part of my life last year, but which I didn't necessarily take the time to write about here.
Sun Jan 19 2025 18:45 Miscellaneous 2024 Pictures:
Since I went through the trouble of finding a static gallery generator for my Japan photos, I made another portfolio of miscellaneous pictures from the rest of 2024.
I've put up a huge photo gallery of pictures full of wacky and interesting stuff, but in case you're planning your own visit, here are some of my recommendations:
Finally I want to mention a couple stores that I didn't take pictures of. B-Side Label has cool laptop stickers. There are a few locations; I went to the one in Kyoto.
Second, New Yorkers might remember City Bakery, which sold really great pastries including the legendary pretzel croissant, plus hot chocolate which was way too rich for my taste. In 2019 City Bakery went out of business, leaving Americans croissant-less. But there are twenty City Bakery locations in Japan! We were randomly walking through a mall in Nagoya—bam! City Bakery! Heading to the Kyoto shopping district—City Bakery! They're quite a nostalgia trip, with everything looking and tasting exactly like it did the old City Bakery on 19th street, or maybe 18th, I could never remember. Anyway, that's why I've now got a freezer full of pretzel croissants from halfway across the world.
(1) Sun Jan 12 2025 13:56 2024 Japan trip:
I've hinted at this before in NYCB but now I've got my photos organized and I'm ready to talk about the vacation I took in Japan last November. I was nominally on vacation with my friend James, but he was working most days, so I spent a lot of time walking around exploring before meeting him for dinner, which I found to be a great way to run a vacation.
Here's my top ten for 2024. A very big year for Japanese movies, but Hundreds of Beavers takes the gold home for the U.S. of A.
Sun Jan 05 2025 12:51 2024 Film Roundup Roundup:
I saw 73 movies in 2024, and twenty were good enough to be added to Film Roundup Roundup, my ever-growing list of over 300 really good movies.
In May 2003 I created The Eater of Meaning, a web proxy that changes the words on a web page and renders the results. It was popular for a while in the "blogosphere" and then I kind of forgot about it for 20 years, until it broke in 2024.
Throughout 2024 I got occasional emails from poets about the Eater of Meaning and could I fix it. Upon reflection I decided that while running a public web proxy on my personal website in 2003 was kind of fun, doing so in 2024 is a bad idea. So the CGI script breaking was a blessing in disguise. But I didn't want the Eater of Meaning to disappear entirely because, as I've found out, it's important to some poets' artistic practice.
So I've rewritten the Eater of Meaning code in modern Python, and added it to olipy, my pack of art supplies. With basic Python skills (or even Python package-installing skills) you can have access to just about all of the Eater of Meaning's old functionality, as well as some new eaters based on the other olipy tools. I realize that this isn't as convenient as having it as a proxy on a website, but this is the best I can do for now.
Fri Jan 03 2025 10:46 The Eater of Meaning is now part of the olipy family:
You know that email you get when a website you like is acquired by a big company and you know it's going to get shut down? This is like that, only the website shut down first and then got merged into a bigger project.
Near the beginning of the film the story train is visibly shunted off the generic "Hallmark Christmas movie" setup into a story that is, at best, poking loving fun at Hallmark Christmas movies, and then it's shunted back onto the track at the end for a Hallmark Christmas movie conclusion. In the middle the movie's all right, but the book spends a lot more time on Leah's outsider's view of Christmas in a way that really rings true. Also, in the book they take the Metro North up to Connecticut rather than driving, which makes way more sense.
The book is better, is what I'm saying. In a Film Roundup first, I will reproduce some of my old notes from the meeting of our writing group where we went over Leah's Perfect Christmas:
The best part was the dinner where Leah takes Gavin's bleu cheese
because his mom won't make a meal accommodation, and then his mom
makes a completely unnecessary meal accommodation for Maddie.
The parents are ridiculous stereotypes, but I didn't reliably find them ridiculous to the point of satire. I'd like to see more of that.
The main issue I felt was a kind of emotional monotony through the
middle of the book. Often a rom-com has a red herring romantic partner. I would either introduce a red herring or make the Christmas
experience—not necessarily the parents—less uniformly
unbearable. There needs to be something to distract Leah from Gavin,
because I'm not being brought through the story solely by the idea
that Gavin isn't the guy he seems to be when they're in New
York. I haven't read the final version of the book, but in the movie they chose door #2, giving Leah a variety of Christmasy side quests that let them showcase the many, many colorful sets and props available to the production.
This reminded me that our mom loved the soundtrack to Beaches, or at least kept the tape in her car for a really long time until we knew all the songs. (Other albums I assume Mom loved from the same evidence: Neil Diamond: His 12 Greatest Hits.) So I told Susanna I'd watch the movie with Sumana when I got back.
And... it's pretty good. The critical consensus is negative, but I thought it did a good job of showing a long-lasting friendship between two women, a friendship that is strained but never breaks. And there are a lot of good songs on that soundtrack. In the 20+ years since I last heard the Beaches soundtrack I've grown more able to recognize the musical homages going on in the songs. In particular, I correctly identified "Oh Industry" as "a Laurie Anderson thing."
And now, it's time to send off another Star Trek series with this month's Television Spotlight.
She sulks on a ship whose crew starts out mediocre but improves in cohesion over time. She sulks on her punitive assignment to a crappy space station, which we later see get turned around by crew who came in with a more positive attitude. Other people improve, but she doesn't. There's a blissful couple of episodes when she actually leaves Starfleet and seems to be living the life she wants, but she comes right back. I can sorta make this make sense based on the exposition we get—mommy issues plus Dominion War PTSD, basically—but the series kept showing Mariner grow as a person, only to hit her reset button at the end of an episode or season. (Tendi did have sustained, persistent growth throughout the series, so it is possible.)
The versions of Mariner and Boimler in the Strange New Worlds crossover were much more appealing than the cartoon versions, which probably indicates that the characters' flaws are exaggerated for comic effect vis-a-vis what they'd be like in a live-action show. But I don't find it funny to see people learn the same lessons over and over. It is a tribute to the writing of Lower Decks and the charisma of the actors that I loved the show despite this really annoying problem they never fixed.
Wed Jan 01 2025 15:46 December Film Roundup:
Really cute, I don't have a lot to change.
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This document is part of Crummy, the webspace of Leonard Richardson (contact information). It was last modified on Tuesday, December 08 2020, 19:23:12 Nowhere Standard Time and last built on Monday, April 06 2026, 19:05:02 Nowhere Standard Time.
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