Monday, December 12, 2016

Miss Sharon Jones!

UPDATE: After nearly a month's delay, we'll finally screen Miss Sharon Jones! this Friday, January 13th, at our place. Showtime at 7:30--stop by around 7 for drinks and snacks.

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I know Sunset Boulevard is next on the list, but I want to invoke executive privilege and bump that back a week so we can watch Miss Sharon Jones! (2015) on Friday. This documentary by Barbara Kopple is about the amazing soul singer who passed away just last month from pancreatic cancer.

Yuriko and I were lucky enough to see Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings perform a couple times--once in Wilmington and once in Philadelphia--and we were blown away by her talent, energy, and humanity. In honor of her memory, let's watch this feature-length documentary about her struggle and her artistry.


Showtime:
Friday, January 13th
Matt and Yuriko's place
Drinks and snacks at 7pm
Movie at 7:30pm

Monday, December 5, 2016

Margin Call

After several film outings, movie night finally returns to Oak Lane this Friday.

Yuriko and I will be hosting for Margin Call (2011), a dramatic look at panicking investment bankers in the moments leading up to the 2008 financial crisis.

If that doesn't sound sexy enough for you, consider the impressive cast: Kevin Spacey, Paul Bettany, Zachary Quinto (Spock!), and Stanley Tucci. (Aren't there any women in this movie? Oh yeah: Demi Moore.)

Here's the trailer:


So that's Friday, December 9th, Matt and Yuriko's place
Snacks and drinks at 7:00; movie starts at 7:30.
Hope you can make it!

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Frenzy

On Tuesday, November 29th, Albright College will be screening its final film of the calendar year for its current International Film Series. Alfred Hitchcock's Frenzy (1972) is about a serial killer in London, who strangles women with a necktie. According to Albright, this is "Late Hitchcock, arguably his last, great film." Here's the trailer, which is more goofy than scary:


The screening will be Tuesday, November 29th, at 7:30pm, in the Klein Lecture Hall at Albright College.

Here's a link to Albright's campus map.

The Visitor Parking lot on 13th and Bern is close to the Center for the Arts, where you will find the Klein Lecture Hall.

Hope to see you there!

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

A History of Violence

Movie night is back this Friday with A History of Violence (2005), directed by David Cronenberg (The Fly, The Dead Zone, Naked Lunch, Crash), starring Aragorn, Maria Bello, and Ed Harris. This movie was suggested by Jen as a follow up to Out of the Past, the film noir we watched last month. It was based on a graphic novel by John Wagner and Vince Locke from 1997. Here's the trailer:


We'll be showing it this Friday (10/14) at our place.

Drinks and snacks at 7pm; movie at 7:30pm.

Feel free to bring any guests.


Monday, September 26, 2016

Tuesday at RACC: Sweet Dreams

This week, instead of having folks over on Friday, we'll be heading to the Miller Center at Reading Area Community College to see Sweet Dreams (2012). It is the first film to be shown in RACC's new "On Screen / In Person" film series. There will be a pre-film reception at 5:45pm, and the screening starts at 6:30. (Not sure if we'll make it to the reception, but we will be at the screening.)

The movie is a documentary about an all-female drumming troupe in Rwanda, who, following the 1994 genocide, partnered with American entrepreneurs to open the nation's first ice cream shop.

Here's the trailer:


The Miller Center is in downtown Reading, on the corner of 2nd and Penn Streets, next to the IMAX theater. Tickets are $5.

Tuesday, September 27:
Pre-film reception: 5:45pm
Film screening: 6:30pm

Hope to see you there!

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Whiskey Tango Foxtrot

This week we'll be screening a "new release": Whiskey Tango Foxtrot (2016), a film starring Tina Fey that looks somewhat more substantive than Mean Girls (which I loved). It was co-directed by Glenn Ficarra and John Requa, and also stars Alfred Molina and Billy Bob Thornton. Here's the trailer:


The movie is billed as both dramatic and comedic, and it's also based on a work of non-fiction: Kim Barker's memoir: The Taliban Shuffle: Strange Days in Afghanistan and Pakistan, which recounts her experiences in these countries as a journalist in 2002 and following.

Friday, September 23rd:
Drinks and snacks at Matt and Yuriko's at 7pm; movie at 7:30.

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Paris Is Burning

As a follow up to Tangerine, which we watched over the summer, this week we'll be taking a look at Paris is Burning (1990), a documentary set in 1980s New York, directed by Jennie Livingston. Like Tangerine, the film has been criticized as being voyeuristic and/or exploitative, but at the same time, it's become somewhat of an iconic classic, in which Hispanic and African American LGBT individuals speak openly and candidly not only about "ballroom subculture," but also about matters of race, class, gender, and beauty. Here's the trailer:



That's this Friday, September 16, at Matt and Yuriko's.

Drinks and snacks at 7pm; movie starts at 7:30.

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Silver Streak

In honor of the late, great Gene Wilder, we will be screening Silver Streak (1974) this Friday (9/9). I haven't seen it before, but Yuriko has fond memories of it. From glancing at Wikipedia, we can expect it to be convoluted and hilarious -- best enjoyed if you don't try too hard to figure out how it all fits together. Here's the trailer:


Drinks and snacks at 7; movie starts at 7:30 (ish).

Bring a friend! Bring a dog! It's PG -- bring a child!

Hope you can make it...

Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Out of the Past

This week's movie will be a classic film noir, made 3 decades before the neo-noir film (Chinatown) we watched earlier this summer.

Out of the Past (1947) -- directed by Jacques Tourneur, starring Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, and Kirk Douglas.


Showing at Matt and Yuriko's this Friday, September 2nd.

If you want to bring your dog and let him/her run around our new fenced-in yard with Kima, please do!

If you want to bring a human guest (lovers, small children, etc.), that is also fine.

Stop by anytime after 7pm -- movie starts at 7:30.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Summer May Be Ending, But Movie Night Is Not

Finally, we are going to be home on a Friday night in August!

Earlier this summer, Yuriko and I went to see the new Star Trek movie (twice!), which was good, but not great. Of course, this led to several discussions of what made the previous movie (Star Trek: Into Darkness, 2013) so amazing. We decided it might be time to revisit it.

Warning--I sobbed uncontrollably in the theater when I saw this movie for the second time in the theater. I realize how strange that is for this kind of movie, and I can't predict what will happen this time--but please try not to be disturbed by any inexplicable emotional eruptions on my part. I just love a good bromance. This one is somewhere between Y Tu Mama Tambien and Superbad.

Directed by JJ Abrams, starring Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, and Benedict Cumberbatch. Here's the trailer:



Stop by anytime after 7pm this Friday (August 26th), and we'll start the movie at 7:30pm.

Hope to see you!


Sunday, July 17, 2016

July 22: Embrace of the Serpent

This week, we'll be watching Embrace of the Serpent (2015), directed by Ciro Guerra. For a preview, check out Stephen Holden's review from the NY Times, or watch the trailer below:


Also, I found an interesting blog post about Tangerine that discusses both the power of the film, but also what might be problematically voyeuristic or exploitative about it. Check it out here.

Hope you can make it on Friday!
Drinks and snacks at 7, movie starts at 7:30 -- see you at our place!

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Tangerine for July 8

We're taking a break for July 1st, but we'll be back on July 8th.

Next up is Tangerine (2015), directed by Sean Baker.

It is a short movie (88 minutes), about a prostitute in Los Angeles, and it was shot entirely on smartphones (iPhone 5s).

Here's the trailer:



If you're interested, come by at 7pm on July 8th for drinks and snacks -- movie starts at 7:30pm.

Hope you can make it!

Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Chinatown for Friday, June 24

This Friday's film will be Chinatown (1974), directed by Roman Polanski, starring Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway.

I first saw this movie around 2002--and loved it--but I haven't seen it since, and I don't remember much of the story (lot of ins, lot of outs). At the time, I hadn't seen any of the classic films noir, so I wasn't aware of the tradition that it was harkening back to. Looking forward to seeing it again.



Friday, June 24
Snacks and drinks at 7:00
Movie starts at 7:30
Matt and Yuriko's place


Saturday, June 18, 2016

Vote for Next Friday's Film!

After last night's movie, we thought it might be a nice change of pace to watch something older--perhaps a noirish, crime-classic. I've come up with 5 options to choose from below. If you think you'll be able to make it on 6/24, vote for the movie you'd like to see. (Either post a comment or e-mail me.) Please vote by Monday (6/20) at noon, so I have time to get the DVD by Friday.

The Killers (1946) -- directed by Robert Siodmak, loosely based on a story by Hemingway, starring Burt Lancaster and Ava Gardner.



Out of the Past (1947) -- directed by Jacques Tourneur, starring Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, and Kirk Douglas.


Strangers on a Train (1951) -- directed by Alfred Hitchcock, based on a novel by Patricia Highsmith, screenplay by Raymond Chandler.




Touch of Evil (1958) -- directed by Orson Welles, starring Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh.




Chinatown (1974) -- directed by Roman Polanski, starring Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway.


Sunday, June 12, 2016

Friday, June 17th: Brooklyn

This Friday, June 17th, we'll be back at Oak Lane.

On tap is another movie with an Irish actor (or Irish-American, anyway) playing the lead: Brooklyn (2015), directed by John Crowley (who also made Intermission (2003), which I loved!and starring Saoirse Ronan. Here's the trailer:



The movie is an adaptation of a Colm Tóibín novel. (I haven't read it, but I have come across some of the author's short stories in the The New Yorker.) Nick Hornby worked on the screenplay with Tóibín.

Here's a review from The Atlantic.

Rotten Tomatoes score is 97%, if that means anything to you.

Drinks and snacks at 7pm; movie starts at 7:30pm.

Hope you can make it!

Thoughts on The Lobster

For our second movie night, we watched The Lobster at the GoggleWorks art theater in downtown Reading. We followed this with dessert and discussion at Dolce de Zabala in West Reading. 

To be honest, I was a little disappointed with this movie, despite the fact that it had some great moments throughout that were laugh-out-loud and darkly funny. I think the disappointment came from my expectations, based on some reviews, that had me anticipating an insightful social satire about modern dating and relationships. Although the film comically exaggerates the "compulsiveness" of pairing off, in order to form the nuclei of the bourgeois family unit, as well as the extremes to which states sometimes attempt to police the sexual lives of their citizens, I found the "social satire" to be lacking in depth or insight. Maybe my dating / relationship experience has been atypical, but most of the scenes--bizarre and captivating though they were--didn't really resonate with my sense of what it feels like to look for, long for, or give up on love.

This made me wonder if there was, perhaps, a better way to unpack what the film is up to. My hunch is that the film is actually more absurdist than satirical--more Samuel Beckett than Mark Twain. And perhaps "the point" (not that there is only one) is more existential than social. In other words, maybe it's not so much (or at least not only) a critique of modern relationships, but a deeper, darker, more cynical critique of the willful blindness and fakery that goes into human companionship. If Waiting for Godot dramatizes the absurdity of waiting for some mythical figure, who probably doesn't exist, to swoop in and give life meaning, perhaps The Lobster attempts to dramatize the absurdity of thinking that one can transcend one's mortality or one's isolated consciousness through "coupling."

The Loners appear absurd as well, in their opposite, anti-hegemonic taboos (no sex, no flirting, no intimacy), but there is perhaps something "more authentic" about their way of life, at least in their approach to death. Digging their own graves is an important reminder of that bleak existential truth--that we all must face death alone, no matter what love (real or imagined) we find in life. 

As for the love story, I found it to be more pathetic than moving. The conventional belief in the film, that a good match must be cemented by a shared impairment (nose-bleeding, limping, sociopathy, myopia) seems significant. If an impairment marks one as "different", and potentially isolates one, then this coupling is a fantasy of finding someone who completely understands your difference--who knows what it is to be you, can completely empathize, and thus restore your alienation. The Lobster relentlessly shows us what a naively adolescent fantasy that is, and moreover, the surprising degree of self-harm we're willing to endure in order to pursue it. It is "short sighted", if not "blind", to think that any form of companionship can help one escape one's "animality" or one's mortality. Yet we rush toward that fantasy with steak knives drawn.

I'm not sure if this makes me like the film more, but it gives me a stronger framework with which to understand it. (Three years into a marriage that has transformed and enriched my life on so many levels, I'm not quite so cynical about love myself--though, on the other hand, I have been in relationships, in the past, where blinding myself seemed like the only way forward.)

Oh, and famous existentialist philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre had recurring dreams of lobsters.

Monday, June 6, 2016

Let's Rock The Lobster at GoggleWorks!

All who attended our inaugural event seemed fairly curious about the bizarre new film The Lobster, directed by Yorgos Lanthimos, starring Colin Farrell, Rachel Weisz, and John C. Reilly. And as fate would have it, the GoggleWorks will be screening it this Friday (June 10th). So we're going to postpone Brooklyn for a week or two, and take a little excursion downtown this week.


Hope to see many of you downtown on Friday. We'll be back at Oak Lane soon.

June 10th:
The Lobster (2015)
at the GoggleWorks (201 Washington St., Reading, PA)
7pm


Monday, May 23, 2016

Y Tu Mamá También

For our inaugural night--Friday, May 27th--we plan on screening Alfonso Cuarón's 2001 film, Y Tu Mamá También.





Please join us at 7pm for drinks and snacks. The movie will start promptly at 7:30, and the runtime is approximately 1 hour and 46 minutes.

I first saw this movie in the theater when it came out 15 years ago, and it totally blew me away. But I was 21 years old at the time, so who knows what I'll think of it now. I'm excited to revisit it, and I hope you, too, are interested in checking it out.


For more about the movie, click here to read Roger Ebert's review.


For directions or our street address, please call or text me or Yuriko.


Coming up:


--June 3rd (no movie)

--June 10th: Brooklyn (2015)