October 01, 2009

Proof

This little 528-page beauty rolled into FFC HQ earlier today:


I am quite pleased with it, but need to make a few minor adjustments. More details to come, including the name of the winning Patron.

4 comments:

Bryant Frazer said...

Hey man, nice cover. It took me a minute to figure it out, but that's totally swank.

Bill C said...

Thanks, Bryant. I thought you'd seen it already, otherwise I would've made sure this wasn't a surprise to you!

Apropos of nothing, I'd like to put in a good word for WHIP IT, since nobody got a chance to review it for the mothersite and since it seems to be getting middling reviews elsewhere. It's not a masterpiece, and it's pretty predictable, but it's sensitively made and, regardless of what you may think sight-unseen about Drew Barrymore directing a feature, it's got a pedigree. (She had Wes Anderson's DP and Paul Thomas Anderson's editor to cushion any falls.) Juliette Lewis plays something other than a retarded woman-child for a change, and the Austin milieu feels really authentic. (At one point, Ellen Page and her credibly-drawn musician love interest attend a screening of THE JERK at the Drafthouse.) I think the middle section of the movie gets choked a little bit by the relentless, iPod shuffle soundtrack, but confess I got the tingles during a scene where shirts are exchanged to Radiohead's "No Surprises" after a night of lovemaking--a lovely sequence in and of itself that's photographed mostly underwater. It's probably a clichee, but it's done well. A lot of the movie is like that: refining the familiar.

In short, WHIP IT's gentility--all that body-checking not withstanding--disarmed me in a way that I feel the picture's good outweighs its bad. I want to call it a crowd-pleaser, but that implies something much more obnoxious than the film I saw, during which the audience (composed mostly of mother/daughter pairings) was as quiet as church mice. But they left the theatre beaming, and so did I.

Patrick said...

I have promised myself that unless it sucked absolutely, I would see Whip It at least twice in the cinema, if only to make a point for movies with female protagonists that are neither "The Proposal" nor "Sex in the City". Glad to hear I'll be able to spend some money.

Pierre Mercer said...

Thank yyou for sharing