Monday, May 29, 2023

Remembering

His tribute to Robert Frost, October 26, 1963. He was speaking of Frost, but also -- as we can now feel -- about himself as well. How far we have "evolved" away from Kennedy's dreams. . .

Happy 106th Birthday.

Thursday, May 18, 2023

Krystal Ball Has Fat Arms

Krystal Ball. . . what do you expect from a "journalist" with such a name? Get a load of this...


Sunday, May 14, 2023

Moms

Olive the Party Hummingbird has done it again. . . two little chick eggs have been laid.
 
 
Live stream here.

Friday, May 12, 2023

USA '23

All people in the USA now live inside what is basically nothing but a Murder Inc. operation, internationally and domestically. (While the only protests occurring deal with one's right to replace one's penis with breasts and of course the right to murder fetuses.)

So the USA Gestapo (aka FBI) has released a Woke-starring video on how to survive a mass shooting. . .

(Get the normalization/glamorization here.)

And COVID Island (aka New York City) has given us a PSA on how to survive a nuclear attack, again starring widdle Miss Woke. And again the normalization/ glamorization. . .

Looks like they're preparing us for something, doesn't it?

Tuesday, May 9, 2023

Tradition and Honor






Victory Then!

 

Victory Now!

 
 

Saturday, May 6, 2023

One Shot


Happy 108th Birthday to the greatest of all American filmmakers.






Friday, May 5, 2023

Monday, May 1, 2023

May Day


In Year XL (give or take a few) of Hollywood: The Vomit Era, Icíar Bollaín's Spanish masterpiece from 2013 flows with moments rarely seen in the marketeer States: rage, dignity, meaning, gesture, fellowship, purpose, self-forgetfulness, moral confusion, heroism -- while telling a great story with great pace. In 2000, a production crew invades Cochabamba, Bolivia to make an anti-Columbus period piece about the Columbian exploitation (and eventual extermination) of the native peoples. While filming, a rebellion breaks out over local water rights, involving many of the extras hired for the movie and led by a locally-hired lead actor. The silly director (played by Gael García Bernal), deeply in love with his own sensitive creativity (it brings tears to his eyes), tries to hold the project together, but when violence rains down on the village rebels, cast and crew seek to flee for their own safety and, if possible, finish the film.

'Though dedicated to Howard Zinn, Even the Rain's quiet humanity moves it far beyond mere polemic, as director Bollaín suggests that, despite the communal nature of the movie-making process itself, movies -- through the demands of isolation and selectivity -- are a deeply private, anti-communal art form.

All performances are perfectly keyed, with Luis Tosar unforgettable as the hard producer turned rebel. Remains the best and most important theatrical fiction film of the 2010s. (As a political work, just compare it with chum such as Sorry to Bother You, Vice, BlacKkKlansman or anything by Jordan Peele.)