Quick Movie Review – Dark Skies

The less you know walking in, the more you will love it. Based on the movie  poster I assumed that Dark Skies was a horror movie. In the end, I  think that this movie created a whole new genre because it seriously creeped me  out while suggesting a whole new way of looking at the human experience. It’s  just another sunny day in suburbia for the Barrett family until the lights go  out. After a series of disturbing events, Daniel (Josh Hamilton from Outsourced) and Lacy (Keri Russell from Waitress) use  every rationalization in the book to avoid reality. Half of the terror in this  movie is not knowing what’s going on. The other half is finding out what’s going  on yet not knowing what you would do in the same situation. Once the audience is  in the foxhole with the family anticipation just hangs in the air. Crawling  towards the end of this story was like waiting for the last part of an  earthquake – you want the intensity to stop even if that means discovering  more cracks in the sidewalk.

8 out of 9

Guest blogger from Seattle

Jobs in the Future

As I sit there another day at Big Firm, Douglass Rushkoff’s blog post from September 2011 comes to mind.  Wherein Rushkoff’s ask the question, are jobs obsolete?  Are Jobs Obsolete?

This passage jumped out at me:

“We’re living in an economy where productivity is no longer the goal, employment is. That’s because, on a very fundamental level, we have pretty much everything we need. America is productive enough that it could probably shelter, feed, educate, and even provide health care for its entire population with just a fraction of us actually working.”

Societies first evolved where families worked and hunted for the provisions required to feed and shelter their families.   As technology progressed, people turned to trade and factory work to produce essential items that society needed.  Instead of making or growing items oneself, people earned a wage and purchased these items. With each technological jump, few workers were need to produce the same level of products.

Could society actually evolve where a few dedicated workers work to provide the basic items that we need while the other members of society pursue other avenues in science and arts?

In Star Trek, we hear about the ideals of the Federation that provides the basic essentials for society and everyone is able to pursue loftier ideas.

“We work to better ourselves and the rest of humanity” (ST: DS9 In the Cards)

What has to happen to get this change to come about?  The shift in philosophy that wealth is not the goal of our energy but the expansion of our creative selves for the betterment of humanity.  We are living in a time period that the accumulation of wealth is the more important than any other pursuits. Corporate profits are at their highest as unemployment rates remain high. “But the record profits come at the same time that workers’ wages have fallen to their lowest-ever share of GDP.” (Isidore, C. Corporate profits hit record as wage get squeeze http://www.cnn.com 2012)

Will this take generations to make a shift away from the pursuit of wealth.  How will society decides who produce the basic needs while others pursue their creative dreams.

“We start by accepting that food and shelter are basic human rights. The work we do — the value we create — is for the rest of what we want: the stuff that makes life fun, meaningful, and purposeful…

This sort of work isn’t so much employment as it is creative activity” (Rushoff D. Are Jobs Obsolete? http://www.cnn.com 2011)

We seen now that the Millennial generation have a vastly different agenda than the Baby Boom generation.   “…77 percent of workers believed the millennial generation has a different attitude toward workplace responsibility than those in other age groups.” (Porillo, E. New poll shows many think millennials aren’t hard workers www.chicagotribune.com 2011)  Younger generations are taught that their needs are extremely important and consequently their goals are to fulfill their self defined needs.

The things I think about when work is slow…

Road trip!

In March, American Cinematheque is showcasing great road trip movies: Easy Rider, Sugarland Express, Road to Morrocco and Duel. Two of my favorites are being shown March 30.

IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT / TWO FOR THE ROAD

    Sat, March 30 • 7:30pm

Classic 1934 screwball IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT, starring Claudette Colbert and Clark Gable, is paired with 1967’s TWO FOR THE ROAD, starring Audrey Hepburn and Albert Finney as a husband and wife who can’t stand each other, yet can’t stand to be apart.

For more information seee the American Cinematheque website.

Event: Cat Ballou and The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance

Calling all Lee Marvin Fans! American Cinematheque is having a Lee Marvin double feature this weekend:

 

Double Feature!  Director Elliot Silverstein In Person!
CALL IN THE MARINE: LEE MARVIN ON THE BIG SCREEN

    Sat, February 16 • 7:30pm

For his dual role as inebriated Kid Shelleen and his assassin brother, Lee Marvin won a Best Actor Oscar in western CAT BALLOU, which screens with director Elliot Silverstein in person. It’s followed by another western, John Ford’s classic THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE, starring James Stewart and John Wayne with support from Lee Marvin and Vera Miles.

Fore more information see the American Cinematheque website.

Quick Movie Review – Mama

Guillermo del Toro (Don’t Be  Afraid of the Dark, Pan’s Labyrinth) has done it again! He took a simple  horror story and visually interpreted in such an imaginative and creepy way  that every aspect of it gets under the audience’s skin. Mama is about a  present man’s worst day colliding with a dead stranger’s worst nightmare.  After a 1-year old and 3-year old disappear, their loving uncle pays a couple  of locals to keep searching for them. Five years later, the sisters are found  abandoned in the woods, but in relatively fair condition. Studied by a  psychologist and under the care of their father’s brother (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) and live-in girlfriend (Jessica Chastain), it’s not long before  the truth is revealed: the girls are not alone. Del Toro doesn’t need gore, loud  noises or invisible figures lurking in shadows to scare the poop out of you. The  audience gets to see all of the characters involved right away. The horror in  this story comes from how their incredible circumstances terrorize the  already-victimized family and everybody unfortunate enough to know  them.

6 out of 9

Guest blogger from Seattle

My Neglected Blog

My poor neglected blog. There are so many things that I want to say but I haven’t the time or energy to write about it. People also take about a work-life balance but how does one achieve it? During the day there are so many ideas twirling around on my head but at night I’m to mentally and physically drained to write in a coherent fashion.

Upcoming posts: Top Women in Sci Fi No 6; Movie Trailer Review; The future of jobs; my thoughts on the end of Fringe; update on my Sci Fi reading challenge.

Quick Movie Trailer Review – After Earth

The cinematography looks gorgeous but the plot isn’t enticing.  There have been too many earth doomsday films and from the trailer, this film doesn’t add anything new to the genre.  I am totally biased because I have never been a big Will Smith fan but I found the voice over work to be ridiculous.

Pass.