Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Featured merchandise
Keeps rainin’ all the time.
Related posts
Armstrong and Arlen, blues and weather
Snow, snow, snow
By Michael Leddy at 9:14 AM comments: 0
Monday, December 19, 2011
Eameses on PBS tonight
Tonight on PBS, Charles & Ray Eames: The Architect and the Painter. Like they say, “Check your local listings.”
Related posts
Eames on reams
Twine and yarn
By Michael Leddy at 1:07 PM comments: 0
Cello exceptions?
Jim Fleming, on To the Best of Our Knowledge: “It’s a truism in the rock-music industry: if you want to make a sad song, put a cello in it.”
I can think of one flagrant exception to this rule — a song that’s anything but sad in which a cello plays a significant role. And there must be others. Your suggestions are welcome in the comments. (Spoiler alert: mine’s there too.)
By Michael Leddy at 11:53 AM comments: 5
Proust in Miami
In Miami, sixteen old folks finish reading Proust. I love it.
By Michael Leddy at 11:49 AM comments: 0
Make Way for Tomorrow
Bookkeeper Barkley Cooper (Victor Moore), hasn’t worked in four years. He’s not retired, just out of a job: the Depression is on. But something will come along. Bark’s wife Lucy (Beulah Bondi) is sure of it, or at least she says she is. Bark and Lucy, both in their seventies, have been married for fifty years. With no income and no pension, they have lost their house to the bank. Now what? How will their children help them? Hard times, for these times: Make Way for Tomorrow (1937) is eerily contemporary in its examination of the effects of economic extremity on family relationships.
This film could have been made as a sappy picture of cute clashes between generations: Grandma and Grandpa move in. Hilarity ensues. Instead, Leo McCarey, probably best known for Going My Way (1944), gives us an intimate depiction of displacement and isolation in old age. Bark and Lucy move in, but not together: circumstances require that they live apart for the first time in their married life, each with a different child. The old people are out of place and in the way in their new quarters, and the film makes us feel their awkwardness. The creak of a rocking chair makes Lucy a distraction during her daughter-in-law’s evening of cards: the furniture itself calls attention to an interloper’s presence. A storekeeper reads to Bark (whose glasses are broken) a heartbreaking letter from Lucy, and we understand that Bark must have been unwilling to share the letter — whatever it might have to say — with the daughter who’s taken him in. Yet the Coopers’ children are hardly monstrous: obtuse and selfish, certainly, but not wicked. Indeed, the film makes it clear that having either Bark or Lucy in the house would be trying.
In an interview accompanying the film’s Criterion release, Peter Bogdanovich recalls Orson Welles saying that Make Way for Tomorrow “would make a stone cry.” And for various reasons. The film’s final twenty-six minutes chart five hours of a Bark and Lucy reunion — a late afternoon and evening in Manhattan as they revisit the world of their younger days, walking in Central Park, dining in the hotel where they honeymooned. How delightful these old people seem to those who aren’t their children. And now what? You’ll have to see for yourself.
Make Way for Tomorrow is available, beautifully restored, from the Criterion Collection. It is, I’d venture, Leo McCarey’s finest hour and a half.
[Hard Times: For These Times, the full title of Charles Dickens’s 1854 novel.]
By Michael Leddy at 8:39 AM comments: 1
Sunday, December 18, 2011
On interests and teaching
Gary Gutting:
Teaching is not a matter of (as we too often say) “making a subject (poetry, physics, philosophy) interesting” to students but of students coming to see how such subjects are intrinsically interesting. It is more a matter of students moving beyond their interests than of teachers fitting their subjects to interests that students already have. Good teaching does not make a course’s subject more interesting; it gives the students more interests — and so makes them more interesting.
What Is College For? (New York Times)
By Michael Leddy at 9:34 AM comments: 2
Domestic comedy
“There are two kinds of people: those who are punctual and those who — where are they?”
Related reading
All domestic comedy posts (via Pinboard)
By Michael Leddy at 8:56 AM comments: 0
Saturday, December 17, 2011
namebench
The Google Code project namebench (no cap) is an “open-source DNS benchmark utility” for OS X, UNIX, and Windows. It finds the fastest DNS servers for your computer.
If you poke around a bit online, you’ll find a folkloric consensus that Google Public DNS and similar services are faster than an ISP’s DNS. I switched to Google’s DNS in 2009, and the difference in speed was indeed great. But now namebench tells me that my ISP’s DNS is faster. Because more people are now using Google’s DNS? Beats me. At any rate, I’ve switched back. And yes, my ISP’s DNS is faster. PDQ. QED.
By Michael Leddy at 9:55 AM comments: 0
They don’t write ’em like this anymore
“The entire ballet is running away, and I am mired in this insignificant little speck on the map!”Related reading
William Conrad as Major Anatole Karzof, in “Death Takes a Curtain Call.” This episode of Murder, She Wrote first aired on December 16, 1984.
Stubbs’s Corollary
By Michael Leddy at 8:46 AM comments: 2
Friday, December 16, 2011
Brian Wilsons
Brian Wilson, September 2011, on the Beach Boys’ fiftieth anniversary and the prospect of a group reunion:
Asked if he’s looking forward to the anniversary, he responds, “Not particularly,” adding, “I don’t really like working with the guys, but it all depends on how we feel and how much money’s involved. Money’s not the only reason I made records, but it does hold a place in our lives.“Brian Wilson, December 2011, on the Beach Boys’ fiftieth anniversary and the prospect of a group reunion:
Beach Boys Plan Anniversary Blowout With Likely Reunion Tour (Rolling Stone)
“This anniversary is special to me because I miss the boys and it will be a thrill for me to make a new record and be on stage with them again.”[I like George Harrison’s 1989 comment on the idea of a Beatles reunion: “As far as I’m concerned, there won’t be a Beatles reunion as long as John Lennon remains dead.”]
Surviving Beach Boys Announce Album, Tour Plans (Billboard)
By Michael Leddy at 12:32 PM comments: 1