Saturday, November 6, 2010

Grown Ups DVD

DVD Review by Kam Williams

Headline: Adam Sandler Buddy Comedy Arrives on DVD

In the opening scene of Grown Ups, a black kid (Jameel McGill) who has very obviously double-dribbled during a basketball game unreasonably calls the referee a racist for blowing the whistle on him. That sets the tone for the rest of a movie which is essentially a series of offensive one-liners in which African-Americans are the butt of the joke.
Unless you enjoy laughing at outdated stereotypes suggesting that blacks are loud, stupid, lazy, smelly, promiscuous and criminal, you might like to pass on this insensitive exercise in bigotry masquerading as a buddy flick. Don’t be fooled by the fact that Chris Rock is one of the movie’s stars, what’s served up as humor here is cruel, hateful, and anything but funny.
Let me offer a few examples, so you can judge for yourself. Rock’s character, Kurt, is chronically unemployed, a situation that doesn’t sit well with his resentful, expecting-again wife (Maya Rudolph) or with her terminally-sassy mother (Ebony Jo-Ann).
Still, the shiftless slacker returns their stinging barbs by telling his overweight mother-in-law “You look like Idi Amin with a propeller on his head.” Meanwhile, she’s supposedly so ignorant that she says, “I think I just sat on your adding machine,” when she actually crushed a cell phone. Granny is also oversexed, which is proven by how she insists on French kissing Kurt’s friend, Lenny (Adam Sandler) as a greeting, and at a funeral, no less.
Kurt can’t contain his carnal urges either, as he’s caught putting the moves on his pal’s young nanny. Plus, he’s able to have intercourse with his nine-months pregnant wife “because the baby thinks he’s getting a Tootsie Roll.” Even Kurt’s prepubescent son (Nadji Jeter) is depicted as lusting after a friend’s breastfeeding mom (Maria Bello) by asking, “Can I have some of her milk?”
Furthermore, granny is relentlessly classless and crude, whether she’s releasing one annoying fart after another, or exposing her unsightly bunions in public. And when she demands a big meal, she’s asked whether it’s her last before she gets the electric chair. Then, in the end, she gets what she apparently deserves, when she trips and falls face first into a pie comprised entirely of whipped cream.
Young black females fare no better, such as Kurt’s daughter (China Anne McClain) who wonders whether “we get to hang ourselves” at the sight of a tree swing she mistakes for a lynching rope. Then there’s this dubious exchange between Kurt and a friend (Tim Meadows) over who is more intimidating to Caucasians. “When white people see me come into a store, they get scared,” Malcolm boasts. “Yeah, when white people see me coming into a store, they run,” Kurt retorts.
The plot revolves around the reunion of members of a championship basketball team (Sandler, Rock, Kevin James, Rob Schneider and David Spade) in honor of their recently-deceased coach (Blake Clark). Despite bringing along their wives and children to the lakefront retreat, they degenerate into a bunch of self-indulgent, potty-mouthed brats over the course of an irreverent 4th of July weekend.
A midlife crisis disaster more akin to Billy Madison in search of a second childhood than anything evocative of The Big Chill. Grow up already!

Poor (0 stars)
Rated PG-13 for profanity, male rear nudity, crude humor and suggestive material.
Running time: 102 minutes
Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
DVD Extras: Blooper reel, gag reel and “The Cast of Grown Ups” featurette.

This Week’s DVD Releases

by Kam Williams

Headline: Top Ten DVD List for November 9th 2010

Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child


Scott Pilgrim vs. the World


Car Bomb


Mystery Science Theater 3000: Volume XIX


Antichrist


Love Ranch


Van Gogh: A Brush with Genius


Lovely, Still


Bill Moyers: On Faith and Reason


O.J.: Monster or Myth


Honorable Mention

The Boondocks: The Complete Third Season


Bing Crosby: The Christmas Specials


Arsenic and Old Lace


Presumed Innocent


Three and Out


The Elia Kazan Collection


Ghetto Stories: The Movie


Ocean’s 11: 50th Anniversary Edition


Network


The Christmas Collection

Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child DVD

DVD Review by Kam Williams

Headline: DVD Revisits Rise and Fall of Short-Lived Sensation

Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988) was born in Brooklyn to a Puerto Rican mother and a father of Haitian extraction. Blessed with a rebellious nature, he ran away from home a lot during adolescence, finally leaving for good at 17. Moving to Manhattan, he dropped out of school to fritter away his days spray-painting his alias “Samo” all over the city, because as he put it, “The whole object of doing graffiti is fame.”

Fortunately, some well-connected folks in the art world recognized that Jean-Michel actually had some talent and convinced the kid to go legit. He gave it a try and watched with amazement as his paintings rapidly escalated in price from $200 to $30,000 a piece. It wasn’t long before he found himself rubbing elbows with celebrated icons like Andy Warhol and Julian Schnabel.

Some people can handle such overnight success, but Jean-Michel wasn’t one of them. Because he was making way more money than any of his hangers-on, he got a swelled head and decided to serve as the fulcrum of a non-stop, substance-abusing party which eventually culminated with a heroin overdose in his studio at the age of 27.

All of the above, plus his arresting array of hairstyles ranging from sumo wrestler to Mohawk to weed-wacker, are amply illustrated in Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child, a cautionary documentary about the downside of having it all. Basquiat was already the subject of a dramatization of his life directed by pal Schnabel and starring Jeffrey Wright.

What make this flick a real treat is seeing file footage of the bombastic iconoclast in all his glory before he bottomed out on smack. Too bad he didn’t have even one person in his entourage he could trust to pull his coattails about the dangers of intravenous drug use. But hey, if he were still alive, there might not be any Basquiat mystique for the upscale auction houses to capitalize on.

Conclusive proof that, in certain exclusive circles, it’s still better financially to flameout than to fade away.

Excellent (4 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 93 Minutes
Distributor: New Video Group
DVD Extras: Interview with director Tamra Davis and theatrical interview.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Jason Palmer: The “Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench” Interview



with Kam Williams

Headline: Jason’s Jam Session

Trumpeter/Composer/Arranger Jason Palmer is one of the most in-demand jazz musicians of his generation. He has worked with such icons as Roy Haynes, Jimmy Smith, Wynton Marsalis, Kurt Rosenwinkel, Ravi Coltrane, Geri Allen, Patrice Rushen, Kenny Barron, Phil Woods, Common and Roy Hargrove. Jason took first place in the 2009 Carmine Caruso International Jazz Trumpet Solo Competition.
The June 2007 issue of Downbeat Magazine cited Palmer as one of the “Top 25 trumpeters of the Future.” His debut recording, “Songbook,” with Ravi Coltrane and Greg Osby, was released to rave reviews in 2008. And his second CD, “Nothing to Hide,” just dropped in September of this year.
Jason’s group has been playing Wally’s Jazz CafĂ© in Boston every weekend for the past decade. The quintet has also been featured at the Tanglewood Jazz Fest, the Stone and the Jazz Gallery in NYC, the Studio in Hartford, Connecticut, as well as numerous venues across New England. In 2007, he was commissioned by the Festival of New Trumpet Music in NYC to premier a new composition based on Sudoku at the Jazz Standard.
Besides performing, Palmer maintains a busy schedule as an educator/actor/board member at JazzBoston. Plus, he was recently hired by Berklee College of Music as an Assistant Professor of Ensembles. Here, he talks about playing a title role in Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench, a jazz-driven romance drama marking the impressive directorial debut of Damien Chazelle.
Kam Williams: Hi Jason, thanks for the interview.
Jason Palmer: My pleasure, Kam, and thank you for your interest.
KW: What interested you in Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench?
JP: A little over three years ago, Damien visited Wally's, the jazz club that I perform weekly at in Boston, in search of a lead for his film. He asked me if I was interested and I thought the project sounded really interesting. I was excited about the idea of being a part of a film that featured the musical genre at I love. I must say that in most cases when I'm approached at Wally's by an individual that's interested in collaborating, they're usually not too serious about it, so I don't expect any follow ups on their end. But this wasn't the case with Damien. From the start I got the sense that he was motivated and on top of things. That piqued my interest as well.

KW: You’re a jazz trumpeter. How much acting experience did you have prior to shooting this film? JP: I had no experience acting at all. Still, there are some aspects of performing jazz that are similar to acting. What I mean by this is that when I'm performing I believe that I am obliged to leave all my troubles aside.
KW: Which do you find more challenging, acting or play music?
JP: I think that they both have their challenges. I wouldn't rank one harder than the other. I think that we are in a day and age now when musical performances on stages are apt to end up on Youtube or any other social media. Musicians are highly conscious of this. For a period in my life, I felt a pressure to perform beyond my expectations because if I didn't, that particular performance might end up online for all to see and judge. So that pressure was there. With acting, it was so new to me I didn't really feel the pressure in the beginning. That was also due to the fact that in acting for this film, I had the option of doing another take.
KW: Were you surprised by how well-received the film has been?
JP: I was surprised because I knew that the film started off as Damien's thesis project at Harvard. I wasn't aware that the film was going to be submitted to film festivals. Due to my performing and teaching schedule, I also didn't get a chance to see the film in it's entirety until after I had learned of some accolades that the film had garnered.
KW: I noticed that you both d gigs with your quintet and teach trumpet at a couple of conservatories? How hard is it to juggle those careers?
JP: It's a challenge but it's not anything that I can't handle. I think that communication is key when juggling these two things. When I'm out on the road, I schedule make up lessons ahead of time so flexibility on both ends is key to managing a career in music.
KW: Who are your favorite trumpeters?
JP: How much print space do I have [LL] I'll just say that I embrace every trumpeter in jazz from Louis Armstrong to Don Cherry. All musicians who play with heart and display integrity hold a special place in my heart.
KW: How would you describe your sound?
JP: I think it's a combination of all the trumpeters and musicians that I've been influenced by over the past fifteen years. I believe that in today's musical climate musicians have to play many styles convincingly and sometimes alter their sound to stay true to the style that's being played. This is what I try to convey whenever I take the stage.
KW: Is there any question no one ever asks you, that you wish someone would?
JP: I've been asked so many questions, I can't really think of anything at the moment. I'm pretty much an open book.
KW: The Tasha Smith question: Are you ever afraid?
JP: Sure, that's an emotion that I'm not immune to. I'm not a swimmer yet, so you can imagine how I must feel about large bodies of water.
KW: The Columbus Short question: Are you happy?
JP: I'm happy today, I was happy yesterday and the day before, and I hope to keep that streak going!
KW: The Teri Emerson question: When was the last time you had a good laugh?
JP: Right now, I'm on a “This American Life” kick. There are some really funny stories on that NPR radio show that have had me rolling lately.
KW: The Flex Alexander question: How do you get through the tough times?
JP: The use of patience and action coupled with the belief that everything happens for a reason that we are meant to learn from gets me through.
KW: The Nancy Lovell Question: Why do you love doing what you do?
JP: I love seeing the smiles on people's faces and sensing the joy from them after a show. I believe that's what I've been put on this earth to do. I also love helping student musicians realize their potential and self-worth when I'm working with them.
KW: The bookworm Troy Johnson question: What was the last book you read?
JP: Music, the Brain, and Ecstasy by Robert Jourdain.

KW: The music maven Heather Covington question: What are you listening to on your iPod?
JP: On my iRiver, I currently have the music of Kurt Rosenwinkel as well as Janelle Monae's Archandroid in heavy rotation.I hope she wins a Grammy.

KW: What is your favorite dish to cook?
JP: I have a variation on a Costa Rican dish that I make maybe once a week. It consists of grilled swordfish, tomatoes, onions, zucchini, garlic, spinach, oregano, basil, salt, a little cayenne, thyme and rosemary, all on a bed of quinoa infused with lemon juice. I also started making lamb saagwala. That's a challenge, but it's fun!
KW: The Uduak Oduok question: Who is your favorite clothes designer?
JP: I haven't really gotten into that yet.I shop at Marshall's, Banana Republic, and online at J. Crew occasionally. I also like places like Brooks Brothers, but I'm pretty thrifty, so I may splurge there only once a year or so.
KW: If you could have one wish instantly granted, what would that be for?
JP: An end to global poverty and inequality.
KW: When you look in the mirror, what do you see?
JP: My eyes.
KW: The Ling-Ju Yen question: What is your earliest childhood memory?
JP: Sticking a key into a socket and getting electrocuted.
KW: What advice do you have for anyone who wants to follow in your footsteps?
JP: Stay persistent and don't be afraid to be told “no.” All it takes is one “yes” to get things rolling for you. My career has been on a slow steady incline for some time now and I have to take it in stride.
KW: The Tavis Smiley question: What do you want your legacy to be?
JP: I do my best to pattern my life after greats such as Clifford Brown and Dizzy Gillespie. I want to be known as a person who made an important contribution to this music that we call jazz. I would like for my teaching methods to live on after I'm gone. That's why I'm writing a book right now.
KW: Thanks again for the interview, Jason, and best of luck with all your endeavors.
JP: Thank you, Kam, and the same to you.

Kam's Kapsules: Weekly Previews That Make Choosing a Film Fun

OPENING THIS WEEK
Kam's Kapsules:
Weekly Previews That Make Choosing a Film Fun
by Kam Williams
For movies opening November 12, 2010


BIG BUDGET FILMS

Morning Glory (PG-13 for profanity, sexuality and drug references) Romantic comedy about an aspiring TV producer (Rachel McAdams) whose hopes to save a struggling news program depend on her controlling the show’s feuding co-anchors (Diane Keaton and Harrison Ford). With Jeff Goldblum, Ty Burrell and Patrick Wilson, and cameos by 50 Cent, Chris Matthews. Lloyd Banks and Morley Safer. (In English and Ukrainian with subtitles)

Skyline (PG-13 for profanity, intense violence and brief sexuality) Sci-fi thriller about an evil extraterrestrial force which threatens to wipe all of humanity from the face of the Earth by emitting mysterious, irresistible light beams which attract people like moths to a flame. Cast includes Eric Balfour, Donald Faison and Scottie Thompson.

Unstoppable (PG-13 for profanity and scenes of peril) Action thriller about a train conductor (Chris Pine) and an engineer (Denzel Washington) in a race against time to prevent a runaway locomotive with a cargo of toxic chemicals from running off the tracks. With Rosario Dawson, Kevin Dunn and Elizabeth Mathis.


INDEPENDENT & FOREIGN FILMS

Cool It (PG for mature themes) Eco-documentary chronicling the efforts of skeptical, Danish environmentalist Bjorn Lomborg to debunk the prevailing conclusion of leading scientists that global warming trends are man-made.

Disco and Atomic War (In Russian, English, Estonian and Finnish with subtitles) Cold War Era mockumentary painting a humorous picture of what life was like behind the Iron Curtain for citizens of Estonia being constantly subjected to Communist propaganda. Starring Gerda Viira, Oskar Vuks and Toomas Pool.

Helena at the Wedding (Unrated) Romance drama about a newlywed couple (Lee Tergesen and Melanie Lynskey) whose New Year’s Eve party in the woods for just their closest friends is ruined when it’s crashed by an attractive model (Gilliam Jacobs) the groom had developed a crush on at their wedding. With Corey Stoll, Dagmar Dominczyk and Paul Fitzgerald.

Tiny Furniture (Unrated) Coming-of-age comedy about a rudderless, recent college grad (Lena Dunham) with a worthless degree in film appreciation who moves back into her mother’s (Laurie Simmons) loft in Soho where she has to settle for an unfulfilling job as a restaurant hostess. With Grace Dunham, Jemima Kirke and Alex Karpovsky.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Is It Just Me? Or Is It Nuts Out There? (BOOK REVIEW)

Is It Just Me? Or Is It Nuts Out There?
by Whoopi Goldberg
Hyperion Books
Hardcover, $22.99
216 pages
ISBN: 978-1-4013-2384-4

Book Review by Kam Williams

“Thoughtlessness is the new manners, and I’ve got to say I don’t like it… Somehow, so many little pieces of courtesy have gone by the wayside. People in your face, in your business, not caring if they are being disrespectfully loud…
So over the last year there were days when I remembered to write things down that struck me. Many are written here. They cover the map of my mind, unleashed on you the way they appear in my head.

Little things, the way I can comment on them in a book but not on TV. In no particular order—oh, and I don’t necessarily have any answers guaranteed to work for anyone."

-- Excerpted from The Foreword (pgs. xiii-xiv)

All over the country nowadays, we’re witnessing a frightening decline in civility, whether it’s teens being bullied to the point of suicide, tourists being subjected to searches at airports that look more like foreplay than pat downs, or simply people talking loudly on cell phones in places where it’s rude or illegal to do so. In the political realm, we’ve heard mudslinging candidates refer to opponents as a “witch,” “whore” or “degenerate idiot,” a Republican interrupt the President’s State of the Union speech to call him a liar, and even a fellow Democrat tell Obama to “shove it.”
Weighing-in on this disturbing trend is comedienne Whoopi Goldberg, herself no stranger to such controversy. You may remember how she and fellow co-host Joy Behar recently became so exasperated by what they considered to be anti-Muslim remarks by guest Bill O’Reilly that they stormed off the set of their own show, The View.
Now Whoopi has written “Is It Just Me? Or Is It Nuts Out There?“, a book chock full of observational humor about the demise of manners in America. In a flip stream of consciousness, she basically bemoans the quality of discourse’s being stuck in the toilet. In fact, the tome’s cover even features a tasteless photo of the author sitting on the john in a public bathroom stall.
Among the hundred or so behaviors getting under Ms. Goldberg’s skin are fans who act like jackasses at sporting events, drivers with road rage, noisy neighbors, cowardly bloggers and cheap perfume. You can easily imagine her gravely voice as you read along, given her conversational tone peppered with colorful slang and salty expletives.
Nothing particularly deep or memorable here, just the literary equivalent of an entertaining standup act by a seasoned comic venting via an emotional dump.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench



Film Review by Kam Williams

Headline: Brilliant Debut by Director Damien Chazelle Deconstructs a Failed Romance

Melancholy Madeline (Desiree Garcia) sits alone freezing on a park bench in Boston contemplating what just happened after being dumped by her boyfriend on a chilly, wintry day. Meanwhile, her equally-wistful ex (Jason Palmer) trudges home through the snow with his trumpet slung lazily over his shoulder. Upon arriving at his apartment, in utter resignation Guy removes a picture from the wall taken of the two of them during much happier times.
This is the poignant point of departure of Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench, an intriguing flashback flick deconstructing the demise of a young couple’s troubled relationship. The picture is finally finding its way into theaters after receiving rave reviews a year ago on the festival circuit. The delay might be explained by the colorblind casting featuring an African-American opposite a Latina in the title roles, both of whom by the way display an enviable versatility while turning in a pair of powerful performances.
Guy is played by Jason Palmer, an accomplished jazz trumpeter recognized as an up-and-comer by Downbeat Magazine. Triple threat Desiree Garcia proves formidable in her own right as Madeline, handling her acting, singing and dancing duties with perfect aplomb.
The movie marks the remarkable writing and directorial debut of recent Harvard grad Damien Chazelle, a gifted wunderkind to be reckoned with. For, with an effortlessness that’s nothing short of amazing, he exhibits an encyclopedic knowledge of cinematic history here, interweaving a dizzying number of allusions to the work of his idols behind the camera, legends like John Cassavetes, Jean-Luc Godard and Busby Berkeley.
As engaging as the picture’s premise are its original score by Justin Hurwitz and its shadowy cinematography coming courtesy of seductively-grainy, black & white 16mm film. The movie’s magical musical renditions, a delightful blend of jazz and show tunes, range from impromptu improvisations to catchy, carefully-choreographed song and dance numbers.
If all of the above isn’t enough to whet your curiosity, consider the plot which complicates into a compelling love triangle when Guy’s head is turned by flaky temptress Elena (Sandha Khin) while riding the subway. Like a black version of Woody Allen, Guy develops existential angst over his ensuing girl troubles, the difference being that he finds solace playing his instrument instead of kvetching about his feelings to a shrink.
Overall, the vaguely-familiar production has the retro look and feel of a casually-staged, New Wave classic from the Fifties, except that no French is spoken, unless the evocative lyrics of a haunting ballad count. Ultimately, there’s no mistaking this impossible to pigeonhole adventure for an unearthed relic from a bygone era, given such unmistakably-modern moments as when Elena responds to a solicitous stranger’s pickup line with a resolutely-salty expletive.
A tribute befitting Boston readily comparable to Woody Allen’s bittersweet homage to his own beloved Manhattan!

Excellent (4 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 82 minutes
Studio: Variance Films