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Downton Abbey& the Roar of Women Rising

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Downton Abbey, either the series or the fictional estate, might seem like an unlikely incubator for 20th century feminism.

But by the time the most popular series in PBS history wraps up this March, empowered women could be one of its strongest legacies.

"If anyone hadn't realized it by now," says creator and executive producer Gareth Neame, "women rule the roost on this show. The men may think they do, but it's the women who decide almost all of what happens."

He's got a good body of evidence to support that assertion.

Dowager Countess Violet (Maggie Smith) is an iron pillar, and her friend Isobel Crawley (Penelope Wilton) has shown an equally strong will. Cora Crawley (Elizabeth McGovern), also known as Lady Grantham, often must steer her sometimes befuddled husband Robert (Hugh Bonneville) in the right direction.

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The Grantham daughters (above), born into a society where their sole duty was ornamental, all stepped out of that boring box. The late Lady Sybil (Jessica Findlay Brown) became an activist who married the socialist chauffeur. Lady Edith (Laura Carmichael) runs a major magazine. Lady Mary (Michelle Dockery) seems poised to become the agent who runs Downton, a position assumed for centuries to be far beyond a mere woman's capability.

Downstairs, Neame points out, head housekeeper Mrs. Hughes (Phyllis Logan) "is really the one who steers [the butler] Carson [Jim Carter]." Other female staffers like Anna Bates (Joanne Froggatt), Mrs. Patmore (Lesley Nicol) and Baxter (Raquel Cassidy) have all taken charge of various difficult situations.

Moreover, Neame notes, the show has done this without painting the men as buffoons.

"Robert's problem is that the estate now requires a different sort of leader than it did in his father's day," says Neame. "It requires a chief executive officer, someone who can handle finances and real estate and multiple moving parts.

"That's not something Robert is especially skilled at. He's made mistakes. But we like him, because he has other qualities we admire. He has a sense of how to be fair."

Nor does empowering the women make them saintly.

"All the characters have flaws," says Neame. "Mary, for example, is fascinating. She's the one I suspect everyone would like to know. But she's a snob. She can be a bitch. She says horrible things about her sister. She complicated, very Jane Austen-esque.

"Her Lady's Maid Anna in many ways seems perfect. Mary is not that."

He and writer Julian Fellowes have tried, says Neame, to create nuances even in characters with a limited role. That has ranged from Jack Ross (Gary Carr), the black musician with whom Lady Rose (Lily James) had a fling in Season 4, to the late Mr. Green (Nigel Harman), the vile valet who raped Anna.

"As much as available screen time allows, you try to give everyone shades," says Neame. "When we first meet Mr. Green, you see his good attributes. People liked him."

As for Jack Ross, "He's the one who knows the complexity of his relationship with Rose. He understands that it can't work, while she doesn't, and that creates the whole undertone to the piece."

Interestingly, the show's most prominent character departure, Dan Stevens's Matthew Crawley, was triggered by Stevens's concern that Matthew's nuances had all played out.

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After a long dance of a courtship, Matthew married Mary and they had a son, whom Matthew saw just before being killed in a car crash.

"Dan felt there was no more to say," reflects Neame. "We were all terribly sorry to see him go, But it became a real turning point. It opened up whole new ventures for Mary and opportunities for new characters."

While the Mary/Matthew romance became a focal point of the first three seasons, Neame notes that from the beginning, he conceived Downton Abbey as "a family story. It's about the Grantham family and the world they live in."

He also acknowledges that the British aristocracy is uniquely positioned to make this story compelling, which is why British period dramas have become a movie and television evergreen.

"It's an expressly British genre," Neame says. "The country house and so on. We rebooted it for the 21st century. We livened it up."

That parlay succeeded to a degree "that doesn't happen often on television," he muses, and he admits it still hasn't fully sunk in that the series has ended.

"With all the interviews and so forth, it feels like it's still going on," he says. "It probably won't hit me until some time in January, when we would have been starting the preparation for a new season."

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In any case, Neame (above with Dockery and Fellowes) is confident Downton Abbey still has some shelf life ahead.

"I think it's the sort of show that people can binge-watch for years to come," he says.

He also suggests it has already had at least one concrete positive side effect: calling attention to the slowly vanishing old British estates.

Highclere Castle, where Downton has been filmed, is the obvious direct beneficiary, since the show has provided a huge financial boost, but Neame says there could also be a ripple effect.

"We've highlighted the preservation of an important piece of British history," he says. "These estates are where you go to see how people lived a hundred years ago."

As for the future of the fictional Downton characters, Neame says the major stories will be tied up at season's end, though not always with neat little happily-ever-after bows.

"The final episode will wrap it up," he says. "It's the end. There might be a movie, but it would be an adjunct to the whole thing. The end of the TV series finishes the story we set out to tell."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.












AMANZA - Ep.28

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Updated every Wednesday

Copyright ⓒ 2015 RollingStory Inc.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.











TRIBE X - Ep.15

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Updated every Wednesday

Copyright ⓒ 2015 RollingStory Inc.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.











Doesn't Get Better Than This: A Wrap Up of the 2015 Dubai Film Fest

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Arab Idol winner Mohammed Assaf delights fans on the red carpet at DIFF 2015



Undoubtedly, the Arab world is the epicenter of most news, all the time these days. But unfortunately for my own agenda -- which for those who don't know me is to help us understand "the Other" through culture -- it's seldom happy stories. Wrapped up instead in the chaos of war, destruction and those four little, capital letters that spell disaster for everyone, the Middle East is hardly a go-to place for feel good narratives.

Until early December, that is, when every year for eight incredible days, Dubai hosts the best bridge-building, and most understanding-centric film festival on earth. Yup, I said it, as far as giving humanity hope, the Dubai International Film Festival tops my list, way above Cannes, Berlinale or even my beloved Venice. This high rating is also due to the organization of DIFF, as the festival is known affectionately, which boasts accommodations at five star hotels like Mina A'Salam, galas at Madinat Jumeirah and screenings at VOX cinemas at the nearby Mall of the Emirates, all the while enveloping attendees in perfect December Dubai weather, a mix of blue skies, bluer seas and temps in the high seventies. I told you, it really doesn't get any better than this.

Following are a few highlights from this year's festival.

Star light, star bright, Aussie star I see tonight, Ewen Leslie

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I'm seldom impressed with celebrities, but I have to say that somehow their stars shine brighter in Dubai. In recent months I've rediscovered actors I used to follow and found new infatuations, cinematically speaking of course, and they've all been in Dubai. But none beat Australian thespian Ewen Leslie. Apart from his obvious good looks, Leslie is also a damn, damn good actor! His interpretation of a father who screws it all up in a moment in The Daughter, a modern day adaptation by filmmaker Simon Stone of Ibsen's The Wild Duck left me in tears, and without giving anything away, there is a scene towards the end of the film, where he wraps his leg around his movie-wife, in a hospital. That moment, that movement, nearly imperceptible, just turned up his performance from great acting to humanly perfect. It doesn't hurt that he smolders in person and is a damn nice guy too. I look forward to watching more and more from Leslie, and hope, for my own sake, that he'll be featured soon in some major Hollywood fare.

Talking with the festival's Chairman Abdulhamid Juma

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When I sat down with the man I credit with being a bridge of understanding for cinema in the Gulf but also Arab cinema throughout the world, DIFF Chairman Abdulhamid Juma, we immediately jumped into a talk about the first animated feature made entirely in the UAE, Bilal produced by Dubai company Barajoun Entertainment Animation. I, alas, had not watched the film, but I listened intently to his opinion. "I liked the way they tackled it," Juma said, about the character of Bilal ibn Rabah, who is considered the first muezzin (the man who makes the call to prayer five times a day in the Islamic world) and a trusted companion of the Prophet Mohammed. The story chooses to deal with Bilal's early years and avoid all religious references, so I was curious about Juma's thoughts on that. "They took it beyond religion, you never hear Mohammed's name in the film, or the word Islam," Juma admitted, "a great film is one that makes people sit and discuss for an hour, after watching it." And that's what Bilal did and still does, because it never actually shows the power of Bilal ibn Rabah's voice or what the religious implications of his life were.

Perhaps most importantly, Bilal offers a great way to understand and accept, two verbs we should use more actively these days.

The Star Trek Beyond phenomenon, AKA scenes from the future-land



Earlier this year, the Dubai Film and TV Commission held a press conference announcing the shooting of some scenes in the upcoming Star Trek Beyond to be held in the Emirate. Everyone from the cast and crew were in Dubai, including Idris Elba, whose character is still a bit of a mystery apart from his sultry voice heard in the trailer, and Chris Pine, whose thoughtful answer indulging my typical obsession with bridge-building across cultures made me reexamine a star I'd often bypassed. Only because of the cinematic choices he'd made so far. But now, after watching a sizzle reel from the shooting in Dubai as well as their new trailer, I can't wait to watch the new Star Trek and Pine in action, plus evil-villain-maybe or righteous-hero-unlikely Elba at work.

Living like a celebrity: Going behind the scenes of the VIP Lounge

Don't know a girl who doesn't like gifts. If I meet one who says she doesn't, I won't trust her, because I know she can't possibly be telling the truth. And in the spirit of DIFF their VIP gift lounge, designed to give celebrities the star treatment in every way, was splendid. I finally got the abaya (traditional Emirati national dress for women) I've always wanted, as well as some great Make Up For Ever foundation and fake lashes, while also enjoying a special cocktail courtesy of their bar, tended by Angus McGregor. Think of it as a candy store for grown ups and you get the idea. If you want to see more of the goodies, check out my Instagram account.

AMBI Pictures and the power to remake

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I've been a fan of Lady Monika Bacardi and Andrea Iervolino since our first meeting in Cannes, two years ago. Give me a strong yet feminine and successful woman and I'll always find her essence intoxicating. Plus her pairing with business partner Iervolino, a fellow countryman of mine, is a match made in cinematic heaven. These days, AMBI Pictures, their company, is working on a remake of Christopher Nolan's Memento, as well as a biopic of Ferruccio Lamborghini, the legendary creator of the iconic car brand bearing his family name, and an animated 3D film titled Arctic Justice: Thunder Squad, voiced by Alec Baldwin, Omar Sy and James Franco, among many others. In Dubai, they were there to premiere All Roads Lead to Rome, a rom-com starring Sarah Jessica Parker. They've also purchased a catalogue of titles that include the rights to Memento, but also The Ides of March, End of Watch and Begin Again, which means in plain terms that if anyone even wants to breathe about those titles, they'll have to go through AMBI Distribution. Cue thunderous applause.

The Young Journalist Award, with Gulf News Tabloid!

When the folks at DIFF asked me to mentor eight young men and women in the Young Journalist Award contest they run with Gulf News' entertainment insert Tabloid! I said yes. Maybe? I mean, how much do I really know or have to teach anyone... I'm hardly a journalist, and feel quite happy calling myself a blogger these days instead. But the idea to work with four women and four men who could inspire me through their own vision of this wondrous film festival was irresistible. Accepting the assignment turned out to be the best decision I've made in years. I spent a few precious moments in the company of eight individuals who make me proud to call them journalists, and through their struggles, their strength, their enthusiasm and their victories, I found new inspiration.

For that, I'll always be thankful to this group and I hope they all realize that winning was definitely not the goal of this contest. Connecting, with the world at large and with each other, through cinema is. But then they do have one amazing professor, at the University most of them share in common, so I think they'll do alright!

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Mohammed Almezel, Managing Editor of Gulf News, hands the Young Journalist Award to Sayema Wasi, while yours truly looks on


Netflix wants to change the narrative in the Arab world, but are they still in time?

Netflix is doing a lot of impressive things these days. They've revolutionized the way films are distributed with titles like Beasts of No Nation, a favorite of mine at the Venice Film Festival, by releasing the film simultaneously through their online video-on-demand platform and in theaters. This sent major theater chains in the US in a tizzy and when movie theaters like AMC and Regal call for a boycott, you know you're doing something right! If we can't see digital online screening of films and TV series as the way of the very-near future, we're definitely blind. By the spring of 2016, Netflix plans to tap into the nearly 370 million people who live across the region, some of whom are already familiar with the service and access it through a Virtual Private Network. The move may be a bit too late, since the idea already exists and was pioneered by ICFlix, most similar in style to Netflix and then followed by Starz Play Arabia and OSN Play. But Netflix biggest competition may come from itself, because so many in the UAE and Saudi Arabia are already connected to the US site through their VPNs. Only time will tell, but a few great, Netflix standard TV series set in the Arab world would definitely be welcomed. Lets see, things like a House of Cards with Khaled Abol Naga, or a Sense8 starring Ali Suliman and Saleh Bakri wouldn't hurt.

Looking at the Arab film market ahead, with Samr Al Marzooqi

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I cherish and relish my conversations with Dubai Film Market Manager Samr Al Marzooqi, because we can talk together about everything. Much of what we talk about I would never disclose to anyone else and he provides a humanity barometer for me, of what is happening in the region. This time around we talked about his one-year stint in the UAE army, where Al Marzooqi was among the first group of Emirati citizens to be drafted for mandatory service, after the law requiring such service of all male nationals between the ages of 18 and 30 was passed in June of 2014. But on the record, we also talked about the Netflix move to the Arab world, and the impact of the Dubai Film Market, which Al Marzooqi confirmed is, "the only leading film market in the region." With naysayers who were trying to predict an end of the market last year, I was personally glad to see DFM even better and stronger than before. Stalls full, people making deals, great networking sessions, the return of the Dubai Film Connection and some wonderful panels, which included one via satellite with Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos. Al Marzooqi addressed his disciplined, down to earth approach to DFM when he told me, "this whole ecosystem took us a long time to reach and from that perspective, I feel comfortable, but every year we look at improvement points, how we can do things much better the following year." He also echoed my doubts about the Netflix move to the region, if only because of the timing. "I'm glad Netflix finally woke up and decided to come to the Middle East, we have such a healthy audience here," Al Marzooqi said, "but I feel sorry that they did come late, as ICFlix has most of the market shares here, and Shahid doing a great job with MBC. I really wish Netflix the best."

#SupportArabCinema, Zinzana and the power of film over evil



When I sat in the audience of the theater where the Middle East premiere of Majid Al Ansari's Zinzana (an Arabic word for "prison") took place, I knew the cinematic game in the Arab world would never be the same again. Al Ansari, along with the support of Image Nation Abu Dhabi, has changed it all, from the quality to the stories, to the way cinema is watched in the Middle East. And along with his groundbreaking film, starring two great, beloved superstars in the region Ali Suliman and Saleh Bakri -- yes the stars I just mentioned above -- this young talent I proudly named the Arab Tarantino has revolutionized the cinematic world at large. As DIFF Chairman Abdulhamid Juma said about the young filmmaker, "this guy is going somewhere!" Indeed. Blending a script written by an American couple with visuals straight out of a Hollywood horror film, Arab regional accents mingling with each other courageously "Somewhere in Arabia", Zinzana also represents a commentary on the great creative powers available for the picking in a part of the world that is clearly born to make movies. And when watching cinema from the Middle East from now on, why not post about it on Istagram or Twitter and tag it with the hashtag "#SupportArabCinema" a campaign created by the great powers at Image Nation to promote cinema in the region.

Are you Worthy or will you get left behind?

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Ali F. Mostafa and Rami Yasin at the press conference for Worthy


Just as I knew while watching Zinzana that cinema in the UAE would never be the same again, when I watched the teaser for Ali F. Mostafa's upcoming post-apocalyptic thriller Worthy I felt a sense of triumph. I've long been an admirer of Mostafa's work, but also his pioneering vision for cinema in his country. Filmmakers such as Al Ansari today quote Mostafa's City of Life as their inspiration, their go-to film that made everything possible. I agree. It must have been incredibly difficult to create a film industry from scratch in Dubai, but if there is a single person I can look to as the spark, it's Mostafa. Pairing up with wonder company Image Nation Abu Dhabi was also the perfect way to ensure his vision for the first film of its kind Worthy to come out looking and playing like a real blockbuster. As Rami Yasin, one of the producers on Worthy pointed out at the press conference, Image Nation "give us the resources to be able to implement them for high production value, which Image Nation was expecting and is known for." In the words of Mostafa himself, the film is, "about survival and what a human being is capable of doing or even thinking when it comes to survive, the true essence," and pointing to the headlines coming out of the Arab world now, he concluded, "it's like we're going back to the dark ages. It looked for a period that we were really advancing and then now we are going backwards. How would the world be if it did go wrong?" Therein lies the premise of a film that will blow our socks off, when it comes out in the spring of 2016 and not a moment too soon.

Making arthouse cool in Cairo, and much much more

Zawya Cinema is a one-of-a-kind art-house theater in downtown Cairo. Easier said than done one would think, in a country known for its popular yet hardly ever original Arabic films. Yet Zawya continues to thrives, and after eight years of its "Panorama of European Film" showcase each fall, they are also moving on to a distribution branch of the brand, aimed to create a platform for independent Egyptian filmmakers, so that independent films can be viewed in cinemas but also on TV, at film festivals and on VOD. I met with Youssef Shazli, Executive Director of the Panorama of the European Film during DIFF and enjoyed our chat, looking forward of more things to come from them.

Because if we've learned anything from things so far, it's that it is not just about how we view the Arab world, but how the Arab world views us too, through our films, our video games and our culture outreach. And we only get one chance at it, so lets make it something positive, instead of violence and bad behavior.

All images courtesy of the Dubai International Film Festival, used with permission.

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The Catharsis of Star Wars

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On Christmas Eve, rather than leave town and see family, I stayed put. A minor but wearying illness, one that put me on a liquid diet -- except for the alcoholic kind necessary to survive holidays -- had worn me out. Also, my mother passed last winter and even if I could make it, I wasn't up to going home without her there, not as lousy as I physically felt. Stuck in the city alone I decided to take solace at the movies just as I've always done when life sort of sucks. My no brainer choice was Star Wars. Now, I am not too much of a sci-fi geek. I don't speak Klingon, never watched Battlestar Galactica in any of its iterations, and by the third Alien movie I started rooting for the slobbery beast with too sets of teeth: anything to get Sigourney Weaver to stop scowling. Star Wars is different.

I count myself among those that felt betrayed by George Lucas long before the most hated character of all time, Jar Jar Binks, bounded into our consciousness like a Rastafarian reptilian donkey man. Even writing his name makes me shudder in a Sideshow Bob on The Simpsons sort of way. Imagine it with me, Kelsey Grammar saying "Jar Jar," in lieu of "Bart," and following it up with his staccato groan. No, my ire came much earlier, via the Ewoks, or as I thought of them: Care Bears in space. In retrospect perhaps I've been too harsh on the little guys that seemed to have been inspired by the gopher in Caddyshack. I mean, him I liked.

Maybe it was just the boy of 10 that sat beside his mom and little sister in 1977 in the 1.0 version of a multiplex at the equally new at the time concept of an indoor mall, had by 1983 been replaced by an angry young man. When the Jedi returned, I was in my junior year of high school, my dad had died, and I resented everything, including that my iconic space escape had become just another avenue to sell toys and the Ewoks a way to market to kids too young to really appreciate the spectacular awesomeness of light sabers or R2-D2's dry wit as expressed via his iconoclastic whistles and hoots. I know my fellow member of generation X, Brett Ellis, on his podcasts enjoys verbally bitch-slapping millennials too coddled to grasp sarcasm. "When you said everyone gets a trophy you meant that as a bad thing?" I can hear one cluelessly reply to his snarky jabs that I thoroughly relish. I, on the other hand, envy their clinging to an idealism that seemed to elude those of us born after the baby boom and before HBO.

When the wildly popular and acclaimed revival of South Pacific opened at Lincoln Center in 2008, they chattered on NPR and in the highbrow press about the strange spectacle of seeing New York's elite shakers being moved to tears in their pricy front orchestra seats as the global economy circled the drain and two wars still raged. Graying heads wept when confronted with what, in their innocent youth with greatest generation parents, American optimism and certainty of purpose had looked -- and in this case sounded -- like as expressed via Rodgers and Hammerstein.

Most of the plebian former dope smoking, binge drinking, underachieving, slacking children of disgruntled hippies or the buttoned up squares that hated them of my generation never saw that show. Just like no one cried when we returned to that galaxy far far away on what began for me as a very gloomy Christmas Eve. As the iconic scroll of exposition began I felt an odd but not at all unpleasant sensation over my left shoulder. One that made me smile and my neck knots loosen. I am not a believer in the supernatural per se but for the first time since her passing I felt my mom's presence. Rather than reignite my melancholy it had the opposite effect. As if she'd been gone for so many months and had, like the Obi-Wan in The Empire Strikes Back, at last returned. While I heard those around me clap and cheer, men and women my age who probably never publicly displayed affection for a flick before, I realized Star Wars is the gen-X South Pacific, our link to a simpler time. One where we weren't constantly connected, the work day had an end, everyone watched the Battle of the Network Stars or the infamous Star Wars Holiday Special -- yes it does exist -- and we prayed for an old graffiti covered wall to someday be torn down not a new one to be built.

To the director, J.J. Abrams, also a fellow gen-Xer, I say a heartfelt thank you for giving those of us with a frayed denim jacket in the back of our closets and a mix tape we no longer have any way to play back that moment. One when we sat in the dark with our moms and imagined that a boy with an electric sword really could save a world.

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Eight Holiday TV Movies That Should Air in 2016

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When December's shopping and baking are done and it's time to relax over cookies and TV, we usually turn to feature films like Elf or A Christmas Carol. We might even look for I Love Lucy or Honeymooners Yuletide episodes or check out the newest holiday specials.

But television has been producing its own seasonal movies, hundreds of them, ever since the small screen was actually small. They run the gamut from brilliant to awful, but even some of the trashiest can be as sweet and comforting as cocoa on the first chilly night of the year.

The problem is that so many new films materialize each year while older ones tend to disappear quickly. And unlike movies released in theaters, too few resurface on DVD, Hulu or Netflix.

So I'm starting next year's Christmas list early. Here are eight holiday TV movies, in no special order, that I've enjoyed in the past and hope to see once more. They're only the first to occur to me, so I'm likely to make additional requests in the future. And I invite you to do the same.

It Happened One Christmas: Long before It's a Wonderful Life took its rightful place as a holiday treasure, this 1977 role-reversed version paved the way for its popularity by reviving the 1946 saga of the Bedford Falls family's crisis and redemption. Marlo Thomas stars as the self-sacrificing president of the building and loan company, Cloris Leachman as the bumbling but earnest angel who guides her, Wayne Rogers as Mary's loving spouse George and Orson Welles as wealthy, tyrannical Mr. Potter.

Home for the Holidays: A post-Flying Nun Sally Field stars as the youngest of four sisters returning to the country home of ailing patriarch Walter Brennan in this 1972 thriller. The prime suspect in the ensuing string of murders is stepmom Julie Harris, who Dad claims has been poisoning him, but over several dark and stormy nights it becomes clear that the family closet has lots of other skeletons.

Little Women: This 1978 retelling of the March sisters' Civil War-era life and loves is sweet, sensitive and fairly faithful to Louisa May Alcott's book. Susan Dey shines as Jo and heads a first-rate cast that includes Eve Plumb as Beth, Meredith Baxter as Meg, Greer Garson as Aunt March, Dorothy McGuire as Marmee, Richard Gilliland as Laurie and Robert Young as his grandfather. It served as the pilot for a series that, unfortunately, lasted only one season.

Ebbie: Scrooge, in this 1995 incarnation of A Christmas Carol, is a bitchy department store head played to the hilt by soap queen Susan Lucci. After four spirit visitations, including a comical one from a pair of rowdy galpal ghosts of Christmas past, she sees the light, reconciling with her niece and becoming a second mother to Taran Noah Smith's Tiny Tim.

Turn Back the Clock: Connie Sellecca plays an actress named Stephanie Powers (seriously!) in this 1989 mystery. After a New Year's Eve murder she can't piece together the following day, she wishes for, and gets, the chance to relive the previous year so she can prevent the death. It's a bit predictable but highly entertaining and stylish noir, right down to the dreamlike black-and-white opening with splashes of color painted in.

Christmas List: This lighthearted 1997 fantasy stars Mimi Rogers as a talented perfume consultant whose career and love life are at a dead end until her wish list winds up in her store's North Pole mailbox. It's fun to watch Melanie's dreams come true one by one, even her unwritten longing for a husband and family, and to see her get the best of man trap Marla Maples.

Silver Bells: Based on a Luanne Rice novel, this 2005 family drama brings bereaved Anne Heche together with single dad Tate Donovan, who sells his farm's evergreens in Manhattan each December. When his teenage son runs away to pursue a career in photography, Heche becomes his guardian angel, mentor and ultimately the catalyst for reuniting the two men.

Gift of the Magi: Marla Sokoloff of The Practice fame brings a lot of spirit to this thin but charming 2010 update of the O. Henry tale. She and new husband Mark Webber struggle to pay rent and keep a car running, but their biggest challenge comes when their efforts to buy each other Christmas gifts in secrecy nearly destroys their marriage.

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What a Cosby Prosecution Means

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There really should never have been much doubt that disgraced comedian Bill Cosby eventually would be charged with a sex-related misconduct offense somewhere at some time. In the much discussed unsealed affidavit Cosby swore to in 2005, he confessed to giving drugs to one woman and getting drugs for other women he wanted to have sex with.

This was tantamount to a smoking gun confirmation of what many of his alleged victims claimed and that was that he plied them with drink and drugs before he sexually waylaid them. It was also a numbers game. There were just too many alleged victims who said that Cosby, take your pick: drugged, fondled, molested, abused, intimidated and of course, raped them over the course of many years.

Cosby loudly protested his innocence and even filed defamation of character countersuits against some of the alleged victims. Meanwhile, legions of legal experts took it as a virtual article of faith that there were no legal grounds to prosecute him because the statute of limitations had long since run out on most of the claims.

They -- and Cosby -- were wrong. They either misread the rape laws in those states or simply assumed like so many others that a sexual abuser could get away with the crime simply by waiting out the calendar. More than two dozen states have no statute of limitation depending on circumstances in the nature and type of sexual assault. If the evidence was compelling a Cosby could indeed be prosecuted even decades after the assault in those states.

This gross misconception about prosecuting sexual crimes implanted the dangerous public notion that rape or sexual abuse could be minimized, marginalized or even mocked because the clock had wound down on when the crime could or even should be prosecuted.

A Cosby prosecution rightly tosses the ugly glare back on the wrong public perceptions about rape and sexual abuse and how easily the crime can still be blown off. But it also casts light on two other deeply troubling questions. One is why Cosby's alleged victims kept silent for so long. Cosby and his apologists endlessly used this ploy to trash his women accusers. This was a straw man argument if ever there was one.

The Iowa Law Review, in March, 2014, gave an answer. It found that rape is routinely underreported in dozens of cities. The rape claims were dismissed out of hand with little or no investigation. The result was there were no report, no statistical count, and no record of an attack.

The study zeroed in on the prime reason for this, namely disbelief. It's that disbelief that assures men such as Cosby are reflexively believed when they scream foul at their accuser. They lambaste them as liars, cheats and gold diggers, or ridicule and demean them as sluts. If things get too hot, they toss out a few dollars in hush money settlements and the screams are even louder that it was all a shakedown operation in the first place and the victim is further demonized.

As I wrote in a previous post:

Cosby is the classic textbook example of how men who are alleged to commit rape routinely get away with it. Contrary to the non-stop slanders of his accusers, some did go to the police, attorneys, and their agents at the time he allegedly victimized them. But they quickly ran up against the wall of suspicion, indifference, and flat-out contempt and blame. Decades later when they again came forth little had changed. They have been hit with the same wall of suspicion, ridicule, snickers, and even wisecracks about their motives and morals.


This wasn't the only reason it took so long to prosecute Cosby. He wasn't just another rich, mediagenic celebrity whose wealth, fame and celebrity status routinely shielded him from criminal charges. Or in the rare occurrence someone like him winds up in a criminal court, he can hire the best of the best legal guns to skip away scot free or get a hand slap punishment.

Cosby was a special case even by the standards of the rich and famed celebrity world. For a decade he reigned as America's father figure -- not black father figure but father figure. He embodied the myths, fantasies, and encrusted beliefs about the role that a caring, loving, engaged dad is supposed to have with his family. This rendered him almost an untouchable when it came to casting any mud on his character.

He cemented his Olympian-like icon perch when he hit the circuit for months and used his icon and. America's number one dad status to rant, rail and lecture blacks on their alleged slack, derelict, slovenly morals, criminality and educational torpor. For that, conservatives and the family values crowd hoisted him to their honor roll of heroes for supposedly having the guts to defy the civil rights and liberal PC crowd on race.

Cosby's rude fall from grace and now the prosecution will change much of that. It's a change that's long overdue.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. His latest book is Trump and the GOP: Race Baiting to the White House (Amazon Kindle). He is a frequent MSNBC contributor. He is an associate editor of New America Media. He is a weekly co-host of the Al Sharpton Show on Radio One. He is the host of the weekly Hutchinson Report on KPFK 90.7 FM Los Angeles and the Pacifica Network

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The Big Short

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Adam McKay's The Big Short is based on Michael Lewis' book about the 2007 financial crisis. It's what's usually termed a docudrama (a category that also applies to Spotlight, the recently released film about pedophilia and the Catholic Church). However the film's hybrid nature results not only from the use of actors (Brad Pitt, Steve Carell, Christian Bale, Marisa Tomei) to tell a real story, but from the complexity of its tale. It bears the burden of trying to explain how a pair of esoteric financial instruments few people understood, credit default swaps and collateralized debt obligations, could have created such a havoc in the lives of average people all over the world. During the course of the movie the economy of Iceland will tank and that of Spain will begin to titter. Many viewers of the film may still be perplexed about what exactly happened in financial markets and why for instance Lehman Brothers and Bear Stearns were allowed to fail while other financial institutions like A.I.G were bailed out with the help of the government. Here are a few choice quotes: "Tell me the difference between stupid and illegal and I'll have my brother-in-law arrested...truth is like poetry and most people hate poetry....I'm standing in front of a burning building and offering to sell you insurance on it." The following from Huraki Murakami also appears on the screen: "Everyone, deep in their hearts, is waiting for the end of the world." The language is plainly an attempt to bridge the gap between economics and emotion, but it also leaves many loose ends, the greatest of which lies in how the SEC and agencies like Moody's, that rate financial instruments, could have fallen asleep on the job. It's logical on one level and yet on another makes absolutely no sense. In his early writings Marx talked alienation caused by the division of labor. If nothing else The Big Short takes this to its logical conclusion in dramatizing an unregulated financial system that has little if nothing to do with the lives of those who actually have to work for a living.






{This was originally posted to The Screaming Pope, Francis Levy's blog of rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture}

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LOVE MAKER -- Ep.29

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Updated every Wednesday

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IMPULSE -- Ep.14

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Updated every Thursday

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Welcome 2016 with music instead of overhyped NYE party

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I ran across this meme the other day compliments of a friend, who shared it on social media:
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Admit it, we've all done it. This year, however, will be different. If you choose to go out, you'll welcome the new year by listening to one of your favorite bands with like-minded fans -- instead of attending some overpriced and ultimately disappointing party.

The Avett Brothers were trailblazers 10 years ago with a NYE show at Charlotte's Neighborhood Theatre. Now, everyone seems to be getting in on the idea.

Following is just a smattering of the NYE concert options happening in the Southeast and beyond. If you know of a show worth noting I failed to mention, please add to the comments. Enjoy and be safe out there!

  • The Avett Brothers with Asleep at the Wheel, Greensboro, North Carolina. Returning to the Greensboro Coliseum, where they celebrated New Year's Eve 2012, this promises to be a magical celebration with 20,000 fans singing along to match the band's crazed energy onstage, according to the website.

  • Yarn with The Morgan Wade Band, The Rives Theatre, Martinsville, Virginia. For the first time, this historic converted movie theater in uptown Martinsville is hosting a New Year's Eve concert with Rooster Walk Music and Arts Festival fan favorite Brooklyn-based alt-country band Yarn, who are promising a special mini set of one of our favorite singers and songwriters. Get tickets here. Yarn is also performing Friday, Jan. 1, at High Rock Outfitters in Lexington, North Carolina. Get tickets here.

  • Josh Shilling, Roanoke and Danville, Virginia. Another Rooster Walk favorite, the versatile singer/songwriter frontman of the newly revamped Americana ensemble Mountain Heart is playing New Year's Eve at the historic Hotel Roanoke in downtown Roanoke, Virginia. The Martinsville-area native is also set to perform as part of the Cabin Fever Series -- Harvest Jubilee in Danville, Virginia, on Saturday, Jan. 2.

  • Scythian, Raleigh, North Carolina. From the Celtic folk rockers' website: "We are honored to be headlining First Night Raleigh where we will play a 90-minute set leading up to the New Year. We've never been asked to help usher a city into a New Year and so are looking forward to toasting the start of 2016 with 15,000 of our dearest friends in the streets of Raleigh. Visit the website here. On Saturday, Jan. 2, this MerleFest favorite will perform at The Hamilton in Washington, D.C., with local bluegrass faves Second String Band. Visit the website here for tickets.

  • Rising Appalachia, Charlottesville, Virginia. Another FloydFest favorite, Asheville, North Carolina-based soulful folk/world troubadours Rising Appalachia, is performing at the New Year's Eve Gala with special guests Birds of Chicago and Elby Brass at The Jefferson Theater in Charlottesville, Virginia. Get tickets here.

  • Big Something, Roanoke, Virginia. These veterans of festivals including Rooster Walk and Front Porch Fest will perform Friday, Jan. 1, at Martin's Downtown Bar and Grill, 413 First St., Roanoke, Virginia.

  • Old Crow Medicine Show , Nashville. Before you can catch OCMS at MerleFest 2016, this perennial festival favorite will continue its tradition of celebrating New Year's Eve at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville today and tomorrow with Madisen Ward and the Mama Bear. NOTE: Both shows are sold out. The good news for those who didn't get tickets is WSM Radio broadcasting the Old Crow Medicine Show New Year's Eve concert LIVE. You can tune in at 11:30 p.m. (EST) on 650 AM, WSMonline.com, or download their free mobile app http://wsmonline.com/

  • Rusted Root, Pittsburgh. Rusted Root, FloydFest veterans jammy rock ensemble and Pittsburgh natives, who have been referred to as "a fanciful marriage of Dave Matthews Band and Morrissey," plays at the Rex Theater in the Burgh with Derek Woodz Band and Bastard Bearded Irishmen.


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ReThink Review: the Hateful Eight - Reservoir Cowboys

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As its promotional material is fond of telling us, the Hateful Eight is only Quentin Tarantino's eighth film in his more than twenty-year career. However, few if any other filmmakers have had as much of an impact on film and television as Tarantino has. And his films are so distinct, singular, and uniquely Tarantino-esque in their use of dialogue, violence, and genre that they're in a category all their own, making it nearly impossible to compare his work to any other director's. Tarantino's films can only really be compared to each other, and the Hateful Eight serves as an excellent progress report for how Tarantino has and hasn't evolved as a filmmaker, since not only does it find Tarantino revisiting the themes and conventions that define his work, but also bears similarities to his 1992 film that started it all, Reservoir Dogs. Watch the trailer for the Hateful Eight below.



The Hateful Eight takes place in the middle of a Wyoming blizzard sometime shortly after the Civil War. Bounty hunter John "the Hangman" Ruth (Kurt Russell) and his driver O.B. (James Parks) are transporting murderess Daisy Domergue (Jennifer Jason Leigh) to the town of Red Rock for a $10,000 reward. While heading to a remote trading post called Minnie's Haberdashery, Ruth picks up two men stranded in the storm -- former Union officer and fellow bounty hunter Major Marquis Warren (Samuel L. Jackson) and, later, former Confederate raider Chris Mannix (Walton Goggins), who claims to be the future sheriff of Red Rock.

When the five reach Minnie's Haberdashery, they find not Minnie, but four rather questionable characters -- Oswaldo Mobray (Tim Roth), a Brit claiming to be Red Rock's new hangman; a cowboy named Joe Gage (Michael Madsen); a Mexican named Bob (Demián Bichir) who says Minnie left him in charge of the Haberdashery; and former Confederate general Sandy Smithers (Bruce Dern). Over the course of a long night, we learn which of these nine people is who they say they are, what really brought them to Minnie's, and who will be left standing at the end.

The Hateful Eight is a Tarantino film through and through. The cowboy genre suits Tarantino well, since nearly all of his films are set in worlds full of armed, hard-boiled killers where violence or death could occur at any moment -- and the word "nigger" can be used liberally. The Hateful Eight also has the Tarantino staples of a chaptered format, a non-linear timeline, and characters who themselves are performing as someone else. We also see Tarantino's more recent interest in directly confronting America's racist roots, which can be seen in Django Unchained and Tarantino's vocal support of the Black Lives Matter movement. And, like Reservoir Dogs, the Hateful Eight mostly takes place within a single building as a group of killers attempts to figure out which among them is gunning for the rest of them.

But despite these similarities, the Hateful Eight isn't simply a rehash of Tarantino's previous films. And the main reason why is one of the major things that put Tarantino on the map from his first film in 1992 -- his use of dialogue.

From the beginning, characters in Tarantino's films talked like actual people -- a trait that remains oddly rare in film and television even today. Their speech was full of pop culture references, anecdotes, interruptions, theories, organic humor, and mannerisms that were entertaining, differentiated each character, and explained the relationships and power dynamics between them. But if you watch Reservoir Dogs, you'll see that some of these speeches -- like the one about the true meaning of Madonna's "Like A Virgin", the social convention of tipping at restaurants, and the story about the angry stripper -- do nothing to advance the story, up the tension, or even set up a payoff later in the film. They're just funny, cool, help establish a vibe, and that's about it.

While Tarantino has retained every bit of his penchant for sudden, gory spasms of violence, it's his ability to use dialogue -- and dialogue alone -- to ratchet up tension and push the story forward without diversions from entertaining but insignificant tangents that has undergone the biggest evolution over his career.

While this was sometimes evident in his earlier films, I feel like this evolution was first truly felt in the opening scene of Inglourious Basterds where Christoph Waltz as SS colonel Hans "the Jew Hunter" Landa interrogates French dairy farmer Pierre LaPadite (Denis Ménochet) about the location of a Jewish family Pierre is hiding in his basement. It's an excruciatingly tense scene that establishes the film's villain, elucidates his feelings towards Jews, and sets up the constant fear of discovery and violence Jews in occupied Europe experienced under the Nazis, all without ever leaving Pierre's kitchen table.

The Hateful Eight feels like the logical conclusion of Tarantino's sharpened, more focused use of dialogue. The Hateful Eight is both violent, gory, and suspenseful, yet it's virtually all talking in a nearly three-hour movie that spends the vast majority of its time within the walls of a single large room. It's the Tarantino film that looks and feels most like a play -- or, more accurately, a murder mystery, but about a murder that's yet to be committed. When I rewatched Reservoir Dogs for this review, I was reminded of how many scenes and gunfights take place outside the criminals' warehouse meeting place, providing diversity and action to keep the story moving. The Hateful Eight is almost completely contained within the four walls of Minnie's Haberdashery, yet manages to be even more tense even though nearly all of its battles, subterfuge, and evasions are verbal. But when the bullets do inevitably fly, Tarantino once again demonstrates that gunshot wounds in his films are the most splattery and skull-destroying in the business.

Of all Hollywood directors, Tarantino certainly seems to have the game figured out better than the rest. He puts out films at the comfortable pace of one every three years or so, giving each enough time to be appreciated and discussed on its own while providing enough distance between films that moviegoers remain hungry for his next project. And when Tarantino releases a film, each one is so indelibly imbued with his unmistakable voice, DNA, and love of film history even as his films change time periods and genres that they're sure to delight his fans and film buffs alike, even if the movies themselves don't leave viewers with any deeper understanding of the world or the human condition. But they absolutely deliver a fun, funny, bloody, unique, exciting, and -- most importantly -- surprise-filled time at the movie theater. And it's hard to ask for more than that.


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31 Eye-Opening Quotes From Some Of 2015's Most Buzzworthy Blogs

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An Open Letter to the Princess Leia Body-Shamers

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Dear Princess Leia Body-Shamers:

Twitter is ablaze with angry troll tweets about how Carrie Fisher (a.k.a. Princess Leia in the new "Star Wars" movie) has aged in the decades since the first "Star Wars" movie was released in 1977. You say she looks fat and old now.

I have this to say to you: Stop it, you stupid, ignorant young idiots. Carrie Fisher was in her 20s when she wore the Princess Leia sex-slave metal bikini in the original "Star Wars" movie. Most people will not have that body ever, and no one has that body three decades after they were in their 20s.

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So why express your disappointment at her appearance in the new "Star Wars" movie when she is close to 60 years old? Do you have any clue as to how you will look when you are close to 60 years old? Do you think you will have a small waist, sculpted abs and a general lack of body fat or wrinkles decades from now, just because you want it to be true?

Well, here's a reality check for you. You may not want to age or look older decades from now. But you will look older decades from now, even with Botox. I look older than I did decades ago, and I hate it. I actually cringe at photographs of me these days, because apparently I have an image in my mind of me looking younger than I really look now. Aging sucks.

So shut up, please, about how Carrie Fisher looks old or heavy. All of you will look older and no doubt heavier many decades from now, as well.

Stop the fat-shaming and age-shaming. Anyone who lives long enough to reach middle age or older will be beset with the internal and external manifestations of a life well-lived, and a body that shows the unfortunate realities of aging.

Hopefully you will appreciate this message when, decades from now, you have lived beyond your attractive youth. If you are that lucky.

photo credit: Digital Painting: Princess Leia via photopin(license)

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10 Reasons 'Star Wars: The Force Awakens' Is the Best 'Star Wars' Film Ever Made

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Warning: major spoilers for Star Wars: The Force Awakens ahead.


Last week, I wrote two pieces panning Star Wars: The Force Awakens. The first one went viral -- around 100,000 "likes" and more than 12,000 shares at last count -- while the second one, intended in part to clarify the first, was widely read, but less so.

The second article was necessary in part to explain how, despite finding The Force Awakens full of "plot holes," I nevertheless very much enjoyed it. As for the first article, it set off a firestorm of discussion over what a plot hole is (as explained here, it's simply a logical inconsistency in a narrative, whether critical to the plot or not) and polarized readers into two camps: those who saw not even one of the flaws I saw in the film, which largely accounted for the response on Facebook, and those who saw nearly every single flaw I called out, which was the dominant reaction on Twitter.

The division yet again confirmed, as if any confirmation were needed, that we live in artificially polarized times. Apparently, The Force Awakens can only be regarded as a great or appalling film, and nothing else.

In law school, they taught us to argue both sides of any issue with zeal and ferocity. When I left the law to focus on my poetry, I realized I was in even worse shape than most of my fellow law school graduates: Not only could I effectively, if all too often gratingly, argue both sides of an issue, but my penchant for passionate self-expression inclined me to take personally any side I happened to be advocating.

I now find myself, far too often, feeling strongly about both sides of a divisive issue. This may not be a cure for contemporary polarization, but it does mean that I'm more inclined than many to, having just made the case against J.J. Abrams' The Force Awakens, now with equal fervor and sincerity make the case that in fact the film has no plot holes at all and is every bit as good as -- indeed, even better than -- people have been saying.

So here are 10 reasons why irate critiques of The Force Awakens miss their mark:

1. You wouldn't watch the seventh film in a seven-film series without first watching its six predecessors, would you?

Or critique such a film via complaints that watching those six predecessors would have eliminated? Of course not. And yet that's what so many reviewers criticizing The Force Awakens have done.

So let's be clear, then: While according to Star Wars lore the Jedi have most often interpreted the idea of "bringing balance to the Force" as requiring the destruction of all Sith (users of the Dark side of the Force), George Lucas himself has repeatedly said otherwise, suggesting instead that "the overriding philosophy of the movies is the balance between good and evil."

Elsewhere he has remarked that the "issues of nature" he wanted to focus on in the Star Wars films included "the idea of positive and negative, a push and a pull, a yin and a yang." In 2002, he wrote that the "mythological footing" of the Star Wars films depends on the idea that "the Force has two sides, the good side, the evil side, and they both need to be there.

Most religions are built on that, whether it's called yin and yang, God and the devil -- everything is built on the push-pull tension created by the two sides of the equation" (emphasis added). And, much like those religious analogs, Lucas has allowed that the two sides of the Force are able to act upon humans every bit as much as through their direction.

What this means, in brief, is that in the galaxy of Star Wars the Force is a mystical, essentially divine energy whose sole purpose is to make sure that neither the good guys nor the bad guys ever pull out a permanent win. More specifically, the Force compels both the good guys and the bad guys of the Star Wars galaxy to play out the same plotlines over and over again, because only by repeating these plotlines can the Force ensure that neither the good guys nor the bad guys will permanently gain the upper hand.

Essentially, the Force is an invisible script, and as long as everyone stays on-script -- which the Force uses many subtle means, and many not-so-subtle vessels, to ensure -- the Force is preserved (or, if you like, it "wins"). All of this is clear from the original Star Wars trilogy and its prequels, and indeed it should be so obvious to moviegoers, whether or not it is to the Jedi, that it's rather astonishing that none of the critics of The Force Awakens seem to realize that, from a certain perspective, the actual "bad guy" of the Star Wars films is the Force itself.

It's the Force that pushes Force-sensitive young people toward the "Dark side" whenever the good guys have gotten too powerful, just as it's the Force that subtly compels the bad guys to make the kind of mistakes even a James Bond villain would blush at whenever they're getting too powerful. Stated even more simply, in the galaxy in which Star Wars takes place, free will is in substantial part an illusion; it's no coincidence that one of the more commonly used Force powers is mind control, and another (as we see Kylo Ren employ repeatedly in The Force Awakens) mind invasion.

The Star Wars version of a deity puts its thumb on the scales of war and justice routinely, and if it often seems as though that thumb is a benign one it's only because (a) the good guys are losing for most of the first six Star Wars films, and (b) we tend to attribute the successes of the bad guys in Star Wars to dastardly scheming, rather than a pinch of dastardly scheming and a whole heap of deus-ex-Force.

It's impossible to watch a Star Wars movie without understanding that the entire series has the equivalent of a literary conceit. And like all conceits, the Force is not merely a rhetorical structure but a totalizing organizational principle. It's the Prime Directive in Star Trek and the MI6 in the James Bond films and the sequential manifestation of Doctors in Doctor Who all rolled into one. And yes, the Force has always been "meta-" inasmuch as the real "balancing" force in Star Wars is the desire of its writers to build drama and suspense in the films and thereby generate a massive and lucrative viewing audience.

The Force is a proxy, then, for the film's writers, which simply means that George Lucas and now J.J. Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan are more honest than most screenwriters, not more cynical. It means, too, that when a character acts oddly in Star Wars -- as they often do, with it often, and wrongly, being chalked up to bad writing -- it is in fact, in the world of the films, because that character is either (a) being manipulated by the Force, or (b) trying to combat the Force to re-assert his or her free will.

Never before has a film series so roundly played its own leads -- both protagonists and antagonists -- for fools, as the real power-broker of every Star Wars film is never shown on-screen. In a sense, what Star Wars does is offer viewers a meta-drama whose actual topic is fantastical narrative itself -- specifically, the way in which such narratives often seem like chaotic romps through the imagination when in fact they constitute humankind's attempt to micromanage and even police what any one imagination can conceive.

The good-versus-evil dynamic that has dominated literature and our collective imagination since antiquity is in fact an artificial overlay we devise to pretend that we are the final authors of our own existence; it is too terrifying to contemplate, perhaps, that Good could entirely vanquish Evil and win permanently, or vice versa, and that it's our own shortcomings that make the former impossible. This is why, over time, our narratives -- much like the Force -- always bring both the good guys and the bad guys back into the ring for another round. And ever since Joseph Campbell taught us about "monomyths," these "rounds" have looked a lot like, much like the Star Wars films themselves, the same story being told to us, by us, again and again and again.

2. In view of all the above, Rey is most definitely not a "Mary Sue," whatever Max Landis may say.

A "Mary Sue" character serves as both a wish-fulfillment fantasy and a proxy for the writer who writes her. A "Mary Sue" figure is a self-expressive ego-stroke; she therefore not only kicks butt -- usually beyond all plausibility -- but must also be witnessed by fictional bystanders, and repeatedly, kicking butt. I'm not very interested in or convinced by the term "Mary Sue" in the first instance, but much more importantly, none of this has anything to do with The Force Awakens. Indeed, the writers of The Force Awakens are at great pains to remind us throughout the film that Rey is not naturally as competent as she appears to be during the film's runtime. And the reason for her preternatural competence during the film's runtime is -- you guessed it -- the Force.

While it's true that Rey's remarkably smart, agile, and self-sufficient as The Force Awakens begins, it's entirely understandable that this should be so given that her origin story is similar to Luke Skywalker's only in its most general outline. Yes, Luke was a bit of an idiot early on in the original Star Wars trilogy, but that's because he was raised middle-class by two loving relatives. Sure, he was a crack shot and had an inquisitive mind, but if he often seemed, also, to be a bumbling farmhand, it's because that's by and large what he was. His very early years did not substantially harden him.

Rey's early years could not have been more different. Abandoned by her parents, she was not left in the care of loving relatives, but rather had to fend for herself on a planet every bit as inhospitable as Tatooine. She learned to dexterously make her way through dangerous space wreckage to salvage high-tech detritus; she learned how to defend herself against the (largely male) scavengers who likewise spent their days swarming over downed Empire spacecraft; she learned far more than just rudimentary piloting and repair skills because having these allowed her to do paid work for Jakku heavy Unkar Plutt, including the many months or even years of work she did for him on the Millennium Falcon -- one reason she knows it so well in the film, before she's ever flown it.

So yes, Rey is an exceedingly competent young woman when we first meet her, not because she's a "Mary Sue"-like stand-in for her writers' wish-fulfillment fantasies but because, with no family or friends to protect her, she would've been dead long before the events of The Force Awakens if she hadn't been.

But the movie doesn't rely on this back-story to explain Rey's heroism in the film. Sure, she fights off Unkar's unskilled thugs using basic staff-fighting techniques; and sure, she fixes the Millennium Falcon twice, using knowledge she gained during the period she was its chief mechanic; but that doesn't explain why she's able to pilot the ship as well as she does, or shoot a blaster as well as she ultimately does, or wield a light saber as competently as she finally must in her nighttime, deep-forest battle with Kylo Ren.

What explains those competencies is not some beyond-the-film conspiracy theory but the fact that Rey herself is absolutely astonished by these events. When she pilots the Falcon like a pro, thereby saving her and Finn and BB-8, her excitement afterwards is mixed with bewilderment. She begins to tell Finn that she has no idea how she managed the feats she did, but her monologue is quickly interrupted by other events. After Han gives Rey a laser pistol and she begins mowing down stormtroopers with it, she stops and stares amazed at the gun -- unable to understand how she's so competent with it.

Her battle with the thrice-shot Kylo Ren, who doesn't use the Force on her because he's hoping to make her his pupil (an offer he formally extends during their duel) begins with her looking dogged but sloppy, repeatedly using the saber to thrust instead of slash, until she consciously focuses on the Force -- at which point the battle turns in her favor.

The point is clear, almost to the point of being heavy-handed: Rey is highly competent, but the only thing that allows her to be supernaturally competent is the supernatural energy known in the Star Wars galaxy as the Force. The Force, as these films have already well-established, not only makes one more competent, it also makes one better able to discern others' motives and intentions and, yes, even to be luckier than the average bear.

If you think Rey is just some amped-up Luke, you understand neither character; if you think Rey is some writer's fantasy of himself transplanted into the Star Wars pantheon, you've missed a boatload of obvious clues in the film itself telling you that Rey is entirely the product of in-world influences.

3. As a character, Kylo Ren is vastly superior to Darth Vader.

This is not a knock against Vader so much as it is an acknowledgment that (a) we get Vader's back-story in a trio of prequel films that are universally reviled, making it impossible to fully appreciate the complexity of his journey on the grounds that that journey was exceedingly poorly written and acted; and (b) in the original trilogy, Vader is thrilling largely because of his now-iconic aura of malice, not because his last-minute decision to save his own son from being murdered was a tear-jerking character evolution.

The history of last-minute conversions in literature is a long and storied one, and it's not at all clear that Vader's own turn was particularly subtle or even interesting in this longer view. Frankly, you can read plenty of interviews with Lucas in which he implies a degree of embarrassment over Vader's character, particularly as he was drawn early on in the original trilogy.

For the reasons above, Kylo Ren is a refreshingly blank slate. His back-story comes without baggage, and unlike Vader in the original trilogy, Ren does not begin this new trilogy as a textbook baddie. But it's more than that: Ren's role in this story is nothing like Vader's in Lucas' original trilogy, and indeed there is no character in those earlier films who resembles Ren whatsoever -- except, that is, for Luke after he begins seriously contemplating the power of the Dark Side.

The fact that Ren's closest analog is the protagonist from the original trilogy is what makes Ren a fascinating bad guy right off the bat; far from being merely a rehashing of an earlier narrative arc, Ren answers the question that arc has begged for decades: what if Luke had gone bad?

Ren, like Luke, is a young man born to someone powerful in the Force and someone else with many other admirable skill-sets. But where Leia, Han, Yoda, and Obi-Wan were able to keep Luke on the right side of the Light-Dark divide -- a line that Luke, like Ren, found himself astraddle -- Leia, Han, and Luke were quite evidently not able to do this for Ren. Quite understandably, Luke not only blames himself for this but (given the intervention he received during his own youth) feels it particularly acutely. The result of Ren rejecting his Jedi training so early is that he does not learn to master the Force to the degree that Luke does; as The Force Awakens begins, Ren is strong in the Force but also inconsistent in his usage of it. Indeed, as Snoke points out, Ren is only in the early stages of his training; and, as Han points out, one reason Snoke has not been training Ren with great attentiveness is that he is really just using him for his own purposes. Keeping him strong -- but always in desperate need of more training -- is part of that.

So Ren is strong enough in the Force that he can still fight Finn and Rey at the end of The Force Awakens despite having been wounded not just one but three times by a mix of bowcaster and light saber strikes; however, he is not so strong that when the Force intervenes to take Rey's side during her interrogation, he doesn't quickly meet his match Force-wise. So if, when we first met Vader in 1977, he had mastered the Force and seemed largely in control of himself, when we first meet Ren he is younger than Vader, has not yet mastered the Force, and is still in the midst of being "torn apart" by his own and the Force's Light and Dark sides.

We can better understand how strange Ren's positioning is in the plot of The Force Awakens if we consider that both Snoke and Hux are substantially less conflicted than Ren is about their reasons for doing what they're doing. Snoke has been largely underestimating the Resistance, perhaps because they are a tiny force -- much smaller than the Rebel force of the original trilogy, it appears -- and it is Hux who pushes to destroy several planets simply to punish the Republic for secretly providing financial assistance to an outfit which is, in his Nazi-like view, a detestable congregation of disorderly, mixed-race rabble. Watch the film again and you will see that Snoke seems oddly removed from the current strategies being employed by the First Order -- as though he has bigger fish to fry, namely Skywalker -- and that Hux is contemptuous of Ren's (at least by comparison) immature angst. Which, of course, is the point.

When Ren screams at Rey that Vader's old light saber is "mine," it is not merely the rage of a petulant child we hear, though there is that, but also of a young man whose only anchor, having rejected the pieties of his parents, is a belief that his birthright comes, instead, from his grandfather. Ren at once worships Vader and needs to believe he was destined to be like him, even though, as a teacher, Snoke is no Palpatine and therefore Ren's chances are, as he senses and Han confirms, rather slim.

If Rey was a self-sufficient orphan and Luke a much-loved one, Ren is of an entirely different breed. Ren is a young man who grew up in a time of relative peace, raised by parents who only knew how to be a soldier-politician (Leia) or a space smuggler (Han) and who now have, in retrospect, come to realize that they never had any parenting skills.

In Ren's mind, his parents' sin was to have outlived their greatness -- a mistake his grandfather didn't make. Inasmuch as The Force Awakens is in large part about what happens when lifelong warriors like Luke, Leia, and Han become exhausted or drift outside their element in peacetime, Ren's rebelliousness underscores that there is always a price to be paid for thinking that the time for battling is over -- and perhaps, too, that upper middle-class boys always fruitlessly dream of "greatness" in times of peace.

Therefore, to compare Ren to either Luke or Anakin Skywalker is a grave disservice to the distinctness of his character, back story, and likely character arc. Just so, reading Ren as the clearly designated disciple of Snoke, rather than a seriously confused disciple of his own deceased relative Vader, is a grave error.

4. Finn is the character Star Wars fans have waited a lifetime for.

Never before has a franchise as lucrative as Star Wars provided such robust fan service as is epitomized by the character of Finn. In the cult-classic Clerks, Randal Graves (Jeff Anderson) opines that the Rebels killed thousands of innocents when they destroyed the second Death Star in Return of the Jedi. His reasoning is that, because the second Death Star wasn't completed when it was destroyed, there were untold thousands of independent contractors still on board when it was blown up.

It's a silly -- if oddly rational -- argument, but it also underscores moviegoers' collective sense that at least a few of the Empire's goons must have been undeserving of mass murder. After all, the Stormtroopers of the original trilogy were brainwashed clones, just as the Stormtroopers of The Force Awakens are brainwashed kidnapping victims. How much moral responsibility does a minion or paid employee really have, when and where he -- be he clone or abductee -- has either been brainwashed or simply put into a no-win, wrong place-and-wrong time situation? Randal asked that question back in 1994, and, in a stunningly direct reply, J.J. Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan have now answered by confirming this key fan theory as correct: in other words, no, not all those stuck on a Death Star-like super-weapon are evil. In another film, this sort of fan service would have been a three-second gag; in The Force Awakens, fans' query about the moral standing of low-level grunts in the Empire is given answer at the level of a top-line protagonist.

While there's still much we don't know about Finn, including his parentage, we do know that the male lead in this next Star Wars trilogy is a janitor -- not a princess, an alien creature, a swaggering space pirate, or a wide-eyed farmhand-with-a-dream. It's the stuff of fan fiction, not big-budget Hollywood screenwriting, and it's remarkable that thus far critics of the film have given The Force Awakens so little credit for it. While Luke Skywalker was, in a sense, a proxy for the wide-eyed moviegoers of 1977, who'd never before seen a science-fictional narrative on this scale, Finn is a stand-in for the clear-eyed and somewhat cynical moviegoer of this century -- who always wonders what she might say or do were she transplanted into a somewhat ridiculous fictional universe.

Finn's well-intended but chauvinistic impulse to take Rey's hand whenever they're running together is the charming emulation of a boy who's read one too many mass-market sword-and-sorcery paperbacks; his trash-talking of Captain Phasma at Starkiller Base is the sort of schoolground hijinks many of us like to believe we'd bring to our own interstellar adventures. In short, Finn is reminiscent of Justin Long's character in Live Free or Die Hard (2007), an imperfect film that nevertheless can be credited with helping to bring the action film into the Age of the Fanboy. Some are understandably irked by that term and all it connotes, but those who see Star Wars: The Force Awakens as merely a remake of Star Wars: A New Hope have some explaining to do when it comes to Finn's character, as no one in the latter film resembles him. The closest we might come, in fact, is C3PO -- and yet, the idea of elevating an empathetic, C3PO-like figure to a first-order protagonist (no pun intended) is itself an example of risk-taking in a film not yet heralded for that quality.

5. Han's death was hard-earned, not cynical or contractual.

As The Force Awakens begins, Han Solo is separated from his wife and engaging in the same shenanigans he had already become infamous for four decades earlier. That might look like fun to us, but to Han it surely was misery -- and indeed, Han doesn't seem at all happy in The Force Awakens. Instead, he seems tired. And he should be; I can tell you that as I approach forty, nothing in the world sounds worse to me than repeating the behaviors of my youth. Nor do the interactions Han has with Leia in The Force Awakens offer any hope that the two will get back together; rather, they merely confirm that while the former couple will always care for one another, the time in their lives when that caring could express itself in the form of a romantic relationship has ended.

So Han will never again be a father, never again be a husband, and, as he knows perfectly well, will never again find being a rakish smuggler in any sense satisfying. He's a walking dead man: no purpose, no hope, no anchor. He can assist the Resistance in their fight against the First Order, but does anyone know better than Han that that fight will in fact be never-ending? Does anyone think that Han can be the eternal happy warrior, at least of the sort Leia became after Ren turned to the Dark Side? ("Happy warrior" here means only that you need the purpose fighting brings, not that you are actually happy.)

No, what Han wants, oddly enough, is exactly what Harrison Ford, the actor playing him all these years, has always said Han would want: a noble death. Han wants out of the cycle the Force has created, but he wants out on his own terms. Specifically, he wants to make his exit while engaging in a singular act of the very sort the cyclical, balance-oriented Force is not supposed to permit. He wants to give two fingers to the Force, ultimately, whether he thinks of it in those terms or not. And how better to do that than to contest directly with the Force at its very epicenter -- that place it is waging total war for control of a single soul? When Han meets Ren on that catwalk in Starkiller Base he is speaking at once to both the Force and to his son; the words he offers are for his son, but the real offering he has brought -- his body -- is for what passes for a god in the Star Wars galaxy, the Force.

The look on Han's face before he leaves for Starkiller Base tells us that he has made the decision to die. What we do not realize until the last moment of Han's life is that he has cagily created a situation in which he can spit in the eye of the gambler's fallacy: either his very human appeal to his son turns his son toward the Light and thereby unbalances the Force (against its "will") in favor of the Light, or else he compels the Force to do directly and openly what it usually does subtly and in the way that causes maximum surprise and anguish to all participants and onlookers. In short, Han authors his own death in such a way that if he survives, he has broken the Force's hegemony, and if he dies, he has done the very same thing.

6. The First Order of The Force Awakens isn't stupid, it's merely caught in the same cyclical, Campbellian "monomyth" that Han and Leia are.

Yes, from one perspective, it's bewildering to watch the First Order construct what is basically a third Death Star; from another, it seems things couldn't have been any other way -- as being caught in a myth-cycle underwritten by an unstoppable divine force (er, the Force) means (a) having to retread the same steps your predecessors trod, but also (b) always feeling tantalizingly close to breaking the mold. It's no coincidence that the First Order believes it can "fix" what the Empire did wrong merely by doing something similar a little bit better.

After all, that's been the story of our species from the start, as we say each time "this war will make things better in a way all the other wars did not," or "this invention will solve our problems in a way all our other creations did not," or "this political leader will be effective in a way no other has ever been." It's all rubbish, of course; the only way to break a cycle is to break the very wheel upon which that cycle depends. But just as we humans are more inclined to (as we see it) perfect the wheel than destroy it, so too is the First Order.

In this view, the Empire's failure in the original Star Wars trilogy was not a series of faulty design plans for a "Death Star" but the decision to be less vicious than it might have been from the start. After all, Palpatine originally built the Empire via years of political shenanigans, whereas Hux wants to fire his "Starkiller" weapon and destroy the Republic the very moment Starkiller Base is completed. That that weapon would, like the Death Star(s), be one that can destroy planets in a single shot is sensible because, really, what's the First Order's other option? Use conventional warfare? It's reasonable for Hux to think that the mistake made by his predecessors was not that their weapons were too powerful but that their resolve was too plodding.

Meanwhile, Snoke has no particular reason to improve on Palpatine's kill-all-the-Jedi strategy, as by the rules of the Force this is, in fact, the only way for his side of the Force to win: by eliminating the "balancing" function of the Force. For this aim to be achieved, anyone the Force could ever use as a "balancing" vessel must be killed. Seen from this standpoint, the First Order both knows itself to be recreating history and also has just enough reason to believe it isn't -- which is exactly what the Force requires, and why, in a sense, the Force is the real bad guy in these films.

If, in most films, we learn that "crime doesn't pay," in Star Wars we learn that nothing pays -- at least not for very long. For the Galaxy in which all these events take place to be truly free from the overbearing hand of divine interference, the Force would need to be vanquished permanently -- as only then could wars end "for good," whensoever they did end, or peace be eternally abiding, when it's finally forged. Until then, yes, the bad guys will delude themselves and the good guys be recipients of unusual luck; or, at other times, the good guys will delude themselves (e.g., Leia and Han after the original trilogy but before The Force Awakens) and the bad guys be the recipients of unusual Luck (e.g., the New Republic's inexplicable underestimation of the First Order until it's too late to reverse course).

7. Luke is not immaterial to The Force Awakens; rather, he's central to it.

Many have made much ado about the fact that Luke appears in The Force Awakens only at the very end; in fact, his presence is deeply felt throughout, an impressive bit of film-making when one considers that the nominal protagonist of the entire Star Wars universe is only on-screen in J.J. Abrams' new film for less than sixty seconds.

Luke recognizes, like Han, that he is caught in a myth-cycle. He feels this most acutely when the Knights of Ren kill his gaggle of padawans in the same fashion Anakin Skywalker once killed a roomful of younglings. So he flees -- not out of cowardice, but in an attempt to remove himself from a divinely authored narrative, much like Jonah does in the Bible. His hope is that his absence from the Force Narrative will compel that narrative's destruction, perhaps through the arrival of a new Force-user better able than he is to combat the Dark side. And of course he turns out to be correct: his absence from the Narrative soon enough compels an "awakening" (Snoke's term), specifically the Force's "decision" (as it were) to activate Rey, against her will, as a consequential Force-user. So Luke is in fact the author of the events of The Force Awakens, despite his absence for almost the entirety of the film.

Meanwhile, his decision to disengage from the Narrative presents, as a matter of screenwriting, a nice contrast to the decisions made by the other two main protagonists from the original trilogy: Leia returns to dutifully playing her role in the Narrative, and finds there only misery and continued struggle; meanwhile, Han returns to dutifully pretending that he can remain outside the Narrative, and finds, in time, that doing so is impossible. It is only Luke who deduces that for him to truly escape the Narrative he must actually do nothing at all. But to successfully do nothing, he must go where no one can follow him until such time as the Narrative has been compelled to respond to him, rather than vice versa. It's a sign that Luke is indeed, as the films have posited, a master of the Force -- literally.

No one could credibly see -- in any of this -- bad writing. Instead, it's as ingenious and courageous a use of a main protagonist as a blockbuster Hollywood film has dared in many decades. Can anyone else name a big-budget studio film whose most influential protagonist isn't really in the movie at all?

8. The Force Awakens has no plot holes; it's just in the uneviable position of having to continue telling one of the longest and most complex stories ever rendered on film, and having to do so within a two-hour runtime.

Most of the things that confuse you about this movie the first time around are explained via throwaway lines, as you realize when or as you see the film a second time. It's not an elegant solution to the problem of the big-screen epic, but it does mean that, plot-wise, everything actually does come together in The Force Awakens.

How did Poe survive the TIE Fighter crash but not come across Finn afterward? He ejected from the TIE fighter before impact, as did Finn, but was knocked unconscious until many hours afterward; when he awoke, it was nighttime and there was no sign of Finn, who'd long since left the scene of the accident. This is all explained in the film.

How did Han and Chewie find the Millennium Falcon so quickly after Rey began piloting it, when they hadn't been able to find it for years prior to that? Han explains that the Falcon puts off a unique signal that is activated only when the ship's engines are on; when Rey turns the Falcon on, Han and Chewie, who had been looking for that signal for years, pick it up on their computers immediately -- indeed, so quickly that they feel compelled to warn Rey that the same trick could readily be used by the First Order (who likewise know the Falcon's signature, from prior encounters with it).

How did the First Order get hold of the "map" that tracks the first 90% of Luke Skywalker's flight from the public eye? As Ren explains, the "archives of the Empire" contain that information because the remnants of the Empire had tracked Luke up to a certain point in the galaxy -- about 90% of the path of his "flight" from civilization. Luke subsequently manipulated R2D2 in such a way that R2D2 would immediately generate the remaining 10% of the map if a large enough convocation of Light-side Force-users were to occur -- which then did occur at the very moment Leia and Rey meet and hug. That's why R2D2 wakes up at exactly that point. This was fairly clear, if only imperfectly made explicit, in the film: we see Luke instructing R2D2; we see R2D2 wake up at the moment Leia meets Rey; we see Luke's Force-charged light saber seek out Rey to hasten her meeting with Leia; and so on. It's all in the film.

Why does Finn suddenly gain a conscience? Well, he's been brainwashed from birth to believe that the First Order are the good guys and the Resistance the bad guys, and nothing in his many years of janitorial service gave him any cause to doubt that, as the details of First Order military operations were not available to him; once he is given military training, however -- including instruction in blaster use and the basic handling of the taser-/saber-like weapons used by the First Order -- he is sent out into the field, and on his very first mission sees that the First Order is willing to kill unarmed to innocents for no reason whatsoever, so he defects. Why does he choose to defect so quickly? Because Captain Phasma observed his refusal to kill innocents; ordered him to surrender his weapon to her Division Command; found that the weapon had not been fired, despite her orders for all Stormtroopers to fire upon the Jakku civilians, and thereupon ordered him to be sent to "re-education."

Finn, knowing he was mere hours away from a years-long punishment that might successfully indoctrinate him as a killer, chooses to use a Resistance pilot as his getaway driver. Because, during his escape, Finn and Poe destroy more than a dozen First Order aircraft and kill scores of First Order soldiers -- including a number of high-ranking officers -- Finn understandably believes that he is the first name on the First Order's hit-list once they finish their work blowing up the New Republic's home planets (work which Finn knows will take only a day or so). All of this is in the movie.

Other easily missed items are readily recovered on a second viewing of the film. Does Maz Kanata really leave Luke's light saber in an unlocked basement room? No, the extremely secure blast door guarding that particular treasure opens immediately when Rey approaches it, because the Force is exerting itself. Doesn't anyone think it's strange that Kanata has the light saber? Yes, Han and Rey both do, but there's no time for Kanata to explain herself because the First Order attacks. Why does Leia choose Rey to retrieve Luke? Because by then she knows that the saber has "chosen" Rey, and besides which, she has an army to run.

Why does Finn know how Starkiller Base works? Because he was a janitor there, and the film is making the very obvious point that menial workers at the Base's main location would be far more likely to have walked all its corridors than those officers who only use the mess, the control room, and their own bedrooms. How does Rey speak Wookiee? Well, Jakku is a waystation for all sorts of creatures, and perhaps she learned it there -- or, perhaps the Force is putting its thumb on the scale again, causing Rey to not fully appreciate that she really shouldn't be able to understand Chewie.

Why does Poe say that the Starkiller weapon will go off as soon as the light disappears? It's not because Starkiller Base can only operate if it steals 100% of the power of a sun thousands of times its size, rather than merely 98.9% -- that would be a little silly -- but because the weapon has never been tried before, and has no mechanism to "shut off" its draining of the sun that powers it, and therefore the sun must be fully extinguished before the Starkiller weapon is ready to be used. Why does the greedy Teedo just give Rey BB-8? Because BB-8 is fighting back against the net Teedo has thrown on him, making him far too much trouble for the merely opportunistic Teedo to deal with. And so on. It's all in the film.

Never before has it been seen as a "flaw" for a film to require multiple viewings for viewers to fully appreciate and understand its complexities. And that trend shouldn't be bucked simply because some people resent giving more money to the Disney Corporation via subsequent trips to the theater to (re-)see The Force Awakens.

9. J.J. Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan faced a much harder screenwriting task than George Lucas ever did.

In 1977, there were no expectations placed on Lucas, and his science-fantasy space opera succeeded in part because America had not seen anything quite like it -- a credit to Lucas, of course, but also a confirmation that there was ample room for artistic failure. When Abrams and Kasdan began writing The Force Awakens, yes, they had the advantage of knowing that the film would make money even if no one came to see it -- due to prior merchandising agreements -- but also knew that this historic film series was coming off a decade of embarrassing critical failures. In other words, fan angst was high, but so were fan expectations -- a terrible combination.

Moreover, Abrams and Kasdan were faced with advancing by thirty years a story so complex that explaining all that had occurred in the intervening decades would be literally impossible. Their solution, and it wasn't at all an unreasonable one, was to write a movie that makes full sense if one merely sees it twice, while nevertheless implicitly promising that many more unanswered questions will be addressed in future installments. Abrams and Kasdan were saddled with decades of bad writing from George Lucas, and a mythic structure that almost demanded a cloying repetitiveness, and yet they managed to hit a home run with nearly every original addition they made to the Star Wars universe.

Consider: as noted here, Rey is exceedingly different from Luke Skywalker, and frankly in a way that makes Luke seem a little wooden; Kylo Ren is an infinitely more interesting and dynamic figure than Darth Vader, especially comparing the two at the end of the first third of their respective trilogies; Finn is an entirely original addition to the Star Wars universe; Hux is more homicidal and zealous than Tarkin, in a way that ups the ante in these films substantially; Snoke is more mysterious and less committed to his apprentice than Palpatine, and of course Ren does not yet appear to be a Sith, making the Snoke-Ren relationship less predictable and more ambiguous than the Emperor's with Vader; BB-8 may not be an improvement on R2D2, but he is thankfully more mobile and, as it were, even "younger-seeming" than R2D2 was in the original trilogy, giving him more opportunities for dynamism; the Resistance is smaller and less powerful than the Rebellion -- by far -- which makes it more interesting and its broader strategic positioning more dire; and the First Order is, frankly, less well-organized and competent than the Empire (cf. Phasma) which opens opportunities for greater rather than less dynamism on their side of the conflict.

Finally, more broadly, this new trilogy has, of course, the advantage of the largest stock of back-story in the history of Star Wars, which (a) enriches the writing options available for Abrams and Kasdan, (b) limits the amount of data-dumping and bland explication these films will require, and (c) enables viewers to more clearly appreciate every echo and deviation these new films will indulge. And of course, technology having advanced as it has, these new films will enjoy much better CGI than any of their predecessors -- and far less of the ham-fisted dialogue that George Lucas became rightly infamous for. It's the richest viewing experience the Star Wars galaxy has permitted us thus far, and we should be damn glad for it.

10. The Force Awakens comes to us at one of the most fraught moments in the history of Hollywood, and it's exactly the right movie for these times.

Television is overtaking film as the richest medium for multimedia entertainment; sequels, prequels, and re-boots that do not substantially challenge their predecessors are now the order of the day among big-budget blockbusters; VR entertainment in on the horizon, raising the question of how much connection we want or need to traditional Hollywood fare and storylines; Generation X is entering its "nostalgia sweet-spot," in which it ages just enough to realize that technology is moving more quickly than it can track, and now threatens to erase its happy memories of earlier times' relative simplicity; our collective sense of being at once tethered to the past and hurtling through an uncertain future is greater than ever before, and leaves us wondering whether or how our popular entertainments can capture this emerging metamodern cultural philosophy. The Force Awakens responds to each of these phenomena in different ways, but it responds to all in a way no other entry in a longstanding film franchise has. It is all well and good to say that the film offers us rip-roaring entertainment and a dollop of nostalgia-laden escapism -- as so many reviewers of the film have averred, and as is self-evidently true -- but it is quite another thing to acknowledge the historically unique challenges and achievements of the film, all of which permit it to be called the best in the Star Wars franchise thus far.

--

Seth Abramson is Series Editor for Best American Experimental Writing and an Assistant Professor of English at University of New Hampshire. His most recent book is Metamericana (BlazeVOX, 2015).

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The Cinema Year That Was: Zaki's Flick Picks 2015

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It's been a great year for movies, with a diverse assortment of high-profile and smaller scale films, true stories and big surprises, all emerging as some of my favorites for this year. Here's a countdown of my top ten for 2015:

(Click the links to read my full-length reviews/features)

10 - Ant-Man

After feeling a little bit of "superhero burnout" from Avengers: Age of Ultron last May, I really wasn't sure what to expect from this one. Quirky director Edgar Wright had departed the Marvel Studios pic about the microscopic superhero, and Peyton Reed stepped in at the eleventh hour so the project could keep its release date. Hardly an auspicious place to start. And so I was as shocked as anyone at how Reed and star Paul Rudd were able to subvert the usual Marvel tropes in service of a film that's feels so warm, fresh, and fun, and one that only grows in my estimation upon subsequent viewings.

9 - Trumbo

Star Bryan Cranston delivers a tour de force performance as Dalton Trumbo, the quirky, spirited screenwriter who got swept up by 1950s "Red Scare" paranoia and tarred as anti-American, becoming the unlikely face of what it truly means to be American in the process. As directed by Jay Roach from a script by John McNamara, Trumbo tells of a time long past, but feels like it's aimed at our specific historical moment.

8 - Straight Outta Compton

Also feeling like it's aimed at our specific historical moment is this riveting biopic tracking the rise and fall of NWA, one of the most influential hip-hop groups of the '80s and '90s. Featuring standout performances by a cast of young newcomers, director F. Gary Gray walks us through the usual highs and lows this kind of story calls for, but imbues the proceedings with a fresh sense of energy and immediacy.

7 - The Martian

I'd been anticipating the "Matt Damon on Mars" survival story ever since I first read the novel by Andy Weir. But while a lifetime of watching movies based on beloved novels had conditioned me to expect the worst when it came to seeing words translated to the screen, this was one instance where any changes were entirely understandable, and the screen adaptation preserved the essence what made the text so impossibly engrossing. Not only does Damon deliver one of his best performances, but The Martian is also a late career high-water mark for director Ridley Scott.

6 - Steve Jobs

Another biopic, but about as far from "standard" as it gets. I was disappointed that more people didn't glom onto this fascinating character study directed by Danny Boyle when it was released this past fall, but I guess it's a case of Jobs burnout given how many recent releases the late Apple founder has been the focus of. Regardless, with a script by Aaron Sorkin and a standout central performance by Michael Fassbender in the title role, Steve Jobs is a remarkable portrait of a complicated man.

5 - Mad Max: Fury Road

Three decades. Three decades I waited for another Mad Max movie after seeing the last one, BeyondThunderdome as just a wee one. Over the years, I'd heard rumors that director George Miller was gearing up for another installment of the post-apocalyptic franchise, but I had basically given up the ghost until, suddenly, Fury Road was announced five years ago, this time with Tom Hardy stepping in to Mel Gibson's iconic role. Honestly, when it came to a new Mad Max I would have been happy with something that lived up to its predecessors. Little did I know we'd end up with one of the best films of the year.

4 - Sicario

It's been three months since I watched Sicario, and the imagery still feels like it's right in front of my eyes. The thematic material is at the forefront of my thoughts. Anchored by Emily Blunt in a star turn that should (if there's any justice) open up vast new opportunities for her, and Benicio Del Toro's riveting supporting turn, the dark, violent "war on drugs" saga from director Denis Villaneuve gets under your skin and stays there. That's the mark of a great film.

3 - Creed

Nine years ago I put Sylvester Stallone's Rocky Balboa on my "best of" list for 2006. Like Stallone, I'd said goodbye to one of my favorite cinematic characters, and like the star, had moved on. The fact that we'd be here nearly a decade later with Rocky as a supporting player is surprise enough, but Creed, about a young boxer (Michael B. Jordan) who turns to Italian Stallion to train him, is engrossing and compelling above and beyond any extant interest in the Rocky connection. Director-writer Ryan Coogler got into the ring with something to prove, and I was gratified to see him go the distance.

2 - The Big Short

Director Adam McKay seamlessly transitions from comedy to drama with this incredibly complicated, impossibly compelling study of the lead-up to and aftermath of the financial crisis that nearly decimated the global economy in 2007 and 2008. Adapting the depth and breadth that author Michael Lewis brought to his book of the same name was no easy task, but McKay manages with aplomb, keeping our interest thanks to an all-star ensemble including Steve Carrell, Ryan Gosling, and Brad Pitt. The Big Short will grab you, grip you, and make you angry.

1 - Spotlight

And speaking of making you angry, that's sure how I felt after watching Tom McCarthy's Spotlight, about TheBoston Globe's 2001 investigation into criminal sexual abuse in the Boston Archdiocese. Anchored by one of the most egalitarian ensembles of big names I've ever seen (including Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, Liev Schreiber, and Rachel McAdams), the film drives home the important role that an effective news media can play in not only telling truth to power, but also giving much-needed succor to the ones who've suffered by those who abuse it.

******

And that's it for 2015!

Click here for a full list of my movie reviews from this year

Click here for a full list of my interviews from this year

For more movie talk, including an episode-long discussion of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, catch the latest episode of the MovieFilm Podcast at this link or via the embed below:


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Watch A Noob Play Lara Croft in RISE OF THE TOMB RAIDER

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What's Trending's mission to turn me into a gamer continues. sWooZie didn't make a whole lot of progress getting me through "Fallout 4," but with Meghan Camarena aka Strawburry17 and the latest "Tomb Raider" game, maybe I'll have more luck!

"Rise of the Tomb Raider" is the sequel to 2013's "Tomb Raider," which was the second reboot to the popular "Tomb Raider" franchise featuring sexy adventurer Lara Croft."The last game was kind of Lara's origin story," Meghan explained. "You got to see how she became the Tomb Raider. ["Rise of the Tomb Raider"] picks up where that one left off."

The game takes Lara through beautifully-rendered, dangerous landscapes as she searches for an ancient city that contains the secret for immortality. Me as Lara did surprisingly well climbing and jumping on an icy mountain, but skipping ahead to the desert and a cavern full of booby traps, I had a bit more trouble. Aiming and shooting is pretty difficult when death is bearing down on you.

All things considered, it's a good thing Meghan was there to guide me through it.

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This Will Be a Key Issue in the Bill Cosby Case

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With Bill Cosby now having been formally charged with aggravated indecent assault in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, the prosecutors and defense lawyers will soon start fighting over what evidence the jurors in his case will be allowed to hear. One of the most critical questions will be whether the prosecutors can present evidence relating to the many other accusations made against Cosby by other women. The judge's ruling on this issue may end up being the turning point in the case.

In a vacuum, Cosby's case may well be defensible. Jurors could conceivably decide that the complainant's testimony and the other evidence presented by the prosecution, including Cosby's admissions in his 2005-06 deposition testimony, are insufficient to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. But if they learn that dozens of other women have made similar accusations, the balance will shift dramatically towards the prosecution. Scientific research and common sense both agree that jurors are heavily influenced by evidence that a defendant has previously committed acts similar to the presently charged ones.

So will that evidence come in? That's a complex question, with the answer depending on the prosecution's specific argument for admissibility and the nuances of Pennsylvania's evidentiary law.

Historically, the default rule in criminal law has been against the introduction of "prior bad acts" evidence. There are, however, a number of exceptions to that rule. In particular, although such evidence usually isn't admissible for "propensity" purposes -- that is, to suggest that since the defendant committed another crime back then, he's probably the type of person who would have committed the presently charged crime -- the prior act can often come in if it's relevant for some "non-propensity" purpose.

For example, if the prosecution's theory in a murder case is that the defendant initially robbed the victim and then later killed her to prevent disclosure of the crime, the jurors would get to hear about the initial robbery -- not to show that because the defendant was a robber he's probably the type of person who would also kill, but to demonstrate the specific motive for the particular charged crime.

Alternatively, if there is something unique about the present incident, the prosecution may be allowed to demonstrate that this unique feature showed up in the defendant's prior acts. If, for example, a serial killer had previously left specific marks on his victims' bodies after killing them, the prosecution may be able to introduce this evidence to show that a new victim with the same mark was killed by the same person.

Prior acts can also be used to show the absence of mistake or accident. For example, a defendant accused of groping someone on a subway may admit the touching but say that it was inadvertent. If so, the prosecution may be allowed to show that on past occasions he had deliberately engaged in similar conduct, thus making it more likely that the presently charged conduct was also intentional.

Finally, and of particular relevance here, many jurisdictions have enacted rules that make it easier for prosecutors to introduce prior bad acts evidence in sex offense cases. The rule in federal cases, for example, is that "[i]n a criminal case in which a defendant is accused of a sexual assault, the court may admit evidence that the defendant committed any other sexual assault," and "[t]he evidence may be considered on any matter to which it is relevant." Although many states have adopted similar rules for sex offense cases in state courts, Pennsylvania has not, so the issue in Cosby's case will be fought out under the more generally applicable rules.

The prosecution may argue for admissibility on "signature" grounds, based on the theory that Cosby used a similar approach with other alleged victims. If so, that will be a high bar to clear. Pennsylvania's Supreme Court, for example, has explained:

Evidence of other crimes is said to be admissible [to] prove other like crimes by the accused so nearly identical in method as to earmark them as the handiwork of the accused. Here much more is demanded than the mere repeated commission of crimes of the same class, such as repeated burglaries or thefts. The device used must be so unusual and distinctive as to be like a signature.


Whether the prior acts evidence in Cosby's case meets this standard will depend on the specific facts. If the only common theme is that he allegedly drugged women without their knowledge before making his advances, that's probably not enough to constitute a "signature." But if there's more -- for example, if the prosecution has evidence that Cosby regularly used a specific drug and a specific method of delivery, and consistently took a specific series of steps -- that may be enough.

Regardless of the details, two things are certain -- the prosecution will use every plausible theory it can think of to get Cosby's "prior acts" evidence in, and the defense team will do everything it can to keep it out. We'll all have to wait and see how this plays out.

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AMC's Into The Badlands Season 1 Finale Explosive

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Loyalties are questionable. Love is in jeopardy. And hidden motives come to light. All from Machiavellian power plays. Into The Badlands sounds like Game of Thrones all over again.

At the end of previous episode 4, Sunny (Daniel Wu), head clipper to Baron Quinn, meets The River King (Lance E. Nichols) to discuss payment of granting passage out of the badlands. Sunny and his pregnant lover Veil (Madeleine Mantock) will have safe passage if Sunny delivers the head of the teen boy M.K. to The River King. A month ago, M.K. (Aramis Knight), now a colt in training to become a clipper like Sunny, was among a shipment of 28 cogs, slaves, to be delivered to The River King. When The River King's men opened the hatch, all 28 cogs were slaughtered, supposedly killed by M.K. after his dark energy was unleashed. To The River King, the loss represented not only a loss of money, but also a loss of respect. He then shows Sunny the wanted poster of M.K., and asks, "Do we have a deal?" While Sunny looks on silently.

Whereas, in the next episode 5, at The Fort of Barron Quinn atop a wall, Sunny trains M.K. in clipper fighting tactics. Now tired after the constant sparring, M.K. warns Sunny to stop. Sunny then quickly grabs ahold of M.K., bringing the teen to the edge of the wall, and asks, "Or what? You're gonna kill me? Just like you killed those people on the boat?" He also asks M.K. what happens to him if he can't control his power. M.K. replies, "I can. You saw it at the parley." Which in episode 4, while empowered with his dark energy, M.K. refrains from killing Tilda (Ally Ioannides), a Butterfly warrior, and daughter of The Widow (Emily Beecham). Sunny then asks, "How do I know you weren't lucky?" Then dramatically in the next moment, it's now M.K. holding Sunny at the edge of the wall. Sunny now sees the young colt's eyes glazed over in black, a sign of his dark energy, as M.K. replies, "You don't," and has Sunny fall from the wall. Sunny then awakes gasping, which also awakes Veil as both were in bed at her home.

"Sorry for waking you," says Sunny, as the encounter with M.K. was only a dream. "It wasn't you," says Veil soothingly, as she follows by saying, "It's being pregnant. You know I won't be able to hide it much longer." In the badlands while serving a baron, a clipper is not allowed to father a child. And Veil tells Sunny in the pilot episode that she wants both him and the child. Sunny then tells Veil that there's a way out of the badlands. "There's a boat going up river. But the price is steep," says Sunny, thinking about M.K. "How steep?" Veil asks softly, for she too knows M.K. But Sunny doesn't divulge to her about the deal. Thus all happening in episode 5.

In the beginning scene of season 1 finale episode 6, titled, "Hand of Five Poisons," Sunny rides his motorcycle up to the docks to meet The River King. While meeting inside, he drops a bloody sack on top of a desk. "Your payment, in full," says Sunny, and then adds, "We need to leave tonight." To which The River King replies, "Anchor's up at midnight. Don't be late."

Sunny then visits Veil, a doctor, at her clinic to inform her to wait for both him and M.K. so that all three could leave the badlands. Sunny had duped The River King when he dropped off the bloody sack. Both saw the severed head of a young boy, though it was the head of Bale, a colt like M.K, who tried to kill the captured Tilda in episode 5, yet was saved by M.K. using his dark energy who then killed Bale. Thus after Sunny had fought and injured The Widow, another baron who came to rescue her captured daughter at The Fort of Baron Quinn (Marton Csokas), he had made use of Bale's freshly deceased body.

Upon visiting Veil, she then asks Sunny, "Did you kill my parents?" In episode 2, Baron Quinn and Sunny visit Dr. Vernon and his wife Hannah about the baron's brain tumor, while during the visit, Hannah tells Sunny she knows about Veil's pregnancy, is happy about the news, and have kept it secret. Shortly after the two leave the home, Baron Quinn orders Sunny to go back inside and kill Veil's parents, fearing news of the brain tumor would leak out to the other six barons to make him look weak. Sunny refuses. The baron then unsheathes the long sword from Sunny's daisho, a samurai sword set, and goes back to kill Veil's parents. Afterwards, the baron sees Sunny back outside, and says, "As far as I'm concerned, you killed them."

After reminding Veil that he told her Baron Quinn had killed her parents, Sunny promises her that things will be different. Though he didn't kill, he didn't dodge his complicity. In episode 5 while seeking her care, Veil confronts the baron, who then tells her that Sunny killed her parents, and finishes by saying, "It was his blade that ended their lives, not mine." Which of course was a half-truth. Deep down Veil knows Sunny did not commit the act, though knowing he was nearby offered her no solace. After Sunny tells her that his way out is their only chance when he comes back with M.K., she says, "If I'm still here when you get back, you'll now my answer."

Meanwhile, an aide to the Priest Penrith (Lance Henriksen) travels to a church to meet three cloaked Abbots. During the meet, he shows the Abbots M.K.'s wanted poster, revealing there's another 'dark child' in the badlands. And that's when the Abbots take off in a truck.

Concurrently, Lydia (Orla Brady), first wife of Baron Quinn, tends to Jade (Sarah Bolger) after being poisoned. Jade is scheduled to marry Baron Quinn, for a baron can also have more than one wife. Be that as it may, Lydia is suspected by Baron Quinn of having poisoned Jade out of jealousy, and has their son Ryder (Oliver Stark) banish her from The Fort. Seeing she has no place else to go, she returns to the spiritual compound of her father, who is Penrith.

Upon returning to The Fort, the baron confronts Sunny. After blaming his head clipper for not killing The Widow, whom he injured in their fight, he also has Sunny arrested as a traitor, and apprehended by his fellow clippers. The baron while having witnessed the fight, had also seen M.K. bleed himself to unleash his dark energy to save The Widow's daughter Tilda from Bale.

Quinn later meets Sunny inside the brig, and reveals that not only will he make use of M.K., but that he will also raise Sunny's child from Veil. Though he also did promise not to harm Veil. To which Sunny says, "When I get out of these chains, I'm gonna clip (kill) you first."

Meanwhile, as Veil packs to leave with Sunny upon his expected return, she's abducted by The Widow's daughter Tilda to tend to her mother's wound, yet later is sent home. While also, the baron makes a deal with M.K. to let Sunny free. Yet before that happened, Sunny is set free by his former mentor and clipper Waldo (Stephen Lang), revealing himself to be the true traitor to Baron Quinn while in league with The Widow.

Later, there's an epic showdown. Sunny catches up with both Quinn and M.K., and plunges his sword into his baron's stomach. M.K. also unleashes his dark energy by sending Zypher, a clipper of Baron Jacobee, into a wall. For Zypher was also working for The Widow.

Then the three Abbotts appear, and with their mystical energy, manages to subdue M.K. Yet Sunny takes them all on, though he's also subdued, and later captured by The River King for double crossing him about their deal with M.K. While M.K. is taken by the Abbotts in a truck.

Let's hope Into The Badlands doesn't go the way of Pan Am. Canceled after one season, Pan Am was to be ABC's Mad Men of airline drama starring also Australian actress Margot Robbie, to appear later in films, The Wolf of Wall Street, Focus, and plays herself in The Big Short. Still, AMC is usually patiently supportive of its TV series, for example renewing both Halt and Catch Fire and Turn: Washington's Spies for third seasons. Into The Badlands deserves another season.

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John Ford's Greatest Film at 70 (plus In Harm's Way at 50)

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It was 70 years ago this holiday season that the film I think is legendary director John Ford's greatest -- greater even than The Grapes of Wrath or The Searchers -- was released to an American public just a few months removed from the largest war in world history. They Were Expendable is the largely true story of a gallant defeat that set the stage for the victory to come, the last stand of the U.S. Asiatic Fleet in attempting to defend the Philippines in the wake of Japan's devastating attack on Pearl Harbor.

The film, which features a host of veterans of the war just past, including director Ford, a Navy captain, and star Robert Montgomery, a Navy commander, focuses on the cockleshell heroes of the PT (patrol torpedo) boats, those speedy plywood vessels which began the war as an untried curiosity and ended it as one of the most glamorous, and perilous, of assignments. As a certain future president found out the hard way.

It is also 50 years since In Harm's Way, another World War II-in-the-Pacific saga which, while not a great film, is a fine and satisfying one that's among my 50 or so favorites.

With the Pacific again looming as arguably America's most geostrategically important region -- hence the Obama administration's Asia-Pacific Pivot policy -- and the Navy taking the lead role, the two venerable Navy pictures, both depicting Pacific operations, have renewed relevance.



The original trailer for They Were Expendable.


They Were Expendable's elegiac tone and message of self-sacrifice leading to ultimate victory was a little out of step with the national mood at Christmas 1945. The war, at long last, was over, and people were more into moving on than contemplating its darkest days after Pearl Harbor.

Still, the film was one of the 20 biggest pictures of the year at the box office.

But time has burnished its allure, though not as bright as that of It's A Wonderful Life (which was not a success when it came out), lacking It's A Wonderful Life's repeated TV airings, beginning decades later in the '70s, which turned it into a force-fed though legitimate Christmas classic which also stars the estimable Donna Reed.

They Were Expendable, based on the book of the same name by William L. White, is a true story of gallant defeat setting the stage for ultimate victory. Which is really more in the British story-telling tradition than the more determinedly upbeat American one, and probably a reason why this film hasn't achieved the level of fame it deserves.

The tale of an untried PT boat squadron in the Philippines rising to the occasion in the dark days after Pearl Harbor even as it is inexorably ground down is part of the larger story of the destruction of the U.S. Asiatic Fleet, the only major American command in World War II that was crushed and never resurrected.

This forward-deployed force in the Western Pacific, the lost fleet, subject of an old war college paper for me, fought against overwhelming odds, in effect serving as a series of speed bumps for onrushing Imperial Japanese forces. They and allied ground and air forces had no hope of beating the Japanese in the Philippines or anywhere else in the region.

Bu the effort showed that America would fight for Asian allies even against much more powerful forces. And it bought time, crucial time needed for larger and more advanced American forces to regroup and prepare, probing for the right opportunity to turn the tide.

As such, They Were Expendable is a film of painful choices, which director Ford presents in a series of elegantly framed episodes, all of it beautifully shot in gorgeous black-and-white and accompanied by a heartfelt and usually unobtrusive Herbert Stothart score.

If it's all rather noble, filled with Fordian grace notes, well, guess what, the material deserves it. It was a very noble effort. These folks knew they could not win, that it was their duty to lay down the sacrifice plays. They did what needed to be done.

As Ford himself was a rather heroic naval officer in the war, seeing action at Midway and on Omaha Beach, the film was a labor of love.

As his star, Ford selected a prominent Hollywood leading man named Robert Montgomery. Best known today as the father of Bewitched star Liz Montgomery and as the star of the original version of the Warren Beatty smash Heaven Can Wait, Montgomery was himself a decorated PT boat officer in the Pacific, a multiple Oscar nominee who hunted some medals after helping set up FDR's famed White House Map Room. Later he went on to be a big TV producer and arguably the first media consultant in presidential politics, working with Dwight Eisenhower.

Here he plays real-life Medal of Honor winner and future Admiral John Bulkeley (called Brickley in the film to comply with naval regulations for serving officers), a PT boat friend of JFK. As played by Montgomery, the squadron commander is an ideal naval officer, smart, cool, contemplative yet decisive, always aware of the bigger picture yet concerned for his men, neither rah-rah nor especially macho. The latter is left to his combustible second-in-command, well-played by John Wayne, whom Ford reportedly rode hard during filming for his lack of military service until Montgomery interceded on Wayne's behalf. Later Oscar winner Donna Reed, extremely well known to boomer TV viewers, plays a stalwart nurse with a star-crossed friendship.

The squadron's individual successes can't outrun the shadow of impending defeat and retreat, a retreat which won't save many on the team. And its greatest success was defensive in nature, engineering the escape from the Philippines by General Douglas MacArthur, whom FDR, despite his dislike and distrust of the controversial commander, deemed too valuable to go down for morale and overall strategic purposes.

There is no Hollywood happy ending for They Were Expendable, just an unforgettable one I won't spoil.


An In Harm's Way scene featuring Henry Fonda, John Wayne, and Burgess Meredith. Wayne's beached Navy captain has just been promoted to admiral, but the celebration will be short-lived.


In Harm's Way is more a melodrama, quite good though critically underrated, featuring an astounding nine Oscar nominees in a powerful cast. It was popular in the day and became a big TV standby in an era in which a nightly movie presentation on one of the three networks was something of a big deal.

The title comes from perhaps the most famous of John Paul Jones sayings: "I wish to have no connection with any ship that does not sail fast; for I intend to go in harm's way." Jones, the great naval hero of the American Revolution now interred at Teddy Roosevelt's direction in a sarcophagus at Annapolis, died penniless in a foreign land before Thomas Jefferson could rescue him with an appointment.

The last of the big movies filmed in black and white -- which earned an Oscar nomination for its often striking cinematography -- the film boasts a huge, star-studded cast with a box office giant at its center, yet is also something of an examination of the US Navy as an institution. This was the period in which director Otto Preminger also used the event film template to examine the founding of Israel (Exodus), the US Senate (Advise and Consent) and the Roman Catholic Church (The Cardinal).

Yet it is essentially the story of one man, "the Rock," a career naval officer named Rockwell Torrey, played of course by Wayne. While a bubbling sexual potboiler on the side, In Harm's Way features a tale of mature romance between Wayne's Captain and later Admiral Torrey and Patricia Neal's senior nurse Maggie Haines. Neal won a British Academy Award for her portrayal of a character who more than holds her own with Wayne's powerhouse.

In Harm's Way, rather sprawling at nearly three hours long, is several things at once. It is a John Wayne vehicle with a terrific ensemble cast, a World War II epic that is at once a potboiler and rather shrewd examination of the US Navy as an institution.

Based on the novel Harm's Way by longtime Los Angeles Times journalist James Bassett, an aide to legendary Admiral William F. "Bull" Halsey during the war and later a high-level Republican operative, the film uses the prism of war to examine a career naval officer described by a subordinate as "Old rock of ages, all Navy and nothing but Navy."

As dawn breaks on a fateful Sunday in December 1941, Captain Torrey -- with his broken marriage to a Wall Street heiress and estranged son in the rear view mirror and all his belongings in his old sea chest -- is commanding a old cruiser off the coast of Oahu, his charismatic alcoholic best friend (Kirk Douglas) serving as his very capable but volatile executive officer. After the devastating Japanese attack, he's ordered to form a makeshift task group and seek out the enemy.

Beached after things go badly, separated from his exec who's nearly busted from the service after his reaction to the unsurprising yet highly cinematic end of his marriage, Torrey settles into some quiet staff work at a recovering Pearl Harbor only to find a variety of second chances, both personal and professional.

Wayne shows how an older action hero can be a dominant presence in a war epic without ever firing a shot or throwing a punch. Others, like Kirk Douglas, who recently celebrated his 99th birthday with son Michael Douglas and the rest of the Douglas clan, carry the bulk of the action. Douglas shows here why he was a two-fisted action hero and a very fine dramatic actor.

Henry Fonda, like Douglas another staunch liberal, who in real life was also a decorated naval officer in the Pacific, makes a vivid impression with only a few scenes as the overall American naval commander in the Pacific, the unnamed Admiral Chester Nimitz. Burgess Meredith is another strong presence as Fonda's intelligence advisor, a reserve officer and ex-Hollywood screenwriter who befriends Wayne and ends up as his key aide.

Younger stars like Tom Tryon, Paula Prentiss, Brandon deWilde, and Jill Haworth also make strong impressions.

But Wayne is the rock of the production, with Patricia Neal and Kirk Douglas as very strong co-stars. Does Wayne's Rockwell Torrey prevail in the end, even though he has his doubts? Whatever happens, it comes at a very high cost, much higher than in most star vehicles.

It's an interesting picture by autocratic Austrian director Otto Preminger, whose reputation has faded next to John Ford's but who provides here a very entertaining and flavorful film that is also quite savvy and mostly unsentimental in looking at the Navy.

As Fonda's CINCPAC says to appreciative chuckles from fellow officers before announcing a certain promotion and command change: "Well, we all know the Navy's never wrong, but sometimes it's a little short on being right." The "little short on being right" is on ample display throughout the film, depicting a service shot through with bureaucracy, internal politics, apple-polishing and cover-your-ass thinking. Great things occur only by cutting through the normal BS. But only when order and discipline are observed as well.

It's an interesting and savvy take.

The film, while not great, is nonetheless smart and warm and entertaining as hell. It's even marked by some touches of pure artistry, such as an early stunning score by the young Jerry Goldsmith, who would be the perfect composer for the sometimes erratic musical stylings of the Marvel Cinematic Universe were he still with us, and awesome closing titles by legendary designer Saul Bass, which prefigure the nuclear closure to the hard-fought war depicted in the film.

While each film has been a bit lost to history, especially in our devotedly non-historically minded culture, history is bringing their relevance back round again as the nexus of events shifts toward the Pacific. History has a funny way of doing that.




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