The Incredibles, 2004

March 9th, 2010

The Incredibles, 2004

Pixar/Disney

Directed by Brad Bird

Rated PG

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It will not come as a shock to anyone that the world is rough on nice guys. And gals. People who have good hearts are paid lip service, and when we say that someone is nice we mean it in a complimentary way. We even hold up niceness to our children as an ideal for behavior and interaction: play nice, be nice, that’s not nice. But the truth is, the world, by which I mean the culture and the systems which order our life, does not nurture niceness. Sharing, helping, going out of one’s way to be kind, are met with suspicion, opposition and ridiculed as childish virtues. Ruthlessness, competition, and self-interest, while never explicitly encouraged, are the values of winners.

What happens, if, for the sake of the extremes of animation and the communication of the point, we took that dichotomy as far as it could go? What if the nice guys were more than just nice, more than just helpful? They would be Superheroes, the ultimate Nice People. They would be amazing people seeking only to do good, with bodies and skills that reflected the size of the hearts beating within. So, a man with enough inner strength to step out of his myopic world and lend a hand becomes a man with enough physical strength to help in extreme situations. He becomes Bob Parr, Mr. Incredible. And a woman who can multitask and care for others out of the deep wells of her compassion and omnicompetence becomes a woman who can stretch without snapping, who can be in two places at once without tearing herself in two. She becomes Helen Parr, Elastigirl.

And what does the world do to nice people? Especially Super nice people? It isn’t pretty. Mr. Incredible, in the course of his other professional nice guy duties, saves the life of a man preparing to jump out a window. The man slaps a “wrongful life” suit on him, and the floodgates are opened to lawsuits against anyone trying to help anyone without their express consent. The Superheroes are put out of business and sent into the Superhero Protection Program, where they are instructed to live out their lives in unremarkable anonymity. They’re not supposed to bother anyone with their inclinations to be helpful.

But some instincts run too deep to bury. Bob and his best friend Lucius, also a retired Superhero, can be found sitting in their car in dark alleys listening to the police scanner, and sometimes, it must be said, they give in to temptation. Yes, they go and help people. It’s illegal, it’s unappreciated, and their wives won’t be amused, but they can’t help it. Because they’re really good guys.

That’s just the set-up, of course. The rest of the action takes place when the opportunity to use their powers arises, causes a lot of trouble, and the Parr family has to decide who they really are. Their children have to be taught how to focus and control their powers, and Bob and Helen have to be reminded what really matters in the end. One of the beautiful things about this film is the portrayal of Bob and Helen’s marriage. There’s tension here, and not everybody is perfect all the time. But these two love each other for better or worse, and when the going gets tough, whether it’s an attack by a Supervillian or a chaotic family dinner, these two come through for each other, often with the kids in tow.

The acting is led by very strong performances by Craig T. Nelson and Holly Hunter as Bob and Helen. In a solely vocal performance, they convey love, competitiveness, anger, fear, relief, jealousy, and a whole host of other complex emotions in such a way that we forget that the art-deco sets and primary color schemes are not the real world. They may be animated, but every marriage should be this strong. In a tense moment when Elastigirl and two of her three offspring (baby Jack-Jack is home with a traumatized sitter) have just saved Mr. Incredible from the clutches of the villain Syndrome, Bob tells Helen to take the kids and wait outside so that he can finish the job. She interprets this as a sexist remark and is indignant, but Bob blurts out that for all his muscles, he’s not strong enough to lose her again. Nelson’s and Hunter’s acting in this scene is intense, the characters’ expressions are exquisite, and the audience is deeply touched by the dramatic purity of the scene. This is a top quality cinematic moment.

Mention also should be given to actors Samuel L. Jackson as Lucius/Frozone, and Jason Lee as the side-kick-wannabe-turned-Supervillian, Syndrome. If their performances aren’t as deep as those of Nelson and Hunter, they do their jobs and give us a friend we love to depend on and an enemy we love to hate. And of course, director Brad Bird himself, as Edna Mole, supersuit designer to the heroes. More than any other character, Edna makes Superheroism seem positively normal. In fact, she seems quite convinced that it would be normal, if not for the chic outfits she herself provides.

The partnership between writer/director Brad Bird and Pixar Studios is a fortuitous one. Pixar enjoys a well-deserved reputation as the industry’s leading creator of high-quality family films, such as Toy Story 1 and 2, Monsters, Inc., and Finding Nemo. And Bird, in his work on the “Simpsons,” the “King of the Hill,” and The Iron Giant, has shown us that in the midst of lives that range from mundane to extraordinary, nice people can have compelling and complex stories to tell. I don’t think it’s giving too much away to say that in The Incredibles, Bird sticks to his strengths, and the nice guys come out on top.

New Movies!

January 3rd, 2010

That is, new movies for ME! Between my December birthday and Christmas (and with divorced parents, you get twice the presents!), I think I personally and my family got probably 50 new movies. Some are better than others (my mom shops the $5 Wal-Mart bin all year round, for example), but our collection expanded significantly.

Here’s as comprehensive a list as I can come up with:

Another Cinderella Story (this is the one with Selena Gomez)
Star Wars II: Attack of the Clones (David LOVES Star Wars!)
Star Wars III: Revenge of the Sith (more Star Wars– I think he has them all except Empire Strikes Back)
My Sister’s Keeper (AJ got the book and the movie–NOT THE SAME!)
Up (“I hid under your porch because I love you!”)
Little Rascals (2 DVD set of the 30’s TV show–David and Matt love these)
Merry Madagascar (gotta love the Penguins!)
Stuart Little I and II (we had one on VHS, but DVD is better)
Clueless (also had on VHS)
Nim’s Island (cute movie, but I just cant love it)
The Incredible Mr. Limpet (not as cute as I remember it being)
13 Going on 30 (I’ve heard this is cute, and I like Mark Ruffalo)
Sydney White (with Amanda Bynes, whom the kids love for some reason)

1776 (on DVD! It’s like a whole different movie! GET the DVD if you don’t have it!)
The Adams Chronicles (the 1976 Bicentennial production from PBS–the highest rated PBS series ever!)
John Adams (the 3-part HBO series with Paul Giamatti and Laura Linney based on McCullough’s book)

Christmas in Connecticut (with Barbara Stanwyck, 1945)
The Band Wagon (y’all know how I feel about “Dancing in the Dark,” right”)
Meet Me in St. Louis (we were just in St. Louis, so it’s fun to see the locations)
Singin’ in the Rain (which we already had–anyone need a DVD copy of SITR?)
Easter Parade (we were short on Easter movies before!)
No, No, Nanette (with Victor Mature)
Dinner at the Ritz (with David Niven)

Anne of the Thousand Days (Richard Burton is just so kingly)
Mary Queen of Scots (with Vanessa Redgrave)
The Mystery of Edwin Drood (we are in love with Claude Rains these days–one of history’s most versatile actors)
Gone With the Wind (no, I didn’t have it before! Yes, I know…)
The Public Enemy (sooo iconic…so stereotyping for poor Cagney)
The Trouble With Angels (with Hayley Mills and Rosalind Russell…weird combo!)
The Tell-Tale Heart (the 1941 version, looks wonderfully awful)
Wes Craven’s Chiller (part of a horror collection along with The Tell-Tale Heart)

Sweeney Todd (the Johnny Depp version!)
Dancing at Lughnasa (unknown film, great cast. Meryl Streep, Michael Gambon, Catherine McCormack)
Atonement (I’ve heard good things…I just don’t care for Kiera Knightly)
Definitely, Maybe (looks cute, family friendly)

Alfred Hitchcock: The Legend Begins
(don’t know how to count this. It has several movies, several episodes of his TV show, and a bunch of his silent films! This DOUBLED my silent collection!) Movies include: The Lady Vanishes, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Sabotage, and The 39 Steps.

And the new jewel in my film-lover’s crown: The Coen Brothers Collection!

No Country for Old Men
Fargo
Raising Arizona
Miller’s Crossing
Blood Simple
Barton Fink

So, yeah, we did all right as far as movies went! Look for review for many of these to appear here.

So, what about y’all? Get any good movies for Christmas?

Nory Ryan’s Song

October 13th, 2009

Nory Ryan’s song

By Patricia Reilly Giff

Delacourt Press

2003

Image courtesy of Fayschool.org

Image courtesy of Fayschool.org

I am always grateful to authors who can make a historical abstract real to me. Patricia Reilly Giff places her story in 1845, at the beginning of Ireland’s horrific potato famine, and tells it through the experience of twelve-year-old Nory Ryan. Through Nory, the reader experiences the desperate denial when the crops start to fail, the frustrated resentment against English overlords, and the crippling pain of hunger. The hunger is at its worst not when Nory herself suffers, but when her elderly neighbor or her young brother suffer, and the fear for their very lives grows days by day. However, this despair, while sharp and real, is not the driving force of the book.

The driving force of the book is love and hope. There are moments when the love is painful, and the hope borders on pathetic, as when Nory’s sister in America sends a package, and Nory is convinced it must contain diamonds that she picked up off the streets. “Brooklyn in America” shines like a beacon of survival through the book, but those of us who know the history feel the bittersweet knowledge that life wasn’t quite so perfect for Irish immigrants in America. Still, imperfect is better than the slow death of starvation, and we children of immigrants feel proud that families like Nory’s could find some hope here on our shores.

Ironically, it is for the sake of love that the Ryan family separates, until only Nory is left to tend the family fire, which has never gone out for a hundred years. Everyone she loves has gone, but she is sure they will be safe, and so the story nears its conclusion with this beat of sacrificial love. It is only at the very end that Nory gets her chance to live as well, though the taking of that chance brings her both joy and sorrow.

The beauty of this story lies in the character of the Irish family. Nory longs for her eldest sister and her absent father, she and her middle sister take on extra work to spare their elderly grandfather. He, in his turn, takes on extra work to provide for his hungry grandchildren. Nory and Celia, the middle sister, squabble and fight when things are well, but when things are hard they show love and support for each other. Nory almost literally gives up her life for her young brother, Patch, the son who is the pride and joy of the Ryan family. And other such sacrifices by other characters, made in love and compassion, keep this book from being too bitter to read.

Though the Irish family can be proud of the place Giff gives them, the most compelling relationships in this book are two that Nory has outside of her family. Her best friend, young Sean Red Mallon, is clearly the only possibility for Nory’s future husband. They are devoted and intimate in the way only children can be, but Sean’s delight in Nory, and her affection for him, is on the edge of adolescence. When this relationship appears to be broken by circumstances, the grief is tangible (I cried more than once in reading this book, both in sadness and happiness), but each still relies on the hope he or she has in the other. Nory also becomes friends with Anna, the feared healer/witch of the village, and begins to learn her craft of herbs and treatments. Anna represents the wisdom of the old ways, and Nory will take those old ways into a new life.

This book has more substance and deeper character development than many adult-oriented books. The story is moving and compelling, and the characters will live forever in the reader’s mind. I am grateful to Giff for showing us the beauty and hope that are possible in some of history’s most difficult moments.