Baby-feeding media roundup
The 70-minute middle-of-the-night baby feedings are giving me plenty of time to watch movies. Here’s a list of the movies I’ve watched since my last post about this:
- The Good Shepard: Matt Damon’s acting direction for the whole film must have been something like you have deep, conflicted feelings about this, but you can never show your true feelings so you bury them deep behind a mask of seriousness.
- 50 First Dates: Funnier than I remembered. Sean Astin is hilarious.
- Inside Man: A pretty great heist film, with good acting and some clever stuff. Spike Lee laments that the film’s success has not bought him much leeway in terms of getting films made, except if he wanted to do another heist film.
- I Know What You Did Last Summer: Perhaps I’ve seen too many movies making fun of this movie for it to be worthwhile, or perhaps it’s just unbelievably stupid. Unlike Scream, which I think holds up pretty well, this film is just terrible. The deaths aren’t even scary, and the villain could hardly choose a less creepy outfit than the fisherman’s smock. Look out, here comes the Gorton’s Fisherman.
- Hellboy: I’ve been hankering to watch this since we saw H2 in the theater. Rasputin is a cool enemy. My only beef is with the icky monsters that double when they die. The solution is to kill all of them at once, but it doesn’t explain how that works — wouldn’t they all double?
- The Bourne Identity: I want to see more movies with Franka Potente. Best car chase since Ronin.
- The Bourne Supremacy: Even better than the first, though with less Franka Potente. A higher volume of Joan Allen though. Car chase not as good. I don’t understand the title.
- The Bourne Ultimatum: Are you sensing a pattern here? Even better yet, since it has David Strathairn. And brings back the death of the assassin in the first movie with Bourne’s line: “Do you see what they make us give?” Just enough Julia Styles to offset the Non-Potente. I wonder if Franka gets some money because they use her picture from the previous film?
- Batman Begins: Another one I’ve been itching to re-watch since we saw The Dark Knight. Really good. My favorite discovery? The no-name actor who played Bruce’s dad went on to replace Sam W. on the now defunct Law and Order.
- A Mighty Wind: The vibrato in Christopher Guest’s voice on the word “Weelllll…” makes the whole movie work. Other favorite lines: “I would love to see Crabbeville in Autumn” and “This candle represents the darkness and the eternal light. It represents life and divinity. And it also represents a penis.”
- X-Men: I’m too lazy to look it up, but I’ll say this came shortly after Spider-Man in the revitalization of superheroes. I enjoy it, but have seen it enough times that my email was more interesting than the movie.
- X-Men 2: Highly enjoyable as well, with plenty of histrionics and excitement. Two thoughts, first–that the metal nails given to the Wolverine-type girl look darn fragile to me. Second, the evil scientist is also the guy who played the evil scientist in the third Bourne movie — he’s getting typecast.
- X-Men 3: Not as good as the other two, with a ludicrous ending that makes Magneto look like a chump. Why wouldn’t he, you know, just destroy the building with the bridge? LAMEO.
I watch each of these movies in pieces (usually three to four sessions) at low volume with the subtitles on. It’s interesting to see the difference between subtitles and subtitles for the hearing impaired. The latter include bracketed notations on sounds and sound effects. Another bit I like about subtitles is that you can often catch bits of dialogue coming into or going out of scenes that you wouldn’t normally hear.
Next up? Four (count-em, four) movies about the Titanic.
The Black Hand by Will Thomas
Darwinia by Robert Charles Wilson
California Fire and Life by Don Winslow

I watched Spider-Man 3 with my family Friday evening.
Carr’s book is pretty great. It’s the story of a serial murderer in New York in the 1890s. The main character is a reporter who’s friends with Teddy Roosevelt (the chief of police) and with Lazlo Kretzler, an alienist (the term for a psychiatrist in the 1890s). Because the murderer is picking out people he doesn’t know, the police are completely unequipped to catch him, and Lazlo builds a team to find the murderer by building a composite sketch of him based on his behavior and actions. It ends up being a prototype of the killer profile we see in television police procedurals.









Getting Even
The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America
Main Street (Modern Library (Paperback))
Don Quixote (Penguin Classics)
Consumption in an Age of Information

