An Ingenue Review: The Babadook

Ba ba dook dook dook. I love indie film. I pride myself in finding those obscure gems to share.  I am especially drawn the horror & thriller genres. The more twisted, twisty, confusing, confounding, the better. The kind of story where you wake up in the middle of the night, 3 days later, with an epiphany about a scene or a metaphor or a twist.  Not gore or torture for the sake of gore and torture, but a work that makes you think.

I can’t stop thinking about The Babadook since I saw it earlier this week. The Babadook ticks all my boxes.  It’s an Australian piece, written and directed by Jennifer Kent (girl power!), partially funded by Kickstarter,  It stars Essie Davis as Amelia, the troubled and harried widow raising an equally troubled son. You might know Essie from the original, gritty, far superior Australian version of The Slap. The young and monstrously talented Noah Wiseman plays Sam, her six year old son whose behavioral issue are getting out of hand.  Mark my words – you won’t be forgetting him any time soon.

Equal parts horror and psychological thriller, there isn’t a second in this film when you aren’t on the edge of your seat.  It’s intelligent, thought-provoking, emotional, visually stunning, and superbly acted.   Plus, it is streaming free on Netflix. Take my advice and watch it ASAP,  then slither on over to the The Middle-Aged Ingenue Facebook page and we’ll discuss.

Have you ever liked a movie so much that you wish you hadn’t seen it?  Simply for the joy and pleasure of being able to see it again for the first time. Films like that are few and far between.  That’s what makes them so special.  The Babadook is one of those films. Here’s the official trailer.

Songs In The Key Of Me.

 

I love me

It’s upon us again.  Valentine’s Day.  My least favorite of the manufactured, consumer-driven holidays.  Why do I have to buy candy or what…. batteries?….extension cords? – what do you get a man for Valentine’s day- to prove to someone I’ve been with nearly 19 years and see 365  –  that I love  him?  It’s not that I’m anti-romance, but at this point, I believe it pretty much speaks for itself.  The fact that I’m still here should be gift enough, right?

Anyway….

In 2011, I came upon a list of  Billboard’s Top 50 Sexiest Songs OF ALL TIME.   (Put down your drink before you look at it.  You’ll for sure do a spit take at some point and I don’t want to be held responsible for any damage to your electronic device. ) Reading that article, I quickly surmised those songs were chosen by horny 15 year old boys.  Because they had the word sex in the title, boobs in the video,  or some type euphemism for doing it was mentioned.  I literally heard Beavis and Butthead laughing while I read it.  So I made my own list of sexy songs.  The Top 13 of that compilation are listed below this article.

In the years since I originally wrote that piece, things have changed.  As they do for everyone.  Emotional connections are important to me.  And not just with my partner, my friends and family, but most importantly with myself.  If you don’t love yourself , you truly have nothing worthwhile to share.

Behold the new and improved list. Song I love.  Songs that remind me of myself.  They might remind you of yourself as well.

So here is ….

My 2015 Collection of Love Songs To Myself

Because I feel this way most days…

…this has become my anthem,  I listen to it nearly every day.

You might think you do, however, you don’t.

  I’m not quite sure yet what it is.

“Rummaging for answers in the pages….”

Encourages me to write:

Do you ever feel like a plastic bag, drifting through the wind, wanting to start again?

Because there are some days when we all want to feel like heathens.

Dedicated to my soul mate Paul Rudd.

I’m sure I have one with some people.  That means to me that I’ve done something right.

I might actually consider going to that church.

Reminds me of, well, my favorite mistake.

For my Sassy.  May she becomes all she wants to be and more.

I don’t know and I don’t care if I ever will be there.

When all is said and done, it all comes down to this.

I’m sad but I’m laughing, I’m brave but I’m chicken shit.
I’m sick but I’m pretty, baby.

Blank stares at blank pages,  No easy way to say this
You mean well, but you make this hard on me.

For those meditative, contemplative  occasions.

Raise your glass if you are wrong in all the right way, all my underdogs!

No list would be complete with the ultimate diva songs.

I love a man who sings and plays the guitar.

And dances.  (I’m not obsessed, I promise!  I really just want to work with him.  In a film with at least one love scene, preferably.  I do want to kiss and date him. )
Who am I kidding.  I’m obsessed.

And when all else fails, come home with a box of tools.

And always remember

 

Happy VD, everyone!  And remember, learning to love yourself is the greatest gift of all.

 

____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

From the original 2011 piece.

 

13. Could I Be Your Girl – Jann Arden: “I am ashes, I am Jesus, I am precious.  Could I be your girl?” Some of the most brilliant lyrics ever written. I’m still in awe of her talent.

Sorry, I cant get this one to embed.  Click the link.  It’s worth it.

12.  I Wanna Be Your Lover Prince.    I guess the Duggars are right. Those syncopated “devil rhythms” make me want to do unholy things.

11. We’ll Be Together – Sting.  Those glasses used to drive me mad….

10. Practical Amanda – Ben Folds/Nick Hornby    If my husband were a woman, his name would be Amanda.

9. I Drove All Night – Cyndi Lauper: tortured and haunting.  Beautiful.

8. Need You Tonight – NXS: Raw and animalistic.   Michael Hutchence- what a waste.

7. Hard To Handle – The Black Crows: This song makes me want to light up a Marlboro Light, grab a Jack and Coke and hit the dance floor!  (My red roots are showing!)

6. If –  See above list

5.  Your Body is a Wonderland – John Mayer – There is innocence about this song that I find sweet and charming.  Plus, John Mayer.

4. I Touch Myself – Divinyls:  I honestly do.

3. Can You Tell – Ra Ra Riot:  These cute boys make me forget I’m a middle-aged woman. They are so (when I was young, cute, and single) my type.  And cellos.

2. In Your Eyes – Peter Gabriel:  Our wedding song.

1. I’m On Fire – Bruce Springsteen:    “Sometimes it’s like someone took a knife, baby, edgy and dull, and cut a six inch valley through the middle of my skull.”   Just watch and listen……  (John Sayles directed the video.)

My Crush With Eyeliner

crush with eyeliner

 I am smitten
I’m the real thing (I’m the real thing)
We all invent ourselves
And you know me

We’ve all had them.  I’ve nurtured them as far back as I can remember. Celebrity crushes. Granted, I was an odd kid.  I flew that freak flag early.  I liked Marvin Hamlisch and Art Garfunkel.  Then I graduated to Donny Osmond, Michael Jackson, and Tony DeFranco. And more than a couple of those kids from Zoom.  Actually, I wanted to move to Boston, Mass (02134!) to audition.  My parents put the kibosh on that mighty quick. (Me: “They have telephones in Boston too, ya know!” My dad worked for Bell Telephone.)   But I really got walloped when I discovered the first “love of my life” – Robbie Benson.  There was no other boy so sensitive, so sweet, so kind, so beautiful.  And that voice.  I have to admit, I have watched Beauty and The Beast more times than I care to admit, as a grown woman, no doubt.  He’s still spectacular, by the way.  Currently at Indiana University’s film department.  My brother-in-law, the soon to be famous screenwriter knows him.  When I found out that little nugget of info, I’m afraid I behaved like a junior varsity cheerleader for a couple of seconds, in the presence of my in-laws no less.   As an adolescent, I was totally smitten with Robbie  and dealing with feelings I’d never experienced before.  I didn’t know what to do with them.  It was a little scary.  And there was no way I was ready to experience those emotions with a real boy.  So, I did what worked for me. Thumb tacked photos from Tiger Beat  & Teen Beat magazines to my bedroom wall.  Pretended to be getting ready to go on dates. Kissed my hand and hugged my pillow.  Obsessed over Ice Castles.

And I must admit, I also had a poster of Barry Manilow on my teenage bedroom wall, so I still let a bit of that freak flag flying, and it let me know I wasn’t ready for a full commitment.  But hey, at least I had a “type”.  I’ve always had a thing for nice Jewish boys. Unfortunately they were in short supply in southwestern Kentucky.

I can still remember the first grown man I ever found attractive (besides Marvin and Art).  That would be Richard Dreyfuss in The Goodbye Girl.  I was 13.  He was 30-ish. There was something about that energetic, rakish, intelligent charm of his. What a smart-ass. And that guitar. It was also when I discovered my deep and abiding love for Neil Simon.

My daughter has celebrity crushes now, too. There are pictures of a boy band on her bedroom wall.  And there’s one actor in particular she’s quite taken with.  He’s quite a bit older.  She’s 14 – he’s 27.  (She would KILL me if she knew I was writing about this.) We were talking about our crushes at dinner the other night –  and she asked “What would you do if I dated someone older?”  “How much older?” ” 27.” Dad immediately mentioned jail, as I chimed in, casually, of course,  about castration.  When we found out it was Evan Peters she’s crushing on, that lightened the mood a bit. By the time she’s legal, he will have had time to get through his first marriage/divorce and be ready for a younger woman.  Good to go.  I have no problem with that.  Except she finishes college.  That’s non-negotiable.

I’m aware that I’m probably not the best role model,  fostering these infatuations,  since I have quite a storied and illustrious history of that type of behavior myself. I used to have a big thing for John Corbett when he was on Northern Exposure (but who didn’t, right?).  And Johnny Depp – I thought he was my ideal man.  I was even willing to forgive him for the whole Kate Moss debacle.  Then he took a partner, had kids, seemed to settle down.  About the same time I did.  How nice for us both.

After I married,  had a child and became a stay-at-home mom,  my sources for crush material were pretty limited. I didn’t have time for many movies, t.v. or new music, so I mined the sources that I had.  Anthony, the blue one from The Wiggles – say what you will, but the man is hot.  Steve from Blues Clues – there was just something about him. You just could tell there was a little freak under that green rugby shirt.   But one horrifying day, while the kid was watching Dora The Explorer,  I heard myself say “That Diego is going to be a hottie when he grows up”.  I said that shit out loud! Even I knew that was so wrong on SO many levels.  Measures had to be taken for the good of the entire household. So we limited t.v. time for the kid.  I started watching more appropriate, adult-oriented programing –  Six Feet Under and Carnivale.  And LOST.   I did like Billy and Brother Justin on those shows, however, but not to crush-level.  I was merely obsessed with LOST.  Not the boys, the entire show.

All the while, I still carried little torches for both John and Johnny.  My boyfriends.  Until I found out John had taken up with an older woman (not that there’s anything wrong with that) and Johnny had left his partner, Vanessa, and was cavorting with some 27 year old chippy.  It was then and there I took out my big black Sharpie and crossed them off my “list”.  When you date someone young enough to be your child,  you are a cliche’.  Johnny had become a cliche’.  And despite it all, I do have standards, you know.

The unfortunate John/Johnny curb-kicking incidents actually turned out for the best.  Now I have time to devote to my latest fiance –Paul Rudd.  I think  he is the perfect male specimen. I want some recognition when People Magazine names him  2015’s Sexiest Man Alive. and he gets catapulted to international super-stardom when Ant-Man is released. I also want to go on public record that I’ve called dibs.  I called those long ago, btw.   Just in case.  One never knows when dibs will come in handy.  When I see those beautiful head shots and publicity stills I want to launch into a stream of expletives, for some reason.  Call it some rare form of estrogen-induced Tourette Syndrome. I don’t know.  It’s totally involuntary, I promise.

Lately, I have been going onto the sci-fi/Marvel fan-boy boards and setting them straight about Ant Man (in theatres summer 2015).  Some of them have already judged and condemned the film.  You wouldn’t believe the level of exposition on the subject. These people know so much about this comic book universe, honestly some of the posts look like so many doctoral dissertations.  Truly amazing, I have to say.  So, I’ve made it my mission to share with them my expertise in film and entertainment marketing.  How Disney may have finally realized they need to target various demographics for this film –  not just comic fans but the mom crowd, the ladies in Paul’s actual age range.  We are going to see that movie.  Those fan boys can sit home and quibble online about how it differs from the comic, the canon, how the suit is wrong, how his antennae are askew, whatever it is they go on about.  Because it’s what they love to do.  However, they’ll see the movie too.  They won’t be able to help themselves.

But moms – and 40-ish women – we will see this movie.  We will go in droves, on girls’ night out,  having dinner and cocktails first, to lust after this beautiful man. We will pass over the money without even thinking about it: for it’s money we have and stimulation we lack.  We will sit in the dark, with our smuggled cocktails and low-fat popcorn, on a perfect summer evening.  And it will be as if we’ve dipped ourselves in magic waters.  We, who don’t really give a shit about plot, or canon, or FX  –  any of that other superfluous noise – will be in those multiplex seats.  The one constant through all the years, Disney, has been fantasy. It reminds us of all that once was hot, and that could be again. Women will come, Disney.  We will most definitely come.

But really, all Disney needed to do was release this photo.   Done.  Sold.  Here’s my money.  And don’t forget.  Dibs.
shirtless Paul Rudd

Son*&^%$FU***BIT*&^%cCK**DAMN*&#^$%@#KER!

I’ve been smitten with Paul since his Kirby days on Sisters in the ’90s.  A filmmaker who moves to Minnesota to run a video store – my God, a man after my own film school attending/video store managing heart! He was like the male ME!  I honestly thought were trying to kill me!  Later I found out he had lived in the same suburb of Kansas City during the same time I lived there. Was at the same university.  WHAT?   Why oh why, didn’t I follow my heart and major in theatre, like I’ve always wanted to do? And why oh WHY did I have a stupid boyfriend in college?  Paul likes to dance, I like to dance. Plus he’s so goofy/funny and a talented, versatile actor. He manages to be funny without being mean. Trust me, that’s more difficult than it appears.   And he such a nice person. He’s been with his wife for 14+ years and they have two kids. What a great guy.  No wonder I want to kiss and date him.  If I had a notebook, I would for sure write his name all over it.  True fact, he’s the only one left on my “list” right now.  Should that astronomically unlikely opportunity present itself, there are going to have to be serious negotiations involving spouses, waivers, codicils, and the like.  Or it might be time to unveil my idea for my new religion. One that includes “brother husbands”.   Think about it….

While we grown-ups know this is all in good fun, I want to make sure my teen daughter realizes the difference between a healthy fantasy life and dipping one’s toe into the dark pool of obsession. (Did you know there’s an actual identified mental illness for celebrity obsession? It’s called Celebrity Worship Syndrome. <Shut up. I’m seeking professional help.> )  Or acting out the fantasy with real boys, God forbid.  I’m sure as hell not ready for that.  And neither is she. And neither are those young men in One Direction or Evan Peters.  Right, guys?

Real-life relationships are difficult to navigate, especially as a teen.  I believe it can be healthy and good practice for “the real thing” to have a celebrity crush.  Just as long as there’s no isolation, disconnect with reality,  avoidance of real relationships,  stalking, OCD-related behavior or just plain weirdness involved.

Believe me, I know the warning signs. I’ve been close to the edge.  Just ask Diego.

 

Crush With Eyeliner by REM  Video by Spike Jonze

 

Me, My Thoughts Are Flower Strewn

After years of having no particular focus, I have decided that The Middle-Aged Ingenue blog site’s main concentration should be my first love – entertainment. Film, television, books, music. I’m reposting this as an example, a transitional piece. I wrote this in 2014.

How a 22-year-old song caught me off guard and catapulted me into the existential ether.

Two pieces of art that best represent my tumultuous transition from youth to adulthood are Toad The Wet Sprocket’s achingly beautiful Dulcinea and R.E.M.’s masterwork Automatic For The People.  I lived and breathed those albums in the early 1990s.  Both became a part of my consciousness, of my very being.  They imbued my brain cells, my heart, my essence, and reside in my soul to this day.  These albums told my story. They spoke to, confronted, and comforted me during a time when my life was in a difficult but necessary period of uncertainty and upheaval.

Automatic For The People is not merely an album but a song cycle about youth, nostalgia, loneliness, joy, unfulfilled promise, and acceptance.  So profound are Stipes’ lyrics that they have been compared to the works of John Keats.  Haunting and painfully beautiful.  Soulful and intuitive.  Ultimately hopeful.

I heard a snippet of Find the River on a film soundtrack the other night. I hadn’t heard the song in years. It completely knocked me into a fugue state – set me adrift in the existential ether.  I became obsessed, as I sometimes do with music – with the lyrics, the musical structure, and the mystery of how the coalescence of those elements creates such beauty. I played the song over and over.  I sang along, admittedly through tears.  I analyzed the lyrics.  But this time, from a distance of over 20 years.  I became reacquainted with that anxious, aimless, confused girl.  She is indwelt in me.

She is still trying to find the river.

When Find The River was first written, it was said that Michael Stipe wrote the lyrics as an ode to River Phoenix. Scholars have compared the lyrics to To Autumn The Phoenix story may or may not be true, but that doesn’t really matter.  As with any sublime work of art,  it transcends simple interpretation.  Experiencing the song as a woman who possesses a little more of the maturity, enlightenment, and wisdom that comes with age,  it touches my psyche on a more intricate level now.  A level of discernment. A spiritual place.

The lyrics are poetry, yes, and ambiguous in a resplendent way. Find The River captures the sense memory of youth;  the beauty and tragedy of experience.  The pain of loss.  The joy of fulfillment.  The complexity and unpredictability of life and the eventual acquiescence that comes with having no choice but to move forward.  Lesson learned and lessons taught.   Disappointment, promise, and hope.  A completed cycle.  A full circle with light years to go.

All of this is coming your way.

I hope it touches your heart as well.

 
Hey now, little speedy head
The read on the speed meter says
You have to go to task in the city
Where people drown and people serve
Don’t be shy, your just deserve
Is only just light years to go
Me, my thoughts are flower strewn
Ocean storm, bayberry moon
I have got to leave to find my way
Watch the road and memorize
This life that passed before my eyes
Nothing is going my way
The ocean is the river’s goal
A need to leave the water knows
We’re closer now than light years to go
I have got to find the river
Bergamot and vetiver
Run through my head and fall away
Leave the road and memorize
This life that passed before my eyes
Nothing is going my way
There’s no one left to take the lead
But I tell you and you can see
We’re closer now than light years to go
 
Pick up here and chase the ride
The river empties to the tide
Fall into the ocean
The river to the ocean goes
A fortune for the undertow
None of this is going my way
There is nothing left to throw
Of ginger, lemon, indigo
Coriander stem and rose of hay
Strength and courage overrides
The privileged and weary eyes
Of river poet search naiveté
Pick up here and chase the ride
The river empties to the tide
All of this is coming your way

sunset

The Fault in Our Stars – An Ingenue Review

fault-our-stars-movie-poster

I had intended to write an in-depth review of the new film A Fault in Our Stars.  A real review.  Turns out, I really don’t need to.  You can take the word of millions of teenaged girls (and girls at heart).  The film was a huge winner at the box office during its opening weekend.  It made $48 million, beating out the strangely dark Disney offering Maleficent and the “I refuse to admit I’m no longer a heart-throb” Tom Cruise vanity vehicle.  And now, Hollywood has come to the realization that FEMALES WATCH MOVIES!  There don’t have to be shootings, explosions, car chases, robots, or even super heroes. There doesn’t  have to be a  roman numeral in the title, and studios can actually release a movie with a plot, a good script, and fine acting in the summer.  Who knew?

Back to the film.

I went with my almost 14 year old daughter.   We’ve both read the book.  Me,  once.  Her- nine times.  We were both crying within the first 5 minutes. And that’s a good thing.  It was a bonding experience.  I had recommended the book to her.  She didn’t want to see the movie – the first time, anyway – with anyone but me.   Those experiences, as she gets older, are becoming few and far between.  It was precious.

The Fault in Our Stars is beautiful story.  It’s a story about living in the moment, regardless of what that moment is.  And ultimately, it a life-affirming story about strength, honesty, and acceptance.  I won’t go too much into plot description – it’s about two teens who meet at a cancer support group and fall in love.  And it certainly has struck a chord with young people.  When I was a teen, there were several books and movies based on the same premise.  Death Be Not Proud (starring the ever-delicious Robbie Benson), Love Story (meh), even After School Specials  that dealt with the difficult subject matter.  We had films like Ice Castles,  even made for t.v. movies like Champions: A Love Story (Remember Jimmy McNichol?). These shows allowed us that catharsis, that ability to vicariously experience tragedy and all the emotions that come along with it.   Today’s teens haven’t had that. They’ve seen the violent deaths of teens and kids dystopian society stories and fantasies. They’ve seen the star-crossed, doomed romance between girl and vampire.  And sadly, they see all too frequently,  seemingly endless reports of school shootings and violent attacks  on the news, glossed over and soon forgotten. I’m afraid in our current cultural climate our children are in danger of becoming desensitized to death.  They haven’t been exposed to loss in a realistic, “this could happen to me” setting.  Not really.  Until now. That’s why I think The Fault in Our Stars is an important film.

Shailene Woodley, who plays Hazel, gives an excellent performance. She is certainly one to watch.  Never once did I get the feeling that she was acting. Hazel, having battled cancer for much of her adolescence, is feisty, intelligent, and cynical about the whole situation   Gus, played by Ansel Elgort, is the perfect boyfriend and counter to Hazel.  He’s charming, disarming, and persistent. Almost too good to be true (for this experienced, jaded no-longer-a-teenaged-girl anyway).  But you can’t help but love the guy. He’s so earnest and sweet in that smart-ass kind of way.   Hazel’s parents (although a little “Disney-fied” for my taste) are played by two excellent actors. The always magnificent Laura Dern, who can do no wrong in my opinion, takes on the role as Hazel’s mother. She’s brilliant as usual.  I just wish her role had been a bit meatier.  Hazel’s dad, in a stunning feat of rebranding, is played by Sam Trammel,  hunky shape-shifter Sam Merlotte in HBO’s True Blood. Thanks to this ingenious bit of casting, Trammel has established himself not only as a hottie in the minds of women in my age group, he’s now cemented in the psyche of millions of teens world-wide as the perfect father figure.  His agent is a genius.  There is also an entertaining cameo by a well-known, big-name Hollywood actor.  I won’t spoil the surprise because it kind of made the movie for me.

Bottom Line – see this film.  It’s wonderfully acted.  Nicely paced,  An authentic, endearing story.  And don’t forget to bring the tissues. And take along a teenager.  You won’t regret it.

*Literary Nerd Alert: The title is inspired by Act 1, Scene 2 of Shakespeare‘s play Julius Caesar, in which Cassius says to Brutus:

“The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, / But in ourselves, that we are underlings.”