Friday, December 19, 2008

Movies: A Christmas flick list--what's yours?

Michael Nielsen, writing in Ezine Articles, presents his "Top Ten Christmas Films of All Time" --

1. It's a Wonderful Life
2. A Christmas Story
3. A Christmas Carol (adopted from Charles Dickens)
4. Miracle on 34th Street
5. The Santa Clause
6. A Charlie Brown Christmas (animated)
7. National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation
8. Love Actually
9. How the Grinch Stole Christmas
10. White Christmas

Nielsen supplements his main list with a few citations flicks that are more "classic, Disney, and animated":

Mickey's Christmas Carol
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
Frosty the Snowman
Elf
Nighmare before Christmas
A Walt Disney Christmas

Nielsen's write-ups are rather supine, and he fails to give us his criteria of selection. But, as he notes, many people are trying to decide what they'll watch on TV or on DVD at home during the hastening season. He also notes that, even without a Christmas thematic, first-run movies in the theatres and newly-released DVDS of all worldviews and genres get attention from viewers and theatre-goers this time of year.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Arts: Fred Astaire, a consummate dancer of the Movie Age

There's a new book out, being a biography of Fred Astaire the dance work of whom, in the comic vein mostly, set a dance-aesthetics standard that still holds. His dances, a body of artistic work from one dance routine to the next in a given movie, and from film to film, these choreographic accomplishments remain somehow normative today because of old movies that still dazzle us with his showmanship. His work was slanted by the mass-communications medium of the cinematographic camera's angle. He danced to the camera's eye for the future ticket-purchasing audience of each movie, and often gently deconstructed himself in his role, larger than any role in a movie, as big as life. Leading male dancer in the early movies which were viewed in movie theatres, Fred Astaire is an entertainer par excellence; and he became a bon vivant.

A fine boildown of an important theme of Jason Epstein's new book, Fred Astaire (Yale University Press), was recently recently posted on the American Heritage website. Jason Epstein, "Like kissing your sister: the sibling partnership that launched Fred Astaire into stardom" (posted Oct28,2k8).

In noting how important Adele Astaire was, we underscore an axiom of dance aesthetics -- at least of the dancer business and profession -- that we have to say male dancer or female dancer when we indulge ourselves in ranking the stars of movie dance and dance movies. The instant I think of Astaire's female partners, once he got into the movies, it's Ginger Rodgers who stands out, to my mind. She played with Fred in several memorable storyline dance-movies (really a form of "musical," carried over the top by fancy footwork).

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Technics: I just discovered Gmail's voice and video chat

It only works with Firefox 2.0, InternetExplorer 6.0 (ugh!), Safari 3.0+, and Google Chrome. It uses YouTube, and requires dowloading the Gmail voice and video chat plug-in

Voice and video chat plug-in info page for Gmail.

I haven't yet discovered the relationship to this Gmail v&v chat with the Applebased iChat.app.

Technotes, by Technowlb

I'm looking forward to gettingh this set up properly.

Technowlb