maryturzillo ([info]maryturzillo) wrote,
@ 2008-03-08 20:44:00
Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Current location:Amid the silence of deep snow
Current mood: pleased
Current music:The Internationale, American version
Entry tags:art kramer, bette midler, beynelmilel, charlie oberndorf, colin firth, helen hunt, matthew broderick, michele cooper, salman rushdie, the internationale

Cleveland International Film Festival
The insanely generous Charlie Oberndorf, having far too much academic work to do, gave us his tickets to the opening gala of Cleveland International Film Festival on Thursday night, and it was fabulous. We saw Then She Found Me , which will open in May of this year. It stars Helen Hunt (who also directed it), Matthew Broderick, Colin Firth, and Bette Midler, who was splendidly comic. It also featured several adorable children, one of whom is first seen having a major tantrum screaming "I want my mommy!" and is so cute you just want to pick her up and be her mommy.

Best of all was a very convincing performance by Salman Rushdie. I'll let you spot him when you see the film.

After the film there was a huge noisy party with a lot of pretty people who must have been actors and film critics, and wonderful food. We had a nice wine I had never heard of, called Pensacal. It made me decide I'm going to give up on those little 6-ounce screw-top bottles and just open a bottle of real wine when I want, and if it goes bad before I finish it off (we don't drink very often), well, so be it. (Googling "Pensacal 2001 Red," I discover that it is in fact a very inexpensive wine. But I don't care; it was great!)

And then, despite a predicted blizzard, poet Michele Cooper, of whom I've spoken before, and her sweetie, playwright Art Kramer, invited Geoff and me to join them to see two more features at the Film Festival today. Alas, white-out driving conditions kept Art and Michele house-bound. Not just their drive, but their whole street was blocked with snow. But Geoff is a brave soul and off we went. Our first movie of the day was Beynelmilel (also called The Internationale . This is a Turkish film which motivates me to learn more about Turkish history. The premise is that a naive band-leader hears the melody of The Internationale, and innocent of its origin or intent, plays it to welcome minions of a military dictatorship opposed to socialism. The non-idiomatic subtitles made the film harder to understand, but it was thought-provoking, and exotic costumes and actors made it memorable.

The other film we saw was Canadian and lots of fun, with plot twists galore. This was Bluff. Never a dull moment, with infidelity, lost objects, mysteries under the floor boards, and most of all bluffs, bluffs, bluffs. Sadly, I couldn't understand much of the French, which made me feel quite inadequate, or maybe just a victim of multiple European-French teachers in my past, but the subtitles were quite okay. I think the sinister art collector looked like Isaac Asimov.

Between films, Geoff helped un-stick some poor guy who hadn't a clue how to get out of a huge snowbank he'd stuck his car in, this with the help of five teens. And, when their efforts weren't quite enough, feeling very foolish, I put my shoulder to it, and, as Geoff says, every newton counts, so my little addition got the guy out.

Our drive home was adventurous, but not catastrophic, and now perhaps we'll take a trudge in the snow and discuss our movies.



(Post a new comment)


[info]bradipo
2008-03-09 10:39 am UTC (link)
I know what you mean about the difference between actors and regular people. At WorldCon in Glasgow, we went to the premier of Gamerz and saw the same thing. A big chunk of the audience were showbiz people who had been involved in making the film, and then the rest were con-goers. It's almost like they're a different species.

(Reply to this)(Thread)

very well groomed
[info]maryturzillo
2008-03-09 02:27 pm UTC (link)
They seemed very well groomed. I think when your livelihood depends on your appearance, you probably spend more of your disposable income on good haircuts and personal trainers. I read a musing in a Harlan Coben novel where he speculated that in high school, the athletes are the premier kings and queens of their little microcosm, where the theater kids are the outsiders, the ones who are ignored, or considered weird, or just don't stand out. He speculated that this builds a sense of entitlement in the athletes so that the rest of their life they are always faintly surprised when they aren't the center of attention. But actors, if they become prominent later in life, are always delighted to get the extra attention.

The other thing I have noticed is that actors have alert, interested faces, not always pretty, but always worth looking at. I think this comes from a habit of using their faces in their art.

I wonder if writers have a specific "look."

(Reply to this)(Parent)


Create an Account
Forgot your login?
Login w/ OpenID
English • Español • Deutsch • Русский…