On March 15, 2021, Priyanka Chopra and Nick Jonas announced the year's Oscar nominations remotely from a random studio somewhere in London. That's not how it normally happens, but it was the most normal I had felt since the beginning of COVID: sitting on my couch, watching two celebrities fake enthusiasm and struggle through names and categories. The feeling didn't last, but shortly thereafter I realized it was feasible - maybe for the first time - for me to watch every nominee before the ceremony aired. Not just Best Picture (my usual goal), but everything across all 23 categories. The ceremony had been pushed to the end of April and most films were getting digital releases as cinemas were either still shuttered or hobbling along with reduced seating and dodgy air filtration promises. I hadn't set foot in a movie theater for over a year, and this seemed like a decent way to fill the hole in my movie-loving heart.
No Boating Accident: A Movie Blog
I wanted to be a Quint, turned out to be a Brody, but on here I'm a Hooper. These are my musings on cinema.
Saturday, March 1, 2025
Sunday, June 30, 2024
The Best of the First Half of 2024
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| Feels like this maniac is running most of our control panels right now. |
These are stressful times. Not just at the box office, where it's panic 24/7 - either because of the latest flop or because the "wrong" movie (a sequel, usually) broke through, suggesting we can kiss originality goodbye or whatever. It's also the upcoming U.S. presidential election, where the fate of democracy will lie in the hands of one of two very old white men (where there's a clearly superior choice whose win still wouldn't reassure me too much*). It's also work. And the heat. And the state of the world. And the fact that I'm just not drinking enough water.
So when I tell you I have bounced off of 2024's biggest titles, largely due to how they skew a little too thematically close to the bombastic internal and external conflicts of our world (I'm talking about the year's top two commercial successes, Inside Out 2 and Dune: Part 2... But, inexplicably, not Civil War?) and have spent a great deal of my downtime building an audio/visual pillow fort around myself out of semi-niche feel-good entertainment like Taskmaster and Eurovision and the Savannah Bananas, I need you to know that things aren't normal. I'm still seeing a lot of movies (as my Letterboxd can attest), but I don't always have the bandwidth to deal with the larger spectacles (Sorry Godzilla x Ghostbusters: The [Insert Adjective Here] Empire) or the emotionally resonant second chapters. That won't necessarily be clear from my picks for the best (so far) of the year. But stick with me. I'll try to put my madness into words. And be a little more cheery. (Apologies again, it's probably the dehydration.)
Friday, January 12, 2024
MEAN GIRLS - A Review
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| These are obviously the coolest kids on campus. Why are you so stupid, high schoolers? |
I want to get this out of the way: Although I was a junior in high school when the first movie came out, I did not worship at the altar of Mean Girls. I didn't see it until its DVD release, liked it well enough, but didn't return to it for a decade. Those two screenings didn't leave much of an impression. I remember a kid at the beginning talking about God giving us guns to fight "the dinosaurs and the homosexuals" (biting satire for a progressive kid educated at a small Christian K-12), and a strong focus on cliques (which we didn't really have in said Christian K-12 of maybe 600 students). But mostly I remember it making me feel bad, because everyone in the 2004 movie was so terrible to each other. I still found it funny and appreciated the callbacks in social circles (mostly yelled phrases like "She doesn't even go here!" or "You can't sit with us!"), but the Mean part of the title was a little too accurate.
This could all explain why I liked this, the fourth-ish (It was a parenting book?) iteration of the story and a translation of the Broadway hit, better than the original. It probably reads as basic or declawed to fans of the 2004 version, but I found it to be more empathetic than its cinematic predecessor. Partially because the core performances don't come across as sinister, partially because I am now in my 30s and no longer fear running into any of these characters in the real world, and largely because, yes, the musical is way less aggressive than the non-musical. And that's for the best.
Saturday, January 6, 2024
Top 10 of 2023
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| May December, the kind of character study that turns questions like "When do you think she'll start doing the lisp?" into high drama, is my pick for best of the year. |
Friday, August 4, 2023
BARBENHEIMER - A Review
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Image by Vinithasree3 (via Twitter) |
Thursday, July 20, 2023
An Imagined Conversation with You, the Stranger I Feel Obliged to Explain My Two Month Absence To
| How it feels returning to a dormant blog. |





