
I don’t watch as many movies as I used to but I still watch too many.
I forget most of them before the credits even roll (provided I get that far, which is not the case at least fifty percent of the time.) The natural question to ask is why I even bother at this point and I don’t have a ready answer, except to say that habits are hard to break. Movies have been a mainstay of my life since I was a kid. I’m not ready to quit them. Not yet.
I can’t remember a worse year in terms of theatrical releases. It’s seen career worsts from PT Anderson, Lynne Ramsay, Ari Aster, Darren Aronovsky, and David Cronenberg, and dud after dud from middling or unknown directors. The medium is on life-support for a lot of reasons but this avalanche of mediocrity is beyond my analytic capacity to explain. And yet I keep trudging to the theater hoping for the best.
I loved Magic Farm and wrote a whole thing about it and Ulman’s other movie. Radu Jude’s Dracula was a filthy hoot and Kelly Reichardt’s The Mastermind was a sweet shaggy-dog story about a really shitty guy. On becoming a Guinea Fowl cast a weird spell, Misericordia seduced and Secret Mall Apartment made me laugh while mourning the damage ill-conceived urban renewal wreaks. Nearly every other flick I can think of that I got something out of was old or seen on my TV, in bed.
Because of K, I enjoyed a couple trips to the theater despite the horrid shit onscreen. We laughed through most of 28 Years Later and heroically outlasted both Eddington and Frankenstein. I’d have skipped out on all three less than an hour in if I was solo. I paid for a month of HBO so we could watch the Paul Reubens doc. It was worth the fifteen bucks, even if I deleted the app after a couple weeks for want of anything else to watch.

The only upcoming release I’m sort of looking forward to is the new one from Jarmusch with Tom Waits looking like the Crypt Keeper. Could be great or complete schlock. There’s just no telling anymore.

RIP Tony Adler. He was my first theater editor at The Reader but I got to know him better through his yearly Whitmanstide readings and frequent meet ups at art openings. He was a sweet guy and I’ll miss him. I don’t know what he’d have thought of this Trap Door production, but I loved it.
I reviewed a great travelogue of cemeteries.
Here’s the checklist for my Fire Cat show, just in time for the shopping frenzy season.






