Tuesday, January 30, 2024

I fixed a gate

If someone were to ask, I would never represent myself as "handy." When Pinewood Derby time came around, my poor son actually had to use the sandpaper and pocket knife technique because we didn't have any tools. But today I fixed something. I fixed a gate. 

We have a gate in the back that you roll open. Nothing fancy. No remote control or motor or magic sensor or anything. You just pull it one direction or push it the other direction. Depending on whether you want it open or closed. However, it does require some technology to function. Specifically, the technology of the wheel. 


And while that's a pretty simple technology, if it stops working, well, so does the gate. And that was the problem I was having. 

I'd been noticing that the gate seemed heavier when I pushed it open or pulled it closed. And I had no explanation for this. It had been raining a lot. Could the wood just be wet? I mean, really wet? So much that it affected the overall weight of the gate? Seemed unlikely/impossible. 

So yesterday, I took a good look at the wheels. And sure enough, the nut that holds the bolt that attaches the wheel to the gate in place had worked its way off. And the screw had receded into the hole such that you couldn't put the nut back on. I couldn't figure out how I would get that bolt back through with the weight of the gate bearing down on it. 

So, I borrowed a jack from my neighbor. 


And you might think, But Chad, why didn't you just use your own jack. And I would answer, "Because I bought a hybrid, and it doesn't come with a spare tire or a jack." And you'd be like, "For real?" And I'd just kind of shrug. 

But my neighbor had one. And it fit! So I hoisted up the gate and screwed back on the nut, and now it works like gangbusters. 



And that is the story of how I fixed a thing! 

THE END

Spring Break

It just occurred to me for the first time ever that in Texas we have Spring Break in the winter. And we always have.

I don't really feel any kind of way about that. Maybe it should be called something else? But then we would have been deprived of this incredible art. 


Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Monday, January 8, 2024

Movies I Watched in 2023

It's the time of year when people post their favorite movies lists. Usually their top 10 for the year. For the past few years as a kind of humorless joke, I've just posted the couple of handfuls of movies that I actually got out to the theater to see because depressingly it's only numbered about 10 anyway. Also, I don't really like to discriminate.

This past year I did a better job of seeing movies in the theater, which is one of my favorite things to do. Still nowhere near what I used to do, quantity-wise, but I feel like I'm at least somewhat back on the horse. And I already saw a movie in 2024. Unstoppable! 

These are the movies I saw in the theater last year in order. This time, taking a cue from my friend Josh's inspiring and exhaustive movie list (Check it out here!), I added some stills I found on the internet. Unlike Josh's inspiring and exhaustive posts, I didn't write any reviews. I saw them. I'm telling you. That's it. 

If for some reason you enjoy finding out what I've been up to, movie-wise, feel free to "follow" me on Letterboxd for a much more incomplete accounting of my cinematic behaviors. One thing I do over there is list the research movies I watch when I'm working on a screenplay, so if you're curious about the types of scripts I've been writing, that will give you some idea. 

Here goes.

Everything Everywhere All at Once

Paris, Texas

Computer Chess

Times Square

Make Popular Movies

Alien

Mod Fuck Explosion

Spider-man: Across the Spiderverse

Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One

Barbie

The Mother and the Whore

Asteroid City

True Stories

Zachariah

Stop Making Sense

Mutiny in Heaven

The Bikeriders

American Fiction


That was great. Let's do it again next year. 

Note: For more information about the films, clicking on the images will take you to IMDB.

Thursday, September 13, 2018

One-Part Songs

Earlier today, I was listening to "Anyway You Want It" by Journey, and I realized that the whole song is essentially the same part without any changes. Sure, the vocal melody and feel changes for the refrain, but the essential chord progression just repeats. The spine of the song is just that one phrase, over and over. I'm wondering what other songs make good use of this one-part structure. Off the top of my head, I can think of two:

"Born in the U.S.A."
"All Along the Watchtower"

What are some other ones?

(Again, I'm not talking about the vocal melody but the underlying musical structure.)

UPDATE:

Had a bunch more suggestions for this one over on Facebook.

"The Passenger" - Iggy Pop
"Natural's Not In It" - Gang of Four
"Gloria" - Them
"Everybody's Gotta Live" - Love
"Save it for Later" - The English Beat
"When the World Is Running Down, You Make the Best of What's Still Around" - The Police
"Demolition Man" - The Police
"Papa was a Rolling Stone" - The Temptations
"Failures" - Joy Division

And of course, the perfect marriage of form and content:


h/t to Mike Corwin for that one.

Friday, January 19, 2018

He Said/She Said

Earlier today I was listening to a Power Pop playlist that I'd made a while back, and these two songs came on within a few minutes of each other. I realized they're kind of saying the same thing from two different perspectives. Thought it might make an interesting comparison/contrast. What do you think?

The Primitives - Really Stupid

The Vapors - Talk Talk

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

My Top Ten Music Movies

1. Half Cocked
2. Hedwig and the Angry Inch
3. Tender Mercies
4. 24-hour Party People
5. Ladies and Gentlemen, the Fabulous Stains
6. Leningrad Cowboys Go America
7. Payday
8. This Is Spinal Tap
9. Almost Famous
10. Linda Linda Linda 

What did I miss?

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Short Pants

I don't wear a lot of shorts. Every once in a while this gets pointed out to me. There are those among my friends who see it as kind of an ongoing challenge. They proselytize. They cajole. I remain unmoved. I live in Texas, and the weather here, particularly during the summer, heavily suggests semi- if not outright nudity as the only sane mode of presentation, yet I persevere.

When pressed for a justification, I tend to get a little peevish, and when I'm feeling especially mean-spirited, I might say, "I'm not a child," which is a shitty thing to say to your well-meaning, accomplished, grownup friend who is standing right in front of you, wearing shorts. Most of the time, though, I just smile or grumble, depending, and kind of dodge the issue. Well, now, thanks to the New York Times Magazine, I can just refer people to this incredibly bitchy think-piece that outlines every possible rationale for wholesale shorts avoidance:

He's Got Legs

Patterson dares to be much cattier than I could ever manage about the subject, meanwhile providing a pretty thorough history of pants length throughout the past couple of centuries. It's a fascinating read, and I was kind of amazed to come across it. For once I didn't feel like a trouserial iconoclast. There are others out there!

I wasn't always shorts averse. In my high school days, regardless of the arena, I garbed myself almost exclusively for the beach. Witness:

(Extra points if you noticed the
Spuds Mackenzie poster in the bg.) 
The dress code at my high school stipulated only that the hem of one's shorts not rise more than six inches above the knee. Eton it was not. Somewhere exists photographic evidence from those days of a pair of Jams unmistakably occupying my person. If you want to see that one, you're on your own.

Then I moved to Rhode Island. Sure, it gets hot in Rhode Island. I definitely wore shorts there on more than one occasion, but when a place gets a foot of snow dropped on it the second week of April, two weeks after my home beach of South Padre Island's monthlong cavalcade of barely clad spring breakers has already vamoosed back to campus, leaving a wake of discarded Bartles and Jaymes 4-pack holders and vomit-filled jacuzzis, you're probably best off keeping those knees hidden from the elements.

I don't know when the shorts forsaking became a personal mandate, but I think it was around the turn of the century. Motivations are open to speculation, but I know mosquitoes contributed to the reasoning. There were doubtless aesthetic considerations as well. I've noticed that rockers rarely sport them (When was the last time you saw a photo of a bare-legged Keith Richards?). Skaters and hardcore punks are a different story. Cargo shorts abound. At some point, I made a semi-conscious transition from the style choices of the latter to those of the former. And there I stayed. (I actually touched on this phenomenon in a piece I wrote a while ago in Tribeza. Here it is, if you're interested):

Sympathy for the Devil Who Wears Prada

Once I stopped, I never really went back. At a certain point age imbues a certain ridiculousness unto a mode of dress essentially designed for children. At least in my case. I still don the short pants for appropriate occasions. For me, that's athletics and swimming. And nothing else. People still try to bring me over to their side. But now I can just forward them this post and know this secret: Last summer, I used a gift card from my mother-in-law to acquire a pair of gray J. Crew lightweight chino club shorts with a 9" inseam that I plan to wear only for vacations or picnicking, mosquitoes be damned. Until then, I'll see you around town in my black jeans and Adidas Superstars, the way God intended.

Old Tribeza Article

I recently ran across this old piece for Tribeza when I was going through some boxes. It was for their Fashion issue from several years back. The assignment was to write a piece about music and fashion, and while I definitely did that, I'm not sure it was exactly the kind of thing they were looking for. But thanks to the unfailing grace of my editor Lauren Smith Ford, they ran it anyway. Hopefully you can make out the text. The always generous Molly O'Halloran was kind enough to scan it from the print issue for me. Enjoy:




Wednesday, August 5, 2015

New piece in Pursuit Magazine

I wrote an article about a new startup called Trustify for Pursuit, a magazine for private investigators. Check it out!

Should We Trust Trustify?

Friday, March 6, 2015

The Return of Draw Egan/Morricone Show

The composer Justin Sherburn hired me to rewrite the title cards to this nearly 100-year-old silent Western. I collaborated with Elizabeth Jackson, and the cards were edited in by Austin Higgins. Justin will be performing Ennio Morricone tunes as a live score with his mini-orchestra/band Montopolis. Check it out this Sunday.
 
The Return of Draw Egan/Morricone Show

Monday, July 7, 2014

In a World and The American Astronaut

It wasn't my intention when I went in to the video store, but I ended up with two Citizen Kanes. A "Citizen Kane" is when the same person writes, directs, and stars in a movie, as in "Shakes the Clown is the Citizen Kane of alcoholic clown movies."

In a World

In a World was exactly the movie I expected it to be but was somehow still surprising. I mainly knew about Lake Bell from Childrens Hospital and Wainy Days, and I thought she was a really good comic actor, so I was excited to see that she had written and directed a movie. I'm always happy to see women making comedies, and it's always cool to see an actor you like turn out to be a triple threat.

Even without the Lake Bell bona fides, In a World would have caught my eye because it's about the world of voice-over artists. Having spent years as a hack voice-over actor in various Foleyvision shows, I have a special affinity for the field. I've been hearing a lot lately about how you should zero in on a subculture to write about, and I'm glad Bell is the one to have made a go of this one.

The movie is great. Light-hearted comedy with a solid cast of comedy pros (Ken Marino, Demetri Martin, Tig Notaro) and a tight script that hits all its marks. What surprised me though was how Bell produced some real strangeness as well as real emotional depth. Rob Corddry gets to bust out of his smarmy dickhead persona to play a really interesting put-upon husband. It's his arc with his wife (Michaela Watkins) that provides some real adult humanity to a pretty typical lovable loser story. But what's great about how Bell navigates these scenes is how she allows incompatibility and inarticulacy and disconnectedness to just hang there without underscoring them for big, obvious laughs. There's a great almost-monologue that Corddry goes into about wishing there was some sort of bubble with no future and no past or something--it doesn't really make any sense--but the emotion behind it is sincere and evident. Bell mirrors the audience's confusion, but it's clear she really wants to get it and to be there for him.

Even better is a moment when Ken Marino finds Bell in his secret hideaway lair and, as a pretty off-target seduction gambit, tells her that he likes to go in there and take off all his clothes and just remember what's it's like to be uncomfortable. It's a great moment because it subverts your expectations. Usually people get naked to feel more comfortable. It also is such a lame come-on, but it works because the strangeness of it registers as a kind of innocence. There are a lot of moments like this in the film: lines that could have been exploited for cheap laughs, but instead, the characters just kind of roll with them because that's the way life is: You rarely say the right thing, and instead of really connecting, you end up just half-assing it the best that you can. Every once in a while, you get past all the misfires and get a chance to really jibe. Or maybe you don't. Corddry and Watkins never quite get there, but their love is built on the strength of their emotional magnetism. Not everybody needs to line up just so. Bell seems to get this in a way that a lot of writers gloss over.

I hope she directs more films because it's really nice to see some humor that doesn't depend on obnoxious boors or gross-out gags. The world could use a lot more of that.

The American Astronaut

I haven't been able to stop thinking about this movie. It is easily the strangest movie I've seen in a long time, Computer Chess notwithstanding. I had no idea what to expect when I put it in. The box advertised it as "A Laurel and Hardy skit directed by Salvador Dalí," but I'm not sure that even scratches the surface.

The film was entirely conceived and executed by members of a band called The Billy Nayer Show with whom I was not familiar. The band's singer Cory McAbee wrote, directed, and starred, and the drummer, Bobby Lurie, was the music director, not a small task considering the film was a space-western rock opera. I've recently been circling around the idea of watching Zachariah, which looks insane, but I'm sure it can't even come close to how unbelievable this movie was. I say "unbelievable" because the film constantly provoked a feeling of "It is impossible that that just happened, that someone thought of that and then actually rehearsed and filmed it. No way." There were definitely some Lynchian moments: sequences that seemed to be more interested in off-kilter tonal surges or performative recalibrations than any kind of narrative flow ( This one's a shoo-in for Bordwell's "parametric narration.").

McAbee resembles a Rumble-Fish-era Dennis Hopper, and a lot of the population and look of the film has that early-Jarmusch, NYC-music-scene hipster kind of feel but coming out of a much stranger subcultural niche. Maybe a twinge of Kaurismäki in there, too. The closest comparison I can come up with is if Three Day Stubble executed a remake of A Boy and His Dog. The plot is negligible to such an extent that McAbee delineates the whole thing in a short speech featured prominently in the trailer. And, right on schedule, the film follows the map he lays out beat by beat. McAbee isn't interested in plot twists or big reveals. Even so, the film constantly manages to surprise and confound expectations largely because it doesn't conform to any known conventions of mainstream filmmaking.

The main formal device here is the songs, which the story links like the projected lines of a constellation and which almost always are both unexpected and disorienting. Witness:



This is easily the best scene in the film, if not the most unusual. I feel bad taking some of the sucker out of its punch by posting it here, but it does an exemplary job of showing how the film functions. Our assumption when the men enter the restroom is that we're headed toward a confrontation and toward violence. And even when the men start singing and pacing the floor, that menace abides. As the dance gets stranger and less likely, constantly expanding and reconfiguring our expectations, it maintains that sense of danger and malice all the way up to the snap of the Polaroid, a final and abrupt veering from the payoff that the scene has taken such pains to set up.

Not that the movie is always this good. It definitely ventures into Ed Wood territory at times (though in this instance, the filmmakers are in on the joke), and one has to have a very specific cluster of predilections to appreciate some of the more jarring stylistic choices. I thought it was incredible, but I know this is one of those movies that, even given someone whose Venn diagram of cinematic tastes overlaps so overwhelmingly with mine as to appear more like an eclipse than the usual cell-in-the-final-stages-of-mitosis figure eight, would remain in that little sliver of corona that belongs to just me. Maybe this sums it up best: My wife was in the next room while I was watching, and after about 15 minutes, she got up and went to another part of the house. The next day, I made her watch the "Hey Boy" scene, and she said "Wow. That was amazing. When you were watching it last night, it sounded horrible." She was probably right in both declarations. I think I'm going to try to get the other Billy Nayer Show film collections. Check 'em out here.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Be your own protagonist.

Last night Kevin Corrigan was telling a story about hanging out with Al Pacino at a diner. He and some buddies had put on a play, and Pacino came to see it and took them all out afterwards. This is way back when KC was just starting out. He paraphrased Pacino, and I'm in turn going to paraphrase him. He said that we're all actors. That everybody is the lead in their own movie.

I think about acting a lot. I started acting pretty young. I was 15. I found that a lot of the skills I learned there were useful in what we call "regular life." Not always in an admirable way. I can lie pretty convincingly. I'm pretty good at manipulating my emotions. I'm self-analytical to a fault. I try not to use that stuff for evil, but it's in my pocket.

What I realized, though, when Corrigan espoused this idea of every person's life being their own movie, is that I'm not sure I see myself as the lead in mine. I'm definitely more than a spectator, and I think I drive more of the action than an extra. Am I a supporting player? Am I crew? An executive producer? (Probably not. They usually have money.) I'm not sure. But from now on, my goal is to be the lead. I don't know if I have to audition or how exactly this works, but whatever it takes. This should be a good part. Probably needs a few rewrites, but I think it has a lot of potential. Thanks, Kevin Corrigan!

Monday, June 23, 2014

Literary Loglines

Can you match the logline to the title?
  1. A dude is mad at a whale.
  2. A guy's mother dies, so he kills a guy but doesn't feel anything.
  3. An old guy goes crazy, and everybody's mean to him.
  4. Jewish Irish guy has a weird day then gets laid.
  5. Guy gets really confused 'cause his plane got shot up. 
  6. A French dude has a crush on his neighbor, so they do all sorts of pervy shit.
  7. A bunch of people drive a dead lady cross-country, but they can't get their stories straight.
  8. A dude joins up with some scalp hunters who proceed to be horrible.
  9. A guy should not have taken so many drugs in Las Vegas.
  10. Some poor people take a road trip.
  11. A lady gets mad at her gay husband and his weird family.
  12. Everybody goes crazy from drugs and pleasure, but some of them are really good at tennis.
  13. A guy shoots drugs and talks crazy conspiracy stuff, inadvertently inspires worst band.
  14. Strong-handed Swede kills a monster, his mother, and a dragon, calls it a day.

A. Infinite Jest
B. As I Lay Dying
C. Moby Dick
D. Beowulf
E. King Lear
F. Catch 22
G. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
H. Naked Lunch
I. Blood Meridian
J. The Stranger
K. The Grapes of Wrath
L. Ulysses
M. The Story of the Eye
N. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Flock

How come it's the same word for a group of sheep as for a group of birds? Are sheep birds?

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia

Finally got around to watching Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia. Such a strange movie. I thought it was really interesting that it used a tragic structure rather than a classic quest structure. At least that's how I see it. It seems like the climax comes about halfway through. After that, it turns from a quest story to a revenge story, and everything after the midpoint is just fallout from the climactic event. (I'm trying not to give any spoilers.) It's not so much a question of getting what he wants because he's already lost everything.

I kept expecting the movie to end abruptly, but it just keeps piling on climactic confrontations. I guess in that sense, it has a lot in common with Point Blank, but Alfredo Garcia does in its second half what Point Blank takes the whole movie to do. Come to think of it, Point Blank starts after the triggering action has already taken place. He's already made his decision. It's like it starts in Act II and unfolds straight toward the climax. Man, I'm going to have to watch Point Blank again now.

What happened to the days when dudes like Lee Marvin and Warren Oates could be the lead in a movie? No offense to Channing Tatum or Chris Hemsworth or these other roided up pretty boys (I shouldn't say that. I'm sure the bulk is all natural), but those dudes were tough without the pumped-up physiques. But they were also weird and brutal and definitely not bros. What actors like that are there now? Mike Shannon? Anyone else?

Final thing about Alfredo Garcia: Dude, Peckinpah is not kind to women. This is no revelation, but I was really struck by it in this film. The misogyny was almost sociopathic. I felt like he was living out some sick fantasies. That said, it was surprising to see a Mexican woman cast as a lead in an American film, and it gave the film a kind of authenticity that was really fascinating. This was a long way from the Charlton Heston as a Mexican stunt of Touch of Evil. I also appreciated that a lot of the Spanish wasn't subtitled, to really put the viewer in Oates's position. I'm going to have to watch this movie again now that I know how it turns out, but it's going to be a while. Ugly stuff expertly done.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Heroes

The first time I ever heard the David Bowie song "Heroes" was at the end of a movie about jogging.


Apparently, the Italians love this video.

Heroes

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Big Dipper

I just got this Big Dipper anthology, and I've been combing through it over the past week. I wish I'd given Big Dipper more of a shake when I was living in Providence, but I bypassed them for better-known acts like M.O.B., Volcano Suns, Christmas, and eventually the Pixies. I kind of lumped them in with Dumptruck: a totally good band but not exciting enough I guess for my late teen-age tastes. If I'd know that B.D. was comprised of former Volcano Suns and Embarrassment members, I would have definitely delved deeper. If you don't have All-Night Lotus Party or Heyday, you should definitely drop the cash and pocket those puppies.

The only Big Dipper song I really knew back then was "He Is God," an excellent weirdo pop tune from the point of view of some of Jesus' friends.

And soon we met up with a blind man,
Perceived that his vision was flawed.
Until our young buddy put a hand to his forehead.
That's when we knew...

He was God.

I know this song because a couple of friends of mine in college made a Jesus mix tape. They did a pretty good job: Big Star's "Jesus Christ," VU's "Jesus" and "Heroin," Leonard Cohen's "Suzanne." I sort of start forgetting after that.

Anyway, I was looking for "He Is God" clips on youtube and found a pretty good live one here. I couldn't figure out why youtube was recommending all these Embarrassment clips alongside the Big Dipper ones, so I looked into it and found out that Bill Goffrier was the guitarist for both bands. His guitar work on the Embarrassment stuff is some of my favorite playing. It's simple but really original and it has a vivacity to it that a lot of indie rock doesn't manage to muster. Anyway, "He Is God" is still great, but my favorite song right now is "When Men Were Trains."

Monday, July 26, 2010

Woyzeck and The Limey

Woyzeck

Here is the main reason I rented Woyzeck: I'd been sick in bed for about a week, and by the time I got back up on my feet, I had a pretty grizzly beard with huge shocks of white all through it. I'd also lost about 15 pounds, and I joked that I looked like a soldier on the Russian front (pick a war). I read the play Woyzeck in college for a class called "Civilization and Its Discontents." I was 18 when I took the class, and it precisely catered to all my late-teen-age angst. Arnold Weinstein was the professor, and he used as the premise an essay by Sigmund Freud with the aforementioned title. The reading list included (in no particular order) The Wasteland, Woyzeck, The Flanders Road, Naked Lunch, Phedre, Spring Awakening, Beloved, and a bunch of other texts about really messed up people.

All that aside, with the beard and gaunt face I was reminding myself of a particularly grizzly looking cover photo of Woyzeck that I remembered from the class. Also, I'd recently finished The Rest Is Noise and Ross talks a lot about Alban Berg and his opera of Woyzeck, Wozzeck, so I'd been wanting to revisit the text. The last thing was that I'd managed to make it almost 40 years without seeing any of the (in)famous Herzog/Kinski films, and I thought it was about time.

Turns out, Woyzeck doesn't have a beard at all. In fact, one of the first scenes is of him shaving someone with a straight razor. He's one of the most clean shaven characters in memory. I must have been thinking about someone else. If memory serves, the film is true to the play. What struck me most is the subtlety of Kinski's performance. I was expecting a real lion, but he gives one of the most understated portraits of mental duress I've ever seen. Likewise, Herzog uses a light touch and resists the urge to overdramatize Woyzeck's anguish. It's a very strange film, mean-spirited and relentless but also matter-of-fact. Eva Mattes turns in a fantastic performance (apparently she was awarded Best Actress at Cannes), but Kinski's impotence turned to psychosis is obviously the point. It's a slow film and mostly a quiet one. Ultimately it left me a little nonplussed, but if you're interested in seeing a decidedly non-Hollywood portrayal of mental calamity, I'd highly recommend it.


The Limey

I decided to rent The Limey when I came across this feature at the AV Club. Apparently, the commentary track on this film is legendary in film circles for the undisguised malhomie between screenwriter Lem Dobbs and director Steven Soderbergh. I've never much delved into commentary tracks, I think partially because I've always rented from shops and have run out of time. Now that I'm going to be studying screenwriting though, I've become a lot more interested in the particulars of how certain films were made. That's one thing I'm looking forward to with Netflix is having the time to really delve into the extras on the film if it warrants it. A notable exception to this was about a week I spent with Wim Wenders' Paris, Texas, when I was working on my short film "Sonny's Gambit." I would recommend that commentary for anyone who's interested in process, if not for the insane logistics behind that production, at least for the sonorousness of Wenders' voice.

It had been a while since I'd seen The Limey, so I watched it without the commentary first to refresh my memory. I got a lot more out of it this time around, and it was especially interesting to place it in the trajectory from Out of Sight to Oceans Eleven to Traffic. You could really see Soderbergh experimenting with a lot of the stuff that he would perfect in Traffic: the color palettes, the fragmented editing, the breaking up of the timeline. There was one scene where one continuous conversation takes place in three different settings, with the film cutting back and forth among them. I hadn't even noticed that the first time I saw it because the dialogue is continuous.

The commentary track definitely delivers. There are times that are hilarious and some that are truly uncomfortable, but if you've ever worked on a collaborative project, you know exactly where they're coming from. What's actually more interesting than the conflict is seeing how much common ground the two share. And it's thrilling just to hear the scope of knowledge that these two have about cinema. Ultimately, for reasons I can't quite pin down, The Limey is a flawed film. All the scenes with Nicky Katt seem like they're from a different movie. He's funny, but his scenes distract from the hard-boiled nature of the Terence Stamp story. Tonally, the film lies exactly between the sort of charming, jokey Elmore Leonard adaptation Out of Sight and the more ambitious but also more consistent Traffic. But The Limey goes much farther than either in its use of oblique, abstract devices to convey story and character. It's frankly a miracle that Soderbergh got to turn in a film this hostile to convention. But for all the experimenting, there's a sense that ultimately he didn't take it far enough. Ultimately, the film feels pretty safe. Once you boil it down, it's a story about gangsters and screw-ups, a little comic, a little violent, with just enough emotional depth to give it life.

Again, for anyone thinking about studying or making film, I'd definitely recommend the commentary here. It really lays it out there.