A movie review that couldn’t wait until Monday
As if it wasn’t enough to see Rachel Getting Married to stir my emotions like crazy. My senses were unceremoniously aroused further when I happened upon my car with its shattered front windshield. Apparently, while I was tearing up over Rachel, someone was hurling a sharp object onto my poor little, four month old Toyota’s window.
Round perforation like a bullet hole, sprinkles of glass on the dashboard, with no sign of the criminal, two young policeman came to my aid and basically said, “call your insurance company.” I did. By midweek, my little economy ride should be all better.
This post lead-in wasn’t intended to elicit your sympathy, but rather to set the stage for my report about one of the most real and moving films I’ve seen in a long time — maybe even of all time.
Rachel Getting Married is about a wedding. Big surprise.
But, this wedding is such a close up of a dysfunctional family that it’s sometimes hard to look at. Kym, the recovering addict character, is on leave from rehab to attend her sister’s wedding and in her short visit home, stirs up a dizzying hornet’s nest which includes lots of yelling, crying, humiliation and even some fisticuffs.
The movie could have been called “It’s All About Kym” but that might have prevented you from paying attention to the flaws of the supporting family characters with their icy personas and/or diametrically opposing enabler behaviors. Kym’s history is textbook addict with stints in and out of rehab, accidents, and most importantly the bogarting of all parental attention for herself (poor Rachel).
What separates this from just another treatise on family and addiction is that Kym carries another traumatic experience so devastating that one can’t even imagine surviving it. I won’t reveal what this is but as heart wrenching as it is to view, it makes her tragic character more sympathetic.
Poor Kym.
As for the acting, the characters for Kym (Anne Hatheway) and Rachel(Rosemarie DeWitt) are so convincing that at times you really feel like you’re watching someone’s home movies. (Who would shoot movies like this, I’m not sure!) So raw and true they were, but the role of their mother (Debra Winger) was so stiffly played and chilling that you wanted to just grab her by the neck and shake her. (which sort of happens in the movie) The father’s (Bill Irwin) warm, fuzzy counterpart affects you quite differently. You want to shake him for other reasons In a word to all of them, brilliant.
For music lovers, the eclectic sounds running through the entire film were extremely well selected but at times you wanted to say, as the step-mother character did in one scene, “give it a rest, will you?” I love much of the internationally flavored music but couldn’t stay dry-eyed during the groom’s Neil Young serenade to his bride at the alter. Can you imagine?
This is a Jonathan Demme (Heart of Gold, Philadelphia, Something Wild, oh and a small film you may remember, The Silence of the Lambs, to name a few) movie who is in the habit of making great films. Rachel Getting Married is sort of documentary-like, but not really. I just think it’s so artfully done that it captures real life with amazing poignancy.
If you have alcoholism or addiction anywhere in your family, I am certain that this movie will speak to you as vividly as a twelve step counselor. And, if you don’t, you will see how completely crippling these diseases can be to everyone close to these diseases. What you will also see is what potentially leads up to acquiring them.
These diseases are treacherous and unforgiving, but familial love is an ingredient that may not be a cure but a welcome balm in the perpetual process of healing.
Go see it.
Bring kleenex.
And, park in a well-lit parking spot and make sure your insurance is up to date.
Comments (0)A Friday tickle
Wisdom from Woody Allen:
“I wish we lived our lives backwards. You start out dead and get that out of the way. Then you wake up in an old people’s home feeling better every day. You get kicked out for being too healthy, go collect your pension, and then when you start work, you get a gold watch and a party on your first day. You work for 40 years until you’re young enough to enjoy your retirement. You party, drink alcohol, and are generally promiscuous, then you are ready for high school.. You then go to primary school, you become a kid, you play. You have no responsibilities, you become a baby until you are born. And then you spend your last 9 months floating in luxurious spa- like conditions with central heating and room service on tap, larger quarters every day and then Voila! You finish off as an orgasm! I rest my case .”
huh?
Comments (0)A near miss, but Ginsu knives saves the day. What??????
I just got home. It’s late. I’m a little under the weather. Perfect conditions for taking the night off from blogging. Then the thought popped into my head - ginsu knives - I just met the ginsu knife guy. More precisely, I met the guy who made the infomercial for the ginsu knife which means one of the first, IF NOT THE FIRST, infomercial ever.
Why would that excite me and what the devil do ginsu knives have to do with KWTB&B? With books?
Ah so, wise ones. Kevin Harrington, the infomercial guru himself, is writing a book for us for spring 09, and I get to bring it into the world. How cool is that?
This one, who’s title shall remain nameless for the moment, is fashioned as a cross between Chicken Soup for the Soul and Donny Deutsch’s Big Idea. That wasn’t necessarily the intention, but from today’s lunch meeting, that’s my take on the book.
Harrington’s got a fascinating history in the business that’s employed him since the early ’80’s. If you’re too young to remember the ginsu knife, I’m sure you know the exercise equipment hawker, Tony Little (who was my client years back before he started yelling), or the Foodsaver, or Bruce Jenner’s step thinga-ma-bob.
Anyway, the infomercial king didn’t rise to the top without sliding back down the pole a few times. His book will tell the stories of failure and triumph that happened along the way to his success. Now, his company does business in over 80 countries.
Imagine watching Tony Little with a Japanese or German voice over.
Sorry.
I’m gonna have fun with this one. On the horizon I see, teleseminars, lectures, morning tv talk shows and evening magazines.
And, the best part is, he’s going to conduct a contest for the best idea for an infomercial subject. If publicity doesn’t follow that idea…
Check back with me in March to see what actually goes on for this book. However you slice it, ginsu knife or not, Kevin Harrington’s story is going to be an inspiration.
Remember, keep your eye on HCI. There’s a lot more where that came from!
Comments (0)A bit of mystical Italy comes to Miami - outsiders, it’s still worth reading!
Mid week, I am delivering an un-bookly post to inform you of an intriguing event happening in Miami. If you’re not a South Florida dweller, I invite you still to click on the links so that you might travel to a mystical place in Italy called, “Damanhur“. They do publish books in Italian, so those out there that speak the language - you can indulge. I hope to add some spiffy graphics to this post as they day goes on so you may want to check back. I’m attending the “Concert of the Plants” event and will be sure to report on the musicality of our shrubs, houseplants and forests. Now, I find that worth the price of admission! Enjoy!
Tomorrow (11/14), from 7pm to 10pm, Miami’s top artists, educators, environmentalists, community leaders and media will gather to welcome special representatives of The Federation of Damanhur. The world’s largest intentional eco-community, Damanhur featured in February 2008 on ABC’s Good Morning America has chosen Miami Beach as the community’s main North American hub for their educational programs and events.
The first event, Damanhur Reception and Music of the Plants, will be held at the Miami Beach Botanical Garden. The program will include a magical concert of the plants utilizing one of Damanhur’s revolutionary technologies that converts the energy of the plants and translates it into music, a short video of Damanhur and open conversation with the Damanhurian Ambassadors, Crotalo Sesamo and Shama Viola.
“We are thrilled to be opening up a center in Miami,” said Crotalo Sesamo. “As part of our first program we’ll be creating a spiral stone labyrinth which will become a permanent interactive art installation at the Miami Beach Botanical Garden, our gift to the community.”
Damanhur has city centers all over the world in countries such as Italy, France, Austria, Japan, Germany and Croatia. Founded in 1975 and located in northwestern Italy, the federation of Damanhur (”the city of light”) has been described as one of the largest and most successful advanced technological intentional eco-villages in the world. Damanhur is a Federation of Communities with a continuously evolving social and political structure. They are also renowned for building the largest underground temple in the world. The Temples of Humankind at Damanhur are an extraordinary work of art that has been described as an “Eight Wonder of the World”.
A United Nations award- winning sustainable community, Damanhur is an eco-society based upon ethical and spiritual values, esoteric traditions and modern research. The world which they speak about is surrounded and motivated by the beauty of art, guided daily by spiritual purpose, and a commitment to manifesting the Damanhur dream; the successes of their ideals manifested as a living reality ignite hope for the future of humanity and for the realization of a diverse and unified peaceable planet.
For more information, contact: Fredda Psaltis: (fredda@healingstar.net)
Comments (0)PR Dream Scenario - yet another
A while back I posted some commentary about an author’s pr dream scenario. Well, that was but a mere taste of what an author can bring to the smorgasbord table of publishing. I encountered such a person in a very recent client meeting. His “resume” was so impressive, I will do my best to usher him into the fold at HCI.
I am so used to authors with books and no platform. How refreshing to meet the opposite - plenty of platform but very little (or no) book.
Clay in my hands.
Without revealing his genre, which is really hard to do and still convey a meaningful message, this author came to me with: a regular presence on a major afternoon tv talk show, a fairly frequent stint on a major cable channel, published articles in his trade media, appearances on tv commercials selling products from his industry, an active lecturing schedule, and the status as the go-to guy in his specific area of expertise.
Pretty impressive, wouldn’t you say?
Don’t fret if your resume, your platform, doesn’t compare to his. Obviously, he worked hard to achieve this stature and deserves serious consideration from a publisher. Let him be a role model. Be inspired and learn.
However, it doesn’t end there. With a platform like his, this budding author might be awarded a publishing contract on the spot. Work with an editor to develop a book idea. This is done all the time.
As a testament to his hard work and preparation, my client also came with a kick-ass outline of his first book and a detailed vision of a subsequent series titles and a detailed plan of how he saw his publishing career evolve.
For a moment, I didn’t think that this man needed anything from me. All the materials he sent me for our coaching session seemed complete. What we ended up doing was really mapping out the life of a book and what was needed (in addition to what he already had) to complete the proposal/preparation phase.
We aren’t all as blessed as this future bestselling author with these whistles and bells. But we have what we have and we mean to go after the rest. With our hammers, nails and wooden planks, we pound away at our launching pads. Our platforms.
To convey to you how a publisher values these types of situations, my boss said it in five simple words: “Did you sign him up?”
Enough said.
Get to work!
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