The Screening Room is the podcast I present, along with Michael Ewins, over at www.multimediamouth.com
This week we talk Bridesmaids, 'Chick Flicks' and Incendies.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
DVD Review: Szindbád [15]
DIR: Zoltán Huszárik

THE FILM
Made in Hungary in 1971, Szindbád is quite a late contribution to Eastern Europe's surrealist movement, which was peopled largely by artist rebelling against conformist communist societies. I wonder if, if I knew more about Hungarian politics, the context of this film, and exactly what Zoltán Huszárik felt in relation to it, I would have liked Szindbád more, but while I'm sure there are layers here that I am not getting, and I'm equally sure that that undermines my enjoyment of the film, that's not to say that there aren't things to recommend here.
Szindbád is a visual marvel. It's essential that the film be beautiful, because its eponymous central character - who seems to be an aristocrat of some sort, but not to have any settled job or residence - is clearly captivated by beauty, and particularly by the beauty of nature. This natural beauty is the film's focus, it is a sensual film, it delights in nature (the near microscopically close up shots of flora and fauna put me in mind of certain sequences in I Am Love), in food and perhaps most notably in women. As far as it has any structure, the film is a dossier of memories of the various beautiful women who have drifted through Szindbád's life. Huszárik, and by extension Szindbád, see beauty in women old an young, from every class and of diverse appearence. There is relatively little nudity, and no sex to speak of, but the film is in thrall to the beauty of women, and Huszárik's soft lighting and his focus on detail in all things (be it a flowers petal, chilli seeds in soup or a woman's breast) draws us into a sensual experience.
For me, Szindbád felt like a series of beautiful digressions, but the frustration of it is that I'm not sure that it is anything more than that. This is a surrealist work, so going in expecting a traditional narrative would be foolish, but Szindbád gives us very little to hang on to. Szindbád himself (Zoltán Latinovits) is so studiedly unemotional - he tells us that the secret of his success with women is not telling them that he loves them - that he always remains distant, and he's so prone to spouting pretentious (and largely irrelevant) philosophies that he's often a chore to follow. None of the women are really around long enough to develop any character, and there is no sense of even the most subtle narrative through line (even films like Valerie and Her Week of Wonders have a central thread, which is then disrupted by the surrealist telling). Engagement is further complicated by a timeline which seems to skip back and forward through time, without giving us any clue to - or real reason to care about - chronology. What I was left with was a film I admire a great deal for its visual splendour, but the frustrating feeling that I'm going to need to do some serious reading to understand it enough to truly appreciate it.
Szindbád is hard work, but right from the start it is rewarding, because it is so beautifully shot and edited (the combination of very fast cutting with other scenes that unfold in long held shots is striking and means that the film always remains visually unpredictable). I'd like to be able to recommend it in more glowing terms. This one is probably for long standing fans and students of surrealist cinema, as a starting point I'd suggest Valerie, or some Bunuel, but if you are already interested in the movement then I suspect that Szindbád will delight and fascinate you.
THE DVD
To begin with, as ever with Second Run, the simple but clean and beautiful cover art bears mentioning, as it conveys the look of the film well without betraying the content.
Szindbád is a 40 year old film which has been out of circulation for a long time, and while there are a few scratches here and the on the print none are bad, and they never interfere with what is a remarkable DVD presentation. The images are rich in colour and detail, skin tones seem accurate and there are no compression or combing issues to be found. The age of the film means it's not reference quality, but it is, nevertheless, an admirable and often remarkable transfer.
THE EXTRAS
There is only one extra on the DVD, a 12 minute 'appreciation' in which Katalin Varga director Peter Strickland talks about his love of the film. It's interesting, but my preference is always to make my own interpretation of a film.
Also provided is a booklet with a lengthy contextualising article on the film by critic Michael Brooke. It's pretty academic, but the historical background might prove useful when revisitng the film.
Overall this is another fine package from Second Run, and continues their admirable track record discovering and exposing films that would otherwise remain lost to us.

THE FILM
Made in Hungary in 1971, Szindbád is quite a late contribution to Eastern Europe's surrealist movement, which was peopled largely by artist rebelling against conformist communist societies. I wonder if, if I knew more about Hungarian politics, the context of this film, and exactly what Zoltán Huszárik felt in relation to it, I would have liked Szindbád more, but while I'm sure there are layers here that I am not getting, and I'm equally sure that that undermines my enjoyment of the film, that's not to say that there aren't things to recommend here.
Szindbád is a visual marvel. It's essential that the film be beautiful, because its eponymous central character - who seems to be an aristocrat of some sort, but not to have any settled job or residence - is clearly captivated by beauty, and particularly by the beauty of nature. This natural beauty is the film's focus, it is a sensual film, it delights in nature (the near microscopically close up shots of flora and fauna put me in mind of certain sequences in I Am Love), in food and perhaps most notably in women. As far as it has any structure, the film is a dossier of memories of the various beautiful women who have drifted through Szindbád's life. Huszárik, and by extension Szindbád, see beauty in women old an young, from every class and of diverse appearence. There is relatively little nudity, and no sex to speak of, but the film is in thrall to the beauty of women, and Huszárik's soft lighting and his focus on detail in all things (be it a flowers petal, chilli seeds in soup or a woman's breast) draws us into a sensual experience.
For me, Szindbád felt like a series of beautiful digressions, but the frustration of it is that I'm not sure that it is anything more than that. This is a surrealist work, so going in expecting a traditional narrative would be foolish, but Szindbád gives us very little to hang on to. Szindbád himself (Zoltán Latinovits) is so studiedly unemotional - he tells us that the secret of his success with women is not telling them that he loves them - that he always remains distant, and he's so prone to spouting pretentious (and largely irrelevant) philosophies that he's often a chore to follow. None of the women are really around long enough to develop any character, and there is no sense of even the most subtle narrative through line (even films like Valerie and Her Week of Wonders have a central thread, which is then disrupted by the surrealist telling). Engagement is further complicated by a timeline which seems to skip back and forward through time, without giving us any clue to - or real reason to care about - chronology. What I was left with was a film I admire a great deal for its visual splendour, but the frustrating feeling that I'm going to need to do some serious reading to understand it enough to truly appreciate it.
Szindbád is hard work, but right from the start it is rewarding, because it is so beautifully shot and edited (the combination of very fast cutting with other scenes that unfold in long held shots is striking and means that the film always remains visually unpredictable). I'd like to be able to recommend it in more glowing terms. This one is probably for long standing fans and students of surrealist cinema, as a starting point I'd suggest Valerie, or some Bunuel, but if you are already interested in the movement then I suspect that Szindbád will delight and fascinate you.
THE DVD
To begin with, as ever with Second Run, the simple but clean and beautiful cover art bears mentioning, as it conveys the look of the film well without betraying the content.
Szindbád is a 40 year old film which has been out of circulation for a long time, and while there are a few scratches here and the on the print none are bad, and they never interfere with what is a remarkable DVD presentation. The images are rich in colour and detail, skin tones seem accurate and there are no compression or combing issues to be found. The age of the film means it's not reference quality, but it is, nevertheless, an admirable and often remarkable transfer.
THE EXTRAS
There is only one extra on the DVD, a 12 minute 'appreciation' in which Katalin Varga director Peter Strickland talks about his love of the film. It's interesting, but my preference is always to make my own interpretation of a film.
Also provided is a booklet with a lengthy contextualising article on the film by critic Michael Brooke. It's pretty academic, but the historical background might prove useful when revisitng the film.
Overall this is another fine package from Second Run, and continues their admirable track record discovering and exposing films that would otherwise remain lost to us.
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Will 24FPS review Transformers: Dark of the Moon?
The answer to that question is up to you. I'll level with you; I don't want to see Dark of the Moon. Why, you ask? Allow me to refer you to my review of the last instalment; Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. I loathed it, perhaps even more than I loathed Michael Bay's awful, awful, awful Bad Boys II. That said... I saw Avatar because you guys demanded it (gee, thanks)and since you all, if my inbox is anything to go by, seem to like to see me suffer I thought I'd extend a challenge to you all...
If enough of you want me to then I will see Transformers: Dark of the Moon and review it, both here on the site and on a special episode of The Screening Room. So, if I get 30 or more requests for the review before Friday July 1st, then I'll go and see it that day. If not... I dodge the bullet and am absolved of responsibility. So, over to you guys. Drop me a line at sam@24fps.org.uk tweet me @24FPSUK or register your interest by commenting on this post.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Early Review: Tomboy
DIR: Celine Sciamma
CAST: Zoe Heran, Malon Levana, Jeanne Disson,
Sophie Cattani, Mathieu Demy

Celine Sciamma made a huge impression on me back in 2008, with her outstanding feature debut Water Lilies (see my Top 100 entry in the sidebar). Ever since I came out of seeing that movie I've been cautiously anticipating her follow up. Whenever a new director makes something as good as Water Lilies there's always going to be a question mark over their ability to follow it with something equally impressive. Thankfully Tomboy is a confident and convincing answer to that question, and a film that really puts its director on the map.
Like Water Lilies, Tomboy concerns itself with girls coming of age. Here Sciamma follows Laure (Heran), a tomboyish ten year old who, on being asked her name by her new neighbour Lisa (Disson), introduces herself as Mikael. 'Mikael' and Lisa become friends, and even share a first kiss, but Laure struggles to keep her secret from her new friend and from her family.
It's refreshing to see a movie these days which, while its focus is on young people, is truly adult, not in terms of having loads of swearing, sex and violence, but in that it deals with complex and challenging issues of identity, sexuality and the process of growing up in a way that never talks down to the audience or moralises about its characters thoughts, feelings or choices. Sciamma approaches Laure/Mikael's gender identity with sensitivity, other viewers might feel differently, but to me it felt like she never quite made an absolute determination about whether Laure is engaging in youthful experimentation here (tied with the confusion that comes with the first engagement with a sexual identity) or is truly transsexual, and for me the film's openness on this issue is a key strength, as it keeps it from being anything as trite as a cry for acceptance. Tomboy doesn't feel, to me, like a film with a heavy political message, rather its strength is as an intimate and insightful drama about a young person trying to define themselves.
As befits a film so focused on issues of the body and identity, Tomboy often lingers in close ups. Shooting on an adapted digital stills camera, with a very shallow depth of field, Sciamma gets right in to the personal space of her characters, especially that of Laure, her six year old sister Jeanne, and her, entirely male, bar Lisa, new group of friends (cast from Zoe Hernan's own real life group of friends). This brings us right in to the characters and experiences being portrayed here, and makes the film feel at times almost voyeuristic in its intimacy and reality. At the same time it's an intelligently composed and often rather beautiful film. It's a difficult circle that Sciamma squares here; making a film that feels designed and directed, without allowing any of it to ring false.
As in Water Lilies, Sciamma's insight into her characters is spot on, now 30, she nevertheless knows how to write kids who seem like kids. Even Laure's intelligent and somewhat wily sister (she exploits Laure's lie so that she can hang out with older kids) is written as a smart six year old, not as the miniature adult we saw in films like (500) Days of Summer. This carries through into the performances. There is never any sense of acting here, especially from the outstanding Zoe Hernan and Malon Levana. Hernan deals assuredly with a complex role, it would be interesting to discover how Sciamma told her about the character, and how she understood Laure/Mikael's identity but what's really impressive here is the ease with which she shifts gears, going from unselfconciously playing with her little sister and her parents, to being more outwardly controlled when she has to fit in with a group of boys. There is a great ease to the way the actors relate, a very real sense of family created between Hernan, Levana and Sophie Cattani and Mathieu Demy as their parents, and this also applies to the scenes between the children, be it the innocent first stirrings of attraction between Lisa and Mikael, or the games that the larger group of kids play, there is just a sense here of Sciamma observing children being children.
Tomboy is full of memorable scenes and moments, from the way that Jeanne visibly considers the decision of whether to expose her Sister's lie when Lisa comes looking for Mikael, to the lovely scene when Jeanne cuts her sister's hair. There is also much to admire in the way the relationship between Mikael and Lisa is drawn, the friendship grows very organically, and there is both charm and thematic interest in a scene in which Lisa puts make up on Mikael. Of course the course of the film can not run entirely smooth, and for me Celine Sciamma's sole - minor - stumble, is having the only confrontational scene with the children, after they discover Mikael's true identity, be an almost line by line quote of a notable sequene in the similarly themed Boys Don't Cry. Is it Sciamma's homage? Is it just that there aren't many other ways to deal with that moment, especially considering the age and level of maturity of the characters? It's hard to say, but it works as a scene in and of itself, even if it is over familliar.
There is real emotional punch to Tomboy. Like Water Lilies it deals in real and raw emotion, and though the performances are never overly demonstrative, you feel it all. I may like Water Lilies a bit more, but this film, for me, confirms Celine Sciamma as a major, major talent to watch and is one of the best of 2011 to date. I'd like to see Sciamma branch out a bit more next time, but if she keeps making coming of age movies this insightful, and this well acted, then that's just fine by me.
TOMBOY is due to open in the UK in September.
CAST: Zoe Heran, Malon Levana, Jeanne Disson,
Sophie Cattani, Mathieu Demy

Celine Sciamma made a huge impression on me back in 2008, with her outstanding feature debut Water Lilies (see my Top 100 entry in the sidebar). Ever since I came out of seeing that movie I've been cautiously anticipating her follow up. Whenever a new director makes something as good as Water Lilies there's always going to be a question mark over their ability to follow it with something equally impressive. Thankfully Tomboy is a confident and convincing answer to that question, and a film that really puts its director on the map.
Like Water Lilies, Tomboy concerns itself with girls coming of age. Here Sciamma follows Laure (Heran), a tomboyish ten year old who, on being asked her name by her new neighbour Lisa (Disson), introduces herself as Mikael. 'Mikael' and Lisa become friends, and even share a first kiss, but Laure struggles to keep her secret from her new friend and from her family.
It's refreshing to see a movie these days which, while its focus is on young people, is truly adult, not in terms of having loads of swearing, sex and violence, but in that it deals with complex and challenging issues of identity, sexuality and the process of growing up in a way that never talks down to the audience or moralises about its characters thoughts, feelings or choices. Sciamma approaches Laure/Mikael's gender identity with sensitivity, other viewers might feel differently, but to me it felt like she never quite made an absolute determination about whether Laure is engaging in youthful experimentation here (tied with the confusion that comes with the first engagement with a sexual identity) or is truly transsexual, and for me the film's openness on this issue is a key strength, as it keeps it from being anything as trite as a cry for acceptance. Tomboy doesn't feel, to me, like a film with a heavy political message, rather its strength is as an intimate and insightful drama about a young person trying to define themselves.
As befits a film so focused on issues of the body and identity, Tomboy often lingers in close ups. Shooting on an adapted digital stills camera, with a very shallow depth of field, Sciamma gets right in to the personal space of her characters, especially that of Laure, her six year old sister Jeanne, and her, entirely male, bar Lisa, new group of friends (cast from Zoe Hernan's own real life group of friends). This brings us right in to the characters and experiences being portrayed here, and makes the film feel at times almost voyeuristic in its intimacy and reality. At the same time it's an intelligently composed and often rather beautiful film. It's a difficult circle that Sciamma squares here; making a film that feels designed and directed, without allowing any of it to ring false.
As in Water Lilies, Sciamma's insight into her characters is spot on, now 30, she nevertheless knows how to write kids who seem like kids. Even Laure's intelligent and somewhat wily sister (she exploits Laure's lie so that she can hang out with older kids) is written as a smart six year old, not as the miniature adult we saw in films like (500) Days of Summer. This carries through into the performances. There is never any sense of acting here, especially from the outstanding Zoe Hernan and Malon Levana. Hernan deals assuredly with a complex role, it would be interesting to discover how Sciamma told her about the character, and how she understood Laure/Mikael's identity but what's really impressive here is the ease with which she shifts gears, going from unselfconciously playing with her little sister and her parents, to being more outwardly controlled when she has to fit in with a group of boys. There is a great ease to the way the actors relate, a very real sense of family created between Hernan, Levana and Sophie Cattani and Mathieu Demy as their parents, and this also applies to the scenes between the children, be it the innocent first stirrings of attraction between Lisa and Mikael, or the games that the larger group of kids play, there is just a sense here of Sciamma observing children being children.
Tomboy is full of memorable scenes and moments, from the way that Jeanne visibly considers the decision of whether to expose her Sister's lie when Lisa comes looking for Mikael, to the lovely scene when Jeanne cuts her sister's hair. There is also much to admire in the way the relationship between Mikael and Lisa is drawn, the friendship grows very organically, and there is both charm and thematic interest in a scene in which Lisa puts make up on Mikael. Of course the course of the film can not run entirely smooth, and for me Celine Sciamma's sole - minor - stumble, is having the only confrontational scene with the children, after they discover Mikael's true identity, be an almost line by line quote of a notable sequene in the similarly themed Boys Don't Cry. Is it Sciamma's homage? Is it just that there aren't many other ways to deal with that moment, especially considering the age and level of maturity of the characters? It's hard to say, but it works as a scene in and of itself, even if it is over familliar.
There is real emotional punch to Tomboy. Like Water Lilies it deals in real and raw emotion, and though the performances are never overly demonstrative, you feel it all. I may like Water Lilies a bit more, but this film, for me, confirms Celine Sciamma as a major, major talent to watch and is one of the best of 2011 to date. I'd like to see Sciamma branch out a bit more next time, but if she keeps making coming of age movies this insightful, and this well acted, then that's just fine by me.
TOMBOY is due to open in the UK in September.
The Screening Room Episodes 14 and 15
The Screening Room is the podcast that Me and Mike Ewins present over at www.multimediamouth.com
It's been a while, but we're back. Sorry about the delay with Episode 14, but I'm by no means a professional sound producer and editor, and it was, for various boring reasons, a real pig to get right. I think I managed it though.
Anyway, here's what you can expect in these shows...
Episode 14: Reviews of Mother's Day and Kaboom and a discussion of the best and worst horror remakes.
Episode 15: A review only special featuring The Messenger, The Beaver, Stake Land, Green Lantern, Potiche and Bad Teacher.
Enjoy the shows, and if you've any comments (or any suggestions for list topics for future episodes) then drop me a line at sam@multimediamouth.com or tweet me @24FPSUK
It's been a while, but we're back. Sorry about the delay with Episode 14, but I'm by no means a professional sound producer and editor, and it was, for various boring reasons, a real pig to get right. I think I managed it though.
Anyway, here's what you can expect in these shows...
Episode 14: Reviews of Mother's Day and Kaboom and a discussion of the best and worst horror remakes.
Episode 15: A review only special featuring The Messenger, The Beaver, Stake Land, Green Lantern, Potiche and Bad Teacher.
Enjoy the shows, and if you've any comments (or any suggestions for list topics for future episodes) then drop me a line at sam@multimediamouth.com or tweet me @24FPSUK
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
The Last American Virgin
DIR: Boaz Davidson
Director Boaz Davidson's original film Lemon Popsicle (made in his native Israel), became popular in a dubbed version on the American and British markets in the late 70's and early 80's as one of the original video hits (it also spawned a whole series of films). It was then somewhat inevitable that some enterprising producer would get around to remaking the film for an English speaking audience, but it is perhaps something of a surprise that they hired Davidson himself to write and direct. I haven't seen Lemon Popsicle, so I don't know how closely this film sticks to it predecessor, but I do know that The Last American Virgin is an interesting film in its own right, and certainly deserves to be better known.
The film really falls into two quite different parts. The first hour of the film combines a knockabout sex comedy about three high schoolers attempting to lose their virginity with a slightly bittersweet twist; Gary (Lawrence Monoson) has fallen for Karen (Diane Franklin), the new girl at school, but she's started going out with his jock friend Rick (Steve Antin, more recently the director of Burlesque). It's the last forty minutes of the film that really pay off this very relateable emotional content, as Gary steps up to the plate to help Karen when Rick won't. The film becomes darker and more dramatic, and has a real emotional punch towards the end.
It's not perfect; the parts don't always mesh, and while the sex comedy is pretty funny the tone of the film as a whole often seems ill at ease. In addition, Monoson doesn't quite have the dramatic chops for the heavier lifting of the second half. That said, it's tough not to be swept along with the film's breezier first hour. The first fifteen minutes are largely given over to Gary, Rick and their friend David (Joe Rubbo) picking up three girls (you'll recognise one of them; she's the girl who was having a driving lesson in that scene in The Naked Gun) they think will be 'easy' and the comic complications they run into with Gary's parents. It's all a bit familiar after countless imitators like the American Pie films, but still, it's funny stuff, and it also sets up the characters quite well. There are plenty of amusing set pieces too, from an awkward conversation with a pharmacist to an hilarious moment in which Gary comes home drunk and proceeds to flirt with one of his Mother's friends.
The Last American Virgin is definitely raunchy - and there's plenty of nudity, though frankly I could have gone without looking at Louisa Mortiz's terrible boob job - and yet, thanks to the naivete of most of the characters there is also a strange innocence to it (established, surely, so Davidson can shatter it with his unexpected third act).
The performances aren't what you'd call brilliant, but they serve the material well enough for the most part. Antin is a perfect asshole, Rubbo amusing as the accident prone one of the group, and the supporting cast generally do nice work, with particular kudos due Kimmy Robertson, who is very funny as Karen's friend Rose, who has designs on David. Monoson may not be any great shakes dramatically, but he handles the comedy better, and is at least convincing mooning over Diane Franklin. Franklin makes her debut here, and though she's not asked to do a great deal, at least in terms of dialogue, until the last third of the film, her presence is effective in and of itself. It's not hard, really, to buy into a geeky 17 year old kid instantly falling head over heels for her; she's basically the dictionary definition of 'unfeasibly cute'. Come the last act she's solid too, handling the pivotal scene well, wringing emotion from it that you wouldn't expect after watching the film's first fifteen minutes.
The Last American Virgin isn't quite a lost classic, and it loses some shine when compared to the real classic teen movie of 1982; Fast Times at Ridgemont High, which mixes tones more organically, boasts an all star cast and has a better soundtrack (Somebody's Baby notwithstanding), but certainly this film deserves better than its current status in the UK; as a virtually unknown film that hasn't seen a release since 1987, there is plenty to enjoy here, and at the very least it is refreshing to see an American teen movie with such a bittersweet ending. If you are, as I am, fond of teen movies then this one is definitely recommended.
Director Boaz Davidson's original film Lemon Popsicle (made in his native Israel), became popular in a dubbed version on the American and British markets in the late 70's and early 80's as one of the original video hits (it also spawned a whole series of films). It was then somewhat inevitable that some enterprising producer would get around to remaking the film for an English speaking audience, but it is perhaps something of a surprise that they hired Davidson himself to write and direct. I haven't seen Lemon Popsicle, so I don't know how closely this film sticks to it predecessor, but I do know that The Last American Virgin is an interesting film in its own right, and certainly deserves to be better known.
The film really falls into two quite different parts. The first hour of the film combines a knockabout sex comedy about three high schoolers attempting to lose their virginity with a slightly bittersweet twist; Gary (Lawrence Monoson) has fallen for Karen (Diane Franklin), the new girl at school, but she's started going out with his jock friend Rick (Steve Antin, more recently the director of Burlesque). It's the last forty minutes of the film that really pay off this very relateable emotional content, as Gary steps up to the plate to help Karen when Rick won't. The film becomes darker and more dramatic, and has a real emotional punch towards the end.
It's not perfect; the parts don't always mesh, and while the sex comedy is pretty funny the tone of the film as a whole often seems ill at ease. In addition, Monoson doesn't quite have the dramatic chops for the heavier lifting of the second half. That said, it's tough not to be swept along with the film's breezier first hour. The first fifteen minutes are largely given over to Gary, Rick and their friend David (Joe Rubbo) picking up three girls (you'll recognise one of them; she's the girl who was having a driving lesson in that scene in The Naked Gun) they think will be 'easy' and the comic complications they run into with Gary's parents. It's all a bit familiar after countless imitators like the American Pie films, but still, it's funny stuff, and it also sets up the characters quite well. There are plenty of amusing set pieces too, from an awkward conversation with a pharmacist to an hilarious moment in which Gary comes home drunk and proceeds to flirt with one of his Mother's friends.
The Last American Virgin is definitely raunchy - and there's plenty of nudity, though frankly I could have gone without looking at Louisa Mortiz's terrible boob job - and yet, thanks to the naivete of most of the characters there is also a strange innocence to it (established, surely, so Davidson can shatter it with his unexpected third act).
The performances aren't what you'd call brilliant, but they serve the material well enough for the most part. Antin is a perfect asshole, Rubbo amusing as the accident prone one of the group, and the supporting cast generally do nice work, with particular kudos due Kimmy Robertson, who is very funny as Karen's friend Rose, who has designs on David. Monoson may not be any great shakes dramatically, but he handles the comedy better, and is at least convincing mooning over Diane Franklin. Franklin makes her debut here, and though she's not asked to do a great deal, at least in terms of dialogue, until the last third of the film, her presence is effective in and of itself. It's not hard, really, to buy into a geeky 17 year old kid instantly falling head over heels for her; she's basically the dictionary definition of 'unfeasibly cute'. Come the last act she's solid too, handling the pivotal scene well, wringing emotion from it that you wouldn't expect after watching the film's first fifteen minutes.
The Last American Virgin isn't quite a lost classic, and it loses some shine when compared to the real classic teen movie of 1982; Fast Times at Ridgemont High, which mixes tones more organically, boasts an all star cast and has a better soundtrack (Somebody's Baby notwithstanding), but certainly this film deserves better than its current status in the UK; as a virtually unknown film that hasn't seen a release since 1987, there is plenty to enjoy here, and at the very least it is refreshing to see an American teen movie with such a bittersweet ending. If you are, as I am, fond of teen movies then this one is definitely recommended.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Green Lantern [3D] [12A]
DIR: Martin Campbell
CAST: Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively, Peter Sarsgaard,
Mark Strong, Geoffrey Rush, Michael Clarke Duncan

I've been trying to think of a pithy line to open this review, perhaps something based on the Green Lantern's rhyming oath, but I'm coming up dry. So how about this? Green Lantern is bollocks. Boring, ugly, badly written, plot hole riddled, nonsensical, unexciting, bollocks. Okay, it doesn't rhyme, but I feel I've made my point.
Based on the DC Comics series, Green Lantern spins a complex mythology (through laughably po-faced narration from Geoffrey Rush) of a universe split into about 3600 sectors, each protected by a superhero who uses the power of a green lantern and ring to harness his will and fight evil. Will was chosen because, apparently, its green energy is the most powerful (safe) power source in the universe. But there is an enemy coming; Parallax, whose yellow fear energy (I swear, this is really the plot) is endangering the universe. When one Green Lantern dies, their ring chooses another, so, obviously, when purple alien Temura Morrison shuffles off, the ring picks military test pilot and (un)professional asshole Hal Jordan (Ryan Reynolds) to save the world. Stupid ring.
Where to begin with this movie? Perhaps the film's weakest link (though, gosh, it's a close run thing) is its look. This is a pig ugly movie, and that's before we get to discuss the 3D. CGI has advanced to a point where it can do almost anything, but Green Lantern leans so heavily on it that it becomes a serious problem. The opening scenes, with the narration, are rendered almost entirely in CGI, and despite the fact that the technical side of things is reasonable (not great, but reasonable), the feeling of watching opening cut scene for a console game is unshakeable. The problems, however, really become clear once the film becomes Earthbound. The first shot of a human is of some nameless conquest of Hal Jordan's, she is a gorgeous girl, blonde, about 25, and there's just something off about her, she doesn't quite look real. Its a problem that persists in the film, there is a sheen of unreality to it. I wonder if director Martin Campbell and DP Dion Beebe used a lot of CGI in post production to augment the film's lighting, because even the light in this movie just feels... wrong. It's hard to explain, and I don't think it's the 3D, but if you see the film (don't) you'll know what I mean the first time human appears.
That's not the only problem with the film's look. The colour scheme is pretty ugly; glowing neon green dominates, and this too is primarily realised with CGI. I'm beginning to think that every time a filmmaker wants to do a CG shot they should be made to justify in writing why they can't do it practially, and what purpose the CG will serve the storytelling. I can see why Campbell had to realise the various things that Hal calls forth from the ring with his will (a race car track, guns, etc, etc) in CG, but his suit and mask? Really? Okay, so it glows, and gives off green static, and this adds what exactly? Certainly it doesn't add enough to make up for the fact that it looks so hilariously stupid. The mask is especially terrible; the look, the texture, the feel of it, it just doesn't work, and that also applies to the rest of the suit. It's a problem, in a superhero movie, when the hero appears in costume and your first reaction is barely stifled laughter.
The script is awful; cliché in the extreme (the flashback to fill in Jordan's Daddy issues may actually be from another film it's so hackneyed) and so riddled with half finished ideas, characters and scenes that one suspects that the studio saw an early cut of this trainwreck and ordered an editor to come in with a machete in each hand and set about a 150 minute film until it only ran to 100 minutes. The arc of Peter Sarsgaard's villainous Hector Hammond (infected by yellow fear energy of Parallax, again, really) suffers most. He goes from nerdy scientist to world destroying large brained maniac in the space of perhaps 12 minutes of screen time, something that even an actor as good as Sarsgaard is (and, bless him, he's even trying to give a performance here) just can't sell without motivation and character development that goes beyond a two minute infodump. Also compromised by the writing are the smaller supporting characters, like Tim Robbins as Sarsgaard's senator father, Reynolds' friends and family (there is a heartfelt talk with a nephew who is then totally forgotten) and Mark Strong as Lantern leader Sinestro (oh, I wonder if he's a villain in the sequels).
The script is also an issue when it comes to Blake Lively's thin role as love interest / endangered prop Carol Ferris, but more of an issue is Lively's fundamental miscasting. Carol is a fighter pilot, and one of the high ranking executives in her Dad's aviation company. Now, I've got a lot of time for Blake Lively, she's clearly very talented and I think she'll go far in the future, but COME ON she's 22. A fighter pilot? A VP of an aviation company? Blake Lively? Total miscasting aside, Lively works hard and is actually much better than the film deserves, but still, when Reynolds says to her "You're a fighter pilot Carol" you'll have to struggle to restrain yourself from bellowing 'no she's not' at the screen.
While Sarsgaard and Lively at least try, Ryan Reynolds barely shows up (not that he needs to, with the CGI doing so much of the work for him). He's on autopilot throughout and, for the first time, a charisma free zone. Part of the problem is, again, the writing, which makes Hal, frankly, more than a bit of a dick, and never lets him enjoy his powers. He's not an easy hero to get behnind, and that robs the films (brief and perfunctory) climax of any real investment or import.
Other little things annoy, but most of all the sheer familiarity of it all, from the Top Gun rip off action scene to the off the peg training montage (featuring Michael Clarke Duncan voicing, again I'm not making this up, Kilowog - yeah, stay classy movie) is what really kills the movie, because it renders it boring as well as poorly put together. It's not even bad in a way insane or notable enough to be fun. Right down to its rubbish 3D conversion (splice in a paragraph from any 3D review I've done here), Green Lantern is lazy filmmaking for undemanding herds of moviegoers. I think we deserve better, don't you?
CAST: Ryan Reynolds, Blake Lively, Peter Sarsgaard,
Mark Strong, Geoffrey Rush, Michael Clarke Duncan

I've been trying to think of a pithy line to open this review, perhaps something based on the Green Lantern's rhyming oath, but I'm coming up dry. So how about this? Green Lantern is bollocks. Boring, ugly, badly written, plot hole riddled, nonsensical, unexciting, bollocks. Okay, it doesn't rhyme, but I feel I've made my point.
Based on the DC Comics series, Green Lantern spins a complex mythology (through laughably po-faced narration from Geoffrey Rush) of a universe split into about 3600 sectors, each protected by a superhero who uses the power of a green lantern and ring to harness his will and fight evil. Will was chosen because, apparently, its green energy is the most powerful (safe) power source in the universe. But there is an enemy coming; Parallax, whose yellow fear energy (I swear, this is really the plot) is endangering the universe. When one Green Lantern dies, their ring chooses another, so, obviously, when purple alien Temura Morrison shuffles off, the ring picks military test pilot and (un)professional asshole Hal Jordan (Ryan Reynolds) to save the world. Stupid ring.
Where to begin with this movie? Perhaps the film's weakest link (though, gosh, it's a close run thing) is its look. This is a pig ugly movie, and that's before we get to discuss the 3D. CGI has advanced to a point where it can do almost anything, but Green Lantern leans so heavily on it that it becomes a serious problem. The opening scenes, with the narration, are rendered almost entirely in CGI, and despite the fact that the technical side of things is reasonable (not great, but reasonable), the feeling of watching opening cut scene for a console game is unshakeable. The problems, however, really become clear once the film becomes Earthbound. The first shot of a human is of some nameless conquest of Hal Jordan's, she is a gorgeous girl, blonde, about 25, and there's just something off about her, she doesn't quite look real. Its a problem that persists in the film, there is a sheen of unreality to it. I wonder if director Martin Campbell and DP Dion Beebe used a lot of CGI in post production to augment the film's lighting, because even the light in this movie just feels... wrong. It's hard to explain, and I don't think it's the 3D, but if you see the film (don't) you'll know what I mean the first time human appears.
That's not the only problem with the film's look. The colour scheme is pretty ugly; glowing neon green dominates, and this too is primarily realised with CGI. I'm beginning to think that every time a filmmaker wants to do a CG shot they should be made to justify in writing why they can't do it practially, and what purpose the CG will serve the storytelling. I can see why Campbell had to realise the various things that Hal calls forth from the ring with his will (a race car track, guns, etc, etc) in CG, but his suit and mask? Really? Okay, so it glows, and gives off green static, and this adds what exactly? Certainly it doesn't add enough to make up for the fact that it looks so hilariously stupid. The mask is especially terrible; the look, the texture, the feel of it, it just doesn't work, and that also applies to the rest of the suit. It's a problem, in a superhero movie, when the hero appears in costume and your first reaction is barely stifled laughter.
The script is awful; cliché in the extreme (the flashback to fill in Jordan's Daddy issues may actually be from another film it's so hackneyed) and so riddled with half finished ideas, characters and scenes that one suspects that the studio saw an early cut of this trainwreck and ordered an editor to come in with a machete in each hand and set about a 150 minute film until it only ran to 100 minutes. The arc of Peter Sarsgaard's villainous Hector Hammond (infected by yellow fear energy of Parallax, again, really) suffers most. He goes from nerdy scientist to world destroying large brained maniac in the space of perhaps 12 minutes of screen time, something that even an actor as good as Sarsgaard is (and, bless him, he's even trying to give a performance here) just can't sell without motivation and character development that goes beyond a two minute infodump. Also compromised by the writing are the smaller supporting characters, like Tim Robbins as Sarsgaard's senator father, Reynolds' friends and family (there is a heartfelt talk with a nephew who is then totally forgotten) and Mark Strong as Lantern leader Sinestro (oh, I wonder if he's a villain in the sequels).
The script is also an issue when it comes to Blake Lively's thin role as love interest / endangered prop Carol Ferris, but more of an issue is Lively's fundamental miscasting. Carol is a fighter pilot, and one of the high ranking executives in her Dad's aviation company. Now, I've got a lot of time for Blake Lively, she's clearly very talented and I think she'll go far in the future, but COME ON she's 22. A fighter pilot? A VP of an aviation company? Blake Lively? Total miscasting aside, Lively works hard and is actually much better than the film deserves, but still, when Reynolds says to her "You're a fighter pilot Carol" you'll have to struggle to restrain yourself from bellowing 'no she's not' at the screen.
While Sarsgaard and Lively at least try, Ryan Reynolds barely shows up (not that he needs to, with the CGI doing so much of the work for him). He's on autopilot throughout and, for the first time, a charisma free zone. Part of the problem is, again, the writing, which makes Hal, frankly, more than a bit of a dick, and never lets him enjoy his powers. He's not an easy hero to get behnind, and that robs the films (brief and perfunctory) climax of any real investment or import.
Other little things annoy, but most of all the sheer familiarity of it all, from the Top Gun rip off action scene to the off the peg training montage (featuring Michael Clarke Duncan voicing, again I'm not making this up, Kilowog - yeah, stay classy movie) is what really kills the movie, because it renders it boring as well as poorly put together. It's not even bad in a way insane or notable enough to be fun. Right down to its rubbish 3D conversion (splice in a paragraph from any 3D review I've done here), Green Lantern is lazy filmmaking for undemanding herds of moviegoers. I think we deserve better, don't you?
Bad Teacher [15]
DIR: Jake Kasdan
CAST: Cameron Diaz, Justin Timberlake,
Lucy Punch, Jason Segel

Is there anything more depressing, as a movie fan, than sitting in a cinema, watching a comedy, and not laughing? Not just at one joke, not just at one scene, but at an entire 100 minute film? Time seems to stretch before you, like a vast desert, and a laugh - just one laugh - becomes the impossible to find oasis. This is what watching Bad Teacher is like.
In Bad Teacher, Cameron Diaz plays Elizabeth Halsey, who returns to teaching after her rich fiance breaks up with her, with a plan to snare herself another guy to take care of her. She's a terrible teacher, and instead of doing anything with her kids shows them inspirational teacher movies while she sleeps. When she meets rich kid supply teacher Scott (Timberlake) she decides he's the man for her, and that she has to get a boob job to snag him. Cue all manner of moneymaking scams to help her get the $10,000 she needs for her new rack.
There are talented people involved at every level of Bad Teacher. Diaz' kooky charm and dazzling smile have served her well, but she's also a capable actress (see Being John Malkovich and tell me otherwise), Timberlake is, surprisingly, becoming an unpredictable but often engaging actor, and the supporting cast is packed with funny people from Jason Segel, to John Michael Higgins, to British actress Lucy Punch (as a super perky teacher who is Elizabeth's rival for Scott's attentions). Behind the camera is Jake Kasdan, who made the very funny Orange County. Every time I see something like this happen; a collection of people who seem talented and intelligent uniting for an idea so utterly misconceived as that of Bad Teacher, I really wonder how it happened. Is there some sort of Hollywood party where entire production teams go and ingest a hallucinogen that makes them think that what they're about to work on is "THE BEST FUCKING IDEA IN THE HISTORY OF THE FUCKING WORLD"? It would explain a lot.
Alfred Hitchcock was a great man, and right about many things, but mostly he was right when he said that the three most important elements of a good movie are "the script, the script, and the script". Guess where Bad Teacher begins to go wrong.
One of the major difficulties is with Cameron Diaz' character. Yes, she's supposed to be a bad teacher (and that's actually something that's worked in the past, Kindergarten Cop is no masterpiece, but the incongruity of Arnie as an out of his depth teacher is funny), the problem is that there is nothing even a tiny bit likeable about Diaz' Elizabeth. Elizabeth is shallow, drug addled, an alcoholic, she not only doesn't care about her students, she hates them (and in one scene throws basketballs at the heads of several of them, which is pretty dangerous and would get her immediately fired), on top of that she's a lying, manipulative, thieving bitch who is incapable of a polite interaction that doesn't serve her in some way. And this movie wants us to like her. Worst of all, she's not funny, because Gene Stupnitsky and Lee Eisenberg (who have written Ghostbusters 3, Lord help us) seem to think that being an awful person is the same thing as being amusing. It's not. It actually actively works against the film, because you're so alienated by the character that you start thinking about the huge logic gaps. For instance; do none of Elizabeth's students talk to their parents? Does she only have one class a day? Does no other teacher ever observe one of her classes? I shouldn't be thinking about these plot holes, and if the film were funny, if Elizabeth were more than just an inappropriately sweary bitch, I wouldn't be.
The other huge problem with the writing of Elizabeth is that she (like all of the characters) has no arc. If anything by the end of the film she's worse, MORE of a bitch, prepared to potentially ruin the lives of two nice people for her own ends (and again, we're expected to cheer). If you want to make a film about an unlikeable character, fine, but you have to move them on. Again, look at Kindergarten Cop; Arnie starts out as a very inappropriate teacher, you could even say he bullies the kids in some early scenes, but the screenplay allows him to learn, to become a better person, so we get to like him and feel comfortable with laughing along with the movie (again, it's not like I'm holding it up as some masterpiece, it just does the basics quite well). There is a brief moment where it seems that Bad Teacher might go that way, as Elizabeth discovers a cash prize for the teacher with the best test scores, and begins to actually teach her class, but the film abandons this idea almost as soon as it has it, and goes down a different road - one that makes Elizabeth EVEN WORSE.
Sadly the rest of the film is no better. Every single character is unstintingly annoying. Chief offender in these stakes is British actress Lucy Punch who, as in Woody Allen's You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger, gives a performance good enough that I want to see her in more movies, but as a character so totally insufferable that after ten minutes the sound of her voice became like fingernails running down a blackboard in my soul. Punch's Amy Squirrel is so irrepressibly, aggressively, infruiatingly perky that she's almost a parody of a manic pixie dream girl, and while Punch totally sells her performance, and is really the only actor who disappears in this movie, Amy is the kind of person I'd cross roads to avoid, so being trapped in a movie in which she's the major supporting character was a nightmare.
Jason Segel blandly dude's his way through his handful of scenes, and seems to make no attempt to play an actual character. The same can't be said of Justin Timberlake as Scott, but, again, the writing is just broken. Scott, too, is insufferable; a new man so desperate to please everyone that he'll agree with whatever the last statement made was. He's also set up as being naive and nice to a fault, which makes the film's pivotal scene, in which he dry humps Diaz, cheating on his girlfriend, nonsensical. That scene is just one of many which feels half finished. Scott has thus far been a very nice man, so why is he suddenly cheating on his girlfriend with Elizabeth? There needs to be another scene, maybe one where Elizabeth convinces him that the rulebook (it could even be an actual rulebook, in another incongruity he's stupid enough to buy that) says it's not cheating if they keep their clothes on.
This tossed off, unfinished, who gives a fuck attitude pervades the film, from Kasdan's flat visuals to the lack of actual jokes (what is the joke when Elizabeth show her class movies over and over? That's not a joke, it's a setup). But the real blame has to fall on the awful, awful writing, on a screenplay that is broken at the most fundamental levels, that is written by people who appear to have no idea how to write an evolving character, or simply don't care enough to bother. Bad Teacher is a terrible, terrible film. It's boring as all hell, packed with unlikeable characters and about as funny as stepping in dog shit on your way to a friend's wedding.
CAST: Cameron Diaz, Justin Timberlake,
Lucy Punch, Jason Segel

Is there anything more depressing, as a movie fan, than sitting in a cinema, watching a comedy, and not laughing? Not just at one joke, not just at one scene, but at an entire 100 minute film? Time seems to stretch before you, like a vast desert, and a laugh - just one laugh - becomes the impossible to find oasis. This is what watching Bad Teacher is like.
In Bad Teacher, Cameron Diaz plays Elizabeth Halsey, who returns to teaching after her rich fiance breaks up with her, with a plan to snare herself another guy to take care of her. She's a terrible teacher, and instead of doing anything with her kids shows them inspirational teacher movies while she sleeps. When she meets rich kid supply teacher Scott (Timberlake) she decides he's the man for her, and that she has to get a boob job to snag him. Cue all manner of moneymaking scams to help her get the $10,000 she needs for her new rack.
There are talented people involved at every level of Bad Teacher. Diaz' kooky charm and dazzling smile have served her well, but she's also a capable actress (see Being John Malkovich and tell me otherwise), Timberlake is, surprisingly, becoming an unpredictable but often engaging actor, and the supporting cast is packed with funny people from Jason Segel, to John Michael Higgins, to British actress Lucy Punch (as a super perky teacher who is Elizabeth's rival for Scott's attentions). Behind the camera is Jake Kasdan, who made the very funny Orange County. Every time I see something like this happen; a collection of people who seem talented and intelligent uniting for an idea so utterly misconceived as that of Bad Teacher, I really wonder how it happened. Is there some sort of Hollywood party where entire production teams go and ingest a hallucinogen that makes them think that what they're about to work on is "THE BEST FUCKING IDEA IN THE HISTORY OF THE FUCKING WORLD"? It would explain a lot.
Alfred Hitchcock was a great man, and right about many things, but mostly he was right when he said that the three most important elements of a good movie are "the script, the script, and the script". Guess where Bad Teacher begins to go wrong.
One of the major difficulties is with Cameron Diaz' character. Yes, she's supposed to be a bad teacher (and that's actually something that's worked in the past, Kindergarten Cop is no masterpiece, but the incongruity of Arnie as an out of his depth teacher is funny), the problem is that there is nothing even a tiny bit likeable about Diaz' Elizabeth. Elizabeth is shallow, drug addled, an alcoholic, she not only doesn't care about her students, she hates them (and in one scene throws basketballs at the heads of several of them, which is pretty dangerous and would get her immediately fired), on top of that she's a lying, manipulative, thieving bitch who is incapable of a polite interaction that doesn't serve her in some way. And this movie wants us to like her. Worst of all, she's not funny, because Gene Stupnitsky and Lee Eisenberg (who have written Ghostbusters 3, Lord help us) seem to think that being an awful person is the same thing as being amusing. It's not. It actually actively works against the film, because you're so alienated by the character that you start thinking about the huge logic gaps. For instance; do none of Elizabeth's students talk to their parents? Does she only have one class a day? Does no other teacher ever observe one of her classes? I shouldn't be thinking about these plot holes, and if the film were funny, if Elizabeth were more than just an inappropriately sweary bitch, I wouldn't be.
The other huge problem with the writing of Elizabeth is that she (like all of the characters) has no arc. If anything by the end of the film she's worse, MORE of a bitch, prepared to potentially ruin the lives of two nice people for her own ends (and again, we're expected to cheer). If you want to make a film about an unlikeable character, fine, but you have to move them on. Again, look at Kindergarten Cop; Arnie starts out as a very inappropriate teacher, you could even say he bullies the kids in some early scenes, but the screenplay allows him to learn, to become a better person, so we get to like him and feel comfortable with laughing along with the movie (again, it's not like I'm holding it up as some masterpiece, it just does the basics quite well). There is a brief moment where it seems that Bad Teacher might go that way, as Elizabeth discovers a cash prize for the teacher with the best test scores, and begins to actually teach her class, but the film abandons this idea almost as soon as it has it, and goes down a different road - one that makes Elizabeth EVEN WORSE.
Sadly the rest of the film is no better. Every single character is unstintingly annoying. Chief offender in these stakes is British actress Lucy Punch who, as in Woody Allen's You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger, gives a performance good enough that I want to see her in more movies, but as a character so totally insufferable that after ten minutes the sound of her voice became like fingernails running down a blackboard in my soul. Punch's Amy Squirrel is so irrepressibly, aggressively, infruiatingly perky that she's almost a parody of a manic pixie dream girl, and while Punch totally sells her performance, and is really the only actor who disappears in this movie, Amy is the kind of person I'd cross roads to avoid, so being trapped in a movie in which she's the major supporting character was a nightmare.
Jason Segel blandly dude's his way through his handful of scenes, and seems to make no attempt to play an actual character. The same can't be said of Justin Timberlake as Scott, but, again, the writing is just broken. Scott, too, is insufferable; a new man so desperate to please everyone that he'll agree with whatever the last statement made was. He's also set up as being naive and nice to a fault, which makes the film's pivotal scene, in which he dry humps Diaz, cheating on his girlfriend, nonsensical. That scene is just one of many which feels half finished. Scott has thus far been a very nice man, so why is he suddenly cheating on his girlfriend with Elizabeth? There needs to be another scene, maybe one where Elizabeth convinces him that the rulebook (it could even be an actual rulebook, in another incongruity he's stupid enough to buy that) says it's not cheating if they keep their clothes on.
This tossed off, unfinished, who gives a fuck attitude pervades the film, from Kasdan's flat visuals to the lack of actual jokes (what is the joke when Elizabeth show her class movies over and over? That's not a joke, it's a setup). But the real blame has to fall on the awful, awful writing, on a screenplay that is broken at the most fundamental levels, that is written by people who appear to have no idea how to write an evolving character, or simply don't care enough to bother. Bad Teacher is a terrible, terrible film. It's boring as all hell, packed with unlikeable characters and about as funny as stepping in dog shit on your way to a friend's wedding.
Saturday, June 18, 2011
10 cara agar wajah cantik
Kebanyakan produk kecantikan yang bermanfaat untuk melembabkan dan menyehatkan kulit terbuat dari bahan-bahan yang terdapat di alam. Oleh karena itu, mengapa tidak langsung mengambil dari sumbernya saja jika ingin mendapatkan kulit sehat seperti yang diinginkan?
Berikut ini 10 cara mudah mendapatkan kulit wajah yang sehat dengan bahan alami
1. Tepuk wajah kain yang dibasahi dengan air hangat untuk membuka pori-pori. Kemudian oleskan madu pada wajah dan diamkan selama 15 hingga 30 menit. Bilas dengan air hangat, kemudian tepuk-tepuk wajah dengan kain yang dibasahi air dingin
2. Buatlah masker dengan kuning telur mentah. Aplikasikan kuning telur pada wajah dan leher, diamkan selama 30 menit, bilas dengan air dingin.
3. Anda juga bisa membuat masker dengan putih telur. Aplikasikan putih telur pada wajah dan diamkan hingga putih telur mengering di wajah, baru kemudian Anda hangatkan.
4. Untuk cara yang lebih mudah, Anda bisa menggunakan anggur. Cukup potong sebuah anggur menjadi dua, kemudian gosokkan dagingnya pada wajah. Setelah merata, bilas dengan air dingin.
5. Tumbuk pisang yang sudah terlalu matang hingga haslus, kemudian oleskan keseluruh wajah. Diamkan selama 15 hingga 30 menit, kemudian bilas dengan air hangat.
6. Yogurt tanpa rasa juga bisa digunakan untuk menyegarkan dan melembabkan wajah. Oleskan yogurt pada wajah dan diamkan selama 15 hingga 20 menit sebelum dibilas dengan air dingin.
7. Jika Anda memiliki bibir yang pecah-pecah, oleskan minyak zaitun sebelum tidur. Biarkan semalaman dan dapatkan bibir lebih lembab dikeesokan harinya.
8. Hancurkan alpukat lalu oleskan pada wajah. Biarkan selama 10 menit, kemudian bilas dengan air dingin. Alpukat baik untuk kesehatan dan keremajaan kulit.
9. Siapkan susu pada sebuah wadah, kemudian sedikit celupkan cotton bud atau kapas dan terapkan pada wajah. Biarkan hingga Anda merasa kulit wajah jadi lebih kencang dan bersihkan dengan air hangat. Rasakan kulit wajah menjadi lebih lembut.
10. Gunakan baking soda untuk mengangkat kulit mati dengan mencampurkannya dengan cleanser harian Anda.
Berikut ini 10 cara mudah mendapatkan kulit wajah yang sehat dengan bahan alami
1. Tepuk wajah kain yang dibasahi dengan air hangat untuk membuka pori-pori. Kemudian oleskan madu pada wajah dan diamkan selama 15 hingga 30 menit. Bilas dengan air hangat, kemudian tepuk-tepuk wajah dengan kain yang dibasahi air dingin
2. Buatlah masker dengan kuning telur mentah. Aplikasikan kuning telur pada wajah dan leher, diamkan selama 30 menit, bilas dengan air dingin.
3. Anda juga bisa membuat masker dengan putih telur. Aplikasikan putih telur pada wajah dan diamkan hingga putih telur mengering di wajah, baru kemudian Anda hangatkan.
4. Untuk cara yang lebih mudah, Anda bisa menggunakan anggur. Cukup potong sebuah anggur menjadi dua, kemudian gosokkan dagingnya pada wajah. Setelah merata, bilas dengan air dingin.
5. Tumbuk pisang yang sudah terlalu matang hingga haslus, kemudian oleskan keseluruh wajah. Diamkan selama 15 hingga 30 menit, kemudian bilas dengan air hangat.
6. Yogurt tanpa rasa juga bisa digunakan untuk menyegarkan dan melembabkan wajah. Oleskan yogurt pada wajah dan diamkan selama 15 hingga 20 menit sebelum dibilas dengan air dingin.
7. Jika Anda memiliki bibir yang pecah-pecah, oleskan minyak zaitun sebelum tidur. Biarkan semalaman dan dapatkan bibir lebih lembab dikeesokan harinya.
8. Hancurkan alpukat lalu oleskan pada wajah. Biarkan selama 10 menit, kemudian bilas dengan air dingin. Alpukat baik untuk kesehatan dan keremajaan kulit.
9. Siapkan susu pada sebuah wadah, kemudian sedikit celupkan cotton bud atau kapas dan terapkan pada wajah. Biarkan hingga Anda merasa kulit wajah jadi lebih kencang dan bersihkan dengan air hangat. Rasakan kulit wajah menjadi lebih lembut.
10. Gunakan baking soda untuk mengangkat kulit mati dengan mencampurkannya dengan cleanser harian Anda.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
DVD Review: Sea Purple [15]
DIR: Donatella Maiorca

I wonder just how closely Sea Purple (an unwieldy title, explained only in a caption just before the end credits) is inspired by a true story. Certainly its main character seems to be based on a real person, and the central conceit seems to be true, but I would be surprised if some of the peripheral details are true.
The film is set in the mid to late 1800's and is about Angela (Valeria Solarino), whose childhood friend Sara (Isabella Ragonese) returns to their small Island off the Italian coast after a fifteen year absence. Soon after Sara returns, Angela confesses her love for her old friend, who reciprocates. Angela's Father (Ennio Fantastichini) wants her to marry a local boy, but Angela refuses, and tells him she loves Sara. In order to allow her daughter to live how she wants, Angela's Mother (Giselda Volodi) convinces the local priest that there was a mistake when Angela was born, and Angela returns to the village, as her Father's son Angelo.
Sea Purple is a beautiful film. There likely wasn't a great challenge involved in making it look good; the scenery is stunning and frankly so are the cast - to a fault actually, the otherwise excellent Solarino coming a little unstuck in the 'looking like a boy' stakes - but director Donatella Maiorca also deserves credit for finding some striking shots (Angela's Father, rendered as a silhouetted monster, as he beats her) and for exploiting the natural beauty of the film's environments and of her cast quite so effectively. Maiorca also draws strong performances from her leads. Though there is little setup provided by the screenplay for the devotion that Angela and Sara have to one another, Solarino and Ragonese sell the relationship at both an emotional and a physical level. There is also an excellent supporting performance from Giselda Volodi, as Angela's Mother, in limited screentime Volodi gives a rounded portrait of a woman long cowed by her husband, coming out of her shell when her daughter needs her most. Unfortunately the same can't be said for Angela's Father, who is written and played as a cartoon bastard.
The strength of most of the performances and the visually arresting quality of the film allows Sea Purple to hold the attention despite its other problems. The script, as mentioned above, often feels a little thin, and Angela and Sara's relationship in particular could do with a few more conversational scenes to really solidify it. More problematic is the fact that much of what happens after Angela becomes Angelo doesn't feel all that believeable; the way that the village only quietly bristles about her marriage to Sara, and that there is little in the way of confrontation for the couple to deal with (actually this is true throughout, despite the amount of time they spend making out in broad daylight in island beauty spots). None of this really seems to fit with what you'd expect in an insular, religious, island community in the 19th century. There is also the problem of Angela's Father, who is basically a caricature of a misogynist (and, in keeping with the film's contemporary resonance about gay marriage and conservative opposition to it, which is largely subtly advanced, he says "remember, I only care about myself". That line may as well be replaced with him waving a sign saying 'contemporary right wing bastard').
The last major issue with the film is its score, which is far too contemporary (electric guitars, really?) and used in a manner best described as instructional, especially in the scenes that have Angela's Father being abusive to his family. For the most part the film doesn't need this coating of aural schmaltz / menace, because Maicora and her actors are doing their jobs effectively and communicating to us exactly how we should be feeling.
Sea Purple may be flawed, but there is a lot going on in it, the contemporary resonance is subtle but strongly felt, the performances are largely strong and the story itself is both different and interesting. It's not entirely satisfying, but it has plenty to recommend it, not least Valeria Solarino and Isabella Ragonese.
Sea Purple comes to DVD, from Peccadillo Pictures, on June 20th. The DVD will also include a making of feature and some deleted scenes (not supplied on my check disc). If you'd like to buy the film, and help 24FPS out at the same time then please use the link below. Thanks.

I wonder just how closely Sea Purple (an unwieldy title, explained only in a caption just before the end credits) is inspired by a true story. Certainly its main character seems to be based on a real person, and the central conceit seems to be true, but I would be surprised if some of the peripheral details are true.
The film is set in the mid to late 1800's and is about Angela (Valeria Solarino), whose childhood friend Sara (Isabella Ragonese) returns to their small Island off the Italian coast after a fifteen year absence. Soon after Sara returns, Angela confesses her love for her old friend, who reciprocates. Angela's Father (Ennio Fantastichini) wants her to marry a local boy, but Angela refuses, and tells him she loves Sara. In order to allow her daughter to live how she wants, Angela's Mother (Giselda Volodi) convinces the local priest that there was a mistake when Angela was born, and Angela returns to the village, as her Father's son Angelo.
Sea Purple is a beautiful film. There likely wasn't a great challenge involved in making it look good; the scenery is stunning and frankly so are the cast - to a fault actually, the otherwise excellent Solarino coming a little unstuck in the 'looking like a boy' stakes - but director Donatella Maiorca also deserves credit for finding some striking shots (Angela's Father, rendered as a silhouetted monster, as he beats her) and for exploiting the natural beauty of the film's environments and of her cast quite so effectively. Maiorca also draws strong performances from her leads. Though there is little setup provided by the screenplay for the devotion that Angela and Sara have to one another, Solarino and Ragonese sell the relationship at both an emotional and a physical level. There is also an excellent supporting performance from Giselda Volodi, as Angela's Mother, in limited screentime Volodi gives a rounded portrait of a woman long cowed by her husband, coming out of her shell when her daughter needs her most. Unfortunately the same can't be said for Angela's Father, who is written and played as a cartoon bastard.
The strength of most of the performances and the visually arresting quality of the film allows Sea Purple to hold the attention despite its other problems. The script, as mentioned above, often feels a little thin, and Angela and Sara's relationship in particular could do with a few more conversational scenes to really solidify it. More problematic is the fact that much of what happens after Angela becomes Angelo doesn't feel all that believeable; the way that the village only quietly bristles about her marriage to Sara, and that there is little in the way of confrontation for the couple to deal with (actually this is true throughout, despite the amount of time they spend making out in broad daylight in island beauty spots). None of this really seems to fit with what you'd expect in an insular, religious, island community in the 19th century. There is also the problem of Angela's Father, who is basically a caricature of a misogynist (and, in keeping with the film's contemporary resonance about gay marriage and conservative opposition to it, which is largely subtly advanced, he says "remember, I only care about myself". That line may as well be replaced with him waving a sign saying 'contemporary right wing bastard').
The last major issue with the film is its score, which is far too contemporary (electric guitars, really?) and used in a manner best described as instructional, especially in the scenes that have Angela's Father being abusive to his family. For the most part the film doesn't need this coating of aural schmaltz / menace, because Maicora and her actors are doing their jobs effectively and communicating to us exactly how we should be feeling.
Sea Purple may be flawed, but there is a lot going on in it, the contemporary resonance is subtle but strongly felt, the performances are largely strong and the story itself is both different and interesting. It's not entirely satisfying, but it has plenty to recommend it, not least Valeria Solarino and Isabella Ragonese.
Sea Purple comes to DVD, from Peccadillo Pictures, on June 20th. The DVD will also include a making of feature and some deleted scenes (not supplied on my check disc). If you'd like to buy the film, and help 24FPS out at the same time then please use the link below. Thanks.
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
VHS Memories: Natural Born Killers
DIR: Oliver Stone
The Memories: Like every movie lover who was in his teens in the mid 1990's, I wanted to see ALL OF Quentin Tarantino's films. One small problem... I'm British, and Jamie Bulger had recently been murdered, precipitating a second moral panic about violent films being available on video. This led to BBFC bowing to pressure and delaying certification decisions on True Romance and Reservoir Dogs (among others) for well over a year and to Warner Brothers cancelling the video release of Natural Born Killers - though it is still falsely reported as having been a banned title the uncut 18 certificate was always in place and it was purely a decision of Warner to leave the film unreleased in the UK market until 2001.
Obviously, whatever the reasons, when you tell a film fan he can't see something, that immediately means he wants to see it. So, I managed to obtain a second generation VHS, copied, I believe, from an American release. There was one small issue... It had been recorded on long play, and I, at this time - probably somewhere around '96 or '97 - didn't own a long play VHS machine. I watched it anyway.
My abiding memory of my first viewing of NBK is trying desperately to get the tracking to come in watchably, and trying to discern some of the dialogue through the double speed, suddenly helium voiced, performances. It's a strangely appropriate way, I think, to have first experienced it, firstly because, even at normal speed, NBK is a weird movie and also because that amount of effort feels appropriate for what was, for me at the time, one of the great forbidden holy grails of home viewing. So, how does it hold up? Let's find out...
The Movie: It is easy to see why, in 1994, Natural Born Killers caused a storm of controversy, and why some people still hate the film, because it's still shocking, still feels dangerous, seventeen years on. It is satire, but it is also very easy to see where the people who decried this film as no more than an orgy of violence that makes heroes of two serial killers were coming from, because Oliver Stone manipulates every shot of the film in order to manipulate us into seeing these psychopaths the way that the mainstream media (personified by Robert Downey, Jr as TV tabloid journalist Wayne Gale) are portraying them. The film, however, does much that subverts and comments on that surface reading.
Early in Quentin Tarantino's career we got to see how his ideas looked filtered through a selection of other filmmakers, Jackie Brown notwithstanding, these films; True Romance, From Dusk Till Dawn and NBK are my favourites of his now 20 year career. NBK, despite its basic story having a very Tarantinoesque feel, is an Oliver Stone film through and through. Stone can be an infuriating filmmaker, he often slaps his audience in the face with his films messages, and his tendency to make digressions and indulge in his own obsessions can become wearing - and NBK is not immune on that score - but when Stone is visibly engaged in a project there are few filmmakers more interesting or more exciting. Though it seems to be anomaly in his filmography, NBK is actually the perfect film for Oliver Stone to have made, he runs wild here, his every crazy idea rampaging through the film like a bull in a china shop, as if he's trying to see just how much he can fuck with the medium. It doesn't always work, but it's never, ever, boring.
The film starts as it means to go on, with a scene that is brutally violent, inventively shot and cut, seductively stylish and unexpectedly funny. This diner set prologue, in which the films protagonists; serial killer couple Mickey (Woody Harrelson) and Mallory (Juliette Lewis) Knox gleefully murder a selection of truckers and a waitress over breakfast is the film's most Tarantinoesque, but shot through with the blitzkrieg style filmmaking that Stone is about to immerse us in for the next two hours. The use - at seemingly random intervals - of colour and black and white, 35 and 16mm stock, and the incredible pace of the cutting is difficult to adjust to to begin with, but it is impossible not to become caught up in the violent action that erupts when Mallory attacks the trucker who has been flirting with her, and L7's Shitlist begins blaring away on the soundtrack. Like Michael Haneke did with Funny Games a few years later, Stone asks us to revel in this violence, and later he'll (more subtly than Haneke) ask why we do.
Beyond the sheer verve of the filmmaking, the reason that NBK really grabs you is in the performances. They are all of a type; overblown, but the film is so over the top, so relentless, that if the acting was smaller or more subtle it would get swamped. Harrelson and Lewis are particularly good, he as a detached, sometimes thoughtful, psychopath, her as a more gleeful and impulsive one. Their Mickey and Mallory may be despicable murderers, but they are incredibly charismatic; Lewis in particular is so unpredictable, such a coiled spring of dangerous energy, that she is fascinating to watch here (it's a crying shame that she doesn't work much, and certainly not in roles this good, anymore). Also helpful in drawing us in is that, however overblown the film, and despite the fact that it is founded in seconds through a bizarre sitcom parody that provides Mallory's backstory, Mickey and Mallory's relationship does convince. Harrelson and Lewis reportedly didn't get along, but their chemistry works brilliantly, powering the film's epic prison escape sequence, and allowing us, perhaps, the tiniest morsel of identification.

Around those central performances are a set of grotesques, caricatures of a tabloid journalist (Downey's aforementioned Wayne Gale, who he plays with an exaggerated Australian accent, for no readily apparent reason), a tough as nails prison warden (Tommy Lee Jones, having a ball in his third film for Stone) and a seriously disturbed cop who is hunting Mickey and Mallory, but is a rapist and killer himself (Tom Sizemore as Jack Scagnetti, about whom it would have been fascinating to see a whole - more serious - film). You have to be on board with the tone by the time these even more outlandish characters become a large presence in the film about an hour in, or they are just going to annoy you, but in the context of the film they're all brilliantly engaging, and often hilariously funny.
Natural Born Killers has some incredibly striking sequences. From the diner to the sitcom sequence which ends in the murder of Mallory's parents (played by Rodney Dangerfield and Ferris Bueller's Edie McClurg), to the sickly green tinted Drug Zone confrontation which leads to Mickey and Mallory's capture, right through to the monumental, roughly 30 minute, prison riot / breakout which forms the film's third act and, in keeping with the lunatic tone, was filmed in a real maximum security prison, with real lifers as extras. That riot is an incredibly visceral sequence, there's a palpable feeling of chaos and danger in it both in the situation and sometimes in the performances themselves.
The satire of the film, which so many people seemed to miss at the time, lies in its extreme content, and in the way it sees Mickey and Mallory as both products of and commodities to be exploited by pop culture. It implicitly asks (without shouting at us for watching the movie the way Haneke did in Funny Games) whether this is healthy. It's an interesting question too, because we can see echoes of things like the vox pops of Mickey and Mallory fans in day to day life now - consider the Facebook group that declared Raoul Moat a 'legend' or the way that one British newspaper ran a story from a satirical site suggesting that there was to be a Grand Theft Auto game based on the crimes of mass murderer Derrick Bird as fact. It can't obviously, have been the intention, but NBK has only become more relevant as time has gone on.
It's not a perfect film. It's really less a story than a series of connected scenes and, as I said before, Stone's obsessions crop up, giving us the movie's one major misstep; a desert set sequence in which Mickey and Mallory encounter a wise old Indian and are attacked by snakes. Yes, it leads into the great Drug Zone sequence, but the ten minutes we spend in the desert seem to have been teleported in from some other movie; one that's not as good as Natural Born Killers.
For the most part though, this is a relentlessly engaging, intriguing and entertaining film. Few movies have such a freewheeling feeling about them, and few filmmakers could combine that with social commentary as effectively as Oliver Stone does here. I was surprised how well it still played long after my last viewing, but this remains truly exciting cinema.
The Memories: Like every movie lover who was in his teens in the mid 1990's, I wanted to see ALL OF Quentin Tarantino's films. One small problem... I'm British, and Jamie Bulger had recently been murdered, precipitating a second moral panic about violent films being available on video. This led to BBFC bowing to pressure and delaying certification decisions on True Romance and Reservoir Dogs (among others) for well over a year and to Warner Brothers cancelling the video release of Natural Born Killers - though it is still falsely reported as having been a banned title the uncut 18 certificate was always in place and it was purely a decision of Warner to leave the film unreleased in the UK market until 2001.
Obviously, whatever the reasons, when you tell a film fan he can't see something, that immediately means he wants to see it. So, I managed to obtain a second generation VHS, copied, I believe, from an American release. There was one small issue... It had been recorded on long play, and I, at this time - probably somewhere around '96 or '97 - didn't own a long play VHS machine. I watched it anyway.
My abiding memory of my first viewing of NBK is trying desperately to get the tracking to come in watchably, and trying to discern some of the dialogue through the double speed, suddenly helium voiced, performances. It's a strangely appropriate way, I think, to have first experienced it, firstly because, even at normal speed, NBK is a weird movie and also because that amount of effort feels appropriate for what was, for me at the time, one of the great forbidden holy grails of home viewing. So, how does it hold up? Let's find out...
The Movie: It is easy to see why, in 1994, Natural Born Killers caused a storm of controversy, and why some people still hate the film, because it's still shocking, still feels dangerous, seventeen years on. It is satire, but it is also very easy to see where the people who decried this film as no more than an orgy of violence that makes heroes of two serial killers were coming from, because Oliver Stone manipulates every shot of the film in order to manipulate us into seeing these psychopaths the way that the mainstream media (personified by Robert Downey, Jr as TV tabloid journalist Wayne Gale) are portraying them. The film, however, does much that subverts and comments on that surface reading.
Early in Quentin Tarantino's career we got to see how his ideas looked filtered through a selection of other filmmakers, Jackie Brown notwithstanding, these films; True Romance, From Dusk Till Dawn and NBK are my favourites of his now 20 year career. NBK, despite its basic story having a very Tarantinoesque feel, is an Oliver Stone film through and through. Stone can be an infuriating filmmaker, he often slaps his audience in the face with his films messages, and his tendency to make digressions and indulge in his own obsessions can become wearing - and NBK is not immune on that score - but when Stone is visibly engaged in a project there are few filmmakers more interesting or more exciting. Though it seems to be anomaly in his filmography, NBK is actually the perfect film for Oliver Stone to have made, he runs wild here, his every crazy idea rampaging through the film like a bull in a china shop, as if he's trying to see just how much he can fuck with the medium. It doesn't always work, but it's never, ever, boring.
The film starts as it means to go on, with a scene that is brutally violent, inventively shot and cut, seductively stylish and unexpectedly funny. This diner set prologue, in which the films protagonists; serial killer couple Mickey (Woody Harrelson) and Mallory (Juliette Lewis) Knox gleefully murder a selection of truckers and a waitress over breakfast is the film's most Tarantinoesque, but shot through with the blitzkrieg style filmmaking that Stone is about to immerse us in for the next two hours. The use - at seemingly random intervals - of colour and black and white, 35 and 16mm stock, and the incredible pace of the cutting is difficult to adjust to to begin with, but it is impossible not to become caught up in the violent action that erupts when Mallory attacks the trucker who has been flirting with her, and L7's Shitlist begins blaring away on the soundtrack. Like Michael Haneke did with Funny Games a few years later, Stone asks us to revel in this violence, and later he'll (more subtly than Haneke) ask why we do.
Beyond the sheer verve of the filmmaking, the reason that NBK really grabs you is in the performances. They are all of a type; overblown, but the film is so over the top, so relentless, that if the acting was smaller or more subtle it would get swamped. Harrelson and Lewis are particularly good, he as a detached, sometimes thoughtful, psychopath, her as a more gleeful and impulsive one. Their Mickey and Mallory may be despicable murderers, but they are incredibly charismatic; Lewis in particular is so unpredictable, such a coiled spring of dangerous energy, that she is fascinating to watch here (it's a crying shame that she doesn't work much, and certainly not in roles this good, anymore). Also helpful in drawing us in is that, however overblown the film, and despite the fact that it is founded in seconds through a bizarre sitcom parody that provides Mallory's backstory, Mickey and Mallory's relationship does convince. Harrelson and Lewis reportedly didn't get along, but their chemistry works brilliantly, powering the film's epic prison escape sequence, and allowing us, perhaps, the tiniest morsel of identification.

Around those central performances are a set of grotesques, caricatures of a tabloid journalist (Downey's aforementioned Wayne Gale, who he plays with an exaggerated Australian accent, for no readily apparent reason), a tough as nails prison warden (Tommy Lee Jones, having a ball in his third film for Stone) and a seriously disturbed cop who is hunting Mickey and Mallory, but is a rapist and killer himself (Tom Sizemore as Jack Scagnetti, about whom it would have been fascinating to see a whole - more serious - film). You have to be on board with the tone by the time these even more outlandish characters become a large presence in the film about an hour in, or they are just going to annoy you, but in the context of the film they're all brilliantly engaging, and often hilariously funny.
Natural Born Killers has some incredibly striking sequences. From the diner to the sitcom sequence which ends in the murder of Mallory's parents (played by Rodney Dangerfield and Ferris Bueller's Edie McClurg), to the sickly green tinted Drug Zone confrontation which leads to Mickey and Mallory's capture, right through to the monumental, roughly 30 minute, prison riot / breakout which forms the film's third act and, in keeping with the lunatic tone, was filmed in a real maximum security prison, with real lifers as extras. That riot is an incredibly visceral sequence, there's a palpable feeling of chaos and danger in it both in the situation and sometimes in the performances themselves.
The satire of the film, which so many people seemed to miss at the time, lies in its extreme content, and in the way it sees Mickey and Mallory as both products of and commodities to be exploited by pop culture. It implicitly asks (without shouting at us for watching the movie the way Haneke did in Funny Games) whether this is healthy. It's an interesting question too, because we can see echoes of things like the vox pops of Mickey and Mallory fans in day to day life now - consider the Facebook group that declared Raoul Moat a 'legend' or the way that one British newspaper ran a story from a satirical site suggesting that there was to be a Grand Theft Auto game based on the crimes of mass murderer Derrick Bird as fact. It can't obviously, have been the intention, but NBK has only become more relevant as time has gone on.
It's not a perfect film. It's really less a story than a series of connected scenes and, as I said before, Stone's obsessions crop up, giving us the movie's one major misstep; a desert set sequence in which Mickey and Mallory encounter a wise old Indian and are attacked by snakes. Yes, it leads into the great Drug Zone sequence, but the ten minutes we spend in the desert seem to have been teleported in from some other movie; one that's not as good as Natural Born Killers.
For the most part though, this is a relentlessly engaging, intriguing and entertaining film. Few movies have such a freewheeling feeling about them, and few filmmakers could combine that with social commentary as effectively as Oliver Stone does here. I was surprised how well it still played long after my last viewing, but this remains truly exciting cinema.
Tuesday, June 14, 2011
Fixing a Broken Heart
there was nothing to say the day she left
i just filled a suitcase full of regrets
i hailed a taxi in the rain
looking for some place to ease the pain
then like an answered prayer
i turned around and found you there
i just filled a suitcase full of regrets
i hailed a taxi in the rain
looking for some place to ease the pain
then like an answered prayer
i turned around and found you there
chorus:
you really know where to start
fixing a broken heart
you really know what to do
your emotional tools
can cure any fool
whose dreams have fallen apart...
fixing a broken heart
and now I don’t understand
what I’m going through
must be a plan that led me to you
because the hurt just disappears
in every moment that you are near
yeah..
just like an answered prayer
you make the loneliness easy to bear
you make the loneliness easy to bear
repeat chorus
soon the rain will stop falling, baby
and i’ll forget the past
coz here we are at last
and i’ll forget the past
coz here we are at last
repeat chorus
pertamakali denger lagu ini, saya denger versi sabrina. yang kalo ga salah denger, pas yang bait "there was nothing to say the day she left", "she" nya di ganti jadi "he". penyanyi aslinya tuh indecent obsession, dua versinya suka saya denger secara bergantian. krn emang 22nya enak di denger :)
dan ada juga versi duet nya sama Mari Hamada. kalo versi duet, jarang saya denger.
ah jadi, pengen ngegabungin versi indecent obsession sama versi sabrina pke sound forge. moga2 cepet di realisasiin dan ga lupa :P
Monday, June 13, 2011
15 Ciri Orang yang mencintai kamu
1. Orang yang mencintai kamu tidak pernah mampu memberikan alasan kenapa dia mencintai kamu. Yang dia tahu di hati dan matanya hanya ada kamu satu-satunya.
2. Orang yang mencintai kamu selalu menerima kamu apa adanya, di hati dan matanya kamu selalu yang tercantik walaupun mungkin kamu merasa berat badan kamu sudah bertambah.
3. Orang yang mencintai kamu selalu ingin tau tentang apa saja yang kamu lalui sepanjang hari ini, dia ingin tau kegiatan kamu.
4. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan mengirimkan SMS seperti ’selamat pagi’, ’have fun’, ’selamat tidur’, ‘take care’, dan lain-lain, walaupun kamu tidak membalas SMS-nya, karena dengan kiriman SMS itu lah dia menyatakan cintanya, menyatakan dengan cara yang berbeda, bukan “aku CINTA padamu”.
5. Orang yang mencintai kamu tidak akan pernah memperlakukan kamu seperti boneka / mainnanya, tetapi akan bertindak lebih seperti saudara daripada seperti seorang kekasih.
6. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan selalu mengingat setiap kejadian yang dia lalui bersama kamu, bahkan mungkin kejadian yang kamu sendiri sudah melupakannya, karena saat-saat itu ialah saat yang berharga untuknya. dan saat itu, matanya pasti berkaca. karena saat bersamamu tidak selalu terulang.
7. Orang yang mencintai kamu selalu mengingat setiap kata-kata yang kamu ucapkan, bahkan mungkin kata-kata yang kamu sendiri lupa pernah mengungkapkannya. karena dia menyematkan kata-kata mu di hatinya, berapa banyak kata-kata penuh harapan yang kau tuturkan padanya, dan akhirnya kau musnahkan? pasti kau lupa, tetapi bukan orang yang mencintai kamu.
8. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan belajar menggemari lagu-lagu kegemaran kamu, bahkan mungkin meminjam CD milik kamu, karena dia ingin tahu apa kgemaran kamu - kesukaan kamu kesukaannya juga, walaupun susah menggemari kesukaan kamu, tapi akhirnya dia bisa.
9. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan memberikan suatu barang miliknya yang mungkin buat kamu itu ialah sesuatu yang biasa, tetapi baginya barang itu sangat istimewa.
10. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan terdiam sesaat, ketika sedang bercakap di telefon dengan kamu, sehingga kamu menjadi bingung. Sebenarnya saat itu dia merasa sangat gugup karena kamu telah menggetarkan dunianya.
11. Orang yang mencintai kamu selalu ingin berada di dekat kamu dan ingin menghabiskan hari-harinya hanya dengan kamu.
12. Orang yang mencintai kamu bertindak lebih seperti saudara daripada seperti seorang kekasih.
13. Orang yang mencintai kamu sering melakukan hal-hal yang bikin BETE, seperti menelefon kamu 100 kali sehari. Atau mengejutkan kamu di tengah malam dengan mengirim SMS. Sebenarnya ketika itu dia sedang memikirkan kamu.
14. Orang yang mencintai kamu kadang-kadang merindukan kamu dan melakukan hal-hal yang membuat kamu pening. Namun ketika kamu mengatakan tindakannya itu membuat kamu terganggu dia akan minta maaf dan tak akan melakukannya lagi.
15. Orang yang mencintai, tidak pernah memaksa kamu memberinya sebab dan alasan, walaupun hatinya meronta ingin mengetahui, karena dia tidak mau kamu terbebani karenanya. saat kau pinta dia pergi, dia pergi tanpa menyalahkan kamu, karena dia benar-benar mengerti apa itu cinta.
2. Orang yang mencintai kamu selalu menerima kamu apa adanya, di hati dan matanya kamu selalu yang tercantik walaupun mungkin kamu merasa berat badan kamu sudah bertambah.
3. Orang yang mencintai kamu selalu ingin tau tentang apa saja yang kamu lalui sepanjang hari ini, dia ingin tau kegiatan kamu.
4. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan mengirimkan SMS seperti ’selamat pagi’, ’have fun’, ’selamat tidur’, ‘take care’, dan lain-lain, walaupun kamu tidak membalas SMS-nya, karena dengan kiriman SMS itu lah dia menyatakan cintanya, menyatakan dengan cara yang berbeda, bukan “aku CINTA padamu”.
5. Orang yang mencintai kamu tidak akan pernah memperlakukan kamu seperti boneka / mainnanya, tetapi akan bertindak lebih seperti saudara daripada seperti seorang kekasih.
6. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan selalu mengingat setiap kejadian yang dia lalui bersama kamu, bahkan mungkin kejadian yang kamu sendiri sudah melupakannya, karena saat-saat itu ialah saat yang berharga untuknya. dan saat itu, matanya pasti berkaca. karena saat bersamamu tidak selalu terulang.
7. Orang yang mencintai kamu selalu mengingat setiap kata-kata yang kamu ucapkan, bahkan mungkin kata-kata yang kamu sendiri lupa pernah mengungkapkannya. karena dia menyematkan kata-kata mu di hatinya, berapa banyak kata-kata penuh harapan yang kau tuturkan padanya, dan akhirnya kau musnahkan? pasti kau lupa, tetapi bukan orang yang mencintai kamu.
8. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan belajar menggemari lagu-lagu kegemaran kamu, bahkan mungkin meminjam CD milik kamu, karena dia ingin tahu apa kgemaran kamu - kesukaan kamu kesukaannya juga, walaupun susah menggemari kesukaan kamu, tapi akhirnya dia bisa.
9. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan memberikan suatu barang miliknya yang mungkin buat kamu itu ialah sesuatu yang biasa, tetapi baginya barang itu sangat istimewa.
10. Orang yang mencintai kamu akan terdiam sesaat, ketika sedang bercakap di telefon dengan kamu, sehingga kamu menjadi bingung. Sebenarnya saat itu dia merasa sangat gugup karena kamu telah menggetarkan dunianya.
11. Orang yang mencintai kamu selalu ingin berada di dekat kamu dan ingin menghabiskan hari-harinya hanya dengan kamu.
12. Orang yang mencintai kamu bertindak lebih seperti saudara daripada seperti seorang kekasih.
13. Orang yang mencintai kamu sering melakukan hal-hal yang bikin BETE, seperti menelefon kamu 100 kali sehari. Atau mengejutkan kamu di tengah malam dengan mengirim SMS. Sebenarnya ketika itu dia sedang memikirkan kamu.
14. Orang yang mencintai kamu kadang-kadang merindukan kamu dan melakukan hal-hal yang membuat kamu pening. Namun ketika kamu mengatakan tindakannya itu membuat kamu terganggu dia akan minta maaf dan tak akan melakukannya lagi.
15. Orang yang mencintai, tidak pernah memaksa kamu memberinya sebab dan alasan, walaupun hatinya meronta ingin mengetahui, karena dia tidak mau kamu terbebani karenanya. saat kau pinta dia pergi, dia pergi tanpa menyalahkan kamu, karena dia benar-benar mengerti apa itu cinta.
from -> http://www.kaskus.us/showthread.php?t=5813948