Like just about everyone else on the planet these days, I love Arcade Fire. I was lucky enough to attend their Madison Square Garden concert for The Suburbs earlier this month, and I swayed and sang along and rocked out and savored every minute of it. But my favorite Arcade Fire song– really, one of my favorite songs, period– is and probably always will be Neon Bible’s “(Antichrist Television Blues).” It encapsulates everything I love about Arcade Fire– the sweeping sound, the catchy melody, and the well-crafted lyrics. In just over five minutes, we get the full arc of a man as he moves from faith and hope to a state of dangerously unmoored desperation.
Posts Tagged: 2010
13
Aug 10
Scott Pilgrim makes a sweet summertime treat
The first thing I need to tell you about Scott Pilgrim vs. the World is this: The book is better. Yes, everyone says this every time a movie based on a book is released. Yes, it’s an entirely different medium. But seriously, the book is better. The film cuts out too much of the book’s depth and breadth to compare. Whereas the series is about not just Scott but Ramona, their friends, the rest of their universe, and growing up, the film is really just about Scott.
So that’s the bad news. The good news is that Edgar Wright’s film version has a vibrant energy of its own that makes it a spectacularly good time at the theater. In other words: Holy shit, it’s fun. Wright’s shown a knack for combining wacky and sweet with pop culture inside jokes as far back as Spaced, and he takes it to the extreme here. The result is exhilarating, a film that looks and feels like nothing else you’ve ever seen before.
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16
Jul 10
Bold, brilliant Inception sticks thanks to good old-fashioned storytelling
It’s been about 18 hours since I saw Christopher Nolan’s Inception, and in that time my thoughts on the film have shifted around somewhat. I went in expecting a masterpiece, exited feeling pretty sure that if it wasn’t quite a masterpiece, it was close enough, and went to bed thinking it was very good if perhaps a little overrated after all. By the time I finished my coffee this morning (COFFEEEEEEE), I’d decided that it was a pretty damn amazing movie after all, just not for the reasons I’d initially looked to.
14
Jul 10
Adventureland successfully combines quiet sadness and dick jokes
There are few movies in this universe that I despise more than Garden State. I have many reasons for disliking it, from its unlikable main characters to its creepy fetishization of depression. But what really pushes me over the edge is the unbelievable hype that surrounded it. “The Graduate for our generation”? No, thanks.
That said, I get what the movie was going for, because Adventureland is the movie Garden State wishes it was. Both attempt to capture the exciting, terrifying space just before adulthood, and both feature aimless young men at a crossroads in life who fall for irresistible young women. But Adventureland is a warmer, more relatable film– and as a result, a much more moving film, too.


