Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other A to Z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 17 more times this month.
Film: It's A Wonderful Life (1946)
Director: Frank Capra
By National Telefilm Associates - Original 1946 film, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=18061926
It's A Wonderful Life is a film that needs no introduction.
Positive Tomato: Capra remained true to classical Hollywood narrative, conceived and directed here, it is true, with almost hallucinatory skill. The scenes of tenderness are capable of penetrating the armor of even the most skeptical critical mind.Andre Bazin - L'ecran Francais
Original Trailer
Negative Tomato: Capra is an old-time movie craftsman, the master of every trick in the bag, and in many ways he is more at home with the medium than any other Hollywood director. But all of his details give the impression of contrived effect. Manny Farber - The New Republic
By National Telefilm Associates - Screenshot of the movie, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17631672
Resiliency: My favorite moment of resiliency in the movie is when the Bailey's use their wedding gift money to get their Building & Loan customers through the run on the bank.
Top 100: It's Actually in the Top 1. It's A Wonderful Life is my favorite movie of all time. Starring Jimmy Stewart, my favorite actor of all time, and directed by Frank Capra, my favorite director of all time.
By National Telefilm Associates - Screenshot of the movie, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=17596045
A to Z Connection: This is the 2nd movie on my list directed by Frank Capra (Arsenic and Old Lace).
Next Time: Just a movie about a revolutionary movement.
I have a routine when it comes to my A to Z challenge posts. I schedule the time of the post for the date of the post. For example, today is April 11th or numerically 4/11 so I would generally schedule my post for 4:11 a.m. so people could see it as they were checking their computers in the morning.
This by the way is not an A to Z post but I am posting this at 4:11 in the morning because April 11th is a very significant day in my life. It is the day I married my wife Amy. Today is almost as significant as that day as it is our 25th wedding anniversary.
I have scheduled my A to Z post at 4:11 p.m. It talks about my favorite movie It's A Wonderful Life.
In that film, the main character gets a glimpse of what life might have been like if he was never born and gets to realize what a wonderful life he had.
In December of 2005, our 3rd and final child was born and 2 days after they were released from the hospital I rushed Amy to the emergency room. They did tests and her heart was working at 10% capacity. I remember driving back from the emergency room to my house with 3 children between the ages of 3 days and 6 years old and I got a glimpse of what my life might look like If Amy was gone. I prayed on the way home and asked God to restore her to health.
Thankfully Amy was back to 100% use of her heart and her kidneys and was home to our family in a few short days. We were never given an adequate reason for the occurrence but we believe it was due to a lack of proper hydration after the C-section.
I really didn't need an angel to show me the worth of my wife. We were best friends for 8 years before she signed the Marry Dave Agreement. She takes the best care of me and our children. Often preparing and perfecting foods for us that she doesn't even like to eat. While she is just a sinner that said I Do, she is a loving, Godly influencer on me and our children.
I have had the opportunity in the past 5 years to substitute teach in the same building where she works as a school psychologist. I have never seen anyone take their job so seriously and still love on the children and show compassion and concern to the teachers, administration, and parents. We also have worked side by side the last 2 summers working concessions at a ballpark where she would bring sunshine even in a two-hour rain delay.
So you see she really is a wonderful wife. Happy Anniversary Amy. You really do complete me.
Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other A to Z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 18 more times this month.
Film: Hidden Figures (2016)
Director: Theodore Melfi
Trailer for Hidden Figures ...
Hidden Figures tells the story of Katherine Johnson, Mary Jackson, and Dorothy Vaughan who were among a group of African American Mathematicians who worked at NASA during the time that John Glenn orbited the earth.
Positive Tomato: Hidden Figures puts the familiar period-piece lens on an overlooked part of space history without glossing over the ugly bits while still feeling hopeful for what science and technology can achieve when the best and the brightest can participate. Nathan Matisse - Ars Technica
Negative Tomato:
Hidden Figures will likely satisfy on the actress' strength, but Taraji - and her audience - deserve better than focus-grouped pablum. Chris McCoy - Memphis Flyer
The film stars Taraji P Henson as Katharine Johnson, Janelle Monae as Mary Jackson, and Octavia Spencer as Dorothy Vaughn. The cast includes Kevin Costner, Aldis Hodge, Jim Parsons, Kirsten Dunst, and Mahershala Ali.
Katherine Johnson - NASA 1966
Resiliency: Each of the 3 main women featured in this movie gives a clinic on resiliency. It would be hard to boil that down into one moment or one quote.
My mind always goes back to the scene where Mary Jackson has to go to court to convince a judge for her to take engineering classes at an all-white school. She says to the judge:
I plan on being an engineer at Nasa, but I can't do that without taking them classes at that all-white high school, and I can't change the color of my skin, so I have no choice, but to be the first, which I can't do without you sir. Your honor, out of all the case you gonna hear today, which one is gonna matter hundred years from now? Which one is gonna make you the first?
Top 100: There is no uncertainty. This movie is definitely in my top 100 films of all time. The only question is where. I would not be surprised if it makes it into the top 75.
A to Z Connections: This is the second film in the challenge to depict a space program (Gattaca). It is also the fifth film to deal with a character or characters fighting against some sort of discrimination (Breaking Away, Chariots of Fire, 42, and Gattaca).
Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other A to Z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 19 more times this month.
Film: Gattaca (1997)
.Director: Andre Niccol
By Unknown author - ProSieben MAXX HD, screenshot (15.06.2014), Public Domain, Link
Gattaca is a genre blending delight of a movie. Part science fiction, part cultural critique, part noir; Roger Ebert rightly called it a thriller with ideas. Ethan Hawke, Uma Thurman, and Jude Law head a stellar cast in a work that is superbly written, beautifully captured on film, and blessed with an evocative score.
Positive Tomato: The writer- director crafts a paranoid discriminatory world out of ripped-from-the-headlines science. Adapting a noirish mood and an austere dystopian backdrop, it's the sort of Orwellian vision that could only exist in a movie. Brian Eggert - Deep Focus Review
Negative Tomato: You have to admire Nicol's humanizing agenda in movie terrain usually crowded with numbing technology and digital stereo explosions. But jeez what a downer.Jan Stuart - The Advocate
Resiliency: Ethan Hawke, who I remember best from his sweaty toothed madman poem in Dead Poets Society does a character study of resiliency in Gattaca. Science conspired against him and he was told he would never reach for the stars. But reach for the stars, he did and the degree that he did reach shows his resiliency and disregard for the imposed status quo.
Top 100: Gattaca is a movie that I could see ranking any where between 75 and 125. So we'll have to wait and see if Gattaca makes the list.
A to Z Connections: This is the 2nd science fiction film in the challenge (The Empire Strikes Back).