Showing posts with label lizard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lizard. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Farewell Liz: Elizabeth Taylor: 1932-2011

"She was so extraordinarily beautiful that I nearly laughed out loud. She ... [was] famine, fire, destruction and plague ... the only true begetter. Her breasts were apocalyptic, they would topple empires before they withered ... her body was a miracle of construction ... She was unquestionably gorgeous. She was lavish. She was a dark, unyielding largesse. She was, in short, too bloody much ... Those huge violet blue eyes... had an odd glint... Aeons passed, civilizations came and went while these cosmic headlights examined my flawed personality. Every pockmark on my face became a crater of the moon."
With the above words, the late actor Richard Burton gushed about his first sight of a then 19-year-old Elizabeth Taylor. And Liz indeed proved "too bloody much" for him, as they burned through two failed attempts at marriage (1964-74; 1975-76).
Taylor of course, was all that Burton described and more. Though she had been ailing, the news of her death  - ostensibly of congestive heart failure - is a spear to our hearts. She grew from child star to powerhouse actress to Hollywood legend and -to some sad degree - tabloid fodder and perfume pitchwoman, but true movie fans will always remember her in the light of Burton's glorious first revelation - "a dark, unyielding largesse"  
Though English-born, both her parents were actually American - from Kansas no less. She took ballet lessons at age three, and at age nine made her Hollywood debut in "There's One Born Every Minute".  That tenure would be short-lived however as then Universal Pictures head Edward Muhl cancelled her contract, saying she had "no talent" (reportedly it was more because he absolutely could not get along with Taylor's mother).
She would, however, land on her feet at the famed gates of MGM, where she started off in October 1942 with "Lassie Come Home" opposite Roddy McDowall. While at MGM she took a role on loan to 20th Century Fox in the adaptation of Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre before going on (after constant campaigning) to score her breakout role in "National Velvet."
Its runaway success made Taylor one of the highest paid actresses in Hollywood at the time, with an annual salary of US$30,000 (keep in mind tis is a 12-year-old, in 1944). Her first box office success as an adult came as Kay Banks in "Father of the Bride" alongside Spencer Tracy and Joan Bennett. This was followed a by a lackluster sequel before her next breakout role "A Place In the Sun" (with Montgomery Clift and Shelly Winters).
She would receive Oscar nominations for her roles in "Raintree County" "Cat on A Hot Tin Roof" and "Suddenly, Last Summer" but it was her reunion with Fox Pictures, which paid her a cool $1million to star as Egyptian queen "Cleopatra" that would set the film world and the papparazzi ablaze. It was while filming that the married Taylor met Welshman Richard Burton (born Richard Jenkins) and began one of the great, albeit tragic, Hollywood romances.
It was opposite Burton that she won her second Oscar (the first for Butterfield 8) in the modern classic, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf". She and her husband (whom she married a mere nine days after securing her divorce from Eddie Fisher) would go on to make six other films in the 60s. she made two other films with Burton in the 70s and they also collaborated in a TV movie, the appropriately titled "Divorce His, Divorce Hers" .
Taylor remained an active screen presence through the 80s, appearing both in cinematic and television releases. Her last big-screen role was in the 1994 live action adaptation of the classic cartoon series "The Flintstones."
She was a passionate advocate for HIV/AIDS Research and also a staunch defender, in 2005, of her friend Michael Jackson, who predeceased her in 2009. Taylor a famous lover of jewellry, developed a line of perfumes and personal care products inspired by gems - White Diamonds is perhaps the best known.
Taylor dealt with various health problems over the years, including issues regarding congestive heart failure. In February of 2011, new symptoms related to congestive heart failure caused her to be admitted into Cedars-Sinai Medical Center for treatment.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

A Legend In his Own Mind?: Rango Trailer HD (2011)



The first bit of good news surrounding this movie is - it's not in 3-D.

That's really a good start, but it gets better. Rango is smart, stylish, wide-ranging, socially aware and pretty damn funny. Its also cartoonish and formulaic in spots, but hey, you can't hit every ball out of the park.

Johnny Depp voices the lizard of the title and I suspect it must have been one of his more taxing assignments cause this reptile talks - a lot. He narrates the story first of all (with the help of some mariachi owls) and when he's not addressing the audience - or himself - he engages nearly everyone in the film in some kind of conversation.

Still, Rango is someone you actually want to hear from, most of the time anyway. Having been rudely tossed from his  insular yet boring existence of imagined plays, he must first survive the harrows of the desert (a marauding hawk, dehydration etc) before alighting on the town of Dirt (yes, that's it).

There, with water critically short, a series of unfortunate (or fortunate) events and Rango's big mouth lands him the job of sheriff, which he takes on with some gusto. That is, until the real bad guys - and the real cause of the town's water shortage - becomes ever more evident. In the process he also meets and falls in love with Beans (Isla Fisher) the proverbial orphan now grown who also owns last bit of unconsolidated property in town.

Thereafter, director Gore Verbinski (Pirates of the Caribbean I) and the riders rip off and assimilate just about every Western movie cliche there is but, it must be said, with a considerable degree of skill, and style. Through the course of the story, the main theme of rampant capitalism and corporate greed vs individual and community development is played out, but with smart jabs at the viewer rather than with a hammer. Rango is also called upon to walk the walk and not just talk the talk as sheriff and face the bad guy Jake the Snake (Bill Nighy).

There are other choice bits which I won't deign to reveal here. Suffice to say you likely will not regret giving your ear and eye to Rango, the liveliest, happy-go-luckiest lizard in the West.