Party Now, Apocalypse Later Industries

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.
  • Home
  • BOOKS
    • THE ONCE AND FUTURE ORSON WELLES
    • IF ANY OF THESE STORIES GOES OVER 1000 WORDS...
    • ORSON WELLES OF MARS
    • THE DEVIL LIVES IN BEVERLY HILLS
    • A LOSS FOR NORMALCY
    • RIGHT - A NOVEL OF POLITICS
  • PODCASTS
    • Beyond the Cabin in the Woods
    • THE HOLODECK IS BROKEN
    • THE FOURTH WALL
    • As The Myth Turns
    • FRIENDIBALS! - TWO FRIENDS TALKING ABOUT HANNIBAL LECTER
    • DISORGANIZED! A Criminal Minds Podcast
  • MOVIE REVIEWS
  • BLOGS AND MORE
    • Bloggy B Bloggington III, DDS
    • THE HOLODECK IS BROKEN BLOG
    • REALLY GOOD MAN!
  • Home
    • THE ONCE AND FUTURE ORSON WELLES
    • IF ANY OF THESE STORIES GOES OVER 1000 WORDS...
    • ORSON WELLES OF MARS
    • THE DEVIL LIVES IN BEVERLY HILLS
    • A LOSS FOR NORMALCY
    • RIGHT - A NOVEL OF POLITICS
    • Beyond the Cabin in the Woods
    • THE HOLODECK IS BROKEN
    • THE FOURTH WALL
    • As The Myth Turns
    • FRIENDIBALS! - TWO FRIENDS TALKING ABOUT HANNIBAL LECTER
    • DISORGANIZED! A Criminal Minds Podcast
  • MOVIE REVIEWS
    • Bloggy B Bloggington III, DDS
    • THE HOLODECK IS BROKEN BLOG
    • REALLY GOOD MAN!

A Blog About Watching Movies (AKA a Blog in Search of a Better Title)

Mother (1996)

Mac Boyle November 28, 2025

Director: Albert Brooks

Cast: Albert Brooks, Debbie Reynolds, Rob Morrow, Lisa Kudrow

Have I Seen It Before: Yes. I remember this film eerily well. I honestly think it aired on HBO, I recorded it, and I watched it over and over again.

Did I Like It: It’s odd to say that Brooks—and specifically Brooks’ character in this film—was something of an heroic figure for my adolescence. He made a living writing science fiction books. I wanted* to make a living at writing science fiction novels. What’s more, I wanted to just happen upon beautiful women out in public who are so windswept by my typing that she’s willing to follow me to what would be to any rational observer a meetup for serial killers, and that would solve all of my lovelorn problems.

Forget the fact that he has a painfully neurotic relationship—matched only by his brother (Morrow)—with his mother, is irretrievably blocked** on his next novel, and that he has been twice divorced. John Henderson had the life.

And he fixes his relationship with his mother (Reynolds)! What more could a man want out of life when he gets to his forties?

The humor of the film is lively, making conscious decisions at every point to not descend into sitcom cliché and make every beat not only emanate from the characters as we’ve come to know them, but be in service of the characters ongoing development. It’s an exceptionally, almost deceptively well-crafted comedy. So much so that by the resolution, there might be a flash of feeling cheated, but not everything has to end with one more punchline.

And if you think it was easy for me to admit that, you’re crazy.

The casting is also quite good. Brooks plays the same leading-man he has created for himself previously, but does it without any trace of a self-consciousness that you might come to expect from writer-director-stars. Look out for Lisa Kudrow’s near-cameo. I think we all get how good she really is, but opting to be “the blind date” in an Albert Brooks’ movie is a more purely comedic choice for an actress at that point in her career, when she could have just as easily been the second half of any cookie cutter romantic comedy, and made plenty of money in the effort.

Then there’s Debbie Reynolds. Picking up her career after several years away, she’s as natural as she was in decades past. It’s infinitely fascinating that Nancy Reagan (of all people) seriously considered playing the part before ultimately passing. She wouldn’t have been nearly as good—and indeed, never was—as Reynolds, but my, oh my, would that have been a fascinating version of this film.

*I haven’t given up the ghost on it, but… You know. I live in the real world.

**I get the need to introduce complications into the life of a main character, but blocks are for chumps. Throw him Grady Tripp’s (Michael Douglas) problems in Wonder Boys (2000) and then we have something.

Tags mother (1996), albert brooks, debbie reynolds, rob morrow, lisa kudrow
Comment

Singin’ in the Rain (1952)

Mac Boyle April 15, 2023

Director: Stanley Donen, Gene Kelly

Cast: Gene Kelly, Donald O’Connor, Debbie Reynolds, Jean Hagen

Have I Seen it Before: Never.

Did I Like It: And that’s the thing that’s more than a little unnerving to me, because I loved this a very great deal. Maybe I’ve always been just slightly allergic to the big technicolor musicals, because I—despite all of my bluster to be one of those quintessential movie fanatics—am fundamentally an idiot.

The film is a bubbly journey through the transition from silent to synchronized sound, and makes it an exciting new adventure for the characters involved, not the insurmountable collision with obsolescence that it was for pretty much everybody other than Charlie Chaplin. Every character draws a guileless laugh from me. Every song—not just the one that got completely coopted by A Clockwork Orange (1971)—I found myself humming as I left the screening, and am still doing so as I type this review nearly a week later.

I should have been spending decades loving this movie and bothering everyone around me about how great it is. What else have I been missing? It boggles the mind, but I don’t feel shamed by the realization that I’ve been missing out. At worst, I feel sorry for the rash of people on social media as of late who bemoan what they see as movie snobbery, for they may never get to stumble across a movie that elicits this kind of response. It’s more a feeling of excitement that the very realization that this movie exists implies that there are any number of movies that have existing long before I was ever born and are just sitting there waiting for me to discover them.

I’m quietly, but insistently thrilled that I have so much more to see and experience. Good morning, indeed.

Tags singin’ in the rain (1952), stanley donen, gene kelly, donald o’connor, debbie reynolds, jean hagen
Comment

Powered by Squarespace

Party Now, Apocalypse Later Industries

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.

Where creativity went when it said it was going out for cigarettes.