This is not an official blog of the City. It is the work of Mark Kapel who is solely responsible for content.

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Monday, March 3, 2014

Oscar 2014 Recap.


On an annual basis there are six potentially career changing awards made by the Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Science. Better known as Oscars they are 1)Best Picture. 2)Best Director. 3)Best Actor. 4)Best Actress. 5)Best Supporting Actor, and 6)Best Supporting  Actress. 

In each of the above categories  with the exception of best picture, five nominations are made. Best Picture can have has many as ten nominations. Last year there were nine Best Pictures nominations. Thus  there were a total of  34 nomination were spread over a total of eleven movies. Last night those 34 nominations became six actual winners from four different movies.

  • 12 years a Slave won Best Picture and Best Sporting Actress Lupita Nyong’o,. 

  • Dallas Buyers Club won Best Actor Matthew McConaughey,and Best Supporting Actor Jared Leto.

  • Gravity Alfonso CuarĂ³n, won Best Director (only the 23rd time in 85 years awards for Best Picture and Best Director have gone to separate movies).

  • Blue Jasmine Cate Blanchett,  won for  Best Actress.
So what shall we make of all that  ? Well Oscar likes to share the wealth. But we know that and have known it for years. Sweeps it seems are not  politically correct .

Do we agree with all the awards ? Yes and No.12 years a Slave was the most significant, ground breaking picture of the year in its depiction of slavery.  With a potential of ten best picture nominations we were however dismayed to see the critically acclaimed  Fruitvale Station, a tragedy in Urban America overlooked for celebrations of wanton greed and excess like The Wolf of Wall Street. Uncle Nestor who is slightly to  right  of Archie Bunker was "PO ed"  that The Butler (which I did not see  but he says was really good)  was overlooked for "some of the nominated junk" he  was dragged to.

Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor awards  to the Dallas Buyer's Club is in our opinion is also very deserved. Like 
12 Years a Slave the makes a significant social statement.

Gravity as a movie left us cold. No pun attended. First of all the space craft depicted was apparently a rental from Russia. The horizontal striped  tri-color flag and Russian lettering inside indicate that. Secondly how can anyone be Best Director,for directing a film for with a  cast  of essentially one ? All the rest was special effects. CGI. Computer Generated Imagery.

Last but not least , for  Best Actress we would put  Cate Blanchett's good performance in Blue Jasmine well below that of Meryl Streep's  great performance  in August: Osage County, and  Judy Dench's in Philomena.

Both of the later pictures quote TS, Elliot. August: Osage County begins with a quotation for Elliot's The Hollow Man.

I had to speak my mind once, seeing that I knew you from a child, so to speak. And now I shall forget; but you are young yet. Life is very long,” he went on, with unconscious sadness.

The speaker, a poet himself  then tells the audience that many have had similar thoughts  or even said as much but T.S. gets the credit because he was the first to write it down.

Tolstoy who is not quoted tells us (first line of Anna Karina

 Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.

Margo Martindale Picture
Martindale
The family in August:Osage County is not happy and life is long. Meryl Streep is the matriarch.  The cast also includes Julia Roberts, (also Oscar nominated) and Margo Martindale (University of Michigan), and now playing in the FX  TV series The Americans. She also played with Streep in The Hours.) The women  dominate but the men are not pushovers.There is Chris Cooper, October Sky who previously paired with Streep,and won a Supporting Actor Oscar in Adaptation and Ewan McGregor of Star Wars.) 

Cooper
In short Meryl Streep, (in the spirit of  all memorable Mothers or Mother-in-laws ) is a master, in voice and facial expressions that convey every emotion under the sun. Using them Streep  often in less than a  second goes from rage to  restraint and then humor as she considers the absurdity of it all. Throughout the film Julia Roberts holds her own and Margo Martindale (as she does on the FX TV series) offers a delicious sort of evil.

Philomena is a movie  about unwed mother in Ireland who in 1952 is forced to give up her child and provide  indentured servitude at  the "everything by hand" laundry of the convent that takes her in.

"It really wasn't slave labor" she explains. " I could have left at any time but I would have had to pay the convent back for all I owed them and I had no other way of coming up with the money."

She tells this to one who has become a journalist because he just been "given the sack"from a prestigious government job.

In some respects getting sacked or inadvertently pregnant isn't very different. Everyone is sympathetic but no one believes it isn't your fault.

The Journalist agrees to help  her find out what 
happened to of the baby she gave up for adoption. When answers are not forthcoming in Ireland they go looking for them in the United States a popular destination of adopted infants of that era.

Thus begins a journey of serendipity or as the journalist explains
which prompts Philomena to ask. "That's really quite good. Did you write that Martin ?"  No he says explaining it is T.S. Elliot.

The New York Times in review by Stephen Holden, states "The movie has many facets. It is a comedic road movie,  a detective story, an infuriated anticlerical screed,and an inquiry into faith  and the limits of reason, all rolled together.... That Ms. Dench makes you believe  her character has  the capacity to forgive provides the movie with a solid moral center."




Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Baldwin Library Board Meeting February 17th 2014. Student Library Board Member Jack Kellet. Quarton Lake Historian Pat Andrews.



Click Here for Full 46 Minute Meeting 


To follow along with  this  meeting use the proposed minutes  at the following link. Proposed Minutes.


People Of Note



 Jack Kellet, Student Library Board Member,










                                                 
   Kellet reads application letter to Board.         
         





Pat Andrews Presentation
         

















Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Best Picture Nominees Gravity and Nebraska, Plus Thor The Dark World, Highlight Baldwin New Titles 2/25/2014.

Gravity (DVD)Dr. Ryan Stone is a brilliant medical engineer on her first shuttle mission with veteran astronaut Matt Kowalsky. On a seemingly routine spacewalk, the shuttle is destroyed, leaving Stone and Kowalsky spiraling out into the blackness. The deafening silence tells them they have lost any link to Earth and any chance for rescue. As fear turns to panic, every gulp of air eats away at what little oxygen is left, and the only way home may be to go further out into the terrifying expanse of space.
Check Availability

Nebraska (DVD)After receiving a sweepstakes letter in the mail, a cantankerous father thinks he's struck it rich, and wrangles his estranged son into taking a road trip to claim the fortune. Getting waylaid in the father's hometown in Nebraska, the son tries to reconnect with his impenetrable father.  




Thor: The Dark World (DVD)Worlds collide when a powerful ancient enemy threatens to plunge the cosmos into eternal darkness. Thor fights to restore order across the cosmos, but an ancient race led by the vengeful Malekith returns to plunge the universe back into darkness. Faced with an enemy that even Odin and Asgard cannot withstand, Thor must embark on his most perilous and personal journey yet. Now, reunited with Jane Foster, and forced to forge an alliance with his treacherous brother Loki, Thor embarks on a perilous personal quest to save both Earth and Asgard from destruction. Check Availability

The Chase by Janet Evanovich and Lee Goldberg: FBI Agent Kate O'Hare is a force of nature, and she's lived for one thing and one thing only: to put the slippery conman known as Nicolas Fox behind bars. Nick is a fed's worst nightmare: exceptionally talented in his line of work, known the world over for being able to pull off some of the most dangerous, high-profile cons. In a cruel twist of fate, Kate's bosses at the FBI force her to covertly partner up with Nick to take down big league crime. 
 Check Availability




Pulling Strings (DVD):  After his daughter's Visa request to visit her grandparents in America is rejected, a single father and his loyal best friend do everything it takes to win over the Embassy worker who turned her downCheck Availability















Monday, February 24, 2014

Precepts for City of Bloomfield Hills 2013 Person of The Year Award.

 Valentine's  day is over over and St. Patrick's day approaches. We are chagrined to note that  we have yet to post our 2013 Persons of the Year award.  It is an award we do not give lightly and we must say it is a  difficult award to win. We don't seek suggestions or nominations. There is no panel to impress. Essays are not required .
Until it is announced (usually at some late date ) there is no mention. We don't  ask questions of co-workers  or do similar  things that might tip our hand. Instead we evaluate throughout the year and sometimes, in the case of this year, a little longer. Then we announce our 2013  Person of the Year. The individual selected will find out just as you do. By reading it here. We don't notify the winner. We feel that would be inappropriate  as if we expected something in return  for picking them. There is also no tangible award made in terms of a plaque, certificate or a banquet. Just the words that appear.

Last December  we recognized  four individuals who participated in the major news stories of the year. Two of which Amy Burton, (City Archives) and Mary Juras (Celebrate Bloomfield Hills Day)  accomplished far  more than their duties.

 Our  Person of the Year award is  however different. It is  not just recognition of a job well done which in the course of year, could include many in our communities.

Our award is made for the benefit of our readers. We  hope that our recognition  of residents or nearby neighbors, who have displayed courage, overcome adversity, and  improved our communities will inspire others.

Like all awards the validity of ours can only determined in the continued accomplishments of the people who we award it to. 
We are pleased to say that  the people we acknowledged in 2011 and 2012  did  very well in the years that  followed.