Posts Tagged ‘2010’

May Playlist… 90s Edition!

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

I did a lot of growing up in the 90s, and the music of the decade still features prominently in my iTunes library. So I present you with a tribute to the music of my youth:

Ten Random Songs from the 90s… With Video!

1. The World is Not Enough, Garbage (1999)

2. Possession, Sarah McLachlan (1993)

3. Black Balloon, Goo Goo Dolls (1999)

4. Who Will Save Your Soul? Jewel (1995)

5. I Will Buy You a New Life, Everclear (1997)

6. You and Me Song, The Wannadies (1994)

7. Genie in a Bottle, Christina Aguilera (1999)

8. All Star, Smash Mouth (1999)

9. Smoke, Natalie Imbruglia (1997)

10. Closing Time, Semisonic (1999)

You Cannes Not be Serious!

Sunday, May 9th, 2010

Four years ago I attended the Cannes International Film Festival in France as part of a student work program with the American Pavilion.  While the organization and attentiveness of the Pavilion to its students could have been better, the festival itself was amazing.  I was able to attend the premieres of a number of excellent films – Babel, Pan’s Labyrinth, The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Volver, Marie Antoinette, and Fast Food Nation – months before the films were released to the general audience in theatres.  Being surrounded by the world’s top filmmakers was an inspiration, and the beauty of a gorgeous May and the beaches of the French Riviera didn’t hurt either.

In 2006, of the 20 films in competition for Cannes’ top prize, the Palme d’Or, three of the films (15%) were directed by women – Marie Antoinette (Sofia Coppola), Red Road (Andrea Arnold), and Selon Charlie (Nicole Garcia).  In 2010, of the 18 films in competition, none of them were directed by women.

Women make up more than 50% of film audiences (buying 55% of the theatre tickets), but they continue to be severely under-represented both behind the camera and in front of it.  The Women & Hollywood blog features some great statistics on the percentage of women protagonists in film and in various above-the-line positions from 2006 to 2009.  The under-representation of women has long been known as the “celluloid ceiling” and it has been a real deterrent for both professional women filmmakers and for many young women who graduate from film school having lost their drive to write or direct, no longer optimistic about their chances in an industry that appears uninterested in their contributions.

Film is a subjective art.  One man’s Citizen Kane is another’s Starship Troopers (which I’ve heard is pretty good), but that doesn’t mean there aren’t very real biases against women-centric films, even in the second decade of the 21st century.  But it is surprising that a festival as progressive, artsy, international, and independent-friendly as Cannes couldn’t find one film directed by a woman that was worthy of competition for its highest honor this year.

At the grassroots level, there is a CALL TO ACTION  forming, a petition circling, and protests being organized within Cannes and out to express dismay at the lack of women filmmakers in competition.  To show your support, join the You Cannes Not Be Serious! Facebook group and sign the petition.  As a female film goer, I want to see my life, my dreams, and my experiences on screen, and who better to answer this need for self-expression and representation than another woman?

VICTORY IS MINE! (PART 2)

Friday, April 30th, 2010

It was quite a tight race to the finish line (isn’t it always?), but I have finished my first ever Script Frenzy with a WIN. 100+ pages of scripts written during the 30 days of April! Hooray!

100 / 100 Pages. 100% done!

Even though I plan to keep writing tonight (and hopefully this weekend), I wanted to upload my script to validate my page count well before midnight in case I ran into any technical snafus. I will wrap up my seventh short script in April, but the so-good-it-can’t-possibly-be-true news is that once May rolls around… I plan to keep on writing.

Yes, I said it. I plan to keep on writing. In April, I started a Google Docs list of log lines for eleven short script ideas. I wrote seven. That means there are four ideas that have yet to go from a sentence to… many more sentences. The ideas are waiting for me in May… after school… behind the gym… if I am writer enough to take them down.

I AM WRITER! AND VICTORY IS MINE!

And yeah, I know the progress meter is ridiculous looking. It was a rough month.

Spring is Here!

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Spring is here, the flowers are in bloom… and I’ve taken some new pictures!

April Playlist

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

I’m currently participating in the 2010 Script Frenzy competition this month, and below are ten of my favorite songs that help to set the mood for my writing.

Runner ups included We Will Become Silhouettes by the Postal Service, Let Me Know by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, and Better Son/Daughter by Rilo Kiley.

Paperback Writer, The Beatles – This song is so deliciously infectious it makes me smile every time I hear it. Yes, I DO want to be a paperback writer (paperback writer!).

It’s a thousand pages, give or take a few,
I’ll be writing more in a week or two.
I can make it longer if you like the style,
I can change it round and I want to be a paperback writer,
Paperback writer.

Spectacular Views, Rilo Kiley – Rilo Kiley is my favorite band and this song tops almost all my playlists. When Jenny Lewis exclaims that it’s so fucking beautiful, you believe the world really is.

We can see the stars
from where the birds make their homes
staring back at us.
Indifferent
but distanced perfectly
projected endlessly
it’s so fucking beautiful.

Lonely Ghosts, O+S – I first heard this song in the Dollhouse episode “Needs”. It was beautifully integrated into the episode’s finale as it successfully captured a mood of melancholy and unfulfilled endings.

Like lonely ghosts
at a roadside cross
we stay because
we don’t know where else
to go

Lucky, Bif Naked – My favorite love songs are almost exclusively ones about loss. The lyrics are uncomplicated, but that doesn’t take away from the power of the chorus and Bif’s emotive performance.

Remember the time we made love in the roses?
and you took my picture in all sorts of poses
how could I ever get over you
when I’d give my life for yours-
I know we are..we are the lucky ones

I Hate Everyone, Get Set Go – It’s the perfect song for a protagonist stuck in a dead-end job she hates… or as the anthem for an antagonist you just can’t help but love.

I bet you think I’m kidding
But I promise you it’s true
I hate most everybody
But most of all I hate
Oh, I hate you

Falling Slowly, Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova – All of the songs on the Once soundtrack are beautiful, and this one in particular was well-deserving of the Academy Award for Best Original Song. Glen and Marketa sing as a Boy and a Girl who are falling in love despite their past broken hearts and the reality that real life love stories are never that simple.

take this sinking boat
and point it home
we’ve still got time
raise your hopeful voice
you had the choice
you’ve made it now

Still Life, Patty Medina – Another song about lost love and a standout on the Radio Sunnydale soundtrack. For me, the most profound lyric has always been I was so busy making plans, I felt I needed both my hands, and when I let go of yours you were gone.


But sometimes I see you,
a vision I can’t hold onto
So for today I’ll be still life
with window view

Plane Crash in C, Rilo Kiley – Two Rilo Kiley songs were always destined to make this list because I just can’t get enough of Jenny Lewis. This song speaks to everyone who has ever felt like they are floundering in the deep end of life.

and how do you do it?
you make it seem effortless
when it’s all the stupid things
that are so overwhelming to me
like paying my bills
or showing up for work early
or laughing at your jokes

Such Great Heights, Iron & Wine – Hey, a love song on the list that doesn’t end badly! I’ve heard several covers of this song, but Iron & Wine’s performance on The Garden State soundtrack is the most winning.

They will see us waving from such great
Heights, ‘come down now,’ they’ll say
But everything looks perfect from far away,
‘come down now,’ but we’ll stay…

Transylvanian Concubine, Rasputina – Supernatural stories are hugely popular right now (ones about vampires in particular), and this dreamy, bohemian song is perfect for setting the mood to dark and sensual.

If you want to know how
To fly high, then go now
To the place where all the concubines…
Meet and converse with them
Marvel at their pale skin
Wonder how they chew on their pointy…