Monday, October 17, 2016

The Accountant

I saw the movie The Accountant on Saturday night and I thought it was a pretty good action thriller; in fact, it was better than I was anticipating!  Ben Affleck is not my favorite actor but he does a good job with this character (the irony is not lost on me that this character is unable to express emotion).  Christian Wolff (Affleck) is autistic but he is a mathematical savant.  His father, an officer in the military, believes that the only way to protect him from being taken advantage of is to teach him to defend himself physically with various martial arts and with every type of weapon (shown through various flashbacks).  The adult Wolff is an accountant who has dealings with with a number of underworld crime organizations, legitimizing their accounts.  When an employee (Anna Kendrick) finds a discrepancy in the books at Living Robotics, a company about to be taken public, owners Lamar Blackburn (John Lithgow) and his sister Rita (Jean Smart) hire Wolff.  When he runs the numbers (in some great scenes involving him writing figures on all of the windows), he discovers that the error is in the millions and suddenly people in the company are killed by a mysterious assassin (Jon Bernthal).  Meanwhile, Raymond King (J.K. Simmons) and his associate (Cynthia Adai-Robinson) at the Treasury Department are trying to track Wolff down.  How he hides is extremely clever and the action sequences are fabulous.  There are some pretty big twists at the end (one of which I probably should have seen coming) that add to the intrigue.  My only complaint is that virtually every character has a long and complicated backstory and this is sometimes confusing because it requires a great deal of exposition.  Overall, this film is quite entertaining and I would highly recommend it.

Sunday, October 16, 2016

Three Cheers for Number 98!

Just like every other Saturday, my family was there to cheer on our favorite football player!  I hate to admit this, but I have actually started to enjoy getting up early on Saturday morning.  The air is brisk and invigorating, the games are a lot of fun to watch, and I really like going out to breakfast afterwards.  I will be sad when his season ends in a few weeks!  The Braves played the Stansbury Stallions and Sean had a great game.  He would get so pumped up whenever he would get a tackle and, once, we even heard him growl!  It was awesome!

Note:  I didn't get very many pictures of this game because I was trying, unsuccessfully, to get tickets to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir Christmas concert!

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Sister Act at HCT

Last night I went to see Sister Act, the musical based on the 1992 movie of the same name starring Whoopi Goldberg, which is the current production at Hale Centre Theatre. I really enjoyed the movie so I was hoping that the musical would be just as entertaining. Normally I am not a big fan of the current trend of turning popular movies into musicals because they seem so contrived but I think this adaptation is fantastic.  Like the movie version, the story involves a singer, Deloris Van Cartier  (Raven Flowers), who inadvertently witnesses her gangster boyfriend Curtis (Brannon Killgo) kill someone. She is placed in the Queen of Angels Convent to keep her safe until she can testify against Curtis and, as you can imagine, she wreaks havoc on the Mother Superior by taking over the choir. Unlike the movie version, it contains all new original songs by Alan Menken and they are quite good.  I actually really enjoyed watching this show and there are a few aspects of the production that really stand out.  First, Flowers gives a sassy and soulful performance that is just so much fun to watch (I saw her in the title role of Aida at the CenterPoint Theater and she was amazing). She has a voice capable of blowing the roof off of the theater and a larger-than-life personality that makes her ideally suitable for this role. I especially loved her dancing in the song "Raise Your Voice" when she is teaching the nuns how to boogie! Second, I loved all of the choreography, especially in "When I Find My Baby" and "Lady In The Long Black Dress."  In fact, Joey (Bryan Dayley), T.J. (Cameron Garner), and Pablo (Matthew Richards) just about steal the show with their leisure suits and disco moves and I laughed out loud, as did everyone around me, during both of those numbers.  I also really enjoyed "Take Me To Heaven" with the nuns.  Finally, I loved all of the costumes!  Monsignor O'Hara (Oran Marc de Baritault) wears vestments that get more and more elaborate as the show progresses and what can I say about the nun's habits made of turquoise sequins for the finale? They are fabulous, baby!  Speaking of things that sparkle, did I mention all of the disco balls dangling from each entrance to the theater? So much fun!  I thoroughly enjoyed Sister Act and I highly recommend it for a fun and entertaining night out!  It runs at HCT until Dec. 3 and tickets may be purchased here.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Utah Opera's Carmen

I have seen the opera Carmen, Bizet's classic tale of love and betrayal, several times and let me tell you that Utah Opera's current production is magnificent!  I had a chance to see it Monday night and I loved it!  As soldiers guard a factory in Seville, a peasant girl named Micaela (Sarah Tucker) comes looking for her childhood sweetheart, a new recruit named Don Jose (Dominick Chenes), with a letter from his mother begging him to come home.  After reminiscing about their home, she leaves.  The women who work in the factory come out for a break and one of them, a gypsy named Carmen (Elise Quagliata), flirts with the soldiers.  Jose ignores her but he secretly keeps the flower she tosses to him.  Carmen and another worker get in a fight and she is eventually sent to prison.  Jose is ordered to escort her there but she convinces him to let her escape with the promise of her love.  Jose is sent to jail for letting her go.  Meanwhile, the bullfighter Escamillo (Christian Bowers) comes to town and declares his love to Carmen but she refuses him because she loves Jose.  When Jose is released from prison, Carmen dances for him but he tells her he must return to the barracks when he hears the bugle sound.  Carmen is furious and Jose eventually deserts the army to be with her.  After a while, Carmen grows weary of Jose and, when Micaela comes to tell him that his mother is dying, she urges him to go to her.  Escamillo invites Carmen to watch him in a bullfight and she joins him in Seville.  Jose, still desperately in love with Carmen, follows her and, when she declares her love for Escamillo, he kills her.  It is so dramatic and the music is absolutely incredible, with some of the most recognizable melodies in the classical canon: the "Habanera" and the "Toreador Song."  Quagliata is an absolutely beguiling Carmen and she sings the role beautifully but I was also very impressed with her dancing.  Chenes is also excellent as Don Jose and I had goosebumps as he sang of his love for Carmen in Act 2 and Bowers is a lot of fun in the "Toreador Song."  I loved the vibrant costumes and the set design actually reminded me of the arena where I saw a bull fight in Spain!  I highly recommend this thrilling production!  It runs through Oct. 16 and tickets may be purchased here.

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

The Birth of a Nation

Nate Parker's The Birth of a Nation was the talk of the Sundance Film Festival last year and it was one of the most coveted tickets.  I tried to get one, to no avail, but I knew that the Salt Lake Film Society would eventually screen it and, sure enough, it is now showing at the Broadway Theatre.  I had the chance to see it Sunday afternoon and all of the hype surrounding the film at Sundance (it garnered the biggest deal for worldwide distribution in festival history and won both the Audience Award and the Grand Jury Prize) was definitely warranted!  The subject of this film is controversial and it is sometimes very difficult to watch but it is powerful, brilliant, and strangely beautiful.  I don't think I will be able to stop thinking about it for days.  It tells the true story of Nat Turner (Nate Parker), who as a child is taught to read but is only allowed to read the Bible.  He becomes a preacher to his fellow slaves on the plantation owned by Samuel Turner (Armie Hammer), who is near bankruptcy.  Many plantations are suffering economic difficulties and owners fear slave uprisings.  Nat is taken to these neighboring plantations to preach to the slaves about submitting to their masters in order to quell the rebellions (and make money for Samuel).  Nat begins to see, by incremental degrees, the evils of slavery, particularly the brutal beating of his wife and the rape of a slave by a guest on the plantation.  As he searches the Bible for justification for slavery, Nat finds more justification for rising up against the chains that bind him.  He eventually foments a dramatic rebellion against his master and those of neighboring plantations (in some incredibly greusome scenes) before being suppressed by the Virginia militia.  Nat is eventually captured and hanged but the film ends with a close-up of a face of a young slave watching the hanging and that same man as a soldier in the Union Army during the Civil War showing Turner's legacy.  Parker gives an absolutely riveting performance as Turner and the scenes where he preaches gave me goosebumps.  The beautiful widescreen shots of antebellum Virginia are juxtaposed with nightmarish close-up shots of brutality (some I had to look away from) very effectively and the stirring soundtrack by Henry Jackman adds to the tension.  I walked out of the theater in tears, as did many others in my screening, but I think this is a film that everyone should see.
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