Monday, February 27, 2023

Jesus Revolution vs. Cocaine Bear

Sorry, not sorry…but I am seriously amused that my small town theater is showing both Jesus Revolution & Cocaine Bear! πŸ˜‚ 


A theater marquee showin ant man & wasp, Jesus revolution and Cocaine Bear

BTW, I actually went to both yesterday just to experience cinematic whiplash. πŸ˜  


Movie posters for Jesus revolution and Cocaine Bear

One was a badly acted film with one-dimensional characters and preposterous situations.  πŸ‘ŽπŸ‘Ž


The other was Cocaine Bear. πŸ«’🐻 πŸ‘πŸ‘  


Movie ticket for Cocaine Bear

Freak Out, 

JLH 


~~~~~~~~~~~~

My books & blogs… 

http://thejlhcollective.blogspot.com/2018/03/the-collective.html

Thursday, February 23, 2023

freakboy on film: TOMMY (1975)

The DVD of Tommy

(The following post was initially placed behind a “sensitive content” warning.  I changed the wording in order to comply with Google’s & Blogger’s regulations.  I hope these changes satisfy the PC Police and don’t offend anyone or whatever.πŸ™„)


 Welcome to the camp.  I guess you all know why we’re here.” 


We are here because of a blogging challenge posed to me by Gill of Realweegiemidget Reviews She challenged me to blog about a typically non-singing actor who sings in a musical.  My mind immediately zeroed in on one jaw-dropping performance, but more about this later.


My name is Tommy and I became aware this year.” 


Roger Daltry as a shirtless Tommy on the mountainside

I first became aware of TOMMY back in the late 1990’s.  I don’t recall what exactly drew me to this psychedelic musical, but I remember wondering what the hell I just watched as the ending credits rolled.  Even now, decades later, I’m still not quite sure of the answer.  

Elton John as the Pinball champ who wears ridiculously big shoes

If you want to follow me, you’ve got to play pinball.


Tommy is born on the first day of peace after WWII.  His father has been presumed dead during wartime, so his mother remarries.  Then, in a soap opera twist, Tommy’s father returns and is subsequently murdered in front of his son.  The guilty party, his mother and stepfather, convince Tommy that he didn’t hear it, he didn’t see it and won’t say nothing to anyone ever in his life.  


Ann-Margret and Oliver Reed as Tommy’s mother and stepfather telling Tommy to keep his yap shut.

Tommy looks in the mirror as his mother and stepfather prepare to paint the town red
Now Tommy is hearing, verbally and visually impaired.  He lives in a physically small world, but his mind is expanding, even with babysitters tormenting him.  Then one day Tommy discovers a pinball machine and quickly gains fame and fortune as the hearing, verbally and visually impaired kid who sure plays a mean pinball.  What’s a pinball wizard to do?  Start a holiday camp cult centered around the game, of course.  You’ll have to see for yourself how all this chaos concludes. 


Tommy’s family looks on as he receives questionable psychiatric care

And put in your ear plugs, put on your eye shades, you know where to put the cork!” 


Extreme close up of a wide-eyed Tina Turner as the acid queen

Screenwriter/director Ken Russell takes The Who’s masterful rock opera and transforms it into a visual fever dream mess.  Oh, but what a strangely compelling mess it is, especially with such a cast!  Ann-Margret and Oliver Reed, as Tommy’s mother and stepfather, act just enough over the top to fit perfectly inside the surreal story.  Roger Daltrey, as adult Tommy, seems mainly able to act without his shirt.  Eric Clapton is mellow magnified as The Preacher of a Marilyn Monroe healing cult that Tommy’s mother drags him to.  Tina Turner is singing, shaking and sizzling through her memorable role as The Acid Queen, the woman Tommy’s stepfather hires to put the boy right.  Elton John is in full-tilt 1970’s mode, and really big shoes, as The Champ, Tommy’s pinball rival.  Then there is the reason we are here…


Jack Nicholson as The Specialist peering  through a medical device.

Jack Nicholson as The Specialist.  Yes, THAT Jack Nicholson!  His appearance in this film still floors me, even more so when he actually sings a song about his examination of Tommy’s inability to hear and speak and see.  How is Jack’s singing?  Well, he’s not going to win a Grammy, even with the pretense of a British accent.  However, despite any tuneful deficiency, he is memorable as the doctor who can’t reach Tommy but would enjoy reaching Tommy’s mother instead.


The specialist woos Tommy’s mother

In conclusion, 

TOMMY is bizarre and bizarrely entertaining.  I prefer The Who’s original album, but this filmic spectacle lures the viewer in with eclectic actors and catchy songs.  Sally Simpson, a song about a young girl who disobeys her religious father to see Tommy, is one of my personal favorites.  So, if you want to take a trippy ‘70’s musical trip and experience the vocal stylings of Jack Nicholson, then grab a can of beans and experience TOMMY! 


Thank you for reading or listening to my half-blind words. 


Freak Out,                                                           JLH


P.S.  I would like to pass on a blogging challenge to…


Barry, of Cinematic Catharsis-  I challenge you to do a full scale review (no picks & pans or short takes) of an Andy Milligan film of your choice!     


Dave, of My Gay Opinion -  I challenge you to review either the soundtrack to DEEP THROAT or the Madonna-infused soundtrack to EVITA! 


~~~~~~~~~~~~

My books & blogs… 

http://thejlhcollective.blogspot.com/2018/03/the-collective.html

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

freakboy on film: TRUST (1990)

 

Trust, a film by Hal Hartley

TRUST is essentially a story about two lost souls finding one another at the right time and place.  Will this make a perfect Valentine’s Day gift?  


Matthew and Maria facing each other in opposite directions

Well…

Maria is a pregnant teen who just quit school and may have slapped her father to death.  Matthew is a young man who just quit a computer manufacturing job and pissed off his father again.  These two complicated people form a complicated bond that leads to, well, complications involving abusive parents, a stolen baby and a hand grenade.  


Matthew and Maria waiting

Writer/director Hal Hartley creates memorable characters with severely direct dialogue.  Seriously, has anyone ever talked like anyone in this film?  Adrienne Shelly shines in a sullenly inquisitive way as Maria.  Martin Donovan emits edgy rebelliousness as Matthew.  Both Maria and Matthew are often abrasive, and possibly unlikable, but I find them sympathetic and relatable.  This is probably because I’m drawn to emotionally damaged characters.  Plus, there is a piece of dialogue exchange that has become one of my favorite scenes from any film.  


MARIA: “Did you mean it, would you marry me?” 

MATTHEW: “Yes.” 

MARIA: “Why?” 

MATTHEW: “Because I want to.” 

MARIA: “Not because you love me or anything like that, huh?” 

MATTHEW: “I respect and admire you.” 

MARIA: “Isn’t that love?” 

MATTHEW: “No, that’s respect and admiration.  I think that’s better than love.” 

MARIA: “How?” 

MATTHEW: “When people are in love, they do all sorts of crazy things.  They get jealous.  They lie.  They cheat.  They kill themselves.  Kill each other.” 

MARIA: “It doesn’t have to be that way.” 

MATTHEW: “Maybe.” 


Maria sitting while Matthew stands and smokes

I first experienced TRUST on IFC back in the 1990’s and even recorded it on VHS.  Oh, there was a constant search later for a DVD, but somehow I missed its Region 1 release, which is out of print and pricey.  Thankfully, I found a Region 4 copy for $8 on Amazon and it was worth it.  (Kneels in gratitude for my region-free player.)


In conclusion…

I respect and admire this film and now it takes me back to the ‘90’s indie film movement, which makes me feel both happy and sad.  I’m reminded how great these films are, but then I begin feeling wistfully nostalgic for that time period.  Ugh, enough of my sloppy sentimentality!  If someone special in your life enjoys character driven drama with sly humor and a romance that doesn’t make you wanna wretch, then TRUST may be the perfect Valentine’s Day gift! πŸ–€


Thank you for reading or listening to my half-blind words. 


Freak Out, 

JLH 


P.S.  Click the pic ⤵️ for more emotionally damaged characters…


Dark excursions, by john L. Harmon.  The character development is quite simply brilliant, Amazon reader review, available from Amazon.com


Thursday, February 9, 2023

freakboy classics: THE GAME


An old photo of my dad holding a baby freakboy


My dad passed away in March of 2022 and today would’ve been his birthday.  So, here is one of my old “tales from the freakboy zone” emails from 2008 all about a nice moment with my dad…


_______________

THE GAME

 

Truth be told, I continue to be an early/mid-1980’s boy living in an Atari 2600 world.  As a matter of fact, Margaret and I occasionally dig out and dust off that antique gaming system and test our more “mature” hand-eye coordination and stamina.

 

I still leave her in the dust on Megamania.  She will almost always beat me at Video Pinball.  We level the playing field with our equal and eloquent suckiness in maneuvering Pac-Man!

 

But back then, back in those toe-tally awesome years, if someone had told me that I would one day play a video game with my father, I would have laughed the delusional fool out of the decade!

 

Flash-forward to Wednesday, January 30th, 2008, the impossible became reality.

 

After an out-of-town doctor appointment, my father and I had the opportunity to fiddle with that new-fangled contraption called Nintendo Wii.  There we were, me in my thirties, him in his seventies, playing a game of bowling, a controller replacing the ball and no shoe rentals!

 

We soon grew accustomed to swinging the controller as if we were really swinging a ball, and releasing a button at the moment we would have normally sent a physical bowling ball down the lane.  It was fun, plain and simple!

 

Together, as father and son, we were initiated into the 21st Century and its virtual playground.  For a change, technology closed the age gap instead of expanding it.

 

FYI: My dad won, 127 to 93.  Hhhmmm…maybe this gaming system reversed the age gap.

 

1/30/2008

 

John L. Harmon

freak under control 

_______________


Thank you for reading or listening to my half-blind words. 


Freak Out, 

JLH 


P.S. click the pic ⤵️ for another tale about my dad…


A rubber duck with sunglasses

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Bubba’s Truck is a very short story that may make you tear up a bit and is available as a very short ebook from an Amazon near you. 

Bubbas truck, a short story, by john L. Harmon


Wednesday, February 1, 2023

Ghost in an Echo (a poem, of sorts)

I keep going 

Because 

I need it 

The challenges  

The creativity 

Even though 

I’m hard 

on myself 

Believing 

I’m unworthy 

Believing 

the voices 

From the past 

From inside 

That I’m nothing 

That I’m shit 

That I don’t exist 

Just an echo  

From a 

long ago 

dream 

Faintly reverberating 

Through space  

Through time 

Until 

there is 

nothing 

left 

of 

me 

A ghostly selfie with my face blurred and obscured by white light

____________

2023, John L. Harmon 


This poem was written while listening to the lonely ghost on the sun” by Blue Sun Chasing, an incredible sonic creation which can be experienced through Bandcamp. 


A screenshot of the lonely ghost in the sun by blue sun chasing

Thank you for reading or listening to my half-blind words.


Freak Out, 

JLH 


P.S.  click the pic for a thematically related video from 2016… ⤵️ 


A silhouette of a person with parted hair and glasses in front of trees and a sunset

~~~~~~~~~~~~

My books & blogs… 

http://thejlhcollective.blogspot.com/2018/03/the-collective.html