Monday, 25 November 2024

Arts & Life



‘SKYSCRAPER’ (Rated PG-13)

The popularity of likeable action star Dwayne Johnson should carry most of his films and “Skyscraper,” at least to his fan base, proves to be no exception. It’s basically robust, wild and crazy fun based on an improbable premise.

No matter the role, Johnson is an indestructible hero. His Will Sawyer, U.S. war veteran and former FBI hostage rescue team leader, specializes in security assessments of skyscrapers and lands an assignment to appraise the world’s tallest building in China.

The story begins with a flashback to 10 years before when Will Sawyer suffers grievous physical harm that ends his career in law enforcement. During a hospital stay, he meets with future wife Sarah (Neve Campbell), a talented Navy surgeon who saved his life.

Now married and with young twin children, Will ends up at the skyscraper with his family only a temporary stay while he starts his evaluation for billionaire visionary Zhao Long Ji (Chin Han) who has created the marvel of a prototypical city in a building 225 stories in height.

Compromised by betrayals, Will finds himself on the lam when fire breaks out on the 96th floor and he’s targeted as the prime suspect though no one bothers to ask why he would leave his danger with deliberate sabotage of the fire suppression system.

Framed for setting the building ablaze, Will has to find the responsible parties, clear his name and somehow save his wife and kids trapped inside on an unoccupied floor above the fire line. It’s a tall order and a lot of duct tape becomes one useful tool.

The bad guys are generic Eurotrash in a mercenary crew led by wanted criminal and overall nutjob Kores Botha (Roland Moller), deadly and revenge-driven but not as villainous as his accomplice Xia (Hannah Quinlivan), an assassin with a nasty mean streak.

Writer and director Rawson Marshall Thurber is described in the press notes as delivering the juggernaut of “Die Hard” meets “Towering Inferno” set in Hong Kong. The “Mission Impossible” franchise should be tossed into the mix as well.

Regardless of any inspirations, “Skyscraper” showcases Will’s incredible death-defying moves when hanging high in the air outside the building while onlookers below express the awe we are supposed to feel.

We delight in Dwayne Johnson’s innate ability to take us along for a thrill ride, even one that strains all credulity. His fierce determination results in the kind of rousing, relentless action that should be just good enough for the summer fun of “Skyscraper.”

Derided by some as a forgettable “disaster flick,” no doubt “Skyscraper” will be overlooked during awards season unless there’s a category for cliffhanging action.

The aim of “Skyscraper” is for tasty popcorn entertainment and that it delivers in a gargantuan bucket of rock solid thrills.



‘TAKE TWO’ ON ABC NETWORK

The summer TV schedule is typically filled with new shows on cable and plenty of reality and documentary-type shows on both cable and network.

The big four major networks, ABC, CBS, NBC and FOX, usually hold off until the Fall season to launch new series, but there are always exceptions. ABC fills the void this summer with “Take Two.”

The ABC long-running series “Castle” was popular. Nathan Fillion played the titular character, a mystery novelist who tagged along with reluctant NYPD detective Kate Beckett (Stana Katic) and often meddled in cases with his opinions.

In a gender twist, “Take Two” has similarities in that private eye Eddie Valetik (Eddie Cibran) is put in the tight spot of having the unwanted shadow of Sam Swift (Rachel Bilson), the former star of TV cop series, tailing his every move.

On a condition of parole, the unemployed Sam, fired from the series “Hot Suspect” and freshly out of rehab, teams up with the disinclined Eddie to remain under his watchful eye even though the last thing he needs is an inquisitive nuisance.

If you are most likely thinking that the similarities between “Castle” and “Take Two” are eerily parallel, it may not surprise that Andrew W. Marlowe is the creator of both series. Recycling story formulas are nothing new in both television and film.

The big question is whether these two crime-solving disparate characters, much like Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd in “Moonlighting,” are engagingly fun to watch in their inevitable quarrels and sarcastic banter.

So far, every time that Eddie cautions Sam to be invisible and not get involved, these admonitions are predictably ignored by the actor who gleans all of her theories from years of solving fictional crimes.

Midway into the second episode, one observation from Eddie sums up a feeling that might even be shared by the audience. Asked how it is going in working with Sam, Eddie replies that it’s like “a circus that never leaves town.”

In an obvious marketing ploy, “Take Two” episodes, at least in the initial going, feature an ad for the upcoming Fall series “The Rookie” starring Nathan Fillion. Is this a wink to the viewers about the connection to “Castle?”

Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

From left to right, Conni Lemen Kosla, chair of Lake County Rural Arts Initiative; Laura Barnes, producer of “As You Like It”; and Wilda Shock, chair of Lake County Friends of Mendocino College. Courtesy photo.

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – The Lake County Rural Arts Initiative is adding a donation to the Shakespeare at the Lake production of “As You Like It,” being presented free of charge at Library Park at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, July 28, and Sunday, July 29.

The Mendocino College Lake Center theater program in collaboration with the Lake County Theatre Co. is staging a wonderful, fun version of this classic play.

The monies from donations support the free performances and scholarships for theater students at Mendocino College.

This delightful production and talented performers “add tremendously to Lake County’s already robust and exciting arts community and offerings,” said Conni Lemen Kosla, Lake County Rural Arts Initiative chair.

Lemen Kosla presented a donation of $300 to Laura Barnes, producer of As You Like It, and Wilda Shock, chair of the Lake County Friends of Mendocino College.

Call 707-263-7576 for “As You Like It” sponsorship information.

For more information on the Lake County Rural Arts Initiative, visit www.lcrai.org .

Mario Lanza and Ann Blyth star in “The Great Caruso.” Courtesy photo.


LAKEPORT, Calif. – The 1951 musical drama, “The Great Caruso,” starring Mario Lanza and Ann Blyth, screens at the Soper Reese Theatre on Tuesday, July 24, at 1 and 6 p.m.

Entry to the film is by donation.

This fictionalized film traces tenor Enrico Caruso’s ascension from adolescent choir singer to the uppermost ranks of the opera world.

His first love is Musetta from his hometown of Naples, and then Dorothy, the daughter of one of the Metropolitan Opera's patrons.

Caruso is unacceptable to both women's fathers: to one, because he sings; to the other, because he is a peasant.

Throughout you’ll be treated to the voice of the fabulous Mario Lanza and 1950s stars from the Metropolitan Opera.

The movie is sponsored by Alex Valiansky. Rated G. Run time is 1 hour and 49 minutes.

The Soper Reese Theatre is located at 275 S. Main St., Lakeport, 707-263-0577, www.soperreesetheatre.com.

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – Calling all parents: Bring your mini Picasso to the Kelseyville Pear Festival on Saturday, Sept. 29 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. to have them be a part of the free collaborative community mural by the children of Lake County.

This free project will be set up in the children’s area next to The Saw Shop and all of the paints and art supplies will be provided.

Each participating child will receive a square block on the mural board to paint with his or her interpretation of our county and pears.

There will be “artist supervision” to help little ones with their designs, but a parent or guardian must also be present.

Let’s get “artsy” Lake County!

For more information on volunteering or sponsorship, please call Amber Sheridan at 707-245-5432.

Conan the Barbarian. Courtesy photo.


LAKEPORT, Calif. – The GenX Cinema series presents the 1982 action/adventure/fantasy film, “Conan the Barbarian,” on Wednesday, Aug. 8, at 7 p.m. at the Soper Reese Theatre in Lakeport.

Entry is by donation.

The film stars Arnold Schwarzenegger, James Earl Jones and Max Von Sydow,

Out of the swords and sorcery movie genre, “Conan” was former bodybuilder Schwarzenegger’s first film, in which he played a boy slave who’s grown up strong, angry and seeking vengeance.

This primitive pulp fiction film, from a Robert E. Howard book written in the 1930s, is full of quotable lines and gritty action including plenty of spilled guts, dismembered heads and bodies thrashed by sea monsters.

The film is rated R with run time of two hours and is sponsored by Cani Painting and Stone Fire Pizza.

The Soper Reese Theatre is located at 275 S. Main St., Lakeport, telephone 707-263-0577, www.soperreesetheatre.com.

Ted Kooser. Photo credit: UNL Publications and Photography.


I live in Nebraska, out in the country where summers have two seasons, ticks and chiggers, and both the ticks and chiggers like nothing better than a sip of me.

So how could I resist seeing what a tick might have to say for itself?

Here's a poem by Jim Zimmerman, who lives in Pleasantville, New York, which when the ticks are hungry may not be so Pleasantville.

His most recent book of poems is Family Cookout (The Comstock Review).

Listen to the Deer Tick Sing

I wait for you to come
to brush your shoe against
the blade of grass I'm sitting on
touch me with your hand
as you reach for one last
violet to take home

or pick up a worm to place
gracefully in the garden

even better if you lie
on a hillside to watch the sunset
or breathe in stars

I will feel your warmth, bury
my head next to that freckle
on your calf, that hair
on your forearm, or just behind
the lobe of your left ear

I promise not to take too much
blood into my swelling body

only what I think I need

and I will never
let you know I am here
though I will love you

deeply


American Life in Poetry does not accept unsolicited manuscripts. It is made possible by The Poetry Foundation ( www.poetryfoundation.org ), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2017 by James K. Zimmerman, "Listen to the Deer Tick Sing." Poem reprinted by permission of James K. Zimmerman. Introduction copyright ©2018 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006.

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