Selasa, 15 Desember 2009

golden robes






















Today was the announcement of the Golden Globe nominations. They are actually a pretty great bunch of nominees: four of my favorite movies of the year made it in the Best Picture - Drama lineup (Up in the Air, The Hurt Locker, Precious, and Inglourious Basterds). I'm reserving judgment on Avatar until I see it.

I thought it would be fun to a little style retrospective on memorable Golden Globe dresses!

The Golden Globes didn't really become a TV sensation until the mid-90s so it's hard to find decent pics!

What are your faves?!

OK, this is the first dress I think of when I remember past GG's. It really looked awesome on Kim Basinger. I like how 1950s-ish it is, appropriate because she won for L.A. Confidential.























Another bit of 90s nostalgia. Check out Rupert & Julia (My Best Friend's Wedding days) entering the Golden Globes in1998. Has she looked prettier since? I love this dress!





Kate looked very classy winning two Globes in a smart Yves Saint Laurent.























OK, this 2000 pick may be controversial but I remember thinking how pretty this Vera Wang was on Tyra. Pastels were in that year.





















SJP in Chanel. 2004.





















Love the shoos!






















Freida Pinto so pretty in Christian Lacroix.






















Before the infamous swan dress was Bjork's memorable sequined MJ tribute!






















I loved Drew's hair here. And this color. She is fun.






Minggu, 13 Desember 2009

cagey george in his glass cage















In adapting a classic novel for a film, it seems to me a filmmaker has the responsibility of at least capturing the spirit of the source, even if the adaptation makes many changes. Tom Ford's A Single Man is certainly a noble attempt for a new filmmaker and it shows a lot of confidence. Yet, by making Isherwood's George suicidal, the film version becomes plodding and morose.

Indeed Ford was probably trying to add some dramatic tension. He has recently shared that an unnamed family member committed suicide in a way similar to what George's character plans: "It was exactly that suicide. Everything planned, everything laid out, suit, cuff links, zipped himself in a sleeping bag so he wouldn't make a mess." By drawing on his personal life, Ford does indeed make the work interesting. Yet the book, so slim and fleeting, with pages of rich dialogue, is a celebratory and somber rush of a single day in the life of a middle-aged gay man in the early 1960s. Isherwood's George, particularly observant of his rapidly gentrifying Los Angeles suburb, offers many crackling insights. Ford infuses the movie with an overwrought, changeable warm and cool tone, exaggerated tick tock clocks, and slow-mo student film-ish shots of people's eyes and lips, to show George's isolation and fragmented world view. It has a healthy love for Bergman, Almodovar, and Kar Wai Wong's In the Mood for Love. And it is certainly a stylish affair (George's get-up is, as you may have guessed, Tom Ford, while Julianne Moore seems to be having fun with her part as a boozy, hopelessly in love fag hag with bouffant hair). But because Ford's George is so morbidly depressed, it's difficult to discern the meaning of whatever substance of Isherwood's is left intact. The entire movie becomes a will he or will he not kill himself kind of game. And that kind of dance can really only be viewed once. Isherwood's novel still feels fresh. Ford's film feels dated.


However there are things to be admired here. And perhaps it's wrong for me to do so much comparing and contrasting; a film is meant to be reviewed on its own merit. The re imagining of George as the sleek professor works largely due to Colin Firth and the brilliant set design. His modern, glass house, open for the world to see, is an ironic womb for such an isolated character stuck in the past. It's also a glimpse of the promise of what George's life used to hold. Colin Firth is a reason to see the picture. He has always been a quiet, very real presence in his best roles as difficult-to-read, aloof Mr. Darcy's. George is another one of those roles and he tackles it with gusto. The other supporting players are electric including the very handsome Matthew Goode as George's old lover and the very handsome Nicholas Hoult as a radiant, curious young student. The scenes involving these two really jolt George (and the film) to life. They connect with insular George in surprising ways. Despite the film's flaws, Ford should be commended for bringing such a strong cast to the screen and for taking on such an ambitious project.


-Jeffery Berg

Jumat, 11 Desember 2009

(un)cool cats
















What is Cats about really? It requires a lot of suspension of disbelief and marveling at people dressed in feline costumes. It is indeed even more bizarre that its basis is T.S. Eliot. The song "Memory" has become standard for covering all the thematic bases of Broadway: lost hopes and dreams of performing, and aging.

I used to really love the Cats soundtrack as a child (listened to over and over on cassette). I would dance around my room to "Jellicle Cats" and "Mr. Mistoffelees." Little did I know I would grow to learn that this is considered the nadir of popular musicals.

Years later when I saw a production of it at the Roanoke Civic Center, it seemed to have lost a lot of the luster I remembered it for. It was actually kind of irritating.

But secretly I still like some of the songs.

Are there any guilty pleasure musicals you can think of?




Rabu, 09 Desember 2009

inspiring the captain

















In recent years, Clint Eastwood has blended masculine sentimentality with foreboding themes in a string of morose dramas (Mystic River, Million Dollar Baby, Letters from Iwo Jima, and Changeling). His latest is of a different tone. Invictus is crowd-cheering, inspirational sports drama uplift to the hilt and yet also grounded by its complicated subject matter and an affecting portrayal of Nelson Mandela by Morgan Freeman.

Upon his new presidency in divided South Africa, Mandela becomes invested in the nation's rugby team, the Springboks. He immediately observes that the South African blacks are cheering for the other side. Soon Mandela begins his personal quest to inspire team captain Francois Pienaar (an exceptional Matt Damon) to win the World Cup and for a moment, unite the nation. The title refers to the poem that the imprisoned Mandela found comfort in; he passes it on to Pienaar to unlock his potential to be a true team leader ("I am the captain of my soul").

Based on a book by John Carlin, Anthony Peckham's script is a tightly focused exercise in the classic sports drama but also a subtle reveal of racial tensions in apartheid torn South Africa. Mandela's clashing crew of bodyguards ("the rainbow nation starts here") figure as a sort of microcosm. Instead of emotionally investing with any of the Springboks, the movie centers on Pienaar--a simple, rugged athlete who becomes more passionate about his team and his country as the story progresses. When Pienaar visits Mandela's prison cell, it's an undeniably powerful moment. Invictus is an economical picture: streamlined, stately. I have to admit in the hours after it ended, as in any sports drama that values a good, clean score rather than ambiguity, I felt as if something was missing. And yet the film's shortcomings are somewhat ameliorated by the rigor of Eastwood's direction, especially in the thrilling rugby sequences (the '95 World Cup is practically recreated down to the tiniest detail).




Discover more about the film on NPR

think pink


On this rainy day in New York and in the spirit of how amazing SJP looked at the London premiere of Did You Hear About the Morgans? I thought it would be fun to do a collage of pink.







































Here are some recent & not-so recent pink looks:

From DVF Pre-Fall Ready to Wear 2010. Fun pink gloves, right?




















Beyonce rocks some in the "Video Phone" video.










Lady Gaga in V Magazine.






















Oscar de la Renta goes pink too.







































A pretty in pink number from Rachel Roy.




















"Mad Men" costume designer Janie Bryant created special looks for Oprah & Gayle King.
































Gwyneth at the Academy Awards, 1999.







































Cameron Diaz looked really awesome at the Golden Globes. Remember the "Rachel Zoe" episode that featured this Chanel dress?







































Work it Hills!
















Here are some pink objects...

Best watering can ever!



















I need think plastic pink flamingos are always cool.




































A touch of pink (like these knobs from Anthropologie) can cheer a sad room.


















And here are the original Pink Ladies!

Rizzo & crew in Grease










Material girl















And of course, Marylin!















A little "Pink Elephants on Parade" for you to enjoy.


Selasa, 08 Desember 2009

an educated style





















The best costumes in a film illustrate not only time and place but character. Lone Scherfig's An Education is an exercise in pre-swinging 1960s.

Through wardrobe, costume designer Odile Dicks-Mireaux (Emmy winner for The Lost Prince) illuminates the characters' personal journeys.














Dicks-Mireaux elaborates: "One of the most important things is that Jenny's transformation has to be the image of how Peter's character wants his little girl to be." Ditching her prep school uniform for a hustling cad, Jenny (an impeccable performance by Carey Mulligan) dons an updo and uncomfortably adult frocks to try to impress him and his crew.



























My favorite is this dress with the crimsonish strap (it looks much better in the film).


















Supporting character Helen (a fun performance by the lovely and versatile Rosamund Pike) plays a dizty Catherine Deneuve-ish vixen. Dicks-Mireaux provides many great looks for her too.


























Check out the bow!



























The choice of cat eye glasses and tweeds adds layers to Olivia Williams's affecting portrayl as an uptight school marm.



























Read more about the costumes in An Education on Vanity Fair's site