The lighting and shading in this movie are amazing. Great use of colors. I watched this movie as a kind of modern-day fairy tale, with Claire Danes playing the role of a modern-day Cinderella... Mirabelle (Claire Danes) and Jeremy (Jason Swartzman) are both in their mid-twenties. Ray (Steve Martin) is in his 50s. A weird Mirabelle love triangle develops. Mirabelle has nothing in common with Jeremy, and she's way too young for Ray, but he is also the man of her "dreams," in terms of a man who has the means and the experience she's looking for to make her feel seen and important. I think we're supposed to feel uncomfortable about the age difference. Ray even comments at the first date that he hopes she has a good relationship with her father, so he's uncomfortable by the age difference. too. Ray's house is immaculately clean. And sterile. It feels empty and unlived in. When he gives Mirabelle the tour, everything is in its place. He saves the bedroom for las...
Pretty nice retrospective of Garbo's life and career made 15 years after her death in 2005 by TCM. Kind of wish they had made it during her lifetime, because as is, the people alive that still knew her were pretty old, and many of the people interviewed are just the children or grandchildren of those who knew her. The other thing: She retired at 36 and apparently completely disappeared from public life. So as the documentary notes, not much is known about her life after her career. She walked. She had a friend that she walked with and who acted as her confidant, but she lived in America, which means she was completely cutoff from any family. She never had children, and I guess never married. This is never explored. Did she completely give up dating, too, when she "retired." Did she stop going back to visit Sweden? Although it would be easy to call her a hermit or a recluse, the idea presented in the documentary is that she simply liked being alone. Her last film, 1941...