Sunday, October 29, 2023

TCM Movie Matinee: The Famous Ferguson Case

Last Monday, TCM showed a series of B-movies--most were from long running series. There were three Philo Vance films with three different actors in the lead role, four Perry Mason movies with three different leads, a Doctor Kildare feature, and two miscellaneous reporter films. I caught bits and pieces of many of these films, but I watched The Famous Ferguson Case in full. 

A prominent financier in an upstate New York town is murdered, and a horde of New York City descend on the town like a swarm of locusts. The banker's wife is tied up and tells the police of burglars, but the reporters don't buy her story. They're aware of her friendship with a local banker and believe this is a crime of passion, and that's what they report. Joan Blondell stars as one of the NYC reporters. 

Oddly enough, I recently watched another film--Back in Circulation--with Joan Blondell as a reporter. Both films portray reporters badly. They just want a juicy story regardless of the truth. And both films have a few good reporters such as Joan Blondell in Back in Circulation. In The Famous Ferguson Case, it's the small town reporter who cracks the case.

Overall, it's an unrealistic film, but kind of fun for an old-movie buff like me.

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Topics for Tuesday

Here's what's on my mind.

Health: Jeff and I got our Covid shots today. In four of my five previous Covid shots, I've had bad reactions. I scheduled this appointment before a day with no plans, just in case. We've also completed our annual physicals recently.

Baseball: We're watching more baseball than I thought we would. Happy to see two Game Sevens in the League Championship Series; happy to see the Rangers beat the Astros last night. We're watching Game Seven between the Phillies and the Diamondbacks now. 

Sleep: We overslept this morning. It was not a big problem, but obviously I got off to a later start than I had planned. I'm debating setting the alarm again. I had been waking up early without an alarm. It's easier in the summer morning light. 

Weather: Just as we're getting used to fall weather, summer will return this week with temperatures flirting with the 80s. I'm not complaining, but it's weird. Jace and I will do some hiking.

Cleaning/Organizing: I'm almost done with consolidating the stuff of Jeff's and my car. A friend was happy to get some of the car emergency items, and I was happy to give them to her. Most of the things left will go to Goodwill.

Writer's Doubt: I've barely written anything lately and am doubting myself. Can NaNoWriMo be the answer?

Sunday, October 22, 2023

What's Cooking

I always make a batch of spaghetti sauce for Jeff's birthday. Of course, I make it other times too. This year, I had the flu on Jeff's birthday, so I was late making the sauce.

Last Saturday,  I made pumpkin, apple, sweet potato soup. I've been making versions of this soup for  years, trying to recreate an especially delicious variation. Unfortunately, it still eludes me.

Yesterday (the fifth consecutive rainy Saturday) I made a flat iron steak and black bean chili. It wasn't ready for dinner last night, so we had it tonight with a tomato, avocado, and pepper salad. 

I have more of all three selections in the freezer.

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

Book 26: Dead Mountain by Preston & Child

This is the fourth book in Preston & Child's Nora Kelly series (although Nora first appears in Thunderhead, the fifth book in Preston & Child's collaboration.) In the four books, archaeologist Nora is teamed with young FBI agent Corrie Swanson. Nora and Corrie are my favorite characters in the Preston & Child world: I love reading about them working together. 

In Dead Mountain, Corrie is assigned to a case where two bodies have been found after being missing for 15 years. The two were part of a nine-person backpacking trip in the New Mexico mountains. Six bodies had previously been found with no solution to the case the FBI named Dead Mountain. Nora works with Corrie to find the missing ninth body and solve the case that has baffled the authorities for years.

Another page turner--I finished the book in three days. 

Sunday, October 15, 2023

TCM Re-watch: Bordertown

Bordertown is one of my favorite films from Bette Davis's early years in Hollywood. Paul Muni plays the main character Johnny Ramirez, a poor Mexican who believes he can achieve his dreams when he graduates from night law school. Unfortunately, Johnny loses his first case against socialite Dale Elwell (Margaret Lindsay) who wrecks the truck of a poor friend of Johnny's in an auto accident. When the opposing counsel (who is also Dale's boyfriend) calls Johnny a shyster lawyer, Johnny loses his temper and decks the opposing attorney which gets him disbarred. 

Johnny believes he lost his case because he doesn't have any money. He leaves Los Angeles and ends up working as a bouncer in the Silver Slipper nightclub. He eventually becomes a partner of the proprietor Charlie Roark (Eugene Paulette) and catches the eye of Charlie's bored wife Marie (Bette Davis.)

Johnny tells Marie he could go for her, but he won't betray his partner. Soon Marie sees her chance: she leaves a drunk, unconscious Charlie in the running car and allows the automatic garage doors to close. Charlie's death is ruled an accident.

Marie and Johnny partner on La Rueda--a new high end nightclub. But Marie's plans for a personal partnership are foiled when Dale arrives at opening night. Johnny believes now that he has money, he's worthy of her. He doesn't realize she's just slumming. 

Marie confronts Johnny about his new romance, telling him she committed murder to get him. Johnny leaves her in disgust. Marie then goes to the police and tells them that Johnny made her kill Charlie. 

It looks bad for Johnny until Marie has a breakdown on the stand, and the case is thrown out. Johnny returns to Dale and proposes. She rejects him, telling him he's from a different tribe. Johnny  becomes furious: Dale calls him a brute and runs into the path of an oncoming car.

Johnny sells La Rueda to help endow a law school, and he returns where he belongs with his own people.

There's a lot to unpack here. Johnny is clearly subjected to racism and prejudice, But the movie shies away from dealing with this explicitly. This review discusses the racism. Other user reviews on IMDB.com call the film politically incorrect. 

But I have to say that Johnny is clearly over his head in the trial against Dale. He doesn't understand the rules of evidence and what is admissible in court. I'm not denying that the lawyer and judge are racist and condescending. The judge could have helped Johnny, but immediately declares Johnny is "not a lawyer at all" but "a ruffian at heart, brutal, cheap and bad-tempered." 

Of course, the whole trial scene is ridiculous. Dale's lawyer is also her boyfriend who was in the car at the time of the accident. He would never represent her. Also, why didn't they settle the case? Because then there wouldn't be a movie.

The ending of the film doesn't sit well with me: keep in your own place. There's nothing wrong with Johnny endowing a law school to help his people. It's a shame that he's come to that realization only because of the snobby Dale.

About the performances. Paul Muni is a little over the top, but so is Johnny. I've seen Muni in subtle performances (one is Juarez, his second film with Bette Davis.) Bette is wonderful, expressing her frustration with her drunken husband, her guilt, fear, and paranoia after the murder, her confrontation with Johnny when she confesses the murder. Some commenters on IMDB criticize her courtroom scene as over the top. She toned down what the director wanted. I thought it was effective.  

Eugene Pallette does a good job as happy-go-lucky Charlie. Too bad he doesn't guess what Marie is capable of. Margaret Lindsay is also good as the spoiled socialite Dale. 

One last thing on this already long post. The poster for this movie shows Muni in a sombrero, which he never wears in the film. One last stereotype.

Saturday, October 14, 2023

Book 25: Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel

This is the second book in Mantel's Wolf Hall trilogy focusing on the fall of Anne Boleyn through Thomas Cromwell's point of view. 

Ten years ago, I read Wolf Hall. My reaction to Bring Up the Bodies is similar. The choice of Cromwell as a narrator is brilliant. Even though Mantel is a prizewinning, acclaimed author, I just don't like her style. I find it stilted and awkward. To each his or her own. 

Monday, October 9, 2023

Monday Miscellanea

I'm beat. It feels like it's been a long day (though it's still early.) I woke up around 4:15. I know I slept after that--I remember snippets of dreams--but I'm not sure how long. 

I had a good workout at the gym. I also researched some auto and home insurance pricing. Those were my main to-dos for today, along with this post. I wanted to post because it's been eight days, not because I have anything particularly insightful to write.

Jeff sold his car last week to a cousin of a neighbor. We had a slight snag because he had let the registration lapse. It took us three tries over two days to renew online. If the online system didn't work, we wouldn't have been able to get an in-person appointment until the end of the month. 

I spent a good chunk of Saturday going through all the stuff I got out of his car and consolidating his things with what I had in my car. We had more towels and blankets than we realized. I ended up reorganizing the linen closet and packing up things for Goodwill. 

For several weeks, our temperatures have richoceted from unseasonably warm (90 degrees in September and 80 degrees last week) to unseasonably cold. It's strange to see the beginning of fall foliage and Halloween decorations when it's 80 degrees. At least it feels like fall now, even though it's late October temperatures for now. It's also rained the first three Saturdays of fall, with more rain predicted for this Saturday. Ugh.

It's taken me a long time to recover from my bout with the flu. I don't know if I had a bad case or if I'm just old.

We're watching the baseball playoffs. Things aren't going as expected, but that's what makes baseball fun. I do hope the Orioles turn it around though. 

Sunday, October 1, 2023

Requiem for the 2023 New York Mets

Only four posts with the label 'Mets' this year. That says it all. 

As a Met fan, I'm always waiting to hear bad news. More bad news. Today it was that Buck Showalter will not continue with the Mets. I understand it on one level, but on another level, it hurts. 

Pre-season Jacob deGrom signed with the Texas Rangers. But then the Mets signed Justin Verlander. That seemed the cure. Then Edwin Diaz was down with a season ending injury. Later Verlander was injured. 

Then the Mets sucked. I don't want to analyze the season and try to figure out when the Mets first messed up and how. I just knew things were bad. The Mets couldn't win. And didn't.

Steve Cohen cut his losses at the trading deadline: Robertson, Scherzer, Verlander, Canna, Pham were traded. The Mets now have prospects. 

Wait until next year. That's all we have to do.