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February 19, 2008

BYOB - Tuesday 2/19

Posted by poland at February 19, 2008 11:30 AM

Comments

Unique U.S. visitors in January to each papers' web site in millions:

NYTimes 20.5,
USA Today 12.3 (Gannett),
Washington Post 9.9,
WSJ 7.0 (Rupert Murdoch),
LATimes.com (Tribune) 5.7.
MCN ?
DHD ?
HE ?
TOH ?

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/19/business/media/19hiller.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hp

http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117981101.html?categoryId=21&cs=1

Posted by: T. Holly [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 19, 2008 02:18 PM

Some friends and I were sitting around talking about movies that best capture the spirit of Hollywood/LA, and along with the usual great ones, like Chinatown and LA Confidential, someone mentioned Play It As It Lays, and we all sort of went "oooooo" in agreement. I loved that movie when it first came out. Someone went to the web and found out that the DVD does not exist. Of all the great LA movies, doesn't Hollywood love that one enough to put it out on DVD? To me, it's the best thing Tuesday Weld ever did. Brilliant movie.

Posted by: adorian [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 19, 2008 06:45 PM

Adorian, have you ever read the book? I only ask because I had read and loved the book and felt the movie was such a miscalculation, but I'm wondering if maybe it was because I knew the source material too well.

Posted by: Noah [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 19, 2008 06:50 PM

The best movies about L.A. usually have nothing to do with Hollywood. It's always far more interesting to see filmmakers explore other aspects of this expansive, fascinating city. An exception, of course, is The Player.

Robert Altman became quite the master of L.A. vibe late in his career. Both The Player and Short Cuts show he understands the city deeply.

For my money, the best movie that accurately frames contemporary life in L.A. is Swingers. Well, it was accurate for young male hipsters in the '90s (which I was) so it really spoke to me.

Posted by: Wrecktum [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 19, 2008 10:50 PM

Play It As It Lays played at the New Beverly last year, I think. I didn't manage to get over there, though.

Swingers was great at poking fun at the East Side hipster culture, but didn't really show how great it is either, did it? Okay, so you can swing dance at The Derby or go watch Marty and Elaine...whatever. It's also quite dated now, because a lot of the action has shifted southeast into Silver Lake, Echo Park, and downtown.

I'd nominate Steve Martin's (and Mick Jackson's) L.A. Story, which takes endless potshots at the city, the culture, the people, but also makes a great show of how magical it can be if you're patient and look hard enough. To me that's about as perfect as an L.A. Film can be.

Posted by: lazarus [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 20, 2008 06:45 AM

I always thought FM, that little 1978 comedy about a maverick rock radio station, captured the city as well as anything.

Posted by: Cadavra [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 20, 2008 10:11 AM

No movie has captured the spirit of 90s LA for me quite like THE BIG LEBOWSKI. Maybe because the opening sequence uses a shot from my old neighborhood? Maybe because I spent too much time in Venice/SM area back then? Dunno, but the whole thing is just too spot-on. You know, it's that apartment manager asking the Dude if he'll attend his awful-sounding performance and give him "notes." Even better twist on the old cliche that everyone has a script.

Posted by: Armin Tamzarian [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 20, 2008 12:16 PM

Did DP ever reveal what really shitty movie he saw back in late '05/'06? I know I'm two or three years late here, but...

Posted by: JBM... [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 21, 2008 07:13 AM

PLAY IT AS IT LAYS also showed at the Egyptian last year. A terribly pretentious film in all the best ways. But Tuesday is great along with Tony Perkins.

THE LONG GOODBYE is a great LA movie. LA STORY is too jokey and fanciful for me. Martin seriously loves this place. Tho I would to if I were him...

I think Chris Guest's underrated THE BIG PICTURE is pretty dead on in terms of the industry.

And my favorite LA film of the past 18 years is GRAND CANYON. Kasdan understands this town.

Posted by: christian [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 21, 2008 04:53 PM

Falling Down- a depressing cross-section.
The Limey- Another fantastic performance by Terrence Stamp: "Tell 'im I'm fucking coming!"

Posted by: doug r [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 23, 2008 10:00 AM

I was just in LA and was thinking about LA movies.

I am torn between short cuts and grand canyon (the Superior form of Crash) as the best LA movie although I really had powerful love for Heat as well although that's a different type of LA, is the LAPD LA.

ALso To Live and die in LA (with hot bod wm Petersen) also had some truly unique angelino moments...and wasn't eating Raoul set in LA as well?

Somehow I can;t see Wrecktum as a early 90s hipster however, if he was, the name wrecktum is a good fit! : )

Posted by: Lota [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 23, 2008 07:02 PM

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