Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Music?
The last time I remember caring about music and actively seeking it out was in 2005. I was 19 and had just gotten out of military training. I wanted to roam free and hear everything the musical world had to offer. I remember finding a handful of pop-punk "emo" bands that made me feel okay with being an emotionally detached degenerate. Although these bands still hold a special place in my heart, I can't remember the last time I listened to any of their albums on purpose. And the even weirder thing? People I come into contact with who love those same bands are between the ages of 15-20. I don't want to say that some musical genres are easier to "grow out of", but these bands seem to be proving that point. I thought bands were supposed to stick with their generation of kids, and follow them until their 50's.
I guess I realized all of this when I got a new MacBook and accidentally hit "Restore"; erasing the last 6 years of music in my life. Normally I would be devastated, but for some reason I didn't want anything back. I was completely fine with starting over. I had Mozart, Adele, Sinatra, Andrew Lloyd Webber, and other random show tunes, but nothing new or daring. Then I stumbled upon She & Him, and fell in love with their modern but classic style. Deschanel's voice is twangy and soft. The songs are sweet and beautiful. It gives me hope for modern music for the first time in 6 years, and that makes me a very happy girl.
Namaste
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Top 10 Episodes of the 10th Doctor
I got kind of busy with school after reviewing the first two seasons. So, here is a list of my ten favorite episodes with David Tennant as The Doctor.
Alonsy!
10. Army of Ghosts/Doomsday
I actually cried at the end of this episode when they met on the beach. The fact that they couldn't touch each other kills me every time. That solitary tear on the Doctor's face doesn't help either. This heart-breaking, gut-wrenchingly emotional finale is definitely one of the best Rose episodes of the series.
9. Midnight
This is one of the scariest episodes I have ever seen. Ever. This is scarier than any movie I have ever seen. Ever. There are no Daleks or Sontarans or Cybermen in this episode. Hell, even Donna takes a hike and gets a massage while The Doctor embarks on a fun little ride to planet Midnight.
The Doctor and a bunch of random passengers visit Midnight, a planet that supposedly has a bunch of diamonds on it. Once they land, the pilots die, and the young blonde woman above gets possessed. Only she doesn't spew vomit everywhere or yell in a deep voice chanting 666. She just sits there and waits until someone engages her. She waits until they speak, and repeats everything they say until everyone goes mad and turns on each other. This thing gave me nightmares. But I loved it.
8. Love and Monsters
On a lighter note, this is an episode that hardly features The Doctor or Rose at all. It's about a guy named Elton who loves conspiracy theories and is obsessed with The Doctor. He meets others like himself, and most of the episode is light and funny. The group he finds meets a stranger who becomes their leader and ends up turning into an Absorbathing.... Absorbatron... Absorbaloff. He absorbs all of his friends for energy, and The Doctor finally shows up to his rescue. This is kind of a quirky episode, but is still one of my ultimate favorites!
7. Smith and Jones
Finally! A companion who is smart and brunette and in the medical field (ha ha). All self-comparison aside, I really do love Martha Jones as The Doctor's Companion. She is highly logical, and is just trying to do her job at her clinical site. Is it her fault that the hospital gets sent to the moon during all of this? No.
The Doctor recognizes her intelligence and recruits her to help him find the Plasmavore (difference between this and a vampire?). To deter the alien guards also looking for this Plasmavore, he kisses Martha passionately on the mouth to fool their DNA scanners. A simple distraction for him, a giant festering crush for Martha. 900 years in this universe, and the man still hasn't figured the ladies out? Come on...
The two of them find the culprit and deliver her to the authorities before the hospital is sent back to Earth. Martha goes about her day, meets her family at a bar, and finds The Doctor and the TARDIS in an alley. He asks her to be his companion and travel the stars with him. She says "Ummm, I'm in medical school". He says "Umm, it's also a time machine, hello: Time And Relative Dimension In Space, jeez!" (not actual dialog).
She says okay.
6. Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead
5. The Stolen Earth/Journey's End
Everything seems to be fine now that people are home safe and the Daleks are neutralized, right? God, I wish. Donna begins to overheat like a robot on hyperdrive. Her brain can't handle the vast knowledge of a time lord, and The Doctor has to act fast before she burns up and dies. What? Yeah. She's talking just like him and moving so fast, he has to wipe her memory of him completely in order for her to survive.
4. The Sound of Drums/Last of the Timelords
Martha, The Doctor, and Jack Harkness return to the present after visiting the "end of the universe" where they met another time lord called "The Master". He hot-wired the TARDIS and went far back enough in time to ruin Martha's life and become Prime Minister. Although he is absolutely prime evil, he is hilarious and kind of hard to hate.
He captures Martha's family and puts them into slavery, holds Jack in handcuffs, and ages The Doctor so much that he is wrinkled in a wheelchair. Martha escapes with Jack's watch and travels cross country for an entire year. She is searching for a weapon that can kill a time lord without him regenerating, but ends up getting caught by The Master. He brings her to his spaceship above ground where he watches the entire human race being targeted by flying alien balls (yeah, you read that right). Martha flashes back to The Doctor telling her to "use the countdown". She also remembers outsmarting everyone she encountered on her trek across the globe.
The clock strikes zero on The Master's ship, and is supposed to signal the end of the world. What it does signal, however, is something entirely different. Martha stands up to The Master and tells him that no weapon can kill a time lord. The Doctor scoffs and says "Do you actually think I would make her kill?" As the clock strikes zero, flashes of Martha telling the story of The Doctor to everyone across the world appear. She explains that nothing is more powerful than one cohesive thought by everyone at one time. In essence, the word "Doctor" is exclaimed across the world, and the idea of Prayer sets the Doctor free. The spell is broken, and he regains his strength. He approaches The Master and with one sentence, shakes him to his core.
"I forgive you."
Holy shit. I have goosebumps just thinking about it. "I forgive you"? Amazing! How spiritual, yet non-denominatioal. This show has so many good qualities. Civil rights for all races and species are highly advocated for throughout this series. There is no homophobia or racism at all. It's as if they never existed, and now this wonderful power of forgiveness? Awesome.
The Master's wife shoots him as The Doctor is trying to console him. The Doctor begs him to regenerate, and tells him they can be brothers. The Master accepts defeat and tells him it is over. The Doctor cries as he holds the last of his kind in his arms, and watches him die.
3. Blink
2. Human Nature/Family of Blood
1. Turn Left
Namaste
Alonsy!
Disclaimer:
10. Army of Ghosts/Doomsday
This is the end of Rose Tyler, and it actually starts out with her narrating the episode as "the story of how I died". Maybe that is a little dramatic considering she doesn't really die, but we have to get everyone freaking out at the finale, now don't we?
This is a Cybermen/Dalek collaboration 2-parter. Torchwood is officially introduced, and is much more funded than in the independent series. Rose and Jackie both end up in the TARDIS which gets confiscated by Torchwood after "ghosts" start appearing all over London. The ghosts are of course cybermen, and are entering through a rift which the Daleks use as well. All hell breaks loose, and Rose's father from an alternate universe crosses over to help the good fight.
I really liked this episode because it not only ended Rose's reign as Companion, but gave me a better feeling for her in the end. Kind of like how Charlie redeemed himself right before he died in LOST. She narrated the two episodes with morose maturity that I couldn't help but empathize with. She gave her life to save the world, and was saved in a split second by her father, only to be stuck in his alternate universe.
Yes, she was alive. Yes, she could spend the rest of her life with her father who was dead in her own timeline. But none of that mattered as soon as she was away from her beloved Doctor, and who could blame her?
I actually cried at the end of this episode when they met on the beach. The fact that they couldn't touch each other kills me every time. That solitary tear on the Doctor's face doesn't help either. This heart-breaking, gut-wrenchingly emotional finale is definitely one of the best Rose episodes of the series.
9. Midnight
This is one of the scariest episodes I have ever seen. Ever. This is scarier than any movie I have ever seen. Ever. There are no Daleks or Sontarans or Cybermen in this episode. Hell, even Donna takes a hike and gets a massage while The Doctor embarks on a fun little ride to planet Midnight.
The Doctor and a bunch of random passengers visit Midnight, a planet that supposedly has a bunch of diamonds on it. Once they land, the pilots die, and the young blonde woman above gets possessed. Only she doesn't spew vomit everywhere or yell in a deep voice chanting 666. She just sits there and waits until someone engages her. She waits until they speak, and repeats everything they say until everyone goes mad and turns on each other. This thing gave me nightmares. But I loved it.
8. Love and Monsters
On a lighter note, this is an episode that hardly features The Doctor or Rose at all. It's about a guy named Elton who loves conspiracy theories and is obsessed with The Doctor. He meets others like himself, and most of the episode is light and funny. The group he finds meets a stranger who becomes their leader and ends up turning into an Absorbathing.... Absorbatron... Absorbaloff. He absorbs all of his friends for energy, and The Doctor finally shows up to his rescue. This is kind of a quirky episode, but is still one of my ultimate favorites!
7. Smith and Jones
Finally! A companion who is smart and brunette and in the medical field (ha ha). All self-comparison aside, I really do love Martha Jones as The Doctor's Companion. She is highly logical, and is just trying to do her job at her clinical site. Is it her fault that the hospital gets sent to the moon during all of this? No.
The Doctor recognizes her intelligence and recruits her to help him find the Plasmavore (difference between this and a vampire?). To deter the alien guards also looking for this Plasmavore, he kisses Martha passionately on the mouth to fool their DNA scanners. A simple distraction for him, a giant festering crush for Martha. 900 years in this universe, and the man still hasn't figured the ladies out? Come on...
The two of them find the culprit and deliver her to the authorities before the hospital is sent back to Earth. Martha goes about her day, meets her family at a bar, and finds The Doctor and the TARDIS in an alley. He asks her to be his companion and travel the stars with him. She says "Ummm, I'm in medical school". He says "Umm, it's also a time machine, hello: Time And Relative Dimension In Space, jeez!" (not actual dialog).
She says okay.
6. Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead
Inception, you've got a brother dreaming. This double episode came out before Christopher Nolan's gem, and starts with Donna and The Doctor answering a distress call from the biggest library in the universe, but no one is there.
They meet a science team who informs them of flesh-eating animals that live in the shadows. The leader of this team is Professor River Song who implies that she is someone from The Doctor's past, or rather his future. You know how tricky time travel is. Anyways, Donna is teleported to the TARDIS to avoid being killed by the shadows, and arrives in a fake life where she gets married and has children. She begins to see the flaws in this world, and similar themes of Inception are put into play.
River grows closer to the Doctor but is afraid to tell him too much. She gives him her diary and her (his) sonic screwdriver. She whispers his real name in his ear, but it is inaudible to viewers. She ends up sacrificing herself to save all of the souls that are saved in the library's hard drive (Donna and hundreds of others). She tells The Doctor of the last time they met, and that he was crying because he knew what was going to happen to her. The Doctor uses her (his) screwdriver to send her soul into the fake utopia the hard drive had created for Donna. It was the least he could do for her, and he hasn't even really met her yet. Heartbreaking. So glad we get to meet her again in Season 5.
The Earth gets stolen, just as the title implies. The Daleks transport it, along with every other planet, to a specific location to form some sort of super weapon that will wipe out all existence. This shift in locations causes dimensions to leak into each other.
Rose, Mickey, and Jackie all come back to fight off those damned Daleks. Sarah Jane Smith and her son join forces with Captain Jack Harkness and Torchwood, following orders from former Prime Minister Harriet Jones to find The Doctor. Martha Jones works for UNIT and travels to Germany to threaten the Daleks with the destruction of the Earth. The Doctor and Donna visit the Shadow Proclamation (so cool), and Donna gets condolences on her future loss...
Donna merges her DNA with The Doctor's and becomes half Time Lord, half human. She defeats the Daleks single-handedly. She also creates a Doctor clone. Whoops :). She sets everything right, and all of the planets back to their original orbits.
The best part of this episode is in this moment when all four companions are in the TARDIS together. The Doctor explains that the TARDIS is supposed to have seven pilots, but he just manages to do it all himself. Sarah Jane, Rose, Martha, Donna, Mickey, Jack and the two Doctors all pilot the TARDIS back to safety. They drop everyone off in their places like some demented car-pool, and arrive at Bad Wolf Bay in the alternate dimension Rose came from.
She begins to mope, but he tells her she does not belong in this dimension, and neither does his clone. He finally tells her he loves her, and his clone offers to spend the rest of his life with her. They kiss and close the gap between dimensions. Win win, if you ask me.
Dammnit! I really loved Donna! She was so human and loud and obnoxious. She was caring and kind and sympathetic as well as being crass and hilarious. I think she was the best fit for The Doctor, and that is coming from a Martha Jones fan. I mean, I just.... I can't.....
He takes her home and explains it to her mother and granddad. He says they can't even mention him or her adventures, or she will die. He shakes her hand as he is about to leave, and she is too busy on the phone to even really acknowledge him. It is awful. Not remembering The Doctor is much worse than being in an alternate universe with his clone, if you ask me.
4. The Sound of Drums/Last of the Timelords
He captures Martha's family and puts them into slavery, holds Jack in handcuffs, and ages The Doctor so much that he is wrinkled in a wheelchair. Martha escapes with Jack's watch and travels cross country for an entire year. She is searching for a weapon that can kill a time lord without him regenerating, but ends up getting caught by The Master. He brings her to his spaceship above ground where he watches the entire human race being targeted by flying alien balls (yeah, you read that right). Martha flashes back to The Doctor telling her to "use the countdown". She also remembers outsmarting everyone she encountered on her trek across the globe.
The clock strikes zero on The Master's ship, and is supposed to signal the end of the world. What it does signal, however, is something entirely different. Martha stands up to The Master and tells him that no weapon can kill a time lord. The Doctor scoffs and says "Do you actually think I would make her kill?" As the clock strikes zero, flashes of Martha telling the story of The Doctor to everyone across the world appear. She explains that nothing is more powerful than one cohesive thought by everyone at one time. In essence, the word "Doctor" is exclaimed across the world, and the idea of Prayer sets the Doctor free. The spell is broken, and he regains his strength. He approaches The Master and with one sentence, shakes him to his core.
"I forgive you."
Holy shit. I have goosebumps just thinking about it. "I forgive you"? Amazing! How spiritual, yet non-denominatioal. This show has so many good qualities. Civil rights for all races and species are highly advocated for throughout this series. There is no homophobia or racism at all. It's as if they never existed, and now this wonderful power of forgiveness? Awesome.
The Master's wife shoots him as The Doctor is trying to console him. The Doctor begs him to regenerate, and tells him they can be brothers. The Master accepts defeat and tells him it is over. The Doctor cries as he holds the last of his kind in his arms, and watches him die.
Time resets itself, and it's as if nothing ever happened. Martha takes her family home and leaves The Doctor. In a manner of words, she tells him that she is in love with him and knows that he is not in love with her. She tells him that it is too much for her family to endure, and that she must finish medical school. I guess I can't blame her; I would want to finish my degree as well, especially if no time had technically passed.
The good thing is that we see more of Martha in future seasons, and not just in Doctor Who. She eventually joins Captain Jack Harkness' Torchwood team, and helps fight aliens with her medical expertise. Martha is my favorite Companion, and this episode shows the great depth of her character.
3. Blink
Also super scary, this is my favorite non-finale, non-emotional episode. Like Love and Monsters, this hardly features The Doctor or Martha at all. Instead, a young woman named Sally Sparrow (above) finds mysteriously accurate notes on the walls of an old abandoned house. These notes tell her to beware the Weeping Angel, and to duck right before something is thrown at her. Below the note it says "Love From The Doctor 1969".
Already cool, right? The Doctor and Martha are stuck back in the year 1969, and are trying to get ahold of our new heroin. Sally tells her friend about the weird occurrence and brings her to the old house. While snooping around, someone knocks on the door and hands her a package. Her best friend is hiding in the hall in case it is someone scary, and disappears forever. The person giving her the package is her friend's great grandson. Just like when Doc Brown gets struck by lightning in Back To The Future III and the letter is waiting only seconds later for Marty "at this exact location, at this exact time", Sally gets a package from her now deceased friend.
The package is full of pictures of her life in Ireland, 1920. Diary entries and a personal note tell Sally to visit her brother to tell him that she is alright. She honors this wish and talks to her brother who owns a video store. There she discovers clips of The Doctor on several different DVDs talking directly to her. She gets all of the DVDs with him on it, and decides to play them all at once when inside the old house. It plays as a free flowing conversation.
Already cool, right? The Doctor and Martha are stuck back in the year 1969, and are trying to get ahold of our new heroin. Sally tells her friend about the weird occurrence and brings her to the old house. While snooping around, someone knocks on the door and hands her a package. Her best friend is hiding in the hall in case it is someone scary, and disappears forever. The person giving her the package is her friend's great grandson. Just like when Doc Brown gets struck by lightning in Back To The Future III and the letter is waiting only seconds later for Marty "at this exact location, at this exact time", Sally gets a package from her now deceased friend.
The package is full of pictures of her life in Ireland, 1920. Diary entries and a personal note tell Sally to visit her brother to tell him that she is alright. She honors this wish and talks to her brother who owns a video store. There she discovers clips of The Doctor on several different DVDs talking directly to her. She gets all of the DVDs with him on it, and decides to play them all at once when inside the old house. It plays as a free flowing conversation.
Here The Doctor tells Sally of The Weeping Angels, or "The Lonely Assassins". They appear to be angels when you look at them, but once you take your eyes off of them, even for a second, they will attack. They touch you and send you so far back in time that you are dead to all of those around you. They even took The Doctor and Martha away from the TARDIS. Sounds like an "okay" way to die if you ask me, but still kind of scary.
Sally realizes that the old house is swimming with Weeping Angels, and her and her friend's brother try to find the TARDIS and bring it back to The Doctor. Maybe they do... maybe they don't.
They do!
There are a lot of cool plot points I left out for this one; not only because it's confusing, but they are better when you watch it for yourself. This episode is action-packed, and things happen instantaneously for Sally when they take decades for others. It is very reminiscent of the Back to the Future trilogy, and just may be why it is my 3rd favorite episode!
The Doctor and Martha are on the run from an alien family who have traced his DNA. He puts his "being" inside a pocket watch, hands it to Martha with explicit instructions, and makes himself human. He does this with some weird machine on his head so that the family cannot trace his time lord DNA. Pretty smart for him; pretty sad for Martha.
They land in England 1910 or so, sometime around WWI. The Doctor has no recollection of who he is, but knows that he and Martha (his servant) are friends. He is a schoolteacher and ends up falling in love with the school nurse (above). This nurse is kind of rude to Martha for being so "close" with The Doctor (now named John Smith), and immediately gets a D- for likability. She is a prude, but very flirty with John, and always talks down to Martha as if she is a lesser person.
I know that this is the time period, and there is nothing we can do. Martha, herself, freaks out from time to time because she is black, and asks The Doctor if it is alright for her to be there. He is oblivious to race or color and asks her why not. She says "Not exactly white," and points to herself. She expresses her fear of being put into slavery several times. Even though it is not technically slavery, she is still a lowly servant in this double episode, and no one takes her seriously. Not even The Doctor. And she is a medical student for crying out loud! So sad.
Anyways, a cool thing about this episode is that John Smith dreams of being The Doctor almost as if it is his alter ego. He keeps a daily journal with drawings and writings about his adventures. He shows Martha, but also shows the school nurse. She thinks it's genius. Martha takes it as a sign of hope.
The family hunting them takes 3 months to die without food. So Martha has to deal with The Doctor being a dumb ass for three whole months until some drunk kid finds their ship and ruins everything (per usual). The aliens take form of whatever life they take; so a little girl, another servant, the drunk kid, and a fat guy run around terrorizing the school. Oh yeah, and they also inhabit the bodies of the scarecrows in the fields.
The family raids the school dance and demands to talk to The Doctor. Only The Doctor doesn't know who he is. Martha tries to convince John Smith to open the pocket watch to get his identity back, but some kleptomaniac kid stole it from his office and is hiding in a corner somewhere. Martha pleads with him and tells him that his dreams are true. She hands him his sonic screwdriver, but he denies it. The whole process is extremely frustrating.
Basically the whole school takes up arms against the family, and Martha, John Smith, the school nurse, and the kleptomaniac hide in this house. They are afraid, and Martha is pissed off. The family finds the TARDIS, and threatens The Doctor. Martha hands him the pocket watch, and strings of dialog from The Doctor start coming out of John Smith. He scares himself and the school nurse. The double acting by David Tennant in this scene is impeccable. It rips your heart out. If it doesn't, I might start doubting your own humanity.
To become The Doctor again and save the school, "John Smith" has to die.
Needless to say, he has a hard time.
He figures it out and opens the watch. He tricks the family into believing he is still stupid and destroys their ship. He goes back and consoles the school nurse who is actually smart enough to figure out that he is a different person now. She speaks of John Smith in the third person. She asks to keep the diary, and he lets her.
In the last adventure of the Tenth Doctor, The End Of Time, he visits the school nurse's great granddaughter who has written a book about the diary. She is doing a book signing and he asks her if she was happy in the end. The great granddaughter looks up at him and says "Yes... Were you?". Chilling. A perfect ending among others in that episode.
1. Turn Left
Have you ever wondered what your life would be like if you hadn't met the person you are with? Have you ever though back to the exact moment or decision that dictated if that happened or not? Donna Noble goes to a psychic reading where she is forced to do exactly that. She visits a psychic who convinces her to "Turn Left" instead of right so that she takes a different job, doesn't meet her evil fiance, and doesn't help The Doctor get out of a flooded building. In short, The Doctor is dead because of one little decision to turn left.
This episode follows Donna through this decision and many others. All of the disasters The Doctor prevented end up happening. Everything he did with Martha (he met Donna right before Martha and then came back to her) is discarded. Everyone in the hospital dies including Sarah Jane Smith who was there in his stead, the spider star stays in the sky until Torchwood comes, and the Titanic crashes into England and causes hundreds of people to be homeless.
Donna and her family become homeless and have to live in a small flat with another large family. The cultural relevance to the Great Depression is vivid here, and you can see it in her family's faces. Adipose goes wild across America, and terrible things keep happening. Over time, the family she is staying with is sent off to a "labor camp" to find work in the city. Her grandfather knows better and starts to cry.
"That's what they called them the first time: labor camps."
Throughout all of this fun excitement, Rose has been appearing to Donna. She seems to enter this dimension through bolts of lightning not unlike The Terminator. She tells her that a darkness is coming, and that she needs to change it. She tries to tell her about The Doctor, but it doesn't ring a bell. She takes her to a military base because she thinks she sees something on her back.
Rose is highly regarded by the military personnel here, and refuses to give them her real name in fear of a paradox. She puts Donna in front of several different mirrors to see what is on her back, and the result is terrifying.
Gross. (It's a bug).
Donna freaks out and asks Rose what is going on. Rose is extremely calm, and reassures Donna that everything will be okay. She shows Donna the TARDIS they found after The Doctor's death. They have hooked up several wires to it, and have managed to create a time machine out of their limited materials. They ask Donna to go back in time and turn right. They tell her to change her own mind in any way she can so that The Doctor may live.
Donna agrees and goes back in time. She is several blocks from where she is when she has to turn right, and barely makes it to her destination. She knows she cannot actually talk to herself without driving herself crazy, so she makes a very bold decision. Donna Noble throws herself in front of a truck so that if she were to turn left, she would have to wait in traffic because there was an accident. She makes herself turn right by sacrificing herself.
Before she dies, Rose comes up to her and whispers something in her ear. After that, she is transported back to the psychic's office and quickly finds The Doctor. She tells him everything and he asks her what Rose told her. She tells him:
This heralds the finale "The Stolen Earth". Such a great setup. I have always been a firm believer in the phrase "Everything happens for a reason". This episode only further proves that. The tenth Doctor was truly great, and he, along with his companions, will be greatly missed.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
The Future
Who knew that a movie made in 1968 could predict the computer tablet/ iPad? I just watched 2001: A Space Odyssey and was blown away at this scene.
Namaste
Namaste
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Just Saying
So I was watching Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade the other day at work, and noticed something a little weird.
Elsa and Indy sneak into the Nazi fort after acting like French artists, and they discover the base at the center of the castle. They watch the operations of the SS and the camera closes in on Harrison Ford who says "Nazis, I hate these guys".
Really? Was there some kind of conspiracy going on in the late 1980's about whether Steven Spielberg was an anti-Semite or something? Was it really important for Indy to say "I hate these guys" after identifying them as Nazis? I mean, you can call me picky, but it seems pretty obvious that Indiana Jones would hate the Nazis. Just saying.
Namaste
Elsa and Indy sneak into the Nazi fort after acting like French artists, and they discover the base at the center of the castle. They watch the operations of the SS and the camera closes in on Harrison Ford who says "Nazis, I hate these guys".
Really? Was there some kind of conspiracy going on in the late 1980's about whether Steven Spielberg was an anti-Semite or something? Was it really important for Indy to say "I hate these guys" after identifying them as Nazis? I mean, you can call me picky, but it seems pretty obvious that Indiana Jones would hate the Nazis. Just saying.
Namaste
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Great Success
Today I got my mid-term evaluation from my clinical intructor. She said that I am going to make an excellent nurse, and that she doesn't say that to many of her students.
Finally, something in this stressful, arduous, and trying program has made me feel like I am making progress.
I haven't been this happy in a long, long time.
Finally, something in this stressful, arduous, and trying program has made me feel like I am making progress.
I haven't been this happy in a long, long time.
Friday, January 28, 2011
Doctor Who? The End of Rose Tyler
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| Eccleston and Piper |
I started with Christopher Eccleston cast as The Doctor, and unlike a lot of people, I really liked him. He was mature and gritty. He seemed smart, experienced, and a little rough around the edges. For someone who has been through what The Doctor has been through, I think his demeanor and appearance are nothing short of appropriate. When he grabbed Rose's hand in the first episode and told her to run, I trusted him from the get-go.
The first season was wonderful. Even though I didn't like Rose very much, I could at least relate to her. I worked at Macy's part time when I was nineteen, and felt bored with everyday living. If I had met the doctor at that stage in my life, I would've run away with him in a heartbeat as well. But that is neither here nor there, and this show isn't about me. It's about The Doctor, Rose, her mother Jackie, her boyfriend Mickey and evil monsters from across the galaxy. That is what I liked most about this show, I think; the family aspect of it all. You watch the first episode thinking that Rose will leave everything behind her, but some of her family members turn out to be extraordinarily helpful in the end. She even surprises herself sometimes. I once heard that the best leaders have leadership thrust upon them. I think that happens a lot to Rose in seasons 1 and 2, and she makes the best of situations when the Doctor is off doing something else.
However, this does not mean that Rose would make a good leader, or that she should make any important decisions by herself. Every time the Doctor told her not to wander off, she would run off and get herself captured. It was like I was watching Jack and Kate from LOST all over again! Ugh! And her 80 coats of mascara she kept piling on every episode? And those teeth? Close your mouth, woman, Jeez!
Anyways, the dynamic between Rose and the Doctor is sweet, but the age gap seems to throw a lot of people off. Maybe that is why the majority of people prefer Tennent over Eccleston. Maybe a lot of people forget that he claims to be over 900 years old in one episode. If he was dating an eighty year-old woman, it would still be an inappropriate age ratio. So, no matter what, I think the realtionship, in and of itself, is sweet. The two of them truly care for each other, and would do anything to save the other.
The dynamic duo travel in their ship, the TARDIS, through both space and time. That means that aliens, robots, zombies, and even the Devil himself are confronted, explored, and explained in a very scientific and logical way. Ethics and morality are discussed for all types of lifeforms including ghostly spirits and alien entities. The Doctor challenges your way of thinking of other races and species, and always delivers in a tight spot.
I was really sad at the end of Season 1 when I knew that The Doctor was going to die. Even though he was only changing faces, it was still really depressing. I had grown accustomed to the more mature Doctor, and then all of the sudden this anorexic guy who played Barty Crouch Jr. in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire takes his place? It didn't seem right, it seemed, so... silly.
It didn't take long for that silliness to warm my heart. Granted, Tennant is not as endearing as Eccleston was, but his goofiness and confidence drew me in. Everything is sing-songy fun until it can no longer be. He wears a three piece suit with Chuck Taylors, and 3-D sunglasses to see alien matter surrounding foreign objects. He's loud, he's jumpy, he's funny, he's adorable. The relationship between him and Rose is more noticable with this actor, and a lot more believable. They kiss each other's forehead and touch each other a lot more, and it's not as "icky" as it was with Eccleston.
Much more fun characters are introduced and revisited in Season 2 with Tennant. Daleks and Cybermen terrorize alternate universes where Rose was never born, and her father was never killed. Harriet Jones defeats the Slitheen and becomes Prime Minister. Torchwood is founded and Mickey ends up saving the day. Rose runs into Sarah Jane, who we find out is The Doctor's ex-companion, and jealousies rage. Jack Harkness wasn't in Season 2, but I just realized I forgot to mention him earlier. He shows up in the middle of Season 1 in an alternate World War II London. He's somewhat of a time-traveler himself and has his own ship. He has psychic paper like The Doctor, and helps the two of them fight off the Daleks in the season finale. I've heard that he plays a bigger role in the show later, and if not on this show, he is featured in the spin-off Torchwood. I can't wait.
The end of the second season was a tearjerker even though I knew I was going to lose Billie Piper as Rose. It was an exact flip of emotions from the Season One finale; but this show is so good, you can't help but be pulled in. You can't help but feel the abandonment Rose feels when The Doctor sends her into the alternate universe to save her life. Her anger and depression is well deserved, and the Doctor can do nothing to help her. He can only send his image in that final scene on the beach in Norway. He can't even touch her.
All I wanted throughout this whole season was for them to kiss, or to do something, and when it's all said and done, they can't even do that. What heartbreak! What disappointment! And when she finally tells him she loves him, he doesn't even have time to say it in return. He just disappears because the TARDIS runs out of energy. Ugh, that poor, poor girl. She could have been with The Doctor and she is stuck in an alternate universe with Mickey. Oh well, at least she has both of her parents in this world, and she is still alive....
I don't know what the last few seconds of this season were about, or how any of it could have happened. How did a woman get aboard the TARDIS that The Doctor doesn't know? Who is this woman? Why is she wearing a wedding dress? Why are her teeth so bad? Why am I in love with David Tennant?
Basically I can't stop thinking about this show. Everything about it gets me geeked out beyond belief. I've finally filled the void in my life that LOST left me with last year. Only I don't have to think very hard, or wait three years for an answer to a question that turned out to be relatively unimportant............. But you get the idea, right?
Namaste
Saturday, January 8, 2011
10 Favorite Musicals of All Time
10. Moulin Rouge!
A musical within a musical, and who knew Ewan McGregor had those pipes? Even though this show is a compilation of pop-culture songs with added harmonies and dance numbers, who's to say that Mamma Mia!, Footloose!, or Movin' Out are any less of a musical? I mean, they all have the ridiculous Broadway exclamation point at the end of the title. Moulin Rouge!, Repo!, we get it. It's exciting... it's spectacular spectacular.
I have to admit I hated Nicole Kidman until I saw this movie. She just annoyed me and now I adore her. She looks so glamorous and her voice is like an angel. Jim Broadbent is awesome as usual, and the whole movie is an orgy of bright color, beautiful music, and compelling storytelling. I love, love, love this movie.
Favorite Song: "Roxanne"
Favorite Character: Teluse
Media Type: Film
9. The Producers
Who doesn't love a good play about a play about Hitler? Right? Anybody? No?
The Producers was created by Mel Brooks, a Jewish man, and takes the liberty of making light of Hitler and the Third Reich. The leads need to find a terrible play to produce so they can get rich quick and leave town. The soundtrack I have has the original cast of Broderick, Lane, and Huffman as the leads, and I can't imagine it any other way. They changed the role of Ula to Uma Thurman for the Hollywood film for some reason, but it is still just as I imagined it.
Favorite Song: "Springtime For Hitler"
Favorite Character: Leo
Media Type: Stage Show
8. RENT
Favorite Song: "Thank Goodness"
Favorite Character: Fiyero
Media Type: Stage show, obviously
2. Chicago
I saw the off-Broadway production of this show my sophomore year in Ohio. A bunch of my theater friends drove off to see it and ended up getting lost on the way back, but that is neither here nor there. What I saw that night was unlike any other stage show I had seen to date. It was better than RENT, Chicago, and every other musical I had seen up until that point. The stage was alive, the music still rang in my ears, the story was heart-breaking, and people of all walks of life enjoyed it in the theater with me.
The movie came out in 2004, the winter after I graduated high school. Although most of the casting was ideal (Patrick Wilson as Raoul, hello!), I think they could have done with someone different as the Phantom. Gerard Butler isn't known as a singer by any means, and he is about twenty years too young to play the middle-aged psychopath. Other than that, the film is very enjoyable and always makes me feel better when I am sick.
Favorite Song: "Twisted Every Way" and "Wandering Child"
Favorite Character: Madame Giry
Media Type: Stage Show
A musical within a musical, and who knew Ewan McGregor had those pipes? Even though this show is a compilation of pop-culture songs with added harmonies and dance numbers, who's to say that Mamma Mia!, Footloose!, or Movin' Out are any less of a musical? I mean, they all have the ridiculous Broadway exclamation point at the end of the title. Moulin Rouge!, Repo!, we get it. It's exciting... it's spectacular spectacular.
I have to admit I hated Nicole Kidman until I saw this movie. She just annoyed me and now I adore her. She looks so glamorous and her voice is like an angel. Jim Broadbent is awesome as usual, and the whole movie is an orgy of bright color, beautiful music, and compelling storytelling. I love, love, love this movie.
Favorite Song: "Roxanne"
Favorite Character: Teluse
Media Type: Film
9. The Producers
Who doesn't love a good play about a play about Hitler? Right? Anybody? No?
The Producers was created by Mel Brooks, a Jewish man, and takes the liberty of making light of Hitler and the Third Reich. The leads need to find a terrible play to produce so they can get rich quick and leave town. The soundtrack I have has the original cast of Broderick, Lane, and Huffman as the leads, and I can't imagine it any other way. They changed the role of Ula to Uma Thurman for the Hollywood film for some reason, but it is still just as I imagined it.
Favorite Song: "Springtime For Hitler"
Favorite Character: Leo
Media Type: Stage Show
8. RENT
The first Broadway musical I ever saw live, my mom took me to see this at the Embassy Theater when I was a freshman in high school. My life was changed forever. I cried at the end for almost ten minutes, and I knew that I was in love. This play was loud and raunchy, and in your face. It was funny and colorblind. It was sad and romantic. It was everything.
Sure it was controversial because it was about gays, lesbians, transvestites, people with AIDS, poor people, friends who sellout, and strippers. But none of that mattered when you watched it. All that mattered were these awesome people who grabbed your attention from the very beginning and never let go.
Favorite Song: "Halloween" was filmed for the movie version, but cut at the last minute,
Favorite Character: Mark, of course.
Media Type: Stage Show. Although the film was good, it just didn't work the same way. And why randomly have someone else play Mimi?
7. Beauty and the Beast
Belle was my favorite Disney princess while growing up. She was smart, didn't take anyone's crap, and turned a beast into a hot-looking man. How could you not be inspired by her? All jokes aside, this is a great fairy tale that is even better when brought to life onstage. The costumes of the enchanted objects are enough to give anyone chills. The music is powerful enough to melt anyone's heart, and the dance numbers are out of this world.
The Broadway show added a bunch of new songs on top of the Disney film, and all of them are fantastic. Songs like "No Matter What" and "How Long Can This Go On?" bring more depth to characters you didn't know much about. And "Gaston"? Forget about it! The best chorus number I've ever seen!
Favorite Song: "Home"
Favorite Character: Lumiere
Media Type: Stage show, hands down!
6. Little Shop of Horrors
Another one of my dad's favorites; I think he has "Suddenly Seymour" downloaded on his phone. We watched the 1986 film together, and I went out and bought the revival Broadway cast soundtrack. Just like Beauty and the Beast, it has all of the songs featured in the film, with a few more added in between scenes. Also like Beauty and the Beast, the music was written by composer Alan Menken. Coincidence? I think not. Genius? I think so.
Favorite Song: "The Meek Shall Inherit"
Favorite Character: Audrey
Media Type: Stage show.
5. Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat
Andrew Lloyd Webber returns to my countdown with Joseph. The classic Bible story is about a boy who interprets dreams and is sold as a slave by his eleven brothers. He gets thrown in jail and eventually climbs the corporate ladder of Egypt. Throughout all of this, Egypt and Israel's history are cleverly sung by the Narrator and a choir full of school children. When the Civic Theater does Joseph in our town, they bring in the city Children's choir to sing with the cast, and it is the icing on the cake.
Every song is different. Every song is amazing. The end reprise is the most tear-jerking reunion ever. Everyone comes back onstage, and the exchange between Joseph and the Narrator is nothing short of spine-tingling.
Favorite Song: "Potihpar"
Favorite Character: Narrator
Media Type: Donnie Osmond DVD
4. Jesus Christ Superstar
Even though I could improve my church-going habits and relationship with God, this play always brings me a little closer. When it came out there was an outrage about the title "Superstar" after Jesus' name. Christians everywhere stood outside of theaters with signs protesting Andrew Lloyd Webber's controversial new play. How dare he call Jesus a superstar... how dare he.... Settle down, Christians.
There is nothing crazy in this play; nothing controversial. They don't imply that Jesus was gay, or that he was sleeping with Mary Magdalene or anything ridiculous like that. All this play is guilty of is showing how human Jesus was, and how he struggled with the giant task he was destined to perform. I personally see nothing wrong with that. So suck it, crazy Christians, and enjoy the musical masterpiece that is Rock Opera "Jesus Christ Superstar".
Favorite Song: "Superstar"
Favorite Character: Judas
Media Type: Film
3. Wicked
Based on the novel by Gregory Maguire, this musical depicts the life of the Wicked Witch of the West from the Wizard of Oz. Elphaba struggles through problems with her parents, a sister's disability, and the desire to be popular in her new school. She meets Galinda, the Good Witch from the North, and the two form a strong friendship much like Clark Kent and Lex Luthor. Eventually the two form their different opinions and go their separate ways, leaving the story from The Wizard of Oz to unfold. Stephen Schwartz composed this modern gem, and every song is jam-packed with energy, and balanced by sweet and endearing lyrics.Favorite Song: "Thank Goodness"
Favorite Character: Fiyero
Media Type: Stage show, obviously
2. Chicago
I saw this movie a total of five times in the theater when it came out. I drug everyone I knew to see it with me, just so people wouldn't get tired of watching it. I remember buying the Broadway soundtrack after obsessing over the movie and loving every extra song. I know you can't fit everything into a movie that is in a stage show, so I wasn't too disappointed when Catherine Zeta Jones didn't sing "Class" or "I Know A Girl" on the silver screen. What I didn't expect, was that A. Renee Zellwegger had talent, and that B. "Class" was on the DVD as a deleted scene!
Don't just watch this movie for the beautiful Zeta Jones, but go to see the amazing dance numbers, the cunning witty dialog, Richard Gere getting down to his skivvies, the costumes, the hair, the make-up, and John C.Reilly!
Favorite Song: "I Can't Do It Alone" and "They Both Reached for the Gun"
Favorite Character: Velma Kelly
Media Type: Tie between film and stage show.
1. The Phantom of the Opera
Oh. My. Love. How can I even put into words how much I love this musical? Can my description of the orchestra do justice to the majestic and frightening music composed by Mr. Andrew Lloyd Webber? Do the chills down my spine describe Sarah Brightman's haunting and angelic voice as the lead role Christine? Can my gushing like a little baby on here about Michael Crawford make you all click on the iTunes store and buy the original Broadway soundtrack? No. But you should, anyways.I saw the off-Broadway production of this show my sophomore year in Ohio. A bunch of my theater friends drove off to see it and ended up getting lost on the way back, but that is neither here nor there. What I saw that night was unlike any other stage show I had seen to date. It was better than RENT, Chicago, and every other musical I had seen up until that point. The stage was alive, the music still rang in my ears, the story was heart-breaking, and people of all walks of life enjoyed it in the theater with me.
The movie came out in 2004, the winter after I graduated high school. Although most of the casting was ideal (Patrick Wilson as Raoul, hello!), I think they could have done with someone different as the Phantom. Gerard Butler isn't known as a singer by any means, and he is about twenty years too young to play the middle-aged psychopath. Other than that, the film is very enjoyable and always makes me feel better when I am sick.
Favorite Song: "Twisted Every Way" and "Wandering Child"
Favorite Character: Madame Giry
Media Type: Stage Show
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
25 Favorite Musicals of All Time: 19-11
19. Jekyll and Hyde
A lot of people might not like this one, but I think it is a diamond in the rough. Did you know Sebastian Bach from Skid Row played Jekyll at one point on Broadway? That probably isn't helping my case, is it? Anyways, this play has a strong ensemble and chorus bringing countless street scenes to life. The crowd almost seems to be its own character half of the time, while Jekyll plays both himself and Hyde. What a challenging role, and what a bold decision to put something this complex on the stage. I am glad they took the risk and made this dark and terrible tale a musical masterpiece.
Favorite Song: "Good N' Evil"
Favorite Character: Lucy
Media Type: Stage show. No movie has been made of the musical version, unless you count the opening scene of Van Helsing with Australian Broadway star Hugh Jackman...
18. Rocky Horror Picture Show
I had no idea people were supposed to yell things out when I saw Rocky Horror Picture Show on stage for the first time. I had seen the movie countless times, but wasn't ready for this. I ran into my high school Spanish teacher doing the pelvic thrust and my virginal friend's parents yelling out swear words in lingerie. What had happened to the world? Was this show that awesome? Yes. Of course it is.
I love this show just as much as I love old British men who are just a little past their prime. It's weird, inappropriate, and a little embarrassing, but I love it nonetheless. This show is pure controversy, no doubt having to do with the year it was released, and no doubt memorable. I watched it with my mom one Halloween and loved the songs. The characters who sing them are even more ridiculous, and anyone who knows anything about theater loves Rocky Horror. I was a prudish virginal Catholic school girl, and even I fell victim to its charms.
Favorite Song: "Don't Dream It, Be It"
Favorite Character: Franken Furter
Media Type: Tie between stage and film
17. Fiddler On The Roof
What a sad, sad story. Tevye watches his daughters grow up, marry off, and move away. That's probably why this is my dad's favorite and least favorite movie. He cries every time they sing "Sunrise, Sunset", but still made me watch it with him when I was little. I always think about him when I watch the movie or listen to the soundtrack. I also had the luxury of seeing it on stage, and was blown away. The dream sequence puts every other musical to shame on set and props.
Favorite Song: "Chaveleh (Little Bird)"
Favorite Character: Tevye
Media Type: Stage Show
16. The Full Monty
I didn't think I would like this at all. I saw the preview for the movie when I was young and thought it looked really stupid. I had put it out of my mind completely until I found out who Patrick Wilson was, and someone had the soundtrack in their car. I listened to it, and couldn't take it out of my CD player (times have changed kids, this is before iPods). I had no idea there were such strong female supporting cast members, such humorous moments, such dark humor, and... oh yeah, a bunch of naked guys. But that is just an afterthought after you meet the characters and hear their story.
Favorite Song: Tie: "You Rule My World" and "Breeze Off The River"
Favorite Character: Jerry
Media: Stage Show
15. The Hunchback of Notre Dame
This is the most underrated Disney movie of all time. Maybe I like it because the lead girl has dark hair, or because it has to do with the Catholic church. Or maybe I like it because it is the classic revamping of the timeless story that never gets old: hideous creature falls in love with a beautiful girl even though she is with someone else, and sort of wins her over. Beauty and the Beast and Phantom of the Opera have the same general storyline in the beginning, only this movie is a lot more realistic. The girl doesn't end up with our Quasimodo, but instead falls for the blonde-haired, blue-eyed Phoebus. I like that it doesn't end happily ever after like every other Disney movie. Maybe that's why no one else seems to like it.
Story line or not, the music in this film in undeniably fantastic. Latin choirs of monks chill your bones throughout the heartache of a deformed bell ringer you come to love. The bells he has to ring soar through the air of your living room as you watch it, and you can't help but to be moved.
Favorite Song: "Heaven's Light/Hell's Fire"
Favorite Character: Quasimodo
Media Type: Disney Film. There is a stage show somewhere but it is called something different, and is entirely in French. No thanks.
14. Hairspray
For the fat girl in all of us, it is easy to relate to the lead Tracy. She is a simple girl who dreams of dancing on an American Bandstand-type show, and eventually gets her wish. She meets a bunch of new friends, and becomes an advocate for civil rights and "Negro Day" on the show she dances on. This show is gay and fabulous and show choir-ready. Tolerance and ignorance butt heads in the most beautiful and campy way, and everyone has a good time learning about it.
Favorite Song: "I Can Hear The Bells"
Favorite Character: Seaweed
Media Type: Film, because Christopher Walken plays her dad and John Travolta plays her mother. No one while in drag has ever made me cry before.
13. The Sound of Music
Another classic from my dad. This is his other favorite movie, and of course, one of mine. Julie Andrews is such a wonderful performer, the opening scene of her running through the mountains is so uplifting. I could listen to her until I die and I'd always be smiling. The kids' songs are great too, and this is one of those musicals that everyone knows almost every song to, even if they aren't aware of it. That is timeless in my opinion. That is greatness.
Favorite Song: "I Have Confidence". I need to use this as an audition song once I get back in the game...
Favorite Character: Anyone but Rolff
Media Type: Film. I've never seen it live :(
12. The Boy From Oz
The story of Peter Allen portrayed by the wonderful Hugh Jackman. This has so many different styles of songs as his life changes. Powerhouse solos, soft duets, sexy threesomes, and flamboyant chorus numbers. Jackman is flawless as Peter as he goes through his ups and downs, relationships with men and women, and says his goodbyes to each of them. There isn't a song on this soundtrack I skip over when I listen to it. I really want to see this live someday. So far I just listen to it on my computer and imagine how great it will look.
Favorite Song: "An Older Woman"
Favorite Character: Judy
Media Type: Stage Show, there is no movie.
11. Oklahoma!
A lot of people might not like this one, but I think it is a diamond in the rough. Did you know Sebastian Bach from Skid Row played Jekyll at one point on Broadway? That probably isn't helping my case, is it? Anyways, this play has a strong ensemble and chorus bringing countless street scenes to life. The crowd almost seems to be its own character half of the time, while Jekyll plays both himself and Hyde. What a challenging role, and what a bold decision to put something this complex on the stage. I am glad they took the risk and made this dark and terrible tale a musical masterpiece.
Favorite Song: "Good N' Evil"
Favorite Character: Lucy
Media Type: Stage show. No movie has been made of the musical version, unless you count the opening scene of Van Helsing with Australian Broadway star Hugh Jackman...
18. Rocky Horror Picture Show
I had no idea people were supposed to yell things out when I saw Rocky Horror Picture Show on stage for the first time. I had seen the movie countless times, but wasn't ready for this. I ran into my high school Spanish teacher doing the pelvic thrust and my virginal friend's parents yelling out swear words in lingerie. What had happened to the world? Was this show that awesome? Yes. Of course it is.
I love this show just as much as I love old British men who are just a little past their prime. It's weird, inappropriate, and a little embarrassing, but I love it nonetheless. This show is pure controversy, no doubt having to do with the year it was released, and no doubt memorable. I watched it with my mom one Halloween and loved the songs. The characters who sing them are even more ridiculous, and anyone who knows anything about theater loves Rocky Horror. I was a prudish virginal Catholic school girl, and even I fell victim to its charms.
Favorite Song: "Don't Dream It, Be It"
Favorite Character: Franken Furter
Media Type: Tie between stage and film
17. Fiddler On The Roof
What a sad, sad story. Tevye watches his daughters grow up, marry off, and move away. That's probably why this is my dad's favorite and least favorite movie. He cries every time they sing "Sunrise, Sunset", but still made me watch it with him when I was little. I always think about him when I watch the movie or listen to the soundtrack. I also had the luxury of seeing it on stage, and was blown away. The dream sequence puts every other musical to shame on set and props.
Favorite Song: "Chaveleh (Little Bird)"
Favorite Character: Tevye
Media Type: Stage Show
16. The Full Monty
I didn't think I would like this at all. I saw the preview for the movie when I was young and thought it looked really stupid. I had put it out of my mind completely until I found out who Patrick Wilson was, and someone had the soundtrack in their car. I listened to it, and couldn't take it out of my CD player (times have changed kids, this is before iPods). I had no idea there were such strong female supporting cast members, such humorous moments, such dark humor, and... oh yeah, a bunch of naked guys. But that is just an afterthought after you meet the characters and hear their story.
Favorite Song: Tie: "You Rule My World" and "Breeze Off The River"
Favorite Character: Jerry
Media: Stage Show
15. The Hunchback of Notre Dame
This is the most underrated Disney movie of all time. Maybe I like it because the lead girl has dark hair, or because it has to do with the Catholic church. Or maybe I like it because it is the classic revamping of the timeless story that never gets old: hideous creature falls in love with a beautiful girl even though she is with someone else, and sort of wins her over. Beauty and the Beast and Phantom of the Opera have the same general storyline in the beginning, only this movie is a lot more realistic. The girl doesn't end up with our Quasimodo, but instead falls for the blonde-haired, blue-eyed Phoebus. I like that it doesn't end happily ever after like every other Disney movie. Maybe that's why no one else seems to like it.
Story line or not, the music in this film in undeniably fantastic. Latin choirs of monks chill your bones throughout the heartache of a deformed bell ringer you come to love. The bells he has to ring soar through the air of your living room as you watch it, and you can't help but to be moved.
Favorite Song: "Heaven's Light/Hell's Fire"
Favorite Character: Quasimodo
Media Type: Disney Film. There is a stage show somewhere but it is called something different, and is entirely in French. No thanks.
14. Hairspray
For the fat girl in all of us, it is easy to relate to the lead Tracy. She is a simple girl who dreams of dancing on an American Bandstand-type show, and eventually gets her wish. She meets a bunch of new friends, and becomes an advocate for civil rights and "Negro Day" on the show she dances on. This show is gay and fabulous and show choir-ready. Tolerance and ignorance butt heads in the most beautiful and campy way, and everyone has a good time learning about it.
Favorite Song: "I Can Hear The Bells"
Favorite Character: Seaweed
Media Type: Film, because Christopher Walken plays her dad and John Travolta plays her mother. No one while in drag has ever made me cry before.
13. The Sound of Music
Another classic from my dad. This is his other favorite movie, and of course, one of mine. Julie Andrews is such a wonderful performer, the opening scene of her running through the mountains is so uplifting. I could listen to her until I die and I'd always be smiling. The kids' songs are great too, and this is one of those musicals that everyone knows almost every song to, even if they aren't aware of it. That is timeless in my opinion. That is greatness.
Favorite Song: "I Have Confidence". I need to use this as an audition song once I get back in the game...
Favorite Character: Anyone but Rolff
Media Type: Film. I've never seen it live :(
12. The Boy From Oz
The story of Peter Allen portrayed by the wonderful Hugh Jackman. This has so many different styles of songs as his life changes. Powerhouse solos, soft duets, sexy threesomes, and flamboyant chorus numbers. Jackman is flawless as Peter as he goes through his ups and downs, relationships with men and women, and says his goodbyes to each of them. There isn't a song on this soundtrack I skip over when I listen to it. I really want to see this live someday. So far I just listen to it on my computer and imagine how great it will look.
Favorite Song: "An Older Woman"
Favorite Character: Judy
Media Type: Stage Show, there is no movie.
11. Oklahoma!
Another Jackman gem, the London cast show was recorded and put on DVD. I thought only Les Miserables had a revolving stage/set, but it worked out beautifully for Oklahoma!. The process of Oklahoma becoming a state, and the conflict between farmers and cowboys sets the stage for the main characters in the show. Although it has a western theme to it, Oklahoma is no country musical. Rodgers and Hammerstein put their smooth, romantic touch on the love-stricken leads, and keep the other characters fun flirty. Judd Fry sticks out as the only character with deep, dark vocals, and brings the cast full circle.
Favorite Song: "Surrey With The Fringe On The Top"
Favorite Character: Ado Annie
Media Type: Stage Show
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