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posted by [personal profile] owlfish at 06:12pm on 31/12/2007 under
I've already received an email from tomorrow. In a few minutes, it will be the future in the UK. Here, it's not even dinnertime yet, and I'm skimming posts pondering the year past and the year to come. Many of them deal with the question of what the best movie they saw this past year was. If I had to choose one, it would be Hot Fuzz, but what I actually want to tell you about are two movies I saw recently.

Enchanted had a terrible and off-putting preview, but was a delightful and charming movie of fairy tale animateds come to unwilling life in New York City, where there are no happy endings. I loved the sequences transfering fairy tale moments to the city: summoning with songs pigeons and cockroaches to clean an apartment; Giselle's clothing patterns left behind in curtains and sheets. It's not a perfect movie, but it's an endearing one, and I like it quite a lot. [livejournal.com profile] fjm critiqued it minorly as part of a recent group of movies which show people with curly hair getting it straightened as part of their transformation sequence; knowing this in advance, I can redeem the movie by observing that Giselle's hair is straight in the opening sequence and she doesn't wear it curled until she goes to get married. Having her hair straighened, while not great for the message it sends about curls, is at least consistent with the status quo shown at the movie's beginning.

Shotgun Stories is a movie filmed in Scott, Arkansas, currently in very limited release, having won several major awards at a variety of more minor film festivals. I went to see it with my cousin, who did the costumes and still photography for it. It's a powerful, slow-paced piece about two sets of half brothers, raised in hate of each other, and the violence which comes from their upbringing after their father dies. Three of the brothers - Son, Boy, and Kid, are so alienated from their father that they never had proper names. It's about family and the other relationships which connect them. It's about the women who love them and the countryside which nurtured them. Inevitability is what gives the plot tension, but things don't always work out as you might expect.
There are 6 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] sioneva.livejournal.com at 12:38pm on 01/01/2008
As someone who's always had stick-straight hair, I have never understood why someone with GORGEOUS CURLY HAIR!!!!! would want to straighten it! I have to go to so much trouble to get mine curly when I want to dress up!
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posted by [identity profile] taldragon.livejournal.com at 04:48pm on 01/01/2008
because it's unusual.

i like straightening my hair simply because it makes such a huge difference.
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posted by [personal profile] owlfish at 03:33am on 02/01/2008
People with curly hair like to straighten it for the same reason people with straight hair like to curl it: variety, and, in some cases, grass-is-greener. Curly does often come with frizz.

I've had straight hair for two days of my life: both came as a surprise to me when, post trim, the stylist blew dry my hair straight.
 
posted by [identity profile] sioneva.livejournal.com at 10:02am on 02/01/2008
Oh, I can certainly understand wanting variety...the people I was really referring to (and should have been more specific about) are the people I know who have curly hair and straighten it every. day. of. their. lives. I have a good friend down the road who I know does that. She doesn't come out of the house until her hair is straightened EVERY MORNING.

I guess I find it a bit silly to fight something you were born with quite that hard. Once in a while, sure, but every day?!

Then again, I'm a "natural" kinda girl - apparently British women on average spend £180,000 on beauty products over their lifetimes. I must be way, way behind!
 
posted by [identity profile] moon-custafer.livejournal.com at 04:05pm on 01/01/2008
Haven't seen the movie, but it sounds from your description as though it's actually satirizing the privileging of one kind of hair over the other - or at least showing that the ideal of beauty varies from one one society to another.
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posted by [personal profile] owlfish at 03:34am on 02/01/2008
I wish I could give it that kind of credit, given how sly it is about so many other things. It's possible you're right though, and it's an interesting take: curly hair is prioritized in fairy tale land, straight hair in the real world.

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