Monday, January 14, 2013

Four Score and Seven Years Ago

Julia: This past lazy Sunday morning, I decided breakfast and a movie would be a great idea.  There are some great breakfast ideas on Pinterest and I have been wanting to try this one for a while.  I am starting to get obsessed with using muffin pans for breakfast, dinner and dessert.   What is better than an egg, bacon and toast muffin!  This one is courtesy of Martha Stewart so it has to be good.

Ingredients:
  • Unsalted butter
  • 6 slices of bread (I used 3 sandwich thins)
  • 6 slices of bacon (You can use turkey bacon to make it healthier)
  • 6 eggs (Once again, you can use egg whites for a healthier option)
  • Salt and Pepper to taste
Directions:

One of the things I love about this recipe is that it so simple.  You can change the number of ingredients and basically just put it in the oven after prep.  First you will want to cook the bacon a little less than you normally would as you are preheating the oven to 375. Grease the muffin pan with unsalted butter.  Tear the bottom half of the sandwich thin in half and place in the muffin pan creating a cup.  Put one slice of bacon in each of the bread cups and crack an egg over it.  Season with salt and pepper to taste.  Put your breakfast muffins in the oven for 20-25 minutes until the bacon gets crispy and the eggs are set.  Off to the movies!

Andy: As I keep harping on it’s, (say it with me) OSCAR season!  With the nominations being announced mere days a go, Lincoln topped the list with 12 nominations making this instant classic a must see in the theater with my turtle dove!


In a lock performance for a Best Actor win, Daniel Day-Lewis was mesmerizing as Lincoln.  I couldn't help but wonder how on earth could one memorize ALL those lines!?  It seemed like if he wasn't giving a speech on the end of slavery he was telling a story (which I thought hilarious -  at one point in the film a character played by D Day from Animal House actually says, “Oh, no! Not another story!").

The supporting characters in the film were a veritable who’s who of actors.  It was like Terrence Malick’s The Thin Red Line where every scene brought a new familiar face.  I loved the trio of Tim Blake Nelson, James Spader and John Hawkes - who coincidentally is a contender in the Actor category this year for The Sessions. This trio added a bit of humor to an otherwise sometimes too talky film.  Tommy Lee Jones was great as always and I am glad to see the Academy agrees.  David Strathairn had a nice meaty OSCAR potential part as well but with so many great performances, he failed to get a coveted nod.  Finally, Sally Field had an amazing scene where she breaks down and then has to literally next scene put on a happy face.  I liked her, I REALLY liked her.

I remember when I was in High School the school actually gave us tickets to see Spielberg’s Schindler’s List in history class. If history classes are not doing so for Lincoln they should!  A must see for all generations.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

And the Nominees Are...

BEST PICTURE
  • Amour
  • Argo 
  • Beasts of the Southern Wild
  • Django Unchained
  • Les Misérables
  • Life of Pi
  • Lincoln
  • Silver Linings Playbook
  • Zero Dark Thirty
ACTOR in a Leading Role
  • Bradley Cooper, Silver Linings Playbook 
  • Daniel Day-Lewis, Lincoln
  • Hugh Jackman, Les Misérables 
  • Joaquin Phoenix, The Master 
  • Denzel Washington, Flight
ACTRESS in a Leading Role
  • Jessica Chastain, Zero Dark Thirty
  • Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook 
  • Emmanuelle Riva, Amour 
  • Quvenzhané Wallis, Beasts of the Southern Wild 
  • Naomi Watts, The Impossible 
ACTOR in a Supporting Role
  • Alan Arkin, Argo 
  • Robert De Niro, Silver Linings Playbook 
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman, The Master 
  • Tommy Lee Jones, Lincoln 
  • Christoph Waltz, Django Unchained 
ACTRESS in a Supporting Role
  • Amy Adams, The Master 
  • Sally Field, Lincoln 
  • Anne Hathaway, Les Misérables 
  • Helen Hunt, The Sessions 
  • Jacki Weaver, Silver Linings Playbook 
ANIMATED FEATURE FILM
  • Brave 
  • Frankenweenie 
  • ParaNorman 
  • The Pirates! Band of Misfits
  • Wreck-It Ralph 
CINEMATOGRAPHY
  • Anna Karenina 
  • Django Unchained 
  • Life of Pi 
  • Lincoln
  • Skyfall 
COSTUME DESIGN
  • Anna Karenina 
  • Les Misérables 
  • Lincoln 
  • Mirror Mirror 
  • Snow White and the Huntsman 
DIRECTING
  • Amour, Michael Haneke 
  • Beasts of the Southern Wild, Benh Zeitlin 
  • Life of Pi, Ang Lee 
  • Lincoln, Steven Spielberg 
  • Silver Linings Playbook, David O. Russell 
DOCUMENTARY FEATURE
  • 5 Broken Cameras
  • The Gatekeepers
  • How to Survive a Plague
  • The Invisible War
  • Searching for Sugar Man
DOCUMENTARY SHORT
  • Inocente
  • Kings Point
  • Mondays at Racine
  • Open Heart
  • Redemption
FILM EDITING
  • Argo
  • Life of Pi
  • Lincoln
  • Silver Linings Playbook
  • Zero Dark Thirty
FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM
  • Amour, Austria 
  • Kon-Tiki, Norway 
  • No, Chile 
  • A Royal Affair, Denmark 
  • War Witch, Canada 
MAKEUP AND HAIRSTYLING
  • Hitchcock
  • The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
  • Les Misérables
MUSIC Original Score
  • Anna Karenina
  • Argo
  • Life of Pi
  • Lincoln
  • Skyfall
MUSIC Original Song
  • "Before My Time" from Chasing Ice 
  • "Everybody Needs A Best Friend" from Ted 
  • "Pi's Lullaby" from Life of Pi 
  • "Skyfall" from Skyfall 
  • "Suddenly" from Les Misérables 
PRODUCTION DESIGN
  • Anna Karenina 
  • The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey 
  • Les Misérables 
  • Life of Pi 
  • Lincoln 
SHORT FILM Animated
  • Adam and Dog 
  • Fresh Guacamole 
  • Head over Heels 
  • Maggie Simpson in "The Longest Daycare"
  • Paperman 
SHORT FILM Live Action
  • Asad
  • Buzkashi Boys
  • Curfew
  • Death of a Shadow (Dood van een Schaduw)
  • Henry
SOUND EDITING
  • Argo 
  • Django Unchained
  • Life of Pi
  • Skyfall
  • Zero Dark Thirty
SOUND MIXING
  • Argo
  • Les Misérables
  • Life of Pi 
  • Lincoln
  • Skyfall
VISUAL EFFECTS
  • The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
  • Life of Pi
  • Marvel's The Avengers 
  • Prometheus
  • Snow White and the Huntsman
WRITING Adapted Screenplay
  • Argo written by Chris Terrio 
  • Beasts of the Southern Wild screenplay by Lucy Alibar & Benh Zeitlin 
  • Life of Pi written by David Magee 
  • Lincoln written by Tony Kushner 
  • Silver Linings Playbook written by David O. Russell 
WRITING Original Screenplay
  • Amour written by Michael Haneke 
  • Django Unchained written by Quentin Tarantino 
  • Flight written by John Gatins 
  • Moonrise Kingdom written by Wes Anderson & Roman Coppola
  • Zero Dark Thirty written by Mark Boal 
The movies in blue are movies we have already seen so you can expect to see some reviews here as we get closer to the OSCARS.  We still have 45 days until the OSCARS so I will be sure to update this list as we preview this year's contenders.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Intermission

Julia: Well a move across town and the holidays led to a brief hiatus from our blog, think of it as a brief intermission.  Fortunately we were able to see a little film that may be a huge contender at the OSCARS.  We'll know for sure tomorrow morning when the nominees are announced!  In the meantime, please to enjoy...

Andy: Seeing a movie the day after Thanksgiving is an unofficial family tradition.  So in keeping the tradition alive I went to see OSCAR buzzed Silver Linings Playbook after Thanksgiving with my blushing bride, sister and brother-in-law. 

It stars Sexiest Man Alive (sorry ladies he’s gay)* Bradley Cooper as a man straight out of the mental hospital after catching his wife another man and practically beating him to death.  While re cooperating with his parents, played by Jackie Weaver (Animal Kingdom) and Robert DeNiro (in what could be his first OSCAR nomination in a hard to believe 21 years!), he sets his sights on losing weight and bettering himself in an effort to win his wife back. Along the way he meets, through the help of his friend, a recently widowed young girl – Jennifer Lawrence (aka Katniss Everdeen)    with some baggage of her own.  The two have similar quirks and through what seems to be chance encounters the two form a bond and start training for a dancing with stars type talent show.

Without giving away the entire movie, the scenes with Cooper and Lawrence were sweet, DeNiro was amusing as a dad with OCD watching the Eagles in ritualistic fashion.  God forbid you move the remote!  The Eagles could lose!  The ending had the big cat tearing up a bit. As OSCAR nominations are announced this Thursday, I wouldn't be at all surprised if Cooper, Lawrence and DeNiro all got the old tip of the hat from OSCAR. Jackie Weaver is a long shot but you never know. Demian Bichir came out of nowhere last year so we will just have to wait and see.

Worth checking out in the theater but not being a huge theatrical success you could probably survive waiting for Netflix. 

Julia: *editor's note - Andy is misrepresenting Brad's sexual preference.  He likes to dash the hopes of all women when it comes to sexy movie stars, as if we had a chance anyway!

Monday, November 12, 2012

The Greatest Movie Never Made

Andy: As I stated in our first review I love this time of year for it is OSCAR SEASON!

This past Sunday the Browns had a bye week so my betrothed and I went to the movies.  Julia, being the good sport that she is, allowed me to knock out another sure to be nominated film ARGO directed by Matt Damon’s other half Ben Affleck. 

In keeping with Affleck’s first two films Gone Baby Gone and The Town the actor/director is proving that he is quite good at the other half of his credentials.  The film is about the six US embassy workers in Iran who escaped and found refuge in the Canadian embassy during the 1979 Iran hostage crisis.  Affleck’s character has to come up with a believable plan to extract the six escapees from Iran and bring them safely back to the states. Sounds simple enough right?

Even though the movie is based on a true story (declassified in 1997) and you know the outcome, you still feel your heart pounding out of your chest in the last thirty minutes.  I seriously almost screamed at the screen several times out of sheer panic.  “For the love of God find their reservations!”  “Answer the damn phone John Goodman!”  I felt like screaming…if you don’t know what any of that means, go see the movie!  It is sure to get a Best Picture, Director and possible supporting nods for a great supporting team of Alan Arkin and John Goodman.

This film is a true sign that Mr. Affleck has proven that the third time is definitely a charm with this award season probable nominee.

Julia: Watching Argo isn't a bad way to spend 2 hours on a Sunday.  I agree with Andy that this movie creates so much suspense at the end, even though you know the way it ends.  And that is a sign of a great movie!

So how do you top a nice Sunday watching a great movie?  Head home for a dinner wrapped in bacon (I recommend skipping the movie theater popcorn in this instance).  Fortunately there's no shortage of bacon wrapped recipes on Pinterest.  I got this idea from an Artsy Fartsy Mama and added some healthy twists.

Ingredients:

  • 2 chicken breasts
  • 10 slices of bacon (I used turkey bacon)
  • Cream cheese (I used fat free cream cheese)
  • Shredded cheese (I used 2% shredded cheddar cheese)
  • Garlic salt to taste
  • Seasoned salt to taste
Directions
  • Preheat the oven to 400 degrees
  • Use a meat tenderizer to thin the chicken breasts
  • Season chicken breasts with seasoned salt
  • Lay 3 pieces of bacon vertically and 2 pieces horizontally
  • Place one chicken breast in the middle of the bacon
  • Mix cream cheese with garlic salt and spread on top of chicken
  • Add shredded cheese on top
  • Roll up the chicken and wrap the bacon around it 
  • Repeat for the other chicken breast
  • Place bacon wrapped chicken on an aluminum foil lined pan
  • Bake for 45 minutes
  • Enjoy!
All in all I think this turned out well.  Next time I may make it without bacon or using bacon bits in the filling.  The turkey bacon, while healthier, probably wasn't quite as tasty as the real thing.  This time I did manage to remember to take a photo (above). 

Monday, October 15, 2012

Bernie, Bernie, Oh Bernie!

Andy: I love lazy weekends with my Boo! You know those Saturdays you’re just snuggling on the couch watching a marathon of those murder mystery shows on the ID Network? OK, that sounds kind of creepy and it’s mostly me watching those while Julia is in the midst of a Pinterest black out, but I digress. If you love the mix of those and a doc block on MSNBC you will get a kick out of Bernie!

Bernie is filmed almost exactly like one of those “whodunit” shows - from the interviews with people who knew the real life victims and “perps” right down to the sometimes cheesy re-enactment segments. Jack Black plays the titular character Bernie and was a perfect choice for the role. The movie is a very dark comedy so you have Jack Black playing a watered downed zany as opposed to the normally off the wall School of Rock crazy. His character sings publicly at the funerals conducted by the funeral home at which he is employed and I must say Tenacious D, or not Jack Black, really does have a good singing voice.


Shirley MacLaine plays the ill-fated widow who Bernie befriends and not since Steel Magnolias have we seen a more loathsome character played by the Hollywood legend. Unfortunately, for MacLaine’s character no matter how nice and good hearted somebody is (Bernie) we all can take just so much.

Matthew McConaughey plays the DA out to put Bernie away despite the uphill battle of the town’s disbelief that Bernie- who gives money to everybody else but himself- could commit such a horrible crime. Wooderson was good in the movie but barely in it at the same time. I feel like a girl, “More McConaughey!”

So, next time you find yourself getting sucked into another MSNBC doc block or Scorned: Love Kills on the ID Channel rent Bernie! 

Julia: I definitely agree with Andy on this one - more Matty McConaughey (now I digress)! While watching Bernie, we enjoyed bacon topped BBQ turkey meatloaf.  Let's just say it was to die for!  This sinful recipe comes to you courtesy of a blog I found through Pinterest :) I have tried out a few recipes on this site and they never disappoint.

I modified the recipe a bit, mostly because of my lack of baking pan selections.  Instead of mini meatloaves, I just made one large meat loaf which was delicious but sadly took much longer to cook.

Ingredients:
  • 3/4 cup grated zucchini
  • 2 tbsp onion, minced
  • 2 tbsp diced red pepper
  • 1/2 cup Italian style breadcrumbs
  • 1/4 cup Jack Daniels Honey Smokehouse BBQ
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tsp paprika
  • 1 tsp kosher salt
  • 1.5 lb raw lean ground turkey
  • 3 slices precooked turkey bacon, cut in half
  • 2 1/2 tbsp Jack Daniels Honey Smokehouse BBQ Sauce
Directions:
  • Preheat the oven to 350° and lightly spray the pan with oil.
  • Mix the zucchini, onion, red pepper, breadcrumbs, 1/4 cup BBQ sauce, egg, paprika, kosher salt and ground turkey in a large bowl.
  • Transfer the mixture into your pan.
  • Cut the turkey bacon slices in half, place on top of the meatloaf and coat with the remaining BBQ sauce
  • Cooking time will vary depending on the size of the pan so keep checking after about 30 minutes.
P.S. Unfortunately, I forgot to take a photo of the finished product (likely due to the longer cooking time and ravenous newlyweds) so I have supplied the photo above from Pinterest.

P.P.S. If you are a Clevelander, please sing the post title in the style of the "Bernie, Bernie" Superbowl song.  I had to throw that in there in honor of the Browns win this past Sunday.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Cervezas with The Master

Andy: My first memory of becoming a straight male Oscar enthusiast probably goes back to the 1990 ceremony where Dances with Wolves won the top two Oscars for Picture/Director. From there I was hooked! I had always been a huge fan of film, randomly owning and studying Roger Ebert books on film in elementary school and memorizing my favorite lines of movies to the point where my mother insisted I take the same interest in school as I did with film.


So, needless to say we are entering my favorite time of year…OSCAR SEASON!

To start what’s sure to be on the 5 (maybe 10 depending on votes) best picture nominee list of 2012 I decided to drag my fiance, er wife, sorry we are newlyweds : ),  to see The Master directed by Paul Thomas Anderson (PTA). I have been such a fan of PT Anderson since first seeing Boogie Nights all the way through There Will Be Blood (TWBB) that I even own his obscure film Hard Eight or Sydney depending on who you ask.  I loved the multiple story lines of Boogie Nights, the” these things happen every day” weirdness of Magnolia, the quiet/psycho Barry Egan of Punch Drunk Love (PDL) and of course “I’VE ABANDONED MY BOY!!!” – need I say more about TWBB?  So I went into The Master like it was Christmas morning. (On a side note I am from Cleveland where PT Anderson’s dad Ernie was the original "Ghoulardi". I grew up with the ‘Son of Ghoulardi" so just knowing that connection makes me root for him more.)

From the start of the film it felt very different from any of the other PTA movie. I was shocked and impressed to hear my wife after the movie say the exact thought I was thinking at the beginning of the movie.  It reminded us at times of a Terrence Malick picture! The war scenes and flashbacks were very similar to Malick’s The Thin Red Line. Not sure where he was going with the R&R time on the beach with the drinking and making sweet, sweet love to the sand lady? But it was clear that war had been hell on Freddie (Joaquin Phoenix) and he would clearly never be the same.

Phoenix does such an Oscar worthy performance during the movie with just the mere fact that he is so uncomfortable to watch. From his boozy speech pattern, to the old man stance of his hands on his hips and his bent frame its cringe worthy. Not to mention his hair trigger temper that makes it pretty hard for him to hold down a job.

Enter Lancaster Dodd (Phillip Seymour Hoffman) whose ship Freddie escapes onto after maybe killing an old man at a job with too much of his booze concoction – which is so disturbing to watch him make…what is he mixing together??? Dodd, mainly due to his love of Freddie’s booze, picks up an instant friendship with Freddie and takes him on as his protégé much to the dismay of his wife Peggy played down Amish-ly by a usually perky Amy Adams. (Doubt not included.)

It’s clear that Dodd is a bit of a mixture of L. Ron Hubbard and any cult fixture of the twentieth century. He could be a way to save self destructive Freddie from himself if he can convince the doubt that is always in the back of Freddie’s mind despite the fact that he physically defends Dodd on several occasions. No one, especially Peggy, is ever sure that Freddie isn’t simply a psychopath.

Despite the fact that this movie has Oscar worthy performances by all three principal cast members it does have a few rarely seen flaws in a PT Anderson film. Flaw number one – way too long! This movie will never be a box office draw such as a Dark Knight Rises or The Avengers but it definitely won’t help the somewhat indie film with a more than two hour run time where a lot of the time you are confused as to what exactly is happening and why? (ie. walking back in forth in a room for 10 minutes…you know the scene). Finally, flaw number two seems to be going around in films these days – a character with no redeemable features. I guess PTA gave us a bit of that in TWBB but sometimes it helps to have a character that was worth two hours of movie not just for the acting alone.

I still give this movie an 8 on acting alone and will always see a PTA film! Just maybe go for a lighter/wrapping things up ending PDL or Magnolia style next time and oh yeah MAKE IT UNDER TWO HOURS, JEEESH!

Julia:  Not only should I better vet the movie selections, but also our dinner choices.  After the movie, we headed to a Mexican place near the theater and enjoyed street tacos, street hot dogs and of course, cervezas.  The food wasn't too bad but I think the best part was that we were there during happy hour so it was cheap :)  As for the movie, I think SNL's Aunt Linda would agree it was one "Whaat?" and a "Not This Time PTA".


Saturday, October 6, 2012

Andy & Julia's Cinema Cucina

Welcome to Cinema Cucina!  Andy and I recently got married and received a plethora of gifts for the kitchen including some cookbooks, non-stick cookware, cooking utensils, mixing bowls, cutting boards and personalized his and hers aprons (thank you!).  I must admit that I brought a lack of cooking skills to the table when we first moved in together and have come a long way over the years.  Having these brand new kitchen essentials (and some pretty extensive Pinterest foodie boards) has inspired me to refine my mediocre skills.

Andy, on the other hand, is a cornucopia of movie knowledge.  His vast understanding of the movie industry is not limited to Oscar caliber movies, but also includes action movies, thrillers, horror movies, cult classics and rom-coms (ok, maybe not the last one).  In fact, if Andy and Siri were competing to see who could list all best picture nominees from the 1985 Oscars, my money would be on Andy.

We plan to combine these two interests to provide you with movie reviews and some great dinner ideas for your very own movie date nights.  If there are any movies you want to see reviewed or dinner ideas you would like me to try, feel free to let us know in the comments section.

First up is an easy one :)  We're going to see The Master and then grab dinner out.  Andy will give a review of the movie, and I will give a review of the dinner.  I promise, next one will be a home cooked meal!