PalTalk has a site where you can put in any name -- yours or a friend's -- and it will create a remarkably real-looking news broadcast about how the name you type in has become a massive nationwide political phenomenon and could just be elected the next President. Very clever! And very funny.
Get ready for the upcoming release of the first American Girls feature film, "Kit Kittredge: An American Girl," starring Abigail Breslin, with the DVD series, The American Girl Movie Collection, including "Samantha - An American Girl Holiday," "Felicity - An American Girl Adventure," and "Molly - An American Girl on the Home Front." These are fine introductions to history for children and fine stories of brave young girls dealing with challenges at home and in the greater world.
Just after the Children's Television Workshop realized that if children could memorize advertising jingles they could learn the alphabet and numbers and other important lessons through lively short films for PBS, a group of advertisers and educators got together to create "Schoolhouse Rock," a series of fifty-two short films with irresistibly catchy songs about history, grammar, math, science, and economics shown on ABC in the 70's and 80's.
Schoolhouse Rock was discontinued because for technical reasons it did not count toward the network's obligation for educational programming. But the films are delightful and the content is valuable. They are available today on DVD and YouTube. Here is one to help children understand why we celebrate Independence Day.
Families will also enjoy Schoolhouse Rock! Rocks with covers of "Schoolhouse Rock" songs by indie all-stars like Blind Melon, Moby, and Daniel Johnston.
"When Did You Last See Your Father" is based on the best-selling non-fiction book by Blake Morrison. I spoke to director Anand Tucker about adapting the book and about fatherhood.
What is it that makes relationships between fathers and sons so difficult?
Have you got all day? There's a really kind of basic thing at the heart of that. It's programmed not to work. One of the tragedies at the heart of the relationship is that the son has to rebel to find his own place in the world. I am at the moment the absolute hero of my 4 year old, all about what he wants to be, and then he will get to the point where he does not want to be me any more and wants to kill me so he can begin to know who and what he is apart from me. And in a way thank god for that because they have to leave home.
Do you think the current generation has as much difficulty communicating with their fathers as the last did?
I think about this all the time at 5 am when I'm trying to build Lego cars and remember that my father in his 80's and in a different generation never did that. He's a lovely man but I struggle to remember if he ever played on my level ever. We're all trying to be best fiends for our children. That was never an issue up to the last 20 years, and it is both good and bad. You want to be their best friend but they need you to be their parents. Even with the best will it's still a complicated relationship. The people you love the most are the hardest to really see, to say, "I love you." I suspect that maybe fathers like Arthur (played by James Broadbent in the movie), we don't have those kind so much in the contemporary Western society, but probably do in the rest of the world. My father is Indian, and he is still like that: the father the absolute head of the family, the family is the important thing, not the individual. In the West, it's more about the individual. It is a part of consumer culture, Byronic self-expression. There's probably a generation of dads trying not to be Arthur Morrison.
What was the biggest challenge in adapting this non-fiction book for a feature film?
I started in documentaries and pretty much every film I've made has been based in non-fiction. True life is so extraordinary in a way, stuff that doesn't work in fiction stories. You come up against all the problems of how movies work. Movies are blastedly simple ridiculously stupid thing where B has to follow A, if you're trying to tell a narrative story. We decided not to have a scene on the deathbed where it all got resolved as you would have in the usual movie. Mostly that doesn't happen in real life. In fiction movies you get the big hug and "I love you" at the end and it offers us a fantasy but without that it offers a chance to connect in a human way, very powerful and moving. You get to a place of truth and still get the emotional resolution. Through Blake's interior journey he gets to tell his father that he loves him even though he's already dead.
Movies can give you a particular point of view but in true life stories there is no such thing as the truth, just everyone's version. Getting answers was the thing that was driving Blake, but the point was he's got to get over it. There was something very moving in Beaty's refusal to give him an answer. He has to learn that he's not the center of the universe and he wasn't the only one who had a relationship with his father. It is beautifully old-fashioned when Blake asks her about her relationship with his father and she says, "You've got to leave me something that's mine." I like the fact that in life you don't get all the answers.
This week we are visiting Canada's Prince Edward Island, well known to fans of classic children's books as the home of Anne of Green Gables and the author who created her, L. M. (Lucy Maud) Montgomery. When I was in 6th and 7th grade I was a huge fan of the series about the red-headed orphan with a big imagination and an even bigger heart who held on so tightly to the "e" at the end of her name. I loved the way each book's title indicated the widening of her physical and emotional world as she went from Green Gables, Avonlea, the Island. I also read some of Montgomery's other books, including Tales of Avonlea and More Tales of Avonlea, which reflected more deeply Montgomery's views on spirituality and sacrifice. And I believe that the miniseries is one of the finest book-to-movie adaptations ever put on film. Every detail and performance is everything Ms. Montgomery and Anne could have wished for. I am looking forward to touring Anne's community with my family and if I take any good pictures, I'll post them.
YouTube has set up a new site for independent film-makers, a curated collection of the very best films you are unlikely to find in theaters or on television, shown in an upgraded High Quality viewing system. Check it out to...
The American Film Institute's Lifetime Achievement Award ceremony for Warren Beatty will be broadcast tonight at 9 pm EST on the USA Network. Beatty's notorious romantic life and political activism has sometimes distracted the media from his achievements as an...
"Definitely, Maybe" is the story of the three great loves of a man's life. That's "story" in the literal sense, as in the bedtime story he tells his young daughter, who wants to know how he met her mother and,...
Wall*E, the new Pixar release, was inspired in part by one of the most loveable robots in movie history, R2D2 from "Star Wars." Wall*E, an adorable garbage drone, inspired me to create this quiz about other memorable robots from movies...
Nametapes ironed on? Bugspray and sunscreen packed? As kids depart for camp, it is fun to watch some classic movies about the joys and terrors of life among the bunk beds and color wars. 1. Meatballs Bill Murray was the...
Based on the book by T.H. White, this is the story of the early years of King Arthur. Nicknamed "Wart," the future King Arthur is squire to a knight when he meets Merlin the magician, who promises to take on...
FlowTV, the always-interesting scholarly online publication about media, has a thoughtful article by Aaron Delwiche of Trinity University called "'What we me worry?' What the new media literacy movement can learn from Mad Magazine and Wacky Packages." Delwiche makes some...
The best-selling series of books about children who find their mysterious old house surrounded by magical creatures has been turned into a visually sumptuous treat for fans of fantasy and imagination. Freddie Highmore (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) plays twins...
Entertainment Weekly has a very important article that asks a very important question. Why is it that the only minority character to anchor a new series is Cleveland Brown -- an animated character voiced by a white guy? The show...
Happy longest day of the year! And happy summer. Long summer days are a wonderful time to rediscover the pleasures of reading. Families should make sure that everyone age 7 and older has a library card and make a point...
My mother just sent me this photo from her college years. One of her classmates became an Oscar, Golden Globe, and Emmy-winning actress. Can you spot her? P.S. That's my beautiful mom in the second row from the front, second...
The big-screen version of the classic 1960's television show created by Mel Brooks and Buck Henry is more than an update. It shrewdly tweaks the original, making its hero, Maxwell Smart (Steve Carell) smarter and more capable than the bumbling...
FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein gave an important speech last week to the Media Institute titled Stuck in the Mud: Time to Move an Agenda to Protect America's Children. [M]any parents are feeling inundated by an array of media that are...
Beliefnet has posted my gallery of movies that illustrate important values like integrity, courage, courtesy, learning, and peace. Movies are our sagas, our myths, our touchstones, and our collective cultural heritage. They are also one way that we teach ourselves...
This week we have something that does not happen very often -- two huge movies in the same genre opening on the same day: "Get Smart" with Steve Carell and Anne Hathaway and "The Love Guru" with Mike Myers. One...
USA Today's Jim Cheng said it best: "Talk about a career with legs." The beautiful dancer from Hollywood's golden age died today at age 86. Born Tula Ellice Finklea in Amarillo, Texas, she was a professional ballerina at age 16...
Mike Myers' new comedy "The Love Guru," which opens on Friday, has already led to complaints from members of the Hindu community for "lampooning Hinduism and Hindus and using Hindu terms frivolously." Beliefnet has invited Hindu leaders, publications and groups,...
The New York Times has a great feature on adapting the 1960's television show "Get Smart" for the big screen, staying true to the spirit of the original and with in-jokes for the fans but updating it and making it...
An adventure-romance-comedy about a just-divorced couple who join forces in pursuit of sunken treasure reunited Kate Hudson and Matthew McConaughey of How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days. Despite the considerable -- and well-displayed -- charms of its stars,...
As the title suggests, there is a little bit of fairy tale moondust sprinkled over this story of a nine-year-old boy who runs away from his home in Mexico to find his mother in Los Angeles. As with all fairy...
Beliefnet's Paul Asay has put together a gallery list of movies about the apocalypse or the end of the world. Some are better as movies than others -- I thought "The Day After Tomorrow" was pretty poor. Some deal with...
As I have said many times, my very favorite DVDs for kids are the Scholastic Storybook Series of great children's books. The latest is Diary of a Spider... and More Cute Critter Stories. The title story is just what it...
This charming little fairy tale is more than a sweet and heart-warming story; it is a thoughtful exploration of the power of stories, why we are enthralled by hearing and watching them and why we are even more captivated by...
Mel Ferrer, who died this week, starred in one of my very favorite family movies, the musical Lili, with Leslie Caron. She is a lonely orphan whose only friends are three carnival puppets. Her natural interaction with them leads the...
Check out my Gallery of 10 of my all-time favorite movie dads. And check out Idol Chatter's list of the best TV dads. I love all the fathers on all the list and in the comments, especially Andy Griffith. I...
It seemed almost too good to be true. One of the best children's books of the 20th century, Where the Wild Things Are, written and directed by Maurice Sendak, was going to be made into a movie written and directed...
In honor of M. Night Shyamalan's new movie The Happening, Entertainment Weekly has prepared a list of the all-time best movies with twist endings. Don't worry -- the twists will not be revealed unless you ask for them. It's a...
I have always disliked the terms "Baby Mama" and "Baby Daddy." Originally they were used only to describe unmarried parents and the implication was that their connection through the baby or children was all that remained of their relationship. The...
Salon's Mark Schone wrote the most purely delightful article about finding clips of high school productions of Broadway musicals on You Tube. It includes everything from a German production of "West Side Story" to an Oklahoma production of..."Oklahoma." The clips...
The contest has arrived! I have three each of Cory in the House: Newt and Improved and Minutemen. Life in the White House or time travel -- take your pick. Both are great family fun. Send me an email at...
"American children get too little sleep, with major adverse implications for their cognitive ability, judgment, behavior and physical health," according to new study from the Kaiser foundation. There are many factors, but one of them is media. Children and adults...
The American Film Institute will be announcing the top movies in ten categories: Animated, Fantasy, Gangster, Sci-Fi, Western, Sports, Mystery, Romantic Comedy, Courtroom Drama and Epic Films. If you can guess #1 in each category, you can win $1000 in...
This week, both versions of the Faustian comedy Bedazzled are being released in one DVD and both are worth watching. The 1967 original, directed by Stanley Donen ("Singin' in the Rain") and starring British comedy duo Peter Cook and Dudley...
Take away the sumptuous settings and Hollywood glamour and what you have here is like Henry VIII for Dummies enacted by the cast of the OC. Natalie Portman plays Anne Boleyn, who became the second of Henry VIII's six wives...
The movie "Jumper" is 88 minutes on a pogo stick, hopping from teenage cliche to teenage cliche. You like the story about the high school nerd who pines for the class beauty and is tormented by her bully boyfriend? You're...
It's The Shawshank Redemption part two, or it tries to be. It has voiceover narration by Morgan Freeman. It has an inspiring and life-affirming friendship -- featuring Morgan Freeman. It just is not very good. If you've seen the trailer,...
Computers can sometimes be full characters in movies -- they play an important part in stories of all kinds -- adventure, science-fiction, even romance. The one thing movie portrayals of computers seldom are is accurate and people who actually work...
Kmart has a new promotion urging children to participate in its "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" giveaway. The movie is rated PG-13 "for adventure violence and scary images." PG-13 means that parents should be aware that...
One of my favorite authors spoke about one of my favorite subjects when Harry Potter author Joanne Rowling addressed the graduating class at Harvard University. Many commencement speakers urge the new graduates departing from the ivory tower to succeed in...
My brief podcast review of "Sex and the City" appears on The Takeaway, a co-production of WNYC Radio and Public Radio International, in collaboration with The BBC World Service, New York Times Radio and WGBH Boston....
This is for Lia and her wonderful listeners -- the trailer for "The Happening," M. Night Shyamalan's first R-rated thriller. It looks haunting and very, very scary!...
Every so often a dance comes along that is just tricky enough to take a little practice but with individual steps simple enough that anyone can do it. Think "Macarena." Soulja Boy's eponymous song and dance is in that category...
The Museum of the Moving Image has a fantastic and nostalgic online exhibit of classic 1980's video games like Frogger, Space Invaders, Pong, Missile Command, and of course Pac-Man. Best of all, you can download and play the games --...
Beliefnet's delightful Our Lady of Weight Loss is having a contest -- tell her your favorite food scene in a movie and you could win a copy of her book! Take a look and see if you can write a...
Movie maven Glenn Kenny has put together a list of the 25 top animated films for Moviefone. Lots of Disney classics, of course, like "Lady and the Tramp," "Dumbo," "Fantasia," "Cinderella," "Snow White," "Little Mermaid," and "Beauty and the Beast."...
I am so happy that Disney is releasing "The Sword in the Stone" on DVD! It is the story of young King Arthur, a medieval page who learns he is the true king of England. The wizard Merlin teaches him...
Mike Myers' upcoming movie, "The Love Guru" has sparked protests from Hindu groups even before its scheduled opening on June 20. Hindus have urged Viacom and its brand Paramount Pictures to post a study-guide about Hinduism and guru tradition on...
"Semi-Pro" is not even semi-funny. It takes what looks like an unmissable slam dunk of a premise and turns it into a big, noisy airball of a movie without a single truly funny moment. Will Ferrell in the 1970's --...
Lionsgate/HIT Entertainment announce a new narrator for this fall's upcoming feature-length Thomas the Tank Engine DVD release, "Thomas & Friends: The Great Discovery." Following the wonderful voiceover work from Ringo Starr, George Carlin, and Alec Baldwin is this glamorous leading...
I like Salon movie critic Andrew O'Hehir very much. He covers the less mainstream films, independent, foreign, and festival fare and I always enjoy his take on what he sees. He is on vacation this week and in something of...
Women & Spirituality is a three-part series about the power of the sacred feminine in mythological, historical and cultural contexts. Part 1, Goddess Remembered, examines goddess-based pre-historic societies, linking the loss of goddess-centered societies to environmental degradation. The second, The...
Movie Mom's Archives
Movie Mom's full archives of more than 1,400 reviews (including her 200 best films for families) and 400 blog posts is now on Beliefnet for searching.