with the gals away the movies will play

Wife and daughter out of town, visiting family in California — Mahattan Beach and San Fran. With them gone the house is empty and quiet. So to fill the void and my time I’ve been watching a lot of movies, more than I have in some time.

This weekend, among other movies, I watched:

The Informers, based on the Brett Eston Ellis book of the same title, which as been called a novel but seems more like connected stories. In any case, I’m interested in any works of BEE’s. Set in 1983-84, this is typical Ellis fair, involving rich LA young people that do a lot of drugs, have a lot of sex. Sort of the counter-view to, say, John Hughes version of the 80s, which much less ominous, more bubblegum pop. It didn’t do well at the theater, but I liked it, for the 80s details as much as anything else. Although one thing that seemed off was the that the girls’ hair styles seemed more late 90s, i.e. straight and blonde as opposed to done up with Aquanet and brown with frosted blonde highlights etc. But maybe things were diff in LA at the time.

Good performances all around, especially by Kim Basinger and Winona Ryder, who deserves more roles but for some reason seems to have gone a little undeground — very GenX. Mickey Rourke is a good scarey guy, as per usual. Billy Bob Thornton is okay, but I’ve never been a big fan of his anyway, especially since he fucked up All the Pretty Horses, although I’ve heard it was the studios doing more than his, but in any case a serious missed opportunity.

At this point, I think the only novel of Ellis that hasn’t been made into a movie or is in production to be made into one is Glamorama. But then Ellis is,  at least in part, bank rolling these projects. Perhaps the reason he moved from NYC back to LA area. He’s an ex-prod on this film. And it seems a worthy effort. Not as good as Less Than Zero and American Psycho but then the original material wasn’t as good so. But then those movies had actors in roles they were made play, baby — Robert Downey Jr. and Christian Bale.

Watchin’ Heathers

Wife and I are watching Heathers tonight. It is one of the best teen movies of the 80s. A cool, twisted dark comedy about teen suicide. And it has got to hold the record for great one-liners. They’re like fucking endless. Watching Heathers was Colleen’s idea. I’m not sure what brought it on. The other day she happened to mention that she thought her brother, a recent film school grad, should watch it. I agree.

Heahters came out in 1989. Same year NIN’s Pretty Hate Machine came out, right? Dark and twisted must have been in the air that year. Maybe that’s why I fled to Ypsilanti, to hide in Jones Hall on the campus of Eastern Michigan University. I knew it was coming. I could sense it somehow. Smell it.

Anyhoo… one of my favorite pointless activities is to search the web to find out what’s become of actors from old movies. In this case, Kim Walker, who played Heather Chandler, the head Heather, the first one to bite it in the movie.

Turns out KIm Walker died in 2001 of — wait for it — a brain tumor. Yeah. One of her more memorable lines in the movie was “Did you eat a brain tumor for breakfast.” Eep. Cue the Twilight Zone music. I learned this from a website called Find a Death. It provides details of the deaths of famous people, including photos of things like their homes and even headstones. Walker’s headstone is posted on it.

According to wikipedia.org:

She was dating co-star Christian Slater, but during the filming of Heathers, Slater ended their relationship and afterwards began dating the film’s star, Winona Ryder.

That’s harsh! Ouch!

Walk had mostly supporting roles after Heathers. She was in Say Anything. But retired from the business and 1990s according to IMDB. The last thing she was in something called Killing Cinderella.

Lisanne Falk, who played Heather McNamara, the chearleader, also had supporting role in Say Anything. The last thing she did was Casablanca in 2002, a short film.

Vernoica’s old friend, unpopular friend, Betty, is Renee Estevez, Martin Sheen’s daughter. She had a recurring role on West Wing.