Colin’s Top Ten Albums Of 2015

That’s right everybody, it’s that time of year again.  No, not Christmastime, you dummies.  That shit has come and gone, which of course leads us to the all-encompassingly depressing month that is January.  Luckily, we here at Mildly Pleased take a bit longer than most pop culture sites to get around to seeing/hearing everything that came out in a given year, because as you may know, we do this for free (which also explains why we have lived to see 2016, unlike several great pop culture sites that folded last year).  And therefore, we will begin unleashing our top ten albums, TV shows, and movies, as well as a podcast commemorating the year in mild pleasure in the coming weeks.

But as for 2015 in music, overall I’d say it was just an ok year for me.  If anything, it was a year where I probably felt myself becoming a little less open-minded towards the kinds of music I was seeking out.  Which might be a sign of me getting older, or might be a sign of me having lived with my own personal tastes long enough to know that if it doesn’t have guitars or a real drummer on it, I probably won’t like it.  So here are the albums that measured up to my ever-narrowing standard of what good music is… Continue reading

Sound and Fury

Macbeth

Remember how just after The Avengers became absolutely huge, Joss Whedon took some of his favorite actors and made a version of Much Ado About Nothing? Director Justin Kurzel must have really liked that idea, so much so that he got his big Shakespeare adaption out before he and star Michael Fassbender could start work on their big franchise movie, Assassin’s Creed. So instead of a palette cleanser, the Scottish play instead serves as a trial run for this cast and crew’s ability to do historical epics. And what a savage epic it is.

This depiction of the classic story of betrayal, murder, and karmic comeuppance emphasizes the war-torn Scotland that serves as the backdrop of most versions. A lot of Shakespeare’s plays are set around war, but this Macbeth is keen on showing not just the gritty battles featured in the play, but the toll it’s taking on everyone. It paints Macbeth himself (Fassbender) as something of a PTSD-sufferer, cloudy and uncertain after so much death. His increasingly warped mind and the uncertain times end up driving the action much more than the typical mastermind adaptations focus on, Lady Macbeth.

Lady Macbeth as played by Marion Cotillard is still the best performance of this movie, even though it felt like she was more of a schemer than the player she could have been. Her world seems to center around her husband; she wants him to have more power, she worries about his state of mind. Eventually she just wanders out of the picture, a shame since I really did feel like Cotillard was bringing it while Fassbender’s performance was a little too mumbly.

But the real star of this Macbeth is the aesthetics. Characters are dressed in beautiful costumes and always seem to have mud, blood, and paint all over themselves. The sets always felt cold, whether they were Scottish marshes, Macbeth’s tiny wooden home, or the vast castle rooms. This extends to the film’s color palette as well, which is desaturated save for bright, bloody reds. Clearly Macbeth is not set in a happy, easy world.

Finally, I must ask you how much you enjoy slow motion brutality. Because the movie’s big battles contain many slow motion shots, which may or may not work for you. This is a brooding movie, one that is at its best when it indulges in dark visual flourishes. Let me put it this way: I might not really have enjoyed a Fassbender/Cotillard Macbeth play, but Kurzel did enough as a director to make it an interesting film. Now let’s see how he does when the source material is a video game story so muddled not even Lady Macbeth could figure it all out.

Some Kind of Movie – Ep. 6: That’s Not How the Force Works!

We good on spoilers now? It’s a new year, you’ve had two whole weeks to go see the new Star Wars movie and forget about it, along with everything else, in a wonderful night of drinking. Let us help you remember The Force Awakens as we talk about the things that worked, the things that didn’t work, and try to figure out exactly what kind of movie it is. That’s the point of these rare Some Kind of Movie episodes, after all. And just to be clear: we’re not trying to spoil anything for you, but we are talking about the plot of this movie in detail. We are operating under the assumption you’ve seen this movie. If you haven’t, go see it first. Everyone else did. Do you really wanna be the only one who didn’t? Is that the reason you want people to think you’re special for? That’s a lame reason. Learn to play the piano or something. Don’t define yourself be the experiences you avoided.

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