
 2009 has certainly ended on a good note (minus all the financial problems and the 24 hours I spent stranded in the Atlanta airport—I love snow, but not when it leaves me stuck in an airport with nothing but Tiger Woods coverage on CNN for entertainment).  I enjoyed Avatar a lot, even if it didn’t change the way I think about cinema for all time.  A great 3-D action adventure yarn with jaw-dropping visuals and fun action sequences is good enough.  I didn’t walk out yammering about how beautiful it was like I did after Titanic (Yeah, that’s right, I went crazy over Titanic like a 13 year old girl—what are you going to do about it?) but James Cameron has yet to make a bad movie.  And though it’s gotten a lot less attention, I also had a ton of fun with Sherlock Holmes.  It was more my style than Avatar—I don’t know about you, but I’ll take any story set in Victorian London over any story set in outer space any day of the week.  Add in black magic mixed with 19th Century science, the always excellent Robert Downey Jr., and a complicated plot right out of a 1900s pulp magazine, and you’ve sold me.  Both movies had a similar tone of wide-eyed adventure that made them feel tailor made for the 12 year old in all of us—they’re the kind of stories you find in yellowed old books in a box in the basement, Robert E. Howard and Edgar Allen Poe and Rudyard Kipling and the Hardy Boys and H.P. Lovecraft filtered through an explosion of modern special effects and thrilling soundtracks.  What’s not to like?
2009 has certainly ended on a good note (minus all the financial problems and the 24 hours I spent stranded in the Atlanta airport—I love snow, but not when it leaves me stuck in an airport with nothing but Tiger Woods coverage on CNN for entertainment).  I enjoyed Avatar a lot, even if it didn’t change the way I think about cinema for all time.  A great 3-D action adventure yarn with jaw-dropping visuals and fun action sequences is good enough.  I didn’t walk out yammering about how beautiful it was like I did after Titanic (Yeah, that’s right, I went crazy over Titanic like a 13 year old girl—what are you going to do about it?) but James Cameron has yet to make a bad movie.  And though it’s gotten a lot less attention, I also had a ton of fun with Sherlock Holmes.  It was more my style than Avatar—I don’t know about you, but I’ll take any story set in Victorian London over any story set in outer space any day of the week.  Add in black magic mixed with 19th Century science, the always excellent Robert Downey Jr., and a complicated plot right out of a 1900s pulp magazine, and you’ve sold me.  Both movies had a similar tone of wide-eyed adventure that made them feel tailor made for the 12 year old in all of us—they’re the kind of stories you find in yellowed old books in a box in the basement, Robert E. Howard and Edgar Allen Poe and Rudyard Kipling and the Hardy Boys and H.P. Lovecraft filtered through an explosion of modern special effects and thrilling soundtracks.  What’s not to like?  That's my main hope for 2010. A philosophy, not a resolution; resolutions so often become an albatross around our neck. I spent so much time in the last decade doing the same things over and over again every day that the time just flew by, and in many ways I’m in the same place on New Year’s Eve 2009 that I was on New Year’s Eve of 1999—in fact, I’m literally in the same place at the moment. So many of the days bleed into the next because I’ve allowed them all to become exactly the same, and before I know it years and years have gone by. So for 2010, and for the next decade, it’s important that I try to do things differently every day, to find the variety in life even if it’s something very small. There’s more than enough out there to make every day unique and memorable, all we have to do is spend a little time looking for it. If not, life might end up like Los Angeles weather—pleasant, but not very interesting.
So goodbye, 2009. Let’s all hope for a better 2010!
 

































