Evan Mather

Evan Mather lives just outside of Chicago and is a full-time student with hopes to eventually earn his Masters in Library Science. He spends his limited free time with his wife and cats, subjecting them to his cinematic, musical, literary and culinary interests. Sometimes this is a good thing, and sometimes it is not.

 

(Warning: I will try to avoid spoilers where possible, but there are bound to be some sprinkled throughout.  Proceed with caution.)

Bicycle Thieves (1948)

A truly classic film is a perfect convergence of technical skill and innovation with an eloquence of emotion and honest humanity, an alchemy that is difficult both to replicate or quantify.  (Ironically, quantifying that is the job of the film critic.  Oops.)  The quintessential Italian Neo-Realist film Bicycle Thieves, an undeniable classic, is so affecting because of its simplicity.  A man in post-WWII Rome, in economic times that make what we’re living through seem like the Roaring ’20s, is lucky enough to get a job hanging posters around the city.  His family pawns most of their belongings in exchange for a bicycle, which is essential to him keeping the job that is the family’s only hope.  Of course, (SPOILER!) the bicycle is stolen, with the remainder of the movie following the man and his young son searching the city for the stolen bike.  What breaks my heart (besides the boy’s cherub-like face, all pudgy and wide-eyed) is the man’s constant loss of dignity in front of his son, first because of his inability to shield him from the harsh, unforgiving world (a parental duty that, in the end, everyone fails at), and in his failure as a role model to his son, as he is driven to make moral compromises to protect his family.  As he makes the movie’s title plural, he sacrifices his own soul to put bread on his family’s table, and the shock and realization that his father is as flawed as anyone reflected on the boy’s face is enough to send me over the edge. …Continue reading this entry

 

Read all about Nate and Evan’s sausage fest!

 

There are too many films to see.  My DVR is packed to the brim (granted, Golden Girls reruns are somewhat to blame for that), and I’ve only been to the theater to see a new movie twice all year.  So going back to revisit movies I’ve already seen seems completely out of the question. Some movies, though, not only deserve re-watching, but demand it.

…Continue reading this entry

 

I’ve made it a sort of life’s mission to sing the praises of unrecognized greatness in the realm of pop-culture. It breaks my heart when great works of art don’t get their due respect, so I shout like a crazy man to anyone that will listen, touting the merits of some obscure book or neighborhood restaurant or indie flick that has unjustly remained off of most people’s radar. …Continue reading this entry

 

We’ve all got movie blind-spots, even those of us that consider ourselves pretty culturally aware. Until the past year, I’d never seen such cinema classics as Raging Bull, Lawrence of Arabia, or Sunset Blvd., and A Clockwork Orange, The Seventh Seal, or On the Waterfront still remain on my ever-growing list of movies I have yet to see. …Continue reading this entry

 

All pop culture is a window into a society’s psyche.  Film noir was a response to the horrors of World War II and the emergence of women in the workplace.  Punk rock countered the rampant commercialism and over-production in music during the mid-late 1970s.  The cultural revolution of the mid- late 1960s is, almost definitely, the most drastic societal shift of the past century, when the baby boom generation came of age and almost everything changed.  This shift was evident in the music of the time (the rise of rock and roll), the literature (Ken Kesey, Kurt Vonnegut, Allen Ginsburg, etc.), and the films of the moment.  Mark Harris’ book Pictures at a Revolution: Five Movies and the Birth of the New Hollywood studies this sea change by looking at the whole of film, and the general culture, through a narrowly focused lens – the movies competing for the Oscar for Best Picture at the 1968 Academy Awards. …Continue reading this entry

 

Music and driving.  Like Mork and Mindy, Sodom and Gomorrah, or lamb and tuna fish, they are perfect partners.  I’ve already talked about some of my personal favorite driving songs here, but I’m busy preparing for two upcoming road trips, so it’s been on my mind lately.  I won’t be around for a few days (off on an aforementioned road trip), so I thought I’d get a conversation going about some of our personal favorite traveling songs, kicking it off with my own list of 10 lesser-known songs that always make my right foot feel a bit heavier. …Continue reading this entry

 

As anyone who knows me can attest, I have two main passions in life (after my rubber ducky collection): film and pop music.  Those rare times when both come together, like chocolate and peanut butter, to enhance one another and make something that transcends the power and beauty of either piece alone.  These are some of my personal favorites.  Some are well-known and fairly obvious (but usually, the well-known ones are popular for a reason), and some are less so, but they’re the ones I love. …Continue reading this entry

 

One month from today, the fourth season of Mad Men, which is now officially my favorite show currently airing on TV, will premiere on AMC.  I know this show isn’t lacking in the “buzz” department – it has taken the place of The Wire and The Sopranos (which is truly this show’s antecedent, in tone and theme) as what is widely considered the pinnacle of television’s current offerings. …Continue reading this entry

 

The answer, my friend...

I, like most rational people, love summer.  But as my nitpicky wife (who I love very, very much) has been reminding me for the past month, “Summer doesn’t start until June 21st!”  To which I always reply, “Yeah, but it feels like summer.”  I work at a high school, so I’ve been off work.  The air is heavy and potent with humidity and electricity.  The days stretch out endlessly, yet there never seem to be enough of them.  I don’t care what the official cutoff date is – it’s summer. …Continue reading this entry

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