Monthly Archives: July 2026

Excited for and Dreading Next Weekend

So, next weekend, July 17th, is the release of Nolan’s next film, his adaptation of The Odyssey. A

Universal Picture

movie that has already drawn fire from idiots online who believe that true beauty can only be represented by fair skin, blonde hair, and sky-blue eyes and has reignited the, from what I can tell, unjust attacks on Emily Wilson’s translation of the epic. I can’t see this two-bit controversy causing any damage to a film by Christopher Nolan and creator who managed to make a lengthy feature that focused on testimony in bland little rooms into an award-winning and box office monster. No, The Odyssey will do just fine, and my sweetie-wife and I will be there Sunday morning to see it on its opening weekend, but it will be a test of endurance as the reported running time is a staggering two hours and fifty-two minutes.

Clearly Nolan cares as little for his audience’s bladder health as he did for their respiratory health when he pushed Tenet into theaters while the COVID pandemic, a pandemic that killed a million Americans, still burned hot. Because the studio, Warner Brothers, delayed the film’s theatrical release, from its original July 2020 until September of that same year, Nolan severed his relationship with them and has since camped his productions at Universal.

Three hours without an intermission is hardly in the same category as expecting people to flock into a confined space while an airborne disease burns its way through the population, but it is also a sign that the filmmaker has little regard for the comfort of their audience. AMC theaters will be a little unhappy because while I plan to see this film, I have adored most of Nolan’s projects (Following is dumb and Interstellar is an overly cynical derivation of 2001: A Space Odyssey.) I will not, for my own comfort, be purchasing any size of diet soda from the concession stand.

When Quentin Tarantino released his nearly three-hour feature, The Hateful Eight, an enjoyable but ultimately lacking film, he included a limited run of a ‘roadshow’ release where the film was presented with an intermission. Nolan isn’t even giving us that. It’s a large-format film and nearly three hours but without a break for the audience.

Nolan is a talented director and writer, someone willing to challenge audiences with complex plots presented usually in a non-linear fashion, but I wish to the gods that he did not also challenge our biology as well.

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Do Not Become Republicans

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It would seem that, with the horrid and credible allegations surfacing about Platner, fate has bestowed upon Susan Collins, the GOP senator that promised to serve only two terms, a successful election returning her to the US Senate for a sixth term. Swapping out Platner this late in the cycle for another candidate, most likely the aged Janet Mills, is unlikely to produce an electoral victory for the Democrats, imperiling their quest to take control of the Senate from the spineless and corrupt Republicans.

Given the stakes involved, it is heartening that voices raised in support of Platner are, to quote the bard, ‘But few of any sort, and none of name.‘ However, this is a vital and important ethical juncture for the Democratic Party. The desire, the need, the critical importance of wrestling control of the Federal government and bringing vital checks on this rogue and unlawful administration is a goal that I deeply share but it must not become something so all-consuming that the quest for power renders all other considerations immaterial — that is the path that led, in part, to the GOP becoming captured by Trump and his slavish cult of personality.

Rightly or wrongly, for the last 20-30 years the Republican Party has become more and more myopic about the Democratic Party, seeing them not as a party with the same love of country but simply different policy goals but instead as an evil and wicked force that must be eradicated from the public sphere. The coordinated campaign destroying Bill Clinton was not about tax rates or welfare reform and the years and years spent investigating his supposed financial corruption and the endless berating on his lack of truthfulness were merely means to an end and not an application of principle. The defense and devotion to Trump reveals that lie all too plainly. It was the quest for power and total control that paid false fealty to our Republic while undermining it at every turn that ultimately led to acquiescing to a man who attempted to overthrow the government. And many in the GOP, but far from all, believed that they were on the side of the angels, quite literally, that their ‘just’ end excused every lie that escaped their lips until they welcomed racists and Nazis into their tent, until even the execution of citizens in the streets could be excused.

This is the warning to the Democratic Party, that the single-minded desire to do ‘whatever it takes’ to ‘save the nation’ can in the end damn that which you seek to rescue. I believe that the Republican party must be driven into the wilderness, to wander the trackless political desert until it has shed its sins, but to achieve that goal the Democratic Party must not become the very monsters that they combat.  It starts with Platner and doing what the Republicans are unable to do: throw a credibly accused rapist from the party.

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