Comfy Cozy Cinema: The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill and Came Down a Mountain

Lisa from Boondock Ramblings and I are back to watching and sharing about comfy cozy (and as we move closer to Halloween, spookier) movies for the fall season. Feel free to join in with us!!

This week’s movie is The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill and Came Down a Mountain. A very long title for a cute little movie.

This was such a sweet little movie about one of my favorite things, a quirky little small town that is full of community. Rotten Tomatoes describes it as “With an ample serving of Huge Grant’s trademark charm, a quirky Welsh town comes together to put their town on the map in this feel-good folksy tale.”

And that is a very simplistic way of looking at this film, since there was a much deeper story under it all, but I will get to that later.

On the surface, this movie is about well, a man (and his boss) who arrive in the small town of Ffynnon Garw, Wales. WWI is still raging, and most of the younger men, sons, brothers, fathers, are off serving in trenches in France. It’s a rough time for people, wartime, full of worry and hardship. But one source of pride the townspeople have is their claim to fame -their mountain.

The rug is pulled out from under them however when two English surveyors (Hugh Grant as Anson and Ian Macniece as Garrad) come to town, and remeasure the mountain – and find out it is a hill. It’s almost like the town visibly deflates. And the Reverend and his nemesis, Morgan the Goat, decide that the English are not going to steal this from them (lots of English vs. Wales banter in this movie). Morale is low, and they need every bit they can to keep a stiff upper lip and all that.

And from there the shenanigans begin. The town works together not only to build up the hill an extra twenty feet to put it over the measurement required to make it a mountain on the map, but to delay the departure of Anson and Garrad. Anson is sheepish, adorable, and affable, while Garrad is a bit of a dandy curmudgeon. His outfits and poses cracked me up. The scene where they were going up the mountain and Garrad was just sprawled out on the ground made me laugh and almost wake my child up. He always looked fabulous though despite his attitude.

The other supporting characters and actors in this were fantastic as well. Colm Meany as Morgan the Goat, was a bit of a slimy character who I didn’t really care for. But Betty played by Tara Fitzgerald was my favorite, besides Hugh Grant, of course. I am sure they are everyone’s favorite characters though. (also adding I love her in I Capture the Castle) She was drawn into the plan to stall the two surveyors by Morgan the Goat, who wanted her to charm and seduce Anson, whose head was turned but he “was a gentleman” which melted Betty’s heart in turn. She made me laugh as well, with some of her comments, like when Anson and Betty were talking about the beauty of some flowers and Anson said they were pretty, and Betty replied with “Not as pretty as me… YOU’RE supposed to say that.” It was just a cute little moment.

There were some serious issues however tackled, regarding the war, especially the PTSD, or shellshocked as they referred to it back then, that the returning men suffered. Johnny Shellshock just about broke my heart, and doubly so knowing that this is such a real thing, then and now.

This whole movie is based on a folktale, and I legit thought it was true because of the ending of the movie, but after reading about it this morning, I learned it is not. Which I am sort of sad that it is not, although I was a little weirded out by one part and was glad that it didn’t really happen.

And now, just some gratuitous images of Hugh Grant because he is adorable.

Overall, this movie is a fun, charming, sweet movie. One for a night when you need a bit of cozy and happy to fill your soul.

You can find Lisa’s post here!

Next week is our last movie this time around, and we are watching The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry.

I hope that whatever you do today, you do something that makes you smile!

Comfy Cozy Cinema: A Knight’s Tale

 Lisa from Boondock Ramblings and I are back to watching and sharing about comfy cozy (and sometimes, chilling) movies for the fall season. Feel free to join in with us!!

This week’s feature is A Knight’s Tale!

When Lisa told me her list of movies and I read this one on it, I was so excited. I love this movie so much! Billy and I have watched it countless times over the years, it is just such a fun movie!

First though, let me just say had he lived, I think Heath Ledger would have done such big things. He was already on his way, and had been in so many movies with so many amazing performances. Rest in Peace Heath.

This movie as summarized by Rotten Tomatoes: “Peasant-born William Thatcher (Heath Ledger) begins a quest to change his stars, win the heart of an exceedingly fair maiden (Shanynn Sossamon) and rock his medieval world. With the help of friends (Mark Addy, Paul Bettany, Alan Tudyk), he faces the ultimate test of medieval gallantry — tournament jousting — and tries to discover if he has the mettle to become a legend.”

“He’s blonde! He’s pissed! He’ll see you in the lists – Liechtenstein!”

Heath Ledger plays William Thatcher, who upon the death of the knight he was page for, assumes the role of a knight himself, with the very fun moniker of Sir Ulrich von Liechtenstein – which is highly entertaining to hear Paul Bettany, in his role as Chaucer, say. I remember being all nerdily excited about the whole Chaucer and Knight’s Tale when this came out. Lol.

William slowly begins to be a force to be reckoned with, and he collects his own court of misfits along the way. Kate the blacksmith, who I love, Paul Bettany as Chaucer who really did add so much excitement and build up to the jousts and the movie itself, Mark Addy as Roland, a more down to earth, sensible character within the coterie, and Alan Tudyk as Wat, who is fabulously funny in everything he is in. They are like a little medieval found family, and I love it.

There is of course romance, with William courting Lady Jocelyn, played by Shannyn Sossaman. (whatever happened to her?)

However, the best part of this movie is the music. I loved this era of introducing modern music into different eras, like all of Baz Luhrman’s Romeo and Juliet and Moulin Rouge, and of course Knight’s Tale (not Luhrman, A Knight’s Tale was directed by Brian Helgeland). Them dancing to David Bowie was the best! It never fails to make me smile and bop along.

We of course have to have a villain, and Rufus Sewell as Count Adhemar was brilliant. You seriously hated him. Billy and I still like to deliver his line “You have been weighed, you have been measured, and you have been found wanting” about certain things (not each other obviously). Sewell was so scheming and scathing, and smug, and just….creepy. He was sooo good at playing the bad guy.

But the best part of this movie was William Thatcher visiting his father. It brought a tear to my eyes, honestly. And that is another thing Billy and I say to each other as well, when we need a little inspiring – we tell each other we need to change our stars, just like William.

And that is what this movie is about deep down isn’t it? Once you remove the dance numbers and music and silliness, it is about hope and believing in yourself and believing things can change. And if you need something that makes you smile, makes you laugh, and gives you hope right now, A Knight’s Tale is the perfect movie for all of those.

And that is it from me today! Stay tuned – next week we are watching and talking about The Five Year Engagement!

Pop on over to Lisa’s post too! You can find it here! Today is Little Miss’s birthday so it will probably be up a little later!

Comfy Cozy Cinema: Benny & Joon

 Lisa from Boondock Ramblings and I are back to watching and sharing about comfy cozy (and sometimes, chilling) movies for the fall season. Feel free to join in with us!! Our link will be live for a whole week after we post about a movie. 

This week’s feature, and first of the season, is Benny & Joon!

I was a 90s teen/early adult and somehow I never saw this movie. Even though I had a huge thing for Johnny Depp back then. Somehow, I just never watched it. I am so glad that Lisa chose this one so I could rectify that wrong!

The quick synopsis from Netflix: “Benny is the overprotective caretaker of his mentally ill but artistically talented sister, Joon, who falls in love with an eccentric comedian.”

Benny has been the caregiver for Joon for twelve years, not all of them smooth judging by the sound of how quickly they go through housekeepers aka Joon minders, but it is working, at least on the surface. They are surviving, but not necessarily thriving. Benny spends his days at work and coming home and taking care of Joon, which basically means keeping her company and keeping her safe. Joon spends her days painting and reading for the most part, but she does have a tendency to wander unsafely and start fires.

Her mental illness in the movie is undefined, and unlabeled. I read online that that was something that was done on purpose, to represent and appeal to a broader audience, but her symptoms seem to indicate that she is schizophrenic. She has emotional outbursts that can be violent, throwing things, etc, hears voices, can possibly self-harm. After they lose their latest housekeeper, Benny has a conversation with Joon’s psychologist who indicates that Joon might be better off in a group home. Not because she is unmanageable, but because she might learn different ways to deal with some of her challenges that Benny is unaware of. Basically, the gist is that both Benny and Joon could use some changes in order to live their best lives.

When Sam (Johnny Depp) enters their lives in a very non-conventional way, things begin to change. He is also a quirky character, and serves as a bridge between Benny’s world and Joon’s. I actually spent a good deal of the movie trying to decide if he was also diagnosed neurodivergent, although it wasn’t ever said. Regardless, he was talented at slapstick, Buster Keaton style comedy, a great housekeeper, and he “got” Joon.

Of course there is a tension and drama and misunderstandings, but you will have to watch to see.

I really enjoyed this movie. I somehow missed how good looking Aidan Quinn was in the 90s. And Johnny Depp and Julianne Moore look like such babies in this movie! Really they all do, Aidan Quinn and Mary Stuart Masterson, Oliver Platt. Sigh. Weren’t the 90s just like the other day?

Johnny Depp did a great job with the physical comedy in this movie. His acting otherwise was sort of all about with his eyes. Like he was just trying to emote the whole movie with them. Staring and trying to communicate with a look. This was the beginning of his career, and I could see where he was testing out new waters. Lots of this face though. This was probably due to the Buster Keaton mien he was embodying, as Keaton was known for his blank, stoic, deadpan faces. I did like when Joon compared him to Boo Radley though. I think Johnny Depp just didn’t have quite the stone face quality, although he tried. He is just too pretty and he looked like a sad little puppy. (that I just want to hug)

I also really liked the hard working, midwestern feel to this movie. It just felt very familiar and homey. Oh that reminds me -their house! I could not get over that house. It was amazing. I am all about a good setting and it was so full of character and charm, with big windows open to the outside, and rooms full of color and plants and paint and art and odd bits.

Overall, I really enjoyed this whole movie. I think everyone did a wonderful job capturing these characters, breathing life into what could have been a story that was predictable and flat.

Have you seen this movie? Feel free to share your thoughts here or link up! And be sure to stop by Lisa’s post as well!

Our next movie is: A Knight’s Tale. Another Lisa pick and one of my favorite comedies.

Springtime in Paris: Charade

Hello everyone!! Welcome to week six of our Paris film journey!  Lisa from Boondock Ramblings and I wanted fun and whimsy and beauty this spring, and although an actual trip to Paris in the spring would be better, a film journey will have to do.

This was our final week viewing movies set in Paris, and I feel like we saw six very different stories. It was fantastic, and I had so much fun!

Our final movie was Charade, starring Audrey Hepburn and Cary Grant.

I was very excited about this movie! I love both of these actors, and I could not wait to see them on screen together. I didn’t know what to expect at all, and I can guarantee you had I thought about it, I would never have imagined this movie and dynamic.

First, let’s see how Rotten Tomatoes sums it up. “After Regina Lampert (Audrey Hepburn) falls for the dashing Peter Joshua (Cary Grant) on a skiing holiday in the French Alps, she discovers upon her return to Paris that her husband has been murdered. Soon, she and Peter are giving chase to three of her late husband’s World War II cronies, Tex (James Coburn), Scobie (George Kennedy) and Gideon (Ned Glass), who are after a quarter of a million dollars the quartet stole while behind enemy lines. But why does Peter keep changing his name?”

Hmm where to begin! First, this cast was pretty spectacular. Besides our two leads, we have Walter Matthau, James Coburn, and George Kennedy. I don’t think I had ever seen any of those men young before so that was interesting in itself! James Coburn was terrifying, honestly, as Tex. There was a scene where he had Hepburn’s character, Reggie, trapped, and was flicking lit matches at her and it was very creepy! It was a well shot scene, and Coburn played menacing very well.

This movie was crazy and all over the place and I liked the chaos. Hepburn and Grant meet while she is on vacation in the Alps, and they have a strange conversation about divorce and views and are they now friends, etc. She has already stated that she is planning to divorce her husband, as neither of them love each other, so when she returns home and learns her husband is dead, she is not super upset over it. She is a bit confused, as she doesn’t know why anyone would want to kill him, or why he would have chosen to sell everything in their apartment, or where the money from that sale is. Which is the point of the movie. Just where is that money, because everyone wants it.

Hepburn’s character is that of a cute little imp, slightly scattered and irreverent, silly, yet she has a pretty important job as a simultaneous translator. She meets with all of these different men, Walter Matthau of the CIA, Jacques Marin of the Paris police (who was also in How to Steal a Million), the men who knew her husband during the war, and while she takes them seriously, there is also an air of.. je ne sais quoi about her. She is hard to describe and summarize, which I enjoyed.

She cracked me up in her pursuit of Grant’s character. It was very cheeky on her part, and he seemed to do his best to hold her at bay, in his own goofy way. I read online that this was Grant’s last role as a leading man, as he felt weird about the age gap, and that they actually changed the script around so that Hepburn was chasing Grant, rather than Grant chasing Hepburn. They felt it would be more palatable to the viewers. There is one scene where Hepburn “traps” Grant in her hotel room by trickery, and that scene might have been slightly off putting if done differently. First, if Grant had done that to her, it would have come off very differently to the audience; in this scene though, it was more like two kids playing, and that was because of how the two treated it. Hepburn slammed the door shut and laughed and Billy and I had a chuckle because it reminded us of The Count Van Count from Sesame Street laughing, and the expression on her face was very open and just like it seemed, like “ha ha ha”. Grant’s character took it in stride and handled the whole thing in a very goofy way as well, by showering in his suit.

I thought their dynamic was just so playful and friendly in this movie. I think it was obvious that the two enjoyed each other’s company in a platonic way, that they were just good friends having a lark, and that this was all good fun for them. I enjoyed just watching the two of them interact much more than I cared about where the money was or who the killer was or figuring out the mystery.

The two remained friends throughout their lives. I found this on the Christie’s website, and it just seems so perfect.

Hepburn and Grant met for the first time in a Paris restaurant just before filming began on Charade, introduced by their mutual friend and director Stanley Donen. Audrey, admitting she was terribly nervous, knocked over a bottle of red wine, staining Grant’s cream suit. Donen wrote the funny incident into the film, when Hepburn as Reggie accidentally tosses a scoop of ice cream onto Grant’s jacket. Like all Hepburn’s leading men, with the possible exception of Bogart, Grant was instantly charmed by her, telling a reporter after filming All I want for Christmas is another movie with Audrey Hepburn.

As evidenced in Grant’s playful letter, the co-stars remained affectionate friends. Years after Grant’s death in 1986, Hepburn reminisced Cary – such a lovely souvenir in my life… He had me down flat the minute he met me. I think he understood me better than I did myself.

And I have wandered a bit away from the movie itself, but that is ok, right?

And that my friends, is a wrap on Springtime in Paris! I hope that you have enjoyed it as much as I have. Thank you to everyone who has commented and watched and posted along with us! I have enjoyed reading your thoughts on these movies!!

Did you watch? What do you think of this movie? Feel free to comment and/or link up with us!

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Thank you again everyone!

Springtime in Paris: Paris Blues

Hello everyone!! Welcome to week three of our Paris film journey! Lisa from Boondock Ramblings and I wanted fun and whimsy and beauty this spring, and although an actual trip to Paris in the spring would be better, a film journey will have to do. We are having great fun, and hope you will journey along with us!

However, this week’s movie is not exactly the most lighthearted of our picks, but it was a wonderful movie all the same. I really enjoyed the vibe, ya dig?

This movie stars some big names! Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Sidney Poitier, Diahann Carroll, Louis Armstrong! That last one was shocking to me! Louis Armstrong! How cool is that?

The Rotten Tomatoes synopsis of this movie states “Despite being far from home, American jazz musicians Ram Bowen (Paul Newman) and Eddie Cook (Sidney Poitier) are content living and working in Paris. Ram knows it’s the best place for him to develop his musical reputation, and Eddie is far away from the racism that once greeted him on a regular basis. But after meeting and falling in love with American tourists Lillian (Joanne Woodward) and Connie (Diahann Carroll), the pair must decide whether their artistic integrity is worth abandoning.”

The bohemian vibe in this movie was awesome. I think it perfectly encapsulates the jazz scene, the clubs full of people smoking and drinking, the casual relationships, the cocaine use (what!), the commitment to art, and of course, the discussion of racism. It felt very different from so many old movies I have watched, but I loved it.

Paul Newman (Ram) is a trombone player in a jazz band, and he is one of those married to the music this is my life kinda guys. We all knew those guys right? In my day they all played bass guitar, but hey, this was another time. He is living his bliss, playing music nightly with his band, picking up chicks, and definitely not getting wrapped up in long term serious relationships. Sidney Poitier (Eddie) is also living his dream, performing as a musician, and not one that is qualified as a Black Musician. In Paris, he is just a musician. Paris did not have the racism that was/is found in the United States, and this stretches as far back at least as far as the Civil War era, when Black people from the States could even move to Paris and receive an education, become doctors, provided they had the financial means or support to do so. And I am going off on a tangent here so I am going to rein this back in.

So these two hepcats were out here living their dream, and then in waltzes two American women who turn their heads and make them question what it is they really want. Diahann Carroll (Connie) and Joanne Woodward (Lillian) are in Paris for some good times on their two week trip.

At first, Ram hits on Connie, although later, Eddie and Connie fall in love while Lillian and Ram pair up and fall in love as well. I did read that this movie was intended to have Newman and Carroll in a relationship but that the director chickened out.

Ram and Lillian waste no time of her two week trip getting to know each other, with Ram and Lillian sharing a bed the next morning after meeting. Eddie and Connie seem to be always outside, soaking up the walks of Paris, and Eddie even mentions how they like to walk and Paris is a city to be walked. Or something like that.

I did have a giggle at one point, when Eddie and Connie are out. He buys her a huge bouquet of flowers that after what seems like fifty feet she says she can’t carry. Eddie takes them from her and gently lays them on a hill next to the sidewalk, and says they will leave them there with a note saying that lovers can take a flower. But then he and Connie just immediately leave, without writing that note! I chatted Lisa, what the heck! They didn’t leave that note! Eddie and Connie’s relationship seems deeper yet more innocent, with them outside all the time, in gardens and on the streets. I loved when Eddie told Connie that he loved her, it seemed so happy and joyful and yet also held I think a bit of surprise, but I mean Poitier was an amazing actor. I was much more interested in him and his story actually, than Ram and Lillian’s. Despite their love for another though, Eddie did not want to return to America with Connie. Why should he, when in Paris he can be himself, and America is segregated and violent at the time? I didn’t necessarily blame him, although Connie makes some compelling arguments.

While Eddie and Connie are having their affair on the streets of Paris, Ram and Lillian are doing their thing as well. And same, Lillian wants Ram to return to America as well. But he is too freewheeling to consider it, and he his has music to think of. Paris offers so much in building his musical education – can he give that up? And he would be a stepdad too, or at least Lillian has two children so there would be children involved if he went back, even for a trial year. So much to consider and weigh. Where does his heart really lie?

The jazz scenes in this movie were amazing. When I was a teen, this was totally the vibe I wanted to serve, all bohemian and ultra cool. My friends and I would go to this coffeehouse called the Mad Hatter and think we were cool and smoke cigarettes and drink coffee and listen to jazz, which at the time I actually really didn’t like. I didn’t start to like actual jazz until much later in my life. I would totally have been all up in that jazz club (cave? was it a cavern?) had I been in Paris at that time. So I really enjoyed those scenes, especially the scene where Ram and Louis Armstrong have this amazing jam session. Can you imagine jamming with Armstrong?

Ok, so I am going to talk about the end of the movie here so skip this if you don’t want spoilers.

After receiving some bad news about his compostions, Ram decides to leave Paris with Lillian. Eddie is going to go back to America with Connie, although he is not leaving immediately. He and Connie and Lillian are all at the station, waiting for Ram. When Ram arrives though, he has bad news. He is not going. He can’t go. He needs to stay, his music is too important. And Lillian leaves him with a few words, a going away present she says, even though it sounded more like a curse, delivered in the most beautiful broken hearted way. She says that he will never forget her, that no matter where he walks he will see her, and he will always know that no one will be as right for him as she was. Then she turns around and disappears into the train station, that looks so much like a Monet painting that I had to look it up, and Ram is standing there alone, and the soundtrack starts playing jazz music and that is that as he walks away. It was an intense emotional scene, in my opinion, and I thought it was so well done.

If you haven’t seen this, I highly recommend it. You don’t need to be a jazz fan or enthusiast to enjoy it – just a person who loves a good romance, set in one of the most romantic places on earth.

You can find Lisa’s review here!

Did you watch? What do you think of this movie? Feel free to comment and link up with us!

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Next up is Hugo!

Friday Morning Coffee Catch Up

Hello everyone!! I am drinking my coffee today out of one my new favorite mugs, this one by Danica Studios. I am on a personal quest to replace my mugs with only ones that make me happy, which might sound absurd but..it’s the small things in life, right?

I just wanted to start this post today by saying my blog is my politics free zone.

I don’t think I have shared Halloween with you all, and I want to. So let’s throw this post right back to October!

The Saturday night before Halloween, Wyatt and I went to the Jack O’Lantern journey at the Detroit Zoo. Billy was supposed to go too, but he hurt his ankle working on Wyatt’s ramp that day, and wasn’t going to be able to manage all of the walking we were going to do. I was a bit nervous about taking Wyatt on my own, which is weird because I am not generally like that. I think because it was going to be dark so fast and I had to drive home through the city at night, but despite being a bit nervous, we went. And I am so glad that we did. We missed Billy of course, but Wyatt and I had a complete blast. We stayed so much later than I anticipated. We were just having such a good time together.

We came home in very high “spirits” and had lots to share with Billy. We bought these tickets as part of a package deal with their Christmas lights display, and now I am looking forward to holiday lights!

The next day was more Halloween shenanigans, with a visit to my dad and stepmom’s house. My stepmom had arranged a whole cookie and cupcake array for the kids to decorate (and eat). She had all of the candy decorations all pre-cut and in little bowls, frosting made, even edible eyes! It was really cool and the kids had a blast. Little Hurricane girl even sat on my lap and made cookies with me!

As you can see, the kids thoroughly enjoyed the day.

After all of our pre-Halloween activities, we were so excited when the big day finally came! Wyatt wanted to be a snail, which turned out pretty good if I do say so myself! I went as a mushroom and Billy wore a shirt with morels on it that said “I’m a fungi”. Lol. We cracked ourselves up.

Phew and now we have made it through Halloween!!

Finally, Billy and I celebrated our 24th anniversary on the 4th! We are old y’all. Wyatt’s grandma watched him for a few hours while we went out for sushi. We went to a place called The Goblin in Detroit (you know I loved that name) and ordered the Penguin tray to split. Now, the Penguin is supposed to come with a cute little rice penguin. But I wanted the panda that comes with the Panda tray lol, and the very nice owner made sure that I got a panda. I am weird. The employee/owner guy was super nice. We really enjoyed chatting with him. The restaurant is small, with maybe six tables total, but does a brisk carry out business. And the sushi was absolutely delicious. We will definitely be returning. And luckily it is not too far from where Billy works, so it would be very easy for Billy to pick up sushi on his way home. We had such a great time together and we need to go out the two of us more often.

Those are all of the big things that happened. We also had slow days, days where we just did school and therapy, sat outside in the sun, painted, played with our menagerie of creatures. And we even added two new babies, two little African clawed frogs that we named Hurkel and Durkel. They are so derpy, I love them.

And now for some random photos!

And that my friends is all for today! I hope that whatever you do today, you do something that makes you smile!

Comfy Cozy Cinema: Bringing Up Baby

 Lisa from Boondock Ramblings and I are back to watching and sharing about comfy cozy (and sometimes, chilling) movies for the fall season. Feel free to join in with us!! Our link will be live for a whole week after we post about a movie. 

We had a last minute movie shake up! We were supposed to watch Skylark – then learned that we couldn’t find it available anywhere! Lisa switched it out to Bringing up Baby, starring Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn, and it was adorable.

I just want to start by saying that Cary Grant was an attractive man, no denying it, but seriously he never looked better than he did as a dino nerd, the slightly awkward paleontologist David Huxley. Dang.

Now, the summary before I get really started. “Harried paleontologist David Huxley (Cary Grant) has to make a good impression on society matron Mrs. Random (May Robson), who is considering donating one million dollars to his museum. On the day before his wedding, Huxley meets Mrs. Random’s high-spirited young niece, Susan Vance (Katharine Hepburn), a madcap adventuress who immediately falls for the straitlaced scientist. The ever-growing chaos — including a missing dinosaur bone and a pet leopard — threatens to swallow him whole.” (From theromcomcatalog)

I loved this movie! Maybe because on some level this movie made me think of Billy and I; he often calls me Calamity as my nickname because well, I guess he thinks I can be a bit of a Calamity. And he wouldn’t be wrong. Billy is much more rational and practical than I am; I get us into all sorts of predicaments, all none of them as cool as what happened in this movie.

So. David is supposed to be married to a woman named Alice Swallow, who is his assistant at the museum. It is never really said why other than that it is for his career, and it sounds like it will be a business-like, staid marriage. No honeymoon, no children. Just work. Which, yuck. David doesn’t seem too thrilled with that but kind of shrugs it off. Neither are madly in love with the other, so that makes what happens the rest of the movie ok.

Enter Susan Vance, portrayed by Katharine Hepburn. She is wealthy, has an even wealthier aunt, and is a bit of a scatterbrain. She is also very impulsive and flighty. And, she has a leopard! Her brother who is in Brazil sent it her way, and while it seems rather tame she can’t keep it in her apartment either, and convinces David to help her drive it out to her country house.

We get a taste of the madcap crazy in the beginning when the two meet, but it doesn’t really escalate until they reach the countryside. It is one thing after another, crazy schemes and situations and misunderstandings and dogs and leopards and car thefts and running around the woods and country at night. It was a wild trip!

Grant and Hepburn were fantastic and just kept the frantic energy up the whole movie, complete with witty remarks and exasperation. When David meets Susan’s aunt, he is clothed in a negligee of Susan’s and has no idea that he is meeting the woman he is hoping will donate money to the museum and kind of releases some of his frustration at his situation on her. Susan tries to cover up for his behavior by telling his aunt that he is a man named David Bone who is a friend of her brother’s, and who has had a nervous breakdown. I thought this was so funny as it becomes a running joke where anything he does is a result of his nervous breakdown, at least as far as the aunt is concerned.

Anyway, there are so many moments in this movie that were funny or endearing or both. They are on the hunt for the leopard baby, who has escaped. Although, unbeknownst to them, another more ferocious leopard has escaped from the nearby circus. Two leopards are on the loose in Connecticut in the same few square miles – what could go wrong?

I always use a net when I am looking for escaped leopards too.

The audience knows of course that Grant and Hepburn are going to end up together, and we are just waiting for the moment that the characters themselves realize it.

We have to wait all the way until the end, when David is back in his museum, putting together his Brontosaurus, sans glasses by the way. Susan comes in with his bone, and she climbs up a ladder, which we all know will end in disaster because it is Susan after all.

This movie was madcap, funny, crazy. I never knew what misadventure would befall our hero and heroine from minute to minute and I loved it. And now I totally want my own leopard. However, that seems to be illegal in the United States. I do have a leopard gecko, and she is a sweet girl and easier to feed so there is that.

My Luna baby.

If you watched Skylark or anything else at all, feel free to comment and link up with us about it! The link is open for a week. You can read Lisa’s thoughts here!

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Next up is The Grand Budapest Hotel, and after that is Chocolat and our watch party! We will all press play together at home and chat on our discord channel (and don’t worry, not on video!). The watch party will be November 17th, at 7pm EST. (the day after my birthday! yay!)

Comfy Cozy Cinema: Kiki’s Delivery Service

Hello everyone!! Lisa from Boondock Ramblings and I are back to watching and sharing about comfy cozy (and sometimes, chilling) movies for the fall season. Feel free to join in with us!! Our link will be live for a whole week after we post about a movie.

This week’s movie is Kiki’s Delivery Service, which is a Studio Ghibli production. It is not my favorite one (that is Arietty, then When Marnie was Here) but it is pretty cute. And I love little Jiji, her cat.

We picked a great night to watch. The day was rainy, the evening was rainy. We had ramen bowls full of chicken and noodles and miso broth and veggies, and it was delicious. Then we settled in to watch Kiki, all super snug.

Kiki is a little witch in training. The movie begins with Kiki leaving home on her own, to find a city for her and Jiji to live in while she goes through her year of training. The viewer knows immediately that Kiki is maybe not the most smooth of witches, as she bumbles into trees and ricochets all over as she shoots off into the air on her broom, with Jiji hanging on for dear life.

One thing I love about this movie is such a small little detail – Kiki’s radio. She has it with her and plays it so often, whether she is at home or on her broom, and for some reason, I just really like that. She lays in bed listening to it, it is next to her while she is cleaning, it hangs from her broom, it is just a cute detail.

Kiki is from what looks like a rural village, and she moves to the much larger city of Koriko, which is modeled after a combination of major cities around the world – Stockholm, Milan, San Francisco, Lisbon, Paris, etc. It has all the energy of an actual city, with bustling busy streets, heavy traffic, but still manages to maintain a level of beauty and coziness, with cobbles and flowers and quaint little shops, like the bakery where Kiki finds herself living and working.

Kiki slowly begins to make a little life for herself. She makes friends with Osono, the bakery owner and her husband, and lives with Jiji in their spare attic bedroom. She also becomes friends with Tombo, an idealistic young man with a passion for aviation, an older woman I think they call Madame, and Ursula, an artist who lives in a cabin in the forest, and is friends with crows (that look like magpies to me).

On the surface, this little sweet cartoon is just that. Kiki’s journey, making friends and a community for herself, starting her little delivery service, becoming who she is meant to be. But it also has a message of not giving up, to not quit when we fail, because failure is part of life. We try, sometimes we fail, and then we pick ourselves back up and try again. Kiki’s friend Tombo wants to fly so badly that he invents a crazy flying machine powered by bicycle and willpower. It crashes and fails its first time out, but at the end, we see him flying out over the sea with Kiki on her broom next to him. He did not quit.

Kiki finds herself in a similar situation, feeling down and not quite herself and perhaps, even losing her magic. She is burned out after working so hard, because Kiki is a very hard worker. She is polite and kind and goes out of her way to help others sometimes, on top of her responsible work ethic. Ursula sees how Kiki is struggling when she makes a surprise visit to town, and invites Kiki to come back to the cabin with her to spend the night. The two have a few heart to hearts, and Ursula tells her that it is ok to have these moments, and that every artist, every person needs to find their own inspiration.

Ursula: Trusting your spirit! Yes, yes! That’s exactly what I’m talking about. That same spirit is what makes me paint and makes your friend bake. But we each need to find our own inspiration, Kiki. Sometimes it’s not easy.

The scenes at the cabin are so cozy and perfect to me, and have such an attention to detail. The way Ursula looks down at her drink, swirls it around a bit as she considers what she is saying, that gesture is just so real. I also love this sort of hint at the healing powers found in simplicity and in nature.

Ok, I can’t talk about this movie without talking about Jiji the cat! I just love this little character. He has his own distinct personality and I simply adore him.

This movie is just so cozy and sweet and full of goodness. Friendship and found family and art and creativity – I just love it. There are actually a few different versions out there, including two different English language versions, a 1998 version and a 2010 version. I watched the 1998. There is also of course the Japanese language version that is the original.

You can find this movie on Amazon Prime, Apple TV, and Hulu to watch streaming for a fee. You might also be able to find it at the library.

If you have watched along with us, and want to share your link, please feel free. We would love it!

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Up next is the 1945 version of Blithe Spirit!

Also, don’t forget to enter our Comfy Cozy Care Package Giveaway! You can enter here!