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1960s

6 items

Mermaids

Mermaids

Richard Benjamin·1990·★★★½

I remember this arriving in 1990, though only as a soundtrack and a general early-60s mood; the film itself never registered. Winona Ryder anchors it completely. Charlotte’s neuroses are pitched exactly right, and the voiceover prayers are the best thing here. Ricci, in her first film, is unnervingly assured. Cher is a natural, somehow both warmer and colder than I expected and with less screen time too. She was forty-four playing a woman of about thirty-one, which no amount of presence quite sells, but it matters much less than it should. Bob Hoskins is charm in a cardigan and flat cap. The whole thing is far sweeter and stranger than its reputation suggested to me.

I’m just a sound: Back to the Beach Boys

www.lrb.co.uk

Ian Penman in the LRB on Peter Doggett’s Surf’s Up, the latest entry in the ever-expanding Beach Boys archive. I’m currently working through David Leaf’s God Only Knows, which covers a lot of the same ground: the abusers and exploiters around Brian, the scarcely believable transformation from novelty pop to Pet Sounds, the apocryphal nature of every retelling.

Good Morning, Vietnam

Good Morning, Vietnam

Barry Levinson·1987·★★★½· Rewatched

“Robin Williams wasn’t Gen X, but he mattered more than anyone who was. Dead Poets Society was contraband—“carpe diem” smuggled into classrooms. Good Will Hunting went deeper: Damon’s Will hiding behind arrogance until Robin cracked him open—“It’s not your fault”—again and again until it broke. Even Good Morning, Vietnam, our parents’ war, not ours, showed comedy surviving chaos without erasing pain. Robin was teacher, therapist, DJ. When he died, we didn’t just lose an actor—we lost the only adult we trusted.” (Mark McInerney, The Movies That Defined Gen X)

Read this today and thought I’d revisit a Williams film I’d not seen in 20 years or more. It has far less to say about the war than I remember, save for one specific scene, which stands out because of it.