The Grandstander
Monday, December 8, 2025
What A Sports Weekend It Was!
Friday, December 5, 2025
Critical Commentary: A Movie and a Book
"Wicked For Good"
We took ourselves out to the local cineplex two weeks ago to see the long awaited, much hyped conclusion to the film adaptation of the hit Broadway musical "Wicked". I will state right off the bat that I liked the movie and will give it a high rating. It is beautiful and colorful to look at, and the performances of the leads, Ariana Gande and Cynthia Erivo, are both terrific.
Oh, and Jeff Goldblum plays the Wizard. I love Goldblum, but he has reached the point in his career where he pretty much plays "Jeff Goldblum" in every movie, TV show, commercial, or talk show guest appearance that he makes, and he'll never top his performance as Michael in "The Big Chill".
To watch this one has two prerequisites. One, you had to see "Wicked Part One" when it came out last year, or stream it before you go see this one. It is not a stand alone movie. Two, you have to have seen, or at least know all about the 1939 classic movie, "The Wizard of Oz". How "Wicked For Good" ties together the tale of Dorothy Gale from Kansas is a great part of the story of "Wicked".
So "Wicked For Good" gets Three Stars from The Grandstander, but....
There's always a "but", isn't there?
From the time the "Wicked Part One" was released last year, one question nagged at me: Why take a musical play that lasts for about two-and-a-half hours and make a movie version that lasts over five hours, and then tell us that the movie will be in two parts that will be released a year apart from each other? The fact that that audiences were only made aware of this fact about a week before the release of Part One in 2024 makes the burr under the saddle particularly irritating. Or maybe it's just me, and no one else cares about something that just screams that "this is a shameless money grab".
Yet, here I was, at the theater box office two Novembers in a row getting sucked right into the whole deal:
Monday, November 24, 2025
Futbol and Football In The Burgh
First, the Positive...
Pittsburgh Riverhounds Win United Soccer League Championship
During the course of my following of the team, I learned that Dick was the USL's Most Outstanding Keeper of the 2024 season, and he was deservedly named the MVP of these just completed playoffs. His performance on Saturday night was spectacular.
- The coaching staff obviously has no faith in Mason Rudolph, who was playing in place of an injured Aaron Rodgers, to throw the ball downfield or over the middle. The offensive game plan consisted of lots and lots of swing passes that gained less than ten yards. And this was against a Bears defense that was riddled with injuries. What's next for OC Arthur Smith? Bringing back the single wing?
- The talk of the town all week was the devastation that tight end Darnell Washington visited upon the Cincy Bengals last week, but where was he yesterday? By my recollection, and I could be wrong, he was targeted only two times yesterday. Why was that?
- Speaking of tight ends, Pat Freiermuth was targeted only three times yesterday. He caught all three passes, one of them a touchdown. So, why only three targets?
- Bills
- @ Ravens
- Dolphins
- @ Lions
- @ Browns
- Ravens
Sunday, November 23, 2025
An Old Movie...."Cactus Flower" (1969)
- A distraught Hawn attempts to kill herself in her crummy NYC walk-up apartment because she realizes that she will never be able to fully have the love of her life
- Her next door neighbor, a hunky young struggling playwright, played by Rick Lenz, smells gas in the hallway, breaks into her apartment and saves her life
- Matthau finds out about the suicide attempt (how he finds out is a part of this whole magilla), and realizing that he doesn't want to lose the beautiful Goldie, tells her that he will divorce his wife
- Hawn then starts asking a lot of complicated questions: When did you decide to do this? When will you tell her? What about the children? This all leads up to Goldie saying that she wants to meet Matthau's wife
- In an effort to quell this pending disaster, Matthau asks his ever loyal Nurse Dickenson, played by Bergman, to meet Hawn and pretend to be his soon to be ex-wife
- At first Bergman refuses to have any part of such a tawdry scheme, but then.....
Tuesday, November 18, 2025
Critical Commentary - Three Streaming Series (All On Netflix)
"Death By Lightning"
The story is about Rabbi Noah Roklov, played by Adam Brody, who meets and falls instantly in love with hot shiksa podcaster, Joann, played by Kristen Bell. Naturally, many, many complications arise from such a relationship. Bell and Brody are charming in their roles, although I think that Bell tries too hard to be a reinvention of Sarah Jessica Parker's Carri Bradshaw, but it is the peripheral characters that really add to the comedy of the show. They include Justine Lupe as Joann's sister and podcast partner, Morgan, Timothy Simons and Jackie Tohn as Sasha and Esther, Noah's brother and his wife, and Stephanie Faracy and Tovah Feldshuh as Joann's and Noah's mothers.
We really liked it and look forward to Season Three, whenever it comes. Three Stars from The Grandstander.
"Man On The Inside"
A perusal of the Grandstander Archives tells me that I never wrote about this series when its first season ran earlier this year. Brief summary: Ted Danson plays a recent widower who is hired by a private detective to go under cover at a senior living community to see who might be behind a series of jewel robberies in the building. Yeah, stuff like this can happen only in television, right? Linda and I found the series to be both funny and touching in the way it dealt with issues like spousal loss, aging, and the, shall we say, challenges of living in a closed community, challenges like HOA meetings. Fun casting: one of the residents of the community was Sally Struthers of "All In The Family" fame.
Like I said, we liked it, and had I written about it at the time, it would have rated Four Stars from The Grandstander. So, go to Netflix right now and watch it.
I bring this whole thing up now because on Thursday, November 21, Netflix will be dropping Season Two of this series. I don't know what the "case" will be for the Man on the Inside this time, or if characters from the senior living center will be involved because after all, that case was closed, but I do know that one story line will be a developing romance between Danson's character, Charles, and a character played by Mary Steenbergen, who is Danson's real life wife of thirty years.
Looking forward to watching it and we will no doubt blow through it in a couple of days.
Thursday, November 13, 2025
"Nuremberg"
"Nuremberg" is a movie that certainly can be classified as an "Oscar-bait" movie. It is being released at the end of the year when the studios release their big gun films, it is about a serious and important subject, it has big stars in the lead roles and it gives each of them large swatches of dialog that they deliver in ways that only Big Stars can, and this is the important part, the movie delivers in every way.
On the day that the war in Europe ends, Allied soldiers stop a chauffeur driven car bearing a Nazi flag. Its passengers: Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering, the highest ranking Nazi official still alive and his family. Upon his surrender, Goering calmly asks his captors to please get his luggage for him. That is the first glimpse we get into the personality of Goering.
What follows is the story of a US Army psychiatrist, Douglas Kelley, played by Rami Malek, who is assigned to examine the captured Nazis as an international tribunal comprised of the Allied powers prepares to try them before the world during the War Crimes trials in Nuremberg, Germany. The movie focuses on the relationship and the cat-and-mouse game that develops between Kelley and Goering, played brilliantly by Russell Crowe.
The movie is filled with great performances by a number of other actors besides Crowe and Malek. Foremost among them is Michael Shannon, playing US Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, who proposed that such war crimes trials be held, despite the fact that there was no legal precedent for them and huge questions about under whose jurisdiction the trails should take place. He was terrific in this role.
The role of the US Army officer who is in charge of the prison in which the defendants are held is played by John Slattery, best known, to me at least, as the guy who played Roger Sterling in "Mad Men", and who always delivered the best lines of dialog in that series. I couldn't help but see, and hear, "Roger Sterling" as he delivered his lines, particularly his farewell line to Kelley near the conclusion of the movie. I loved it.
While the subject matter of the film is a hard and a gruesome one, the movie essentially becomes a courtroom drama and a character study between its two main players, Crowe as Goering and Malek as Kelley. Be warned, though, that at one point during the trial, we are shown films taken by Allied troops as they liberated the Nazi concentration camps. These films are brutal, horrible, and difficult to watch, as they show man's inhumanity to man at its absolute worst. Which is exactly why the world needs to see them and constantly be reminded of what happened, and know that it must be prevented from ever happening again because there exists in mankind people who can cause it to happen again. This is the point that the prosecutors were making at the time of the trials, and largely speaking, that the filmmakers are making to the audiences of today.
I expect that there will be many Oscar nominations for this one. Picture, Director (James Vanderbilt), and a Best Actor nomination for Crowe for certain and possibly Malek. I would also be disappointed if Shannon did not receive a Supporting Actor nomination.
The Grandstander gives this movie the full Four Star rating.
An aside about my attendance yesterday, While visiting the rest room after the movie, a guy in there, who also was at the showing, asked what I thought. We both said that it was good movie with a powerful message, but then he said this: "Yeah, it was good, but you wonder how much of it was true and how much was made up." I wanted to scream.
Aside Number Two. The 1961 movie "Judgement at Nuremberg" dealt with these same topics and was probably a better movie this one. It was filled with great performances by stars like Spencer Tracey, Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Judy Garland, and Maximilian Schell, who won and Oscar for his performance. Seeing "Nuremberg" yesterday is prompting me to watch this one once again. If you have never seen it, I cannot recommend it highly enough.
Monday, November 10, 2025
For Your Reading Pleasure...
Some books that I have recently read......
How he pulled this off is the story that my friend Matthew Algeo tells in his latest book, "New York's Secret Subway". It is a story of New York at a certain time in history. A city with streets clogged with people, horse drawn "omni-buses" and carriages for hire, horse shit, and sometimes even dead horses. A city wherein it took hours to travel short distances, distances that could be traversed in minutes if a transit system such as the one Beach was proposing - and building - was put in place.
A sure thing, right? Well, not exactly because what stood in the way of Beach, and a few other visionaries like him, were a lot of special interests, like the horse carriage trade that might be put out of business, retailers who relied on foot traffic on Broadway, and lots of crooked politicians looking to get their palms greased. In other words, life in 1870 was a lot like life in 2025, which is one of the points that Algeo makes in this book.
In addition to Beach, the narrative in this book revolves around NYC politician and power broker William "Boss" Tweed, who you may have learned about in your high school American History classes. Another guy is someone about whom I had never heard, Alexander T. Stewart, a retailer who might have been one of the richest people in America at the time, and who would stop at nothing to make sure that there would NEVER be anything put in place that would cause people to be taken off of the sidewalks and thus be unable to walk past his storefronts.
It is an interesting book about a subject that I knew nothing about, and Algeo tells it in a breezy and oft times humorous manner. Like his books on Harry Truman, Grover Cleveland, Robert Kennedy (the good one; not the current one), the sport of pedestrianism, the war time Steagles, and Abe Lincoln's pet dog you learn not only about the specific subject, Beach's secret subway, but other collateral issues, like how burgeoning populations that caused people to move further out from city areas created a need for what we now call mass transit, and of course how the wheels needed to be greased with the politicians in order to get anything accomplished. I even learned something about one of my former employers, the Equitable Life Assurance Society, in this one.
The Grandstander gives Three Stars to this one, which, I hope will put a smile on the author's face like the one below.
If you are a long time reader of this blog, you might, but most likely don't, remember that I wrote of a similar book way back in 2012. This one was a lot better than that one. My only quibble on this book is that it is written in an almost scholarly fashion, something like a doctoral thesis in film Studies. However, it's not like there is anything wrong with that. In fact, what I probably most liked about this one was the biographical details of all of the principals involved in this movie. Gloria Swanson, William Holden, Erich von Stroheim, Nancy Olsen, Billy Wilder, Charles Brackett, and even Cecil B. DeMille. Some of this stuff I had already known, but I learned a lot about Gloria Swanson that I did not know and came away from this book with a real admiration for her. Lupin carries it forward with a sort of "whatever became of" coda in the book for all of the featured players from this great film.
If you've never seen "Sunset Boulevard" make it a point to seek it out and watch it. Then read this book. Then watch the movie again.
Three Stars from The Grandstander.
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