entertainment · Quotes

“I just thought there would be more.”

Sometimes a movie can have a real impact on your life.

One movie like that for me is Boyhood, which follows a boy growing up in Texas from ages six to eighteen and, famously, was shot with all the same actors over the course of 11 years as they actually aged. 🤯

Towards the end of the movie, the mom has a bit of a midlife freakout when her son is heading off to college. She frets that all the important milestones of her life are over – two marriages, two kids, building a career. She worries about her next milestone.

You know what’s next?  It’s my fucking funeral!

It reminds me of the chorus to Nirvana’s All Apolgies: “Married, buried!”

Anyways, the son says, “Aren’t you jumping ahead by like 40 years or something?”, to which the mom replies, over her tears:

I just thought there would be more.

That line has really stuck with the last few years. It made me realize I needed to be aiming for something interesting of my own after the kids leave, beyond just my career.

That creeping thought – is this all there is? – has motivated me to work on other things in my life like friendships, writing, music, and hopefully a few more surprises down the pipe. 😉

Via The Criterion Channel
entertainment

Bill Murray’s missing spot in “Asteroid City”

It seems odd that Bill Murray wasn’t in the new Wes Anderson movie, right? He’s always been in Wes Anderson’s movies, all the way back to Rushmore in 1998. What’s the deal? Is Tom Hanks the new Bill Murray?

It turns out Bill “Fkn” Murray was supposed to be in the film but caught the COVID and had to skip out. So Steve Carell replaced him last minute.

After filming, Bill Murray was hanging around the set, recovered and “giving pep talks”, so they decided to shoot a little promo with him and Jason Schwartzman. In the promo, we get to meet Bill Murray as Jock Larkings, the head of the fictitious Larkings Corporation, awkwardly promoting the film.

If you have the right subscription, you can see the promo on Apple News+ or The New Yorker. I assume it’ll show up on YouTube any day now. 🤷🏻‍♂️

Via The New Yorker

What’s this movie about, anyways? According to the video…

It’s about love, death, hope, war, peace, art, science, deep sadness, the unknown, and America. That’s the subject matter. Also infinity, and I don’t know what else.

I feel like they’re kind of stepping on my subject matter here. 🤔

entertainment · Quotes

“When I choose to see the good side of things…It is strategic and necessary.”

Packed inside the breakneck crazy multiverse film Everything Everywhere All at Once is some real wisdom.

My favorite character is the unfailingly nice Waymond, the husband of the main character. One minute he seems a bit out of touch, and the next minute he is the man with the plan.

He embodies the idea that optimism is courageous and powerful. Being cynical and guarded might seem smart, but it will never land you on the moon or win a big battle. Did you ever hear a great general say, “I’m not sure we can do this, guys.” Being optimistic is strategic and necessary.

When I choose to see the good side of things, I’m not being naive. It is strategic and necessary. It’s how I learned to survive through everything.

Waymond from Everything Everywhere All at Once

Thank you, Waymond. 🙏

Side note: Ke Huy Quan, who played Waymond, was also the little kid in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and The Goonies. 🤯

Quotes

“Why can’t things just be good?”

Kimi is a thriller about someone who steps in some 💩 working on a Siri– or Alexa-like voice assistant for a fictional company. It is a stylish, tech-savvy romp.

However, this quote stuck out for me when some characters were talking about having the “best” Thai food ever.

‘Why can’t things just be good? Why do things always have to be the best?’

Angela Childs (Kimi)

Hey, if it’s good Thai food, does it even matter if it’s the best Thai food? I just thought it was a cool observation nestled in the middle of a pretty good movie. 😜

👉 See also: “Comparison is the thief of joy” and perfect is the enemy of good.