Tag Archives: comedy

Pack Up Your Native Soil: Traveling the World with Vampires

28 Oct

In Dracula, a vampire must bring boxes of his or her native soil from where they were born to be buried in to protect them from the sun during the day.  He would certainly be lugging it around a lot, if he went all of the places the vampire myth has traveled.  Here are a few films to checkout this Halloween to see how vampires have translated across the world.

A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night

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I had been hearing a lot of buzz online about A Girl Walks Home Alone At Night from fans of horror as being one of the most original and interesting vampire movies in years.  Technically this is an American film, however, it is set in a spooky Iranian ghost town called Bad City and the film is in Farsi with English subtitles.  A sweet love story emerges between a young Iranian man, who is overwhelmed by taking care of his drug addicted father, and a mysterious young woman who glides about town in something that resembles at times a chador and other’s Dracula’s cape.  The black and white film is visually stunning.  A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night is available from several BCCLS libraries and online from Hoopla.  I’m interested to check out other things by writer/director Ana Lily Amirpour in the future.

Let the Right One In

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Let the Right One In is a Swedish vampire film that centers around two children who form a strong bond over their outsider status: Oskar, a boy who is bullied at school, and Eli, who needs to drink blood to survive.  Vampire children are always extra creepy.  In Anne Rice’s and Stephenie Meyer’s vampire mythologies the creation of vampire children is forbidden.  In Poppy Z. Brite’s world of born vampires they literally absorb the life from their mothers.  Yet there is something vulnerable and touching about Eli. This is another film for those looking for something a bit more unusual than the typical Dracula retread.  An English version of the film was released in 2010 with the title Let Me In and moved the setting of the film from Sweden to New Mexico.  The book by John Ajvide Lindqvist that the films are based on is available from the Hoboken Public Library (the first English translation was published under the title Let Me In, subsequent editions are titled Let the Right One In).  Both film versions, Let Me In and Let the Right One In, are available from the Hoboken Public Library and Hoopla.

Vampire Party

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Vampire Party is a funny light French film for those looking for a bit of slap stick absurd comedy with their horror.  It is available online from Hoopla.  Three best friends Sam, Alice, and Prune think they are incredibly lucky when they manage to get invites to Medici Night a legendary party at a remote castle, but it turns out that they haven’t just been added to the guest list, they are on the menu for an elite group of vampires.  The French title for the film is Les Dents de la Nuit, which translates to teeth of the night, which alludes not only to vampires, but also to one of the silly running gags of the film that a VIP at the event is a dentist.  If you thought films like Bridesmaids and The Hangover would have been better with vampires than you should find Vampire Party a bloody good treat.

Vampire Hunter D

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Vampire Hunter D was one of the first animes (Japanese animation) I encountered.  As someone that was used to animation that was either only aimed at children or comedic like The Simpsons for adult audiences, I was surprised and intrigued by the complex and dramatic story line.  The 1985 film was based on a series of Manga (Japanese graphic novels). D is a half vampire/half human who fights vampires in a post-apocalyptic future.  Some unique details include D’s cybernetic horse and a symbiotic hand whose wise cracks add some levity to the story.  Although I’ve seen a great deal of anime since then, this remains one of my favorite with its cool blend of gothic horror with science fiction.  A second film Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust was released in 2000.  Check the films and manga out from BCCLS libraries.

-Written by Aimee Harris, Head of Reference

Say Yes Please to Yes Please

14 Jan

I’ve long been a fan of Amy Poehler’s. My favorite movie of hers is Wet Hot American Summer, which came out before she appeared on Saturday Night Live and will soon be revived as a TV show on Netflix. I follow Amy Poehler’s Smart Girls at the Party on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Not only is she funny, but she seems down to earth. When I heard she wrote a memoir called Yes Please, I couldn’t wait to read it.

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Amy chose the title Yes Please because the word “yes” calls back to her improv days (saying yes is the first rule of improv), and “please” means you’re agreeing to not do something alone. She also likes to use the phrase in her personal and professional life. I like that it sounds polite.

Yes Please is written like a series of essays. In the early chapters, Amy describes her family and growing up in suburban Boston, where not much happened so she compensated for that with an active imagination. She also gives helpful life advice, such as “treat your career like a bad boyfriend.” There are several shout-outs to Judge Judy, who I also admire.

Improv has played a huge role in Amy’s career and life. She fell in love with it while playing Dorothy in a grade school production of The Wizard of Oz. She writes about her time with the Upright Citizens Brigade improv group, where she met Tina Fey (whom Amy calls her “comedy wife”, and gets a chapter in the book), Rachel Dratch, Stephen Colbert, among others.

There are stories about her time on SNL, good and bad. (Although she doesn’t dish about which celebrity hosts behaved badly.) She writes about making her SNL debut after 9/11, which was poignant. I remember watching that first episode later that September, where in the cold open SNL creator Lorne Michaels asked then-Mayor Rudy Giuliani for “permission to be funny”. Amy admits to laughing on-air during a Debbie Downer sketch. The characters in the hilarious Bronx Beat sketches, performed with Maya Rudolph, were named after two ladies in the SNL hair department. In the chapter “Sorry, Sorry, Sorry”, Amy talks about a skit that offended a mutual acquaintance that she took a long time to apologize for and her regret over the delay.

It’s hard to choose a favorite chapter from Yes Please, but a contender is “The Day I Was Born”. Amy believes everyone should know about the day they were born. She tells her birthday story, with input from her parents. This prompted me to ask my parents about the day I was born. One highlight from my birthday, according to my mom, is when she found me in the nurse’s station hours after I was born having my hair combed by two nurses. I was born with a full head of red hair, and stood out from the other babies in the nursery.

Amy wrote an entertaining chapter about being nominated for major acting awards like Golden Globes and Emmys, which she nicknamed “the pudding”. To make the experience more fun and less stressful, she planned bits with her fellow Best Actress in a Comedy Emmy nominees. At the 2011 Emmys, Amy and the other nominees came on stage as their names were called and held hands like pageant contestants waiting to hear who gets the crown. The winner Melissa McCarthy received a bouquet of roses and a tiara in addition to “the pudding”.

After I read Yes Please, I loved Amy even more. I’m planning to listen to the audiobook of Yes Please, just so I can enjoy this wonderful book again.

This is my second post about funny lady memoirs, which I plan to continue as a series. (The first post was about Tina Fey’s book Bossypants.) Rachel Dratch has a memoir that I want to read. I’d love to read memoirs by other SNL performers, such as Maya Rudolph, Ana Gasteyer, and Kristen Wiig. Publishing execs, please give these ladies book deals!

Who are your favorite funny ladies? Do you know the story of the day you were born?

-Written by Kerry Weinstein, Reference Librarian