TEA TO POUR
18 May 2026
L'Étranger
28 April 2026
Totoro
My friend Michael and I both decided to watch My Neighbor Totoro last night for the first time. Michael is on a Japanese animation kick, and I'm going to see the stage production of My Neighbour Totoro in London in June and wanted to be prepared. Then we texted about it the next day. Here's what we said.
Michael: Just finished. I thought it was delightful.
Aaron: Yes, it was!! I love that cat bus. There was a little too much screaming little girls.
Michael: Oh I thought the whole time the screaming was going to be a fight for you.
Aaron: Little girls really do not need to scream that much. Hush up.
Michael: I was so immediately taken with Totoro, his little sprites, and their bus cat.
Aaron: Love that Totoro. And love his little leaf hat.Michael: I didn't expect the plot to go in the direction it did. I expected more fantastical adventure and this was pastoral life interrupted by childhood fear. I also assumed Totoro would be a very different character. I can't remember the word for it, but his actions didn't seem to make normal sense. He was following his own whims and if he wanted to fly around on a top then baby, he was gonna. On a personal viewing level, it mattered a lot to me that the dad especially didn't scoff at the kids when they were insistent they saw Totoro. He honored it and said ok we better go show some respect!
Aaron: Your analysis here is wonderful. You're very right and I hadn't thought of all of this.
Michael: Tell me how it landed for you.
Aaron: In my viewing of kids movies recently I've been very preoccupied with the attitude the film takes. Most kids movies are not about the experience of being a child at all; they're about parenting. Totoro splits the difference by having two kids of different ages.
Michael: This felt almost completely about the childhood experience. You're so right in the way the parental experience is so commonly the background reasoning behind plotting.
Aaron: And Totoro himself is not the focus of this movie. The first supernatural figure we meet is the soot-mites, actually. And if we consider things that way, then the movie is much more about finding pleasure in the haunted house, learning to love ghosts, staying open to wonder and terror. Totoro appears at the bus stop when they're scared and lonely. He is a kind of embodiment of the scary figure in the dark or in the forest. But as it turns out, he's cuddly and helpful and magically gifted. (Contrast with the way Americans think about Jesus when they're kids.)
Michael: Oh that's such a good way to frame him. That lines up better with my surprise about him. He's unknowable, but it turns out to at least be in a fun way.
Aaron: What I love about Totoro (and maybe Miyazaki more generally) is its approach to the mysterious and unknown. He asks the child to head toward what scares her. In this case her mother's illness and a new house and her sister's absence.
Michael: I see that in a lot of his other work too. And the films don't demand the characters face those fears without flinching. The characters are allowed their breakdowns and acknowledgment of how overwhelming it all is.
16 April 2026
Guilty Bystander (1950)
The acting is not great, however. J. Edward Bromberg gives a kind of low-rent Peter Lorre that works fine, but Faye Emerson is quite boring (one never truly believes she might be part of a double cross), and Mary Boland should really be a lot better than she is. But Kay Medford does excellent work here, and Sam Levene and Harry Landers are great in their smaller parts. Zachary Scott... well I don't think I've decided how I feel about him yet, mostly because I hate his mustache, but I think he might be good in this.
Guilty Bystander was restored from a print—apparently no negative exists anymore—through funding from Nicolas Winding Refn. I'm so glad it was. This is B-movie gold, and I found it to be a compelling portrait of New York petty crime. I don't think I've seen anything quite like it.
14 April 2026
Hamlet (2025)
04 April 2026
How to Make a Killing (2026)
John Patton Ford's movie should have been so much more fun. Zach Woods, Topher Grace, and Ed Harris seemed to know what movie they were in—and this was the real potential of How to Make a Killing: a series of hilarious and flamboyant heirs that our hero kills off in various humorous ways before he kills the big bad at the top.
Unfortunately that isn't how How to Make a Killing shakes out. Ford has overburdened his comedy-thriller with loads and loads of sentiment and moralizing. It felt like I was watching a movie made in the 1980s when Hollywood apparently thought that all of the capitalists who voted for Reagan need to be told that what "really matters" is family and having someone to love you, and that money isn't everything if you can't enjoy it. Giving this film a moral center corrupted this movie from the inside out.
But the real killer here is that How to Make a Killing just isn't very much fun despite the obviously winning presence of Glen Powell. Topher Grace and Zach Woods get some good laughs here, but although it was not his fault at all, this was a dreary Glen Powell vehicle and didn't live up to its considerable promise.
The Drama (2026)
11 March 2026
Oscar Nominations 2025: Post 11 of 11 (with Final Predictions)
The final three films in this year's slate of nominees are:
- Makeup & Hairstyling
- Original Song - "Dear Me": Diane Warren (The Six Triple Eight, Flamin' Hot, Tell It like a Woman, Four Good Days, The Life Ahead, Breakthrough, RBG, Marshall, The Hunting Ground, Beyond the Lights, Pearl Harbor, Music of the Heart, Armageddon, Con Air, Up Close & Personal, Mannequin)
- Original Song - "Sweet Dreams of Joy": Nicholas Pike (1st time nominee)
07 March 2026
Oscar Nominations 2025: Post 10 of 11
This year's nominees are:
- Visual Effects
- Visual Effects
- Makeup & Hairstyling
- Makeup & Hairstyling
03 March 2026
Oscar Nominations 2025: Post 9 of 11 (Live-action Shorts)
I changed my mind and decided to watch the live-action shorts. I don't know why I did this, but I guess I was feeling hopeful. This year's Live-action Short Film nominees are:
- Live-action Short
- Live-action Short
- Live-action Short
28 February 2026
Crime 101 (2026)
Crime 101 is a pleasure. Everyone in it is very nice, though, which is perhaps a sickness afflicting contemporary big-budget cinema (this was my friend Jason’s complaint about both last year's Superman and the recent Fantastic Four reboot). In any case, everyone’s niceness makes everything feel just a bit less dangerous than things ought to feel.
27 February 2026
Oscar Nominations 2025: Post 8 of 10 (Animated Shorts)
This year's Animated Short Film nominees are:
- Animated Short
- Animated Short
- Animated Short
24 February 2026
Oscar Nominations 2025: Post 7 of 10
This year's remaining Animated Feature nominees are:
- Animated Feature
20 February 2026
Oscar Nominations 2025: Post 6 of 10
This year's single-digit nominees are:
- Actress: Rose Byrne (1st time nominee)
- Actress: Kate Hudson (Almost Famous)
- Supporting Actress: Amy Madigan (Twice in a Lifetime)
- International Feature: Tunisia (The Man Who Sold His Skin)































