Gourmet Club – April 2007

It was our turn to host the Gourmet Club this time. Most of the couples start testing potential menus about a month before the actual night. We had an idea for an entre that we got on our mini vacation to Springfield. It was for breaded tuna steaks. We loved it but the more we thought about it, the more squeemish we became because we were sure some of our friends would not like the almost sushi aspects of it. We decided not to have that and as it turns out, we decided correctly. We talked about it at the dinner and those who we expected might have a problem confirmed that they would, indeed, have had a problem with the rareness of the fish. So back to the drawing board. Karen started relentlessly scouring our back issues of Bon Appetit, but as the day drew nearer, we got more and more nervous. We tried a delicious chicken recipe but it just did not seem fancy enough. Then we tried the pork tenderloin recipe that we eventually had so at least we had our entre. The gratin came a day or two later, but we still needed the appetizer, salad, and dessert. The week before the dinner I got the flu and couldn’t stand the thought of eating anything so it wasn’t until about the Wednesday before that I felt well enough to try some of the other things. As luck would have it, we liked everything we tried and the menu was set.

The Menu

Most of the time I show an actual scan of the menu. What you see below is just a summary of the menu because the actual menu was an elaborate affair with all the entries being on separate pages. Karen had been to a conference in Seattle and got a sample of an academic project that worked perfectly for a menu layout.

Gourmet20070414MenuSummary.jpg

The Presentation

Grilled Prosciutto-Wrapped Shrimp Red and Napa Cabbage Salad Mexican Chocolate Souffle
Pan Seared Pork Tenderloin, Sweet Potato Gratin, and Oven Roasted Green Beans

If you look closely, you will see that I had a little nibble of the dessert before I remembered to take the picture. Ah well.

Mini Vacation Revisited

I referred to the tuna recipe we had on our mini vacation in the first paragraph of this entry. It can finally be shown.

Tuna from mini vacation

Posted in Gourmet Club | 5 Comments

Rachel Meets the Robinsons

Meet the Robinsons

Rachel came to stay with us this last weekend. Easter scheduling problems prevented the rest of the family from coming too, but we still had a good time. Saturday afternoon we went to see “Meet the Robinsons”, the latest animated feature from Dreamworks. They even remodeled the theater so it could be presented in 3D. I will give you my review the first of next month, but suffice it to say, we liked it. Here is a shot of Rachel wearing here 3D glasses. Contrary to popular myth, they aren’t red/blue anaglyph glasses. Practically none of the the classic 3D movies were either. Just about all of them used polarized glasses the same a Rachel’s.

Rachel with 3D glasses

When Karen got up Sunday morning, Rachel was already awake. They found 22 of the 23 Easter eggs that had been hidden around the living room then settled down to a breakfast of French Toast Sticks.

Karen brought back a load of giveaways from the conference she attended in Seattle. Among them was a small whiteboard that she gave to Rachel. It was the hit of the weekend. Here you can see her with it, lounging around in our bed.

Rachel With Whiteboard

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Bellamy Glam Girls

I’ve been scanning in old photos and I came across a couple of really great shots of some beauties in their prime. Take a look at these cuties. Hubba hubba.

Paddy - 1946

Barbara - Date unknown

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Home On Leave

Last Saturday Lance and I drove to Oak Park. My neice Sasha was home on leave from her service in Iraq. She gave me copies of photos she had taken over there and I would like to share a couple of them in this blog.

Sasha with her weapon

Sasha & Sarge

Sasha in cab

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Movie Reviews – March 2007

Here are the movies we saw this month:

Title Made Saw Rating
North By Northwest 1959 3/3/07 3
Greenfingers 2000 3/6/07 3
Pan’s Labyrinth 2006 3/9/07 3
Paradise Road 1997 3/9/07 3
Why We Fight 2001 3/16/07 3
Charlotte Gray 2001 3/21/07 3
CSA: Confederate States of America 2005 3/25/07 3
Shooter 2007 3/28/07 3
Sahara 2005 3/28/07 3
The Sentinel 2006 3/31/07 3

Here are my reviews:

North By Northwest

Alfred Hitchcock’s classic from 1959. An unsuspecting advertising man gets mistaken by criminals for an agent they think is investigating them. They try to kill him but he escapes. He is led on a cross country chase that ends at Mount Rushmore. You figure out pretty quick that the love interest is another agent, deep under cover. Ok action yarn but to me, it doesn’t seem to deserve the acclaim it has received.
Turner Classic Movies – 3 stars

Greenfingers

A criminal is transferred to a minimum security prison where he takes up flower gardening. He meets a master gardener who takes a shine to the prisoners but is concerned when she finds that her daughter is in love with the hero. Of course, they go to the big flower show. It’s sweet and a little sappy. There is no evil here despite the fact that a couple of the prisoners, including our hero, are murderers. This is the first movie that I recognised Clive Owen. We saw him not long ago in Children of Men. After that, you look him up and see that he has been in a lot of things you’ve seen but you just didn’t notice. Helen Mirren as the master gardener is a kick. In one scene she is standing below a portrait of the queen wearing one of those horrible royal type hats. You just know that the casting director of “The Queen” saw this movie and said, “I know who gets that part!”
Netflix – 3 stars

Pan’s Labyrinth

A young girl intrigued by fairy tales travels to the post of her step-father along with her pregnant mother. The stepfather is a captain in the facist army in Spain in 1944. The Facists have won control of the country and the captain’s job is to mop up the resistance. The girl discovers a secret labyrinth and turns out to be the lost fairy princess who must pass three tests to be able to return. What? This is really two movies but somehow they do seem to work together. The fairytale part is predictable. Heroic deeds, unflagging courage and some thoroughly evil European style monsters (they eat fairies and children, really Brothers Grimm stuff). The realistic part of the movie is quite disturbing. The captain is a real nasty sort. He commits lots of really graphic violence on the resistance fighters and the camera it there to capture it all. This is not for the squeemish. I maybe could give this one 4 stars.
Theater – 3 stars

Paradise Road

High society British women in Singapore at the beginning of WWII flee the soon to be invaded city, only to have their ship sunk out from under them. They fall into the clutches of the Japanese and are put in a prison camp. There’s lots of “learning their place” action. Deaths from malaria. Executions for disobediance type stuff. And through it all, they find the time and will to create a vocal orchestra. Sort of a classical Swingle Singers. Predictable and heartwarming.
Netflix – 3 stars

Why We Fight

The movie opens with Dwight D Eisenhower delivering his farewell speech, the one that warns about the military/industrial complex. The rest of the movie lays out, step by step, how his nightmare came true. As bleak as Syriana, the movie leaves little hope that anything will ever be able to be done about it. Not only are the military and industry in cahoots, they have recruited the congress and now, think tanks whose job it is to come up with more ways that liberty and freedom can be subverted. In one sad story a barely literate kid is recruited in the army, convinced he will be a pilot.
Netflix – 3 stars

Charlotte Gray

When her pilot lover disappears over occupied Vichy France in WWII, a young Scottish woman volunteers for service behind enemy lines. She parachutes in, delivers her package to a contact that gets caught, and tries to find out what she can about her lover. She discovers his plane was shot down. In the mean time she works with the resistance, living in the house of the chief resistance fighter’s father. Along the way, two Jewish boys are orphaned and also come to live at the house. She takes them under her wing. Eventually the two boys and the father get hauled away and she returns to England. After the war her lover shows up having been convelescing all this time. She discovers she is no longer in love with him and returns to France to find the resistance fighter. Happy ending.
Netflix – 3 stars

CSA: Confederate States of America

CSA is a mockumentary. Supposedly it was produced by the BBS (BBC) and follows the history of the Confederate States of America after they defeated the Union and maintained the institution of slavery. Even through today. There are commercial breaks, station IDs and news updates interspersed with the documentary. All make you squirm and groan. Ads for Niggerhair cigarettes and Darkiebright toothpaste are a couple of the most uncomfortable. In the story the North must be the one to undergo reconstruction. To make the tax burden easier, anyone in the North who buys slaves is exempt from their tax burden. Abraham Lincoln is captured wearing blackface and being helped by Harriet Tubbman on the underground railroad heading for Canada. Which is where all the liberals and abolitionists end up. The South then sets out on wars of expansion, conquering Mexico and the Carribean and trying to take over South America too. Real historical figures appear in the footage too, but sometimes with the details changed. Kennedy is a Republican and Nixon a democrat. The movie is not serious and there is a lot of humor. You are not quite sure what to think when it is over.
Netflix – 3 stars

Shooter

A master sniper is left behind on a mission and retires when he gets back. Three years later they ask him to be an advisor who will help to figure out who is going to attempt an assasination of the President and how they will do it. In fact, the assasination targets the archbishop of Ethiopia who is standing next to the President and the bad guys are framing our hero. The rest of the movie is him showing off his shooting skills and trying to clear his name. Standard action film. OK but not great.
Theater – 3 stars

Sahara

Dirk Pitt is on the trail of some lost Confederate treasure hidden in an ironclad that makes its way to Africa after the Civil War, then disappears. Along the way he runs into a beautiful WHO doctor who is investigating a strange and terrible illness that is affecting people in the surrounding area. It turns out the villain is trying to burn toxic waste with a gigantic solar array. It is not working very well and the waste is entering the water table making everyone sick. Dirk saves the day as usual and finds the lost gold too. Surprise, surprise. There is lots of James Bond type humor. Another action adventure film.
Netflix – 3 stars

The Sentinel

A Secret Service agent gets a tip that there is going to be an attempt on the President’s life and that there is a mole helping the bad guys. Hey, does this sound familiar? Everyone on the team is ordered to take a lie detector test. This is going to be a problem for our hero because he is having an affair with the First Lady, and someone knows and has taken pictures of them together. He flunks the lie detector test and goes on the run. Another frame up. True to his job, he keeps investigating in parallel with the official team who thinks he is the mole. The internal affairs detective is his old best buddy but who thinks our hero had an affair with his wife. So now there is lots of hostility. The First Lady finally comes clean to the IA guy who then realizes that our hero is not guilty. They team up at the last minute to save the day and kill the bad guys. Another action adventure film.
Netflix – 3 stars

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Spring Break Mini Vacation

A week before her spring break, Karen said she would like to go somewhere and not just sit around all week. I was game for this. She even suggested that we go to Springfield, Illinois, to see Frank Lloyd Wright’s Dana Thomas House. I was also game for this. And the best part was I didn’t have to think up something to do. It was all there in front of me. So about a week out, we started planning routes, finding out when things were open, seeing if there were good restaurants, in general, doing all the things a fun vacation should involve.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007
We knew that the House was closed on Mondays and Tuesdays so we figured we would drive down on Tuesday and start all the fun things the next morning. We left about 11:15am and were there by about 3:00 in the afternoon.

To make our drive easier, we got a couple of recorded books. One was Coyote Wind by Peter Bowen and the other was A Vineyard Killing by Philip R. Craig. We listened to Coyote Wind first because Karen had read several of the Gabriel Du Pré books and liked them a lot. There were 4 disks so it would be just about perfect for the drive down. When we finished the first CD Karen was putting it back into the sleeve and discovered to our horror that the second disk was missing. Argh! Did we want to keep on listening, missing the 2nd quarter of the story or start the other one? We started the other one. It was about a married, no account, ex Boston policeman who now lived on Martha’s Vinyard and solved mysteries from time to time. Since we had started with the other book and since this one was a little bit longer, we were only about half done when we got to Springfield.

Before we got there, as I was passing a car, I looked over and the other driver was tooling along with a yellow lizard, about 15 inches long, climbing up his shoulder and onto the top of his head. I wish I had dropped back and got Karen all set up with the camera, but alas, I muffed it. From the description of the beast, Lance said we probably saw an monitor lizard. But I don’t think so. It looked like this:

Spikey Yellow Lizard

We checked in at the Motel 6 around 3:30. There was sign at the desk saying they had wireless internet access for $2.99 so we got that in case we wanted to do some last minute restaurant research. We got back into the car and drove into town to to scope out locations and see the sights. Then back to the motel to fill up the rest of the time before our 6:30 dinner reservation.

We listened to the local news, Springfield is Illinois’s state capitol and saw Attorney General, Lisa Madigan, in a story about smoking in public places and how her next project was to stop people from smoking in their cars if they had children with them. This is an entry non-event don’t you think? Why would I put this in? Read on.

Illinois Attorney General, Lisa Madigan

We went to dinner at Sebastian’s Hide-Out.

Sebastian's Hideout

This might be the fanciest restaurant in town and is right in the downtown. We drove around a bit trying to find a parking place, but we figured it was right in the middle of happy hour and there were none to be found. We decided that Karen should get out and meet the reservation while I continued to find a spot. As luck would have it, as I let her out, there was a space open right across the street. I took it.

Where we sat

For an appetizer we had duck comfit with stilton and brie cheeses, roasted red peppers, and roasted garlic.

For dinner I had Beef tournedos w/Lyonnaisse sauce, garlic potatoes, and spring veggies. The veggies were asparagus and carrots and the carrots were the cutest things you ever saw. They were about 5 inches long and very conical shape and they had the stalks and leaves still on them. You just get the slightest hint of this in the picture below.

Butch's Dinner

Karen’s dinner is a secret. We have a great picture of it but it was so nice, we decided to try to some or all of it at our gourmet club. So maybe I will show the picture of it after that’s over.

Karen asked if the chef would give her the recipe for some of the things, but he refused. He did tell the waitress how to make one of the things in a very general way. We tried it at home a few days later and it was very good, so that was enough I guess.

About 20 minutes into our meal and half an hour after we saw her on TV, the Illinois Attorney General came in and sat about 4 boothes away from us. I asked the waitress if that was her. She knew the woman was with a senator so she thought it was her. Then she asked the other waitress who was waiting on them and sure enough, it was. We never saw or heard of this woman before and then we saw her on TV and in person the same evening. Quite a coincidence.

We shared a Creme Brulee for dessert.

When we got back to the motel, Mission Impossible was on TV so we watched that and went to bed.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007
In the morning we got up and had breakfast at the Hen House restaurant which is right next door to the motel and checked out.

We arrived at the Dana Thomas House in time for the first tour and watched the end of a video that gives you a little bit of the history of the place. They will let you take all the pictures you want on the outside, but no cameras are allowed inside. Here are some views of the place. The inside pictures are copied from a book I bought in the gift shop.

Dana House Entry

Dana House Living Room

Mrs Dana inherited the property the house sits on from her father. By that time she was already a widow and very wealthy. The house was Wright’s first to have no budget restrictions. Budgets were a thing he ignored anyway, but this one let him do it right. The house is pure Prairie Style and was built in 1910 for a cost of $60,000. It occupies a half block with a streets on two sides and a railroad track on a third side. When asked why she would ever build a house there, she said it was already the family homestead and beside she liked railroads, she was heavily invested in them. Here are some shots of the outside.

Front Side of the House

Front Door

Master Bedroom Side

Dining Alcove

Courtyard

After the Dana House we drove over to a school nearby that had a library that Mrs Dana’s father had commissioned Wright to design. Interesting but no big deal.

Then we took a tour of the house Lincoln left when he was elected President. He had lived there for 17 years. It was a fairly upscale place for the times, not a log cabin which everyone in the country at the time thought he lived in. Unfortunately, they were in the process of painting it.

Lincoln's Home

We could have gone to the Lincoln Presidential Library and museum but decided to drive to Hannibal instead. We listened to some more of our recorded book on the way, but it is a fairly short drive and we still had about one more disk to listen to when we arrived.

We checked in at a Bed & Breakfast place, Robard’s Mansion, and unpacked our bags. Then we drove around town a little, getting our bearings and looking at the other places we could have stayed and might have dinner at. We ended up going down by the Mississippi to hear the last disk. It was the exciting conclusion.

Robards Mansion

We still had a bunch of time to kill before dinner so we went back to the motel and took a short nap. We thought we might try a couple of places for dinner. One was by where we parked and listened to the tape. We figured we would go to that one first and have a beer and if it didn’t look too good we could go to the other place. As it turned out, we went to the second place.

The other restaurant’s claim to fame was that it had been a bordello well into the 1920’s. Those days are gone of course but they had fixed the place up and it was very nice. It was called Lulabelle’s. For an appetizer they had a big plate of boiled shrimp in the shell which was included in the price of the entre. Karen had a New York Strip smothered with gorganzola cheese and I had prime rib which contrary to normal practice had a rich, flavorful sauce.

When we got back to the B&B we watched 3 episodes of CSI, had a couple drinks and went to bed.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Posted in Daily life | 3 Comments

Happy Birthday Paddy

We celebrated Mom’s 82nd birthday this Sunday. Lance, Cherise and the kids came up and so did Seth and Erica. We had a split the layer cake for dessert. Among the presents she received was a piece of artwork I did for her called “Grandmothers’ Granddaughters”. We are so lucky to have photos, mother to daughter, for 7 generations. So far, the best we can do for Karen and me is 6 generations each.

Paddy with Grandmothers' Granddaughters

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A Weekend With Ben

The same weekend that Cherise did her show-stealing acrobatic act, Ben came to visit us overnight. What a love! Of course he has to be watched constantly, even after the house has been cleared of ALL child maiming accessories. We have installed child-proofing latches to the most harmful cupboard and liberal amounts of duct tape to the others. Recently we’ve changed to a new sort of lock, ones that Wendy and Zach use and brought with them the last time they visited. Things should be a lot easier now.

Ben

Ben was constantly playing with a stuffed lion we bought a month or so ago. We were teaching him what a lion says. By the end of his stay we would say, “What does the lion say, Ben?” His response, “Rowwwwrrrrrrr!”

Rowwwwrrrrrrr!

Also, Karen would sit him on her lap and sing the Eensy Weensy Spider to him. Yes, Jess and Brian, the Eensy Weensy Spider! None of that Itsy Bitsy nonsense. You can see the progress in the pictures below.

Grandma leads the way
Ben catches on

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Our Talented Daughter-in-Law

I just ducked out of the room for a few minutes and I came back to be told this had happened…

Cherise standing on her head

Karen took the picture and said Cherise claimed she used to be able to do this without her hands even. And promptly let go. We didn’t get a picture of that though. Note Rachel in the background. It’s not every girl who has a mom like this!

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Movie Reviews – February 2007

Here are the movies we saw this month:

Title Made Saw Rating
Sweet Land  2006  2/2/07 3
Little Miss Sunshine  2006  2/8/07 3
Inherit the Wind  1960  2/8/07 3
The Good Shepherd  2007  2/9/07 3
Microcosmos  1996  2/9/07 3
Deep Blue  2005  2/15/07 3
Shadows and Fog  1992  2/19/07 3
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang  2005  2/22/07 3
The Point  1971  2/27/07 3
Artemisia  1998  2/28/07 3

Here are my reviews:

Sweet Land

Inge is a mail order bride from Germany who comes to Minnesota just after World War I. We see her life at three different points; at her arrival (1920?), at the death of her husband (1967?), and at the time of her own death (now?). The scene jumps back and forth among those times but it is easy to keep track because the characters have aged the right amount in the various scenes. The townspeople don’t like her much. Presumably because she is German but more likely because she is different, an outsider. Everywhere she turns, roadblocks to her marriage are thrown up to thwart her. The early part of her life as shown in the movie is pretty much spent trying to get permission to marry Olaf. She hardly speaks any English but is learning it as hard as she can. The only other person who speaks German is the minister and he is one of her biggest opponents. After all, she makes her coffee too black and they have it for breakfast. The movie is touching and is not at all fast paced. The best part for us was when her husband had just died and the minister of that time is struggling through the eulogy, trying to get everything right. Maybe that doesn’t sound all that exciting but when the minister turns out to be portrayed by Jim Cada, my best friend from high school and the best man at our wedding it adds a certain something.
Theater – 3 stars

Little Miss Sunshine

A disfunctional family, forced into each other’s company, makes a cross-country road trip so the daughter can compete in a child’s beauty pageant. Nobody really wants to go and they have all manner of complications getting there. They arrive at the pageant, the little girl competes, and they are all a better, closer family for it. The movie has been fairly highly rated, but I saw little reason for it. Most of what happens is heartbreaking. There are funny moments, but they are fairly few and far between. Most of the characters are forgettable at best, or usually unlikeable. The exceptions are the little girl and her grandpa. Some of the action is outrageous and that’s the only thing that redeems this movie in my opinion.
Netflix – 3 stars

Inherit the Wind

Inherit the Wind was a fictionalization of the Scopes Monkey Trial pitting Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan. The names have all been changed. A school teacher is arrested and put on trial for teaching evolution. The Big Gun lawyers are brought in. The defendent was eventually found guilty but vowed to appeal. This was the classic b&w movie from 1960 starring Spenser Tracy. He got an Oscar nomination for his role, but I think Frederic March as Matthew Harrison Brady did a much better job. The show left me seething at the Fundamentalism and the attack on free speech.
Turner Classic Movies – 3 stars

The Good Shepherd

Set during the time of the Cuban missile crisis, our hero’s life unfolds showing his lost opportunities. He is in counter espionage and everyone he meets through the years advises him to get out while he still can. Of course, he doesn’t. The plot is developed with a series of flashbacks. Back and forth between the early 60’s and his college days at Yale and his membership in Skull and Bones. There is even a flashback within a flashback where we see his father commit suicide. The people around him are constantly being hurt, physically or emotionally. The movie, though well produced, depicts how dismal the spy game is.
Theater – 3 stars

Microcosmos

This is a beautifully filmed documentary of insect life. The photography is stunning. There is no plot in this documentary, just a series of scenes showing one kind of bug or another. Before many of the segments there is a lead in showing the environment this set of insects lives in. It is some of the most beautiful footage in the film; foggy moors, ponds, rain forests. You need to be prepared for a documentary’s slower pace, but if you like this sort of thing, this is a pretty good film.
Netflix – 3 stars

Deep Blue

Two documentaries in a row. That’s what happens when you follow up on the picks Netflix suggests to you. This one is in the ocean. It also has beautiful footage and you often wonder how the film team could have been there at just that particular moment. This movie also uses special effects. It looks like the colors have been saturated or the underwater blue cast has been removed somehow. Maybe they just used really bright lights. Anyway, the reds and yellows are much more vivid than we are used to seeing in underwater footage.
Netflix – 3 stars

Shadows and Fog

This movie got by us in 1992, another of Woody Allen’s black and white endeavors. It’s pretty strange. Allen stars as nebbish Max Kleinman. There is a mass strangler on the loose at night in some dark, foggy, indeterminate city, maybe set in the 1920’s. It looks more like the London of Sherlock Holmes. For some reason that even he can’t figure out, Max is out looking for the killer with other vigilantes. He runs into all sorts of oddball characters at a circus, a brothel, and the rest of the neighborhood. When the movie is over, you ask yourself, “What was that all about?”
Netflix – 3 stars

Kiss Kiss Bang Bang

Robert Downey Jr plays a petty thief who stumbles into a casting call while he’s fleeing a crime scene. His partner has just been killed. He happens to read a part that is about someone who causes his friends death. Downey is full of emotion and is cast for the part. He gets sent to Los Angeles, is apprenticed to a real life private eye to expand his background, and finds himself in a murder investigation. This movie is so bizarre it’s hard to believe. The plot threads weave back and forth on each other so much it is a challenge to follow. Outrageous things happen, like the girlfriend slamming the door on Downey’s hand and cutting his finger off. It gets sewn back on, pulled off again, and is finally eaten by a dog at another murder scene. If you liked “Pulp Fiction”, you will probably like this too.
Netflix – 3 stars

The Point

Oblio, the only round headed kid in a pointy land is banished to the Pointless Forest when he out performs the Count’s son at triangle toss. He has a series of quasi-psychedelic adventures and returns a hero. I’m not sure what the point of this movie was. There are certainly some moral lessons to be learned, but while they have a positive feel, their exact meaning is murky at best. At about 1 ½ hours, this animated movie is about an hour too long. Much of the animation only seems to be there to provide room for Harry Nillsson’s music. In a lot of ways it reminded of the Beatles’ Yellow Submarine. One of my favorite characters was Rock Man. Unknown to me till now, the boy that did the voice of Oblio was one of the Brady Bunch. Previous comments notwithstanding, I still liked this bit of nostalgia.
Netflix – 3 stars

Artemisia

Artemisia Gentileschi had a lot of artistic talent, more so perhaps than her father or her teacher. But it was hard to find outlets for that talent in Italy of the 1600s. Her father, Orazio Gentileschi apprentices her to rival artist, Agostino Tassi. Only to have him seduce her. The father is furious and has Tassi charged with rape. Later they torture, get this, her, and Tassi confesses to keep her from being hurt. There is a lot of nudity in this movie. Also, while being set in Italy, it is performed in French with subtitles. This movie reminded me a lot of Girl with the Pearl Earring and The Governess which I reviewed last month.
Netflix – 3 stars

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