Dinner
and a Movie
Inside Out and Outside In
By Steve Herte
Inside Out and Outside In
By Steve Herte
What
an interesting weekend! I tried to write my movie review Saturday
after my gardening was finished but I was dissatisfied with it. I was
gushing and I can’t think straight when I do that. Knowing that my
family was going to get together at my brother’s house for Father’s
Day I wanted to get my writing done early but it didn’t sound
right. I gathered all the facts I needed, saved what I had and
put it aside.
It
wasn’t any easier picking it up after a dinner of sauerbraten, red
cabbage, potato dumplings and potato pancakes with apple sauce, three
bean salad, chicken in gravy, good wine and three-layer chocolate
mousse cake. But I kept at it. Friday’s movie lived up to every bit
of hype I’ve seen (an extreme rarity in today’s movie world) and
I was energized. Now it’s your turn. Enjoy!
Inside
Out (Pixar/Walt Disney,
2015) - Directors: Pete Docter & Ronaldo Del Carmen. Writers:
Pete Docter, Ronaldo Del Carmen (story). Meg LeFauve, Josh Cooley &
Pete Docter (s/p). Cast/Voices: Amy Poehler, Bill Hader, Lewis Black,
Phyllis Smith, Richard Kind, Mindy Kaling, Kaitlyn Dias, Diane Lane,
Kyle MacLachlan, Paula Poundstone, Bobby Moynihan, Paula Pell, Dave
Goelz, Frank Oz, Sherry Lynn, Lariane Newman, Lori Alan, John
Ratzenburger, & Josh Cooley. Color, 94 minutes, PG.
Riley
Anderson (Dias) is born and opens her eyes on her delighted Mom
(Lane) and Dad (MacLachlan). The scene changes to the control
headquarters inside Riley’s head. As a baby, the first emotion to
appear inside Riley is Joy (Poehler) and she has to learn how to work
the control panel. She pushes a button and Riley smiles at Mom and
Dad. Then Sadness (Smith), who cries when hungry or wet, joins Joy.
That's followed by Fear (Hader), caution crossing a wire with
her wagon; Anger (Black), when she doesn’t get what she wants; and
Disgust (Kaling), while she’s being fed broccoli for the first time
– which Joy counteracts with encouragement on the “airplane into
the hanger” motion initiated by Daddy. Joy’s control builds “core
memories” (golden globes stored in Headquarters central) and
they in turn create causeways to “islands” leading from the tower
and floating above the Pit of Forgetfulness.
Everything
is peachy while Joy rules in Riley’s mind, until the family has to
move to San Francisco. The new house is a real fixer-upper and the
movers are delayed for nearly a week (Riley has to use a sleeping bag
on the floor) but Joy keeps Riley upbeat. Sadness keeps trying to
touch the “golden” memories Joy has stored up, making them blue
and melancholy, and in one scuffle, both are accidentally sucked
up the tube leading to the endless maze of Long Term Memory.
Fortunately, Joy had convinced Sadness of the fun it is to be read
the manuals and she now knows the way through the maze.
Unfortunately, Sadness has gone into despair mode and has to be
dragged by Joy.
It’s
Riley’s first day of school and starts off fine, until Sadness
touches a core memory and Riley turns melancholy. The tussle between
Joy and Sadness happens before Riley goes home, and Fear, Anger
and Disgust are left in charge. This makes her moody and her attitude
cues Mom’s version of Joy (Lynn), Fear (Newman) and Sadness (Alan)
to try involving Dad in the non-conversation. Dad is clueless and the
result is an argument, ending in Riley being sent to her room.
On
their way back to the Headquarters, Joy and Sadness meet the
Forgetters, Bobby and Paula (Moynihan and Poundstone), who are
busy vacuuming gray memories from the shelves, sending them down into
the Pit of Forgetfulness. Also on their way they meet Bing Bong
(Kind). He was Riley’s childhood invisible friend. His head is a
pink elephant, his body is cotton candy, and he has a cat’s ringed
tail, and can make dolphin sounds. She and he traveled in his
“rocket” – actually a red wagon with two brooms attached to the
sides.
Bing
Bong seems to know the way but whoops, he cannot read. “This is a
short-cut. I take it all the time. See? (he spells) D.A.N.G.E.R.,
Short-cut!” This takes the trio into Abstract Thought and the
maintainers arrive shortly after they enter and shut the door,
intending to clear out the contents. This transforms Joy, Sadness and
Bing Bong into Picasso-esque versions of themselves. “That’s the
first stage of three!” cries Sadness. Then, they become
two-dimensional abstract figures and lastly single lines before they
figure out how to climb through the door on the other side of the
enormous building. But they miss the Train of Thought. They have to
travel through Imagination Land and Childhood Memories to get to the
next stop.
Meanwhile,
under the manipulations of Fear, Anger and Disgust, Riley is becoming
more distant from her parents and friends; the islands of Goofball
and Friendship crumble, and she eventually steals her mother’s
credit card to buy a ticket back to Minnesota and the Island of
Honesty crumbles. The journey’s getting harder and harder for Joy
and Sadness because the causeways are disappearing along with the
islands. Not only that, but when Riley falls asleep, the train stops
and they have to awaken her with a scary dream to get it started
again.
Bing
Bong gets arrested when he’s blamed for stealing a piece of a cloud
house owned by Fritz (Ratzenberger) and is imprisoned with all of
Riley’s fears in her Subconscious. Sneaking down the long stairway,
Joy and Sadness get the two Subconscious Guards (Goetz and Oz) to
lock them up as well. Inside, there’s a huge stalk of broccoli,
grandma’s vacuum cleaner, and the solution to their problem, the
scary and huge Jangles the Clown (Cooley) asleep with Bing Bong
imprisoned in a cage made of balloons. They escape with the unwitting
help of Jangles and achieve the scary dream, waking Riley – much to
the dismay of the Dream Director (Pell). But things are getting
worse. The last island, the Island of Family, is beginning to
crumble, the train runs out of track and crashes, Joy and Bing Bong
are hurled into the Pit of Forgetfulness and Sadness is crying her
eyes out while floating on a rain cloud.
Inside
Out is easily the best creation
to come out of the minds at Pixar. It’s the perfect entertainment
vehicle: no violence, no sex, no vulgarity. It’s tremendously
funny, ingenious, exciting and clever, colorful to the extreme, and
engaging. Even the baby in the theater stopped crying to watch.
Finally: a new concept for a plot in a desert of remakes and
unoriginality, which includes a maximum “Wow” factor. I laughed a
lot, got teary-eyed and was on the edge of my seat. I’ll admit, it
surpasses Ratatouille as
my favorite Pixar film so far. One of my favorite scenes is when Joy
and Sadness finally splat on the window of the Headquarters Tower,
Disgust insults Anger until he blows his top and she uses him as a
blowtorch to break the window and let Joy and Sadness in.
A
big lesson learned by Joy is being taught to the audience. Sometimes
Sadness is the emotion to take the controls. Make sure to stay for
the credits. The camera takes us into the minds of other characters,
a dog, and (funniest) a cat, to see what’s going on in their heads.
For this marvelous film not to affect you, you would have to be
either comatose or deceased. This film is a definite must-see.
Rating:
5 out of 5 Martini glasses.
The
Chester
45
East 33 rd St. (between Madison
and Park Avenues) , New
York
The
Chester has two locations, one in Chelsea and this one on the East
side. The website makes the place look very attractive and
the menu has enough interesting dishes to lure me there.
Outside,
it’s all glitz. The silver marquee over the door sports the name
embossed in gold, as do the window tops. The front windows are open
to the street (called natural air-conditioning in New York) and I
enter through the main door and walk up to the Captain’s Station.
The young lady leads me to a table by the window with a view of
potted boxwoods and the closed liquor store across the street.
The
two young ladies at the next table greet me, and Christine, our
mutual server, arrives with a bottle of tap water and the menu.
Christine is not your usual waitress. She’s savvy, perceptive and
down to Earth. “Talk to me!” she says. “Do you have
Beefeaters?” I ask. “Yes.” And I order my favorite martini.
It’s perfect, except for the glass. I explain to the ladies at the
next table, “It’s hard to look like James Bond when your martini
glass has no stem.”
Sipping
my drink I look around. The Chester is an airy bistro walled in
medium dark wood with comfy chairs and bare-topped tables. There are
six video screens on the two walls of the bar at the other end of the
room showing various sporting events but not competing with sounds,
thank you very much.
The menu
is a two-sided card with Oysters, Starters, Entrées, Pasta,
Artisanal Pizza, Salads, Desserts, and Sides on one side and drinks
and wine list on the other. There is only one drawback: The font for
the descriptions of each dish, drink or wine is somewhere below eight
points and impossible for me to read. Thank goodness the ladies at
the next table have better eyes than mine and were kind enough to
read what I couldn’t.
Not
wanting to impose on the ladies too much, I told Christine I had a
good appetite and planned a three-course meal – no matter what the
description said. Christine asked me the order in which I wanted the
dishes and I told her, explaining I eat slowly and had lots of time.
I had also chosen a wine, the 2011 Meritage, a blend of Cabernet
Sauvignon, Cabernet Franc and Merlot from Ravines vineyard, Finger
Lakes, New York. Having been to the winery on one of my summer trips
I knew it would have deep fruit flavor with spicy, smoky overtones.
And, yes, it did.
My
first course, meatballs – slow braised, dense, flavorful globes,
drizzled with panko (Japanese wheat bread-crumbs), Parmesan, and
ricotta in a rich, thick tomato sauce – got approval nods from the
ladies at the next table and they giggled when I tasted them and
said, “Oooh! They’ve got a lot going on!” Indeed they did.
Obviously a combination of more than one meat, they required a knife
to cut them, and the sauce gave them a piquant tartness. The toasted
baguette slices helped get every drop left in the square iron skillet
they were served in.
The
next dish was pesto pappardelle – homemade noodles green with a
five-herb pesto, sprinkled with Parmesan cheese, garlic and
lemon. Served in an artistic over-sized bowl it was a unique
experience. Normally, a pesto dish is on the sweet side, but the five
herbs added an intriguing spicy flavor that hinted at bacon (even
though no bacon was in the recipe). Delicious. I could tell it was
homemade because I had to cut the noodles. They must have been a foot
long or more, but were no problem for me.
The
main course was the only one I chose that fit the “Traditional
American” cuisine advertised by the website. It was
“stout-braised short ribs” – on a bed of puréed
parsnip, pear, beet oil and herbs. The meat was nicely blackened and
crisp on the outside and collapsed with a fork into delectable
shreds. I almost wished I had ordered a side dish. When I finished
it, Christine came over to check up on me and said, “You’re my
hero! Any dessert?”
Online,
the only dessert I wanted was the one I ordered, the s'mores –
Classic s'mores, bruléed marshmallows in graham cracker
sandwiches with rich dark chocolate sauce. It’s the ultimate
finger-food sweet. I didn’t even have to think about an after
dinner drink. Christine was already there. “Espresso Martini?”
“Yes!” The great finish to an amazing dinner, it consisted of
Ketel One vodka, Godiva Kahlua and espresso coffee.
When
these two were finished, Christine repeated her plaudit of
admiration and I thanked her. The Chester was a wonderful dining
experience but Christine and my two dining friends made it homey and
welcome. I was so happy I forgot to ask for a business card.
From Steve:
ReplyDeleteIn an age where nearly everything is a sequel or a remake it's stunning to see such imagination still exists - in addition to the visual and vocal artistry.