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Sunday, October 24, 2010

NoNames Ramble

The piles of papers I have to correct has driven me to blog. Yeah, anything to avoid them. I figure the stack will take me a total of 24 hrs. to grade, so there's no way I'm getting them done today. Why even try?

Went to see a movie last night at the Avalon, the local movie hub in downtown P'ville. They're hosting the Driftless Film Festival in the area, and the feature film I saw was called "NoNames." It was pretty interesting, really, but certainly not in an uplifting way. A group of townies in central Wisconsin spend their days getting drunk and getting high as a way to escape the town without leaving it. All seem to have no end of problems and no jobs to speak of, so they bond together in their hopelessness.

Every small town seems to have these characters who graduate from high school to the locar bars. Alcohol must make life seem challenging, or why would they keep going to the same establishment, paying good money to take part in the same stupid banter and suffering the same sickening hangover?

Darren Borrows (Ed Chigliak) of "Northern Exposure" fame portrays a local deputy in the flim who tries to talk some sense into the main character, Kevin, who insists on screwing up his life, over and over again, in a cycle of stupidity. Baxter, Wisconsin is a disgusting, toilet of a town, or at least that's the side of it that we're privvy to.

I couldn't help but compare it to "Northern Exposure's" Sicily, Alaska, where life in a small rural town was portrayed at quaint, serene, and fun, though immensely quirky. The viewer would love to be a part of the simple life in Sicily, whereas life in Baxter is seen as a prison sentence and the dwellers dopes for staying there.

Small towns can be OK, I think. It all depends on how you spend your spare time and brain cells. No different than in a city, really. Cities have bleak, seamy sides, too: homeless, jobless people, crime, gangs, etc.

The film had great music; lots of accoustic guitar and folksy songs. I liked that much better than the country, Farm and Fleet musak they could have chosen for realism. The soundtrack gave the film some flavor, in a good way.