1 post tagged “annie hall woody allen diane keaton relationships netflix”
I was this ( ) close to cancelling my Netflix subscription. I mean, c'mon...who really has time to sit and watch movies these days to make it worth the monthly charge? I even reduced my subscription to just two movies at a time and I still have the same two flippin' movies sitting on my coffeetable for the past two months! I'm sure I can find better ways to spend $11.95/month.
But with work kicking up even more lately, I decided to make myself sit down, have some Sheila time and get my now $23.90's worth. Hmmm, what kind of a mood am I in..."The Gods Must Be Crazy" or "Annie Hall"? It doesn't matter, so I blindly grab one as I'm walking to the TV and only notice that I've chosen Annie Hall until I'm putting it in the player.
It must've been fate...
I've been in a bit of a funk lately for some reason. I try to keep it level and balanced most of the time, but I've just been anxious a lot more than usual about everything...work, relationships, health, etc. But, particularly about relationships. Just really flighty and indecisive about everything...I want this, I don't want that, I want this again, but I don't want that again...it's frustrating for everyone involved so then I do the usual number on myself where I just say "Screw it. Too much drama. I'll just be by myself" and hide in my flat all weekend.
Annie Hall was a much welcomed distraction. I don't watch a whole lot of Woody Allen films (or do and just don't know it), but when I do it's such a treat! He's just so subtle and non-chalant, you just have to do a double-take before it kicks in for real--"Did he just say what I thought he said?". He's hilarious. And there are so many lines worth quoting from that movie. Like when Annie and Alvy first met after the tennis match and she's driving all crazy and straight into a parallel park and Alvy gets out and says, "Don't worry, we can walk to the curb from here." or when Annie's wanting to light up some "grass" and Alvy talks about how it's the "illusion that it will make a white woman more like Billie Holiday." Stuff like that.
Ok, ok, so that's a little outta context if you haven't seen the film, but I just finished it about 10 minutes ago so it's all still fresh. I just couldn't stop laughing. He's really a comical genius. I don't know much about film at all, but I would guess that for a movie done in 1977, it did what movies done in the 80's, 90's and even now are still trying to capture. And I gotta say, I like Annie and can relate...mostly (if not only) because she drives crazy, *is* crazy and rambles like nobody's business. But, the cool thing about her that is admirable is that she kinda marches to the beat of her own drum, and is pretty upfront about what she's thinking and just goes for it but doesn't exert her independence in an aggressive, in-your-face kind of way---and she can dress like a dude and still work it! (oh gawd, I'm starting to sound like the guy in line at the movies that drove Alvy crazy with all his "pontification" so will end here...)
Don't get me wrong. The movie's *far* from being overly and deeply profound, but bottom line, it thew a lifesaver out to my perspective on relationships and put me back on the right path about how to view them from a practical sense which I think was the intent---and for that, I'm thankful. Should probably pick up a copy for my personal collection for those days when I'm wondering why on earth anyone would bother with romantic relationships. They do drive people crazy and you wonder why people expend so much energy over them, but people still continue to do it. Guess Woody's right---some of us just "need those eggs".
Thanks, Netflix.