I lopped off the top of a seedless cucumber and said to FD, "Let’s eat and watch Miss Potter." (2006, directed by Chris Noonan, written by Richard Maltby Jr.)
I had taken it out for the kids.
Y thought R would like it but they left Chicago without touching the DVD. This branch of the tree watches little if any television when visiting the 'rents.
"It's a 2 day rental and Blockbusters is already spleening me," I nagged. "Come on, sit with me. Just a little."
It’s bizarre like that, attending to the oddest things about your kid's genetics, as if discovering them for the first time, things like BMI (body-mass-index). He's home for the summer.
Of all of us, if anyone prefers clean media, it's this guy
And I know that I read Tales to my kids. But how is it that the entire wonderment of that simply got lost under the radar when I posted about children’s books just the other day?
It just did.
Miss Potter is a feminist movie and reminds us that women have worked for over a century to challenge the status quo, to become more than wives and mothers, home makers and socialites.
Beatrix, an unmarried woman in her 30’s, has a well-defined artist's identity even as a very young child. Her very difficult relationship with her mother, a woman we might consider to be the opposite of Lindsay Lohan or Brooke Shield's supportive stage moms, provides the only real conflict in the story.
Beatrix had to be her own agent, bucking social mores of her class to approach a publishing house in London. She didn’t go anywhere without an escort and dating without parental approval in the early 1900s was social suicide. Marriages were supposed to be arranged.
Of course that never happened in Beatrix's case.
That’s how creativity happens for certain artists. A thought comes alive, only momentarily at first, a flash of whatever it is that needs to be said, and then it's colored in and all at once, it's beautiful.
Copyright 2007, therapydoc
7 comments:
I absolutely adore that film! Really, I watched it over and over again. It is so impressive how she is able to make her own way despite her family, has her own money and still allows herself to be soft and in love. Plus the animals always make one smile.
t is pretty wonderful,and inspiring.
I forgot to mention that she had a 3rd life, according to FD, in land conservation. If you've ever toured around England then you know how beautiful the country is. She bought a lot of it to keep it that way.
One more thing, I doubt if Ms. Potter had been African American or any other ethnic that she'd have been allowed into publisher's domain. But I could be wrong.
I haven't seen the movie yet. I look forward though!!
I haven't seen it yet either but I sure want to! I will always have a soft spot for Tom Kitten and of course the Puddle Ducks.
I loved the movie, and her imagination and determination. Wrote a poem about it.
http://dreamsofwho.blogspot.com/2007/08/bunnies-in-blue.html
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