About Me

I
am a staff member at the University of Alaska Southeast, on
the Juneau campus. I recently wrapped up my B.A. in Literary Studies, and I now work at the university full-time, doing many different tasks (you are most likely to find me behind the circulation desk at the library or as a writing tutor in the learning center). Film as Art is among my many handles here at UAS, and it is most certainly my favorite of my various jobs. I am
married to a talented and beautiful artist, Donna,
and also am working on several other projects, including a novel or two and an anthology of short stories.
Other than film related stuff, if you have any other questions
about me, please email!
Favorites:
Roger
Ebert has so often stated that he’s not a fan of lists.
I say that you have to start somewhere, and lists are a good way
of organizing your thoughts. Though to be fair, lists such as
“favorite actors” or “best films” are
certainly subject to change, and I don’t think I could reasonably
create one is not going to be altered somewhat on most occassions that you
visit this page (case in point: I've gone through at least five major revisions of the below lists in the past few years of Film as Art). All that said, if I was stranded on an uninhabited
island with a long extension cord, and I could only have ten movies
with me, these are the ten today. They are by no means the greatest
films on the planet (at least not all of them), but they are
very influential to me in my love for cinema, and/or represent what I feel are grand cinematic moments, and as a result,
I remain forever in their debt.
Here’s “the list.”
1.
Dawn of the Dead
2. Ikiru
3 . Apocalypse Now
4 . Fitzcarraldo
5 . Scenes From a Marriage
6. Magnolia
7 . Once Upon a Time in America
8 . Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid
9 . Paris, Texas
10 Keoma
I
tend to pick my favorites from living artists, as they have yet
to pass on and still can be fairly judged as ever-changing, growing
performers. Favorite living actors include Max
von Sydow (perhaps the greatest living actor since Olivier.
He remains overlooked for his raw talent of never appearing to
be acting at all), Christopher
Lambert (whose subtle movements and quiet demeanor make for
characterizations that are among the most overlooked and underrated
in the movies), William
Hurt (for similar reasons as Lambert; his method of only revealing
"the tip of the iceburg" of his characters and letting
their actions do the rest makes him one of the very best of film
actors), Ed Harris
(who has yet to give a performance that has not been engaging),
Robert Duvall (who,
frankly, needs no explanation), and Billy
Bob Thorton (possibly the greatest living American actor from
the past ten years). Actresses include Jodie
Foster, Miranda
Richardson, Anna
Paquin, Jessica
Lange, and Sissy
Spacek. Deceased favorites include actors Toshirô
Mifune, David
Niven, Lon Chaney,
Sr., Boris Karloff,
the Marx Brothers,
James Cossins,
Bob Peck, and
Charles Laughton;
actresses Bette
Davis, Audrey
Hepburn, Grace
Kelly, and Elsa
Lanchester.
Director-wise,
I find myself partial to the works of Werner
Herzog, Martin
Scorsese, Clint
Eastwood, George
A. Romero, Paul Thomas Anderson, Larry Fessenden, and Julie
Taymor. Favorites who have passed
include Ingmar
Bergman, Akira
Kurosawa, Robert
Altman, Alfred
Hitchcock, Sergio Leone, Frank
Capra, Stanley
Kubrick, David
Lean, Orson
Welles, Roberto
Rossellini, Lucio Fulci, Krzysztof Kieslowski, Kenji
Mizoguchi, and Michael
Cimino (with all due respect to his fans,
of course). I really don’t have a list
of non-favorites, but the only way I’ll
ever see films by Michael
Bay or James
H. Barden again is if my arms and legs
are severed and I am dragged into the theater,
unable to kick and scream.