Previous “I’ve Got Poetry In Me” posts can be found here.
Ithaca Film Journal: 7/16/26
In Theaters: My Loving Wife and I are driving more than 90 minutes to the Cinemark Tinseltown Rochester and IMAX to see The Odyssey on the biggest screen possible, so yes: that’s this week’s biggest new release! It opens locally at both Cinemapolis and the Regal Ithaca Mall today. I’m looking forward to seeing Maddie’s Secret at Cinemapolis as well.
But I’m burying the lede (to borrow a joke from the movie I’m about to mention): Gail Daughtry and the Celebrity Sex Pass has finally ended Obsession‘s two-month-long reign of horror as my most highly recommended holdover! Here’s what I recently said about it on Letterboxd:
30 years ago David Wain and The State taught some of us that the first commandment of comedy is that “anything that isn’t true is funny.” Which: if you don’t just get it, there’s no loose stack of documents in the world big enough to make you understand. Anyway, it’s good to see so much of the old gang back together again still breathing new life into this creed! Favorite The Wizard of Oz riff since Rookie of the Year, and “Make U Sick” for Best Original Song Oscar, Non-Paul Rudd Category!
It remains at both Cinemapolis and the Regal, as does Obsession. I also enjoyed The Invite, which as I quipped on Letterboxd could also be titled Who’s Afraid of Veruca Salt? <PAUSE FOR LAUGHTER> and Disclosure Day, which continue their respective runs at the same two theaters, and Toy Story 5, which is just at the Regal. Finally, a quiet week on the special events/repertory front is highlighted by a screening of Buena Vista Social Club at Cinemapolis on Tuesday.
Home Video Recommendation: By the Bluest of Seas is a great film to pair with The Odyssey because it features one my favorite cinematic Penelopes, Yelena Kuzmina’s radiant collective farm leader Maria:
Who memorably shows her disapproval of Nikolay Kryuchkov’s mimbo Alyosha playing hooky to buy her a pearl necklace in a terrific slow-motion sequence I posted about last week. Bluest also opens with a series of seascapes that according to Nicole Brenez gave French film producer Dominique Païni an erection, which: gross! But while that may be taking things too far, they are pretty spectacular:
Current Cornell University faculty, staff, and students have access to this movie on Kanopy via a license paid for by the Library, and you might as well! If you have an all regions DVD player, you can also purchase it from a couple different foreign labels on Amazon and elsewhere.
Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here. A running list of all of my “Home Video” recommendations can be found here.
I’ve Got Poetry In Me #6: The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
Previous “I’ve Got Poetry In Me” posts can be found here.
What Makes a Man To (Not) Wander?
The Equalizer 2 ends with an homage to one of the most iconic moments in American cinema, the final shot of my November, 2024 Drink & a Movie selection The Searchers:
Writing for the New York Times, Manohla Dargis was typical of contemporaneous reviewers in being unimpressed: “the allusion is more ritualistic nod than anything else,” she argued, “and there’s little otherwise in ‘The Equalizer 2’ that connects it to ‘The Searchers’ other than the bluntly obvious: the near-mythic status of its stars and our very American love of violence.” With all due respect to one of my must-read critics, I beg to differ. By picking up where that film and another one of director John Ford’s masterpieces, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, leave off, the Equalizer franchise actually answers a question which has long vexed me: just what the hell did John Wayne’s character in the latter film do with himself during the decades that separate its main flashback narrative from the framing device scenes that begin and end it?
This mystery doesn’t really exist in the Dorothy M. Johnson short story that Liberty Valance is based on, which begins with the following lines:
Bert Barricune died in 1910. Not more than a dozen persons showed up for his funeral. Among them was an earnest young reporter who hoped for a human-interest story; there were legends that the old man had been something of a gunfighter in the early days. A few aging men tiptoed in, singly or in pairs, scowling and edgy, clutching their battered hats–men who had been Bert’s companions at drinking or penny ante while the world passed them by. One woman came, wearing a heavy veil that concealed her face. White and yellow streaks showed in her black-dyed hair. The reporter made a mental note: Old friend from the old District. But no story there–can’t mention that.
A mystery is exactly what Ford deliberately and very effectively creates when he replaces Johnson’s funeral with a rough-hewn box that the county was about to bury without ceremony:
Has the editor of the Shinbone Star Maxwell Scott (Carleton Young) declare that there’s no mention whatsoever of the man whose remains it houses, whose name is significantly now the Irish-sounding Tom Doniphon, in his newspaper’s backfiles while demanding to know what brought the famous Senator Ransom Stoddard (James Stewart) all the way from Washington to bury him:
Then dramatizes Stoddard’s answer in the form of a flashback to Shinbone’s infancy which lasts most of the rest of the movie’s runtime and establishes within a few minutes that Doniphon (John Wayne) was basically the most popular and highly-respected guy in town.
Watching Liberty Valance for the first time, My Loving Wife actually paused it to demand an explanation! Part of the problem is undoubtedly that the actors are portraying younger versions of themselves without the benefit of today’s totally uncontroversial de-aging technology, initially suggesting that much less time has passed than the 20+ years implied by the list of offices Stoddard will go on to hold which Scott rattles off near the end of the film: “three terms as governor, two terms in the Senate, Ambassador to the Court of St James, back again to the Senate.” Regardless of how long we’re talking about exactly, it’s shocking that such a prominent man could be forgotten so entirely.
The first The Equalizer works with a different palette of visual references than its successor:
And it would be a stretch to connect Denzel Washington’s titular protagonist Robert McCall to Ford’s heroes based on this movie alone. Details begin to emerge right from the start, though, which will take on significance in the sequel. Just as Stoddard describes himself as going west with “a bag full of lawbooks and my father’s watch,” which he is relieved of by the outlaw Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin) moments after his younger self appears onscreen:
So too does our introduction to McCall include shots of first an alarm clock, then a digital watch, establishing both men as “right on time” cogs in a clockwork design bigger than themselves.
McCall works in a big-box store in the first Equalizer movie and as a Lyft driver in the second, which also makes him professionally adaptable like Stoddard, who as David Coursen observes “is shown or referred to as a lawyer, dishwasher, waiter, reporter, schoolteacher, election official, gunman and convention delegate-elect.” Like Ethan Edwards from The Searchers, we learn in The Equalizer 2 that McCall is a decorated former soldier:
Although unlike him McCall doesn’t care who women in his life sleep with as long as their partners treat them well. Meanwhile, a big difference between McCall and Doniphon is that whereas Robert B. Pippin notes in his book From Hollywood Westerns and American Myth that “we get some indication later that it is precisely because [the latter] feels so self-sufficient and independent that he sees no need for adopting a civic role,” McCall uses his “very particular set of skills” (to borrow a quote from another revenge/rescue fantasy) to help a co-worker train for a security guard test and serves as a mentor to young people in his community even before he confides to a colleague from his former life (Melissa Leo) that he has embarked on a vendetta against the men who nearly killed one of those women he cares for because “one day somebody does something unspeakable to someone else to . . . someone you hardly knew, and you . . . do something about it because you can.”
Finally, like Doniphon he loses his one true love, although in his case to death instead of another man, and instead of wallowing, it ultimately sets him to “wandering” like Edwards. Which just about brings us back to our first image, but first here’s the last shot from Liberty Valance‘s flashback, which binds that film more tightly to The Searchers by showing how Doniphon lets the door close on any future he might have in politics in much the same way that Edwards decides to “turn his back on home” in the song by Stan Jones that this post’s title comes from:
Joshua Foa Dienstag writes in an article for the journal Political Theory called “A Storied Shooting: Liberty Valance and the Paradox of Sovereignty” that the people of Shinbone were faced with a “Hobbesian” dilemma. Tom Doniphon had the ability to dispose of Valance on their behalf any time he pleased, but in doing so “he would be taking it under his protection, putting it under his own rule,” and this “is a responsibility he has no desire for”; Stoddard, on the other hand, had the desire “to bring democratic law to the town,” but lacked the power to do so. “What,” Dienstag asks rhetorically, “is it that combines law and power? And can they combine in some way that is not arbitrary or despotic?” The answer he proposes is Hallie, who “articulates the active desires of the demos” and “is not (as she might be in other films) a token passed between the two men but a live participant in a three-pointed relationship that endures even after her ultimate marriage to Stoddard.”
Robert McCall represents an attempt to unite all this in a single character. With his late wife as his conscience, he has both the power and the desire to stand up for the little guy, and the check on his would-be despotism is Pippin’s observation that “a civilized order must view itself as founded by heroic and unproblematic violence,” which necessitates that upon exercising his power, he must move on lest facts emerge to cast a shadow on his legend. If this sounds too good to be true, that’s because it is, and to its credit The Equalizer 2 acknowledges this by turning McCall into a “superhero character” created by the aspiring artist he steered away from the corners:
And THAT, at long last, brings us back to the final days of Tom Doniphon. Liberty Valance gestures at a descent into alcoholism, but the math doesn’t add up. He drinks five shots in quick succession in the aftermath of Valance’s demise, then dispenses with the glassware and goes straight for the bottle:
After busting up a saloon and drunk driving his buckboard back to his ranch
He proceeds to set it on fire in a suicide attempt thwarted by his “boy” Pompey (Woody Strode):
Carrying on like this he would have been dead long before the year of 1910 when Johnson’s play begins and Ford’s movie probably does too because there aren’t any indications that it doesn’t. Nor do I think a man with this much Ethan Edwards in him could have just stayed in Shinbone and moldered away regardless.
“What makes a man to wander,” to answer Stan Jones, is other people, “the living and the dead.” The ones who would make of you an idol, and the ones whose memories you can’t shake. If you’re a good man at heart–and troubled though some of them may be, I think the heroes of these films all are–you stay and try to help as long as you can stand it, and when you can’t any more you move on. But then you come back and the cycle repeats. And each time it does there are less around who remember you, until one day there’s nothing left to run from and you quit, no matter what kind of critter you are.
Juxtaposition #19
From The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance:
RANSE: Hallie, who put the cactus roses on Tom’s coffin?
HALLIE: I did.
From the “The Dead” in Dubliners by James Joyce:
A kinder note than he had intended went into his voice.
–Why, Gretta? he asked.
–I am thinking about a person long ago who used to sing that song
–And who was the person long ago? asked Gabriel, smiling.
–It was a person I used to know in Galway when I was living with my grandmother, she said.
The smile passed away from Gabriel’s face.
Previous “Juxtaposition” posts can be found here.
I’ve Got Poetry In Me #5: By the Bluest of Seas
Previous “I’ve Got Poetry In Me” posts can be found here.
Ithaca Film Journal: 7/9/26
In Theaters: I drove seven hours to see Wet Hot American Summer during its original theatrical run with a car full of friends who also cut their sketch comedy teeth on The State, so director David Wain’s latest Gail Daughtry and the Celebrity Sex Pass is definitely this week’s theatrical highlight for me. I’m also intrigued by The Invite based on what I heard about it out of Sundance. Each film will open at Cinemapolis and the Regal Ithaca Mall today or tomorrow. Obsession, which is still going strong at both venues, remains my favorite holdover for an impressive eighth week in a row. I also enjoyed Disclosure Day (same two theaters) and Toy Story 5 (just the Regal).
Special events include one showing only of Our Land, which I mentioned in my dispatch from this year’s Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival, at Cinemapolis on Sunday as part of their “Global Lens” series. Finally, noteworthy repertory options include My Neighbor Totoro at the Regal Saturday-Wednesday and two screenings of Pulp Fiction at Cinemapolis on Tuesday.
Home Video Recommendation: Speaking of FLEFF, my favorite new movie that I saw there, The Love That Remains, is now available on the Criterion Channel with a subscription! Here’s what I said about it on Letterboxd during the event:
Scenes From a Marriage meets “Break Up in a Small Town.” Palm Dog notwithstanding, Panda is up against Rin Tin Tin at FLEFF ’26. Sorry, girl! Without spoiling anything, I think all readings of the final scene (which ended Silent Friend‘s reign as my favorite closing shot of Movie Year 2026 after less than 24 hours) should take the apparent level of peril into account. The plane crash fantasy is a masterpiece of deadpan morbid humor, and if you told me this film was inspired by that Australian woman who tried to murder her husband with poisonous mushrooms, I’d believe you.
My point about the ending is that land is clearly visible in the background, so this is not a depiction of a man set adrift in the open sea, but rather one who pathetically insists on waiting for someone else to save him instead of just swimming to shore, which I submit is representative of the movie’s attitude toward the character in question generally.
If you don’t have access to Criterion Channel, The Love That Remains can also be rented and purchased from a variety of other streaming platforms, and it’s coming to Blu-ray and DVD on July 21.
Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here. A running list of all of my “Home Video” recommendations can be found here.
A PSA from My Children (Contains Spoilers)
Ithaca Film Journal: 7/2/26
In Theaters: We aren’t a Minions household for whatever reason, and the girls are in Canada for the summer anyway, so this is a “meh” week for us for new releases. I didn’t get to Leviticus last week, so seeing it at Cinemapolis is my top priority, and I’m going to try to catch either Ask E. Jean or Girls Like Girls there as well. Obsession, which continues its run there and at the Regal Ithaca Mall, remains my favorite holdover. I also enjoyed Disclosure Day and Toy Story 5, which are at the same two venues and, as I noted on Letterboxd, have basically the same ending. I think it must just be too damn hot for special events, but repertory highlights include 85th anniversary screenings of Citizen Kane at the Regal on Sunday and Wednesday and My Own Private Idaho at Cinemapolis on Tuesday.
Home Video Recommendation: The World Cup and Wimbledon are in full swing, the Tour de France is right around the corner, and it’s going to be a while before the buzz of the Knicks finally winning a banner wears off, so I’ve got sports on the brain! That makes now a great time to watch what for my money is one of the most underrated movies of the millennium, Undisputed. As I recently argued on Letterboxd:
Over the past two months, millions of parents around the country let their children stay up late to watch the New York Knicks’ run to their first NBA title in 53 years, creating shared memories they will cherish for the rest of their lives. O.G. Anunoby’s tip-in in Game 4 and highlights from Jalen Brunson’s performance for the ages in Game 5 will be celebrated and replayed not just by fans of the team, but all lovers of the sport. The championship brought a city together. It also resulted in 63 arrests, Spurs fans being assaulted, and the destruction of five school buses.
Undisputed is one of the great sports movies because it’s laser-focused on the fight between Ving Rhames’ George “Iceman” Chambers, a world heavyweight champion recently fallen from the mountaintop of fame and fortune, and Wesley Snipes’ Monroe Hutchen, a could-have-been-a-contender convicted of murder in his prime and undefeated after ten years of underground prison bouts, not as the climax of a story but as an object of inquiry in its own right. The beauty of boxing, as Peter Falk’s aging Cosa Nostra connoisseur says, lies in its simplicity: “two guys fighting to the finish but just one guy wins because he’s the better man and that’s what the goddamn sport is about.” That’s what all sports are about, even if parasites and poets create spectacles, rackets, and morality plays around them.
Characters are introduced by the crime they committed first, then their name, because what matters most for the purposes of this narrative is how they got here. Lloyd Ahern’s camera is restless. It searches for truth in the main story, archival footage of old fights, flashbacks to the one time Hutchen lost control, and the face of the woman who has accused Chambers of rape. But it doesn’t tell us what it finds because this is no The Jericho Mile or The Longest Yard. Those are both fine movies, but they’re about something else. Undisputed is about a boxing match between two men who fight to the finish according to the London Prize Ring Rules. Just one guy wins because he’s the better man. Neither of them appears to learn anything. And that’s it. Whatever else we come away with is something we brought with us.
You can stream Undisputed on Paramount+ with a subscription or rent it from a variety of other platforms, and it’s also available on Blu-ray from Kino Lorber.
Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here. A running list of all of my “Home Video” recommendations can be found here.
Ithaca Film Journal: 6/25/26
In Theaters: I will be in Chicago for the American Library Association Annual Conference until Tuesday, but I’m hoping to see Bouchra at the Siskel Film Center and make it to a 35mm screening of Rose of Nevada at the Music Box Theatre while there. I’m also going to try to catch Supergirl at the Regal Ithaca Mall and Leviticus there or at Cinemapolis after I return. This week’s other big new release Jackass: Best and Last, which opens at the Regal today, will have to wait, as will the rest of the first-run fare at Cinemapolis that I haven’t yet seen, The Death of Robin Hood and Girls Like Girls. Finally, the clear special events/repertory highlight is summer classic Do the Right Thing, which plays Cinemapolis twice on Tuesday.
Home Video Recommendation: While my religious beliefs haven’t fundamentally changed since the age eleven revelation I wrote about last week, my views on religion have evolved considerably during this time. To hijack a popular meme, the pithily wry short The Tomb now streaming on the Criterion Channel as part of their “Sudanese Film Group” collection (which is well worth watching in its entirety, by the way) represents “how it started” with its charlatan church built atop a bag of wheat. The Age of the Medici, which you can watch on the same platform, uses a variation of the same story (this time it’s about a chapel dedicated to the remains of a saint which turned out to be the bones of a dog) to pick up where the former movie’s cynical “if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em!” ending leaves off and suggests that maybe just maybe the wonders of art and architecture surrounding this preacher are ends that justify the means:
Tag Gallagher calls this “the greatest defense of capitalism ever filmed” in The Adventures of Roberto Rossellini, but there’s a lot to love about this movie even if that doesn’t sound like your particular brand of vodka. As I recently said on Letterboxd:
Roberto Rossellini rewrites the Great Man theory of history as biochemistry. Almost the entirety of the final third of Cosimo de’ Medici’s story is devoted to cataloging the achievements of another, Leon Battista Alberti, who in turn would have seen far less were it not for his vantage point atop the pile of art and scholarship commissioned and collected by his patron. It is, in other words, a tale of enzyme catalysis. The brilliant forced perspective establishing shots of Florence keep the fires of activation energy burning.
Previous “Ithaca Film Journal” posts can be found here. A running list of all of my “Home Video” recommendations can be found here.



































