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Play like a pro with expert knowledge from a champion of the game
If you don't know the ins and outs of play, bridge can seem like an
intimidating game--but it doesn't have to be! Armed with the techniques
and strategies in the pages of this book, you'll be bidding and winning
hands like a boss! A good book for beginners, it has lots of advanced
techniques useful to experienced players, too. This is as close to
an all-in-one bridge book you can get.
About the Author
H. Anthony Medley holds the rank of Silver life Master, is an American
Contract Bridge League Club Director, and has won regional and sectional
titles. An attorney, he received his B.S. from UCLA, where he was sports
editor of UCLA's Daily Bruin, and his J.D. from the University of
Virginia School of Law. He is the author of UCLA Basketball: The Real
Story and Sweaty Palms: The Neglected Art of Being Interviewed and The
Complete Idiots Guide to Bridge. He was a columnist for the Southern
California Bridge News. He is an MPAA-certified film critic and his work
has appeared nationally in Good Housekeeping, The Los Angeles Times, Los
Angeles Magazine, The Hollywood Reporter, and other publications. Click
the book to order.
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Belushi (5/10)
by Tony Medley
108 minutes
TVMA
I’m not sure why a drug-addicted wannabe like John
Belushi deserves his own documentary, but 12 credited producers
apparently think he does, despite the fact that the highly publicized
portion of his life lasted only seven years, from 1975 to his death due
to drug overdose at the Chateau Marmont in Hollywood in 1982. Belushi’s
fame came quickly with his debut on the first shows of Saturday Night
Live but, just as quickly, he flamed out. He was in only one memorable
movie, National Lampoon’s Animal House (1978) as a low-class
jackass which, frankly, didn’t require that much acting.
This documentary has John's brother Jim saying near
the outset, “There was something safer and more comfortable in being me
than in being him.” The film then proceeds to document the completely
wasted life of a little (5’7”) man who had a talent that he apparently
over-rated and that misconception destroyed him.
Written and directed by R. J. Cutler and narrated
by Judd Apatow, it contains lots of clips of interviews with those close
to him, including Dan Aykroyd, wife Judy, Chevy Chase, Jim Belushi, Jane
Curtin, John Landis, Lorne Michaels, Harold Ramis, Penny Marshall, and
Richard Zanuck to name just a few. All pretty much confirm that he had a
unique talent but was miserably unhappy and difficult to get along with.
Also quoted and shown are psychological self-searching letters he
apparently wrote, mostly to his wife.
He was apparently disheartened that Chevy Chase
became the star of the first season of SNL and pouted the entire year.
Then when Chase dropped out of the show after that one season and he
became the alpha male his attitude improved, especially when he started
some of his popular characters.
If you’re looking for clips of his comedy, though,
you won’t find them here. Oh, there are some very short clips of
excerpts of a few of his skits but if you blink you miss them.
Although he was unique, his uniqueness was mostly
to be so different and base, crass and crude as to be shocking. To me the most
memorable thing about him was the way he could control both eyebrows
separately, and that says a lot. It closes, appropriately enough, with a
grotesque clip of Belushi gratingly giving an unappealing rendition of
Lennon and McCartney’s “With a Little Help From My Friends.” It is
anything but entertaining, and it could sum up this entire film.
Frankly, I had a hard time staying awake. Showtime
November 22.
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