| 
		 
		Out of print for more than 30 years, now available for the first time as 
		an eBook, this is the controversial story of John Wooden's first 25 
		years and first 8 NCAA Championships as UCLA Head Basketball Coach. 
		This is the only book that gives a true picture of the character of John 
		Wooden and the influence of his assistant, Jerry Norman, whose 
		contributions Wooden  ignored and tried to bury. 
		Compiled with 
		more than 40 hours of interviews with Coach Wooden, learn about the man 
		behind the coach. The players tell their stories in their own words.  
		
		Click the book to read the first chapter and for 
		ordering information. Also available on Kindle. 
 | 
  
    
      | Thumbnails Nov 18 by Tony Medley A Star is Born (9/10): Top quality 
		production design and captivating cinematography are enhanced by 
		wonderful editing, and original music by director/star Bradley Cooper, 
		costar Lady Gaga, that is a cinch to win the Oscar®. This movie is an 
		effulgent treat. Lady Gaga is a brilliant singer and Cooper shows 
		surprising musical talent (not to mention the directing, for which he 
		should receive an Oscar® nomination, in addition to Best Actor). The 
		movie drags in the last half hour, but the preceding 90 minutes are 
		enough to carry it. I can’t say enough about the quality of the music 
		and concert performances. Bohemian Rhapsody (9/10): Everything I said 
		above applies to this biopic of Queen and their lead singer, the 
		convention-shattering Freddie Mercury, who was enthralling onstage. Rami 
		Malek gives a boffo performance as Mercury, looking, walking, and 
		performing in his spitting image. Even though there is a lot of music 
		and mind-blowing concert performances, I wished there were more. Trust Machine: the Story of Blockchain (8/10):
		This is a much-needed, fascinating study of blockchain, which is the 
		basis for bitcoin and all the other virtual currencies. Directed by Alex 
		Winter, this is esoteric stuff. The movie does a good job of making it 
		relatively understandable. Laura Shin, a Forbes editor, says that people 
		who criticize bitcoin (like Warren Buffet and Jamie Dimon, Chairman of 
		JPMorgan Chase) are people who don’t understand the technology, “I just 
		don’t know how much homework they’ve done. If they have done the 
		research then they will pretty quickly figure out that these are 
		probably going to disrupt their business models.” Maria by Callas (7/10): If you love opera, 
		you should love this because there are, from my non-operatic POV, too many arias sung in their 
		entirety (although I did love “L’amour est un oiseau rebelle” [Love is a 
		Rebellious Bird], aka Habañera, from Bizet’s Carmen, one of my favorite 
		songs). I found the film entertaining while exasperating in what it 
		omitted. Because it is told without narration, much of what goes on in 
		her life is left poorly explained. The many interviews show her as a 
		sensitive, beautiful woman (much more beautiful than I had thought), not 
		the tempestuous diva that has been her unfortunate reputation; it does a 
		good job of capturing her true personality. First Man (5/10): Long, depressing, and 
		black, projecting very little feeling for the enormous accomplishment, 
		this fails to adequately capture the tension and danger of putting 
		together a try to get to the moon. Immensely disappointing are the 
		promised scenes of the moon in IMAX. There are only a few shots of the 
		moonscape and they were made at a quarry in Atlanta. Front Runner (5/10): Burdened by a painfully 
		tedious first 45 minutes, this telling of the Gary Hart/Donna Rice 
		scandal finally picks up somewhat with good performances by Hugh Jackman 
		as Hart and Vera Farmiga as Hart’s wife Lee, but the inaccurate 
		portrayal of Rice by Sara Paxton as a quintessential bimbo, cheaply 
		beautiful but really dumb and inept ruined the movie for me. I met Rice 
		more than a decade ago and she was nothing like this. She was beautiful, 
		but not in a cheap way. And she was smart and knowledgeable. After the 
		Hart affair she got married and as Donna Rice Hughes she became a born 
		again Christian. She is President & CEO of Enough is Enough and the 
		author of “Kids Online: Protecting Your Children in Cyberspace.” Shame 
		on Reitman & Co. for this misleading portrait of a woman who is still 
		alive, and not adding her present status to the postscript of his movie, 
		which tells about Gary and Lee’s situations today but omits Rice. The Old Man and the Gun (3/10): Iconic actor 
		Robert Redford chooses this plodder as his swan song? I can see why 
		Redford might want to choose a movie like this for his last performance, 
		though. There are three advantages. First, there is no acting required. 
		All he has to do is recite his lines like Robert Redford and smile a 
		lot. Second, since he’s sitting down much of the time he doesn’t have to 
		worry about hitting his marks. Third, he no longer needs to be shot 
		through the Doris Day filter. The point of the film is that he’s an old 
		geezer and his face needs to look worn and lined, which it is.   |