The Friday High Five
The Winter Soldier redux, beautiful babies, and burning questions about Superman's schlong
Every Friday I share 5 things I enjoyed this week. Also, high fives are inherently cool, and I think we can all agree Friday is the bestest day. Hence the Friday High Five. šš»My Favorite Thing
Captain America: The Winter Soldier
The Winter Soldier is the best MCU film in my opinion. Itās also my favorite.
Last year I wrote a long articleāeven by my standardsādelving into the Steve & Bucky bromance, which has always fascinated me.1 The article is exclusive to paid subscribers, but the preview is at least 5 minutes long and includes everything youāve come to know me for.
I rewatched The Winter Soldier again for an episode of the (coming soon!) podcast. Itās funny how you can revisit something youāve already seen a bunch and still come away with so many new observations. I donāt want to shoot my wad prematurely, but hereās a handful of things that may or may not end up on the pod.
The first thing Sam says to Natasha is right out of Joey Tribbianiās playbook: āHow you doin?ā Love the confidence. Shoot your shot, Sam.
I canāt wait to talk about the notebook Steve keeps of things he missed. For now, I would like to point out the only thing crossed off is Star Wars. Iām dying to know what he thought about it. He probably didnāt get it.
Speaking of Star Warsāthe scene where Agent Hill infiltrates the SHIELD strike team by wearing combat gear feels very āHan and Luke in Stormtrooper armorā to me. Including her line after removing the helmet: āThat thing was squeezing my brain.ā
Weāll also be talking about:
Why The Winter Soldier is peak Natasha and Nick Fury.
Is this the best MCU movie in terms of sheer action?
The deliciousness of the Natasha & Steve relationship.
How this was the movie that made Steve the Captain America we know and love.
Plus other things that donāt fit into neat categories.
The podcast premieres May 15th. Episode 1 discusses season 1 of The Wire. New episodes drop every Wednesday. The Winter Soldier pod will be episode 3 or 4.
Iāll be sharing more details in the coming weeks, including how and where you can subscribe.š¤š»
Other Things I Enjoyed
Swingers
A peek into how the sausage is made: Since I work from home, sometimes Iāll throw something on in the background. This decision is predicated on two things:
Does whatever Iām doing require my full attention? If no, move to step 2.
Have I seen this enough times that I can just consciously pop in and out and not miss a beat?
Swingers is one of those movies. Watching it now mostly means watching for my favorite scenesāthe Vegas road trip, every time they play NHL ā93, Mikeās (Jon Favreau) string of progressively worse voice messages, the par 3 golf course.
Itās funny because in the film Trent (Vince Vaughn) talks a lot about babiesāas in babes, a move that never really caught onābut when watching, all I could think was, āHoly crap, theyāre so young. Practically babies.ā
Pronto
If youāve been here any length of time, you know Iām a huge Timothy Olyphant fan. His iconic roles in Deadwood and Justified made him a modern day cowboy. He also played a marshal in Star Wars⦠after wearing Boba Fettās armor. Itās almost like his career has progressed according to my own preferences.
Justified is based on Elmore Leonard stories. The character of Raylan Givens is first introduced in Pronto, Leonardās 1993 novel. The Raylan of the book isnāt quite the Raylan of the show, but itās easy enough to picture Olyphant while reading. The cadence, the calm, the willingness to step outside the law if necessary⦠itās all textbook Raylan.
I finished this book in a week. 90% of it is dialogue and it just runs. What a read.
(Speaking of Olyphant, I really enjoyed his recent interview in Vanity Fair.)
āRoad Houseā on the Rewatchables
Iāve been a Bill Simmons fan since his ESPN Page 2 days, and have followed him to Grantland and The Ringer. His podcast The Rewatchables is basically tailor made for me. Though the central conceitāthese are the movies youād stop on and watch if you were scrolling TVādoesnāt really hold up in a post-TV world. I havenāt scrolled TV in at least 10 years. Instead, I decide what I want to watch and then I watch it. Novel concept.
The spirit of The Rewatchables is still very much relevant: What movies do you rewatch all the time? And what things become apparent upon subsequent viewings?
In general, rewatchability has fallen by the wayside. There is so much stuff you could watch, readily available at the click of a button, so why would you ever choose to revisit something youāve already seen? Many times, our watch lists feel more like checklistsāI gotta get through Suits so I can finally start Fallout. Itās a lame way to think about entertainment, but Iād be lying if I didnāt say I sometimes find myself in a āchecking offā kind of mode.
But as this very edition of the newsletter can attest, I am still very much a fan of rewatching movies I know and love.
The Rewatchables finally(!) covered the Patrick Swayze film Road House, and itās every bit as good as Iād hoped. They even repeat some of the observations I made last year.
Superman II
I mentioned rewatching Superman: The Movie in the newsletter a couple of months ago. My general takeaway was that all my memories of the movie were actually from Superman II. The first Superman is just okay in my opinion.
My son didnāt like it, a fact I got great mileage out of; every Friday since, Iāve suggested we watch Superman II. Jokes aside, it was clear any Superman II viewing would be a solo affair.
Iām super happy and more than a little relieved to report Superman II is just as good as Iād remembered. Forget the divide between Democrats and Republicansāhow can anyone prefer the first Superman over the sequel? Madness.
I havenāt seen the sequel in at least 30 years, but itās crazy how well I remember this movie. The Eiffel Tower sequence; the prison break; Zod and his crew toying with NASA, and later crashing the White House; the New York street fight, including many of the sight gags and even bits of dialogue; fresh-squeezed orange juice; āKneel before Zodā; the diner scene and its sequel (including the background music!). It felt less like memories and more like precognition. I donāt know how else to describe it.
One thing prepubescent me slept on that I picked up this go-around: Superman gives up his powers to shag Lois Lane. Which raises a number of logical points.
Superman was a virgin.
His penis is deadly. Why else would he abdicate all his powers? Unless his penis is too much for a mortal to handle. Talk about a humble brag. āSorry babeāmy dick will literally kill you.ā
Do you think his superwang wore a cape? Do you think it has its own super-properties? Does it shoot red lasers?
Superman was willing to jeopardize the safety of at least the United States, if not the world, just to get into Loisā pants. Before you start judging him for not being about the greater good, just rememberāheās at least 30 years-old. Forget blue ballsāhis have gotta be black.
Everything in the Fortress of Solitude is snow and ice. Everything except a conveniently prepared sex bed. I donāt know how else to describe it. King-sized, silk sheets, the whole deal. Barry White probably starts playing once you get in. But hereās what I keep coming back to: How long has Superman been planning this? Or! Has he been flying babes to the North Pole for years? Doing that, āLet me pop into Paris for a sec and pick up some croissantsā flex. Make a show of giving up his powers for the girl, a move he can apparently undo at will. You canāt tell me it wouldnāt work. His batting average would be 1.000.
How much drag do you think heād experience flying around with a boner? Itād have to slow him down at least 25%, right?
Seriously thoughāI canāt shake the idea of Supermanās dong wearing a cape. I bet it has its own theme song, too.
Iām totally serious about this line of questioning.2
One last thought: Superman uses a chamber to expose himself to Krypton rays(?), which render him a mere mortal. Later, he does it again to strip Zod and his flunkies of their power. Iām just wonderingāwhat would happen if Lois got zapped with some of the K-juice? Would she turn into Superwoman? Isnāt that at least worth kicking the tires on before turning Superman into a weakling?
To date, the longest article Iāve ever written is this 24-minute piece on Point Breakās bromance. I guess when it comes to platonic love between two dudes, I canāt shut up.
This might be my favorite penis-related tangent Iāve ever written. Itās certainly the longest. (Thatās what she said.)
Sorry, Mom.







My views on Superman and Superman II are well documented (in Fanfare, as it happens). With Superman II, my ideal version would be an edit that take some elements of the Richard Lester cut and some elements of the Richard Donner cut. The idea that Superman cannot sleep with Lois until he gives up his powers is inherent in the Lester cut, but in the Donner cut he sleeps with her before he does that. Frankly, that never made any sense to me. Why give up your powers? Just defy dead Daddy (the Donner cut features Marlon Brando again, rather than Suzannah York), marry Lois Lane, and keep your powers. No need to give them up. But the Lester version meant he had no choice but to give up his powers if he wanted to make use of that conveniently prepared sex bed you mention (how the hell did it get there is an excellent question). :)
I recently watched both the new Roadhouse with Jake Gylenhall and the original with Patrick Swayze. Iād love to hear your thoughts on how the two compare. For me itās a bit like competing Tim Burtons Batman and Nolans Batman, barely the same story with completely different purposes. Anyway sorry to go off on a tangent on your story lol