.

Monsieur Chariot

Monsieur Chariot
Location
That Dazzling and Luminous California Metropolis known as The City Of The Angels, USA
Birthday
June 08
Bio
Offering Discreet Tutelage in the Metropolitan Arts to Inquiring Gentlepersons of Variously Misguided Social Persuasions ................................................... To contact me directly, kindly email monsieurchariot (at) aol (dot) com

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Editor’s Pick
JULY 29, 2010 10:07AM

Salt in the Wound

Rate: 57 Flag

· The Finical Filmgoer ·

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On Tuesday evening M. Chariot attended a screening of Salt – the new, double-agent action thriller directed by Phillip Noyce and starring Mlle Angelina Jolie, M. Liev Schreiber and M. Chiwetel Ejiofor. I am here to confess I was rather shaken by the proceedings. Departing the cinema on trembly legs, I found myself ruminating about the cinematic trend depicting women in mortal combat, which I recall starting with films like La Femme Nikita and then Kill Bill. Really pushes one's Bachelor's Button, does it not?
 
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 It's quite one thing to see gentlemen engaged in bloody cinematic brutality, leveling punches and kicks, slashing each other with knives, being perforated by a hale of bullets and hurtled into glass cabinetry and such. Although in real life such extreme violence is typically over in a matter of seconds, in film these kinds of things do go on and on, if you don't mind my saying so. Choreographed for maximum barbarity, film violence discomposes refined gentlepersons (like you, dear reader) the world over!

But when we feature the fair sex in this brutalizing scenario, that sense of vulnerability, of terror, is amped up considerably, in case you hadn't noticed! Yes, yes, heroines in such films are unvaryingly ruthless, trained assassins who are apparently accustomed to being pummeled to a tooth-spitting pulp. Far be it from me to be a partypooper at the slaughterhouse, but one does have some difficulty finding one's bearings midst the haute couture and carnage.

Still, Mlle Jolie, we are reassured, revels in spectacles of this kind. Her recent Vanity Fair interview explains that she adores acting in violent films she just doesn't care to watch them. A telling insight, to be sure. But what are we to make of such remarks? Perhaps "I'm happy to make 90 million dollars inflicting bread and circuses on a drooling public, but I'll be damned if I'm going to watch something this brutal myself." Besides, she's too busy as goodwill ambassador for the UN or somesuch.

salt flourish.jpg

An athletic actress who enjoys executing her own stunts, Jolie works diligently with top stunt trainers and choreographers to bring a lurid savagery to the populace. Thus we get to see the distinguished beauty herself, "kicking ass" so hard her bloody Jimmy Choos thrust fashionably out her opponents' esophagi and we can see her pretty face while she does it. A bonus of sorts.

 Unfortunately, Jolie's enthusiasm for doing her own stunt work is, if one doesn't mind my saying so, the film's weak point. For violence this sensational, a professional stunt stand-in willing to take a few hard slams here and there goes a long way, thank you most kindly. Although Jolie's stunts are breathtakingly choreographed within an inch of her luminous cheekbones, there is a distinct sense that the heavily-insured star is being handled a bit more delicately than action film stuntpersons typically require.

 Think about it: what stunt fighter wants to be the guy who accidentally kicked Angelina Jolie in the face? Talk about losing your job to say nothing of being sued for a kajillion dollars.

 Which brings my third wife to mind.

 

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 Girls Just Wanna Be Slaughtered
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Sincerest apologies to anyone who encountered this post yesterday evening. I became a bit flustered with the buttons and knobs while editing the essay, what with my pinkies being so misarranged of late.
You perform such a valuable public service by falling on the sword and watching these films so that we don't have to. I think I'll go make you a nice plaque.
Yes, one would say that he takes it like a man.. A film going man..:)
Rated with hugs
Monsieur! I too saw this movie, and must weigh in as a female-type person: I loved watching Angie kick butt. Perhaps not my most attractive fantasy, but why should women not have their own indestructible, invincible, smarter-than-anybody-else, mean-as-a-snake action figure? I like the Bourne movies for the same reasons. Thrilling escapes thrill me.

I believe I read that there was indeed a stunt double for Mlle. Jolie, but she did her own stunts in such areas as jumping from one moving truck onto another - with the aid of harnesses and cables, which, of course, were edited out.

The plot is nonsense, but one hardly expects otherwise. It's also nice to see that Russians are back in style as villains. Islamo-terrorists are so yesterday!

Biff! Sock-o! Crunch!
Keen observations Monsieur. I think most of us would be reluctant to project kicks or punches even in the same room with Mlle Jolie. thank you for a very original review.
I'm pretty sure I've never seen any of Angelina Jolie's films. I simply cannot abide that kind of brutality.
Your post's title is Ultra-Wit! And what a great analysis of female action violence (which I fully support within the context of an excellent piece of art. Or pop trash). Long gone are the days when we thrilled to Mrs. Peel's elegant, bloodless judo flips. The ante has been upped. That's not necessarily good. Unless you're watching Kill Bill.
Or, Russ Meyer......
I will pass on Salt. Thanks very much for the review. I can spend 21 dollars on something more valuable.
"One does have some difficulty finding one's bearings midst the haute couture and carnage." I want this on my tombstone, along with your avatar. M. Chariot, OS would be a dismal place without you. Sorry about the third wife. And the pinkies.
Excellent and illuminating analysis. I have never seen any of the Kill Bill's, so I will skip Salt and watch those instead. For free, with my own snacks (camembert and water crackers and a glass of chardonnay).
Yes, it's always amusing the hear the hollywood elites explain they don't LIKE guns and want gun control but engage in shoot-outs in every film they make. Do as I say, not as I do. Must be nice!
I rather like the women action heroes . . . why should the boys have all the fun?
I hesitate to admit this, lest I sully my reputation further than I undoubtedly have already, but I did enjoy La Femme Nikita, and consider the entire 2-part Kill Bill movie one of my favorite films of all time, largely because the violence is so over the top that it is cartoonish. This film seems to be something I would not enjoy--something more akin to a Chuck Norris film perhaps.

Add me to the chorus of people who send you their gratitude for viewing this and reporting on it so that we can skip it altogether. Merci, my dear.
Ah, the exotic, anorexic Angelina of the puffy lips flying through the air, screaming, blood spattered and kicking butt. Why can't I get this image out of my mind?
My dear Mlle Greenheron: No plaques please: just put down that gun.

My dear Mlle Seccaspina: Before we hug, would you mind being patted for weapons?

My dear Mlle SixtyCandles: Thank you for clarifying you position on female violence. But the knee-capping you inflicted was unnecessary.

My dear M. Justis: Were I in the same room with Mlle Jolie, any projections in her direction would be most embarrassing.

My dear M. ChillerPop: One can only imagine your marital bed.

My dear M. OESheepdog: It may be of some interest that Mlle Jolie save a puppy before beheading 3 people in Salt.
I confess: When I am stressed or unhappy, I read your posts and find them as soothing and witty and make-my-world-righty as a Jane Austen novel.

This is, I hope you know...my highest praise.

I smother you with kisses, M. Chariot.
My dear Mlle KTM: Multi-leisurists like ourselves loathe anything so strenuous as evisceration.

My dear M. Blevins: If you don't stop getting covers and 100+ ratings, you may encounter your tombstone sooner than you wish.

My dear Mlle aim: I recommend the French version of La Femme Nikita instead. You'll find it goes much better with camembert, water crackers and a glass of chardonnay.

My dear Mlle Young: Apparently the only difference between conservative assassins and liberal assassins is that conservatives shoot each other in real life while liberals shoot each other on film.

My dear Mlle Russell: Boys like anything gory, grown men ask sexist questions, and girls crave disembowelment.
Wow, I love these kinds of women kick ass movies, and wish there were more women action heroes. I guess some men just can’t stand seeing women be strong and taking as well as giving what is thrown at them. Then again I might be bias; I do karate and have no problem sparing, giving and throwing punches and kicks. Maybe if more women were like this, then men would think twice before attacking us. We are out of the kitchen; please do not try to put us back in.
a wry observation indeed. r
My dear Mlle OwlSaysWho: I recall when ladies found playing nocturnes on harpsichords "fun".

My dear Mlle Mitchell: I should have know I'd find a tiny, pearl-handled pistol in your decolletage.

My dear M. Tingey: It is difficult to get Mlle Jolie out of one's mind when she is pointing a Glock in your face.

My dear Mlle Persephone13: Well, I suppose one should be grateful you're not smothering me with a pillow.
M. Chariot writes: "I found myself ruminating about the cinematic trend depicting women in mortal combat, which I recall starting with films like La Femme Nikita and then Kill Bill."

It seems to me that La Femme Nikita was a different kind of movie. The character portrayed by Anne Parillaud starts out as a thug and drug addict who murders a policeman during a robbery.

After being given an "offer she can't refuse" she enters a training program designed to make her both an efficient killer AND a lady, the latter course of study being the most difficult for her.

Other than doing the occasional assassination, after the training she develops a normal life, shopping for groceries, having a boyfriend, and so on. Eventually the violence takes its toll, and she can't take it any more and flees, presumably never to be seen again. Inasmuch as the movie can be said to have a "message," I think it is the triumph of humanity over violence, the rejection of violence in favor of a normal life.

So perhaps the most troubling development is not the heroine who kicks ass, but the heroine who kicks ass and enjoys it. Women symbolize the peaceful, nurturing aspect of life, and when a heroine commits violent acts and enjoys them, it is a desecration of that symbol.
My dear Mlle Dea-dog: The kitchen? I only wish to keep you out of the cellblock.

My dear M. Tarheel: The witness protection program spares gentlemen such as myself the discreet pleasures of my third marriage.

My dear M. OldNewLefty: Old bullet wounds have a way of placing one's observations on the wry side of the spectrum.
My dear M. Mishima666: When a heroine commits violent acts and enjoys them, it is box office gold.
I prefer movies in which no one is maimed or killed.

As for villains -- I prefer them to be humiliated rather than expired.

Embarrassment will not kill you; you will only wish that was so."
I liked the first La Femme Nikita and the first Gloria...good reminders that it's the lioness who hunts. As to Salt, thank you M. Chariot, for doing for me what I cannot do for myself, which is to watch Angelina for any length of time. She's such an embarrassment of riches, just looking at her makes me feel like I've eaten too many jelly donuts. Rated, but of course.
Ooooh Monsieur, I dearly hated this film.

I do love a ass-kicking female lead, but I want someone I can believe in. I hope it's not asking too much for a little realism with the high-flying super stunts. The plot was horrible, and the characters even worse. Then there was the non-stop violence which I found shocking since the movie was just pg-13.

(sigh I could complain about it for days....)

I could only suspend my disbelief for so long before I found myself wishing Mlle. Jolie would die just so the dreadful movie would end.

It didn't happen soon enough, so I just walked out.
I wasn't going to see this one, but then you mentioned La Femme Nikita and Kill Bill. I loved those movies, especially the original Femme. There is something very satisfying in watching a woman actually fight with no regrets. I guess it appeals to the tightly wound middle class white-bread girl in me.
@Mishima "when a heroine commits violent acts and enjoys them, it is a desecration of that symbol." yeah, I think that is exactly what I like about it
M. Chariot, I'm one who tried to comment on this last night.

I enjoyed how you identified something insightful, something insightful and a little disturbing, and a few other somethings besides. You're my favorite film reviewer, no matter how many fingers you're typing with.
Merci Monsier for taking the bullet for us, as it were. I am fond of Ms Jolie, particularly since she's become such an interesting off screen character. Her on screen presence is always a surprise and sometimes a delight - she can be astonishingly restrained and intense with the right directors.

That said, I would not see Ms Jolie's latest frivolity unless I were paid a tidy sum sufficient to finance my complete mental recovery as spoofy espionage flicks cause this humble commenter vicious attacks of vertigo.

(I am happy to note the Madonna video is a perfect musical accompaniment to your essay with it's complex imagery amidst the overinflated egotistical silly and stark cliche'd symbolism) (but I digress)

I am as ever your humble admirer
sincerly
f. monkey
My dear M. Schult: Well, if embarrassment is all it takes, I've been executed a thousand times by female violence.

My dear Mme WriterToTheStars: Murder via jelly donuts is Agent Salt's specialty. Watch your step!

My dear Mlle Sueinaz: Agent Salt is no match for your Death Wish against her.

My dear Mlle Hyblaean: Your enjoyment of violence is exactly why a bullet-proofing feature is next on the tech team's agenda.

My dear M. ManTalkNow: It's those little something-somethings that knock the ladies dead! The ones not carrying assault rifles, that is.
oh heavens!
my "thank you" disappeared!

apologies M.
and a big FEH for all this techno hoopla of late!
Bravo! It's always a pleasure to visit your page and read your finely tuned verbiage.

Classic:

"...but I'll be damned if I'm going to watch something this brutal myself." Besides, she's too busy as a humanitarian spokesperson for the UN or somesuch.

Somesuch indeed. Ha...love it.

Not only a good review but a good point (re: lighter stunts for stars. It's almost like many actors who decide they can direct - it's an ego thing done for themselves, first and foremost.)

And also a good point, re: her not watching her own films. What? So WE have to endure her faux carnage. What a "take the money and run" attitude!

(And I can't believe I haven't added you as a favorite eons ago. You clearly are and have been. Scuse my OS faux pas, please.)
My dear Mlle FoolishMonkey: Your seductive comments, combined with your adoration of Angelina Jolie, makes me wonder what weapons you're concealing. M. Chariot is no fool!
My dear Mlle Mann: Your ability to use a surfboard as a blunt instrument - while wearing a bikini - leaves you accountable to nothing and to no one.
My dear Mlle Asley: Your smooth words would have been reassuring had I not noticed you're carrying a combat knife.
I confess I loved the original La Femme Nikita (not the abominable and pointless American remake) but generally violent action films starring either men or women leave me cold. I feel like I've been hit in the head repeatedly after watching one. I can enjoy them if they're made with lightness and wit and have more going on than just the action (like, oh, say, well-developed characters and compelling stories).

I also like when they make at least a glancing nod to physical reality. My partner and I caught part of some fairly recent Bruce Willis action flick (name forgotten and rightly so) some months ago on TV and they had him landing on the outside of an exploding plane and holding on without a scratch or some such ridiculosity.

Of course, all movies, and especially action and SFX flicks have only a fleeting relationship to reality but when you can no longer suspend disbelief but find yourself laughing uproariously at the fact that they even thought up the stunt...well, it's just too much. It's obvious in recent action films that directors feel a pressing need to top what the other action directors have done and the result is just silly, but without any winking acknowledgement that it's being done in a cartoonish or tongue-in-cheek style. The result makes the old Roadrunner cartoons look like Eugene O'Neill plays.
I have changed my Tippem number to a kajillion.
My dear M. Lindre: Many thanks my good man!

My dear Mlle Engoron: I was riveted by every word of your thoughtful comment - especially since you polished your AK-47 so ominously throughout.

My dear M. Youdin: A kajillion lies somewhere between God's salary on the low end, and Mlle Jolie's salary on the high.
I enjoyed this action adventure, fantasy weird scripted, surprise ending thingee. R
I try and stay away from those types of movies. I like a movie with great acting. I would take two great actors arguing in an elevator before I would take one Jolie diving down the same elevator shaft. Good review though.
For some reason I tend to find Jolie's movies (we shouldn't call such films, now) dreadfully dull. Though some might say I am envious of cheekbones.
But I don't think the Bratz doll look will look good on me, anyhow.
I think I read somewhere (beauty salon? grocery checkout?) that she DIDN'T do her own stunts. But I could be wrong . . . I was wrong once before.
"Far be it from me to be a partypooper at the slaughterhouse..."

I love that. Can I use it?

Erudite as always.
My dear Mlle Sheila: If you don't mind my asking, what is that "thingee" with the bullet cartridge sticking out of your skinny jeans?

My dear M. Scanner: How would you feel if you were trapped in an elevator which Angelina Jolie had wired for explosives? Living as I do in Hollywood, this happens to me at least once a week. Luckily, I disarm warheads as a hobby.

My dear Mme Seijo: I read somewhere that Angelina Jolie has had 3 fingers sliced off while applying mascara, when they accidentally brushed against her razor sharp cheekbones.

My dear Mlle Hells Bells: A woman who carries a Sig 550 assault rifle is never "wrong".

My dear Mlle Stephens: You can use it only if you reveal the location of your private munitions dump.
I don't know how you do it, but reading your reviews, even if they're for movies I'd never dream of seeing, is such consistent entertainment for me. From now on, I'm going to save the movie ticket expense and just read you! XOXO
Elegant as always, although I confess to being one of those women who enjoy watching women kick butt and go to the gym regularly to be able to do so myself one day. Cheers, darling.
The third wife line was classic!

Not much for violent films regardless the gender of the combatant. Unless, of course, there's mud or jello involved.

I prefer a softer heroine. Give me Meryl Streep in "It's Complicated" for starters. Then again Patricia Heaton and her diminutive feistiness has always put lead in my pencil, too.

But a tattooed nut job seeking to adopt all the Unicef Poster Children?

Pass, Monsieur. Pass.
I wonder how much those cheekbones are insured for. Is each cheekbone insured separately, or as a pair?
R
As one of your more jaded readers, I wondered as I read your lively review whether a daughter of John Voight (a good actor but questionable human being) may have become skilled in self-defense out of necessity. Sigh.
Monsieur, I' didn't know you were a Madonna fan. And although I enjoyed the video, I was waiting for that hard bra to fall off just as I was hearing:
For every sin, I'll have to pay
I've come to work, I've come to play
I think I'll find another way
It's not my time to go
My dear Mme Kern: Please don't publish opinions like that! I daren't end up on Angelina Jolie's wrong side. It's too dangerous.

My dear Mlle Solod: Does the CIA fund your hand-to-hand combat program? And where are you getting your munitions training, if you don't mind my asking?

My dear M. Gwool: If you ever visit Hollywood, allow me to suggest a bullet-proof vest. And don't think softies like Meryl Streep or Patricia Heaton are going to protect you!

My dear M. LittleWillie:
Heaven
I'm in heaven
And the cares
That hung around me through the week -
Seem to vanish
Like a gamblers lucky streak
When we're massacring baddies cheek to cheek!
Your politesse is of such an elevation, I am left wondering if you did not, in fact, like the movie. I hope so, as I fully intend to see it some day. But then I thought the car crash in Final Destination was swell, so perhaps I am a lost cause.
My dear Mlle Roddick: I could see your point if "John Voight" is code The Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (Служба Внешней Разведки).

My dear M. Tingey: If one is ever the object of Mlle Jolie's antipathy, one would do well to come under the protection of Madonna as a private security contractor.
My dear Mlle Mumbletypeg: I am not surprised in the least by your comment - particularly after seeing your mug shot on Interpol's Most Wanted listing.
Witty as always Monsieur! That sort of thing puts a knot in my stomach, but if I MUST watch, I'll admit that I'd rather see the lovely Angelina kicking someone's derriere than a lesser Hollywood goddess... Still, I always wonder how these super women manage to get beaten to a pulp, fall out of cars, and smash through glass windows without so much as a small tasteful bruise or a scratch. :-)
action-flics are like porn movies [ i hear], so easy to write, and a guaranteed audience of mouth-breathers who always buy the big box of pop-corn. little wonder that actrines who yearn to be richer actrines are very willing to get paid, while preserving human credentials by not watching.

you, sir, are suspect: it is not necessary to watch these things, the trailer tells one all a gentleman needs to know.
My dear Monsieur, I love reading what you write.
I haven't seen Salt, but it sounds like a movie I might enjoy. Other movies I've liked in this subgenre (aside from Nikita) are Underworld (very pretty violence), The Fifth Element (cartoonish violence, and not squarely in the genre, but it's a hodgepodge in any case), Resident Evil--wait a minute, all these are fantasy movies...
your posts and riposts are most enjoyable, particularly with Allisons chardonay, cheese, and crackers.
Как насчет " странные отца "?
Entertaining post. Though I must admit violence among women is not for my sensibilities either. Seems the fairer sex does such a good job of manipulating psyches, psychological thrillers such as Single White Female hold my attention far more.

And to add a thought, does the fine gentlemen believe that life imitates art ...is there a co-relation in the rise of acceptance and/or
violence between women as a result of a more common occurence on screen?
I'd also like to commend you on your comment on Hell's Bell's latest post:

"Perhaps the woman might deliver her complaints to a higher class of animals?"

Words of wisdom, Lloyd. Words - of - wisdom. (From The Shining, which I'm guessing you already know...silly me.)
jolie is essentially eye candy for boys and naughty girls. i am not usually a cynic, but when it comes to her my cynicism breaks down the gate. she's a crafty one--and we indulge her--willingly.
Cher M. Chariot, I don't have anything brilliant to say about your post; but I enjoyed reading it in penned in your unique and delightful style. ~R
My dear Mme Stellaa: What is it, exactly, you want to know? And must you point that gun in my face?

My dear Mlle Veltman: The reason action stars can hurtle through windows without a scratch is due entirely to spectacular advances in cosmetic surgery in Hollywood.

My dear M. Loomis: If you must know, I was forced to see Salt against my will - at gunpoint.

My dear Monsieur Docteur Spudman: Thank you for this kind comment. It inspired me to throw my weapon on the floor.
My dear M. St. Amant: Please remember, my dear M. St. Amant, that you are one of the few writers on whom we rely to know the difference between fantasy and reality.

My dear Mlle GabbyAbby: Enchanted, ma cherie! Enchanted! Now tell me who are you working for: CIA? Or KGB?

My dear Mlle Roddick: I knew you were a double-agent!

My dear Mlle Sumac: I am pleased to see we share a certain taste in film - SWF is one of my favorite psychological thrillers! And in response to your question, I think that "glamorizing" anything does make it more acceptable in real life.
My dear Mlle Mann: My understanding of the animal world begins and ends with the Academy of Science, founded in 1666 in Paris.

My dear Mlle KarinR: Elegance is the gentleperson's antidote to idiocy, is it not my dear Mlle?

My dear Mlle Peony: I suspect we both agree that too much eye candy can result in a certain emotional hypoglycemia. One longs for real cinematic nourishment! Does one not, my dear Mlle?

My dear Mlle FusunA: A tip of the top hat to one of our favorite lady writers!
So she doesn't mind being a part of such films, but she won't watch them and seems to admit that they are bad for the public?
Hmmm.
Good review, Monsieur. I am still waiting to become Mrs. Chariot.
My dearest Mlle Black: As flattered as I am by your proposals, really my dear - you must focus your attentions on boys your own age!
Thank you, M. Chariot. As usual, edifying and revealing without resorting to poor taste.

Have a lovely.
"But when we feature the fair sex in this brutalizing scenario, that sense of vulnerability, of terror, is amped up considerably, in case you hadn't noticed! "

Insightful point. Of course, women have always been in danger in the movies. In the past, they've needed a guy to rescue them. Perhaps the movies have found a way to dispense with the male savior. Though the female protagonist is a trained killing machine, the titillating part is still the danger that she's in, not the punishment she's handing out. It's scarier because it's a woman, even though she happens to be perfectly able to untie herself from the railroad tracks without the help of a man. The "woman in danger" thing may be in important part of the appeal, though there's also the fun of the action and the over the top fighting skill as well.
My dear Mlle Mack: A pleasure to see you again, my dear! Your kind comment makes my sense of decorum feel somewhat less plunged into irrelevancy.

My dear Mlle Lake: "Of course, women have always been in danger in the movies. In the past, they've needed a guy to rescue them. Perhaps the movies have found a way to dispense with the male savior."
A very insightful perception, my dear! Thank you for sharing it here!
My dear sir, you are a man after my own heart. I am also a cinephile who aspires to express my love of film. I wrote a pitiful little review of Salt myself. Thanks for showing me how it's done.

I clicked that little thumbs up button for ya.

BB
Where is the Love button?
I have not yet seen Mlle Jolie's latest offering--but doing so would be utterly useless for me, so far as appraising its artistry is concerned. I would either be distracted by her breasts or consumed with absolute envy over her lean and taut body, flatteringly sheathed in the haute couture that you so facilely deride.

Do I detect a note of envy in yourself, Monsieur?

Well, this 47 year-old commie is not ashamed to admit to the middle-age spread that can make an over-produced action film a guilty pleasure for her. I have never had the aspiration or the chance to exhibit the outrageously unrealistic athleticism usually depicted by action films; nevertheless, movies like Salt allow me full immersion in a Walter-Mitty-style fantasy, where I can voyeuristically experience the blissful joys of having such a body (with accompanying couture) and the almost erotic experience of kicking the asses of my truly evil (no shades of grey) enemies. It is a satisfaction that true life never affords!

You may scoff at such a fantasy, Monsieur--you may even critique Mlle Jolie's film as mediocre the execution of such a fantasy--but you cannot tell me you have never indulged in the same. I will not believe you.
My dear Mlle BluestockingBabe: Thank you for your kind appraisal! But it would be so much better-received if you put down that AK-47.

My dear M. Lazar: One relies on Romantics like yourself to uncover that particular toggle.

My dearest Mlle Max: M. Chariot has long envied the precision physiques of our celebrities. Here in Hollywood, it is illegal for uncelebrated, obscure gentlepersons like myself to be even 10lbs overweight - a criminal offense punishable by deportation! If I come off a tad huffish it is only because I'm starved for a croissant.
Please excuse my tardy read at this, one of my favorite spots on OS.

Mon cher Monsieur, your apt review is built on the idea that the film industry is moving into areas where violence is king, something which drives this Poor Woman to remain home for any movie viewing, where she can pause and recoup if assaulted visually.
Your taste, in general, dovetailed my own previously. Now I find us to be more in synch than I had anticipated.
It is delightful knowing you are here to field the foul ball, the poorly targeted hit, for those of us less savvy filmgoers.
Thank you again--or should I say instead, merci beaucoup--for all your work for us.
And may I say your pinkies never seem out of sorts to those of us reading your work.
Rated
M. Chariot, the refining touch of your elegance on my senses has saved me from the risk of crude and unnecessary Salty exposure. I shall limit my collateral damage to the delicious, original La Femme Nikita. Thank you Monsieur.
My dear Mlle Poorwoman: Thank you for your kind words - now drop that grenade!

My dear Mlle Heng: La Femme Nikita and I await you for a cocktail at my cloistral apartments.
I think the violent femme acrhtype started with video games and then it moved into film. You can also go back to Greek mythology: the Amazons, Medus, Medea, and Clytemnestra.