8
Movies This Week, Company American Bistro at Luxor, Fish Camp at Town
Square, Mute Stones, Francis Ford Coppola’s “Youth Without Youth,” and
more...
On Wednesday night, we had two VIP
Press Restaurant Openings. First, we went to the newly re-designed Luxor,
which is moving towards a younger class of patrons.
Company American Bistro, right alongside LAX
nightclub, is their newest restaurant at Luxor. For its Grand Opening,
celebrity investors Nicky Hilton, Nick Lachey, and Wilmer Valderrama
were on hand.
Our judgment on the food? It was great food done
brilliantly. We tried several unique dishes including chicken and
waffle. It was a delicious, crispy chicken tender served on a small
round waffle. Especially tasty were the juicy scallops presented with a
combination of dainty sauces. An unusual delight was crab meat encased
in a light gelatin. This was approached cautiously as it seemed unlikely
that the crab flavor would come though. We were quite surprised at just
how well the combination worked. Also recommended is the prime rib
ordure. And desert? Desert should not be missed. Make sure to try the
ice cream with whipped cream on bananas. Superb.
More important, the restaurant is headed by Executive
Chef Adam Sobel (photos in his immaculate kitchen with his top
waitress), formerly of Restaurant Guy Savoy. The 10,000-square-foot
restaurant is beautiful, the wait staff very, very solicitous and the
Executive Chef, Adam Sobel, was terrific! I stopped him and said,
“Gordon Ramsey is my new crush. I worship him.” He replied: “Gordon
Ramsey has nothing over me.” I then asked to see his kitchen.
“Absolutely!” Isn’t that the sweetest thing! Adam also said his manager
had worked for Gordon.
http://www.luxor.com/dining/
Company American Bistro has a fireside lounge
surrounded by aspen trees and hurricane lamp candles. The main dining
room is highlighted by a state-of-the-art wine wall and silver-leafed
chandeliers. Patrons are ensconced in custom made high-back leather
chairs and cozy couches.
Chef Louis Osteen Opens Two Restaurants in Las Vegas. After
the dramatic fare at Company American Bistro, we took off for Fish Camp
at Town Square. Chef Louis Osteen has opened his two signature
restaurants at the south end of the Las Vegas Strip. While the menu at
Louis’s Las Vegas features upscale, classical regional recipes, Fish
Camp is a loud, boisterous affair meant for having fun, great food, and
dancing. With a 350 seat capacity and live entertainment Friday and
Saturday nights, it is the impressive seafood that sets Fish Camp apart
from the other fish establishments in town. “Deas Guys” from Hilton
Head, South Carolina were on hand to entertain the revelers as the crowd
danced to classic rock.
With gaining access to the American Bistro kitchen, I
asked Chef Louis for a photo inside his kitchen. These kitchens are
nothing like the kitchens on Gordon Ramsey’s “Kitchen Nightmares.” This
is the series, and I’m even watching old episodes on BBC America, that
has replaced “Most Evil,” 48 Hours Mystery, and “Lockdown” as my
favorite show.
For the opening, Louis's Fish Camp rolled out almost
everything and it was all great. Among the interesting presentations was
a whole roast pig that had been appropriately shredded for easy
consumption. To allow customers to try different BBQ sauces, both
Carolina (the home of the company) and Memphis style were available. If
fact, areas of the country are judged based on the quality of their BBQ.
This certainly ranks up near the top.
Of course, being a fish camp, a wide variety of
seafood is on the menu among those items enjoyed were the perfectly
seasoned shrimp, flavorful crab cakes, and surprisingly good Crispy
Fried Oysters. While I'm rarely an oyster fan, these I would highly
recommend to anyone. The counter contained a delightful assortment of
vegetables and dips. Something you won't frequently find in Las Vegas is
grits. Yet, Louis's actually advertise a shrimp and grits combination.
Guess they are not just for breakfast anymore.
Judging from the quality displayed at this opening,
it would be hard to go wrong with anything on this Uniquely Carolina
based menu.
Movies This Week. Youth Without Youth (YES), Charlie
Wilson’s War (YES), The Golden Compass (YES), Sweeney Todd (YES), Grace
Is Gone (NO), Water House (Nice Family Film), Bucket List (YES), and
Atonement (NO).
I love this blind item. But could anyone really be
walking around giving out Mute Stones? Where do we get them? This blind
item comes from
www.laineygossip.com/. “...Yet another star who stalks the set like
a tyrant, yet another star who won’t deign to speak to the regular folk.
Seems she considers conversation with her a privilege but the honor is
granted sparingly and only through "Mute Stones". Seriously.
“She carries around what people on set have taken to
calling Mute Stones and when she isn’t in the mood to converse with
someone, she will silently hand over the Mute Stone – those in
possession of a Mute Stone are not permitted to speak to her until she
takes it back. Perhaps it’s a trick she can pass on to The Unfunny
Douche who fired a dude recently for simply looking at him. It’s hard to
believe, I get it. You can’t believe people are capable of acting so
appallingly. But there are two crews over a hundred strong that can
vouch for it, word for word.” Lainey’s guess is Ashley Judd, since
Lainey says “She is known to act like a witch.”
Francis Ford Coppola returns to directing and
screenwriting after a ten year absence with “Youth Without Youth,” The
film begins in 1938 in Bucharest, Romania. Dominic (Tim Roth) is a
70-year-old linguistics scholar who, failing to complete his life’s
work, plans on committing suicide. Walking across a street, he is struck
by lightning and miraculously survives.
Some
time ago I made an intense study of the effects of being struck by
lightning (see photo of a lightning survivor) since reading the complete
works of Martin Luther and learning about Lightning Shamans. Luther’s
sudden conversion had a profound effect on Western history and the
Catholic Church. Luther was preparing to become a lawyer.
On July 2, 1505, in a field on the way to the
university, Luther was caught in a terrible thunderstorm. He was struck
by lightning and thrown to the ground. Luther’s companion was killed at
his side. Close to death, he cried out: "Help me, St. Anne; I will
become a monk." We all now what happened after that.
In an attempt to explain away the miraculous nature
of St. Paul’s sudden conversion on the road to Damascus, a scientific
paper proposed that St. Paul was struck by lightning. The prevalent
symptoms in lightning injuries are tinnitus, blindness, confusion,
amnesia, cardiac arrhythmias, and vascular instability. Severe damage to
the central nervous system and extensive burns are commonplace.
But not a voice from Heaven.
Ancient
people, living predominately outdoors, would have recognized the signs
of lightning injuries. Paul staked his legitimacy to apostleship
(ranking himself alongside the apostles) by declaring it came directly
from Jesus. Not from a sun flare. Not from a bolt of lightning.
However, if Paul had survived a lightning strike, it
would have been considered an amazing feat of good fortune. People do
survive lightning strikes, and there would have been no need for Paul to
attribute his survival to the generosity of a crucified prophet.
The ancient Greeks believed a person struck by
lightning possessed magical powers. Throughout the world in tribal
cultures, Lightning Shamans (shamans who have been struck more than
once) are revered and feared as the mightiest of shamans.
Lightning injuries affect 800 to 1000 persons per
year in the U.S.; and there are estimated 1000 fatalities worldwide each
year. The physical problems associated with lightning injuries are
serious and often life-long. Yet, a few people do attribute their
awakened psychic abilities to being struck by lightning. In 1959,
Brazilian twelve year old Thomaz Morais was stuck by lightning. Soon
after, Morais claimed he had developed paranormal gifts, which increased
as he grew older. Today, Morais is a healer, psychic surgeon and, most
astonishingly, has ability to materialize objects.
Dominic,
completely bandaged due to the severe condition of his burned body,
begins to show signs of awareness. Soon he baffles not only his doctor,
but the entire country, by quickly recovering and growing younger.
His subconscious physically materializes another more
sinister Dominic, as his mentor and nemesis. The Nazis become interested
in studying Dominic and use a spy, the Woman In Room 6, representing
Eve, The Whore of Babylon and Madonna, as an instrument to seduce him
into giving up his secret of reverse aging. Dominic has had an unhappy
life in his unfulfilled scientific work and the loss of the woman,
Laura, forty years ago! He never got over Laura and has an excuse – he’s
got a grudge against the world.
With the Nazis wanting to kidnap Dominic, he escapes
to Switzerland where he creates fake identities for himself and uses his
paranormal skills at the casino to pay his bills. He finds that he has
extraordinary abilities to hold a book and know all its contents. He can
heal. He understands and speaks any language.
But he is still a miserable old man. He finds no joy
in his second chance at being a young man with miraculous abilities.
Hiking along a winding road, he encounters two women
who stop him for directions. Their car goes off the road in the
approaching storm. One woman dies and the other woman, Veronica (who is
Laura’s double), is struck by lightning.
Upon returning to consciousness, Veronica starts
speaking Sanskirt and tells everyone her name is Rupini and she is a
seventh century disciple of Chandrakirti, abbot of Nalanda University
and a disciple of N?g?rjuna and the most famous member of what the
Tibetans came to call the Prasa?gika school of Madhyamaka. He was an
authority on Emptiness Yoga.
Rupini is a boon to Dominic’s research since she
starts speaking ancient languages. Soon Rupini will be moving further
back in time to our first stirrings of language. When Veronica is not
channeling Rupini, she is a lovely young woman and Dominic, now in his
80’s, falls in love with her.
While Dominic is a sour man his doppelganger is
always voyeuristically nosing around his romance with Veronica.
Though in his 80’s he is getting younger and begins
noticing his vampiric effect on Veronica. As she heads back in
linguistic time, she starts getting older. And, since beauty is really
supreme over all things, Dominic realizes he must abandon his work and
leave Veronica, so she can return, not to the “Eternal Return”, but her
youth and beauty.
“Youth Without Youth” is based on a novella by Mircea
Eliade. I have read Eliade’s “The Myth of the Eternal Return: Or, Cosmos
and History.”
In his work on the history of religion, Eliade is
most highly regarded for his writings on Shamanism, Yoga and what he
called The Eternal Return — the implicit belief that religious behavior
is not only an imitation of, but also a participation in, sacred events.
So Eliade certainly was aware that he was laying bare
his psychological profile in “Youth Without Youth.” I am sure a
psychologist would have a lot to say about the Evil Twin, Dangerous and
Nameless Nazi Woman Spy, and the notion of youth and beauty before all
else.
Coppola has not cashed in. He is doing exactly what
he wants to do giving us a film that succeeds brilliantly on its own
terms. It is beautifully filmed and striking in its haunting themes.
“Youth without Youth” succeeds where other films in this genre have
failed.