Wine Tasting Room Becomes Cheese Shop

For years, Barber Cellars, a small, family-run winery in the Sonoma County town of Petaluma, has offered patrons cheese boards with their wines.

So itโ€™s not a big surprise that their downtown wine tasting room has pivoted its focus from wine tasting to cheese tasting, with their launch of The Petaluma Cheese Shop, a European-style cheese market.

There, visitors and locals alike can try a variety of cheese tastings from local and internationally made products, complete with full tasting experiences and a retail cheese market. Locals, never fear, as the small-production, estate-grown Barber Cellars wines the community has come to love are still available at the shop, and make a great pairing with the new cheeses. This shift from a wine to cheese focus is a natural progression for the Barbers.

โ€œOur local-focused cheese boards have always been the biggest and best deal in Sonoma County,โ€ notes co-owner Lorraine Barber. โ€œWeโ€™re just seriously expanding a part of our business that we really love, and offering the cheese lovers of our town an experience they canโ€™t get anywhere else.โ€

Bringing the focus to cheese is a welcome approach to the traditional wine and cheese pairing, which typically emphasizes the wine.

โ€œA group of friends can dine-in, share some bottles or glasses of wine, have way more cheese and food than they can handle, and split a pretty affordable check,โ€ co-owner Mike Barber says. โ€œEverybody leaves fat, sassy and happy, with hopefully a new understanding of what Sonoma County wine country is really all about: good friends, good times, and great wine and cheese!โ€

And when one has had their fill, they can purchase favorites to take home.

โ€œWhen we first moved to Petaluma, we looked around and saw that there were limited wine tasting options in what is arguably the gateway to wine country,โ€ explains Lorraine Barber. โ€œSo we opened our downtown tasting room, a place where you could feel comfortable asking questions about wine without feeling like you were being judged for not knowing something already. We want to do the same with cheese. Many people come through that are curious about cheese but donโ€™t really have a place to explore whatโ€™s out there. We want to change that.โ€

And they have. Itโ€™s a new frontier and a traditional one at the same time. With the heritage dairy industry in Sonoma County, itโ€™s an experience truly specific to this area. And because there are abundant cheeses and a lot to learn, itโ€™s akin to wine tasting, where one can try diverse varieties and discover new favorites from the knowledgeable and comfortable guides at the shop.

Petaluma Cheese Shop is located at 112 Washington St., Petaluma. 707.971.7410. petalumacheeseshop.com.

Santa Rosaโ€™s 21st Natโ€™l Arts Program Exhibition

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In an exciting collaboration, the City of Santa Rosa Public Art Program has joined forces with the National Arts Program to present the 21st Annual National Arts Program Exhibition and Competition.

Scheduled to run from Feb. 5 to April 19, 2024, the exhibition will be at the Finley Community Center at 2060 West College Ave., Santa Rosa.

This eagerly anticipated event offers a unique opportunity for artists of all ages in Santa Rosa to showcase their talents and foster artistic growth through scholarships and awards. Itโ€™s specifically for local Santa Rosa-based artists, City of Santa Rosa employees, relatives of City employees and retired City of Santa Rosa employees.

โ€œThe National Arts Program is a pillar of the Cityโ€™s Art Program. Because itโ€™s open to any resident or City employee, from amateur to professional, youth to seniors, itโ€™s a unique opportunity for artists at all skill levels to display their creative work in a professional setting,โ€ says Jessica Rasmussen, arts specialist in the Santa Rosa Planning and Economic Development Department.

The deadline is Jan. 5, 2024, but only the first 200 artists who apply will be accepted.

One remarkable aspect of this program is its inclusivityโ€”there is no entry fee, and artists of all ages and experience levels are not only invited but strongly encouraged to participate.

The competition is divided into various categories, including Professional (defined as being in an art profession or working as an artist), Intermediate (meaning art students or those with some art experience), Amateur (those with little or no art experience yet), Teen (13-18) and Youth (12 & Under), ensuring an opportunity for a diverse range of artistic expressions.

โ€œThis program really brings our community together through art and contributes to our local culture in a special way every year. Weโ€™re going on 21 years now!โ€ says Rasmussen.

Awards in each category will recognize outstanding achievement. For the Professional, Intermediate and Amateur categories, cash prizes of $350, $250 and $150 will be awarded for first, second and third place, respectively. Similarly, the Teen and Youth categories will receive awards of $150, $100 and $50 for first, second and third place.

In addition to the category-specific awards, there is a Best of Show award of $400โ€”an award available to all participantsโ€”recognizing the overall outstanding contribution. Furthermore, a Continuing Art Education scholarship award valued at $200 will be presented, highlighting the programโ€™s commitment to fostering ongoing artistic development. Every participating artist will also receive a certificate of participation, acknowledging their valuable contribution to the exhibit.

The National Arts Program, established in 1985 by The National Arts Foundation, aims to inspire, acknowledge and reward creative accomplishments nationwide. The program started as a pilot project in Philadelphia and has since expanded nationally, encompassing over 80 venues in 37 states. The National Arts Program encourages individuals of all skill levels to showcase their talents in a public exhibition, emphasizing inclusivity and providing an uninhibited opportunity for artistic expression.

Artists are encouraged to mark their calendars for the exhibition, which begins Feb. 5, 2024, and will be open Monday through Friday from 8am to 6pm, offering ample opportunities for the public to explore the work of Santa Rosa artists.

Register online at nationalartsprogram.org/santarosa. For those unable to register online, contact Jessica Rasmussen at jr********@****ty.org. To learn more about Santa Rosaโ€™s Public Art Program, visit SRCity.org/Arts, and to learn about the National Arts Program, visit nationalartsprogram.org.

Negotiate an End to the Ukraine War

The war in Ukraine has destabilized and polarized the international order. It pits two nuclear-armed superpowers, the United States and Russia, against each other. Any miscalculation can take all of us to nuclear Armageddon. How can the war be ended and on what terms?

Conventional wisdom holds that wars end in one of two ways. Either one side wins and the other loses, or they negotiate a peace agreement by coming to an understanding that both sides can live with. Peace agreements are reached by making a win-win deal where both sides get something they want out of it.

The โ€œdecidersโ€ will be Russia (essentially Vladimir Putin) and Ukraine (the Zelensky administration). They will be the ones with representatives at the negotiating table. Beyond โ€œthe table,โ€ there are other influencers, such as those who support Ukraine with arms and fundingโ€”the European Union and the U.S. There are those who tacitly support Russia by continuing commerce with Putin and by not voting in the UN to sanction Russia.

If a peace settlement is to be reached between Ukraine and Russia, we must consider the institution most capable of facilitating the necessary negotiations. The United Nations is the logical party for this task. The International Court of Justice was foreseen by the UN Charter as the primary method of resolution of disputes between countries, offering law as an alternative to war. But the law needs enforcement, and the ICJ has none, and its ruling against Russia nearly two years ago was utterly ignored.

But this does not prevent the UN secretary-general, Antonio Guterres, from organizing serious peace negotiations. He is charged with mediation and appointment of envoys to broker peace agreements. In getting such negotiations off the ground, he might find it useful to draw upon countries such as China or Turkey, both of which have a rapport with Putin.

The United Nations is the logical place to organize these negotiations. We can move from war to law by reforming and strengthening the United Nations, but it will take some creative thinking and action by all of us.

Jerry Tetalman is co-author of โ€˜One World Democracy.โ€™

Your Letters, Dec. 6

Disqualifying Qualities

There are three reasons former President Donald Trump must not be on the ballot in any state devoted to the rule of law. First, no person liable for large-scale business fraud should be trusted in public office, where the societal stakes are even higher than in private business, and the consequences of misbehavior are even more dire.

Second, no person convicted of a felony should be allowed to vote, let alone run for office. Otherwise, the sacred civil rights of all upstanding Americans will be diminished and stained. America must prepare for Trumpโ€™s pre-election conviction of crime by enacting explicit laws to bar felons from holding positions of public trust until well after they have served their time.

Third, no person who engages in or gives aid and comfort to an insurrection or rebellion should be allowed to take the reins of any government institution. The only exception must be a case where his or her party writes a new constitutional law that the people of the land overwhelmingly agree to support, as was the case with our founding fathers and mothers.

Kimball Shinkoskey

Marin County

No Country for Old Men

Even as Americans live longer and healthier lives, how we think about aging has not changed. Ageism and implicit bias toward age continue to impact our society, including how seniors are perceived. Look at how you communicate about seniors and be an agent of change in combatting ageism in our community.

Peter Bauer

San Rafael

Women in the Military: Panel Discussion

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Petaluma

Women Win

Often misrepresented, with their contributions minimized, women who have served in the military get their due recognition in the current exhibit at the Petaluma Historical Library & Museum. The exhibit ends this weekend with a panel discussion with women veterans Emily Wingo Sousa (U.S. Navy 1953โ€“1954, Korea), Rose Kostiuk Nowak (U.S. Air Force 1959-1962), Kate Oโ€™Hare Palmer (U.S. Army 1967โ€“1969, Vietnam), Maura Mooney (U.S. Navy 1981-2001, Desert Shield/Desert Storm), Lisa Lim (U.S. Army 2010-2013, Afghanistan) and Bethany LaRosa (U.S. Coast Guard 2007โ€“present). Hear stories from their own service during 70 years of U.S. involvement in armed conflicts around the globe. Women In The Militaryโ€”Women Veterans Panel Discussion, 3-5pm, Sunday, Dec. 10. Petaluma Historical Library & Museum, 20 4th St. Free admission.

Occidental

Handmade Holidays

Thirty local vendors of fine crafts gather under the redwoods to offer original gifts for sale in a communal environment. Occidental Community Council volunteers run this event as a way of supporting their mission to โ€œmeet the unmet needs of people living in and around Occidental.โ€ Proceeds support their work in the community. The day includes performances by the Occidental Community Choir, West County Ukulele Club and a visit from the jolly one, Santa himself! Lunch and pastries for sale, and, of course, a raffle. 37th Annual Occidental Holiday Craft Faire, 10am-5pm, Saturday, Dec. 9, 10am-4pm, Sunday, Dec. 10. Occidental Community Center, 3920 Bohemian Highway.

 
Saint Helena

Drunk on Books

For the third year running, the Napa Valley Wine Library Association is hosting a sale of books on wine to support its mission of preserving historical wine-related materials at the Saint Helena Public Library for use by the general public. Founded by MFK Fisher, James Beard and a few other culinary legends, the Napa Valley Wine Library โ€œcollects and shares the history and nature of the wines and vines of Napa Valley as well as wine country worldwide.โ€ The Books on Wine Sale happens during library hours Friday, Dec. 8 through Monday, Dec. 10 at the Saint Helena Public Library, 1492 Library Ln. #1143.

Cloverdale

Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da

For those who are already singing just from reading that header, the first annual Beatles Night is the place to be. Local musicians play Beatles songs, and the brave among the audience sign up to play a tune from the greatest catalog in the annals of rock. The night is part of the Cloverdale Arts Alliance monthly Music Workshop seriesโ€”hosted by known โ€œBeatlemaniacโ€ Bob Leeโ€”focused on the music of the Fab Four. No need to play; all are invited to sit and experience the pop bliss. Sign up at 6pm, show at 6:30pm, Saturday, Dec. 9. Cloverdale Arts Alliance Gallery, 204 North Cloverdale Blvd. Free. All ages.

Free Will Astrology: Week of December 6

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): I will cheer you on as you tenderly push yourself to be extra exploratory in the coming weeks. Itโ€™s exciting that you are contemplating adventures that might lead you to wild frontiers and half-forbidden zones. The chances are good that you will provoke uncanny inspirations and attract generous lessons. Go higher and deeper and further, dear Aries. Track down secret treasures and lyrical unpredictability. Experiment with the concept of holy rebellion.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In January, I will tempt you to be a spirited adventurer who undertakes smart risks. I will invite you to consider venturing into unknown territory and expanding the scope of your education. But right now, I advise you to address your precious needs for stability and security. I encourage you to take extra good care of your comfort zone and even add cozy new features to it. Hereโ€™s a suggestion: Grab a pen and paper, or open a new file on your favorite device, then compose a list of everything you can do to feel exceedingly safe and supported.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Booker T. Washington (1856โ€“1915) was an American Black leader who advocated a gradual, incremental approach to fighting the effects of racism. Hard work and good education were the cornerstones of his policies. Then there was W. E. B. Dubois (1868โ€“1963). He was an American Black leader who encouraged a more aggressive plan of action. Protest, agitation, pressure and relentless demands for equal rights were core principles in his philosophy. In the coming months, I recommend a blend of these attitudes for you. Youโ€™ve got two big jobs: to improve the world you live in and get all the benefits you need and deserve from it.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): I periodically get a big jolt of feeling how much I don’t know. I am overwhelmed with the understanding of how meager my understanding of life really is. On the one hand, this is deflating to my ego. On the other hand, itโ€™s wildly refreshing. I feel a liberating rush of relief to acknowledge that I am so far from being perfect and complete that thereโ€™s no need for me to worry about trying to be perfect or complete. I heartily recommend this meditation to you, fellow Cancerian. From an astrological perspective, now is a favorable time to thrive on fertile emptiness.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Have you reached your full height? If there were ever a time during your adult life when you would literally get taller, it might be in the coming weeks. And thatโ€™s not the only kind of growth spurt that may occur. Your hair and fingernails may lengthen faster than usual. I wouldnโ€™t be shocked if your breasts or penis got bigger. But even more importantly, I suspect your healthy brain cells will multiply at a brisk pace. Your ability to understand how the world really works will flourish. You will have an increased flair for thinking creatively.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): I like Virgo author Cheryl Strayedโ€™s thoughts about genuine togetherness. She says, โ€œTrue intimacy isnโ€™t a cluster fuck or a psychodrama. It isnโ€™t the highest highs and lowest lows. Itโ€™s a tiny bit of those things on occasion, with a whole lot of everything else in between. Itโ€™s communion and mellow compatibility. Itโ€™s friendship and mutual respect.โ€ I also like Virgo author Sam Keenโ€™s views on togetherness. He says, โ€œAt the heart of sex is something intrinsically spiritual, the desire for a union so primal it can be called divine.โ€ Letโ€™s make those two perspectives your guideposts in the coming weeks, Virgo.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): According to my interpretation of your astrological prospects, you now have the capacity to accelerate quickly and slow down smoothly; to exult in idealistic visions and hunker down in pragmatic action; to balance exuberant generosity with careful discernmentโ€”and vice versa. In general, Libra, you have an extraordinary ability to shift moods and modes with graceful effectivenessโ€”as well as a finely honed sense of when each mood and mode is exactly right for the situation youโ€™re in. I wonโ€™t be surprised if you accomplish well-balanced miracles.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Dear Goddessโ€”Thank you a trillion times for never fulfilling those prayers I sent your way all those years ago. Remember? When I begged and pleaded with you to get me into a sexy love relationship with You Know Who? I am so lucky, so glad, that you rejected my prayers. Though I didnโ€™t see it then, I now realize that being in an intimate weave with her would have turned out badly for both her and me. You were so wise to deny me that misguided quest for โ€œpleasure.โ€ Now dear Goddess, I am asking you to perform a similar service for any Scorpio readers who may be beseeching you to provide them with experiences they will ultimately be better off without.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Among our most impressive superpowers is the potency to transform ourselves in alignment with our conscious intentions. For example, suppose you feel awkward because you made an insensitive comment to a friend. In that case, you can take action to assuage any hurt feelings you caused and thereby dissolve your awkwardness. Or letโ€™s say you no longer want to be closely connected to people who believe their freedom is more important than everyone elseโ€™s freedom. With a clear vision and a bolt of willpower, you can do what it takes to create that shift. These are acts of true magicโ€”as wizardly as any occult ritual. I believe you will have extra access to this superpower in the coming weeks. Homework: Identify three situations or feelings you will use your magic to change.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The eminent Capricorn philosopher William James (1842โ€“1910) is referred to as the โ€œFather of American Psychology.โ€ He was a brilliant thinker who excelled in the arts of logic and reason. Yet he had a fundamental understanding that reason and logic were not the only valid kinds of intelligence. He wrote, โ€œRational consciousness is but one special type of consciousness, whilst all about it, parted from it by the filmiest of screens, there lie potential forms of consciousness entirely different.โ€ This quote appears in his book The Varieties of Religious Experience. In accordance with astrological omens, I invite you to investigate those other types of consciousness in the coming months. You donโ€™t need drugs to do so. Simply state your intention that you want to. Other spurs: dreamwork, soulful sex, dancing, meditation, nature walks, deep conversations.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Are people sometimes jealous or judgmental toward you for being so adept at multitasking? Are you weary of dawdlers urging you not to move, talk and mutate so quickly? Do you fantasize about having more cohorts who could join you in your darting, daring leaps of logic? If you answered yes to these questions, I expect you will soon experience an enjoyable pivot. Your quick-change skills will be appreciated and rewarded more than usual. You will thrive while invoking the spiritual power of unpredictability.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Romantic relationships take work if you want them to remain vigorous and authentic. So do friendships. The factors that brought you together in the first place may not be enough to keep you bonded forever. Both of you change and grow, and thereโ€™s no guarantee your souls will continue to love being interwoven. If disappointment creeps into your alliance, itโ€™s usually wise to address the issues head-on as you try to reconfigure your connection. Itโ€™s not always feasible or desirable, though. I still feel sad about the friend I banished when I discovered he was racist and had hidden it from me. I hope these ruminations inspire you to give your friendships a lot of quality attention in 2024. It will be an excellent time to lift the best ones up to a higher octave.

I dare you to reclaim a power you gave up once upon a time. Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Black Sabbath, Ozzy tribute ‘Sweet Leaf’ performs Christmas shows

Sweet Leaf features a veritable whoโ€™s who of the local metal scene. 

Singer Lance Ozanix still leads Skitzo, one of the first thrash metal acts in the worldโ€”the band was formed in 1981โ€”and the very first from Sonoma County. 

Guitarist Steve Smyth plays in the recently reunited Forbidden. He has done countless national and international tours, playing with the likes of Testament, Nevermore, Vicious Rumors, Forbidden, One Machine and Dragonlord. He also teaches guitar to budding students across the globe. 

Drummer Chris Newman played with Intense, one of the largest drawing speed/thrash metal bands in Sonoma County during the late โ€™80s. The ultra-talented bassist, Steven Hoffman, from the defunct Esseness Project, rounded out the group. Longtime bassist Dave Dโ€™Elicio will play their Sacramento Christmas show one week later.

Bohemian: How many years has Sweet Leaf been around, and how did the project get started?

Lance Ozanix: Sweet Leaf started in 1989 with the idea of being a Black Sabbath tribute. People would say I look like Ozzy, and we tried doing a few Sabbath songs, and it fit well. There were no tribute bands around at that time. In 1992, we had our first tribute show at Uncle Charlieโ€™s (now defunct club in Corte Madera) with Long Gone Bon (AC/DC tribute), and the show went over very well. By 1994, my current band members just left and did their own thing, so I brought the idea to Steve Smyth and Steve Hoffman (who was already involved), and the team meshed pretty well. The rest is history.

Bohemian: Aside from the Santa Rosa show, how many total Christmas shows this year?

Ozanix: Just one in Sacramento at On The Y. I think thatโ€™s it. Ha! We are a once-in-awhile band.

Bohemian: Do you like playing Ozzy Osbourne or Black Sabbath songs more than the others?

Ozanix: I love the Jake E. Lee era and songs off Diary of a Madman. As for Black Sabbath songs, โ€œWar Pigsโ€ is a fan fave, and the audience gets to sing long and loud.

Bohemian: What are your favorite Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne albums?

Ozanix: My top three records for Black Sabbath are Born Again, Master Of Reality and Never Say Die. As for Ozzy, it would be Diary of a Madman, Bark At The Moon and No More Tears.

Bohemian: How many practices do you need to shake off the cobwebs?

Ozanix: Very little. Check this out. When the pandemic hit, we stopped playing for like three years. At our very first rehearsal three years later, just a little over a month ago, we played an hour and a half without any hiccups. Amazing.

Sharing the bill with Sweet Leaf is Head Rush (a tribute to Rush) and Age Against the Machine (a tribute to Rage Against The Machine). Doors open at 7pm, and the show starts at 8pm. Saturday, Dec. 9, at  Barrel Proof Lounge, 501 Mendocino Ave. in Santa Rosa. 21 and over only. 

Tickets are $15 advance and $20 day of show and can be purchased at bit.ly/sweetleaf-23

There will also be a raffle with music gear prizes from BC Rich, EMG, Dunlop and Ernie Ball, with proceeds benefiting the Strides For Life Colon Cancer Foundation and American Cancer Society. For more information, visit BarrelProofLounge.com

Chefโ€™s Pop-up is a Pleasure

Mark Malicki of De Havilland is on a roll. Chef of the new Petaluma pop-up restaurant that appears at the Tea Room on weekend evenings, he is living his dream just about more than anyone.

โ€œThe owners of the Tea Room were at the [Casino] Bar, and theyโ€™re like, โ€˜Hey, would you ever consider doing something at the Tea Room?โ€™โ€ he recalled. 

Malicki has a record of making great food in dishes attuned to the needs of the kitchen in which heโ€™s working. At Casino Bar in Bodega, he remembered working with โ€œjust the two burners behind the stove.โ€

After more than 13 years of cooking in that kitchen, and now at the Tea Room, Malicki has many more tools for homey cross-cultural dishes.

โ€œThereโ€™s two kitchens,โ€ marveled Malicki. โ€œThereโ€™s a bakery kitchen and a regular, like full-on kitchen with stoves and broilers and a refrigerator, all the normal things.โ€ 

While Malicki prepared only four or so dishes for the menu per night at the Casino Bar, in the new kitchen he is able to double that and more, with dishes he calls โ€œopportunities.โ€

From the first contact with the host who takes orders at the counter in fast casual style to the server who brings and takes dishes with a smile and few words, the experience at De Havilland is one of unassuming service. The chef and staff opened this joint to serve good, welcoming food.

Dishes like the fried rice and oyster in broth arenโ€™t always Instagrammable, but neither are my yiayiaโ€™s stuffed tomatoes, and they will heal the soul. 

From potato rolls covered in hickory smoked sable butter to pineapple quince upside-down cake, the dishes are fun, familiar and new. For dessert, the cake was a clever new twist, which my partner approved of very much, while the butterscotch pudding was pitch-perfect to my tasteโ€”this coming from notoriously disgruntled eaters of sweets. So often, they let the meal down. Not here.

The hardiness of the delicata squash fried rice with black truffle egg might even convince someone that they are at a home away from home. Itโ€™s stick-to-the-guts food like Ma made, fuel for the day-to-day grind. And just like the platonic momโ€™s always open kitchen, De Havilland is a perfect place to sit together and be nourished by great ingredients prepared with love.

The Tea Room perfectly suits its new evening use, at least to this attentive customerโ€™s eye. 

โ€œ[Itโ€™s] a very manageable-sized space, 40 to 45 seats max,โ€ said Malicki. โ€œ[If] we turn that dining room once a night, itโ€™d be perfect.โ€ Consider that a call, Petaluma; seats are waiting.  

Only open for three weeks at the time of publication, De Havilland is already a way of life for Malicki.

โ€œMy menus are pretty much structured around me just driving to farms,โ€ he said. โ€œPretty much the only thing that ever gets delivered to me is fish.โ€

Creating a new experience in a locally loved space is a dream opportunity in the Petaluma food scene, of which Malicki is a fan.

โ€œI had a cheeseburger at Luma, which was really, really, really good,โ€ he said. โ€œI went back the next day and got another one.โ€

Unlike Sebastopol, where Malicki had lived until he recently moved to Petaluma, his adopted town โ€œ[feels] more like, where I grew up โ€ฆ more of a blue-collar town.โ€

Malicki and his staff can see Bill and Jayโ€™s Garage across the street from the restaurant. With some love from the foodie community and a little luck, De Havilland can become another worthy local landmark like Bill and Jayโ€™s and the Tea Room.


De Havilland is open every Thursday through Saturday at the Tea Room Cafe, 316 Western Ave., Petaluma. Counter service, blackboard menu, no reservations. Cash and Venmo only.

‘Napoleon’: Epic Battles, Awkward Sex

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Ridley Scott, the filmmaker behind Napoleon, is a European. Of course, the veteran producer-director, a native of South Shields, in the Tyne and Wear district of northeast England, is as English as it is possible to be. But for all that, the indefatigable 85-year-old Scott has something in common with all the Celts, Saxons, Angles, Jutes, Picts, Vikings, Normans and innumerable other ethnic groups who made England, and the present-day United Kingdom, their homeโ€”theyโ€™re all at least nominally European. Numerous wars have been fought over the issue. 

Thatโ€™s where Napoleon comes in. Scottโ€™s 56th directorial effort tells the story of another European, a 19th-century Corsican French warrior-monarch whose name still resonates in world history two centuries later, for better or worse.

Scottโ€™s Napoleon is a rousing, red-blooded experience, an old-fashionedโ€”and emotionally relatively uncomplicatedโ€”historical epic outfitted with modern production techniques and filled to overflowing with battles, intrigues and the scandalous relationship between former artillery officer Napoleon Bonaparte (Joaquin Phoenix) and his restless wife, Josรฉphine (Vanessa Kirby). 

In Scottโ€™s film, with a screenplay by frequent collaborator David Scarpa (All the Money in the World, The Man in the High Castle), Napoleon works his way up from an army captain in league with the French Revolution, luridly depicted in the filmโ€™s opening scene, to the rank of brigadier generalโ€”and eventually, Emperor of Franceโ€”thanks to his seemingly unquenchable thirst for bloody warfare. Toulon, the corridors of Paris during the Reign of Terror, Egypt, Italy, the Austrian Empire, Russiaโ€”Napoleon and his troops subjugate the population everywhere they march, up until that nasty business in Waterloo. CGI soldiersโ€™ heads and horsesโ€™ necks explode under mortar fire, and regimes go up in flames.

Meanwhile, the conqueror falls in love with Josรฉphine de Beauharnais (Kirby), the young widow of a guillotined aristocrat. Sheโ€™s a post-revolutionary party girl not entirely smitten by the coarse Corsican and his battering-ram style of sexual intercourse, but willing to overlook some matters while living in some of the continentโ€™s most lavish houses. Director Scott digs down deep into his bag of extravagant European settings here. Even in the wake of House of Gucci, All the Money in the World, Hannibal and The Duellists, he apparently hasnโ€™t yet exhausted the supply. Despite centuries of destruction, Europe is still remarkably well equipped with fancy real estate. 

Phoenix may not be every moviegoerโ€™s first choice for the title role, especially for those who winced at his performance as the cruel Roman emperor, Commodus, in Gladiator. And yet the actor who starred in Joker and Two Lovers arguably deserves the role of a violent megalomaniac, so all is forgiven. Never mind that a few of his line readings are stiff, and that Napoleonโ€™s childish friskiness in one or two scenes seems odd. Letโ€™s just say that Phoenix cuts a fine figure in the saddle, waving a saber, and let it go at that.

Kirbyโ€™s impersonation of Josรฉphine is another matter entirely. From the very first glimpse of her as the merry widow at a cocktail party, sheโ€™s a beguiling combination of the bewildered coquette and the poule de luxe every time Darusz Wolskiโ€™s camera swings her way. Josรฉphine looks as authentic in her empire-waist gowns as Phoenix does in his cockade-bedecked uniforms. Kudos likewise to Paul Rhys, as diplomat Charles Maurice de Talleyrand, and Edouard Philipponat, as Alexander, Tsar of Russia, a pair of dealmakers in the Age of Enlightenment.

Volumes have been written about Scott and the lasting effect his visual sense has had on contemporary big-screen entertainment. Napoleon belongs in the front rank of his creations, alongside such landmarks as Blade Runner, Alien and Black Hawk Down. For its thrilling battle scenes, its ironic characterizations of the revolutionaries who became their own special brand of aristocracy and for the essential European-ness of the project itself, this glittering, sweaty panorama of antique world history should be essential viewing. 

Playing at Rialto Cinemas in Sebastopol and streaming on Apple TV+.

50 days in Gaza, released hostages have local ties

On Oct. 7, a pineapple farmer opened his door to Avigail Idan, a three-year-old girl covered in blood. Quickly, he ushered the little girl, his wife and their own three children into the homeโ€™s safe room.

With his family and their young charge locked indoors, the farmer, Avichai Brodutch, who is training to be a nurse, left his home to determine what was happening outside and to try to help.

Unbeknownst to Avichai, Hamas terrorists had invaded Kibbutz Kfar Aza, extinguishing the peaceful existence of the farming community where he lived with his family. The kibbutz, located in southern Israel, is just four miles from Gaza.

The village massacre left approximately 52 to 60 people dead, including tiny Avigail Idanโ€™s mother and father. Tragically, she was present when Hamas murdered her parents during the early morning rampage.

About 17 others from Kibbutz Kfar Aza were kidnapped by Hamas, transported to Gaza, held as hostages and then used as human bargaining chips.

By the time the terrorists withdrew, Kibbutz Kfar Aza, once home to about 765 residents, was left in ruins.

Avichai, 42, the patriarch of the Brodutch family, survived the brutal attack on his village, although he sustained an injury from shrapnel. Sadly, by the time he returned home, it became apparent that his wife, three children and Avigail, the bloodied little girl who had hidden with them, had fared far worse. They were among those kidnapped.

Many know Avigail Idanโ€™s name. President Joe Biden has recently spoken of the young child, who is also called Abigail Edan, as she holds dual American and Israeli citizenship. But other hostages arenโ€™t as well-known to the public.

One person who grew up in Marin, however, is very familiar with Avichai Brodutch and his familyโ€”wife, Hagar, 40; daughter, Ofri, 10; and sons Yuval, 8, and Oriya, 4. The Brodutches have kin from Marin.

The local family member, an Israeli-American, fears revealing their identity due to the chaos of the conflict. We will call them โ€œAriel.โ€

About a week after the Hamas attack, Ariel, who was living in Israel, relocated temporarily to the North Bay with their children. Arielโ€™s spouse remains in Israel.

โ€œEverything shut down in the entire country,โ€ Ariel said. โ€œSchools stopped. We went into emergency mode, with only supermarkets and medical facilities open. We wanted to shelter our children.โ€

However, Ariel and their spouse canโ€™t shield themselves from the news of the Israel-Hamas war. During the last seven weeks, the couple has quietly suffered, feeling constant terror over the fate of their kidnapped family members, stolen away from the kibbutz where theyโ€™d lived for years. Avichai, the pineapple farmer, is their cousin.

In October, after Hamas kidnapped his family, Avichai and his dog, Rodney, sat outside Israelโ€™s Ministry of Defense in Tel Aviv to draw attention to his familyโ€™s plight, according to Ariel. At first, Avichai sat alone in a plastic chair, dog at his side, but soon many others came to support him with signs and chants, telling the Israeli government to bring the hostages home.

Finally, on Sunday, Ariel learned that their four relatives were among the 17 hostages released earlier in the day. Avichai was reunited with the rest of his family, who were flown by helicopter to Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel. The hospital is equipped to deal with the immediate physical, mental and emotional needs of the former hostages.

Avigail, the orphaned little girl, was also brought to the same hospital. Her extended family is now by her side.

Physically, the Brodutch family members who were held hostage appear to be in good condition, Ariel said. But the emotional trauma that will haunt the kidnap victims remains unknown, and the scars may never disappear.

โ€œOne can only imagine what they are going through,โ€ Ariel said. โ€œBut they are all now surrounded by loving family and communities who will rally to do everything possible to care for them. But who really knows what to do? There is no playbook for child hostages. Nothing prepares you for this.โ€

Some of the childrenโ€™s life milestones passed while they were in captivity. Avigail turned four years old without her family to make her birthday wishes come true. She also missed her parentsโ€™ funerals.

The day after being kidnapped, Ofri had her 10th birthday. The Brodutch family had planned a special celebration lasting more than a day.

โ€œThey were supposed to start celebrating [Ofriโ€™s birthday] the morning of Oct. 7, but instead they were kidnapped by Hamas,โ€ Ariel said. โ€œHer birthday cake and candles were later found by soldiers, who broke down crying when they opened the refrigerator and saw her cake.โ€

The impact of the attack will continue to weigh on civilians and soldiers. Israel is small enough, according to Ariel, that most everyone either knows someone who was killed or held hostageโ€”or they are acquainted with someone who does.

For the Brodutch family and others who lived on Kibbutz Kfar Aza, the egalitarian, agrarian lifestyle they endeavored to live is goneโ€”at least for now and the foreseeable future.

โ€œTheyโ€™re not going home because their homes were destroyed,โ€ Ariel said. โ€œThe villagers have been displaced. People canโ€™t go back. Each village is temporarily housed elsewhere. But we will do everything we can to help them recover and rebuild. The people in this farming community really lived peacefully with the neighbors across the border.โ€

The current ceasefire between Israel and Hamas has helped bring home some of the hostages, who are being traded for Palestinian prisoners being held by Israel. While the ceasefire is scheduled to end Wednesday, negotiators working with both Israel and Hamas say they hope it will be extended to allow more humanitarian aid into Gaza and the release of the remaining hostages.

Clearly, there are too many variables to predict whether the ceasefire will continue and for how long.

โ€œYou canโ€™t go down the slope of your fears because these feelings are just too much,โ€ Ariel said. โ€œLife was suspended. It still feels like that. There is a sense of helplessness. No one really knows what to do. Of course, weโ€™re relieved our family has been released, but we canโ€™t be happy, because there are so many people still being held hostage.โ€

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