shadowkat: (Default)
Prettier day today, blue sky, passing clouds, mostly clear, in the low 80s. Took a long walk, about an hour or so, around a portion of Greenwood Cemetery. Equivalent of 1.8 miles - still sweated more than I'd like. It's the sweating that keeps me from doing longer walks.

Time was that I could walk 6 to 10 miles without any problems.

Did spot one perfect rose, a rarity this summer due to the overwhelming amount of rains and high humidity. Roses require a slightly drier, milder climate - tropical doesn't quit work for them.



Yes, a pesky house got into the picture, but what can one do?

**

Talked to mother a couple of times today.

Me: So I had an epiphany yesterday. We need to focus on the positive. See the best case scenario and stop preparing for the worst, it never works.
Mother: True, it doesn't. Just makes it more painful.
Me: Exactly.
Mother: And I'm really not that worried about the surgery. But...
Me: That's good.
Mother: I did however decide to write my own obituary. Do you want to hear my obituary? I wrote one today, just finished it in fact.
Me: Okay, you realize this is the exact opposite of what I was talking about right? This is not focusing on the best case scenario.Read more... )

***

Watched two movies today. The Evil Dead and Reminiscence, neither were very good. Reminiscence was admittedly the better of the two, but it also had more money, and was done in 2020, so...plus Hugh Jackman and Twandi Newton.

* The Evil Dead - I'm not sure I can legitimately state that I watched the film. More like fast-forwarded through all the gruesome bits.
It's scary in its own way. Or mainly because Sam Rami was a devil with a hand-held camera. I honestly think he spent most of the shoot running about terrorizing his actors with his camera.

Read more... )
I guess I can see why it became a cult classic in the 1980s, but it doesn't really age all that well. Also, by now, the five kids go to a cabin and get picked off one by one by monsters plot has kind of been overdone, to the point that Drew Goddard directed a satire about it entitled "Cabin in the Woods". But in 1981, it was new. I recommend reading Campbell's book over watching the film.

* Reminiscence by Lisa Joy, starring Hugh Jackman and Twandi Newton, is a boilerplate sci-fi noir. Reminded me a little of Blade Runner - except Blade Runner is so much better, so are the others I've seen. I've seen too many sci-fi and regular noir films. I knew what was going to happen before it did and got kind of bored by the plot. And really all there is - is the plot, not a lot of focus on character.

The world-building and set design are fun though as is the set-up. It just needed a better script and direction. Lisa Joy of Westworld fame, does a so-so job of it. And a lot of her direction and script reminded me of why WestWorld didn't quite work. There's a stiffness to the dialogue, and the characters, that also existed in Westworld.

The setup?Read more... )

At any rate - it's okay, but I wouldn't go out of my way to see it. I saw it on HBO Max - which I have until September 15. Unless I want to subscribe separately from Amazon Prime - which I can always do.

* And I finished watching America's Great Barbecue Show Down on Netflix. One of the better reality cooking competitions. (As an aside I adore cooking demonstrations, always have, and I adore anything showing me how things are mad, even if/especially if I have no interest in doing it myself.) This was a great show. Touching, humorous, with likable contestants, judges, and hosts. Also suspenseful. Loved it. By far one of the better cooking competition shows. However - I would not recommend it to vegetarians or vegans. It would upset you. It shows people barbecuing meat.
It's a carnivore show.

***

Listening to Director Robert Altman's biography - which is interesting, Altman was a bomber pilot in WWII, and his early days directing industry films, educational films, and documentaries in Kansas City and LA. He worked for Culver Films - where he directed things like How to Run a Filling Station, Football, Basketball, Industrial Safety Films, etc. He'd tried to set himself up as a writer in LA, but fell into directing. Also directed plays. And one of his first major films was a docudrama - The Delinquents in the 1950s. We also get snippets of television shows he directed such as Bonanza. Later films such as MASH, Nashville, Short Cuts, Godsford Park, etc. Apparently everyone who worked with him (for the most part) loved him as a director - but he was not a great husband. Cheated on his wife, broken things in drunken rages, and partied a lot. It's a very honest and good depiction of how people are always more than one thing.

***

Attempted to make Plantain Fritters today. They were okay, I guess. The recipe is mashed plantain with cassnova flour (or tapioca flour), mix, make into dough ball, roll out, use cookie cutter or jar to cut out various circles. Heat a 1/2 cup of ghee or your choice of fat over medium to high heat, wait until get brown and somewhat puffy, take out, put on wire to cool. Eat.

I found them to be a bit on the greasy side, and not quite as puffy as shown in the photograph. Also it made far too many. That's the problem with cookbooks - they are geared towards families of five, not single women who are cooking for themselves. Read more... )

***

Random photo of the day...

Labor Day 2018

shadowkat: (Default)
But not a bad day overall. It's cool and raining at the moment, and will be cool and rainy tomorrow. Hee Hee, my brother is cooped up with his daughter, her boyfriend, the friend from Hawaii and his wife during a rainy Memorial Day weekend. Read more... )

Also...movies are back. Theaters are open again. I may be able to actually see a movie again - although I'm putting it off until late July early August. There's nothing out right now - that I want to see, but stuff is coming. At any rate - summer action movies have come back, yay! I missed them. I love summer action movies. (I'm told old for most of the rom-coms. Watching twenty-somethings and teens have sex isn't really my cup of tea any longer.)

Gunpowder Milkshake is coming to Netflix - it's a female action flick about mother/daughter assassins, portrayed by Karen Gillian and Lena Headly, with Michelle Yeoh, Angela Bassett, Carla Guigino, and Paul Giamatti.

Also, coming to theaters is The Eternals which stars Angelina Jolie, Richard Madden, Kit Harrington, and directed by Chloe Zhao.

The US could reach 70% vaccination by July, and NY could hit it before that, who knows - we're at 55% now. I don't know about anyone else? But I'm feeling hopeful.

(I'm also taking a break from the news again, which is irritating me. I know what's going on, I just have decided to ignore it for a bit. My nation's politics annoys me. I think it annoys everyone regardless of where you are on the political spectrum. Also, is it just me or is The Tokoyo Olympics Doomed?)

Crazy Workplace sent out a memo today letting us know that they are once again deciding to commemorate Juneteenth by giving us the day off prior to the Holiday. But it's not permanent because they don't want to give the union a holiday free of charge or interfere in the collective bargaining. I don't understand why the union didn't demand it in the last agreement - which was decided in 2020. I'd happily trade Columbus Day for Juneteenth. Or Election Day for that matter, which is confusing - since there's a law now that you get four hours off to vote.

Little has changed in my world since March 2020. But it is gradually beginning to change...and with any luck, I'll be able to make a field trip to the Botanical Gardens this weekend - I'm thinking Monday.

Work is also coming my way again, so I'm busy. And it's different work - so new challenges. I did update my Linked-in Account, and in so doing discovered another positive review of my book on Amazon - from the London, England. Which was lovely. (I added my non-traditionally published book to my Linked-in Account.) Also added various project that I've completed to the account - with links describing them. Linked-in is a business networking social media account.

***


I finished The Rules of Civility by Amor Torres finally - which was very good. It’s haunting and my mind continues to play with the characters and stories long after it was done. I didn’t like it as well as Gentleman in Moscow - I liked the characters better in Gentleman. Rules of Civility reminded me a little of The Great Gatsby. Also, I can’t help but wonder if the writer was being ironic with the name “Content” (as in state of being and in content at the same time). spoilers )

It's haunting novel about lives lead, and not lead. And the inability to trace back the steps. All we can do is live moment by moment. Katie Content at the end stands, sipping a cocktail in front of photos of herself and her husband and friends...content to sip.

I like fictional novels - if written well - they pull me into another's perspective and at the same time provide new perspective on my own world view and life. So that I am not quite the same afterwards, but not quite different either.

Anyhow, I'm beginning to realize what the fantasy novel I was dabbling with is about, and why I want to write it - so will go back to it soon. For a moment or so, I thought it was a passing fancy or romantic fantasy, best left to my head - but no, there's more there I think.

Picked up The Menopause Manifesto by Dr. Jen Gunter via audio books in the hope that I can get a grasp on how to combat the brain fog, weight gain, hot flashes, and mood swings. I'm thinking estrogen patch. I may contact the gynecologist and ask soon.

Hope all is well in your world. Mine is at the moment a rainy one, outside, but inside sunnier than usual.

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21: Best winter movie?

Gorky Park - winter movies are best when they are thrillers and about snow.

22: Pro or anti watching movies on computers or downloading from web? Why?

Anti-watching movies on computers or down-loading from web. Movies require big screens. Also they are expensive to make.

23: Streaming or DVD rental or On-Demand?

Streaming and On-Demand, actually On-Demand best. DVD rental kind of went out of fashion, when my DVD player went on the blitz. My DVD players have never worked well - also they can't record.

24: Do you prefer to buy movies online streaming or on DVD?

Online streaming - I have no space for DVDs. Although I've stopped buying movies, because they pop up again at some point anyhow.

25: Who’s your favorite movie director (writer's don't really matter in movies that much unless they are directing it) ?

Too many to count. I go in cycles. Right now, I'm partial to Chole Zhao, Patty Jenkins, Kathryn Bigelow...but I also adore Peter Weir, George Miller, David Fincher, Ang Lee, Stephen Spielberg, and classic filmmakers like Billy Wilder, Sydney Lumet, John Ford, Robert Wise, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, and David Lean.

26: Who’s your favorite comedic movie?

Noises Off - I know odd choice, but it makes me laugh.

27: Who’s your favorite fantasy movie?

LadyHawk - another odd choice, but there you go.

28: Who’s your favorite SF movie or movie franchise?

Franchise? Star Wars, Film? Blade Runner

29: List five OTPs from movies.

One True Pairing, but make it Five of them!

Princess Leia/Han Solo
Indy/Marion

[And I can't think of any others. I don't really ship movie characters.]

30: Name a movie you consider to be terribly underrated.

Blade Runner and Star Wars

31: Name a movie you consider to be terribly overrated.

2001: A Space Odyssey and Titantic

32: How many movies on DVD or VHS are actually in your bookshelf/shelves right now?

No idea. They are hidden in the closet. I'd have to go count them. I'm not going to.

33: What language do you (most often) watch in?

English

34: Name one of your favorite childhood movies.

Star Wars

35: Name one of your favorite movies from your teenage years.

Purple Rain
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I think it's clearing off finally. I see blue sky, and sunshine. Was feeling fine this morning, but cold. Apparently I wasn't alone in being cold because the heat finally came on around ten or eleven am. I had heavy shirt, a sweater, sweat pant leggings and fluffy socks. Also hot tea.

I don't mind it being chilly at night, but it is bothersome during the day.

I used to freeze at the office - so this actually isn't so bad.

I've been hunched over a lap top all day long, intermittently hunched over a phone, and staring blankly out the window at the sky, the trees, and a feral cat meandering about whom I've nicknamed ghost.

Didn't feel fine later - had to take something for yet another sinus headache. Some people get itchy and watery eyes or sneeze, I get sinus headaches, and cough/wheeze. Mother informed me that I was taking medication for the allergies so that may be why? God knows.

As a result been dragging a bit, and feeling slightly depressed. Poor mother was trying to cheer me up and failing miserably at it. So I went for a walk.



And bought more groceries, which I most likely do not need.

1. The Governor and COVID

Well they are getting creative regarding the whole vaccination endeavor, and possibly a tad desperate. This is kind of reminding me of the testing initiative. Now, they are setting up vaccination sites in the subway and train hubs for basically everyone. You don't even need to be a NY State resident to get vaccinated. It's the Johnson & Johnson - and if you get vaccinated at one of the subway or train stations, they'll either give you a free seven day subway pass, or two rides on the LIRR or Metro North trains.

Right now, there's about 16 million with at least one dose or 60% of the population, with almost 50% with two doses. The MTA has about 51% vaccinated. Since NY is giving vaccines to anyone who wants one at this point - I figure once we jump past 19 million, they'll realize they aren't just vaccinating New Yorkers. Maybe they know that already - it's not clear. But it has taken the State's total infection rate back down to 1.2 -1.4%.
27 people dies though, and we still have over 1,000 cases. But hey, progress.

They've basically vaccinated everyone who wanted one or was desperate for one. They are now stuck with the folks who don't want one and are being stubborn about it.


2. Television shows - Watched Mare of East Town last night on HBO. I was rather impressed. Much better than expected. Can't wait to see the next episode. It's a mystery serial - focusing on a female sergeant in a down-trodden town somewhere in the US. I'm thinking Pennsylvania, but it could be New England. It's based on a series of books. Stars Kate Winslet, Jean Smart, and Guy Pearce. I rather enjoyed the first episode, and like the actors, also am finding the disgruntled lead character - weirdly comforting.

I'm behind on the Nevers. I think I saw the fourth episode but my HBO Max streaming app disagrees with me.

3. Movies...West Side Story - rewatched that on Sunday (I don't know if that's the best thing to watch if you are depressed - I cried at the end again). It's better than I remembered, there's some amazing and underrated dance numbers in that. And they were apparently grueling to film - since they insisted on doing it on location, and on concrete. Try dancing for hours on end on concrete? They had knee pads - which they burned afterwards. And Tamblyn who played Riff got shin splints.

Things Heard & Seen - stars Amanda Seyfield, James Norton, F Murray Abraham, and Karen Allen. It's not very good. Kind of a gothic horror/ghost story with a murderous husband. The ending is kind of cool, but also - I thought overtly Christian. spoiler on the ending ). Couple moves to creepy farm house up in New England. The wife has an eating disorder, the husband turns out to be a pathological liar and narcissist.

I found it comforting in a way - it made me happy I wasn't married, didn't live in a country house in a small town in New England, didn't drive, and
had no kids. (Actually so did Mare of East Town.)

I also remember wondering why the wife didn't tell her husband - this house is creepy, I'm going somewhere else. The wife - I felt was a tad on the weak side.

4. Books...I'm meandering my way through the audio book Rules of Civility by Amor Torres, and the contemporary romance novel Dear Enemy by an author whose name I cannot remember via Kindle Unlimited. I'd say Rules of Civility is by far the better of the two (no contest really there - it's kind of a given). Dear Enemy unfortunately does not work well as an audio book. While I have no difficulty reading explicit sex scenes or reading characters discuss them - I do struggle with listening to them, particularly in first person - it's kind of silly or ludicrous. "Oh, my cock is so hard, I can hardly stand it" (Me: LOLOLOL!!!) or "The fat head of his cock floated up to the surface of the water..." ME:So is this an inflatable balloon? I began to giggle.

I'm sorry it just doesn't work. And to make matters worse? They have two narrators. One does the female chapters, and one the male. Like I said, it worked up to the sex scenes. And contemporary romance novelists get a bit graphic.

5. Almost forgot..Whedon Studies Association on FB asked if we knew Whedon had gotten remarried? (Yes, I did - I kind of figured it out from his Twitter page way back in November. He'd been living with an artist throughout the pandemic, and I figured they were married.)

Whedon needs Birth Certificate to get his Wife a green card

The “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” writer is being forced to jump through legal hoops to get a copy of his original birth certificate — so his Canadian wife won’t be deported, according to legal filings.

Whedon, 56, was born Joseph Hill Whedon in the Big Apple in 1964, but has used the nickname “Joss” for decades, even on his driver’s license and passport, according to court papers.

When he tried to get the important document online, he was rejected because of the discrepancy. When he and a lawyer called the city’s Office of Vital Records and pleaded his case, a clerk quipped, “Well, that’s not real life. You need to get a court order and an emergency request for birth certificate before we can help you with that,” according to legal filings.


LOL! This is actually true. You need to produce the actual birth certificate - which requires a court order. You can't use the copy. I find out about that when I was applying for a passport, luckily I have a passport already, so not a problem. They've got weirdly bureaucratic about this now.



What continues to amuse me about the whole outdoor dining thing - is apparently some restaurants don't get the concept. The above is a picture of outdoor indoor dining. In other words - it appears the build an extension onto the sidewalk. I didn't know it was possible to do outdoor indoor dining until now.

Oh and the below is why you don't really need to wear a watch in NYC.

Movie Meme

May. 3rd, 2021 06:04 pm
shadowkat: (Default)
Let's see if we can do the book meme as a movie meme?

1: What Movie did you last watch? When was that?

2: What movie are you anticipating or excited about?

3: What movie are you planning to watch next?

4: What was the last movie you added to your to watch list?

5: Which movie did you last re-watch?

6: Which movie was the last one you really, really loved?

7: What was/were the last movies you bought on DVD?

8: Where do you like watching movies best - Movie theater, laptop, phone, ebook player (Amazon Fire HD), or television set? Why?

9: Children's, YA, NA or Adult? Why?

10: Sci-Fi or fantasy? Why?

11: Classic movies or current/modern? Why? (If Classic - which eras?)

12: Political documentary films or comedic/satirical documentary ones?

13: Name a movie with a really bad book/comic/television adaption.

14: Name a movie where the television/book adaption actually was better than the movie.

15: What movie changed your life?

16: If you could bring three movies to a deserted island which would you bring and why?

17: If you owned a movie studio what would you call it?

18: Which character from a movie is the most like you?

19: Which character from a movie is the least like you?

20: Best summer movie?

21: Best winter movie?

22: Pro or anti watching movies on computers or downloading from web? Why?

23: Streaming or DVD rental or On-Demand?

24: Do you prefer to buy movies online streaming or on DVD?

30: Who’s your favorite movie director (writer's don't really matter in movies that much unless they are directing it) ?

31: Who’s your favorite comedic movie?

32: Who’s your favorite fantasy movie?

33: Who’s your favorite SF movie or movie franchise?

34: List five OTPs from movies.

One True Pairing, but make it Five of them!

35: Name a movie you consider to be terribly underrated.

36: Name a movie you consider to be terribly overrated.

37: How many movies on DVD or VHS are actually in your bookshelf/shelves right now?

38: What language do you (most often) watch in?

39: Name one of your favorite childhood movies.

40: Name one of your favorite movies from your teenage years.

41: Do you have a library card to borrow movies from the library? How often do you use it?

42: Which was the best movie that you had to watch in school?

43: How frequently do you watch movies? And how many do you watch a year?

44: Do you like to watch movies while eating - or seeing them in a theater with other food and drink offered like in a restaurant?

45: What is your favorite thing to eat when you watch a movie?

46: What is your favorite thing to drink when you watch a movie?

47: What do you do to get out of a movie slump - nothing to watch?

48: Where do you watch movies - at home, in theaters, etc?

49: When is your favorite time to watch movies?

50: Why do you love movies?

Kind of worked, I had to fiddle with a few of them though.

Oscars..

Apr. 25th, 2021 08:19 pm
shadowkat: (Default)
Well so far so good.

It's very different. They did best original screenplay, and best adapted screenplay first.

*Emerald Fennel - Promising Young Woman, as I expected, won best original screenplay. I'd have given it to her. [I saw the movie - the dialogue is biting and the script is rather good.]

[What's interesting is how Regina King is introducing each person - telling us who these people are. And showing them from across the world, if they aren't in LA.]

* The screenwriters for the Father won. (I can't watch the Father - it's about Althzheimers through the point of view of those suffering it. And that's my Dad, so I can't. Too painful.}

The Oscars are kind of an abbreviated version, with no major performances or hosts, no real fanfare. Instead of red carpet, they did a spotlight - with the songs performed then.

Mother: Are you watching the Oscars?
ME: Uh no.
Mother: Instead of the red carpet they are doing the musical numbers.
ME: Damn. I missed it
Mother: Sorry, should have called you earlier. Oh I watched Sound of Metal today.
ME: What did you think?
Mother: It was extremely good. I enjoyed it.
Me: I loved it.
Mother: So did your brother. He couldn't get into Ma Rainey's Black Bottom.
Me: Yeah, I struggled with Trial of Chicago 7 which he loved. Has he seen Promising Young Woman?
Mother: no. But he troubles finding the same one you were looking for, Minari.
Me: Yeah - that I couldn't find it either.

[See? My family is into discussing movies.]

Now they are doing Best Foreign Film...

*Another Round - the film with the guy from Hannibal (Mads Mikleson - if you are a fan, you should watch Another Round for him), that everyone loves? I predicted it probably would, so not surprised. It's the Denmark film. It's about letting go of control - and features four men who just stay drunk.

[Most thought Que Vadis would get it.]

Ah finally, Best Supporting Actor.

[This is interesting - it has the most black men nominated for Best Supporting Actor in history. 3 people.]

* Daniel Kaluuya won - for Judas and the Black Messiah. I love this actor. He's so powerful. (Although I could not get into the movie at all.)

Ooooh...The West Side Story - Steven Spielberg version looks really cool. They released the trailer just now. It looks good. (Although, it's going to be hard to beat George Chakris, Rita Morena, and Russ Tambolyn from the original.)

Best Makeup and Hair Styling

* Ma Rainey's Black Bottom got best hair and makeup (well deserved)

Best Costume

* Ma Rainey's Black Bottom - Ann Roth (who figures out the costumes by what people do with the clothes when they go to bed at night.)

Best Director

*Chloe Zhao won for Nomadland - history making, first Asian female director to win. "Everywhere I've gone, I've looked and found the goodness in people and the place." That was Nomadland...actually.


Best Sound

* YAY - Sound of Metal won - which it should, that movie did things with sound that amazed me.

[So far I'm agreeing with who is winning these awards, that's kind of rare. I usually don't agree for 3/4 of the awards. In fact I groaned through the last four or five awards...with few exceptions. ]

Best Live Action Short

[I've not seen them. I'm not a fan of short films. But the Oscars do draw attention to them.]

* Two Distant Strangers

Speech: "Yesterday, three people were killed by police, today three people have been killed by police, and tomorrow three people will be killed by police. James Baldwin once said the worst thing people can do is to be indifferent to other people's pain. So we ask you please, don't be indifferent."

Movies, television shows, art, music and books - stop us from being indifferent - they take us inside the pain, the joy, another's mind, another's views, often different than our own... and if well done? Make us feel it.

Animated Short

*If Anything Happens, I love You

[I wish they'd show the films, they used to - it's hard to know without seeing them.]

Animated Feature Film

* Soul - (YAY)

...

Okay I'm losing interest. It's and I'm not up to staying up until 11.
shadowkat: (Default)
1. Found this exchange entertaining - via Reddit. They took down the post of a fish wheeing when it jumped out of the water and in again (apparently).

Hey /u/KebabChef, thanks for contributing to r/aww. Unfortunately, your post was removed as it violates our rules:

Rule 1 - No "sad" content, such as pics of animals that have passed away (try r/petloss), animals that have been injured/abused, or sob stories (e.g. found him in a dumpster). more

Your title must be "100% happy". No mentioning death, injury, RIP posts, finding abandoned animals, sick/survived cancer, pets being put to sleep, "I miss...", etc.

You may tell the complete story, unhappy parts and all, in the comments section.

Silver lining stories still fall under Rule 1. For example, "Jakey was hit by a car and had cancer, but he is a happy little fella today!" is not allowed.

Please read the sidebar and rules before posting again. If you have questions or concerns, please message the moderators through modmail. Thank you!


KEbab Chief: Dude! Stop throwing me back in! I'm trying to evolve!!


2. The NY Times Corona Virus Briefing managed to nail what I've been feeling for the last three or four months now...

The Science Behind COVID Blah )

Article HERE

I'm languishing. I don't really care all that much about anything. Feel sort of numb.

Talk to my mother twice daily trying to boost her spirits. She's worried that she'll never walk again or be able to drive or anything. My father talked about walking on the beach together soon and she quipped that she didn't see how, and he said, they could try. The problem is - of the two of them, my father has always been the more optimistic and courageous. Mother has the worry gene. My brother and father have told her that she always imagines the worst case scenario - aka the worry gene. I've got it too, but I'm working to get it under control.

Today - I told my mother, while we were discussing The Great Gatsby (my mother and I have discussions about literature among other things), that I finally understood the frivolity of the 1920s. It took experiencing a pandemic to get it. They had just come out of the Spanish Flu Pandemic of 1918-1922, after experiencing WWI. I don't want to go to the roaring 20s, because that lead to the stock market crash of 1929, the Great Depression, and WWII. But, I don't think we'd repeat it quite like that - since if you look back there is an interesting pattern emerging in human evolutionary history.

I think humans are stupid. But hey, NASA figured out how to fly a little robot helicopter on Mars. Mars actually has a sky and clouds.

3. Oooh, Marvel's Shang-Chi Trailer Looks Good!



4. Hmmm...

* There’s a giant blue whale at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. You can soon get vaccinated beneath it, if you’d like.

* Alaska will offer vaccinations to tourists in June to boost tourism-related businesses, Alaska Public Media reports. [I'd like to visit Alaska, but I already am vaccinated.] (Apparently it's tough to get a vaccine appointment in France - maybe they should fly to Alaska?)

* The U.S. military will begin offering vaccines to detainees at Guantánamo Bay.

*“Joe’s Covee Car” is decorated with dryer balls that look like the coronavirus. And it ferries people to vaccine sites in New Jersey for free, The Washington Post reports.

* Navajo Nation reported no new deaths for the seventh consecutive day and just two new confirmed cases of the coronavirus, The Associated Press reports.

* After the N.F.L. canceled its in-person draft combine, pro prospects and the teams scouting them have been forced to adjust.

* Airports in Australia and New Zealand were filled with emotional scenes as thousands of passengers were allowed to travel freely between the two countries for the first time in more than a year.

*Eyeing tourist season this summer, Greece will relax its quarantine rules.[Greece actually is ahead of the game on vaccinations. It did rather well.]

* The pandemic has exacerbated Argentina’s economic crisis: In 2020, the national economy shrank by nearly 10 percent, the third straight year of recession.

* Cambodians could get 20 years in prison for breaking pandemic rules, under a new law that human rights groups say pushes the country toward “totalitarian dictatorship,” The Guardian reports.
shadowkat: (Default)
This is just...so insanely ironic, if you know anything about the back-story behind the Buffy Movie - that lead to Whedon's chance to redo it on Television.

Chris Terrio, the original screenwriter of Justice League is furious with how Whedon vandalized his script

excerpt )

- Why this is so ironic?

Whedon's Issues with the Buffy Movie


excerpts )

So, Whedon's original script was ruined in his opinion, and vandalized by the actors, a rushed production schedule and the director. Then several years later, he got the chance to redo it - his way.

Scan about thirty years later? Whedon does the exact same thing Sutherland and Kuzui's did to him, to Snyder/Terrio and all.

30 years later - Whedon is on the opposite side of his own argument. Ironic.
shadowkat: (Default)
Didn't do much today but veg in front of the television and surf the net. Did straighten a few papers though. Partly due to a headache - which began at 1 and didn't leave until 5pm.

1. Falcon and the Winter Solider

I have a vague knowledge of the comics upon which all of this is based, so wasn't as surprised by a few things in the first two episodes as others were.

spoilers )

Outside of the spoiler, which worked better than expected - in that it becomes something the Falcon and Winter Solider bond over. Bucky is basically annoyed with Sam for not following through on Cap's request, mainly because Bucky has made it all about him. A fact that Sam calls him on - and rightfully so. Also, the unspoken word in the room is systematic racism.

Bucky isn't racist, but the system is. And Sam knows that.

The story kind of circles around and plays with the theme of racism, and disadvantaged on multiple levels. Also how difficult the world has become post blip (or post one billion folks coming back after being gone for five years).

I found WandaVision more compelling, but that's mainly because I don't find military ops all that entertaining.

2. Nancy Drew - for a change we didn't have the gang investigating a supernatural mystery - instead we were delving into Bess's checkered past, and the vengeance her former husband (an abusive user and crook) enacted.

Of the CW shows, so far Nancy Drew and Superman are holding my interest.

I am considering trying Kung Fu which airs April 7, I think - which has a female Kung Fu artist as the hero.

3. Whedon Studies posted various things - on FB, one on the Nevers, one a lovely fan picture of Buffy by a non-scholar, and yet another post with Charisma Carpenter detailing her abuse at Whedon's hands. I decided to tell them there was more to that story - which, ahem makes it worse, and depicts a systematic sexism in the industry at large that they may not want to examine. Whedon's behavior much like others is just a symptom of a far more widespread problem. WB and Fox, and those in charge of those studios are at the root of it - the hired and enabled and in some cases pressured Whedon and others like him to behave in this fashion. It's getting better, but as long as people enable selfish asshole syndrome it will continue.

What is, however, most troubling about the Cordelia story on Angel, now that I've examined the Justice League films...is this:
Read more... )
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1. Ben Affleck Returns as Batman in the Flash Film.

It will also have Michael Keaton in it.
Read more... )
There's speculation that DC may use the Flashpoint film to ret-con the DC film verse or reset it. Undoing the Snyderverse and Nolan's stuff. Kind of a reboot. Similar in a way to what they did in Days of Future Past with the X-men. But seriously? Anything could happen at this point.

The Flash movie's history is insane, apparently. And would take volumes to explain or so I've been told. Apparently it's been in development for years and had countless directors attached. It's so complicated it has a Wiki page devoted to it. LOL! So we'll see if it ever gets made or released.

2. Ten Things Whedon and Geoff Johns/Jon Berg added to Justice League that weren't necessary and kind of baffling

[Also offensive in a few places. So offensive that I'm kind of leery of Whedon now. I can barely look at interviews or photos of the man without cringing.]

Joss Whedon took a hatchet to the original Justice League, chopping away at Zack Snyder's vision and refilming more of the movie than necessary.

I'm tempted to do a meta about dialogue and humor, and how certain types of low-brow frat boy style humor doesn't work. But ...meh. I think I made the point already elsewhere.

Anyhow... a few excerpts:
Read more... )

It's funny back in 2017 - I thought Whedon's Justice League was okay, with some jarring and cringe inducing moments, but overall not that bad. Then forgot it. Completely. I also thought he probably would make a better film than Snyder. In 2021, I find Whedon's film bordering on unwatchable, and my opinion of Whedon has tumulted, while I enjoyed Snyder's film and find aspects of it not only memorable but haunting.

Have I changed? Or has my perception/perspective merely changed? Or a little of both? Because the films for the most part are the same.


3. Coming to a television screen near you...

* HBO MAX - Kate Winslet plays a small-town detective in Mare of Easttown. It takes place in Pennsylvania and features a character who is a small town PI, with wrinkled clothes, and a bit of a grump. Premier's April 18.

* PBS - Hemingway Documentary by Ken Burns. Three parts. Airs - April 5

* ABC - Rebel - Katy Sagal plays an Erin Brockovinch type - legal advocate (it's produced and created by Erin Brockovnich).

* Netflix - Shadow and Bone - the fantasy series that adapts the Shadow & Bone and Six of Crows books. Focuses on orphan Alina Starkov - who may have the ability to upturn her world. Airs - 4-23

*THEM - on 4/8 Amazon Prime - it's an Horror anthology drama, that delves into America's cultural divides. The 50's set first season titled Covenant - is about a Black family from North Carolina who moves into then-all-white Compton, California. They battle the racism outside their hours and the evil of the supernatural sort inside it.

I plan to start Streaming "The Falcon and the Winter Solider" on Disney Plus this weekend.

4. Ames wants me to try these three books:

This Is Happiness: a lovely novel with sort of a sleepy start that rambles about life in a small Irish village in the 1950s about to get electricity. Male narrated/lead. It would likely remind you of your summer in Whales.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/04/books/review/this-is-happiness-niall-williams.html

A Gentleman in Moscow (has become one of my very favorite books): Is a 30-year saga of the Count Alexander Ilyich Rostov, who is placed under house arrest inside the Metropol Hotel in Moscow in 1922. It is an "elegantly drawn era with the story of Count Alexander Rostov. When, in 1922, he is deemed an unrepentant aristocrat by a Bolshevik tribunal, the count is sentenced to house arrest in the Metropol, a grand hotel across the street from the Kremlin." Male narrated/lead.

Rules of Civility is by the same author as "Gentleman.." and I think you'd like this a lot, female narrator/lead. Bonus: it works well as an audio book (although now that I've had a listen, I want a hard copy to re-"read" at some future time). Shorter than the other 2, I think. It's set in NYC in the late 1930s through a couple of decades, but mostly 1930s-early 1940s: "On the last night of 1937, twenty-five-year-old Katey Kontent is in a second-rate Greenwich Village jazz bar when Tinker Grey, a handsome banker, happens to sit down at the neighboring table."

All 3 books are about the same length, 300-400 pages. Depends what you might want in a read (or a listen). I think you would enjoy all 3. All of them have very excellent quips peppered throughout and are very well written, good stories.
__

It should be noted that Ames and I share the same sense of humor. Kind of dry sardonic.

I don't know. I'm moody at the moment. And kind of hit the wall with the pandemic. I'm making myself wait until April to get a hair cut. But I want one now.

5. The Nevers Cast Previews the Series and Discusses the Vibe on the Set

They will be positive - it's a promotional article. Also Whedon only directed six episodes of a project he cast himself, and picked the crew and writers for. During a pandemic. He left it (allegedly) due to personal exhaustion. (I don't know, his announcement came on the heels of the Justice League investigation, and I honestly think he was ass hole on the Justice League shoot. But it was also a toxic situation long before he arrived, he just made it worse. And he had help - lots of help. Basically white boys being assholes. Typical Hollywood. On the Nevers, he surrounds himself with folks who keep him in check, and it's not a superhero film.)

excerpt )

And The NEVERS trailer.

Whedon did direct all six episodes, and wrote two. They were supposed to have ten but Whedon left.

I'll probably check it out. I was considering skipping, but what the heck. It's free. I'm already paying for HBO Max.

In case you haven't figured it out by now? I've debated the whole Whedon thing with myself (and other people but mainly myself) in this journal for about two months now - and have come to the conclusion, that...he was guilty of everything they alleged. He was an asshole. He probably deserved whatever happened. They'd be a fool to hire him to show-run a television show, or direct a large scale film ever again.

But it's not my job to judge. Or my business for that matter. And it probably doesn't matter.

But I did learn stuff - so that's good.

People claim things are a waste of time? I don't think anything is - we learn from the silliest and craziest things.
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1. My Father was Famous as John Le Carr, but my mother was his crucial covert collaborator

For as long as I can remember, my parents have been defined by the work they did together, and by a working relationship so interwoven with their personal one that the two were actually inseparable. David’s first report of Jane, long before I was born, was that she had rescued his novel A Small Town in Germany when it was literally in pieces on the floor. Some of my earliest memories are of him reading, handwritten pages or typescript with annotations in black pen, sometimes physically cut and pasted in the days before computers, and her listening, absorbing, only occasionally responding, but always with immediate effect.

It was easy to misunderstand her as just a typist – and many did – not only because she also typed everything, as he never learned how, but also because her interventions were made in private, before the text was ever seen by anyone else. I was witness to it as a child and then as a teenager, but by and large only they knew what passed between them and how much she reframed, adjusted, trained the novels as they grew. She was adamant that her contribution was not writing, that the creative partnership they had was uneven. She declined interviews and stepped out of photographs – even family ones, so that as we were looking this week for images for the order of service at her cremation, we had very few, and those were stolen moments gleaned before she could practise her invisibility trick. It was part of how it worked: he produced, they edited; he burned, she fanned. It was their conspiracy, the thing that no one else could ever offer him, in which they both connived.


This is touching, and reminds me of my own parents. Who both read Le Carr.

I've also been listening to Michelle Obama's Becoming - where she discusses falling in love with Barack via their long debates and discourse. Spouses who can converse for long periods of time - tend to get along better, I think. Since sex waxes and wanes.

2. Reviews of The SnyderCut version of Justice League

Someone on scans daily asked: "so we're excited about a movie that is an expensive recut of another not so great movie, four hours long, and took four years to be remade...from a bunch of comic books?"

Response: "We're comic book fans that's what we do."

It is. It's what geeks do. Particularly culture geeks. I'm fascinated by how this thing came about. It cost WB over $70 to do the recut. It cost them $300 million to do the original. They got bullied into doing the recut by two separate yet united factions - the fans (who are rather toxic but fans can be if riled up and convinced they are on a righteous path of justice - they become a bit like an insane cult or mob) and the cast (lead by Ray Fisher and his allegations against the studio and Whedon). Because of how this came about - I'm wildly curious about the film.

But it's four hours long. And I've seen Snyder films. I am fully aware of what four hours watching a Snyder film would be like. MD and I struggled through Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice. Also through Man of Steel.
(I liked Caville better in The Witcher. He had more to do. Also Mission Impossible.)

So, reading reviews first:

Justice League Review - Still a Mess Now a Million Years Long

Justice League - Snyder Cut delivers the film fans longed for

ome of the most satisfying wrinkles, not surprisingly, involve Superman (Henry Cavill), whose revival to ward off this apocalyptic threat (or Apokolips-tic threat, in deference to Darkseid's home) provides a central dilemma. Where Whedon went for the stirring and staid -- "Truth and justice," etc. -- Snyder again goes grand and indeed messianic, casting the son of Krypton as Earth's savior, who pays a price for his service.

So far, so very good, and this "Justice League" proves a richer and more rewarding experience on almost every level. Some of the best original scenes are still there, such as an awakened Superman's fight with the rest of the team, but it's jarring how much is new and completely different, helpfully divided into chapters, plus an epilogue, to navigate the sprawling length.
Simply put, nobody frames superhero action more lovingly than Snyder, who going back to "300" has exhibited a knack for translating comic-book imagery to the screen. The effect is visually dazzling, and far more visceral than what previously saw the light of day.
Where, then, is the down side? Mainly that producing this for streaming, as opposed to a theatrical version, didn't require any significant choices about excising unnecessary threads.
What might have been a terrific 2 ½ or even three-hour movie thus becomes a somewhat bloated four-hour indulgence intended for die-hard fans, bypassing logical places to end things to pile on tantalizing teases for storylines that seem unlikely to be pursued anytime soon.
Granted, most of those complaints come down to the last 30 minutes or so, and for those who crusaded to "Release the Snyder cut," the subscription to HBO Max will be worth every penny. In that sense, this consumer-driven spectacle represents a logical use of the streaming service, super-serving fans in a way that doesn't care, or have to, about time constraints or how well it will play with the broadest possible audience.

In the final analysis, that's what willed "the Snyder cut" into existence, so from that standpoint, mission accomplished. Whether that means Warner Bros. gets its money's worth out of this unique use of its newest platform, or emboldens future efforts to use hash tags to revisit and expand upon cinematic history, remains to be seen.


Snyder Cut exposes problems with fan culture

Director Zack Snyder’s cut of Justice League, out March 18 on HBO Max, is way better than the original version released in theaters in 2017. It had to be. The theatrical cut of the DC Comics superhero movie was a dissonant mishmash of two radically different directorial styles that left audiences confused, critics unimpressed and the studio reportedly at a financial loss.

During filming, Snyder left the project after the sudden and tragic death of his daughter, and another director, Joss Whedon of Avengers fame, took over. Whedon reshot much of the movie, and whether by poor communication or studio interference, the plot became incomprehensible—and Whedon sprinkled quips throughout to try to brighten his predecessor’s signature gloomy tone, to the consternation of Snyder’s most devoted fans.

The new cut of Justice League, dubbed the Snyder Cut by fans on the Internet, lasts four exhausting hours. But Snyder uses his doubled run time wisely. Whereas Whedon’s version gestured at vague, tearjerky backstories, Snyder gives each hero personal stakes, particularly Ray Fisher’s Cyborg: his strained relationship with his father becomes the much needed heart of the film. The villain Steppenwolf, too, gets a motive—redeeming himself to his villainous family.

The CGI battles look better, and are longer and bloodier, if that’s your thing. No longer tonally bipolar, the film is one man’s vision, for better or worse. It’s uniformly dark—and not just figuratively: Snyder transformed several daytime scenes into murky nighttime ones. (Points for consistency, if not for visual clarity.) And he has said he is donating some of the proceeds to suicide-prevention programs.

Snyder turned a bad movie into a less bad movie. In a pandemic when blockbusters are scarce, maybe that’s welcome. But the journey here was fraught. A group of fans operating under the banner #ReleaseTheSnyderCut bullied Warner Bros. into giving Snyder $70 million to remake the film. (That’s chump change for a superhero movie, but could have funded a lovely new original film.)

This wasn’t a quaint letter-writing campaign. While some fans innocently used the hashtag in hopes of getting a better movie, a toxic contingent spammed producers, critics and fans of the rival Marvel Cinematic Universe with angry comments and threats. By capitulating to fans who employ dubious tactics to get what they want, Warner Bros. may have set a dangerous precedent. If this is the future of filmmaking, who’s really in control?
A new villain Darkseid Zack Snyder's cut of Justice League


Here's the thing? The original version wasn't that bad - jarring yes, but not quite as bad as I was lead to believe. I thought it was okay. I like Age of Ultron better, but I like the MCU as a whole better than DCU. Always have always will. I'm not a fan of the Randian view - which DC swings towards.
Age of Ultron had more going on. And more humor. I also prefer Infinity War and Endgame to Dawn of Justice and Justice League - because they are built up better and there's more character development. And I prefer Robert Downy Jr to Ben Affleck.

Anyhow..it's late. Good night.
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1. Apparently Bridgerton is the most watched Netflix Series EVER!

The link provided above also discusses why black actors and actors of color need to be seen in more historical dramas. And the excuses for not including them, don't quite work any longer.

2. I was amused by a fight that broke out at scans daily over the toxic Snyder fandom. They were arguing that Snyder's fans on social media aren't toxic. Amused, because everyone else believes they are, except for well the fans themselves.

I think when humans get obsessive or obsessive/compulsive about something they love or have convinced themselves they want, are bored, and frustrated about other things - it's kind of a cocktail for toxicity. I've seen it in every fandom. And it's by no means relegated by gender.

I am ambivalent about Zack Snyder's films. They don't really work for me - but I also don't enjoy video games. And get bored watching action scenes or fight scenes after a while. Snyder basically just does action sequences, and paintings. I find his films exhausting. I've seen a lot of them in theaters with girl-friends over the years. CW and I saw The 300 and The Watchmen in the theater, she was dating Frank Miller at the time.
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3. Netflix has been busy, busy, busy building content.

It has now added Zack Snyder (Army of the Dead - a zombie heist film), Tim Burton (Wednesday's school days at Neverdale), and has Ryan Murphy and Shondra Rhimes. It's also busy doing a live action series based on Avatar:The Last Airbender.

It wants to be all things to all people.
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1. Flora & Ulysses - this is the adaptation of a best selling graphic novel for children. I gave the book to my niece when she was about seven or eight. She has no memory of it of course, now that she is almost seventeen years of age. (I feel old and weirdly it feels like yesterday to me, but feels like a century ago to my niece. I've not read the book.) It stars a bunch of comedic stars, but focuses mainly on Flora and a live action animated squirrel.

Alyson Hannigan stars as the mother, and one of the actors from Community stars as a animal control officer who is attempting to euthanize the squirrel.

After a bought with a rogue robot vacuum called "Ulysses", a squirrel much to the astonishment and glee of an eight year old girl - is imbued with super-powers. He can type on her mother's ancient typewriter, understand humans, fly, and lift heavy objects. But mainly he's concerned with eating, pleasing Flora, and escaping from animal control.

It's a cute movie - I don't think I'm the right demographic for it. But it is cute. Also, nice twist, in that the eight year old girl is interested in comic books and her father is a failed comic book artist, while her mother is the bread-winner with romance novels.

2. WandaVision

Episode 7:Breaking the Fourth Wall - continues WandaVision homage/satiric parody of situation comedies. She's now, kind of up to date, with 00's breaking the fourth wall version of the sitcom or the meta-narrative sitcom. (This is my least favorite version of the sitcom - mainly because I don't like it when people stop and talk to the camera or get interviewed in the middle of a story as if it some sort of warped documentary. I find it jarring, and it irritates me. Which is why I don't like 90% of the sitcoms that have come out in recent years. I'm apparently in the minority - because most people love this sort of thing. I don't. I like there to be a fourth wall firmly in place, thank you very much. Which made me appreciate the satirization of it all the more - the writers poke fun at the conventions. At one point, Vision stops and says, why in the hell am I sitting her talking about this with imaginary people off-screen - this is stupid. And at another Wanda tells the people off-screen they aren't supposed to talk back.]

Also, it gets across the feeling of being trapped in a kind of mundane suburban existance and unable to get out.

spoilers )

3. Miss Scarlet and the Duke - enjoying it for the most part, but the banter between the two of them is beginning to get on my nerves. They sound like squabbling siblings. Other than that - the mysteries are fun and the underlying arc entertaining. It's an innovative costume drama mystery series.

4. Palm Springs - film starring Adam Samberg, Cristina Milloti and JK Skinner. It's basically a ground-hog day concept or the idea of being stick inside an internal loop, and unable to get out. In this version - the only way out is to blow yourself up in the middle of the loop and it kicks you out of the box. It's a quantum physics solution apparently. Good deeds don't work, nothing else does. And there's really no root message except to make the best of things.

It felt a bit like a metaphor for the wealthy's tedium of a pandemic. For a majority of the film we watch Sarah and Miles hang out at a wedding neither wish to be at, attempting to deal with the tedium and the prospect of not finding a way out of it. Sarah eventually does, since unlike Miles, the eternal time-loop is impossible for her to deal with.

I was bored. To date the only time loop series or film that's entertained me outside of Ground Hog day is Russian Doll.
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I'll do the daily update later, I think.

1. I read an interesting interview with Harry Lennix regarding Joss Whedon and Justice League the other day - that haunts me. I feel as if the universe is poking me again? So I'm going to poke you, because this reminded me of something - I can be a self-righteous idiot sometimes. Can't we all? I don't get much comfort from that.

Harry Lennix - you most likely know as Boyd from Dollhouse. He is a 6'4 tall black man from the South Side of Chicago, in his fifties. And played the Martian Manhunter in Justice League - most of his role was scrapped when Whedon took over.


The reason there’s a Snyder Cut is because Zack was replaced by Joss Whedon on the movie. As you know, Ray Fisher has alleged that Joss engaged in misconduct during the shoot. You worked with Joss on two seasons of “Dollhouse,” so I wanted to ask if you had any thoughts on the matter?

I wasn’t there during the time in question. I am sorry that anybody had to experience what it was that was described. Obviously, there’s one side of the story that we’ve heard. I don’t know that Joss has made any comments. As you point out, I worked with Joss fairly closely for a couple of years there. I didn’t see that behavior, and at the same time, as an actor, my heart goes out to anybody that had to endure that kind of treatment. We get treated as a second-class citizens frequently. But I did not see it, and I would be curious as to what [Joss’s] response to this has been.

I just hope everybody can move on with their lives, to be honest with you. As a former seminarian, and as somebody who has made mistakes, I’ve been on either side of that equation.

Directors sometimes are insensitive to the needs or the feelings of actors, and sometimes actors are needy, and sometimes they are oversensitive. I know I can be. So that said, I hope whatever it was that happened, that people could move on, and — outside of some unforgivable thing — that people can forgive, not just each other, but forgive themselves. To say, “Look, I may have made this mistake in the past, now I know better, and I’m going to do better.” This was a different time. What was tolerable, five years ago, a year ago, is no longer, and we have to adapt to that. I think there’s some of that going on, that this is generational in some way. I know that Ray has it in himself to be better because of this, to be stronger, to have survived it. And I also hope that Joss can, too, that he can survive it, be the writer and creator that that he is and we can all be better because of it.

You’re looking at this with more empathy than I would say many observers have in light of what Ray has alleged, and what actors on “Angel” and “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” alleged about Joss on Wednesday. Were you experiences with Joss purely professional?

Yes. Utterly professional. I didn’t see any of that kind of behavior that I’m hearing about. But I’m in a different place. That kind of thing is not likely to happen to me, just cause I’m a big Black guy from the South Side of Chicago, that people are a little more circumspect in however they might think about treating me or talking to me. I think maybe we should give [Joss] another chance to respond, to see what his side of the story is. Not minimizing anybody’s story, not minimizing the experiences others had in any way. But I believe that we must learn to reconcile. And we must learn to move on.

We wouldn’t be able to take this into a court, per se, not really. What I’ve learned over the years is that two people could be telling the absolute truth from their point of view, and disagree on what those salient points are.

Whatever those salient points are, I think that everything that I have heard so far — and that’s not everything — is recoverable. And so to the extent that it’s recoverable, let’s recover from it and keep moving.Joss hasn’t commented, Ray hasn’t gone public with almost any details about what he says happened on “Justice League,” and WarnerMedia hasn’t revealed what the company learned in its investigation. So figuring out how to move forward is complicated in the absence of detail.

I agree, 100%. What I’ve been able to glean from the stories and the back and forth, such as it is — mostly the forth — is that nasty things were said, mean, insensitive things were said, that made certain people uncomfortable. That’s certainly something I’m familiar with actors having to endure. Indeed, that’s part of the process. People say “no” to us for any number of reasons, or tell us to lose weight or gain it or get taller or shorter or younger. That’s just the nature of the business — it’s a personal business. I am of the opinion that this is entirely fixable, and that really what needs to happen is a dialogue. I mean, the old standard in American jurisprudence is you have a right to face your accuser and to respond. I think that people have the right to present both sides of the case. In fact, it’s not just a right, I think it’s an obligation. I wonder what’s going to happen.


spontaneous musing on the above, thoughts only, subject to change at any time )

2. I got annoyed - I realized that the four hour movie I was gearing myself up to watch and even looking forward to - isn't premiering until March 18. For some reason I kept reading 3/18/21 as 2/18/21.

3. Finished Illona Andrews self-published best-seller Blood Heir - a spin-off from her Kate Daniels verse. I read thirteen chapters of the draft version on her blog over the summer. I liked, in some respects, those chapters better. This feels paired down and exposition/back story heavy, also alot of action. I find action scenes kind of boring to read. They are like sex scenes - hard to right.

Also she gets preachy in the middle - feeling the need to have the lead preach about a new and better political system, which is based on a kind of magical/militaristic power dynamic. It's a problem that I have with Andrews novels - they each have a very strong power/militaristic base or thematic to them that I personally find off-putting, and have to constantly handwave to get to the bits I like.

It's a problem with the urban fantasy genre, to be honest. It has a heavy anti-hero/noir feel to it - and a kind of uneven power dynamic. Progressive this genre isn't. Yet, I love aspects of it - enough to hand wave the bits I don't. Also it helps me to understand the other mindset a little. Not that Andrews are conservative - they aren't. They were anti-Trump, and seemed fairly progressive actually. And unlike the Dresden Novels and others in the genre, they have bisexual, and homosexual characters in their books.

I can love things I am critical of. Also, I'm well aware that people are more than one thing. I went to law school in Kansas, with people who adored Rush Limbaugh in the 1990s. And I work with a woman, who is a colleague, and I've known for over 13 years, whose cousin works for Scean Hannity. My ability to ignore the politics has served me well.

4. Working my way through Promised Land by Barack Obama. It's very good. He's currently talking about Benghazi and what happened. It is a fascinating and insightful take on the politics of that region, and the conflicting and messy issues surrounding it. There are no good answers.

The problem with being in a leadership role - is often you have to make decisions that are unpopular to benefit the greater good. As Lando once state - you can't please everyone, someone is always going to despise you.
Obama kind of demonstrates that in his book, and show has complicated and dicey some of these decisions actually were.

It's informative and insightful reading and explains quite a bit of what happened, and how Trumpism came about. He seems to eerily foreshadow the rise of the authoritarian movements...while at the same time predicting their eventual demise.

5. WandaVision - haven't seen the latest episode but for the folks who are wondering if they have to see the MCU films to follow it? No, you really don't. In fact it might work better if you haven't - but hard to know.

If you feel an overwhelming urge to get back story?

*. Avengers: Age of Ultron - is the origin tale of The Vision and Wanda. The Vision is basically a combination of Tony Stark (Iron Man) Jarvis - and the Mind Stone. Tony Stark creates the Vision in that film to fight his other creation - Ultron. Wanda - is the reason that Stark creates Ultron - she provides him with a vision of the future that scares the shit out of him. Wanda is the villain in the story who becomes a good guy.

*. Captain America - Winter Solider Read more... )

*. Captain America - Civil War -Read more... )

*. Captain Marvel - provides the debute of Monica Rambeau (the pilot and co-star of WandaVision). Read more... )

*. Infinity War - which is kind of hard to watch without seeing Endgame. Since it ends on a tragic note and Endgame is Chapter 2.
Read more... )

Endgame - Read more... )

[Note - Infinity War and Engame are focused primarily on: Tony Stark, Captain America, Hulk, Thor, Black Widow, and Hawkeye. You don't get much more than cameos from the others. Although Thanos, his daughters, Star Lord, Spiderman, Doctor Strange, Ant-man, Wanda, and the Vision all get something to do. But the emphasis is on the others. If you don't like or care about Thor, Hulk, Iron Man, Captain America, or Black Widow - I'd pass. If you hate Iron Man - really pass. I adore Iron Man - so adored the movies. I'd watch Downy Jr read the phone book.]
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1. Yes, I know everyone is bored of the Whedon thing. But, this is kind of interesting. I found it finally on Twitter - it's about what lay behind the whole CC reveal, and those who followed. Hint - it wasn't about Buffy or the Marvel movies or for that matter, The Nevers. No, it is about Whedon's long running attempt to get into the DC film verse after leaving the Marvel film verse.
Read more... )
What happened? Snyder's daughter died by suicide and he got tired of fighting the WB, and put his family first. The rest of the story is...appalling to say the least. And complicated.

You can find it HERE. It does not show various film critics, comic artists, comic fans, Whedon fans, Whedon, WB or comic writers in the best light. They basically took advantage of someone else's tragic loss for their own personal gain. It is appalling. They also lied about it.

It's an interesting read - because it shows how difficult the film industry can be and why so many go off and do their own things.

At any rate - there's apparently a Snyder Cut of Justice League premiering on HBO MAX tonight - ETA, misread, it's dropping 3/18/2021 - March. It's four hours long. And none of it includes Whedon's footage. Also, only five minutes of it were shot during the pandemic and after 2017. And Whedon's version only contained five 30 minutes of the original Zack Snyder cut - which is possibly why - the re-shoot was hell on wheels - because they basically re-shot the entire movie in less than four months. Cutting everything they did previously. After already shooting and working their asses off on the previous version. AND - various actors ended up with their scenes cut completely. It was - if you can imagine - shooting an entire movie over two years, only to have the director you've bonded with - get fired after his daughter died from suicide - and have a new director that you don't know jump in and throw his weight around. Force you to work hard and long hours, and say lines that you don't feel were in character, and do it in breakneck time, and act as if everything you did the past two years was pointless.

I'd have wanted to skewer Whedon and the WB for that alone. I don't blame the cast for hating them. Add to that - Whedon's version bombed, and the actors struggled afterwards. Plus the anticipated sequel was cancelled.

Now, finally, they get to see the version they worked hard on and were proud of - air. (They spent years trying to get to this point. The previous film aired in 2017.)

I can't see it tonight, but I'll try to see it over the weekend. I'm curious. Although - I'm not really a huge fan of Snyder's films - they give me a headache - all the fight scenes are like paintings, but also feel like watching a video game. So we'll see if I make it through it.

The twitter feeds mentioned Chris Helmsworth has been indicating issues with Whedon for years. So I looked.

Recalls Joss Whedons fury when Avengers Cast Kept Screwing up a Take

I think writers make bad directors for the most part.

2. Winter Storm and Texas Power Outage Map

Texas wanted its own power Grid to avoid the Federal Government - Now What?

Ted Cruz is not having a good year. Nor for that matter is Texas.

But I feel for my poor family members. I have three cousins, their kids, and youngest Aunt in Texas. I'd prefer that they be okay. So far they are.

3. Footloose or Dancing in the Movies



Off to bed. Assuming they quiet down upstairs. It is quiet. It just sounds like someone is moving furniture above me every once and a while.

Day #285

Dec. 28th, 2020 06:21 pm
shadowkat: (Default)


Some good news?

Mother: Trump signed the stimulus bill last night.Read more... )

New York vs. the Corona Virus

Apparently New York went up to 8% today, but they aren't taking it seriously, since there weren't that many people tested, and most of the people getting tested knew there was a problem. (In short, all the people who went to urgent care and were sick.)

New York is withholding pay increases for all State-Wide Elected and Appointed Officials as a cost savings measure. No one is getting a raise this year - well except for those who work for private consulting firms and companies and that we contract out to - unfortunately. I am going to really cut into those increases from now on.

* Apparently some idiotic health care provider fraudulently obtained the vaccine and distributed it to the public. The provider is claiming it was the State Department's fault. Except they fraudulently filled out the form, and stated that they were qualified and legitimate to obtain it. Falsified business records.

from the Governor's newsletter )
The rest from the newsletter...

other items )

Enuf of that.

Below is a photo of a sunset on the beach at Dolphin Head, Hilton Head Island, SC - that I took during Christmas 2018.



I've realized I'm very good at being lazy. Just laying about watching television, fiddling with a new story, and took a walk to buy some groceries at the Coop. That was my major accomplishment today, putting on a mask, and walking about a mile and a half to get groceries. Also involved weight lifting - the groceries weren't light, and it felt like I was carrying twenty pounds the twenty or thirty blocks homewards. (I'm probably exaggerating.) Well that, and paying bills.

My new favorite comfort television series is The Great Pottery Throwdown. It's very relaxing. Today I watched the potters create toilets by handbuilding them out out clay and decorating them. Here's the winning Pot on Twitter. However, they keep changing the set-up. The female judge and host changed in the third season, with no explanation. Also there seems to be more potters in each group?

The other one is Bridgerton, which in some respects is more ground-breaking and radical than Downton Abbey, also more entertaining. (I liked Downton Abbey, but had issues with it.)

Mother: Your brother tasked your niece with saying "damn-it" every time she says the word "like". Read more... )

Wonder Woman 1984 redux

Over on FB, former roommate, who also loves Superhero films - told me that I should write a movie review blog. (Then I'd have to watch more movies. And I don't want to. There's a lot of movies out there that I don't want to see or feel like seeing. I'd rather watch The Great Pottery Throwdown. The life of a movie critic is not one that I want or desire any longer. Maybe I've matured, I don't know. I think it's more that I've met a lot of movie critics and followed a lot of them - and it no longer sounds appealing. It's hard being a professional critic in the information age. Everyone and their mother is reviewing movies, writing essays on them, etc.]

She liked my take on WW 84, which she also had issues with. Some people loved Wonder Woman 1984. One loved it so much, he watched it twice. Which I find mind-boggling, but then I didn't feel the need to re-watch the first one. It didn't work for me, but mileage it varies. People respond to different things - it has a lot to do with which story tropes appeal to you and what you find relatable. I found Doctor Minerva grating and cringe inducing, not relatable at all - but someone else found her to be very relatable and loved the character.
Read more... )

Spoke with parents at noon..

Father: I like the hat you gave me. And this lady keeps showing up to check if I am actually wearing it.
ME: Mom is checking to see if you are wearing the hat? I'm guessing it's Mom, since I'm here.
Mother: No, he means you. You don't understand, you and your brother are clearly time travelers and keep popping up at various times.
Me: Do we ever pop up at the same time?
Mother: occasionally, he mentions that we have to wait on the kids.
Me: How about the cats are they still there?
Mother: well, they are around, at any rate - all Siamese - I think he's remembering the cats we once owned.
Me: In multiple?
Mother: yes..they've been cloned.

Ah, well...life is always interesting when people are involved, isn't it?

Reviews..

Dec. 26th, 2020 09:22 pm
shadowkat: (Default)
1. Saw the first episode of "Bridgerton" - which is exactly as advertised. A fluffy Alternate Universe Regency Romance - where racial tensions don't exist and aren't insular to the class divide. Classicism and genderism/sexism and homophobia is evident, just not so much racism. Which is an interesting tactic. It kind of shifts the focus more directly onto sexism and classicism in a way.

It wasn't jarring because I was prepared for it - and had gone into it with decision to hand-wave all anachronisms. Also, it probably helps that I'm not an expert on British history, British aristocracy or anything associated with it. I know very little, and have forgotten even more. It's not something that has stuck in my brain - and I've not really studied it since well...the 1980s. For example? I didn't know zippers didn't exist back then. Also I have no clue which era this is supposed to exist in - I'm guessing Regency or early 1800s. But I don't know when the Regency period was in British history. (Folks? British history is kind of irrelevant to my life and I'm guessing to the majority of the audience watching it. It's target audience isn't the historians in the crowd but the historical romance readers.)

That's sort of a round about way of stating that it may be jarring to you? D

Anyhow, the production is excellent, and they've cast the leads well. The Duke of Hastings is hot, and comes across as a charismatic rakish leading man of a romance novel - almost as if he stepped out of one. He'd have worked beautifully in Duran's Lord of Shadows. And Phoebe looks the picture of a romantic heroine - except usually they have bigger bosums in these books. She's a tad on the thin side - also back then - the bigger the breasts, the more appealing, they wore corsets to lift the breasts and cinch the waists. But it's kind of hard to cast with that in mind, so I hand-waved it.

Also there's good banter in the first episode, and the dialogue moves the story along at a lively pace, and is rapid fire in some places. And, we have the excellent Polly Walker in a character role, along with a few other British character actors - who I've seen before.

It's much prettier and livilier than Austen, and more than a touch sexier. We have male and female nudity, in particular male - actually more male nudity - and a very definitive female gaze - which is in keeping with the genre. The genre is written for women - and it has explicit sex scenes, and graphic male nudity. The male anatomy in a romance novel is often described in detail, along with the act. Jane Austen and Hallmark - the historical romance is not. [Also keep in mind, it's on Netflix not BBC or PBS or broadcast networks - so swearing, dirty talk, nudity and sex scenes are permitted. And it was apparently all filmed prior to 2020...so no pandemic issues were involved.]

Overall a good start - I'll continue watching. I'm even intrigued enough to try the books.

2. Let Them All Talk - directed by Steven Soderburgh, staring Meryl Streep, Candice Bergen, Dianne Wiest, and Lucas Hedges.

This was filmed on the Queen Mary 2 during the fall of 2019. (So it's kind of odd - to watch?) In addition it has Soderburg's yellow light filter, where everything has a kind of orange/yellowish hue - which is true of most of his movies? I notice it because it annoys me. It makes me feel like the film has been aged or something.)

Actors love Soderburgh for much the same reason that they love Robert Altman, he leaves them alone. Basically what he does is hand them the script, tells them to figure out the characters, and then play it out. The script is almost an outline, and the rest is improve, with the actors coming up with their own lines. The view is this is more organic and realistic. In addition - he doesn't employ extras, instead he films with non-actors or actual crew members, passengers, etc.

It's hyper-realism with a yellow filter over the hand-held camera lens, sometimes a blue filter.

The difficulty with this style of filmmaking is that the dialogue is often kind of jilted, and awkward. If not cringe-inducing. Actors aren't writers, and they are being asked to just to talk to each other in character (easier said than done.) The actors talk awkwardly around each other. There's a lot of pregnant pauses, or "Uh's", clearing of throats, and awkward muttering. And the emotion is muted. You have a lot of meandering conversations that go seemingly nowhere or about nothing. Lots of airy quotes and pretentious musings by Meryl Streep's character, who is an accomplished literary writer.

It's why I find Robert Altman's films for the most part difficult to watch.
Some actors are rather good at it. Candice Bergen is a natural. She's the only one who doesn't speak awkwardly, is direct, blunt, and every time she's on screen - I'm riveted. I actually kept watching because of her. Streep needs a director and a writer, or she gets flighty. She's not really a method actress - like Bergen. Nor is Dianne Wiest, who also got flighty. And Lucas Hedges gave me a headache.

The best thing in this movie is Candice Bergen. spoilers )
The film is bittersweet. But I felt it's overall themes were better accomplished by the far simpler and more joyful fare of "Soul".

Overall rating? B
shadowkat: (Default)
Day #17 of the 30 Days of Television Challenge


The prompt is A Zombie film, song, television series or books series that you enjoyed.

It should be noted that I don't like zombies. Although I get the metaphor - particularly now. Some of the maskless wonders remind me a lot of zombies.

That said, I've seen a lot of zombie films. I'm going with a musical, just because.




Mine is Anna and the Apocalypse. Basically it's a Teenage Christmas Musical in England, with Zombies. It wasn't as good as I thought it would be, but still entertaining.

For someone who doesn't like zombies, I've apparently seen a lot of zombie movies.
shadowkat: (Default)
Day #16 of 30 Days of Halloween Challenge

The prompt is A science fiction film or television series that you enjoy (doesn't have to be horror but should have a scary episode. If it's not horror - pick a scary or horror related episode to show.)

This is a movie I've re-watched several times, and read the book. Is it a masterpiece, probably not. I've also seen all the sequels.



Jurassic Park is a not so subtle satire on the amusement park fetish. And the idea of going a bit too far with science for one's own economic advancement and hubris.

It's also rather clever and biting at times. There's some great lines in it, and some great sequences. It's genuinely frightening in places, and breathtaking in others.
shadowkat: (Default)
This is Day #15 of the 30 Days of Halloween Challenge.

The prompt is A horror film that features an animal or insects or plants in either the title or as the main threat.

One rule: DO NOT PICK A FILM WITH SPIDERS! I don't want to see it or know about it. You can pick anything else with animals, insects, or plants. I'm an arachnophobe. Please be mindful of my high blood pressure, thank you.

Mine is Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. It's adapted from a short story by Daphne Du Maurier. She did another one that was adapted into a film...but I won't list it in case someone else picks it.



I love this film. And it's close to the short story, but in some respects far more disturbing. Hitchcock was a bit like Kubrick, everyone thought he was brilliant, but he drove actors nuts. The man liked to torture his actors.
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