Thursday, January 28, 2016
Challenger - 30 Years On
Today is the 30th anniversary of the Challenger Disaster.
You're going to see a lot of stories out there from those of us who were kids when the Challenger exploded. As much as 9/11, the Challenger Disaster sticks out there for a lot of us privileged suburban kids, not just as our first exposure to real-life horror and an event that dominated the public consciousness for a week, but - I'd argue - possibly the turning point that ended an era of American Enterprise and Exploration that well preceded the space race, but had its roots in Lewis and Clark.
For Gen X'er's who saw space exploration as maybe the only thing the government did that we found of interest (aside from getting the mail), the next decade became a constant argument against accountants and weak-knee'd politicos that NASA was worth it, even as the military budget continued to balloon with stealth fighters, bunker busters and all sorts of innovative ways of killing people.
This mission was as important as any during the shuttle era, a practice that seemed so routine by the time I was 10 (having started just five years before) that, like the Apollo missions, eventually the public wasn't dropping everything to watch a launch. The idea had become - it was too difficult to become an astronaut, and that meant folks were growing detached. So, some superhumans got to go - what did that mean for us?
To get us paying attention, NASA recruited a public school teacher, Christa McAuliffe, a citizen with no flight experience, to give a window of the "everyman" into space travel.
What we've been up to
We've been neck-deep in TV when we've been home, so not a lot of movie-watching. Didn't even finish the film I started tonight.
So, a bit of what we've been up to which might be relevant here:
So, a bit of what we've been up to which might be relevant here:
Tuesday, January 26, 2016
Abe Vigoda Merges With The Infinite. Or, the Infinite Merges With Abe Vigoda.
I know. None of us believed it actually possible, but Abe Vigoda has passed.
Most famous for his roles in The Godfather and the TV series Barney Miller, where he played Fish, a cop who acted exactly how you'd expect a cop who looked like Abe Vigoda to behave - Vigoda somehow became pretty famous and well-loved. Almost all of his other roles since Barney Miller were more or less "holy @#$%, is that Abe Vigoda?" when he'd walk on screen. He also kept invading the sets of late night talk shows for a while in the 90's.
I'll miss Vigoda. It was always nice to know he was out there being Abe Vigoda, a role no one else will be able to fill.
Monday, January 25, 2016
X-Files is Back For Some Reason!
Look, I'm not made of stone. I started tuning into The X-Files in 1993 when it was schedule adjacent to the short lived series The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. (a show canceled way, way too soon). And, yeah, I dug that shortish FBI agent and her skeptical ways and off-the-rack pantsuits.
I was also into aliens and real-life UFO conspiracy stuff at the time. Skeptical, but this was an era before YouTube or 10,000 cable channels - a state of things that meant, eventually, this dude got a platform on the @#$%ing History Channel
:
But, again, in 1993, access to those videos you'd see written about in books and articles were hard to come by, so why not at least entertain the notion?
And, again, Special Agent Dr. Dana Scully in sensible shoes.
In short, The X-Files was the first TV show I ever watched first run in prime time with any dedication, at least as an adult. Otherwise, I guess you could say I'd had strong feelings about The Dukes of Hazzard when I was 6.
I was also into aliens and real-life UFO conspiracy stuff at the time. Skeptical, but this was an era before YouTube or 10,000 cable channels - a state of things that meant, eventually, this dude got a platform on the @#$%ing History Channel
:
But, again, in 1993, access to those videos you'd see written about in books and articles were hard to come by, so why not at least entertain the notion?
And, again, Special Agent Dr. Dana Scully in sensible shoes.
In short, The X-Files was the first TV show I ever watched first run in prime time with any dedication, at least as an adult. Otherwise, I guess you could say I'd had strong feelings about The Dukes of Hazzard when I was 6.
The Nephew
The Nephew has been sick the past week or so, and so I have not been trying to weasel my way into a visit. He needs his rest no matter how much I'd like to come over and stare at him.
My brother posted these pics, and you're just going to have to suffer through them because I haven't seen the nipper in a while.
My brother posted these pics, and you're just going to have to suffer through them because I haven't seen the nipper in a while.
Raylan: Explorer of tubes |
showing proper concern that this guy is responsible for half his genes |
Sunday, January 24, 2016
Bond Watch: Thunderball (1965)
this poster does a surprisingly good job of summing up the movie |
This was the one Bond movie that, even during the 7th grade sprint of renting Bond movies back to back all summer, somehow I never picked up. I don't know why. It's possible it was checked out. Even stranger, I always assumed I'd run into it on cable or at the Paramount during the summer, but it never showed, or I never came across it.
So, here in 2016, I finally watched the movie.
Unfortunately for me, I had triple-checked the plot of Thunderball (1965) over the years to make sure I really hadn't seen it, and - yes, that movies absolutely was the one where the guy crashes a Vulcan with two atomic bombs into the ocean near The Bahamas and ends with a wicked underwater fight.
Don't worry. If I had that spoiled for me over and over and still enjoyed the movie, you'll be fine.
Saturday, January 23, 2016
Screwball Watch: The Awful Truth (1937)
It seems like this is the 3rd of 4th movie I've seen from about this era in which the theme is "rich people in New York ponder divorce, remember they like each other. Everyone is polite. Big Laughs."
It is funny. It works. Both Cary Grant and Irene Dunne are really terrific. Irene Dunne is quite lovely and wears a wide array of architectural dreams as gowns. It's all very light and fluffy and fun, and I will remember nothing about the movie later, but that doesn't mean I wouldn't recommend it. Because it also has a very cute dog named "Mr. Smith".
Friday, January 22, 2016
Oh, holy @#$%. DC Comics looks to be rebooting. Again. Again. Again. Again.
Look, I don't really read any DC Comics any more. Which, yeah... I know, right?
And I have gotten quite tired of saying that watching DC Comics as a publisher/ company/ whatever is waaaaay more interesting than their output.
But what I do know is that for the past year or so, DC's sales have been sliding like mad, and my guess is that even the current milking of Dark Knight Returns with the inconceivably named third volume The Master Race, isn't working out quite as planned.
"I just keep failing upward!" |
Anyway, rumors were a-hopping today at Bleeding Cool that a line-wide reboot was in the works. Heidi opined on this over at Comics Beat.
Then, Didio and Lee both tweeted a kind of stupid looking image of a blue curtain with the word "Rebirth" projected onto the curtain.
Join Max in Kicking Cancer's Ass
I'm going to share this link with you here and again at the end.
Writer, blogger, reader and Austinite Max Romero is putting together a project I think you'll like. I know I'm thinking about this pretty hard. And, I ask you - both of my readers - to think about this as well.
Max is a cancer survivor and he's now about three years out from when he had surgery to remove the tumor. To celebrate the past three years and pay it forward, Max is going to be collecting items from his readers, friends and family and he'll be raffling them off. Proceeds, obviously, go to charity. Quite directly.
Writer, blogger, reader and Austinite Max Romero is putting together a project I think you'll like. I know I'm thinking about this pretty hard. And, I ask you - both of my readers - to think about this as well.
Max is a cancer survivor and he's now about three years out from when he had surgery to remove the tumor. To celebrate the past three years and pay it forward, Max is going to be collecting items from his readers, friends and family and he'll be raffling them off. Proceeds, obviously, go to charity. Quite directly.
Thursday, January 21, 2016
Signal Watch Reads: "The Lady in the Lake" by Raymond Chandler (1943) - audiobook
The great thing about novel adaptations back in the day was that they clearly either adapted the movies of books they'd read ten years prior and couldn't remember anymore, or they'd be damned if they were going to finish the book before pounding out a script.
I say this, because I've seen the odd-ball noir detective film, The Lady in the Lake directed by and starring Robert Montgomery at least twice, but more like three times. Why? Well, it's a super strange movie told from a first person POV with a windy plot that takes a surprisingly believable break in the action for Christmas Eve, and features Audrey Totter at her Totter-iest.
Why, yes, I am going to look right into the camera the whole movie. Why? |
But I don't really want to write a compare-and-contrast of the film and book. First, only one of you has likely even seen this movie (for shaaaaaame...), and, you know, they're two different beasts.
Still, Audrey Totter.
seriously, this movie is odd, and I totally recommend it |
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