Wednesday, May 4, 2016
Happy Star Wars Day!
Oh, what a difference a year makes.
Last Star Wars Day, I kind of shrugged. 16 years or so of ambivalence regarding Star Wars had drained me of any enthusiasm for the movies. At most, I think, I mustered a picture of Princess Leia.
On Monday, I hung a print of the above X-Wing image in my office at work. That's how I roll.
But, hey, The Force Awakens brought me back in to the Star Wars fold, something I, frankly, thought impossible. I figured that even if I liked it, it'd still feel like something of an echo of something else I used to like. But, instead, I'm as excited about Star Wars now as I was in college.
So, here's to a Star Wars day I can feel is mine, too! And to celebrate, here's some artwork promoting the movie! And, heck, here's to Rogue One, coming soon!
Tuesday, May 3, 2016
Noir City Austin 2016 - Schedule is Up - Come join us for a show!
Noir City returns to Austin at The Alamo Drafthouse Ritz on Austin's famed 6th Street! Dates are May 20, 21 and 22.
I'm going to a bunch of the shows, but I fully expect to be worn out only attending a portion of the full program as each showing is a double-bill.
To see which shows are available, check out the calendar at The Alamo Ritz website.
Right now I have tickets to a whole bunch of the showings, which you can see in the calendar on this site.
I'd spend more time coordinating with you fine people to see who wants to go, but I'm flying out for Atlanta for a conference tomorrow.
I have tickets for Row 3, Seat 20 (and 19 for some screenings so I don't leave Jamie alone all weekend).
I don't know too many of these movies, which is something I'm pretty excited about. Always fun to see new things.
Come on down and join us/ me!
Sunday, May 1, 2016
Aliens Watch: Aliens (1986) - Director's Cut
It's been a long, long time since I'd watched the Director's Cut of Aliens (1986). In fact, when I put in my DVD - one of the first DVD's I ever purchased back in The Gay 90's* - I was genuinely surprised to find this was the cut of the film that had been collecting dust on my shelf for... a while.
It's not that I haven't seen Aliens during that time. I know I've seen it at least once at the Paramount (with Simon), and it seems like I've seen it at The Alamo in the last decade, so the need to give my disk a spin has not been extraordinarily high, I guess. It seems like I've watched it at least in parts on cable.
Before the directors cut came out, I had a pretty good idea of what might be in it as I'd read the novelization of the movie back in middle school, and, indeed, meeting Newt's family is in there, but the domestic scene of the novel doesn't play out the same way in the movie - leaving you without that pain point of "here is who we lost".
Frankly, I think the final cut works better than the Director's Cut. That family that's lost works out better as whatever your imagination conjures rather than a fairly forgettable bunch of folks from central casting. The themes of motherhood and protecting your brood are crammed down your throat a bit less in the theatrical cut, that product feeling more organic, and the theatrical cut just feels stripped down and sleeker. Seeing the colony with the same eyes as the Colonial Marines - an unknown place that was filled with unknown people, and something awful clearly happened here - just works better for me than seeing what happened before. And makes the Aliens, in their way, all that more scary.
But, whatever, that's just my take. As per the movie, if you've seen it, you have your opinions. If you haven't seen it and you're over the age of, oh, 13... get on it.
*that's what I'm calling it. The 1890's don't get all the fun.
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Alien Day Watch: Alien (1979)
It had been some time since I'd seen Alien, and I had never seen it on the big screen. The Alamo Drafthouse was doing double-bills of Alien and Aliens, and then Alien3 and Alien Resurrection. I showed up for the double-bill, but I've been exhausted all week, and when SimonUK, my movie buddy, announced he'd seen the two movies on 4/26, I felt like I had an out. So, we watched Alien, grabbed a pint at the bar after skipping out on movie #2, and then I went home for 40 winks.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
A "National Superhero Day" Tour of The Fortress
About three years ago I did a post where I took a bunch of photos of my collections. But it's been a while, so I thought for National Superhero Day, I'd take some pics and show you where we're at today with the collections of The Fortress of Nerditude/ League HQ/ Signal Watchtower.
John Williams Appreciation Post: Rey's Theme from The Force Awakens (2015)
There were many things I enjoyed in the Star Wars prequels, but the parts could never quite match the whole of what I was hoping for. Among the bits I enjoyed - Williams' scores stayed up to snuff. But I figured when Disney picked up the franchise, he'd be retired. Little did I know.
I was delighted that, in his 80's, he was willing to come back to Star Wars. He's not a kid, and we should be quite grateful that he's not just alive, but still, if the Force Awakens score is any indication, still as good as ever.
I loved Rey's theme.
It's difficult to talk about, as I lack the vocabulary for discussing music properly, but it has a Williams-ian adventure hook, but it's also got some lighter bit in the woodwinds, "feminine", lighter, more "humble" than anything. She's a - as the track is called on the soundtrack "Scavenger". She's one of these desert people scraping by. She doesn't even have an Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru and pleasantly domestic existence - but she also can't leave, even if she doesn't entirely understand why. Luke sought the great expanse beyond his twin suns. Rey wants someone to come to her, but, instead, she has to go.
The music goes from simple woodwinds to orchestral sweeps, just as she goes out upon her adventure. It's a complex piece, to my ear, as Rey is perhaps a more complex character than Luke was before her - at least at the beginning of her story in comparison to his own in Episode IV. There's a lot more going on there for her here in Episode VII, with 6 movies of history preceding her, and a history that's taken place between those films.
As Luke's theme was what we think of as "The Force" theme, Rey's theme merges with The Force, and the next part of the Star Wars saga begins in earnest.
Today is, I guess, #nationalsuperheroday
Here are some folks who have been pretty good friends to me over the years. Here's to Superheroes!
All art by the great Alex Ross.
All art by the great Alex Ross.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Signal Watch Reads: Colonel Roosevelt (2010) - audiobook
In college I started reading up a bit on Theodore Roosevelt. If you're reading American History of the 20th Century, he's a figure that looms incredibly large, and I wasn't the first History major to take an interest. In fact, my instructor for my "Presidents and the Press" course was a bit of a Roosevelt scholar, and when it came time to write a paper and I was asking him for topics on TR, he told me to forget it - there was nothing new to research, and sent me down the path of researching a minor scandal during the Wilson administration (and that's when I turned on Wilson).
To Dr. Gould's point, there's a lot of stuff out there both about and by Theodore Roosevelt. And, no, an undergrad history major who wanted to write about the Panama Canal or Russian/ Japanese peace treaty wasn't going to produce any original scholarship on the matter. You begin with reading about TR's great deeds and see him as a champion you can't believe has become something of an obscure lost-uncle figure to many Americans in comparison to FDR (or even his niece, Eleanor), but, much like Shaft, TR is a complicated man.
Colonel Roosevelt (2010) is the third in a triptych of biographies by Edmund Morris. The first to arrive came out in 1979, The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt, but I wouldn't read it until about 2001 on a trip with Jamie's family. On a personal note - reading that book on the porch of a cabin in Minnesota and taking long breaks to fish, cook fish and eat fish, was maybe some the most pleasant few days I can ever recall. The second installment, Theodore Rex, arrived in 2002, and really covered the era of Roosevelt's presidency (and for anyone who thinks our current administration is acting with unprecedented imperial-like authority, my friends... not even close).
The third installment, Colonel Roosevelt, covers the era between Roosevelt departing office until his death. If you think a post-presidency career for Roosevelt was one of quiet solitude, well... (a) your understanding of 20th Century Presidential Politics needs a refresher, and (b) you are so, so wrong.
One day I will read a Roosevelt biography and reach the descriptions of his death and funeral and not get weepy, but, today is not this day.
Happy Aliens Day!
So, we're really doing this, huh?
It seems we're gonna now have a sci-fi holiday every few months, this latest being 4/26, in honor of the planet LV-426, where the Norstromo set down in Ridley Scott's sci-fi horror masterpiece, Alien.
I'm not due to watch the movie until a double-bill tomorrow night with pal SimonUK, but see both of the first two Alien movies I shall.
I saw Aliens the first time when I was in middle school when I was at an all-day Saturday academic competition and a parent accidentally put it on a video player in a "relaxation" room. Something like 4 dozen kids silently agreed not to tell anyone we were watching a Rated-R action/ sci-fi/ horror film so we'd all get a chance to watch an R-Rated movie on someone else's dime. Jason was there, so I assume it was when I was in grade 6 and he in grade 8.
I loved it. I still recall that I came home, admitted to The Admiral that I'd seen this rated-R movie that he would totally dig, and we went and rented it, and, indeed, we all dug it together. I then recorded the film off HBO, and proceeded to watch it a grand total of 32 times in one calendar year. I could quote it line for line.
Weirdly, I wasn't that interested in Alien. I finally watched Alien in 8th or 9th grade, and I liked it. A lot. But I wasn't much of a horror film guy, and the horror overtones never grabbed me in quite the same way that Ripley v. Alien Queen had captured my young mind.
Kind of an odd thing, in retrospect, that I never thought twice about our lead as a woman the same age as many-a-teacher or mom, who wasn't asked to do the Sybil Danning bit, but was exactly what she was supposed to be. A competent do-er, the person with a head on her shoulders when the shiznit hit the fan. And for a long time, when the question would come up "why aren't there more women in action roles" it wasn't that we'd point to Sigourney Weaver as proof that there were, but proof that "yeah, I dunno. Sigourney Weaver is an exemplar of what an audience finds perfectly reasonable in a movie. More of that, I think."
But, man, those Giger visuals, the pounding score, the phenomenally envisioned sets... it's a hell of a movie. A little startling when you go and watch Them! and realize Cameron more or less ripped off a lot of that movie for his picture, but both still work. Especially when you get that last, unexpected battle with the loader and Alien Queen.
That's the stuff, right there.
It seems we're gonna now have a sci-fi holiday every few months, this latest being 4/26, in honor of the planet LV-426, where the Norstromo set down in Ridley Scott's sci-fi horror masterpiece, Alien.
I'm not due to watch the movie until a double-bill tomorrow night with pal SimonUK, but see both of the first two Alien movies I shall.
I saw Aliens the first time when I was in middle school when I was at an all-day Saturday academic competition and a parent accidentally put it on a video player in a "relaxation" room. Something like 4 dozen kids silently agreed not to tell anyone we were watching a Rated-R action/ sci-fi/ horror film so we'd all get a chance to watch an R-Rated movie on someone else's dime. Jason was there, so I assume it was when I was in grade 6 and he in grade 8.
I loved it. I still recall that I came home, admitted to The Admiral that I'd seen this rated-R movie that he would totally dig, and we went and rented it, and, indeed, we all dug it together. I then recorded the film off HBO, and proceeded to watch it a grand total of 32 times in one calendar year. I could quote it line for line.
Weirdly, I wasn't that interested in Alien. I finally watched Alien in 8th or 9th grade, and I liked it. A lot. But I wasn't much of a horror film guy, and the horror overtones never grabbed me in quite the same way that Ripley v. Alien Queen had captured my young mind.
Kind of an odd thing, in retrospect, that I never thought twice about our lead as a woman the same age as many-a-teacher or mom, who wasn't asked to do the Sybil Danning bit, but was exactly what she was supposed to be. A competent do-er, the person with a head on her shoulders when the shiznit hit the fan. And for a long time, when the question would come up "why aren't there more women in action roles" it wasn't that we'd point to Sigourney Weaver as proof that there were, but proof that "yeah, I dunno. Sigourney Weaver is an exemplar of what an audience finds perfectly reasonable in a movie. More of that, I think."
But, man, those Giger visuals, the pounding score, the phenomenally envisioned sets... it's a hell of a movie. A little startling when you go and watch Them! and realize Cameron more or less ripped off a lot of that movie for his picture, but both still work. Especially when you get that last, unexpected battle with the loader and Alien Queen.
That's the stuff, right there.
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