Archive for February, 2008

Take time to read.

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

Read

Movie Roundup, The Weekend Edition

Monday, February 11th, 2008

6ixtynin9 (1999) Ruang talok 69 (1999) Here’s a film with a simple premise, blood money delivered to the wrong apartment results in a high body count. Now before you discount it as an action flick there is very little fighting and when it occurs it is over in a breath. What 6ixtynin9, the English title of the film, lays out is the notion of how far one might go to protect a secret, in this case a case of money delivered to the door of a young woman who had just lost her job and was facing a tight economy with little or no prospects and the events that ensue are darkly comedic. Added to this, the cinematography is lush and colorful making every environment pop from the dull concrete floor light by flickering fluorescence to the verdant countryside. Highly worthwhile.

The Call of Cthulhu (2005) The Call of Cthulhu (2005) The subject of easy ordering from Amazon via the iPhone this is a film that I have been waiting to see since I first heard about it a couple of years prior. Some caveats, it is silent, low budget, and a fairly strict interpretation of Lovecraft’s work so if any of the three turn you off skip it. That said, I was riveted by the movie not just because I cut my literary teeth on Lovecraft or that I suffered through so many terrible film adaptations of his work but for the creativity and artistry expressed in the film.

The score was tense, moody, and lyrical and carried the plot along unobtrusively (are you reading this John Williams?). The set design and camera work was imaginative, particularly when creating the city of dreams and the lost island, and seeing the production stills after the feature really makes the point that with less you can often do more. The scant 47 minutes saw the story neatly delivered, unfolded, and concluded and there was never a moment that I felt short changed or as if some key element were missing. I cannot recommend this film enough.

The End of Suburbia The End of Suburbia (2004) I am officially depressed.

If there is a film you should watch this election year make it this one. The current wars and conflicts we are embroiled in are a direct result of an unsustainable lifestyle that we all partake in. The message is all the more painful to swallow for me as I sit in my three-bedroom ranch in the suburbs, with two cars in the driveway, a lawn I hate to mow, and a daughter I am trying to raise as best as possible. The life I have will not be hers. The life I live is taking that away from her.

So when you listen to the politicking this year think about what the candidates are really saying and bear in mind that the world will change whether we want it or try to will it to not. Are they asking those difficult questions and seeking those seemingly impossible answers? Will we live by blood and sword or in some enlightened fashion? We have had but the smallest taste of the former in the last seven years, can we sacrifice more of our own and others to ensure that the smallest of conveniences are met?

Watch it.

Three of Gabriella

Sunday, February 10th, 2008

Beat Breaker

Have I shown you my teeth? See!

Year Two: Week Six

Christopher Nolan’s Following

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

Following (1998) Just finished watching this intriguing and artful neo-noir film (on the new tv nonetheless!). Shot in black and white on a handheld camera using natural lighting, Following is a tense study of voyeurism and theft of objects that possess material and immaterial value. The narrative winds about three different scams with the intersection of each teasing the viewer to speculate on impending double and triple crosses.

I’m certainly more interested in seeing some more of his work–I had seen Batman Begins and thought that was the right take on the character–in particular Insomnia and Memento both of which I have heard good things about.

Buying a TV I barely watch.

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

Back sometime in November we had our 27″ Sony Trinitron, bought for $50 some six years prior, die a quick but relatively painless death. The screen snapped up to a thin wavering line near the top and after a consult with my father involving lengthy details about the physics and mechanics about CRT operation, all of which swept out far above my head during delivery, it was determined that it had gone to broadcasting heaven.

Since then we have been using our sturdy 19″ Toshiba in the living room which had worked out fine particularly given that it has been a long while since I or Management have actually watched anything on the TV (movies are on the laptop through headphones so as to not wake Gabi). This past weekend, during The Great Chuck (pictures to come), she threw her back out and I began the inglorious task of hefting the TV to and from the bedroom so she could watch movies while blissfully floating on muscle relaxers and Gabi could get caught up on Shushybye Baby before bedtime. Needless to say it was not fun.

After one too many relays I darted out this past Sunday to shop around. I settled on a 32″ Westinghouse SK-32H240S that Best Buy had on sale for $579. I added the 4 year extended warranty largely because I’m a sucker and a masochist.

Westinghouse LCD TV - SK-32H240S

My reasons for selecting this model was simply the convergence of size, cost, and connectivity. At 32″ it is pretty much the equivalent picture size as our old Sony and surprisingly, to us at least, the picture is brighter and crisper. The price sans a $20 gift card and the 4 year warranty put it in league with the starting price of other sets in the same field. Added to that it was the only set I could find with both HDMI and VGA connectors. The latter is important to me as it makes it so much easier now to set up a media pc as the it will just be one giant monitor.

Now to find the time to actually watch the thing…

Night Duty Playlist

Monday, February 4th, 2008

These past weeks Gabriella has been waking up during the witching hour looking for comfort, a bottle, or both and while I don’t mind being wakeful when my body wants rest it can take a toll after awhile. To keep myself steady I’ve been loading up more and more classical music, oddly split between Baroque and Modern with one Jazz album tossed in to keep things off balance. Now, like most things I’m into, I don’t profess to have deep or even cursory knowledge about the subject. I just know what I like.

GORECKI: Symphony No 3 / Three Olden Style PiecesGorecki: Symphony No 3 / Three Olden Style Pieces. Damn. I’ve mentioned this album before and it still stands as being one of my favorite pieces to date. Huge cathedrals of sound, aching melodies, and a glacial pace all conspire to create a feeling of wholeness and longing. Perfect for when you need to still your heart after being ripped from sleep by the chilling screams of a one year old looking for a bottle and a diaper change (a resounding endorsement if you ask me).

Steve Reich: Music for 18 MusiciansSteve Reich: Music for 18 Musicians was one of those “Hmmm, I’ll give it a shot” discoveries that seem to dominate my music purchases. I picked it up around the time as Gorecki and it instantly became one of my preferred late night albums. Reich layers rhythm and harmony like a painter might for texture or a baker for taste and in this composition those layers work together thos generate these long waves of melody that take minutes to unfold and reveal themselves. This is not to say that the music is a series of ponderous standing waves rather it is a breathless construction of rhythm that for me evokes long breezes coursing through tall summer grass.

Tehillim & The Desert Music Tehillim & The Desert Music is another album of Reich compositions that I picked up this past month. The first half of the album features great interplay between vocalists and percussion that possesses a sort of tribal feel that tickles the more reptilian parts of my brain while the latter half features compositions that sound much like the precursor to Music for 18 Musicians. In that regard the album is a little inconsistent if you are listening from beginning to end but each section is fantastic in its own right.

Biber: Soldiers, Gypsies, Farmers and a Night Watchman Biber: Soldiers, Gypsies, Farmers and a Night Watchman sees the playlist go for Baroque (…..really, I couldn’t let that slide). Biber is one of my favorite composers from this period as his work is impassioned and raw while making great use of folk traditions of Europe at the time which in many of the pieces leaves his work sounding some 200 years before its time. The attraction here is that the song cycle feels like a tour through a city contemporary to his time from raucous markets and back alleys to the closing of the city gates when all is beginning to lay down for the night.

J.S. Bach on the Lute J.S. Bach on the Lute is a collection of solo pieces performed by Paul Berget. There isn’t much I can say other than Bach is a giant and his work, for me, nearly always satisfies. Now I have always been a sucker for the lute and for the longest time I had wanted to purchase one and try to teach myself but life’s little conspiracies have kept me from it thus far. Berget’s work is a great substitution and it makes a very relaxing and enchanting listen when you are watching the clock round the corner to dawn.

Postcards From Gypsyland Postcards From Gypsyland is the curveball of the bunch in that it doesn’t lend itself to meditative exercises nor does it possess the more somnolent qualities of the prior albums. Rather it is a toe tapping and feisty collection of Gypsy Jazz that is the perfect for washing the sand out of one’s eyes when their child is up and ready to run around. Think of it as the aural equivalent of Red Bull but without the rot gut. It is a fantastic collection evocative of an era that might have never existed but in romantic writings of people who might wish that it truly was happening and that they were there soul and body.