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Friday, January 30, 2009

MOVIES FOR WINTER NIGHTS, PART II


Here I sit, late at night, toes frozen, in my paper strewn office, tapping away on a prehistoric computer keyboard, to tell you more about the movies I have been watching this winter. The first is John Adams, the lavish HBO miniseries that has been hoisted with high acclaim.


It stars Paul Giamatti and Laura Lynley, two stars I would never think of putting together. Consummate actors, they manage to spin a grand illusion throughout this long and increasingly tedious production. The first few episodes are truly remarkable and surging, but this dramatic tension is slowly lost over the following episodes. Adams did not apparently spend the Revolutionary War fighting the war – he was overseas talking, talking, talking, in diplomatic circles.


This movie gave me great blocks of information about our Founding Fathers but I really wanted to see the story plunged back into some good rollicking Revolutionary action. Call me a typical American: we just love a good battle! Besides, with respect to John Adams, the real unsung hero of this movie is the Founding Mother of Our Country, Abigail Adams. This movie is, however, worthy of the time it takes to see it. As Americans, we need a good cup of wake-up coffee to remind. The production values here are stupendous, the costumes, the historical accuracy of the customs shown (the treatment of a woman’s breast cancer and early small pox inoculations), the movie is a crafted piece that stands with high value despite being dialogue heavy.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

MOVIES FOR WINTER NIGHTS, PART I


I’ve been in Winter Cave Mode ever since Thanksgiving. Plus, I am an extreme night owl who stays up late. I’m writing this at 2:43 AM. So, during the winter nights, my routine is to go into my castle, pull up the draw bridge, and set out the dragons. The cats and I build a fire and have dinner watching a variety of offbeat movies that many have not heard about….

The first film is an odd little piece with Alan Rickman called Snowcake. It is about a man who just got out of prison (Rickman’s character) and his chance meeting with a woman who is an adult autistic (played in raw form by Sigourney Weaver, sans make-up). The location is rural, snowy, small-town Canada where all strangers are viewed with caution. The emotional ride the film offers feels cold and emotionally struggling. However, the story gives the expected 25 mgs of meaningfulness at the end. The real value of the film is to observe Rickman and Weaver out of their usual roles and trying something different.

The second film is another Rickman flick that is much more engaging and emotionally satisfying called Something the Lord Made. This film is highly recommended for those viewers who like to have a little dose of virtue and history mixed together in their movies – along with a bit of a bow tied up at the end. The bow is true, and the truth of this movie is its satisfaction. It is an account of legendary medical pioneers Dr. Alfred Blalock (Rickman) and Vivien Thomas (played superbly by Mos Def) and their struggle to find a cure for the Blue Baby Syndrome. The film is also about much more, in that Vivien Thomas was a black, uneducated man in the 1930s who started his medical career cleaning out Dr. Blalock’s laboratory. It took decades for Thomas to get the credit he deserved as Dr. Blalock’s true partner, if not leader, in inventing the surgical strategies that lead to the survival of many children.

Get your warm socks on and lets make some coco…

Sunday, January 11, 2009

POST SCRIPT


Well, it happened. I now have a lovely TROJ_Generic.DIT virus in my computer. I got it right after writing that last blog about Mercury in Retrograde causing computer gliches and a number of other electrical/communication/connection problems. Now, this virus is being talked about all over the internet. Self-fulfilling prophecy? Not unless I can invent a computer virus. I don't know that much about computers.


Maybe I manifested it out of thin air. Maybe, maybe....


...but that would mean that our thoughts have power and they bring events into physical existence. And that would be magick, wouldn't it?

Thursday, January 8, 2009

MERCURY IN RETROGRADE


Mercury in Retrograde. It’s coming. We are sliding toward it. That yucky period four times a year when the planet Mercury seems to go backward and Murphy’s Law reigns supreme. There are more accidents, travel delays, miscommunications, faxes/texts/voice mails that are never received, computer problems, contractual disputes, verbal misundertandings and divorces considered.

I always notice more police and ambulance flashers along Phoenix streets during this time. Unfortunately, I see a lot more serious car crack-ups and subsequent little white crosses several weeks later. When my clients are leaving my office, I ask them to be extra careful about their during this time.

I used to warn all my friends about it – all my friends, that is, who believe or who are "pre-believers" or, just open. Several years ago, a friend of mine (let’s call her Jan) told me I was being negative. So, I stopped warning her and she called me up about two weeks into a Mercury in Retrograde period. She said she wanted to know all the dates of that year’s Mercury in Retrogrades so she could “plan my travel around it.”

“But you said that you didn’t believe,” I asked her.

“I didn’t!” she said. “But my car broke down during this time, my hotel arrangements got all screwed up and I broke up with Phil. Plus, all my billing with the insurance companies I work with got completely wiped out on my computer! It’s got to be Mercury in Retrograde.”

Ever since, Jan pays careful attention to it and marks her calendar. So do I.

We are getting closer to Mercury going Retrograde. Already, I am hearing a funny noise in my car today. And I wanted to lunge across the table and strangle one of the women in a meeting today. She kept interrupting me and talking as if she didn't understand a word I said! It's starting…

This year of 2009, Mercury in Retro starts January 11th and ends February 1st. Don’t say I didn’t tell you.