Monday, November 30, 2009

A book! Websites!

Despite appearances, I actually have been writing quite a lot. It's all just been in the form of comments here.



Oh, and there is a book. The cover looks like this. More can be learned at these websites:

yesterdayandtodaybook.com

lonelysong.com

The latter is the site of my publishing company (this term is used in the loosest sense). It includes a place for feedback and a discussion forum. It was also designed expressly for all browsers not named Internet Explorer. IE 7 and earlier do not display the site correctly. But I am not expending the energy required to figure out how to fix this.

Web designing would NOT be my dream job. Tedious is a gentle way to describe it. Not that I wouldn't be willing to take on the job of helping someone design their simple site, but adding much functionality seems to increase difficulty exponentially.

Anyway, I stand behind Yesterday and Today. Early feedback indicates that it encourages readers to THINK! And that, in essence, is all I hope for.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Alrighty then!

Did we enjoy that? The comments were just flowing in! But you must admit that The Fool's Discontent wasn't HORRIBLE. Or at least the last part wasn't. As long as you take a broad approach to the whole thing. None of that "this line is awkward/ugly/stupid" kind of stuff. Please. I am not a poet.

But anyway, soon there will be a printed book. It is called Yesterday and Today, it's highly unique, you can read the first bit here (not that reading this excerpt can predict one's reaction to the rest of the book), and I am making websites which I will link to as soon as they do not cause me embarrassment to look at. I am not a web designer.

I think a while ago I said I was going to make a post devoted to another blogger who I don't know at all but has proven to be very fascinating. This will happen at some point, I still think. But I want to write something good, and currently I think I would call myself "mentally busy."

Also, the Indianapolis 500 is a fantastic institution and I love it. The pursuit of speed. Hanging it out on the ragged edge going into turn one. Ah, yeah. If you ain't seen it you may not follow. But you should check it out.

But nowadays, the series built around cars that race at Indianapolis (and otherwheres too) is in a bit of crisis, a financial situation brought on by, among other things, lack of identity. This guy, though he and I may not be idealistically in complete alignment (or we may, hard to tell), is at least THINKing deeply about the issue. Which is a fun thing for any issue. THINK! Yeah! and drink alpha king pale ale generously while doing so*


*don't trust the results of this partnership.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

The Fool's Discontent, Part 7


Read part 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6




VII.



But if
Your poem’s not long enough, strong enough, wait!
The piper is calling for you
And if your song is not high enough, clear enough, jump!
No bird ever stumbled that flew
And if your story’s not sharp enough, deep enough, look:
I know what you seek is the True!


And if
Your fingers clutch weakly at things that don’t seem
To bear up the glory or harbor the dream
And your toes become numb in the biting dry air
Of the cold empty hall leading on to nowhere
And love is a rope and your spirit a chair


And if
Your feet are too slow
And your hands are too wet
And your ears are too close
And your dreams are too set
And your head is too hard
And your mind is too soft
If your thoughts are too clean
And your will is too weak
If your eyes are too thin
And your lips cannot speak
And your heart runs so quick when your thoughts start a-spinning
And your thoughts are set dark when the man starts a-grinning
And your raw throat constricts at the thought of not singing
And your brain gives a leap at the thought of not thinking


And if
Your hands start to shake at the thought of control
And your skin starts to crawl at the call of the night
And your nose starts to curl at the taste of defeat
And your eyes start to glass at the thought of respite
And you turn
And you toss
And you cannot catch sleep


And you envy the dawn with her red morning mist
And you envy the sand with her fluid white pearls
And you envy the forest with her whisp’ring laugh
And you envy the sky with her playful light fits
And you envy the sea with her black magic eyes
And her sweet-smelling sense
And her cool salty smiles
And you run down the road while the night is yet black
And you run to the cliffs with the moon at your back
And you run with the wind as the horizon shatters
And you run with abandon as though nothing matters
And you long for the stone-cut dreams that are found
Where the head meets the heart and the sun hits the ground
And you envy the sea with her mad ocean gown
And her foaming white lace
And her shafted-light crown
And you toss
And you turn
And you stare
And you frown
And you just want to sing out in prayer before you drown


I will meet you on the wild black forest hills
At sundown.


Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Slightly more useful District 9 commentary

Oh yeah, that District 9 thing. I was going to make up for my feeble attempt at reviewing, right? Well anyway, here's what I find most interesting about this film:

1. The documentary-style opening sequence is two things: very well executed (usually when movies take this approach it comes off, at best, as very "fake") and a perfect way to hammer home the political/societal seriousness of the movie to follow. Of course, as previously mentioned this doesn't especially pan out. But in any case, a great zinger opening.


2. The aliens have RIDICULOUS weapons and are superhumanly powerful. Which, regardless of whether the movie is supposed to say something to us Americans or is a strictly an apartheid commentary, makes them silly as slum-dwelling refugees. It just don't jive, you know? Like, we're supposed to believe they're all so downtrodden they trade their body-exploding guns for cat food?


3. There's a lot of F-bombing in District 9. That's not really anything unusual. What is unusual is just how...non-intrusive it is. Unlike the many films which have celebrated the f-word by using it either in a certain context or in an over-the-top manner (e.g. the "F---ing A" catchphrase of The Deer Hunter or - duh - Scarface), the word's prevalence in this film is clearly no more than a reflection of the times. Wikus's frequent use of "f---" whenever he gets into trouble slides by almost unnoticeably because we are so used to hearing it in this context.

"F---" has become so incredibly ubiquitous in everyday conversation that it probably deserves its own post at some point.


4. The action and core story are, when you get down to it, pretty darn conventional. Lots of missed bullets, convenient breaks in the action whenever the protagonists need to talk, a moment rather early on when you KNOW which character is going to do what for whom during the climactic sequence.

But nevertheless, something about the whole production really makes you want to root hard for the success of the protagonists. You just have to refrain from thinking too hard about it.


IN conclusion, District 9 is an interesting and unique movie that works best as a strongly contextualized (i.e. set in Johannesburg) sci-fi/action piece. Unfortunately, certain elements of the film and its story strongly encourage us to seek a greater significance, and by seeking we only uncover flaws that make it impossible to take any of it very seriously.

Monday, August 31, 2009

Movie Review: District 9

This is a good one! It's also pretty bizarre, and not just because there's a dude turning into fish-(super)man.

It's all in the way it starts. "Looky here! I am an out-and-proud in-your-face allegory! When I say 'alien refugee in the ghetto' you see an outer-space fishy man, but you know - oh yes, you KNOW - that what I'm really talking about is HUMAN refugee in the ghetto! Like someone from Sudan, or Iraqi Kurdistan, or Gaza, or even like a Mexican in America!"

Very clear, very upfront. Thus, you gets the impression that the next couple of hours are going to either be 1) an all-out liberal attack on American foreign dealings 2) a surprisingly nuanced commentary on the same subject or 3) An arty exposition of South African apartheid which will probably fly right over your head.

But then suddenly the movie becomes a straight-up sci-fi/action/suspense smashup. And that all plays out in none-too-unpredictable a way. And then we're briefly reminded of the original allegorical premise. And that's it. Whoa.

To be fair, District 9 maintains a consistent anti-xenophobia, pro-human rights stance throughout. But the main plot works entirely apart from all that. The realism of the Johannesburg setting and the characterization of the aliens as refugee-types definitely makes the story more engaging, but we would expect the initial allegory to manifest itself in the plot, and this doesn't happen.

So, the movie's weird. It's some of one thing, some of another, and together these things are very entertaining...but there's little lasting impact. I don't come away feeling any different about the politics of immigration and refugees and exploitation and Blackwater (=MNU?).

Oh. Wait. This thing is South African, through and through. Gah. So I guess all of these American-angled musings are, at best, invented interpretations. Darn. And Mendocino Talon True Style Barley Wine Ale (this is better) has left me in no condition to go back and reapproach this monster from a more proper angle. Well, at least I anticipated it with option 3 above. Maybe I'll come back tomorrow with something unstupid to say.

Wow. I guess District 9 gave this reviewer a whuppin'. Several stars for that.

***