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Tweets from 2012-05-07

  • At last, a gentle spring rain last night. Plus moderate temps. About time. #COwx #
  • Dreamt lastnight about losing my briefcase on a business trip. That doesn't bode well. #
  • Apparently we missed Sherlock last night because we don't have channel or DVR is doltish. Apparently waiting for S.2 DVD instead. #
  • 5 of 5 stars to The President and the Assassin by Scott Miller Link #
  • Margie's right now doing all the reservations for our onshore expeditions during our Alaska cruise in July. She rocks. #

Sherlock and Otters: a double batch of WIN!

Really, truly. Also, very silly. #ddtb

Reshared post from +stephanie wanamaker

for all #sherlock fans!

Embedded Link

The new trend of internet: Otters who look like Benedict Cumberbatch
(From The Sun) Internet pranksters have paired up pictures of the animals with Sherlock actor Benedict Cumberbatch. The jokers discovered similarities between the otters' expressions and faces the…

"Anything You Can Do, I Can Do Better …"

Fun. And some nice scene and lip-syncing. #ddtb

Reshared post from +Jesús Segura

Sherlock vs. The Doctor
#DrWho #Sherlock

Eternal Copyright

Along the lines of another "modest proposal" from Jonathan Swift (whose descendants surely should be able to sue, too.)

"No, it's clear that our current copyright law is inadequate and unfair. We must move to Eternal Copyright – a system where copyright never expires, and a world in which we no longer snatch food out of the mouths of our creators' descendants. With eternal copyright, the knowledge that our great-great-great-grandchildren and beyond will benefit financially from our efforts will no doubt spur us on to achieve greater creative heights than ever seen before.

"However, to make it entirely fair, Eternal Copyright should be retroactively applied so that current generations may benefit from their ancestors' works rather than allowing strangers to rip your inheritance off. Indeed, by what right do Disney and the BBC get to adapt Alice in Wonderland, Sleeping Beauty, and Sherlock without paying the descendants of Lewis Carroll, the Brothers Grimm, and Arthur Conan Doyle?"

#ddtb

Embedded Link

Eternal Copyright: a modest proposal – Telegraph Blogs
On Tuesday 14th, the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) posted a message on RnBXclusive.com, stating: "If you have downloaded music using this website you may have committed a criminal offence whic…

US TV looks to make its own version of "Sherlock"

The only … only … good thing I can say for this endeavor is that we will end up with more than three 90 minute episodes at a time. Of course, given what a botch I expect this to be, that may not be a good thing. #ddtb

Embedded Link

CBS green-lights modern U.S.-based version of Sherlock Holmes
Called Elementary, the new series takes Arthur Conan Doyle's detective to New York City.

Glad to see you have a third season, Sherlock

.. now about the second one …

Great news that "Sherlock" will be back for a series 3. Not so nice news that the word was given by Stephen Moffat as the final (third) episode of series 2 concluded … in the UK.

Which leads to the inevitable question of when the hell is it going to air in the US?

Answer (via http://www.anglotopia.net/british-entertainment/brit-tv/sherlock-series-3-confirmed-us-airdates-for-series-2-set/): On PBS Masterpiece Theater on 6, 13, and 20 May 2012.

Argh. What are they doing, walking the freaking episodes over? #ddtb

Reshared post from +Les Jenkins

Good news indeed. Now we just have to get through the interminable wait until the next season rolls around.

Embedded Link

BBC ‘Sherlock’ Confirmed For Third Season
The second season of the BBC incarnation of Sherlock Holmes, simply titled Sherlock , premiered not long ago and has already finished its run. Seasons of the show are only three episodes each, though each 90-minute episode is essentially as good as a standalone Sherlock Holmes film, and the series as a whole is infinitely superior to the Warner Bros. films starring Robert Downey, Jr. and Jude Law. (Though, to be fair, the aims of the two approaches are quite different.)
If you’re bummed that …

Movie Review: “Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows”

Margie and I went and saw this last night — Kay stayed home (preferring to see it when it comes out on disc).

Bottom line, I didn’t like it quite as much as the first one, but it was close, and it was a tremendous amount of fun.  And there were some very, very nice moments.

The stop-slow-reverse-Matrix-vision bits are all still there, complete (for melees) with Sherlockian commentary. If you didn’t like those parts from the first film, you won’t like the second.

The scope expands from London into much of Europe.  It’s 1891, but the Great Powers that will eventually clash in 1914 are teetering on the brink now, being nudged into place by a grand conspirator (Moriarty, which should hardly be a spoiler) for his own nefarious purposes.

Having Moriarty in play ramps things up a  bit.  The previous bad guy was typical — big plot, efforts put toward keeping it secret, then lashing out at Holmes when he starts to get too close.  Moriarty not only makes the conflict personal, but he’s actively working against Holmes, laying false trails, seeking to intimidate or damage him out of the Great Game.

It all ends appropriately for modern audiences, though oddly, in its own way, much more quietly than in the centerpiece of the film, at and around a great munitions factory.

The movie is all about relationships.  Well, no, it’s all about how idiosyncratic Holmes is and how cool the FX are. But in many ways it’s about relationships — Holmes and Watson, of course (and always); Watson and his new bride; Holmes and Irene; Holmes and Moriarty; Watson and Moran; Holmes and Mycroft; Simza and her brother … Nothing deep or profound, but all fun and giving a few layers of meaning beyond flashy cinematography and outrageous behavior.

The acting is all good, all well-cast (Jared Harris is fine, though I’d have loved to have seen Gary Oldman as Moriarty; Stephen Fry, meantime, is the quintessential Mycroft). The film is lovely, the film speed tricks distracting from solid production work. And the story is a good one, both as an action film and as a character piece about the title figure himself, who evolves (or at least lets us see into him) in some interesting ways during the movie.

I didn’t like it quite as much as the original — the initial third of the movie has problems finding its focus. Once it gets going, though, it’s easily a match for its predecessor, and avoids the sequelitis I was worried about.  Well done, enjoyed it a lot, worth seeing in the theater, definitely getting the disc when it comes out.

Tweets from 2012-01-06

  • One cool thing this time of year about walking daughter to the bus stop is the gorgeous sunrises. #
  • "Sherlock Holmes: Game of Shadows" – Oh, yeah, fine fun. Not quite as good as original net, but still quite excellent. Highly recommended. #

Tweets from 2011-12-08

  • RT @mental_floss: 12+1 = 11+2. Also: “twelve plus one” is an anagram of “eleven plus two.” (via @NeilTyson) #
  • Was late getting to my train this a.m.; first time that’s happened in a while. #
  • Excellent! RT @tomtomorrow: This is exciting! RT @steven_moffat Sherlock returns, Sunday,Jan 1st, 8.10pm, BBC1. #
  • Okay, I feel old now. RT @mental_floss: The Soviet Union Was Dissolved 20 Years Ago Today — Link #
  • I am informed my daughter has decided to follow in her father’s literary footsteps … and break her Kindle. #
  • Light Rail problem at Convention Center… seem to be moving after 10-15 min delay. #denver #
  • Mmmmm … Margie’s making Thanksgiving Leftovers Shepherd’s Pie. Yum! #
  • ST:TOS Rewatch: “Metamorphosis” Another dickish(ish) Fed commissioner but undickish nigh-omnipotent antagonist. Universal Translation FTW! #

Amazing Holmes

Okay, I just plain ol’ love BBC’s Sherlock.

This 2010 modern retread of the Sherlock Holmes canon is lovingly crafted, in considering how to make the Holmes tales set in modern London with as much “mood” as the gaslamp / fog / Victorian era that we’re more familiar with.

Doctor Who showrunning Steven Moffat is co-creator, occasional writer, and an executive producer on the show, and there are times when Holmes comes off as a cross between the Doctor and Gregory House.

But there’s more to Holmes here than simple brilliance, arrogance, and/or grumpiness.  The show touches multiple times on the ways in which he’s actually not an emotionally / psychologically well man (when accused of being a psychopath, he angrily corrects his accuser that he’s actually “a high-functioning sociopath”).  Benedict Cumberbatch does an amazing job as this heroic not-a-hero.

Martin Freeman (who’s on tap to play Bilbo Baggins in The Hobbit) does excellent work as Dr. John Watson — ironically, once again an invalided army medic from the battlefields of Afghanistan (the more things change …).  As Holmes’ flat-mate, associate, blogger, and companion, he walks a tightrope between being the less-brilliant foil and more-functional associate of the great detective. He won a best supporting actor BAFTA for the role.

The bringing of the stories to modern times is seamless. The characters are believable; the use of London’s landscapes for exteriors is exquisite (other exterior bits and interiors were shot in and around Cardiff), including the tilt-shift effects; the music and cinematography and story-telling tricks (floating graphics for text messages, plot count-downs, etc.)  are all very nicely done.

There’s a single problem with Sherlock, but it’s a huge one.  It suffers from typical BBC micro-seasons.  The first series of the show is three 90 minute episodes.  That they’re 90 minutes is a saving grace, but … three episodes?  Three?  Dammit, I want more.

More is coming, early 2012, and I eagerly await it.

The first series is available on disc. Highly recommended.

 

Unblogged Bits (Fri. 12-Aug-11 2330)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. Al Mohler on Adam and Eve vs. The Facts – A nice examination of skepticism vs denialism.
  2. Democratic Dolchstoßlegende by David Atkins – I got a call today from the Obama 2012 campaign, which started with thanking me for my support and invoking Karl Rove to trigger my fear response. And I cut off the nice lady and said, “I’m not giving anything right now, thank you,” and hung up. I have little doubt that, as things presently stand, I’ll be voting for Obama next year, and I’ll probably make contributions — perhaps even to the presidential campaign. But I also don’t mind letting the Obama campaign know that I’m not just automatically forking over the moolah and support just yet, and they can’t just assume my devotion to the cause.
  3. KOA 2011“TIME LAPSE” | Don’t Panik! – If you always were wondering about that big campout we go on each June … well, here’s a better rendition than all of my posts combined. Thanks, Mark!
  4. United Nations Affirms the Human Right to Blaspheme | Politics | Religion Dispatches – If God is angered by blasphemy, God has the prerogative to punish it, not the state.
  5. Joe. My. God.: TX Gov. Rick Perry: Social Security And Medicare Are Totally Unconstitutional – And here’s the man who wants to be President so he can follow up on just that belief.
  6. Fischer: God Only Allows A Woman To Be President As A Last Resort – Hmmm. Will anyone ask Bachman or Palin what they think about that?
  7. Can’t Emphasize This Enough – “The movement conservatives have all come out of the closet – even the ones on the federal bench. They smell a final victory: a return to Gilded Age America.” Which is great, if you’re one the lucky fractional percent who have the gilt.
  8. Microsoft Awarded With Patent For Sliding Mobile Device. Wait, What? – What the –?
  9. Book Ban: Virginia Bans Sherlock Holmes From School Libraries – Stupid, stupid rat creatures …

Movie Trailers

A run-down of trailers/previews they showed during Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 2:

  • Sherlock Holmes 2 — Looks amusing.  Hope there’s more there than what we see in the trailer, though, since it comes across as a shallow rehash of the first film’s flashy quicks. Will probably go see, unless it gets bad word of mouth.
  • Cowboys & Aliens —  I plan to see this. It just looks fun.
  • Real Steel — If they made a “Rock’em Sock’em Robots” film, this would be it.  And … I’m really not interested.
  • Abduction — Look, it’s The Bourne Identity, only with an angsty teen.  Pass.
  • Happy Feet 2 — Kill me.  Please.
  • Glee, the 3D Concert Film — Why haven’t you killed me yet?  How hard do I have to beg?
  • The Three Musketeers — A steampunk (musketpunk?) 3M?  Well, it’s a fresh way to frame a story that’s been remade eleventy-dozen times.  I don’t know that I’ll hit the theater for it, but I might look for it for home viewing.

So 2-3 wins, 2 passes, and 2 eye-gouging-out horrors.  Not bad.

New “Sherlock Holmes” trailer looks pretty good

See, this just looks fun.

The first Holmes movie was surprisingly enjoyable. My only concern with this one is sequelitis, wherein a sequel decides to crank up all the elements that clearly made the first movie a success and omit the more subtle notes that leavened those elements. That’s tough to detect here, but I am hopeful.

Unblogged Bits (Mon. 11-Jul-11 2331)

Links (most recent first) that caught my eye, but did not warrant full-blown blog entries ….

  1. DOJ Trusts Wall Street To ‘Police Itself’ As It Takes A ‘Softer Approach’ To Corporate Crime – Best government money can buy.
  2. House Republicans Look To Push Lower Capital Standards For Banks In Through The Back Door – Because why should we ever worry about banks undercapitalizing again? I mean, it’s been a couple of years now — I’m sure they’ve learned their lesson, after all.
  3. Firefighter loses bid to sue over New York mosque | World | News | Toronto Sun – Injury to the ability to commemorate? Crikey. If having a mosque a few blocks away damages your ability to commemorate the lives of your colleagues lost on 9/11, I suggest you seek therapy, not a court injunction.
  4. AZ State Senator Points Loaded Gun At Reporter – So will we actually hear the NRA criticize this pol for her appalling lack of gun safety?
  5. Fred Upton Pushes Vote to Kill His Own Light Bulb Efficiency Standards – Oceania has always been at war with Eastasia.
  6. Wingnut Camper Art Project Shares How-To Secrets For Sexing Obama – Wow, that’s … that’s … actually not all that different from the rhetoric one’s heard all over the Right in the past 2-3 years. Simply in special concentrate form (just add water).
  7. July 11, 2011 – Simply the Best – Well, if you can do the latter, why worry in the least about the former?
  8. Obama: “I Have Bent Over Backwards To Work With Republicans” – But … why?
  9. $140 Google eBooks reader, iriver Story HD, hits stores July 17 – I remain happy with my Kindle — but I’ll note both this and the recent Nook ads show those platforms with home screens more attractive and useful than the Kindle’s …
  10. Feature: Leaks, riots, and monocles: how a $60 in-game item almost destroyed EVE Online – Games are like societies writ intense. Screw with the economy, and folks get antsy, to say the least. Present them with a situation that seems unfair, and they will, metaphorically or literally, riot.
  11. First Footage & Posters For ‘Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows’ – Woot!
  12. Please Don’t Put Fireworks Through a Coffee Grinder. They’ll Blow Up [Wtf] – /facepalm
  13. This Freaky Optical Illusion Turns People Into Horrible Monsters [Video] – Majorly freaky!
  14. Chile Might Soon Recognize Same-Sex Civil Unions – If the GOP take back the White House, maybe they’ll stage another coup in Chile to prevent it.
  15. Arizona State Rep. Points Her ‘Raspberry-Pink’ Loaded Gun At Journalist | ThinkProgress – Lovely.
  16. Colo. pot proposal faces another legal challenge – The Denver Post – If something becomes legal and taxable and taxed … is that actually a tax increase?
  17. Misleading Missouri Measure: Amendment Harms, Not Helps Religious Liberty « The Wall of Separation

The Father/Daughter Week Film Series

Margie was out of town this week on business, so Katherine and I set up a nightly film schedule.  Well, in actuality, she pulled out six movies, I putted out eight, and then another five or six shorter features, and she looked around in the cabinet and … we ended up figuring out each night what it would be.

I don’t know what the selection says about us, but …

DAY 1

Sherlock Holmes (2009):  We actually watched this earlier in the day. It remains a strangely fun, dysfunctional flick, where you don’t know if you want to admire Holmes, slap him, or feel sorry for him. Which, in most modern renditions of the character, means it was a succcess.

The idea of Holmes thinking so far ahead in a a physical battle that he charts  out each move — and then showing them — is very nicely done.  (Katherine liked that bit.)

And Robert Downey, Jr., is always fun.  Good music from Hans Zimmer, too.

Katherine liked how Holmes confronted the villain at the end.  She thought it was a lot like the ultimate scene between Westley and Humperdink in The Princess Bride.

Fellowship of the Ring (2001):  This remains terribly impressive and, aside from the excision of Tom Bombadil and the Barrow-Downs, is the most “faithful” of the Jackson adaptation of Tolkien.

All the characters are good, and Gimli is at his least buffoonish.  After some initial smiles, I found myself wearying faster than usual at Elijah Woods’ pained/tragic expression.  McKellan and Lee make such fabulous Gandalf and Saruman renditions, it’s hard to say who could ever supplant them.

The real gem in the rough here is Sean Bean as Boromir, who takes a rather stiff foil to Aragorn and invests him with a passion  not only for his city, but for his comrades.  Notably, he shows more compassion and attachment to the Hobbits than Aragorn does.  The preying of the One Ring upon his heart and doubts, thus, becomes all the more tragic.  His final speech to Aragorn is a bit over the top, but Bean still manages to pull it off.

Katherine enjoyed how the Hobbits snuck into the Council of Elrond. She also liked how Legolas stood up for Aragorn at the Council, and how the Fellowship comes together.

DAY 2

Young Sherlock Holmes (1985):  This has long been on my list for K to see, and afer getting over some of the dissimilarities of the characters, she did fine.  The movie’s FX really holds up quite well after a quarter century (!), stop motion and (ground-breaking) CGI both.  The movie’s triffic fun, and I’m glad we watched it.

Katherine thought it was fun, since we know about what the characters become later.  She thought the difference between Watson here and Watson in the movie above was so different.  She also liked the color-of-the-bear riddle.

Batman/Superman: Public Enemies (2009): Faithful adaptation (for good and for ill) of the comic series.  GGood use of “traditional” Animated DCU voices, even if the animation style is (faithfully) a bit odd.  Not a huge rewatch factor, but it’s always good to see Supes and Bats working together, esp. against waves of bad guys (and good guys). (Katherine liked that factor, too.)

DAY 3

The Mummy (1999): This just one of those massively fun adventure movies, one that doesn’t take itself too seriously but with enough occasional bits where seriousness is the order of the day to keep it from being a slapstick romp.  The (also somewhat groundbreaking for the time) FX remain strong, and the movie has a high percentage of lines that are repeated around our household.

This film gets regular replay in this household, and I have no problem with that.  I’ll even go so far as to say (gasp) I enjoy it more than its spiritual forebearer, Raiders of the Lost Ark.

Kay still thinks it’s creepy, but fun at the same time.  Especially Benny.

DAY 4

Charlie’s Angels (2000):  Okay, so the “fun action flicks” played a large percentage of the screens during this film series, and this one falls into that category.  Katherine hadn’t seen it before, but I thought the Girl Power aspect would entertain her, and I was right.  She liked bits and bobs of all the characters, and, without taking it too seriously, I’d agree that there would be far worse role models out there, at least in a cartoonish sense.

The movie not only does well on its own, but it plays on the TV show nicely, with the opening montage, the whole girls / Bosley / Charlie relationship, etc.  In fact, unlike most remakes from TV shows (a genre it, itself, lampoons early on), this one refreshingly doesn’t run away from its roots, but considers itself near-continuity.  That’s nice.

Katherine liked all the backstories. And The Chad.

Hulk Vs. (2009):  This consists of two half-hour unrelated (save by production house, and some voice artist) slug-fests between Hulk & Thor, and Hulk & Wolverine.  Both are not-too-bad intros to the continuity of both guest stars (the Hulk’s continuity is mostly assumed — Banner-anger-Hulk-rest-Banner-wandering).  Which means that not only do we get Thor, but also the Warriors Three, Balder, Sif, Hela, Loki (who is appropriately hoist on his own petard twice), the Enchantress, the Executioner, Odin, the Odinsleep … Really, not at all badly done.

The Wolverine segments gets into the whole Weapon X program, Wolvie’s origins, and various erstwhile allies involved — Deadpool, Sabretooth, Deathshrike, Omega Red.  I’ve never been as fond of all that continuity folderol, but we enjoyed Deadpool at least.

Interestingly enough, the Thor tale paints Banner in a much more human, sympathetic light.  In the Wolvie tale, Banner plays little time on-screen, and is mostly a sniveling whiner.

Katherine thought it was a different Wolverine than she was used to, and liked the in media res at the beginning of the Wolverine segment.  She likes Hulk’s nicknames for people.  She had fun in the Thor segment trying to map the Norse gods to the Greco-Roman ones she’s more familiar with.

DAY 5

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002):  We were pretty disengaged on this one.  Kay wanted to continue her documentation of spells cast in the HP films (yes, I know there are online lists of them … ssshhh, it’s geeky research!), and I’m burned out on HP given the number of times the films have been watched here in the last six months.

Not much more to say about it, except that it’s neither the best nor the worst HP film, I like Moaning Myrtle, and I’m glad we haven’t seen much more of Dobby since then.

Katherine maintains she doesn’t watch it much because, despite how hilarious Lockhart is and how much she likes Dobby, she just dislikes the basilisk.

DAY 6

The Ten Commandments (1956)

I grew up with this movie playing every Easter on network TV.  For whatever reason, I’d forgotten over the years how over-the-top patriotic it’s all about.  Cecil B. DeMille very explicitly (he says so himself in the introductory passage) frames the story of Moses as one not just of freedom by faith from slavery in a foreign land, but as the foundation for freedom in the modern age.  Given that the Israelites effectively (in the story) abandon one yoke (that of physical slavery to the Egyptians) for another (that of cultural slavery to “I AM”), it’s an odd concept; put another way, one would not consider the land of Israel to be an exemplar of American-style democracy and freedom.

That said, the movie does, in addition to some still-spectacular SFX (“cheesy, but awesome,” quoth Kay) and faboo music from Elmer Bernstein, raise some interesting questions of cultural and personal identity, doing what is right vs. what is convenient, and working within vs. outside of an illegitimate system to change it.  For all that Heston’s Moses eventually becomes a cliche as the movie progresses, the earlier, relatively more human story allows for some of these questions to arise.  His decision to take on his Hebrew identity and fight against his adopted culture (and father figure) is perhaps divinely ordained, but you can almost see the argument that Moses could have done better by becoming Pharaoh and striving to better all the people’s lives through his wise rule.  Would have been a lot less bloody than killing all the Firstborn of Egypt (a very creepy scene, and one that makes Passover a lot more like Halloween than one would think).

I’d forgotten how compacted and simplified the action becomes after we leave the Egyptian soap opera.  Bang! Mt Sinai! Bang! Golden Calf! Bang! Moses dies before entering the Promised Land!  The closer we get to Scripture, the more reverence the movie has for the orthodox line, which makes it more a series of Biblical vignettes than a story.

The movie has a cast of zillions. The other ones most worth mentioning are Cedric Hardwick as the beneficent autocrat, Seti; Yul Brynner as the prideful Rameses; and Edward G. Robinsn as the vile straw boss, Dathan.

Katherine liked it, especially that it had an Intermission / Entr’acte, with special orchestral segments at the beginning, middle, and end of the film.  She also thought Moses’ hair changes were interesting.

WRAP-UP

“I want to watch them all again,” Katherine says. “It was all-around good.”  And something she didn’t mind doing with her dear, old Dad. Huzzah.

Tweets from 2010-08-25

  • Father/Daughter Film Fest Day 2: Young Sherlock Holmes; Batman/Superman: Public Enemies. #
  • We may be in the mid-70s today! Yowzers! #
  • Yes, it's 9:45, time for our daily mouse. Thanks, Indy. #
  • Father/Daughter Film Fest Day 3: The Mummy #

Tweets from 2010-08-23

  • This has been a long and not terribly relaxing Saturday. Time to call it quits. #
  • I'm developing a list of movies to force the Girl to watch whilst Margie is away on business. Mwah-ha-ha! #
  • Margie is off on a week-long business trip. Let the keening commence. #
  • Father/Daughter Film Fest Day 1: Sherlock Holmes; Fellowship of the Ring. #

Sherlocks, old and new

After Kay and I watched our Sherlock Holmes (2009) DVD, I realized I didn’t have a DVD version of Young Sherlock Holmes (1985, fergoshsakes), which was just wrong. So I went to buy one …

… and was immediately amused by the covers — color, design, typography.

Even the backs have a similar design.  A nice bit of consumer tie-in for a new movie with one 24 years (!) older, um, younger.

Two final amusing bits:

  1. Both movies are PG-13.
  2. YSH is a Paramount release; SH is Warner Bros. (Which is probably why the design is only similar, not identical).

Tweets from 2010-05-01

  • "How to Train Your Dragon" was faboo. 3D was a nice add, mostly, but not critical. Just a good story, well-told for kids & adults. #
  • Followed up with pancakes and a Robert Downey Jr home marathon: Sherlock Holmes & Iron Man. Both of us enjoyed both. Oh, and ice cream! #
  • This morning introduced K to "Labyrinthe". Wow. Had forgotten how much I don't love that movie. #
  • "Losers" was modestly bloody fun, nicely faithful to the spirit and chars of the comic, which I now want to read again. B+ #
  • RT @doycet: "If only more women were willing to run though 1.25 miles of mud for free roses." #thingsnottosaywhileyourwifewatchesthederby #
  • Alas, no Stupid Evil Bastard podcast tonight, unless folks want to hear Les drone on and on about his knee surgery. (Feel better, SEB!) #

Movie Review: Ninja Assassin

I don’t usually go to movies while on the road on business. Instead, I tend to hole up in my room and watch HBO or browse the Net or stay up way too late reading, or all three.

But there’s a theater over at the Paseo Pasadena, where I was grabbing some dinner, and I always pro forma check out what’s showing to see if it’s of interest.  Or, a more proper subset, if it’s of interest and it’s a movie I wouldn’t mind watching alone and it’s a movie I’m unlikely to see with Margie or Katherine.

Tonight, Ninja Assassin caught my eye.

Now, I’m also not a martial arts movie fanatic.  But I had a special reason to want to see this, which is that Joe Straczynski — of Babylon 5, many good comic books, and an increasing number of movie screenplays fame — shared credit on the screenplay (story and co-screenwriting by Matthew Sand).  And, having heard a few things about it (fast, action-packed, very bloody), I had to wonder what a high-budget high-fx, Grand Guignol modern ninja epic co-screenwritten by Joe Straczynski would look like.

And … yup, that’s it.  Epic, mythic, humorous, appropriately (even satirically) bloody, painful, hopeful, all that good stuff.

The movie was produced by the Wachowski Bros., and they apparently brought in JMS six weeks before filming was to begin to rewrite the script.  Joe kicked it out in 53 hours.  Add in appropriately lyric direction by V for Vendetta‘s James McTeigue and you have something that is not great cinema, by any means, but was was kick-ass bloody fun, and a satisfying show (and possible cult favorite fodder). 

I’d probably wait for the DVD, rather than pay for the theater, if I had it to do all over again.  But I still wouldn’t have Margie sit through it (I’m still trying to figure out how to wangle her into watching Watchmen), so it was a fine “solo” movie.

BONUS: MOVIE TRAILERS!

Given that this is a genre I don’t often go see, the sorts of things that they were flogging at an R-rated ninja flick were unique for me:

  • Armored – Caper-gone-wrong people-pushed-to-the-edge double-hostage this-can’t-end-well sort of flick.  Pass.
  • The Wolfman – Another one I suspect will be too violent for family viewing in any combination, but it looks stylish and horrific, which is just what the lycanthrope genre needs.  Maybe.
  • Shutter Island – Two detectives investigate an insane asylum on an island, peopled by some really creepy patients and even creepier staff.  Yeah, what could possibly go wrong?  Pass.
  • Avatar – My first real look at the thing.  Very pretty fx, very stupid plot. Or, rather, a plot that (to judge by the trailer) is blindingly obvious even in the trailer.  But, oh-so-pretty …  Maybe.
  • The Book of Eli – It’s I Am Legend meets Mad Max meets High Plains Drifter meets Ninja Assassin. On the other hand, Denzel Washington and Gary Oldman?  Hmmmm. Maybe.
  • Sherlock Holmes – This looks to be what the movie version of League of Extraordinary Gentlemen wasn’t — a fun, sassy, fx-ish romp through the period and genre, with Downey, Jr., as the titular detective.  Promising.