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3.5

Since I’ve already had a slew of gaming posts today, I might as well chime in on the new v3.5 of D&D. Except there’s not much for me to say….

Since I’ve already had a slew of gaming posts today, I might as well chime in on the new v3.5 of D&D.

Except there’s not much for me to say. Except it’s really annoying redoing my homebrew character sheets in Excel to delete and/or rename various skills.

Ironically, I haven’t played much straight 3E D&D since it’s issuing. Variant systems, like Star Wars and Oriental Adventures, yes. But Margie drew the fantasy straw in the family.

It does sound like the PHB is somewhat better organized.

The biggest resentment is, of course, going out and buying 3.5 books because of the nagging sense that Everything You Know is Wrong with your 3.0 ones. Or you can borrow them from Good Friends, which is a lot more likely this version around.

Of course, there’s always 3.5 Haiku, for those looking for something other than debates on how different weapons should be handled by different sized characters.

Weekend round-up

Lazy, crazy, hazy days … Doyce’s Star Wars “Prince of Alderaan” campaign came to a crashing halt on Friday, just hours before the game was to begin. He was kind…

Lazy, crazy, hazy days …

Doyce’s Star Wars “Prince of Alderaan” campaign came to a crashing halt on Friday, just hours before the game was to begin. He was kind enough to forward the players a synopsis of What Was Going To Happen in the remaining sessions. Pity — there were some scenes in there I’d have given money to see. And I’d just mapped out how Dag was going to end up prestiging into Privateer. Ah, well.

Instead, the Testerfolk and Randy came over to our house, we sat and chatted, and did some character design for Jackie’s Necropolis campaign. Is it just me, or is anyone else daunted by a campaign distributed as a thick, hard-cover tome. Eek.

Saturday morning and early afternoon somehow just slipped past us. Later afternoon and into the evening we had our Nobilis fix for the week, which was plenty fun.

Sunday, after the usual morning churn, I did up the game notes for Nobilis, then opened up the home theater box to start putting things together. Which is when I learned that it had no auxiliary audio inputs. Feh.

We spent the rest of the afternoon taking it back and hitting the local big boxes. Nothing seemed an automatic win. The runner-up, available in a number of places, is a Panasonic receiver, which has a built-in 5-disc DVD/CD changer. Since we already have one of those, I’m not sure we need another one, nor am I eager to be swapping between CDs and DVDs (it sounds organizationally nasty to me). On the other hand, it does have an Aux port that the current CD changer can plug into. Still, it’s a good $80-100 more than the RCA system, and one more incompatible remote; I wish I could find an RCA system a tick up from the one that won’t work for us.

More searching today.

We then swung past the Testerplace to pick up all the stuff we’d managed to leave behind the evening before when whisking a sleeping Katherine away, and ended up chewing an hour or two’s worth of additional time.

That was an unfortunate chew, because I’d gotten New Character Fever in the afternoon. My original plan for Necropolis had been a scaled-down gold dragon character (recycling Aughto from Rey’s abortive epic campaign). That was fun enough, but I was still fiddling with personality issues. Meanwhile, Margie had been considering a comment by Doyce that we could really use a meat shield powerful stand-up fighter sort. So she was going through Savage Species and looking at the anthropomorphics there.

Well, at first, that struck me as a shame, because the deva she’d come up with had some kick-ass abilities the party could use. And then the penny dropped, and I suddenly got a yen to run an anthropomorphic elephant barbarian sort. I do like simple, straightforward characters (mechanics-wise), and a large humanoid elephant wielding a mongo chopper of some sort qualifies quite nicely.

So I stayed up too late last night doing the initial write-up. Tsk. And decided quite early on that, yes, this is the character for me.

If nothing else, I can always open each meeting with a rousing rendition of “Colonel Hathi’s March.”

And not a single grey hair

Confirmed news for all your (remaining) Star Wars fans — Episode III will feature an appearance by an original trilogy character — and actor. And it’s not one of the…

Confirmed news for all your (remaining) Star Wars fans — Episode III will feature an appearance by an original trilogy character — and actor. And it’s not one of the four we’ve seen thus far.

Now, how cameo and gratuitous and get-the-fanboys-into-the-theatre this is remains to be seen — but, heck, it’s still got me bouncing a bit in my chair.

(Official Lucasfilm announcement here.)

(via GoaF)

State of the Weekend

Because, heck, if I can’t bore you with details of my life, who can I bore? FRIDAY Star Wars RPG at Doyce’s house. Dag’s become the Master Pilot of the…

Because, heck, if I can’t bore you with details of my life, who can I bore?

FRIDAY
Star Wars RPG at Doyce’s house. Dag’s become the Master Pilot of the group, which I suppose has its advantages. The current adventure in the “Prince of Alderaan” campaign is much more scattered than some of the preliminary adventures Doyce ran us through — less of a “dungeon crawl,” more of everyone having their own threads to pursue. Dag gets back to pursuing Nayda’s disappearance (in the company of his mysterious double) next time — and with an additional level, to boot.

SATURDAY
Margie took Kitten Duty in the morning, which I had been ready to take on (since she was sick), but she thwarted me by saying “Go back to sleep.” My will sapped by being damned sleepy, I complied, and ended up with a good nine hours under my belt. Or someplace.

I tried to return the favor by taking Kitten with me out front while I did spring cleaning on the yard — chopping down the old grasses and other shrubbery that needs pre-new-growth pruning. While Katherine played with sidewalk chalk, I also filled up the watering sacks by the trees, and looked at all the bulbs already rising from the mulch.

I’m worried about the yard this year. Water restrictions look like they’ll be harsh, which means no new plantings, and the old plantings (even the drought-tolerant ones) may suffer mightily.

That done, I went in and noodled about online, putting together my game log from the previous night (unheard of!) and leveling Dag to 8th.

I got sucked into a discussion about Iraq and the current Nuclear Posture Report (well, current as of a year ago) on a e-mail discussion list I belong to. That ended up taking a lot more time and effort than I’d have thought, since it’s more difficult to participate in a dialog than to simply put forth (as on my blog).

SUNDAY
Margie took a sick day from church, so I took Katherine, then we all got back together, did brunch, and then went on the normal Alpha shopping at Costco and Safeway.

In the afternoon, I tried to catch up with other household necessities, including ordering magazines from my nephews’ school fund-raiser, and getting this month’s comic book order filled out. On the latter, I dropped some marginal titles, which made me feel virtuous.

MONDAY
I’ve been feeling worn out and listless and unable to concentrate this morning. I don’t know if I’m just tired — my sleep hasn’t been abnormally short, but Margie’s coughing has been waking me up a few times (concerning which I feel worse for Margie than myself, of course) — or if I’m the third domino to drop in our Household Illness Fest. Hopefully the former, since it looks to be a very hectic week.

Comics!

It’s been way too long since I did any comic book reviews. So here are (more than) a few, which, for volume’s sake, I’ll keep to minimum length:…

It’s been way too long since I did any comic book reviews. So here are (more than) a few, which, for volume’s sake, I’ll keep to minimum length:

Continue reading “Comics!”

Epic battle

USA Today has the article based on the survey I mentioned the other day comparing Star Wars and Lord of the Rings. Despite being sent a follow-up e-mail, I wasn’t…

USA Today has the article based on the survey I mentioned the other day comparing Star Wars and Lord of the Rings. Despite being sent a follow-up e-mail, I wasn’t actually quoted, and that’s probably just as well, since it’s kind of goofy.

The author clearly is trying to provoke a dispute, and manages to get a few fanboyish comments to sprinkle about (“We will never be dethroned — especially by a movie that has a midget with furry feet as the hero”).

By and large, though, the author seems to come in with a thesis that sci-fi is out, fantasy is in. To that end, the waning enthusiasm over SW is not seen as the fading of a particular franchise, but as indicative of the whole downfall of a genre. (The other example given to prove the thesis is the lousy showing of Star Trek X — no, no franchise fatigue there.) Love of fantasy, on the other hand, is seen as part of the zeitgeist of these war-torn, buffeted-by-events days.

It may very well be there is such a sea change going on, but this particular article is anything but convincing about it.

Weekend Update

Well, it was a very, very busy weekend. A good kind of busy, to be sure, but ……

Well, it was a very, very busy weekend. A good kind of busy, to be sure, but …

Continue reading “Weekend Update”

Chum

USA Today is holding a “Star Wars vs Lord of the Rings” write-in poll. Let the bloodbath begin!…

USA Today is holding a “Star Wars vs Lord of the Ringswrite-in poll. Let the bloodbath begin!

Continue reading “Chum”

Another Day, Another Stroller

Today, I got to play Mr. Mom. Margie’s conference began (complete with her moderating one of the panels, which I’ve no doubt she did smashingly at). So I got to…

Today, I got to play Mr. Mom. Margie’s conference began (complete with her moderating one of the panels, which I’ve no doubt she did smashingly at). So I got to get the Kitten dressed, get the Kitten fed, and take care of the Kitten for the day.

Had a blast. Mostly.

First on the agenda was picking up the rental car. Called them right after Kitten arose, and found out when their shuttle bus hits Port Orleans (Riverside). That let me time breakfast with Kitten. Went over to the front of the resort, stood in the port coche

— and waited. And waited. And waited.

I had, of course, gotten there fifteen minutes early. Margie will chuckle when she reads this, since it was equally likely I’d get there an hour early. I tend to be … reiterative in the pad time I apply to trips and appointments.

So Katherine and I hung out, looked at flowers, chit-chatted.

Thing is, I could see the bus. It was parked, way out in the parking lot, not really visible from the front door of the resort, but visible from the sidewalk to either side of it, where Kitten and I walked back and forth.

I knew we were the first pick-up of the day. So clearly he had gotten there as early as I, and was just hanging.

As was I.

Finally, at 8:32a (per my wristwatch, its dial barely visible through the water condensed inside the crystal, a result of yesterday’s raininess. Rrg.) he pulled up to the front. Katherine, who was waiting for the “blue and green bus” spotted him, and we piled on.

Off we, and another family from Port Orleans (French Quarter), went, to the fabulous Car Care Center, just inside the ticket booths for Magic Kingdom — the Place Where No Bus Stops.

Except, according to the map that the generally too-cool-but-oddly-surly Euro-type who was driving the shuttle bus had given us, there was another National rental desk.

At the Swan and Dolphin hotels.

Where Margie is conferencing.

*Sigh*

So Joe Euro (who really was only missing an oddly held cigarette to finish the image of disdain-fishing-for-a-tip he had) dropped us off, and I picked up a car. Woo-hoo, a Dodge Neon, yeah. About as manual and basic a car as you can get with automatic transmission. Three-hundred-sixty-degree air conditioning and manual door locks. Not one for frills is our National.

From there, I drove to the Swan. That’s because I had to meet Margie. That’s because we discovered the camera was still in Margie’s purse. Eek.

(Note to self. When going to amusement parks with a 2.5-year-old, you really need two camera-folk, one on video, one on still. Switching back and forth just does not cut it, since you miss the perfectly composed still while you have the video camera out, and the marvelously unexpected activity when you have the still camera out. And, yes, I know I can rip (crappy) stills from my video camera, and make (crappy) movies on my still camera, since both are digital. My note stands.)

Margie had, after my huffing and sighing and general pouting (against Fate, not against her), realized that we could simply meet up between a couple of sessions. And, it so happened, I was pulling into the Swan parking lot at 9a, right after her first session. She had her phone on vibrate, while at the meeting (the only proper thing to do), but had said she would check her messages and turn it back onto ring between sessions.

Ring. Ring. Ring. “Hello, you’ve reached the voice mail of Margie Kleerup …” Damm.

“Turn your phone off vibrate, love. I’m in the parking lot, coming in.”

That was easier said than done, since I managed to park as far from the entrance to the Swan as is physically and topographically and, perhaps, legally possible. Trudge, trudge, trudge, “Come on, Kitten,” “Come on, Kitten,” “Katherine, come on!” The Kyrie Eleison of our vacation.

The Swan and Dolphin were originally built and owned by Disney, but they were sold off, from what I understand, a while back. They still pseudo-carry the Disney name, and they certainly look like Disney hotels (with huge swans and dolphins, not to mention ginormous fountains pouring down the walls), but I understand they’re a bit more institutional than most Disney fare.

I’d discovered the convention registration was, of course, in the Dolphin (another twenty mile walk), and was on my way over when Margie called. Since she was going from the Dolphin to the Swan (about a hundred yard walk), we agreed to meet at the Christmas tree.

Camera was exchanged, kisses likewise, and off she went. If, for some reason, Margie ever had to be the main breadwinner of the family, I’ve no doubt she’d do it with style, panache, and more success than I.

Off, again, to the car, the level of trudgery reduced by Daddy Carry. Back to the hotel, clean diapie, bag over shoulder, and, avante, to the bus depot, Robin!

While waiting to the bus to the Disney/MGM Studios, our park du jour, I called the recommended in-room babysitting service to arrange for Margie and my Fun Night Out, Bwah-ha-ha, tomorrow evening. The lady laughed when I suggested a time when we’d be back. “You only have to give us a time when you’re leaving. Come back whenever you want. We’ve had some couples stay out all night!” Easy to say when they’re charging you $13.50/hour, but, then, there is something to be said for throwing caution and credit rating to the wind.

I expect to be back by 11:30, nonetheless.

The only hang-up was giving my credit card number over the phone for the reservation. Ordinarily not a problem, except I was in a bus depot crowded with park-goers-to-be, and me without my Cone of Silence. I coped.

I also made reservations for dinner. Bwah-ha-ha. This should be fun.

We arrived at Disney/MGM in short order. This is the one park that we’d never been to, and, as a general evaluation, I’d say it’s a lot of fun. It is reminiscent of Universal Studios, not surprisingly, mixed with Main Street USA from the Magic Kingdoms, only translated to a Bizarro Hollywood. It’s rather disturbing, having seen the real thing, but still much fun. Much more in the way of “shows” than “rides,” understandably, but good stuff nonetheless.

Passing up Hollywood Boulevard, we were accosted by a park employee — er, cast member — offering to take our picture in front of the giant Mickey’s Wizard’s Hat, which is the symbol for Disney/MGM. Odd, for a pair of Hollywood entertainment conglomerates to take on as a symbol a hat emblematic of power that runs away from its vain and immature wielder, nearly destroying everything before being barely brought back under control. Or maybe not.

Anyway, I blew off the photo op, and I regret it now, since there’s no record of Daddy & Kitten’s Day Out, except many pictures of Kitten (natch). I visited her on our way back out, but not only was Kitten sullen and tired (it does happen), but there’s a hour-and-a-half delay between photo being taken and prints/proofs being available. A startling encounter with non-instant gratification.

We had about an hour before the Big Show We Had to Visit, the Playhouse Disney Show. So we went on the studio tour. Pretty standard fare of its sort — streets of faux housefronts which look disturbingly familiar if you watched certain shows, views into workshops where folks are sewing, constructing, or otherwise fabricating Movie Studio Stuff, the required Tourist Bus Encounters Horrible Earthquake, Fire, & Flood schtick (which was actually quite well done, and curse me for not noticing that the video camera was on Pause), and, most fascinating (as always), the dead storage area of Props & Vehicles Too Big To Store Elsewhere, including aircraft from The Rocketeer, a Sail Barge and Snow Speeder from Star Wars, the Judge’s Toon Destroying Truck from Roger Rabbit, the tank from Last Crusade, etc.

I want them. Badly.

By the time we were done, we had missed the next Playhouse Disney show, so we killed some time in a fun kid’s playground based on A Bug’s Life, and getting something to drink. Then off to the Playhouse Disney show, where we stood in line for twenty minutes.

It was, for kids or the parents who they make watch it, a pretty decent kiddy show, featuring Bear in the Big Blue House, Stanley, Rolie Polie Olie, and The Book of Pooh. The theater was just a big flat expanse of carpet. Everyone sat down, and about every five minutes the kinder were given an excuse to stand up and shout, dance, catch bubbles, etc. Lots of fun. It was odd seeing some of the bits (the traditionally, if abstractly, animated Stanley and the computer generated images of Rolie) done as 3-D solids and puppetry, but it wasn’t bad, all told. And since I recognized most of the songs (having the Playhouse Disney CD, of course), it was good, leg-falling-to-sleep enjoyment. Pictures to, of course, follow.

Off, after that, to find something to eat. That ushered in about an hour of Cranky Girl. There was nothing she wanted to eat. What she wanted to do was push the stroller. She did not want Daddy touching the stroller in this process. Her pushing the stroller involved moving at 1/8 normal speed, running into a lot of people, and not knowing which direction she should go because she couldn’t see her way.

At last, we compromised. I put her back into the stroller, she sniffled a lot, I looked for some place to eat, I went into the Disney Villains Store, she poited at a four foot long Kaa, and I bought it for her to carry along. Thus were we both mollified.

We finally ate, after much further looking about, at the Backstage Express. The food she’d eschewed before became what she wanted then. There is a lesson to be learned here.

Just as we were finishing up, sirens began to wail. It was the (inevitable) parade. But, hey, the gate they opened up from backstage to start the parade from was right next to the backdoor of the Backstage Express (coincidentally enough), so we could just step out and be the first folks to see anything.

The current Disney/MGM parade consists of various costumed characters on foot — some Disney characters, other just thematic window dressing — escorting various modified classic cars holding some Disney/MGM characters. Sort of. In fact, they were all Disney characters, except for Luke/Leia/Vader/R2D2, which is a 20th Century Fox/Lucasfilm property. Though there’s a Star Tours right there in Disney/MGM, so I guess they’ve figured out how to make it work.

It was actually a cute parade, and Katherine was picked out for special waves and wanders-over by various characters, being the first cute kid on the parade route, literally. And I have to say, it was probably the most fun she had the whole time, since she suddenly was waking up and Seeing All Those Characters She Recognized, like the Playhouse Disney folks, or Snow White, or Ariel.

There was a Monsters, Inc. car, too. Amazingly, but not surprisingly, a real, furred Sully costume looks a lot faker than the CGI version.

After that, I ducked across the way with Katherine into the vacant Star Tours ride. They let her ride, even though the seatbelt being fastened hardly provided real restraint for her, and I think she had fun. We hit the gift shop afterwards and bought Too Much Stuff, including one shirt she won’t be able to wear for two years. (This is a problem with letting me go off someplace where (a) there are cute things to buy for Katherine, let alone fun things for me to buy for myself, and (b) Margie’s not around.)

By this time it was getting around three or so, I thought I could see through the rain forest in my wrist watch, and it was beginning to rain a bit again (the day had been sprinkling when Margie left, and a bit when we were picking up the car, but had been pretty dry since then). Over Kitten’s loud protests, we departed, got back here, set her down for a nap (which, protests aside, she dove into with a passion), and set myself down in front of the keyboard …

The Commericial Hero with 10,000 Faces

Joseph Campbell was right. Luke Skywalker Harry Potter Frodo Baggins is an orphan living with his uncle and aunt on the remote wilderness of Tatooine suburbia Hobbiton. (via BoingBoing)…

Joseph Campbell was right.

Luke Skywalker Harry Potter Frodo Baggins is an orphan living with his uncle and aunt on the remote wilderness of Tatooine suburbia Hobbiton.

(via BoingBoing)

Not Enough Hours in the Day (or Night)

In one week, I got my Amazon pre-order for Attack of the Clones and The Fellowship of the Ring. And last week, I got Spider-Man. And we still even have…

In one week, I got my Amazon pre-order for Attack of the Clones and The Fellowship of the Ring. And last week, I got Spider-Man. And we still even have Beauty & the Beast on the shelf, waiting for us to watch it.

Yeesh.

Of course, if Katherine didn’t do things like wake up at 5:45a, rarin’ to go, then we wouldn’t feel the need to be in bed by 9p — and we might actually get some of these watched.

(Bitch, bitch, bitch …)

Q&A

I’ve been wildly remiss in these things since … well, since last Thursday. But since I do one myself, I’d better get caught up….

I’ve been wildly remiss in these things since … well, since last Thursday. But since I do one myself, I’d better get caught up.

Continue reading “Q&A”

Saturdaze

We wrapped up Doyce’s Star Wars campaign before November/December hiatus last night. Next installment to begin in January, and ten years later, which will move us just to about the…

We wrapped up Doyce’s Star Wars campaign before November/December hiatus last night. Next installment to begin in January, and ten years later, which will move us just to about the Episode II era. I suspect things will not be going well for Dag in the interim; his relationship with Nayda is doomed to a bitter end.

Got to sleep in today, while Margie took care of Katherine. Then it was off on errands (including an errand of mercy to drop off the Firefly tape from last night to the Testerfolks; Doyce ran out of space on his).

Then home again, home again, jiggety-jig, and swinging into action on Operation: MyGodTheParentsAreComing. This afternoon’s target was the dining room. Tomorrow: the breakfast table.

Been thinking about my short story I’m doing this month instead of NaNoWriMo. Now that I’m at the keyboard, of course, I’m finding myself fatigued, and with a zillion excuses not to write.

Such as Excuse #27: Boy, I’d Better Post Something In My Blog …

The Game’s the Thing

A bit of discussion’s going on at Turn of a Friendly Die on whether supers RPGs are more oriented (or limited) to physical combat than other settings or rules systems….

A bit of discussion‘s going on at Turn of a Friendly Die on whether supers RPGs are more oriented (or limited) to physical combat than other settings or rules systems.

Frankly? I don’t think so. And I feel passionately enough about the subject to post about it here, too.

Continue reading “The Game’s the Thing”

Willow

No, not the Buffy Willow. The Lucas/Howard Willow. In 1988, Ron Howard directed (with George Lucas as the Executive Producer and story writer) Willow, a classic fantasy flick, full of…

No, not the Buffy Willow. The Lucas/Howard Willow.

In 1988, Ron Howard directed (with George Lucas as the Executive Producer and story writer) Willow, a classic fantasy flick, full of magic, non-human critters, sword fights, romance, dark and evil threats, etc. It had all the elements of being as much of a breakthrough for the genre as the original Star Wars was for sf, but, somehow, it never did.

There’s DVD of the film out, now, and, lying on my sickbed yesterday (and with a nap in-between), I watched it, and remembered again both the parts that I love and the parts that don’t quite work.

Warwick Davis is Willow Ufgood, a nelwyn (think hobbit without the furry feet) who inadvertently comes into possession of an incredibly cute little daikini (human) girl. Said infant is, of course, the foretold downfall of the evil Queen Bavmorda, a dark sorceress played to scenery-chewing perfection by Jean Marsh.

Willow’s sort of an everyman character. He wants to be a magician, but instead is the low man on the totem pole in his little hamlet, his farm on the edge of foreclosure, the butt of jokes and ribbing by the nasty village headman, Burglekutt. When it becomes clear that Evil Forces are after the baby, Willow and others are tasked by the village High Aldwin (Billy Barty) to take the baby back to the humans.

Willow eventually discovers the baby’s true nature, and must act as her protector, alongside rogue swordsman Madmartigan, shapechanged sorceress Fin Raziel, and a pair of comic relief (and French-accented) brownies, Franjean and Rool. Arrayed against them are the dark armies of the Queen, led by the fearsome General Kael, and the comely-but-nasty Princess Sorsha. Sorcery, chase scenes, and big battles ensue.

Will Willow gain self-confidence, learn magic, be successful in protecting little infant Elora Danan, and return to his beloved wife and children in one piece? Three guesses.

The movie was filmed on the cusp of the digital cinematography revolution. The digital technique of morphing was first used here, as Willow changes Finn Razael from a possum to various other animals. Still, there were plenty of old-fashioned effects — blue-screen and oversized sets for the diminutive brownies, bits of optical animation and “blue fire,” gorgeous matte paintings supplementing the gorgeous countryside of Wales, New Zealand, and Marin Co. The result is a beautiful film that, at the time, was on the cutting edge, but today feels slightly dated.

A lot of friends of mine at the time criticized Willow as a Lord of the Rings rip-off, but in reality it’s more of a swipe from Lucas’ Star Wars story — the farmer boy in custody of something that the Evil Guys want who eventually comes to understand the power within him, the handsome rogue who reluctantly goes along on the quest and eventually woos the aloof princess, flight to a safe place that turns out to be a trap, etc., etc. Its lack of success versus Star Wars likely comes from a number of reasons.

First, it’s got a lot more story than will fit into its 130 minutes. Despite various dissolves of people journeying across the countryside, there’s not a good sense of time passage, and the result is a film that feels like a choppy number of set pieces. We’re here at the lake. Now we’re here on the mountain. Now we’re here at Tir Asleen. It could almost have been a trilogy of movies in and of itself. (Originally there were to have been two more Willow films, but the narrow margin from the first cause Lucas to have the second two stories published in book form only.)

Secondly, the main character, Willow, is a mixed bag as a protagonist. He spends much of the time simply trying to protect the baby, and the rest he keeps demonstrating how little he knows about sorcery and how easily he’s overcome in combat. He’s oddly impotent for being the title character and hero of the tale. Even his final role in the defeat of Bavmorda is more a matter of his trickery and her clumsiness; granted, he shows a lot of pluck in going into the lion’s den to rescue Elora Danan, but not much effectiveness in doing so.

Willow does have some bright moments. His best are his interaction with his wife and children (and I’ll frankly confess that his reunion with his wife at the end brings a tear to my eye every single frickin’ time I see the movie). Davis does as fine a job with the role as can be done

As for the other characters …

Madmartigan (Val Kilmer) kept reminding me of Han Solo, particularly the ruthless, vain, bloodthirsty mercenary smuggler from the first film. Good with a sword (blaster). Prone to charging his opponents even when outnumbered. Disdainful of the hick he’s working alongside. Shamed into being a good guy. His redemption is as artificial as Han’s, too.

As is the romance that develops between Madmartigan and Sorsha (Joanne Whaley). Sorsha’s character is the most cardboard in the cast, starting off as the evil warrior princess seeking evil mom’s approval, and then falling in love with the (magically) besotted Madmartigan because of some sweet talk and because he Fights Real Good — and not just falling in love, but going wholeheartedly into his camp and against her mom. And nobody says anything, but accepts her as one of the new good guys. Sh’yeah.

(To be fair, a lot of this is fleshed out in deleted scenes from the film, unfortunately not included on the DVD. Still, if we look just at the story as presented, Sorsha and the Sorsha/Madmartigan romance is pretty damned weak.)

The brownies (comedy duo Kevin Pollak and Rick Overton) are intermittently annoying and amusing. Most importantly, they don’t add a single thing to the film or plot, for good and for ill.

Sorceress Fin Raziel (Patricia Hayes) spends most of the movie passing out tidbits of information and nattering at Willow about what a bad magician he is (since he keeps messing up her retransformation). Once in human form, she’s much better, and her battle with Bavmorda is quite entertaining (even if she does fall for the Oldest Trick in the Book).

Bavmorda is nasty, evil, and was probably a delight to play.

The DVD, despite being a “Special Edition,” doesn’t offer that much extra, though what it has is good. A period mini-feature about the making of the movie is fine, a retrospective on the morphing sfx is interesting, and the audio commentary track by Warwick Davis is informative, chatty, and interesting. I’d have very much enjoyed hearing from either Ron Howard or George Lucas, but I suppose they both have much bigger fish to fry. And no deleted scenes (though a couple of glimpses can be caught in the featurette).

Nevertheless, Willow remains a charming, enjoyable film, certainly suitable for the family (though little’uns might get more than a bit scared at Bavmorda’s treatment of Elora Danan). Despite its flaws, it’s still eminently watchable. Especially when you’re stuck on the couch, sick, looking for something heartwarming and not too difficult to follow.

And the chain will set you free

Indepedent coffee houses often tremble and protest when Starbucks, like the Star Wars Empire, moves into town. But, remarkably enough, Starbucks may actually be increasing the business for independent coffee…

Indepedent coffee houses often tremble and protest when Starbucks, like the Star Wars Empire, moves into town.

But, remarkably enough, Starbucks may actually be increasing the business for independent coffee houses. While Starbucks’ revenue continues to grow, so do indies in aggregate, and indies often find that their business continues or increases when Starbucks moves in.

A third of Americans who drink coffee away from home order gourmet coffee from a specialty shop, according to Mintel. Many people believe that Starbucks increases the overall market, attracting new customers to the product who then patronize the independent provider next door. “When a Starbucks opens, it educates the market, expanding it for everyone,” says Bruce Milletto, president of Bellissimo Coffee InfoGroup Inc., a Eugene, Ore., company that provides consulting services to independent coffeehouses.
The coffeehouse may be that rare thing in retailing — a concept that doesn’t heavily favor chains. Never mind that critics of Starbucks routinely compare it with Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Starbucks simply doesn’t enjoy the advantages that have made Wal-Mart the bane of countless Main Street retailers — lower prices, longer hours, wider selection. The Starbucks offering isn’t less expensive or more extensive than the independent’s, and the chain’s hours often are shorter.
This may be why, contrary to popular perception, independents still dominate the industry. Independents and small chains boast a 61% share of the industry, says Mintel. In fast food, by contrast, independents and small chains hold only a 27% share, according to Technomic Inc., a Chicago food-consulting firm. Indeed, the coffeehouse industry boasts only one big chain — Starbucks, with 3,167 company stores in the U.S. Of the countless others that have tried mimicking it, not one has matched its success. The nation’s second-largest chain, Diedrich Coffee Inc., of Irvine, Calif., boasts only 237 U.S. stores.

Frankly, I like Starbucks. And the one by our Safeway is convenient enough that we often grab a (pricy) bite to eat and caffeine to quaff when we go shopping. But I’ve patronized the indies, too, and am glad they’re there. I’ll never be the type to hang out at the coffee shop and blog, or chat with the other regulars. But when I look for someplace convenient, I’m not married to any one brand or logo. If the coffee (or coffee drinks) are good, I’m there.

And now you know … the rest of the story

Things for the weekend: Friday Borrow Doyce’s truck (and Doyce) to buy the fencing supplies listed below. Consult with him on fencing stuff (he being a fencing expert and all)….

Things for the weekend:

Friday

  • Borrow Doyce’s truck (and Doyce) to buy the fencing supplies listed below. Consult with him on fencing stuff (he being a fencing expert and all). Maybe even do some bit o’ layout of the fence thing.
  • Star Wars RPG tonight. Everyone leveled last time, woo-hoo! And Doyce is going to try some new techniques to try to keep us all on task (as we used to say in the Ed Biz).
  • Figure out when we’re going to watch Firefly.

    Saturday

  • Pre-gathering for delegates to the Episcopal Diocese of Colorado convention coming up next month. Learn the rules, learn the agenda, learn a bit about church politics and the search for the new bishop (that gets decided next spring).
  • Come home and build a fence. Or two. Pictures will (eventually) be posted.
  • Wish Justin a happy birthday.

    Sunday

  • Hey, more morning churchy stuff. Go fig.
  • Since I’ve dropped my Justice Squad game and campaign (more about which some other time, with distance), there’s been talk about some other sort of gaming thang in the afternoon. Either that, or more fence building.

    So, just about as usual. How domestic.

  • Thenthitive Thursday

    I’ve been finding myself participating in fewer and fewer of these (and I do need to update my link list to that end). I’m not sure why. Part of it…

    I’ve been finding myself participating in fewer and fewer of these (and I do need to update my link list to that end). I’m not sure why. Part of it is that the novelty of the meme has worn off. Part of it is that the same questions keep coming up. And part of it is just that things change.

    Hmmmm.

    Anyway, here’s the Thursday Thumb-Twiddler, which, I promise you, will be the last one I drop …

    Continue reading “Thenthitive Thursday”

    This or That Potpourri

    It’s This-or-That Tuesday!…

    It’s This-or-That Tuesday!

    Continue reading “This or That Potpourri”

    The Organization Man I

    Over the weekend, Margie and I both did some reorganizing of our various RPG character sheets, notes, etc….

    Over the weekend, Margie and I both did some reorganizing of our various RPG character sheets, notes, etc.

    Continue reading “The Organization Man I”