Wednesday, October 31, 2007

The Equalizer

Finally, the TV show The Equalizer is coming to DVD! I am so excited about this (no, really!)! Okay, enough with the exclamation marks (but I'm really excited about this). JamesEdward Woodward plays the titular character, a man seeking to make restitution for lives taken and evils done by helping others who are having trouble. Slum lords, bullies, loan sharks, etc., should all beware The Equalizer.

As much as I idolize Superman (bear with me), I recognize that he is a fictional character . I will never be able to fly except in a plane or by jumping off a tall building, cliff, or other large object. In the immortal words of The Tick, "Gravity is a harsh mistress." I'll never have x-ray vision no matter what the ads in comic books claim. No, the most I can do is kind of look like him (or one depiction of him, anyway) if I lose ## pounds and start working out fairly hard.

The Equalizer is also a fictional character, a much more realistic one, however. I would love to have his connections, money, and force of will in order to do the types of things he did in the show. The average person needs a champion, someone who will stand up for them, someone who will defend them and protect them. This is something I feel like I could manage. And I've actually prayed about this. God's response to me is that I do have that power available to me: it's called "prayer".

And really, who better to know what's needed in any particular case? The best I can do is seek vengeance and be punitive and retributive. But God can speak to the hearts of all involved, touching them where they need it the most, bringing true healing and freedom. Eventually, even Pharaoh let the Hebrew people go. Sure, he regretted his decision, changed his mind, and paid for it with his life, but that was his choice.

Really, how exciting is that? We have the power of God available to us to accomplish things and help improve people's lives. Not that we make things happen according to our whims, but opening our hearts to the truth of God's desires can change us from the inside out and maybe lead us to become part of the solution rather than running away in hopes the problem(s) will just disappear.

Continued Assault

Why are we hearing every nuance of Britney Spears' inability to provide even merely competent parenting to her two sons? "Normal" people would have had their kids yanked by now. And Paris Hilton? I'm glad she's not going to Rwanda (or maybe she is). But she was someone in Europe for some fashion show. And maybe Lindsay Lohan is actually cleaning up her life. I hope she is.

But this is not news. In fact, very much of what's shown on "legitimate news" shows is actually news. It's histrionics designed to turn one's focus away from "real" news. No, we're constantly being assaulted by these immaterial stories as though they matter. If only I could figure out how to convince the powers that be that these things are truly unimportant to the public at large, and the harping/hyping of these irrelevancies drags the reporting source down to that level or lower.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

To Record or Not To Record, How do you do both at once?

I likes my Saturday morning cartoons. I likes 'em a lot. But not enough to actually get up and watch them. Oh no, there's sleep and stuff. So I record them. Silly, I know, but all in all, not a bad vice to have.

I've also discovered that I can't record multiple tapes worth of shows. I never get to watching them. That's why, as discussed in a previous post, I limit the shows I watch and tend not to watch the serial shows, even as good as they might be (I'm not looking at you 24, Lost, Prison Break). All that to say I have one tape I use for recording cartoons, House, Bones, Pushing Daisies, and Life. And I don't set VCR to record weekly, just one week at a time. I don't know why.

Two weeks ago, I recorded cartoons from Fox rather than CW (Fox has horrible cartoons, and I'm sad that they're going to do the programming for The CW starting fall 2008 or 2009 — I guess my Saturday mornings will be completely free). So I didn't have to watch all of those. Bones and House were preempted by baseball, so all of my shows were a miss last week.

This afternoon, I watched Pushing Daisies (I really really like this show), and two minutes into watching Life, my cartoons started. Apparently I had rewound to watch Life at one point, fallen asleep, and didn't fast forward to record the cartoons.

My life is so hard (as my mother is fond of reminding me).

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Sci-Fi Geekiness

I took a little quiz (I'm sure the link is down below somewhere). I really would have liked to be on Babylon 5, but I don't think I'm distrustful of the government enough, nor do I really believe in psychics. (And yes, I know these are all made-up shows, that none of it is real. But if I could chose...)





Which sci-fi crew would you best fit in with? (pics)
created with QuizFarm.com
You scored as Moya (Farscape)

You are surrounded by muppets. But that is okay because they are your friends and have shown many times that they can be trusted. Now if only you could stop being bothered about wormholes.


Moya (Farscape)


94%

Enterprise D (Star Trek)


81%

Serenity (Firefly)


75%

Heart of Gold (Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy)


69%

SG-1 (Stargate)


63%

Babylon 5 (Babylon 5)


63%

FBI's X-Files Division (The X-Files)


50%

Andromeda Ascendant (Andromeda)


50%

Deep Space Nine (Star Trek)


44%

Nebuchadnezzar (The Matrix)


44%

Galactica (Battlestar: Galactica)


38%

Millennium Falcon (Star Wars)


31%

Bebop (Cowboy Bebop)


25%


Thursday, October 11, 2007

Cinema Paradiso

Another stunning Italian masterpiece. I need to stop watching these Italian films because invariably they make me cry. (Yes, I'll admit it.) Except for Fellini films—I just don't get them at all. (Yes, I'll admit that, too.)

The version I saw was the Director's Cut, meaning it was 174 minutes (that's nearly 3 hours) rather than 123 minutes as stated on the sleeve. Imagine my surprise when the movie didn't seem about to conclude at 118 minutes. I mean, there must be several minutes of credits at the end, right? And there were several minutes of credits at the real end of the movie. Kind of a funny thing: in film where bits have been snipped due to damage or censorship (prominent in this movie), you know how the film just kind of jumps? well, the credits were done this way, too. You'd be reading along and then Bam! (sorry, Emeril)

I really liked the first two hours of the movie. The first hour was about the main character, Toto, and his relationship to the Cinema Paradiso, the local theater. Or, more correctly, his relationship to Alfredo, the theater's projectionist. The kid playing Toto (short for Salvatore—I didn't make it up; I'm just telling you) is absolutely adorable and does a great job. I thought it odd that he looks like he's six but then talks about now being in fifth or sixth grade (which means he's about 11 or 12).

The next hour was about a teenaged Toto and his continued relationship with Alfredo and his budding romance with Elena. Alas, it's not to be. Very Romeo & Juliet with out the death part. Except for Alfredo. But don't worry, you find out Alfredo died in the first few minutes of the movie. The next two hours (the first two) are then a flashback to all that Alfredo meant to Toto growing up. And how important movies were/are to him, too.

The third hour was a little less intriguing. Toto sees a young girl who is the spitting image of Elena and follows her. It sounds creepy but never sinks into creepiness, even when imminent. I'll just say in conclusion for the third act, that once something is over, it should be over without you trying to make it something it's not or can't be (this statement is relative to the story, not the movie). I guess with the greatness of the first two hours, the mediocrity of the third hour is a real letdown.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Watching

Previous post was started this past weekend, and I just decided to finish it up rather quickly. Yahoo! sucks; that's all there is to it.

Exhaustion set in and took its toll. I stayed home from work. So I caught up on my taped shows (Pushing Daisies and Life—I love both of them). Then I watched a Netflix movie, Swimming Upstream. It's a pretty good movie based on a true story about an Australian swimmer named Tony Fingleton and the battle he has with his dad. His dad was a total 100% jerk, and that's being very kind. Very kind indeed.

Watching Velvet Goldmine again, after several years since the last viewing, primarily because I now know Christian Bale is in it (along with Ewan MaGregor and Jonathan Rhys Meyers). I gave it 3 stars before; I wonder if my opinion will change?

Musicmatch Jukebox versus Yahoo!

For years, I've used Musicmatch Jukebox (MMJB) for my main listening pleasure. I even paid(!) for an upgraded version to be able to rip my CDs at higher rates, burn better, etc. Yahoo! bought MMJB in 2004 in order to become a major player in the music market. And that was the beginning of the end.

To be fair, the features of MMJB were amped up. If you paid for it, that is.

Long story made short: Yahoo! has now ended the life of MMJB and thinks MMJB users should be quite happy to use Yahoo! jukebox. Everything I've read says this program is worse than even the free version of MMJB. And they're slowly killing off capabilities of MMJB (because they can't force you to delete it), abilities like doing auto-CD lookup when you insert a disc so you don't have to type in all the information. Who would find that useful?

Why kill a good thing? It does nothing to win people over. And I certainly don't want to pay for trash programming. Grrrr!!!!!

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Spirited Away (Sen to Chihiro no kamikakushi)

I finished watching Spirited Away last night. It's one of the most amazing movies I've ever seen. I might even have to say it's better than Akira, and I never thought that would happen.

Basic Story: Chihiro is moving to a new house with her parents. Her dad takes a detour. Eventually, they find themselves at what appears to be an abandoned carnival. Except there's plenty of cooked food, which the parents start gobbling. After many plates, they turn into pigs. Chihiro did not eat any of the food, but she cannot leave, either, and certainly not without her parents. She eventually winds up an indentured servant to the "owner" of the establishment in order to eventually free her parents from the curse. She meets some unbelievable characters along the way and has some wild adventures. Wackiness, tenderness, morality, and just plain fun are all very much in evidence throughout the film.

How can I explain how great this movie is? On Netflix, I rated it 5 stars because I couldn't rate it higher. Stunning animation; great, fleshed-out characters; jaw-dropping ideas. There is nothing wasted in this movie. In one scene, Chihiro is putting on her shoes just like a 10-year-old girl would. Considering that Chihiro is supposed to be a 10-year-old girl, that actually works. Her running down the stairs (with no handrail) on the outside of the building reminds me of some very serious "dreams" I've had.

What a great movie!