Posted By Peter W

Here it is!  My list of the top music in 2010.  Since I don’t much use play lists, these are albums not songs.  Quite a bit of variety this year.

1. Gorillaz - Plastic Beach : Not all parts of this album is to my taste, but I can’t help being amazed at the quality and the variety.

2. Gaslight AnthemAmerican Slang

3. Band Of HorsesInfinite Arms : The better of the two albums on the list this year that make me yearn for new Fleet Foxes material.  Great tunes.

4. LCD SoundsytemThis Is Happening ; Again, diverse, interesting, experimentally new.

5. Ben Folds & Nick HornbyLonely Avenue :  Great collaboration.  Amazing tunes and lyrics.

6. Paul WellerWake Up The Nation : And he did.  Pperhaps the most under rated performer today!!

7. Take That : This one has to grow on you.  A little bit of Green Day.  A little Muse.  Along with some Kinks-like lyrics.

8. Mumford and SonsSigh No More : The other one that echoes Fleet Foxes.  This is a great album, but sometimes seems very repetitive in its tunes.

9. Deer HunterHalcyon Digest

10. Cee Lo Green - Lady Killer : Not my usual musical fare, but just full of raw energy, with a couple of really killer songs.

11. Elton John and Leon RussellThe Union : For sure a couple of old timers, but put them together and magic seems to happen.  There was a big swing back to old school this past year with Plant’s new album, The Black Keys and others.  This is the one that seems to pull off “old school” the best.

12. Peter WolfMidnight Souvenirs : OK, a little more old school.  this one has solid, catchy tunes and moving performances.


 
Posted By Peter W

I haven’t put too many book reviews up lately, so for those who care here are a few book suggestions, primarily fiction and primarily science fiction, ‘cause that’s what I do.

1.  Robert Sawyer’s Wake and Watch were probably the two best reads that I came across this year.  I got to the former a little late, but the latter was published this year.  These two books follow a teenage girl’s discovery of an emerging AI on the Internet.  Sawyer’s writing is always packed with hard science due to his own background.  These books also seem to have been a place for Sawyer to slip in a lot of interesting anecdotes and bits of information that he must have been sitting on for some time.  This makes for an humorous read in some cases.  Fortunately there is another volume in this series on the way, Wonder.

2.  Another author that I discovered this year in the hard SciFi realm was John Scalzi.  I first found Scalzi through his non-fiction book, Your   Will be Graded, which is a collection of entries from his blog, “Whatever”.  The Blog has since become a daily favourite and in many instances an inspiration for my own Blog.  The Old Man’s War series, which currently has four volumes, has been a refreshing read.  I’ve read the first two, Old Man’s War and The Ghost Brigades, and found them to be superbly written in the style of Robert Heinlein, full of intelligent ideas and mature excitement.  Looking forward to the last two.

3.  Two series that have published new works this year are Brian Herbert’s additions to the Dune series and Stirling’s additions to The Change series.  The Winds Of Dune fills in some of the stories from just before and after the primary Dune book.  As such, it would be of limited interest to anyone who was not immersed in the Dune series, but, like an old friend’s visit, it is still a welcome addition to the saga.  The High King of Montival is the latest contribution by Stirling to the story of The Change, and Rudy’s almost painfully slow progress on his pilgrimage.  I find that reading Stirling always involves a fair bit of gleaning through is Dickenesque writing.  To my mind he just goes way overboard on description, but some people may like that sort of thing.  The story, though, is very engaging, and Stirling will continue to have my attention, even though he plans to use another two opus works to finish the story.

4.  One of the most unique books I came across this year, already reviewed once earlier in this Blog, was The Child Thief by Bram.  This is a dark, violent twist on Peter Pan.  This original reboot depicts Peter Pan as obsessed with the war against evil in Neverland, willing to kidnap children from the real world to fight in his battle.  Surprisingly well written, almost poetic in places.

 


 
Posted By Peter W

   It is a good thing that TRON is full of good CGI stuff and was in 3D, because that's all it really had going for it.  It was a really cool looking film, -not great or beautiful, just cool.  3D suits a film which is a glorified computer game quite well.  As for the plot, -I really did have trouble staying awake at some points, -especially during the long explanitory dialogues.  The acting was passable, but the story was predictable and shallow.

This movie gets a B- (and that's giving it the benefit ofthe doubt.)


 
Posted By Peter W

   I guess it is time for my top movie list.  I reserve the right to add a few later on as there are some promising ones I haven't gotten around to seeing yet, -specifically "Black Swan", "Life During Wartime" and "The King's Speech".

   So far, though, I'd list it like this:

1. Inception -  Undoubtedly the most complex and intelligent movie I've ever seen.

2. The Social Network - Like I said before, there's only so much you can do with narcissism, but a movie that can use sharp dialogue to keep you engaged has got my attention.

3.  Kick Ass - Just because it was so audacious.

4. Winter's Bone - A powerful look at the dry rot in the heart of the American Dream.

5. 127 Hours - A movie that just had a lot of reference points for me, allowing me to enjoy it that much more.

6. Iron Man 2 - Stuff blows up!

7. Submarine - The movie I saw at TIFF that never got released.  Too bad.

8. Let Me In - I go against the critics.  I thought it was as good as, and perhaps even a bit better than the original. 

Conspicuously missing from the list is "Youth In Revolt", which was the biggest disappointment of the year, and the new Harry Potter film, which comes across as a very long trailer for the next one. 

Did I miss any?


 
Posted By Peter W

   In addition to a few days of walking on beaches, exploring swamp hummocks, getting a lot of good photographs and finding some good restaurants, I also got a chance to do a fair bit of reading and even a lot of writing.  Over the next week, I'll be dipping into all of this for ideas.

   The drive down to Floriday amounts to about 24 hours, which I did in 3 stints on the way down (stopping for a day at Huntington Beach in S. Carolina) and 2 long stints on the way back.  Keeping me company during this driving was Keith Richards in the form of his new autobiography, Life, on audio book.  I have to say that it was a delight to listen to.  His stories about the escapades of the Stones, especially during the 60s and 70s was delightfully entertaining.  His recounting and self criticism of the horrors of heroine use are dramatic and equally interesting. It's definately a dramatically strong book with lots of drug stories and a generous dose of profanity.  Although he gets off on a few tangents about certain unknown people (to me at least), giving more details than anyone probably wants, I have to say that at least 75% of the book is engaging and insightful.  I recommend it to anyone, but it probably would be best for those over 30 and under 65.  I would also strongly advise the audio book, as it is superbly read by Johnny Depp (a close friend of Richards') who brings his acting genius fully to bear on the text.  I'm sure it is identical to what we'd hear if Richards read it himself.  All in all, it made the miles fly by.

This book gets an A-.


 
Posted By Peter W

     The story line for Hereafter follows three separate situations, merging them together into one common point in the final ten minutes of the film.  As storytelling goes, it’s nicely done, bringing into play a kind of mystical synchronicity which suits the central ideas of the story well.  Each of the stories has its own compelling weight.  The acting and all the technical cinema stuff was quite good...

     And yet the movie left me unsatisfied.  It’s like it was all introduction and then when things got more meaningful it was over.  As the final scene faded out I certainly didn’t feel like there was any kind of closure.  The writer would probably tell you that this was deliberate, but it still didn’t feel right.  ...Like a superficiality. 

This movie gets a C+ ... or maybe a B-  ...somewhere around there.

 

OK, enough of these slow paced movies.  I need to see something blow up!


 
Posted By Peter W

     Yes, this is an unsolicited promotional statement.

     I think that Cinema Clock is a fantastic  movie guide website that more people should use.  It is much more than just a source of info for where and when movies are playing, although it does a great job of that.  It is the reviews and ratings of movies that are really valuable.  Hundreds of reviews are regularly posted for movies, even obscure ones.  The reviews involve ratings along with demographic information so that when you look up a movie you not only can see overall ratings (on a scale of 10), but it is analysed according to age and gender.  So you can determine that a movie appeals more to women or men, and whether it appeals to young or old.  You can then go to the actual reviews to check out comments and even respond to them (if you really have nothing better to do). 
   
    Hundreds of reviews by ordinary viewers is a nice change from the slick and often smug reviews written my critics in the media or accessed on Rotten Tomatoes.  They have their place, but often they don’t jive with the opinions of the average moviegoer.  And if the latest installation of some mindless, frat-boy comedy gets great reviews from viewers, but is panned by the critics, it is easy enough to figure out by looking at the spread of ratings and the actual reviews. 

     One of my favourite types of movies is the art film that only gets ratings of 10 or 1.  People either love it or hate it.  Those are often the most interesting films, although occasionally they tend to be stinkers.    One of each of these are Uncle Boonmee and Never Let Me Go

     Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, is a movie from Thailand which got amazing reviews from the art film circle when it originally came out.  It is listed as a comedy, which I just don’t get.  In fact I don’t think I got it at all.  It’s possible that I missed something, especially since I think I slept through some of the scenes where the camera remained unmoving on a bush or tree for several minutes, or a monk taking an uneventful shower.  The most interesting scene involved what I think was a catfish raping a woman.  (At least it wasn’t a typewriting, as in Naked Lunch.)  If this film was complimented just because it was a film from Thailand, that’s like praising a scribbled drawing from a blind person.  It’s not enough.  Seldom have I ever been in a film where I was looking forward to the end of the ordeal.  I kept looking for some kind of “past lives” theme or some layers of meaning, - and they were totally elusive. 
This one gets an F

     Never Let Me Go is a Sci-Fi thriller based on a famous novel by Kazuo Ishiguro.  It is a slow, plodding, vey gothic film, which is why it scored a lot of very low ratings.  However, it’s strength is in the darkness of the mood and the depressing melancholy of the characters, -if you’re into that sort of thing.  It does what it does exceptionally well, but it’s not and never attempts to be an action film.  Lots of people can’t handle that.  Not popular with the younger crowd, although it does have a decent romantic side to it. 
This one gets a B+


 
Posted By Peter W

     The theme of “innocence to experience” or “coming of age” has been a predominant theme in literature, drama and film throughout history.  From Pollyanna to Anne of Green Gables, -from David Copperfield to Harry Potter literature stories have painted the challenges of growing up on the backdrop of innocence and in that contrast has sharply defined many human qualities.  Ken Wilber says that the time of greatest personal  evolution and development occurs up to the mid twenties.  This is when major elements of our personality and how we see the world are established.  Afterwards, there are other challenges connected to jobs, relationships and parenting, but the moral and conceptual fabric of our lives is largely crystallized during that first 25 years.  (Until, perhaps, the onset of mid life crisis or retirement.)   It’s a question of horizontal versus vertical development.

     I am very partial to “coming of age” movies, telling stories of adolescents, teenagers or young men and women learning how to become who they’re predominantly going to be as an adult.  Since I’ve spent my life as an educator in several arenas, I see this development as the critical element of education.  The minor part of education is knowledge.  The major part of it is the development of values, perceptual and conceptual perspectives, and the evolution of consciousness/awareness so that this knowledge has a fertile medium in which to grow.  Coming of age movies highlight these particular challenges and focus them in ways that usually can’t be done in a love story, historical drama or other genre (-not that these don’t have their own charm).  That's why so many of them appear here.  Movies like "12 And Holding" or "Submarine" spotlight those developmental qualities and add to our understanding of them.
     That’s a really long, roundabout way of introducing the movie, “It’s Kind of a Funny Story”.  Stupid name, but great movie starring Zach Galifianakis and newcomer Kier Gilchrist as a 16 year old boy who checks himself into a psycho ward because he’s worried that he might commit suicide.  There, he learns about his own life and his place in the world.  It’s a dark comedy, reminiscent of “One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest” but from a teenager’s point of view.  I was impressed with the general quality of the film, especially Gilchrist’s acting which manages to capture a teenager’s inner psychological demons with subtle facial and vocal expressions.  It’s not a kid’s movie, but it’s one that adolescents would probably identify with and enjoy.
     This movie gets a B++.

 

funny story

 


 
Posted By Peter W

The series of books by S. M. Stirling, called The Change, take place in our world when all technology stops working.  Most of the world's population does not survive, and the remaining people have to realign their lives along more primitive skills in a landscape where there are lots of hazards due to starvation.  It is an epic story, spanning several generations and describing brave characters putting civilization back together again.

The books are well written, although Stirling has a passion for description reminicent of Charles Dickens.  Most of the time that description reveals the details of primitive technology showing amazing research and deep thought.  There are some times, though, that the description gets a little long winded, where scanning or skipping a few paragraphs is necessary in order to maintain interest.  As a result, this opus series is now into its seventh volume, with another two on the drawing board.  As much as I'm enjoying them, I can't help but wonder if the main character (or maybe the author, or me) might die of old age before he gets home from his quest.  I don't relish the idea of having to wait another two years in order to see the ending of this story.

For those of us with an interest in survival and primitive technology, I really strongly recommend these books.  As I said, Stirling has done his research, and the post-devestation world he paints is realistic and enlightening. 

SciFi and Fantasy series each often create a whole unique universe in which to play.  Some of the best works of fiction fall into this category.

The best, I believe, is the Dune series, first created by Frank Herbert and carried on by his son.  The original seven books start off masterfully, but tend to become a little less engaging as they progress.  The dozen or so penned by his son, Brian Herbert, have all been of a very high quality. This series has spawned two computer games, a board game, and three movies. The scope of the story is majestic and profound.

Orson Scott Card's Ender series is a close second.  The five Ender books and the five Shadow books work together to tell one complete story.  Two of the books won Hugo awards and the first Shadow book really should have, easily being one of the top ten SciFi books ever written. 

His Dark Materials, a series by Philip Pullman, is surrounded by controversy, because of its authors pro-atheist statements.  (The first volume is best known as "The Golden Compass".)  Personally I don't understand this.  While Pullman's books are clearly anti-religion and church, they don't strike me as being atheistic.  There is a spiritual thread running through the books which has a Deist or Taoist sentiment. The story is rich, and the ideas are thought provoking. 

The newest series that has demonstrated its excellence is the WWW Trilogy ("Wake", "Watch" and "Wonder").  Robert Sawyer has always struck me a little pompous and full of himself (especially on his web site), but that seems to work in his favour in this series, where he is really spilling his thoughts onto the pages, putting forth opinions on a variety of random topics, but managing to still achieve some cohesion.  The central concept of an emerging intelligence on the Internet explores the nature of consciousness in a way only SciFi can. 

Other series would include Farmer's Riverworld series, Niven's Ringworld series and Pohl's Gateway series.  Of course you can't forget the grandparents of SciFi/Fantasy, The Lord of the Rings and the Foundation series (although I've never been that impressed with the latter.)
Creating and animating a universe is one of those things only SciFi and Fantasy can do properly.


 
Posted By Peter W

Here is a quick review of two mainstream movies seen in the past few weeks.
     “The Town” is a heist movie starring and directed by Ben Affleck.   The story line has a unique twist of a kidnapper befriending his victim without her knowing who he is, and a relationship developing.  It provides a good setting for Affleck’s conflicted mind and motives and, of course, sets up the emotional scene where the victim finds out that her new lover is the man who terrorized her.  I’m not really giving anything away here.  Right from the beginning, you know it’s destined to happen. 
     The problem I had with the movie is the portrayal of Affleck’s character in a heroic light.  We’re supposed to sympathize with him because he let his victim go and because he wanted to escape his life and start over.  And yet he is portrayed as an unrepentant bank robber who is willing to shoot and kill police officers in a gun fight.  His efforts to turn his life around are weak and ineffective.   I, for one, felt no sympathy for him and was a little offended by the film trying to foster sympathy. 
This movie gets a B. 

     “The Social Network” is the story of Mark Zuckerberg and the inception of Facebook.  Zuckerberg has referred to the movie as fiction, but neither he nor Sean Parker (the developer of Napster) , who was painted in a particularly negative light in the film, have made any strong statements against it, which leads one to believe that they probably just want it to go away.  Zuckerberg is painted as a self centred, socially retarded genius whose prime motivation for developing Facebook was spite felt when he was snubbed by his girlfriend and the frat boys of Harvard’s elite.  Although he is not a very likeable character, he is very interesting and it is easy to understand his motives, perhaps even sympathising with him a little.  This is a great film.  No action.  All cutting dialogue and character development, -so if that doesn’t appeal to you, be warned.
This movie gets an A-.

     Finally, just a work on “Machete”.  I wonder how well it’s dong in Texas and Arizona theatres...


 


 
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Peter W
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Uxbridge, Ontario, Canada

 
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