Rhapsodies

A comic strip about life, love, accounting, progressive bookstores and the divine power of jazz!
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Wednesday Double Feature

by wpmorse on July 2, 2014 at 9:33 am
Posted In: Test

Well, for this week I went with two Scandinavian dark fantasies. It’s interesting for the last few months I’ve found myself drawn to Swedish pop media including Let The Right One In, Girl With A Dragon Tattoo and the Wallander mysteries. Perhaps this is a continuation of the trend. Anyway let’s get started.

the-troll-hunter-poster_4465 The first film, Trollhunter, is the story of a of students trying to interview a supposed poacher who may have been hunting bear illegally what they find is the only government liscenced Trollhunter who’s job is to keep Norway safe from these legendary creatures while making sure they stay “legendary”. This is all done in a documentary found footage style which makes the whole premise wonderfully convincing and sometimes even scary.

I’d somehow managed to miss most of the found footage films, despite it being a bit of a fad for the last couple of years,  so this was the first one I’ve ever seen. For the most part it works provided you ignore all of those niggling questions like why does the camera man keep filming when they’re driving (yes I know the arctic landscape is amazing but still….) or why don’t they drop the camera and run (having said that the scene where Kalle the cameraman is separated from the group and trying to avoid the three headed forest troll is probably the most intense scene in the film for me.)

All in all the effects are convincing. I like a cryptozoological approach in my fantasy and a lot of the “scientific” explanations about troll behavior and biology were grade A bullshit. All in all there was only one thing that I had a problem with.

Suspension of disbelief is an interesting and fragile thing and it’s abasing just what effects it. While you can be willing to accept rubber suits that you can see the zipper on you can paradoxically not be convinced by some of the most sophisticated effects. In Trollhunter the trolls were as convincing as they needed to be (admittedly this is one of the advantages of the found footage style, dim light, infrared and grainy shots forgive much) In this case what drew my attention were the bears. One of the running gags in the film is that after a rouge troll is dealt with the government blames it on a bear attack going so far as leaving a dead bear at the scene. Said bears which the camera lingers on far too long all look like something out of a costume party.

Still Trollhunter does what it set out to do and does not need to worry about me being hypercritical about tiny details .

rareexports_4770Since I decided to stay on that theme for this week’s viewing I went from Norway to Finland to watch Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale. I’d enjoyed the two shorts of Rare Exports and to be honest hadn’t heard many good things about the feature length version.

I’m happy to say I was wrong at that front and it was dark fun. There were several genuinely frightening scenes most notably the life sized straw dolls Santa’s helpers exchange the children they steal with and the feral predatory look that a captured helper keeps giving the film’s child protagonist.

But for the most part I liked how the movie was very character driven focussing on our less than nobel protagonists who find themselves in an impossible situation and use their less than nobel skills to get out.

└ Tags: Film, Rare Exports, Reviews, Trollhunter, Trolls
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Tuesday Rhapsodies

by wpmorse on July 1, 2014 at 9:09 am
Posted In: Test

I can’t believe I’m using this one.

But since the Michael Bay version just came out (a movie I have no intention of seeing) that’s as good an excuse as any. I was probably too old to ever really get into any of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle cartoons, but I was a fan of the indie comic so I was happy for Eastman and Laird’s success. I also enjoyed the first movie mostly due to Henson Studios doing the turtle suits and some fairly good fight choreography… in hindsight all of the subconscious racist bits drag it down a lot.

Anyway this week’s Rhapsody is the Turtle Rhapsody.

Enjoy.

└ Tags: Music, Rhapsody, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
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Wasted Luck

by wpmorse on June 30, 2014 at 10:02 pm
Posted In: Rhapsodies

Well after a mostly uneventful day the end of it was very “interesting” indeed. I’d finished the quota for the day and had headed out to run some errands and gone to Ravenna Park which is just a handful of blocks away from my apartment. It had been recommended to me by a colleague as a good change of scene, something that was reinforced for me the other day when I found that someplace pastoral with no wifi was extremely therapeutic.

So that was where I went and it was most pleasant. Unfortunately i had forgotten my pencils so all I could d was relax for a bit and then I headed first to the Dreaming, to say hi to some friends, the good will where I found a good looking green shirt for a steal and finally to browse at University Books. All fun except I was feeling the beginning of a funk possibly triggered by certain news events I’d been following much of the day so I was thinking about going to bead relatively early… It was then I realized I didm’t have my keys.

This of course led to an immediate panic attack and grasping at straws and being VERY temperamental. After ascertaining they were not on my person or backpack I began a frantic and probably hopeless retracing of my footsteps up the Ave. It began to feel more and more hopeless as I went along. After I had asked at two of my stops I figured I was most likely to have dropped them at a place I had been relaxing at, otherwise I would have heard the distinct clink of keys landing on pavement. This meant either the park or the Dreaming, and since at the Dreaming they’d say “Oh look, Bill’s keys lets keep them safe” I went to the park first, all the way figuring out the logistics of having to call the building manager for a new set and borrowing some clippers to free up my bicycle.

Fortunately there they were lying under the tree as I had hoped and I thanked the lords of causality loudly.

The only downside to this to me is one of my little personal superstitions is applying newtonian physics to luck. That means I frequently worry about wasting it on something trivial. Make no mistake I’m glad I found them, but I was also annoyed about loosing them in the first place. Wouldn’t this luck be better served on something more substantial? Like walking away from a nasty bike accident or a lottery ticket.

On the bright side there’s nothing like an adrenaline rush to burn out a funk.

└ Tags: Life
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Wednesday Double Feature

by wpmorse on June 25, 2014 at 9:10 am
Posted In: Test

Thanks to the move and other inconveniences I’ve had the Wednesday double feature on hiatus even longer than the strip. It’ll ta

215px-Pasolini_Gospel_Poster

ke me a little while to get back into the swing of things so I’m going to keep things relatively short.

The first on our agenda is something I’d been curious about for some time as it’s on nearly every critic’s top hundred list of great films I’ve ever seen. Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Gospel According to St Matthew. When I first heard about it what I heard was how Pausolini used mostly amateur performer’s and also because of Pasolini’s politics and atheism it seemed odd for him to make such an overtly religious film. Because of this I expected something in the “Historical Christ” vein… perhaps something like Franco Zeffirelli’s Jesus of Nazarath.

To my surprise this was a perfectly straight adaptaion or perhaps a better phrase is illustration because if there is one thing that a straight, literal adaptation shows us is that once we get past all of the usual story points, miricles, crucificxion and such the Gospels really doesn’t have much of a plot. Jesus, played with great intensity by Enrique Irazoqui, spends most of the film giving sermons. Some of the ones he gives makes him come off as slightly radical.

Pasolini’s directing has a nice, but somber, lyrical quality to it. He reminds me a bit of Bergman the way the camera lingers on faces and landscape. Quite a bit of it kept reminding me of a medieval mystery play. All good.

220px-NotTheMessiahBoxArt-smStill after watching this I felt a bit of a palate cleanser was in order so what better choice than Monty Python’s irreverence? Unfortunatly I have the obvious choice, Life of Brian virtually memorized a fact that kind of defeats the purpose of this exercise of broadening my film horizons. Therefore I went with the musical adaption Not the Messiah (He’s a Very Naughty Boy) by Eric Idle and John Du Prez a comedic oratorio that servesa musical adaptation of the film as Spamalot did for Holy Grail. It also parodies such pieces as Handal’s Messiah. It’s a hoot throwing in everything they can not just from Brian but just about everything from Python that can fit including any excuse to play “The Lumberjack Song” All in all it’s an enjoyable hoot and Eric Idle’s a much better singer than I thought he was.

└ Tags: Christianity, Film, Monty Python, Pier Paolo Pasolini
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Tuesday Rhapsodies

by wpmorse on June 24, 2014 at 8:07 am
Posted In: Test

This week’s Rhapsody is Asian Fold Rhapsody arranged by Richard Saucedo. It includes such Asian folk tunes as the upbeat Chinese The Bamboo Flute, the Japanese Sakura and the Korean Ahrirang. So here it is performed by theGMEA District 9 Middle School Concert Band at Riverside Military Academy. Laura Stanley conducting

└ Tags: Music, Rhapsody, Richard Saucedo
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First Night

by wpmorse on June 18, 2014 at 10:17 am
Posted In: Test

Well I’m happy to say my housing woes are nearing their closure. Yesterday I finished the first wave of moving (that is to say bringing in most of the bare essentials that can be moved in with an SUV and doesn’t require the furniture I’m going to need to find a pickup truck for. At the moment I’m just figuring out where everything is going to go an my biggest frustration is that I’m not seeing how my largest set of bookshelves are going to get up the stairs and pivot in the hallway but anyway… it’s a work in progress

So anyway I had my first night in my own bed in my own apartment for the first time in over three weeks. So far I am pleased. It’s a little noisier than the old place, but the bedroom is a bit more insulated sound wise than the rest of the apartment, so no big deal. Besides it’s more of a case of different sounds than more sounds so it should be fairly easy to get used to.

But other than figuring out where to put everything is going to go, I’m happy. The location is fantastic. Even though I haven’t lived in the U-District for over a decade it has been the center of my social life and entertainment since I’ve moved to Seattle a place where I spent most of my free time. Now I’m in the heart of it with other cool neighborhoods like Wallingford, Greenlake and Fremont really close by! To be quite frank I’m beginning to worry about gaining wait since what were previously half hour long bike rides are now walking distance. To spell it out the Dreaming, one of my favorite hangouts, is now a nine minute walk… and I can order food before I leave because Tokyo First, my favorite teriyaki place is right on the way!

└ Tags: Apartment, Life, Seattle
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