Rhapsodies

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

by wpmorse on November 7, 2018 at 9:14 am
Posted In: Test

Well, for better or for worse my monster marathon is over and I’m back once again to watching other genres. For this week’s theme I watched what I was originally going to call record store comedy, but one of the films, while certainly funny was more of a drama to me so it’s just films about record stores. 

Wednesday Double Feature - Record Stores - Empire RecordsThe film on my list Allan Moyle’s  Empire Records, tells the story of a day in the life at the eponymous record store. We start the night before, where Lucas (Rory Cochrane) has finally been given the responsibility of closing the store by Joe, his boss (Anthony LaPaglia). Instead of taking the day’s profits to the bank, he drives to Atlantic City, gambling it all away, supposedly to try to make enough money to save the store from being absorbed by a major record franchise. 

From here we are introduced to the rest of the staff. Cute over achiever Corey, played by a very young Liv Tyler, who has just gotten into Harvard, Her worldly best friend, Gina (Renée Zellweger). Troubled Debra (Robin Tunney) who comes to work with a suspicious looking bandage on her wrist and promptly shaves her head, and of course Joe who’s trying not to die of stress as he desperately tries to save the store.

But why worry about any of that? It’s Rex Manning Day!

This film was okay. If I ever rethink suggestions for double features, I think I would put it together with Carwash. For the most part, it’s a film about nothing. Sure we have the future of the store being hung over our head like a sword of Damocles but for the most part, this is just a way to frame all of the other things going on in the store. From Corey’s anxiety to Lucas’s flaky zen-like philosophy and Joe as a frustrated father figure. It’s fun and fluffy with a vibe that makes if feel like the pilot for a potential sitcom. 

Wednesday Double Feature - Record Stores - High FidelityIn the next film in my list Stephen Frears‘s High Fidelity, based on the novel of the same name by Nick Hornby. John Cusack plays Rob Gordon the owner of Championship Vinyl, a used record store in the middle of Chicago. Rob’s in a very bad mood because his girlfriend, Laura just broke up with him. He assures us, constantly, that this isn’t a big deal, in fact, she’s not even in his top five list of his most traumatic breakups. 

As he continues to brew in his self-pity he decides that the best way to begin to improve himself and get over his fear of commitment is to contact all of the women he broke up with on his list and either apologize or find out what went wrong hopefully getting closure. 

What could possibly go wrong?

I enjoyed this film. John Cusack is fantastic as rob, giving us a full portrait of his life as he monologues to us. In fact, I’m pretty sure I’d like to see this done as a play. (Admittedly it has been done as a Broadway musical that so far hasn’t impressed me. ) His performance is mercurial from anger, happiness, and my favorite, complete surprise when things go right for him Even when he believed it wouldn’t.

The rest of the cast is excellent.  Most notably Tim Robbins as Laura’s smarmy rebound boyfriend, and Jack Black as one of Rob’s employees. 

I read a review by  Roger Ebert who thought it served as a movie for all owners of small stores not just record stores and I can see this. Watching this I was reminded of my favorite comic store that is as much a center of the community as it is a place to get your weekly fix.

└ Tags: Movie Reviews
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Rest in Peace, Pete

by wpmorse on November 5, 2018 at 10:01 pm
Posted In: Art

Just saw this on the Woodland Park Zoo’s Instagram Feed.

We have some sad news to share with our zoo family. Our beloved Pete passed away last night at 50 years old. The western lowland gorilla was one of the oldest gorillas in North America and lived a long, enriched life thanks to his team of dedicated keepers who were with him until the very end. The big guy was known as “the gentlemen of gorillas” by his animal caretakers, and many of you grew up watching Pete and Nina (who passed away three years ago) reign as grandmother and grandfather of our gorilla

Pete was my favorite model at the zoo. I hadn’t gotten a lot of good drawings of him this year because his favorite spot was right behind some shrubbery so the only thing I could draw was the same profile over and over.

Not to say it wasn’t a good profile.

So here’s the last sketch I ever did of him in September.

Rest in peace, big guy. Rest in Peace, Pete. You will be missed,

└ Tags: Pete, Silverback, Sketch, Woodland Park Zoo
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Halloween Double Feature – Universal Monster Mash!

by wpmorse on October 31, 2018 at 2:36 pm
Posted In: Art

To finish off this Halloween Film marathon, I wanted to watch something fun, such as some of the better dark films intended for children (or at least for all of us adults with a sense of whimsey.) Regrettably, since I’ve been a fan of that sort thing for a long time, I’ve seen virtually all of the ones that are worth anyone’s time. 

So I went with the next best thing and went to the place where most of these tropes came from, Universal Pictures, monster mashups. These are the films where all of Universal’s monsters come together creating a single continuity and we enjoy every bit of it. 

Halloween Double Feature - Universal Monster Mash! - Frankenstein Meets the wolf man The first of these films, Roy William Neill’s Frankenstein Meets The Wolf Man, (with Lon Chaney Jr. reprising his role as Lawrence Talbot the Wolf Man and Bela Lugosi playing the monster,) starts where The Wolf Man left off. A pair of grave robbers breaks into the Talbot Mausoleum where the body of Larry Talbot lies. However, when the moon shines through the window into his open coffin, Talbot is revived and once again turns into the Wolf Man killing the grave robbers. 

Now that he knows even death cannot free him from the curse, Talbot searches for ways to end his existence. He is told that Dr. Frankenstein may be able to help him. However, he finds Frankenstein’s Castle a ruin. While he desperately searches for any piece of information that can help him. he finds the Monster where he was buried in The Ghost of Frankenstein.  

This was an entertaining film. For the most part, Talbot is the main protagonist with Lugosi’s Monster little more than a shambling automaton. Chaney plays him with just the right amount of pathos (though admittedly he does come off as a bit of a whiner. 

Halloween Double Feature - Universal Monster Mash! - House of FrankensteinIn the next film. Erle C. Kenton’s House of Frankenstein features Boris Karloff as Dr. Gustav Niemann, a scientist who has been following in Dr. Frankenstien’s footsteps and is now in prison for it. He manages to escape with his hunchbacked assistant Daniel (J. Carrol Naish),. He travels to Frankenstein’s Castle disguised as a traveling showman named Dr. Lampini (having killed the real Lampini) It turns out Lampini’s Wagon contains Dracula’s coffin. Of course, Dracula is revived and can the Wolfman and Frankenstein’s monster (Glenn Strange) be far behind? 

This one was okay. Once again, it’s mostly Larry Talbot’s movie. Dracula (John Carradine) pretty much only exists as a subplot which is resolved halfway through the film with little comment, and the monster is little more than a prop until the end of the movie. 

Halloween Double Feature - Universal Monster Mash! - House of DraculaIn the final film on this list, Erle C. Kenton’s The House of Dracula,  Dracula contacts Dr. Franz Edlemann (Onslow Stevens) to try to find a cure for his vampirism. Edelman is skeptical at first but cooperates. Soon Larry Talbot shows up seeking a cure for his Lycanthropy and soon they find the body of Frankenstein’s Monster. 

This film was a lot better balanced than House of Frankenstein giving most of the characters more screen time, except for the Monster. Once again he’s just a prop until the end of the film. 

This is also one of the only films where Talbot gets a happy ending, seemingly cured of his curse. Though he appears to have relapsed by Abbot and Costello Meet Frankenstein

└ Tags: Horror, Movie Review
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Inktober Day Thirty-One – Slice

by wpmorse on October 31, 2018 at 9:26 am
Posted In: Art

Yes! Finished another one! Anyway, today’s prompt, “slice”, might be a bit of a stretch, but it seemed like a good way to segway into making Jack O Lanterns.

This is kind of a call back to a recent portfolio piece of mine regarding a family of witches.  I really need to do more with them one of these days.

Inktober Day Thirty-One - Slice

└ Tags: Inktober, Pen and Ink, Sketch Challenge
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Inktober Day Thirty – Jolt

by wpmorse on October 30, 2018 at 9:45 am
Posted In: Art

“Jolt”, was one of the only prompts that I didn’t have any trouble getting an idea for. In fact, the only thing slowing me down was figuring out the page composition.

It was also an opportunity to bring back my modern, young version of Dr. Frankenstein from last year who I have great plans for in future projects.

Inktober Day Thirty - Jolt

└ Tags: Inktober, Pen and Ink, Sketch Challenge
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Inktober Day Twenty-Nine – Double

by wpmorse on October 29, 2018 at 10:03 am
Posted In: Art

Once again I was mostly stumped on today’s prompt, “double”, I was torn between doing either something involving symmetry or ripping off the mirror scene in Duck Soup.

I finally remembered some of the things I read back when I was into parapsychology, where doppelgangers were a big (and very scary) deal.

Inktober Day Twenty-Nine - Double

└ Tags: Inktober, Pen and Ink, Sketch Challenge
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