Rhapsodies

A comic strip about life, love, accounting, progressive bookstores and the divine power of jazz!
  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
    • First Two Years
    • Year Three
    • Year Four
    • Year Five
    • Year Six
    • Year Seven
    • Year Eight
  • Cast
  • Wiki
  • Other Rhapsodies
  • Store
    • Books
  • Subscribe

Posts

Wednesday Double Feature – Train Stations

by wpmorse on May 10, 2017 at 9:30 am
Posted In: Test

For various reasons, most likely from reading Terry Pratchett’s Raising Steam for the umpteenth time, I was thinking about trains today. But since trains seems to basic I decided to look at films about train stations and the people work around them.

For this week's double feature I watched films about train stations with the Station AgentThe other reason I was drawn to this topic was because of hearing about the film that was Peter Dinklage’s big break, The Staton Agent. Dinklage Plays Finbar McBride a quiet man who works at a model shop. Because his dwarfism tends to draw attention he is very repressed loner pretty much only interacting with his friend and boss at the holy shop. When his friend suddenly dies he finds that he has inherited a small old abandoned train depot. He moves in hoping it will give him the life of solitude he craves.

However when he gets there he finds himself meeting his neighbors Joe, a cuban american played (by Bobby Cannavale,) who runs a hot dog stand while his father recovers from an unspecified illness, who is desperate for friends, and Olivia a divorced artist (played by Patricia Clarkson) who is mourning the death of her son. Together they form  a strange little support group.

This was a nice quiet film. Dinklage does a wonderful job as Fin. For everybody who knows him primarily from his performance as Tyrion in Game of Thrones,  this restrained performance comes as a pleasant surprise. It’s a pleasure watching him gradually coming out of his seclusion and becoming part of the community. The other cool thing about it is this is not just FIn’s story and there are other, bigger, stories going on but since we’re mostly seeing everything through Fin’s eyes we only ever get a handful of snippets and we don’t ever know the whole story.

For this week's double feature I watched films about train stations with Closely Watched TrainsThe next film on my list, Closely Watched Trains (Czech: Ost?e sledované vlaky) by Ji?í Menzel tells the story of Miloš Hrma, played by Václav Necká?who is starting his career as a station dispatcher during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. He’s looking forward to a life of getting paid for doing  nothing… or nearly nothing.

The station staff consists of a band of eccentrics, and Miloš adjusts to his new life quickly. But the war is still going on in the background, and they are instructed to closely watch certain trains in an attempt to capture potential saboteurs. But Miloš is more interested in his affair with a cute train conductor. However this is complicated by a problem with a problem with premature ejaculation…

This is was an interesting film that was really difficult to categorize beyond the category of Czechoslovakian New Wave. It goes from a pleasant sexual farce a bunch of eccentrics working in a train station, then jumps to attempted suicide due the aforementioned ejaculation problem. Then back to a sex comedy as Milos tries to find an “experienced woman” to help him through his problem… Oh yeah did I mention there was a war on?
Despite taking the war and occupation very seriously, the funniest scene is when the station’s collaborationist boss trying to explain all of the German defeats and retreats are all part of a brilliant plan to lead the Allies into a trap.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMJ3z1yrVE8

└ Tags: Film Reviews
Comments Off on Wednesday Double Feature – Train Stations

Happy Alice in Wonderland Day

by wpmorse on May 4, 2017 at 9:02 am
Posted In: Test

Once again we reach the day that Alice dreamed she went down the rabbit hole. (I go into detail how we come to that date here) 

Anyway, in honor of this wonderfully entertaining date let’s celebrate by watching this nice little montage of scenes from Jan Švankmajer‘s Alice. (Set to the music of “Storytime” by Nightwish

└ Tags: Alice in Wonderland
Comments Off on Happy Alice in Wonderland Day

Wednesday Double Feature – Gallows Humor in the New West

by wpmorse on May 3, 2017 at 9:07 am
Posted In: Rhapsodies

For this week I wanted to look at some films fit which under a category I like to call Western Noir. Though the number one films that I thought filled that description, No Country For Old Men, I had already seen. Happily, the other two recommendations I had fit together quite nicely.  So here we have two pieces of gallows humor that tell chilling stories of adultery, betrayal, and murder…. All tragic, if the people doing all this weren’t so comically incompetent.

Wednsensday Double Feature - Gallows Humor in the New west Blood SimpleSince the rules didn’t let me do No Country For Old Men, I started my selection Coen Brothers film, with the first in their career, Blood Simple. Blood Simple tells the story about  Marty, a rich Bar Owner, played by Dan Hedaya, who hires a detective played by M. Emmett Walsh to find out if his wife, Abby (played by Coen regular Frances McDormand) is cheating on him. It turns out that she is and he then hires the Detective to kill her, and her dimwitted lover, Ray (played by John Getz) .

This leads to a fatal double cross, desperate attempts to hide the body and a climax with a desperate cat and mouse game as the detective tries to recover some incriminating evidence as well as taking care of some loose ends (like Ray and Abby, who he didn’t actually kill.)

This was an okay film, but still very much a beginner’s work from the Coen. Though it had a nice raw quality I liked. Having only ever seen Hedaya as the buffoonish Nick Tortelli from Cheers, I barely recognized him as Marty, and Walsh steals every scene he’s in as the detective.

Wednesday Double Feature Gallows Humor in the New West - Kill Me three timesFrom here we go farther west,,, all the way west to the west coast of Australia. With Kill Me Three Times. We pretty much have the same plot as blood simple. A rich motel owner suspects his wife is cheating on him and puts a hit out on her when his suspicions are confirmed. Meanwhile, his wife, who’s trying to get away from him, takes all the money in his safe on the way out. But that’s not all! A dentist is trying to fake his wife’s death for the insurance and all he need is a convenient victim to take her place… And did I mention there’s a crooked cop making things difficult for everyone?

This was… okay. The story was done in a strange Anachronic Order that didn’t have any real recognizable pattern, and was difficult to follow. Like in Blood Simple, the sheer incompetence of all of the crooks made these otherwise horrible things funny.

Otherwise, the best thing about this film was Simon Pegg as the hitman. Having the time of his life playing against type, he’s funny and terrifying at the same time.

└ Tags: Film Noir, Movie Reviews
Comments Off on Wednesday Double Feature – Gallows Humor in the New West

Fairy Tale Sketch Challenge Day Thirty One – The Bremen Town Musicians.

by wpmorse on May 1, 2017 at 9:58 am
Posted In: Art

I Finished my April Fairy Tale Sketch Challenge with the Bremen Town Musicians!Technically I finished the sketch challenge yesterday. but here’s the thing. I do these sketches on 8.5 & ll sheets of bristol board and I do two sketches a sheet. Since I was left with one last sheet of bristol board with only one sketch I finished the month of April on May 1st to make a baker’s dozens. (for anyone who points out that there were only thirty days in April, and thus an even number, I had this same problem for my last Inktober sketch challenge and started this challenge on the last page of my last Inktober challenge.) So anyway. here’s the last sketch of my April Challenge, The Bremen Town Musicians.

The Bremen Town Musicians is a fun one. It’s also one of those ones where there’s really only one image to do that will tell us all we need to know about the story. This doesn’t sound like much of a challenge, but then it hit me, why would this seemingly ridiculous scene of the stack of animals scare the robbers? After that, it occurred to me I’d never seen a version of the image that was from the robbers’ point of view.

Having that smashing through my window in the middle of the night, with the right lighting would certainly frighten me.

└ Tags: Grimm Fairy Tales, Sketch Challenge
Comments Off on Fairy Tale Sketch Challenge Day Thirty One – The Bremen Town Musicians.

Fairy Tale Sketch Challenge Day Thirty The Three Little Men in The Wood

by wpmorse on April 30, 2017 at 8:57 am
Posted In: Art

For today April Fairy Tale Sketch Challenge I drew the Three Little Men in the Wood by the Brothers Grimm. For the penultimate entry in this month’s sketch challenge The Three Little Men in The Wood from the Brother’s Grimm. Another one of the stories where good girl is rewarded and the bad girl is punished. I freely admit that I took liberties with this one. A lot of versions of this story just have the little men (or similar magical beings) just standing around the fire, alone in the forest. In the story, they have a house. For me the alone in the forest thing was much more dramatic… and I’m the one who’s drawing this thing.

└ Tags: Grimm Fairy Tales, Sketch Challenge
Comments Off on Fairy Tale Sketch Challenge Day Thirty The Three Little Men in The Wood

Happy Birthday Duke – Bojangles

by wpmorse on April 29, 2017 at 11:40 am
Posted In: Art

A very happy 118th Birthday to Mr. Duke Ellington. To celebrate let’s listen to his tribute to Bill Robinson, “Bojangles” When I first heard it I briefly assumed it would be a Jazz version of the song “Mr. Bojangles” (even though Jerry Jeff Walker wrote it in 1968) I was pleasantly surprised that it was not.

Enjoy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUyt_jQYw9I

└ Tags: Duke Ellington
Comments Off on Happy Birthday Duke – Bojangles
  • Page 59 of 261
  • « First
  • «
  • 57
  • 58
  • 59
  • 60
  • 61
  • »
  • Last »
Become a Patron! The Webcomic List

Links To Other Webcomics

The Comic Critic

Dresden Codak

Girls With Slingshots

Kinda, Groovy

Gunnerkrigg Court

Heavenly Nostrels

Love And Capes

Multiplex

PVP Online

Precocious

Questionable Content

Scandanavia and the World

Schlock Mercenary

Selkie

Sidekick Quests

Skin Horse

Something Positive

Strong Female Protagonist

Yellow Peril

©2004-2025 Rhapsodies | Powered by WordPress with ComicPress | Subscribe: RSS | Back to Top ↑

 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.