Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Small World

I LOVE the accordion, though maybe not as much as Steve Urkel did.  I think it should be appreciated and even seen as sexy (if used right). Huey Lewis and The News put an album out in late 1988 ("Small World") that used the accordion in a wonderful and tastefully wacky way...

On one of the Korgis' songs I've been listening to you can hear whispers of the quirky musical instrument. The track (called "Hunger") is appropriately titled because it makes you feel the singer's longing for someone, something,  he can never have...he sounds like a less theatrical, more melancholy Barry Manilow, with his own "Mandy" thing going on...

"Hunger" is haunting, seductive and somehow makes you want to tango.

The Korgis Kollection
The Mist
Every once in a while you discover a horror film that makes you wrestle with the ending for days afterward. It seeps into you and causes restless sleep, and not just because it's scary. Based on the Stephen King novella of the same name, The Mist mixes the unimaginable with the all-too-familiar and may very well make you feel uncomfortable and unnerved. And like so many of Stephen King's works, this film takes you somewhere you think of as safe -- in this case, the grocery store -- and makes it the creepiest place around.

The incredible cast (including Thomas Jane and Andre Braugher playing neighbors pitted against each other) couldn’t have done a better job...though maybe Marcia Gay Harden might have toned it down JUST a tad. She plays a religious fanatic the way it’s been played in countless horror films before (think Piper Laurie in Carrie, but slightly less bitter).  I love it though, when a man she’s trying to preach to responds with: "I do believe in God, I just don’t think He’s the vengeful, bloodthirsty (replace curse word with family friendly word here) you make him out to be."

Whereas I don’t remember the book being so deep...the movie really captures the current cultural divide and the absolutes people cling to so desperately, often causing them to lash out at others who politely disagree.

I won’t ruin the ending, but let’s just say it blindsides you. It throws out so much that really gets to you: nail-biting suspense...humanity...inhumanity (a lot of the people are far worse than the supernatural creatures they battle inside the grocery store), emotions...tough, protective women...sensitive, protective men...

The Mist is an intense experience and never quite the film you're expecting, a combination making it a cut above (way above!) all the other horror films you've seen until now. The only complaint I have? Someone needs to teach Thomas Jane (who otherwise is amazing in this!) how to properly cry.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles

Sure, I've gotten over my disappointment that "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" was canceled. It WAS a great sci-fi show, with lots of emotional complexities buried under a seemingly reserved family dynamic, but mourning a program's loss needs to be quick and swift because it's never coming back.

Still that doesn't mean I can't listen to Bear McCreary's lovely score!:)

The music is more low key and chill than anything that ever came from the movie's soundtrack...it's just wonderful to listen to when you want something without words and are in a contemplative mood.

Another tv soundtrack that's amazing (and in this case, FAR better than the show) is:

The L Word

It's everything I had hoped the show would be: smart, pretty, loving, spiritual, complex, sincere...needless to say (if you've seen even one episode!) the show was none of these...


On last night's "24" Agent Walker (played by superb actress Annie Wersching)  continued her very interesting and intense descent from a previously level-headed and reserved by-the-book FBI agent to a self-destructive break-the-rules-with-a-vengeance woman who (we now learn) may or may not have been sexually abused the first time she went undercover with the Russian mob.

While it's true that a LOT of off-screen things happened to Agent Walker between season 7 and 8 (the one currently airing on Fox Monday nights) it's still hard swallow such a swift change in character; with a less talented actress, it would be near impossible...in last night's episode we learned much more about why Walker had the nervous breakdown that was mentioned in the January 19th episode...and I still have a hard time believing that it's supposed to be connected solely to her interrogating a witness and not more related to the horrible things she experienced while undercover and probably will again now that's she been reassigned (unofficially) to infiltrate the mob.

I know it's just a tv show and Wersching (who I might have already mentioned is doing a superb job!) is just playing a fictional character. Still...it saddens and even unnerves me to see the difference between what the cost of recklessness is to a woman who is basically doing the same things (minus last week's saw incident) Jack is and paying a much higher price...that is if we're talking about all of this unwinding being a direct result of Walker's harshly interrogating her witness...I'm still not sure that's what this is all about...

Next week's preview looks even more disturbing as in it we see Wersching's character in a towel  and fresh out of the shower being summoned by Vladimir, the man who physically abused her the first time she went undercover. Even in a brief glimpse of her face it's easy to tell that she does not want to respond. The whole situation (being undercover and having to put up with physical, and possibly sexual, assault or risk breaking her cover) is a very uneasy one and (if handled right) has the potential to pose one of the most thought-provoking questions "24" has ever raised...what exactly is a person capable of going through when committed to a job that involves national security but puts her in serious jeopardy, in both bodily and emotional harm.

Jack's drug addiction horrors (as a result of his undercover work during the third season) sort of pale next to this.
I'm up late because I've been having nightmares lately and would rather not have another tonight...

very scary dream early this morning...scary because while the content was scary i didn't flinch at all and what does that say about me? in the dream I was in a room with two metal boxes of organs (all the organs and innards of the human body) that were probably from two different humans and I was supposed to shift through everything...it was extremely slimy and there was someone to the right of me (I don't know who) when all of the sudden a newspaper article (which I couldn't read) and a cat appeared next to me (the cat was my childhood cat Boots, I think)...the cat started purring and said, "See what happens when you fall in love with humans." or maybe it was: "see what happens when humans fall in love."

awfullll except that the cat wanted me to pick him up and hug him, which I did...there were other dreams before that, but I don't remember them...

I think I had the dream because I'd seen a Francis Bacon painting the night before and his stuff always creeps me out:

(be warned: this link will show you one of the creepiest pictures ever!!)

http://www.sai.msu.su/wm/paint/auth/bacon/painting.jpg