Fri, 28 Dec 2007

Intown Dining
I stopped by The Local for dinner tonight; I had no idea it was a BBQ joint. Smoked meat, brunswick stew, hush puppies, good beer--this is my new favorite place. Except for the smoke-ridden interior, of course. Fortunately, the porch is more than suitable for outdoor suppers, so as long as the weather's warm enough, The Local will be a place to go.

And for a veggie fix, I've discovered Eats. Their menu is kind of like soul food, without the bacon.

Tomorrow will involve American Roadhouse, which is usually closed by time I get into that part of the neighborhood.
posted at: 23:14 | permanent link to this entry

Cloverfield, Godzilla, and 9/11
[Originally posted 12/17/07] ATLMalcontent has linked a third (that I'm aware of) Cloverfield trailer; and I'll use that cue to vent a bit.

Regarding Cloverfield...The part of me that's used to disappointment wants this movie to be a "Godzilla-done-right" that would atone for Hollywood's nerfing of Godzilla '54 and the Great Sea Iguana Redub Project of '99 (which is not deserving of the G. name). This means rendering the amount of carnage and death which would result from Godzilla stomping flat a city of 8 million pedestrians--blood and body parts strewn everywhere, amidst charred corpses and rubble, and abject terror. Now that 9/11 has occurred, there's enough comparison between Godzilla ('54) and those events (and the wars that have followed) that a ground-level remake, or even a new movie using similar story--derived from a 21st century "evil" of choice--would put its monster in proper context for Americans. I'd expend my "one movie per year" quota on such a project, in a heartbeat.
Godzilla vs. 9/11
I worked out the 9/11 comparison while watching the original Godzilla on the 50th anniversary tour (2004), and if I can find what I did with my notes from that viewing, I can't find where I put those notes. Basically, they were along the lines of: Godzilla (the monster) embodies the fears of the atomic age in Japan, as existed several years after Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This fictional monster directly compares to the actual 9/11 jet liners' embodiment of the fears of the Western/Islamic conflict, including relative effectiveness of pre-attack preparations (that is to say, zero), among others. The main practical difference between the two, is that no Oxygen Bomb exists to rid the world of the threat of religious rule.

A new movie, and perhaps a new monster, could represent the result of similar meddling with the Islamic world. If produced using current techniques and CG advancements, such a project would reintroduce the Monster Movie to a 21st century audience, and maybe even spur a review of the original. So, if Cloverfield is such a project, it will be a coup of sorts.
Attack of the Meme?
The trailers hint at something more insidious than just a monster, however. Some of the redshirts seem to be running from human-scale monsters that can chase them. So, perhaps there's a xenomorphic aspect to this monster, which would spread parasitic seeds to people, a la Alien. If so, the Cloverfield monster's offspring would embody the sympathetic memes which divide us in 2007.
Buy the rumor...
Then, there's the part of me that recalls the saying "Buy the rumor, sell the fact." I see Godzilla and Alien aspects from the three trailers I've seen so far, the 'discovered tape' is straight out of Blair Witch Project, and the trailers employ Planet of the Apes' Liberty Head, along with 9/11's collapsing (Empire State?) building and ominous dust cloud. So far, I score -2 Landmarks, +1 body count (speared on Liberty's crown), and +1 Web 2.0 slam (everyone stop to take pictures) for the three trailers, for 3 or 4 cliche points. Combined with the "U.S. site #..." pretext, I assume we end up nuking the city, and the intervening 1:45 is spent offing the cast of yuppies-turned-redshirts. And running, and yelling, and frequent scene cuts. This, by the way, is actually a better answer for filler plots. If you're not going to do something weighty like Godzilla's love triangle, don't bother.

The production team is known for the television hits Lost and Heroes, which are both current shows (barring effects from the Writers' strike). Given that background, and the inrinsic incest of media conglomerates, I'll put a 50%+ chance of crossover/tie-in with one of the two shows (namely, whichever show is aligned with the studio's parent company).

So, as tempting a prospect as Cloverfield is, I get a headache just thinking about how badly it will suck. I will, therefore, wait for reviews and spoilers before watching this movie.
posted at: 23:00 | permanent link to this entry

Thrashers up Close
I went to the Thrashers game yesterday, and splurged for a seat on the glass. I now have a bruised thumb from beating on the glass, so the ticket was worth the price. :)
posted at: 21:47 | permanent link to this entry

Greetings from Ole Miss
[originally written Dec. 20...The week w/o internet was nice, IMO :-]

It's mid-december, and the weather is balmy for mid-december; chai still feels great, though...Uptown Coffee is still my favorite workspace around here, and it's where I'm typing this update...The drive out from Atlanta was smooth, yet felt a _lot_ longer than 4:45'...Alabama DOT has extended U.S. 78 to "the first cut" north of I-20, the trip is another 10 minutes shorter than before...We got to play with cameras, both my point-n-shoot, and my friends SLR (both digital); we completely agree the feedback loop for digital is near-required for learning/remembering WTF we're doing.

And on that note, some (very large!) pictures:
Playing with f1.4, in dim light. f1.4 does closeups: Lugustrum branch
Cedar closeup Lamp @ Ajax Lunch @ Ajax

We put the SLR on a tripod, with the new lens, and took some pictures at midnight. Overcast, waxing moon, and a few security lights == spoooky pictures!
Moonbeams through the clouds This just looks creepy.(Photo: Clint Jordan) The "back 40" at midnight(Photo: Clint Jordan)
posted at: 10:47 | permanent link to this entry

Today's topic for discussion is:
Bell curves.
posted at: 10:44 | permanent link to this entry