Sun, 19 Oct 2003

Potato Head

So there's this family, the Blackadders, and they figure prominently in the history of England and the events are captured in a television show from the BBC. I've watched the second season lately a few times, with Queen Elizabeth and Sir Walter Raleigh and the Bishop of Bath & Wells and so on. It's a bit like Wile E. Coyote with a variety of road-running targets for our hapless protagonist to chase after.

The episodes on the second season DVD are:

  • Bells - Cross-dressing, homoeroticism, easy-listening parodies, this start to the season is quite a joy and nicely sets the tone for the misadventures of Lord Edmund Blackadder.
  • Head - Here we find Edmund given a new position, attendant staff, and responsibility over who lives and dies. Of course he makes a mess of things through his recurring error of delegating to his minions, and has to undergo a variety of contorting impressions to attempt to retain his head.
  • Potato - Sailing, eyepatches, conquest, discoveries, cannibals and a legless Tom Baker. This one is laugh out loud funny.
  • Money - This episode has a cute prostitute. Some other stuff happens, including a recurring gag about unfunny practical jokes and the inability of Edmund Blackadder to hold on to any money, but the important part is that the prostitute is really cute, right down to her toes. Some jibes at the clergy of the day which seem practically prescient considering more recent Catholic scandal and hypocrisy.
  • Beer - My favorite episode of the season, it's got fake breasts, drinking, and Puritans. Wicked Child!
  • Chains - Season ender. Silly accents, sheep-fucking, light-hearted torture and hostage-taking and the obligatory all-fall-down ending. The blood, you see, is compulsory.

So quite fun, and the most concentrated Blackadder I'd seen in such a short span.

posted at 13:51 PDT (-0700)     (comments disabled)   permanent link  
Oh Heathcliff!

Vylar brought this set of mechanics suitable for roleplaying Wuthering Heights style tragedies, should that be the kind of thing you're in to. Reminds me of something lloyd or Josh would be pleased by.

posted at 13:45 PDT (-0700)     (comments disabled)   permanent link  
Words, Words, Words

This year, instead of going to ICON, I went to Bookfest. I'd never been before and it was a real treat. I saw a couple panels, the net effect of which is what I want to read Michael Gruber's Tropic of Night, and anything by Kage Baker and I now know that Bruce Schneier is just as erudite in person as he seems in prose.

I managed to escape buying only one book, an L.E. Modesitt, Jr. novel, Archform: Beauty, which I let him sell me [and autograph] largely because it sounded like an inverse Rashomon's structure. I bought a book-holding apparatus of nifty design for stormagnet and something for Vylar but nothing for Crag, since he's not really a reader, as such.

I had a splendid time, but transportation issues prevented my going for the second day, and I'd definitely recommend it to you. Yes, you. If you're reading this, you're literate enough to groove on the bookfest. You have no excuse.

posted at 13:35 PDT (-0700)     (comments disabled)   permanent link  
Back, and to the Left

After a previous false start, I took another run at James Ellroy's American Tabloid and got through it this time.

This is a thoroughly gritty angle on the run up to the JFK assassination, one of the subjects near and dear to my heart. It follows three fictional protagonists through their machinations to make a buck, seek redress for wrongs, and pursue their rendition of the American Dream. It's populated with realistic character sketches of real people, including:

along with fictional support characters, as well as notables I couldn't find quick and easy links for.

It's a story of violent crime and short-sighted goals having long term ramifications. I don't know that I'd recommend it to someone who has idealized the Kennedys or who has trouble discerning fantasy from reality, but for someone who enjoyed, oh, The Illuminatus! Trilogy, this should be great fun, a romp through history with sex and snideness. First Ellroy I've ever read, but certainly not my last.

posted at 13:11 PDT (-0700)     (comments disabled)   permanent link  
Get It? Got it. Good.

After years of hearing it referenced, I sat down with The Court Jester and saw what the fuss was all about. This quirky musical comedy from 1956 has hypnosis-as-magic, silly songs, magnetism, heroic escapades, poison and, oh yes, Danny Kaye.

It's a fun romp, with lots of clever wordplay, banter, nice emotive acting, and a storyline which is one disaster for our hero after another. It's got a baby with a birthmark, a squatter on a throne, a daring highway robber, some sword fights and at least one dance routine. Fun, light-hearted romance full of twists and turns, with quotable and memorable lines which I'd heard before and now have a context for. I recommend it.

posted at 11:12 PDT (-0700)     (comments disabled)   permanent link  
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