Tederick.com: August 2008 Archives
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August 29, 2008

Off the grid

Sometimes, you just have to accept that some of your friends are stealing from you, and there's nothing you can do about it, and it's kinda okay anyway cuz everybody just wants stuff even if it's not their stuff, and really who wants to get into a fistfight over "stuff" anyway. Batman: that's who.

So the good news, TIFFwise, is that I got the thrill this morning, which is nice, given that last night I was so overwhelmed with work and the move and the festival and everything else that I never even wanted to hear the words "film festival" again. I am in box 41, and I await my results. I am also, however, about to go truly internet-free for the first sustained period in a long, long time - have to turn in all the modem stuff to Rogers before close of business today, and do not actually have an internet hookup coming to me at the new apartment next week. I will be surviving on the whims of free wi-fi until I can get things sorted out. So, fair warning, communication may be spotty for the next little while.

Plus, I shit you not, after 3 months of agonizing, $5 tickets for Avenue Q fell into my lap, for tomorrow afternoon. So yes, it's true that all of my friends went to see Evil Dead: The Musical without me, and in spite of its thrice return to this city I have never been able to go see it with anyone, and I will never ever see it for the rest of my life ever. But I will see the puppet sex. Oh lordy, shall I see the puppet sex.

All is well. It is cold, and rainy, and there's a fuck of a lot going on at all times, but I am happy, and I am going on vacation, and I am in love, and I believe that everything will fall into its proper place. So that's something.

August 28, 2008

Stop the world, I want to get off

What the hell is wrong with the goddamn world when a 9-year-old girl is being sent for a bikini wax at her mother's behest. A NINE YEAR OLD.

There are days I want children, and days I don't want children, and then there are the days where I want to have children exclusively for the opportunity to not do all the incredibly stupid crap that other parents do to their kids.

[shudders]

August 27, 2008

It is also art

Greg Kinnear as the guy who invented the windshield wiper! Keira Knightley as Princess Diana's uncle! And many more.

Yes, today's the day. I used to - like, six or seven jobs ago, certainly not at my current job - just sit at my desk and do my TIFF schedule, a process which takes about 7½ hours and is fairly counter-productive. But I don't do that any more because I am Responsible. Instead, I book the day off, tour the city, and read the programme book cover to cover.

So yesterday after work I went down to the new/weird box office area at Dundas Square, got my stuff, went for some eggs, drew devil horns on Swayne as usual, and got cracking. I've got through the Galas and Special Presentations so far but as per the usual, there is less content for me there (many of those films will see wide release) than there will be in the other programmes. I will, of course, kowtow to the Hollywood machine at least twice, by trying to see Zack & Miri and also the six and a half day mega-epic Che. Those are the kind of yes-they'll-be-released-anyway films that you want to see in a festival environment, just cuz it'll make you feel like a pimp.

Last night I watched A Clockwork Orange and today I'll buy excellent shoes. It's all coming together.

My secret shame

Last night I was laughing with Matty Price because he gets all choked up by the Rachel Getting Married trailer, but truth be told, I am no better, because my crybaby trailer is even stupider. My Kryptonite is, unfortunately, the trailer for Mira Nair's The Namesake. That shit put me into paroxysms of emotional fervour back at the beginning of last year. It starts off goofy enough, playing into that Van Wilder vibe, but by about the 2 minute mark I am standing on my chair shouting "YEAH KUMAR! DISCOVER YOUR HERITAGE!!"

I suspect I should not see that movie.

August 26, 2008

Joker a-go-go

Now, I'm still going to try my ass off to get this Joker

even though it's proving tricky as a cat scratch to find any retailer in Canada who will actually be carrying the dang-old thing (even my beloved Snail).

That said, however, if I had money to burn and a fuck of a lot of time on my hands I'd probably also get this Joker

cuz good lord howdy, he's pretty good. He's a bank robber! And I would pose him on my shelf with his mask in his hand and his back to us, à la this:

and that would be just fine, in my opinion.

I am obsessed with that man's clothes. That's all there is to it.

August 25, 2008

The last of the things

Today I

  • Used the last of my stores of rolled oats to make no-bake macaroons
  • Polished my Macbook (twice) with the last of my Apple Polish wipes
  • Turned the remainder of my frozen chicken stock into lovely risotto
  • Threw out my gym bag and sneakers, both of which have become too stinky to survive
  • Gave away my last pair of old jeans
  • Opened the last bottle of wine
  • And bought a DVD. It's not all purging.

I once saw a player walk up to another player, rip out his heart, show it to him, and then score.

The word of the day is: ambisinister.

So the Yellow Wall got shanooked last night in the playoffs. Well, not entirely shanooked. We got shanooked in the first half: 3-0 for the bad guys going into halftime. Then we (and by "we" I mean "David and Demetre") scored 2 quick goals at the head of the second half, suggesting that we were going to come back strong for either a shootout tie or an outright win. But then the bad guys put Evil Crazylegs on defense duty for the remainder of the game and we just couldn't get a single fucking thing past him. Still, it was a solid game overall and a not entirely disappointing end to a solid season, even if we walk away shirtless. Shirtless! Fie.

I am rapidly, however, turning into a creaky old man. I popped my knee about six weeks ago and I tell ya, it has hurt progressively more with each soccer game since. Nowadays when something like this happens there's a part of my brain that says "Is this one of the things that's going to be with me for the rest of my life?" Like when I started taking daily medication for my thyroid, for example. I looked at that cluster of white pills and thought "every day, for the rest of my life." Getting old is weird.

It used to be, my body would start to feel achey and abused by around the middle of the fall season, Thanksgiving time, telling me that the end of the soccer year was coming and that my body could use the 5-month rest before starting up again next year. This year, though, the aches started in early July. For this and many other reasons, I'm skipping out the rest of the year. Am I "gettin' too old for this shit"? Maybe.

"There are exactly 3 things in the Karate Kid movies that are great: the kick at the end of the first film, the entire second film, and the tag line for the third film." - me, over drinks last night.

August 24, 2008

Sitting around nude

For my birthday, I would like:

  • Anything Mola Ram-related
  • Anything Lando-related
  • Blu-ray DVDs, as outlined on my wishlist
  • This book
  • Liquors
  • Blaxploitation movies
  • And as you probably already know, I am fond of Batman.

Don't buy me this book, though, cuz I bought it for myself today. Pretty! If I have any really rich friends that I don't know about, though: this would look pretty cool on my desk.

I have been to Montreal and back, in class for three days, and have walked from the pits to College Park, twice, all in the past 7 days. Also saw Hamlet 2 (sucked!), had an entirely home-cooked meal at Christys' place (fab-u-lous!), went to the Silver Snail (but not for midnight!) and watched Superman Returns on blu-ray. Tonight is our soccer final: we are playing for first. I never sit down, and I am rapidly running out of things to sit down on, even if I were to find time to do so. Time is getting short. Every last thing into its box, and here we go...

August 22, 2008

Warner shlamozzle

Boy, Warner Bros. is sure as fuck the studio to watch these days. In the wake of The Dark Knight's ass-kickery, they've moved a Harry Potter, re-strategized their comic book movie development, been attacked by a rival picturehouse over Watchmen, and now shitcanned the Bryan Singer Superman franchise in favour of a Letterier-ish Hulk-style reboot.

As the seventh-last surviving male who liked Superman Returns, I'm dismayed, though not much. Still, the prevailing notion that "going dark" is the appropriate treatment of the entirety of DC's character stable is sort of insane. I can see a dark Green Arrow movie or Green Lantern, but Flash? Wonder Woman? Superman? Nuh.

We did a Mamo on the weekend before this latest iteration of the news broke, but which considers some of WB's moves at length, should you choose to listen to it.

August 19, 2008

Intimidation game

Well my work here is done – I am on the train out of Montreal heading back to Toronto after a whirlwind 2-day tour in which names were kicked and ass was taken. The imminent 2-monthday of baby Thomas reminded me that I’ve been in my “new” job for a full quarter at this point. So I guess I oughta stop smirking every time someone asks me an important question.

In the bullshit leadership sweepstakes, I won the Powerball. I picked up a kickass team of people who are superb at their jobs and willing to tackle pretty much anything; all that’s left for me, under ideal circumstances, is to simply get out of the way. I used to say that my boss was my shield against bureaucratic crap; now I’m the shield, but the bureaucratic crap is easier to scare away. So it’s an even trade.

Meanwhile, I am moving in 12 days, picking my TIFF flicks in 8, and taking leadership classes for the next 3. At some point in the next 9 I need to sort out my key objectives for the 2nd half of the year, and in exactly 1 month I’ll turn 32. Oh: and I can smell Hallowe’en, as of today. Still no idea what I’ll be or where I’ll go, but I am fairly content with the simple fact that the next 10-odd weeks really are my very favourite time of year.

Going home simply never ceases to be satisfying.

August 17, 2008

Cuteness overload

Well I'm sorry, but this is just too fuckin' adorable.

Cats simply should not be able to do anything that awesome.

August 15, 2008

Whys and wherefores

I bought Adam a Yoda toy yesterday and in return he kicked me in the fucking shin!!:

Jerk.

Over here, Moriarty calls foul on that favourite fanboy watchphrase, "George Lucas raped my childhood." He's right: inarticulate losers reaching for an ugly overemphasis of their hurt feelings through violent sexual overtones are not doing the world, or the discussion, any favours. Moriarty, though, has become the film criticism community's biggest pansy. He has been so completely spun by the birth of his child and the "development" of his middling screenwriting career that his reviews have gained an imperious, "I'm seeing this from a higher level than you" level of smug that is simply useless to both his direct audience (AICN fanboys) and film criticism in general. And the fact that both of those changes in his personal life have softened any ability on his part to look at a piece of film objectively without either going gooey-eyed over how the flick speaks to his h opes and fears for his child, or rose-hearted about how it's just so hard (sniff!) to make it in tough-ass Hollyweird, means that his opinions have become useless to me as well. Sigh of frustration. When Roger Ebert kicks it (and they're taking him down in chunks, these days), film criticism will die.

For a few months I've been remarking that I really have no idea what's coming out, movie-wise, next summer. Well, others seem to have noticed the tentpole gap in summer 2009, too, because following Star Trek into a release delay is Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, bumped from a November '08 show-date to July '09 to run riot over the relatively limited field of box office competitors next year. I'm not particularly disappointed, if only because my overall interest in the Potterflicks has dwindled precipitously since Order (even though, as blog-memory serves, I liked that one), and this gives me the opportunity to build a bit back up again. They'll never go down as the biggest cinematic contributions to my life, but there's something reflexively nice about going to a Potter movie with Rebecca and just magically freaking out a bit. And with five down and three (!) to go, I do also have an appreciable sense of the scale of the thing, once it's all finished.

So I'm ploughing through Y: The Last Man for the second time, sort of like when I read all the Potter books consecutively since this time, I don't have to wait for subsequent volumes to be released and can treat it as one big story. In addition to all the other stuff Brian K. Vaughan is doing, I am really enjoying the degree to which the story gets to be about the way men think about women. All the myths, misconceptions, psychological fracture points, broken chivalry, noble (and not) ambitions, outright needs, subconscious lacks, complete and utter raging misunderstandings... just so eerily, pleasingly accurate. What 13-year-old boy hasn't stared into that gaping chasm of proposed femininity and refused to take more than a tentative step into the dark cave, out of the sheer unknowable otherness of it all? We can be so patently bad at knowing ourselves when it comes to sex, love, and our position on the gender coin; one of the best things about Y is the way that fully selfish and immature male-ness (which is now too happily fostered in modern North American life) just tracks for Yorick through the story, into a genuine process of maturation and change until he does become, like Jung woulda said, a fully individuated person. It'd be nice if this could happen to everyone, or at least, me. I kinda wonder if Vaughan has actually Figured It All Out, or if he's just a smart enough writer to know that he can just parlay his own experiences of relating to women throughout his life into a reasonable psychological arc for The Last Man, and let the arithmetic work itself out. Either way, it worked great.

It's chilly. It's actually chilly. Fall is coming.

August 14, 2008

Laugh it up, fuzzball

It occurred to me recently that, I guess, I have a beard now. I am a person with a beard.

This occurred to me only recently.

August 13, 2008

Rain is rain, but free hamburgers are free hamburgers.

"I'm not sure this is worth it!" - Maya

"BBQ chips? That's for junkies and crack whores!" - me

"Does it taste like free?" - Jacbo
"Tastes like wet free." - Admo

August 11, 2008

It started with a chair

Mushroom clouds in the Toronto sky, riots in Montreal, weather patterns so schizophrenic and unpredictable that they augur doom. It was not the best weekend to go to the cottage, perhaps, but we did it anyway - a narrow ribbon of time sandwiched between job responsibilities and highway shutdowns. But it was nice, y'know? Waking up not knowing you've slept for ten or more hours without noticing. A chill in the air and a bunch of warm blankets will do that to you.

There's an unofficial maxim in the movie-watcher business: if Harry Knowles hates a flick, it is fucking bad. I mean that guy gives positive reviews to pretty much everything. Well, last night Harry Knowles wrote a scathing indictment of The Clone Wars, and this morning... he pulled it off his site. I suspect conspiracy. There's a good tract of it here, and reading the thing last night - talk of racist Ziro the Hutt, and cutesy Stinky, and how terribile that tweener Jedi girl actually is - cemented my complete unwillingness to engage George W. Lucas on any matters Star Wars-related, ever again. It's an amazement to me that The Phantom Menace didn't dim my SW enthusiasm a jot, but a bad Indiana Jones movie is apparently enough to buy back ten years of disappointment and grief. And I tend to be on the "charitable" side of this argument.

I miss the old days.

Everything's funnelling down toward September now, the boxes are stacked ceiling-high at 3QF, my vacation is booked and the prep for 10 days of TIFF is well underway. I do a lot of rushing about. Scraping twenty minutes to read some Y: The Last Man in the rain. Sometimes though I spend a Sunday night watching dumb sweet Juno with my dear one, and afterwards, there's a bit of singing as we're getting ready for bed. And that's enough to get another week underway with.

August 10, 2008

Isaac Hayes is dead

and shit is blowing up all over town

August 7, 2008

The time of your life, part 2

"I will take you outside and fuck you in the street!!" - Ed Begley Jr.

"That is spicy. I don't think that's for cats." - Adam

I love that photo a lot.

Sarafina and myself went to the Pineapple Express movie last night, and ate fish burritos, and enjoyed ourselves thoroughly. I would say there are at least six things in that film that are outstanding, four things that are just really pretty, and the rest is overall very well done. Additionally, I read the second neo-Fray arc issue in Buffy, and was so goddamned thrilled that I almost didn't know what to do with myself. Actually, I probably embarrassed myself in public spaces with my near-constant glee. The densely-woven futurespeak is new (I suppose we can presume that in the previous self-contained storyline, we were seeing "translated" futurespeak, as we would see translated Chinese in an issue of Iron Fist) but very well done. And as for the spoiler... well yeah. I fell for the Dru fake-out rather nicely and was aptly rewarded at the end, but the bones of the thing now are just gorgeous to look at. Something happened in this issue that never happened before - the modern-day Buffyline just gained a fuck of a lot of context, a place in the world. It's not limited to Sunnydale any more, it's not even limited to the naughties any more; with the past and present accounted for and the future now added in, the Buffyverse feels dense. I like.

This crazy son'bitch built the Batman Beginsmobile. There was a phantom DeLorean that lived somewhere between my ex-girlfriend's house and my parents' place, back in the day... you'd be driving along at night and it would just appear behind you, and you (meaning I) would freak right out. Imagine how you (meaning I) would feel if the motherfucking Batmobile started tailing you instead. Holy cow.

Finally, for everyone who (like me) is still having trouble sliding the oily oyster that is "Quantum of Solace" down their gullet, there's a Joe Cornish fake theme song floating around YouTube that's quite enjoyable. They had me at "great big man-tits."

August 5, 2008

Sorry, the new facebook is temporarily disabled.

The selling-shit-off thing actually worked out better than I expected. I'm down to just two or three items left and they aren't exactly the ones I expected to fly off the shelves. I cannot believe someone is actually taking the TV: that thing is so HEAVY. I feel like a weight has been lifted from my soul.

"How was your long weekend?" Well, it was fine. Not long enough. Sarafina and I had a pretty decent day of just lazing around doing nothing on Saturday, which we haven't had opportunity to do in a good long while (and probably shan't again for a while yet). But I coulda done with more of it. Actually all in all I'm in a very "nesty" mood these days. I wish it was winter, because I seem to crave little more than bed and vidja games, but it's just too goddamned hot at 3QF to accommodate my need. I am forced to go outside, where parasites are choc-a-bloc and the radiation ball rules. Is a little self-imposed agorophobia really so impossible to achieve in August in Toronto? Apparently it is.

Speaking of August: Brian K. Vaughan's meticulous re-work of the 2003 blackout within the fabric of the Ex Machina storyline is really rather breathtaking. As Shortbus pointed out, there's a unique relationship between 9/11 and blackout '03, and also a lot to do there in terms of massaging our own fond recollections of the night the lights went out (vs. the morning CNN would not go away). In narrative terms, the summer of '03 also makes for the middle of his storyline, doesn't it? I am liking that title more and more with each book that comes out.

Sockvivor continues. I've thrown away my lucky socks - I guess sixteen years is simply too much. Things are getting lean around my place - more and more stuff siphoned off to 108, to friends, to the trash heap. I feel cleansed, for the first time in forever.

I have a fondness for Star Trek III that is disproportionate to its worth.

August 4, 2008

May I suggest you buy this? 3: Buy a goddamned television set.

Take my TV. Please.

This 30" CRT Samsung 16x9 beast is sitting in my bedroom. It is six years old - I bought it for $1800 in 2002. It is in good shape. It is NOT Blu-Ray compatible, though, so make sure this thing plays forward into your home entertainment plans over the course of the next five years. It has component inputs only, no HDMI. I am selling it for $250

BUT THERE'S A CATCH

if you are willing to come and get it yourself, and get it out of my room yourself, I will part with it for a mere hundred dollars. That's right - not having to move this thing down my stairs myself is worth a bill and a half to ya. The TV is, in terms of fair warning, HEAVY AS A SON OF A BITCH. But if this sounds like you, get in touch.

Still on from previous bake-offs:

  • 17" CRT computer monitor (a Samsung SyncMaster 900 IFT)
  • Game Cube - no games, no controllers
  • Ginger Snaps II a.k.a. Ginger Really Snaps

August 3, 2008

Unstoppable

Well, this rarely ever happens, but

It's just a blip, caused by my opponent and I both registering our scores so early after the game. But what a game. On no subs, we held a strong team to a shutout, and scored on them once per half. We played our standard roster in the first half and then changed it up to 1 offense, 1 mid, 2 defense, 1 sweeper for the second half, and it just drove the bad guys bugfuck crazy. I played offense - me! I literally stood in their half for the entirety of the latter of the game, waiting. I didn't connect with the one beauty pass from Dave, which otherwise would have got me my annual goal, but otherwise it was a stupendous game all around. Man, we are on an uncanny good ride this season. I'm missing the double-header next week for some cottage time, but I expect that works in the team's favour.

The last Star Wars figure / The day Jack Sparrow died

On Friday, before the wedding, I was downtown anyway dropping off the rock star's dress, and I had about an hour to kill before I had to get dressed, so I went for a burrito - I am all about the halibut lately, belated obsession though that be. I hit the Snail en route, as is my custom, although nothing I read shipped this week so my pull bin was empty. But there it was as I came through the door: the Gargan action figure. Which here matters because, as mentioned previously, she is the last one.

It's actually been thirteen years, give or take. Thirteen years back I got off the Steeles bus outside my grandmother's condo, took a walk across the street (it was snowing), and into Toys R Us, because I'd heard that Hasbro had re-established the Star Wars action figure line - they were calling it "Power of the Force 2," the sequel/continuation to the line's failed attempt at continuing past Return of the Jedi, circa 1984. And... hey, what else am I about if I'm not about about that? So they had a few of the new figures there, including this Ben with a really long lightsabre, and they all looked goddamn weird and awkward but I bought the Ben anyway because he generally looked the most like a human and, c'mon, it's Ben. Then Light & Magic happened and I bought a few more, and then at some point in 1996 I was standing in that same TRU with Adam holding a Jawa 2-pack in my hand, and Adam said something along the lines of "I'll take one, you take one, we'll split it" - yes, these are two 20somethings here - and as far as I'm concerned, the deal was done. Something kicked off in both of us (though he turned back far sooner than I), and the avalanche began which, a baker's dozen years later, lead to something in the neighbourhood of six hundred of the things as a final tally - although right at this moment, over half of them are gone again. Still... six hundred. Droids and jawas and Jedi and pregno-Padme; Jabba aliens by the fucking bucketfull, so many that I even started making my own; and Lukes and Chewies and Slave Leias and Bens beyond measure; and insignificant characters, lord man howdy, how I loved the insignificant characters. Sio Bibble and this guy and Aunt frickin' Beru with her blue milk.

And this stated a bunch of other things too, what with Sideshow and Simpsons and really expensive pirates and I even have a vintage Toht, and one on card too, yeah. But the best of all of it was always and ever shall be Darth Vader with Removable Helmet, which they've re-made a dozen times since but never come close to making as cool as they did on the first try, the tiny piece of plastic in which a shred of my 10-year-old soul permanently resides. And that was in... 1997? Early '98? When the best year of your hobby is ten years back, it's time to look for an exit. Gargan seemed like a good fit - they tried to make her back in '85, but as I recall the prototype got shitcanned because she has so many boobies. Six of them! No self-respecting toy line should ever have a six-titted prostitute as part of its character line, one presumed, at least until whatever phenomenal conversion shift I myself was a part of in the late 1990s, when toys stopped being made for kids and started being made for me. They made Gargan, the Fat Dancer, and I'm out.

(If they ever make Bea Arthur, I'll come back.)

And with all that done, I came home with my action figure firmly in hand and, upon entering, found one of my Jack Sparrow dreadlocks lying on the floor in the doorway to my room. Thinking at first that Zam had - as is her way - destroyed something I cared about, I became riled, and then I had a look at the wig. And, in what can only be described as a rather perfect little Pirates of the Caribbean moment, I turned the thing over in my hand to find the back of it eaten out by grubs. Some unholy combination of the heat, the humidity, the age, or just the primordial fucking filth we now live in at 3QF, conspired to turn my custom-made Jack Sparrow pirate wig into a couple months' worth of food for a colony of mealworms. And as the thing literally decayed in my hands while I stared at - the sheer action of bringing it down off the shelf upon which it has sat since my rather lovely Hallowe'en, was enough to tear apart the few remaining strands maintaining the wig's shape - it ceased to be a thing, and became a former thing, nothing more than a cluster of digital photographs, really warm memories, and at least one Jack Sparrow bolt-in-terror moment when that damn Obeah woman asked for my number.

Here's the thing: I hang on to things. Tangible relics of stuff that otherwise live only in my head, or in my eyes, or on movie screens across the nation, literally clutter the very ground I walk on. My grandmother used to have a glow-in-the-dark Virgin Mary next to her bed; I have a glow-in-the-dark King of the Dead. It comes to the same thing, which is a talisman by which to channel some inexpressible force that flows through my life; without the relics to hang on to occasionally, I become nauseous and indistinct. But this is, after all - and today was not the first time I have realized this - an imperfect solution to a larger problem, because all matter is so frustratingly impermanent and vague. I used to say there was something I liked about having a tiny, perfect Luke Skywalker standing on my desk with his lightsabre in hand, that it said something to something in me in a language beyond arcane. But that same relic melts, turns sticky, gets dusty and loses its colour, gets handed down to kids (because kids are supposed to have these things) or thrown out with the trash. Matter doesn't matter. These are all just signposts on the way to the larger, glowing somethingorother.