Throwback Thursday: “Handmade” Turkeys!

First grade memories … every kid in America made one of these at least once.

Happy Thanksgiving!!

 

 

    

Raimondo Madrazo’s “Fond Memories”

Circa 1910?  Oil on canvas.

 

Aline, album de familia

Rolling hills of burning gold.

Northern Virginia bids the day adieu, with a fiery salute.

 

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A short review of “Fear the Walking Dead” Season 2

I realize that “Fear the Walking Dead” is the show that so many people love to hate.  But I myself am just thrilled with it.  I’d give the second season a 9 out of 10 for being the show to which I looked forward to the most all week, and for arguably being more enjoyable than … that other zombie show.  (Its name escapes me at the moment.)

I suppose it feels smarter than it really is.  The pace is slower, there is far more background and context for the story, and I personally feel that there is far better characterization than in its predecessor.  (My fellow horror zombie fans strongly disagree, but I always thought that consistent characterization was a problem with “The Walking Dead.”)

As friends and reviewers have pointed out to me, though, it isn’t as smart as it feels.  People do dumb things; I’m not sure if it is laziness on the part of the screenwriters or just a lack of good judgement.  A typically egregious example is when our seafaring heroes deploy an unwieldy landing party to the beach while literally waiting to be attacked by pirates.  Another is the characters’ general apathy about the possibility of infection from blood splatters, from surfaces or from skin-to-dead-skin contact.  (We actually see a hero destroy a zombie by inserting his thumbs through its eye sockets into its brains.)

But the show is still damned enjoyable.  It has an epic feel.  Season 2 opens with a sweeping panorama of a ravaged Los Angeles, seen by a departing boat.  We have action by sea and by land, and show visits Mexico.  Radio transmissions and the accounts of minor characters further paint the apocalypse broadly.

I actually found the characters identifiable, if not always likable.  They just seemed more like real people than their counterparts on “The Walking Dead,” who lean closer to recognizable tropes (the good cop, the kid, the biker-with-a-heart-of-gold, the ninja).  The grounded, real-world drama among average, mundane people just made the show’s horror story context more real, and therefore more frightening.  (Let’s face it — you and I would probably be far more similar to “Fear’s” Travis, Madison or Alicia than to “The Walking Dead’s” Rick, Daryl or Michonne.)

And I think the subplots and story devices are often just genuinely creepy.  The hazards at sea, the boat-to-boat conflict, the outcome of the lighthouse storyline on the dock … a few of the show’s story arcs seemed like they were inspired by the kind of short stories you’d find in the best zombie anthologies.  Maybe I enjoyed “Fear” more than other viewers because I like the kind of varying, “situational” horror tales it served up every week.  This appealed to me more than the standard colony-vs.-colony stories seen that have grown routine on the show’s progenitor.

All in all, “Fear the Walking Dead” isn’t perfect, but its still a a great horror show.

 

“Look at the flowers, Lizzie.”

One last Northern Virginia summer picture for 2016.  (I just found it on my camera.)

 

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Throwback Thursday: the WOR-9 Thanksgiving Monster Movie Marathon!!!

If you were a little kid on Long Island in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s, then you remember Channel 9’s annual Thanksgiving monster movie marathon.  Dear God, did I love watching it with my Dad.  It was an EVENT.  I loved it far more than any Thanksgiving turkey — if they played monster movies all day, I think I’d cheerfully just enjoy Cocoa Puffs nonstop in front of the color TV in the family’s living room.

The Holy Trinity of monster movies, of course, consisted of “King Kong” (1933), “Son of Kong” (1933) and “Mighty Joe Young” (1949).  It’s a testament to these films’ staying power that they could still appeal to both children and adults roughly a half century after they were made.  Retrospect suggests it was probably a nice little father-son bonding exercise … my Dad was watching me thrill to the same monster action he enjoyed as a boy.  Special effects legend Ray Harryhausen truly blessed my childhood.

The DVD Drive-In website has a neat little nostalgic rundown right here:

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

 

 

 

A rapid storm in Northern Virginia, August 2016

I took these pictures this summer, but forgot to post them …  I’d like to think they’re pretty neat.  I love the last one.

I watched a storm front race across an expanse of sky in maybe a minute, effectively turning day to night.

 

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Yes, Virginia, there IS an Avengers Initiative.

We can conclude that from evidence left at the aftermath of one of their battles.

I found Loki’s horn down by the Potomac River.  Observe.

(This is the coolest piece of driftwood ever found.)

 

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Veterans Day 2016

To all those who have served our Republic, thank you.

Photo caption:  U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Peter Fischer, 501st Combat Support Wing chaplain, and his wife, Shannon, 501st CSW secretary, walk through a row of tombstones at Cambridge American Cemetery, United Kingdom, Nov. 11, 2014. Prior to the Veterans Day ceremony, the Fischers explored the grounds – looking for graves of fallen family members. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jarad A. Denton/Released)

William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s “Les Murmures de l’Amour,” 1889

“Whisperings of Love.”

(Dedicated to My Lady tonight.)

Nurse Your Favorite Heresies in Whispers