Tag Archives: 2016

A short review of “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” (2016)

“Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” is every bit as good as you’ve heard; even this non-“Star Wars” geek had great fun with it.  I’d cheerfully give it a 9 out of 10, and I’d recommend you give it a try even if you don’t typically enjoy the franchise.

Die-hard fans are currently noting all of the things that make this film unique in the series: it’s the first “Star Wars” movie without a Jedi, the first without the trademark opening text-crawl, the first one without a lightsaber duel.

Casual fans might be more impressed with more general differences.  Two stood out for me.

One, this is the first Star Wars film since “The Empire Strikes Back” (1980) that seems aimed mainly at adults.  Yes, the fairy tale elements are still there — we have an underdog orphan searching for her father, the requisite anthropomorphic aliens, and a humorous robot mascot (which surprisingly worked quite well).  But those elements are absolutely upstaged by a bona fide war film, complete with tactics, strategy, panic, collateral damage and casualties.  I remember thinking during a surprisingly gritty urban warfare scene that it was as though some filmmakers had taken a scene from a film like “The Hurt Locker” (2008) and set it within the “Star Wars” universe.

Two, I think that this is the most human Star Wars movie we’ve had since “Empire.”  It wouldn’t be “Star Wars” without the aforementioned aliens and robots, and plenty of references are made to the Force and the Jedi.  But this is a movie about ordinary people.  Yes, there is one larger-than-life character who appears … force-sensitive?  This universe’s equivalent of Marvel’s “Daredevil?”  (This was a confusing story element that didn’t always work for me.)  But we are presented primarily with all-too-human anti-heroes who feel fear, suffer, and die.

Isn’t that more exciting than watching cartoonish aliens fight armies of equally cute battle-droids?  In this film’s better moments, it made me feel like a was watching a “real” war with “real” people, and I was surprised to find myself actually rooting for the good guys in a “Star Wars” film — this has been a series that I’ve long half-dismissed as being essentially children’s stories.

Seriously, this was a good movie.  Check it out.

 

A very short review of “Blair Witch” (2016)

I fully understand the reasonable popular criticisms of “Blair Witch” (2016).  But I’d be lying if I said I didn’t really enjoy it — I’d give it an 8 out of 10.

Yes, it’s largely a retread of the first film in 1999.  This putative sequel is effectively a remake, given how closely it parallels the original.  (And there are a lot of people who hated that movie to start with.)

There are other problems too.  A subplot’s non sequitur segue into body horror is entirely out of place, for example, and we have at least two characters who are so irritating that we can’t care much about their fate.  And then there are some missed opportunities involving technology.  (Much attention is paid to a drone that the ill-fated protagonists bring along in their trek into the woods, but it is underused later in the story.)

Still … this still worked for me.  I have always really liked found-footage horror movies, and I also like stories featuring local legends.  (They’re just more engaging to me than yet another slasher film or third-rate, no-budget zombie movie.)  And there are a couple of moments of brilliance.  The scariest has already been spoiled by the film’s trailer (seriously, f*** you,  Lionsgate marketing department).  But there are other nice touches … one is the dread-inducing, reality-bending story arc of the two locals who accompany the main protagonists.  (And weren’t these two supporting characters the most fun and interesting, anyway?)

And we indeed finally get glimpses of the titular Blair Witch!  They are brief and few, but they’re a damned effective, scary payoff.

All in all, this is still an offbeat horror outing in the same vein as the original, and I think the better parts made it a decent viewing.

 

Roanoke, Virginia, November 2016 (2)

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A tiny review of “Dr. Strange” (2016)

So Dr. Strange was pretty good — I’d give it a B+ for being a competent superhero origin movie that mostly handles its fantasy story devices quite well.  The script smartly translates the story’s magical elements for the average viewer by having them articulated in language that sounds rational, and the rules seem consistent throughout.

It still strays occasionally into cartoonishness.  (The astral projection sequences seem silly enough for 1995’s “Caspar the Friendly Ghost.”)

The  film has three terrific leads in Benedict Cumberbatch, Tilda Swinton and Mads Mikkelsen.  (The first two are allowed to shine; the third seems underused.)

The special effects are dazzling — I remember thinking inwardly throughout the film that an alternate title could be “Better Inception,” at least as far as its visuals are concerned.

All in all, it’s a by-the-numbers superhero origin story that’s still fun — and the special effects alone make it worth seeing.

 

 

Throwback Thursday: “Handmade” Turkeys!

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

Happy Thanksgiving!!

 

 

    

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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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)

Happy Halloween!!!

Cover to “Harley Quinn” #0, by Amanda Conner

DC Comics.  I’m not sure of the date on this … I’d guess that a Harley Quinn solo title would result from the character’s newfound mainstream popularity following this year’s “Suicide Squad.”

But “The New 52” arrived … six years ago?

 

Eric Robert Nolan published in the Peeking Cat Anthology 2016

The Peeking Cat Anthology 2016 was released today!  It has no fewer than 40 poems, three short stories and six photos.  One of the poems is a micropoem of mine entitled “My mother’s apartment.”  (It’s the third one in the volume, on page 5.)

You can order this first ever of Peeking Cat’s anthologies in hardcover right here, and paperback right here.  If you’d prefer a Kindle version of the collection, you can purchase and download it here.

It is always wonderful to see my work appear in Peeking Cat Poetry Magazine, but being published in its first anthology is a real honor.  Thanks once again to Editor Sam Rose!

 

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