Archive for April 30, 2009

First day on the new job

Looked up ergonomic chairs, found a reasonably-priced one, gave the info to the office manager. Also found nice wrist braces for mouse/keyboard use and gave that info to her.

Got set up on the server, got set up on Skype, got set up on email.

Researched free HTML editors but may or may not download, because I’m not sure I’ll need them, but if I do I know what to do about it.

Read the company’s website and was sort of horrified, hence the potential need for an HTML editor.

Filled out whole megatons of paperwork.

That’s mostly it, except I thought of a word. The word may be the most important thing I did all day. Okay, the payroll paperwork? Very important. But sometimes a word is a concept, a concept is a marketing plan, and all documents can flow from that plan. I think I thought of a very good word.

Went home, watched You’ve Got Mail, cried like a baby, thought some more about my word and other words, went to sleep.

Trivia solved!

Fast, too.
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Tuesday Trivia

1. Misfit and bird man underwater.
Solved by George (comment #5).

2. Pregnant woman goes to the movies, meets dummy.
Solved by George (comment #1).

3. Little big reporter and clown editor.
TIE: Solved by Melville (comment #6) and Ken (comment #7).

4. Southern gentleman robbed by expatriate saloon keeper.
Solved by Ken (comment #8).

5. Dog trainer and nun go on road trip.
Solved by George (comment #2).

6. Boxing great kidnaps professor.
Solved by George (comment #4).

7. Silent film star puts on a show in the barn of a Kansas farm girl.
Solved by Melville (comment #9).

Monday Movie Review: Cadillac Records

Cadillac Records (2008) 8/10
Leonard Chess (Adrien Brody) meets Muddy Waters (Jeffrey Wright) and forms Chess Records.

The movie opens in a field. It looks like it may be one of those idyllic Kansas wheat field kind of things, and then you see it’s sharecroppers, breaking their backs and singing. The scene is definitely not idyllic, but the music is beautiful.

The movie opens in another field. Again you wonder: Kansas? Something beautiful? This time it’s a junkyard, where Leonard Chess is making love with his girlfriend. Soon her father will show up and express his disapproval.

These opening sequences embody everything that’s right and wrong about Cadillac Records. On the right side, of course, is the music, which just gets better and better and better with each scene. The music plus the earthy quality, a grittiness, make this a very watchable movie. You feel present in every moment, and as we move to Chicago and the mixed bag of success in the blues and early rock and roll, that immediacy and grit carry you through.

Also right is the terrific cast. Jeffrey Wright, from sharecropper to blues god, is magnificent, mumbling and preening and living deeply inside his music. Adrien Brody is one of my favorite young actors, and here he’s doing not just his usual great work, but also working his voice into a hustling Chicago immigrant, without mucking around with an accent. He’s sure and good-hearted and also kind of a prick. There’s an extensive supporting cast. BeyoncĂ© as Etta James is surprisingly good; her work in Dreamgirls didn’t indicate to me that she could do this kind of physical role. Eamon Walker, unknown to me, blew my mind in a small role as Howlin’ Wolf.

The movie has been criticized for being too shallow, touching lightly on too many little bits of this moment in history without ever landing. And again, back to the two fields: We fly over a lot of spots, and it is kind of shallow. But it’s also a musical, not just because it’s a movie where a lot of people sing, but because its story is told through the music. These are people whose lived experience resides inside performance. Muddy Waters is the guy with the guitar, Howlin’ Wolf is that big voice. While a deeper story can certainly be told, a rich, textured, deeply musical overview is not at all unwelcome.

Okay, sure, it’s a little all over the place. There’s no clear main character, and the women (as usual) are a little invisible (Etta James isn’t introduced until fairly late). Chess’s wife is barely a presence at all, and while Gabrielle Union does the best she can as Muddy’s wife, Geneva, she’s nothing that can’t be summed up by “Muddy’s wife, Geneva.” Chess himself remains a cipher.

But then I’m back to that great cast. Brody pumps life force into a slight bit of scripting and makes the character seem rich, just as almost every actor in this fine ensemble does.

No drama

As many of you know, I do the Internet dating thing. And often, I’ll see an ad that says “no drama.”

Here’s what I think it means: Don’t have a life, don’t have friends or family, certainly don’t have friends or family with problems that might require your attention or cause you stress or pain. Don’t have stress or pain and if you do, don’t need to talk about it. Don’t change, and if you change, don’t let it be difficult or complicated. Don’t have complications.

Instead, have fun, laugh, have sex, and simulate a relationship on the epidermal layer.

Guess who got a job?

So, this is great news for me, and also kind of an interesting moment for introspection.

At my last job, where I was for five years, I was experiencing a lot of boredom and restlessness. The work seemed flat. In part, this was because the work was flat; I was thwarted in my every effort to grow my job. Team leaders were happy with the way I expanded my value to them, then upper management swooped in and said, hold it sister, go back and sit in your corner.

At the same time, the flatness was spilling into my personal life. For the first time in many, many years, I paid some bills late because I just couldn’t be bothered opening them. My household chores, bill-paying to floor-washing, were puddling around my ankles, undone.

Since I was laid off a month ago, I’ve been much more interested in work. And not in a grass-is-greener way; I’ve been excited about the things I can write, and I’ve gotten a lot more personal writing done (although, mea culpa, not on this blog). I’ve been very energized and task-focused, so that things like updating my resume and following up on leads have been fun to accomplish. I feel like I’ve snapped that feeling of ennui, like I’ve had a profound wake-up call.

Yet there is still a kind of ankle puddle in the house. Damn that floor!

So the question is, after a month at home, how much of this transition has been transformational, and how much will the new job be performed by the same old Deborah?

I really don’t know.

Character Trivia Solutions

The going was slow and required hints but y’all rallied in the end.

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Tuesday Trivia: Character Names

This one’s a total gimme if you use IMDb, so don’t cheat. These are different roles played by the same actor: Name the actor.

1. Mary Ann Lomax, Candy Kendall, Adele Invergordon
Hint: Aileen Wuornos
Solved by Evn (comment #11).

2. Josiah J. Newman, Joe Bradley, Jimmy Ringo
Solved by Melville (comment #1).

3. Schatze Page, Ma Ginger, Marie ‘Slim’ Browning
Solved by Melville (comment #1).

4. Buck Barrow, Harry Moseby, Little Bill Daggett
Solved by Melville (comment #1).

5. Fiona Anderson, Constance Miller, Emma du Maurier
Solved by Hazel (comment #7).

6. Basher Tarr, Paul Rusesabagina, Montel Gordon
Solved by Ben (comment #2).

7. Moira Davidson, Maria Vargas, Maxine Faulk
Hint: Lady Brett Ashley
Solved by Melville (comment #13).

Monday Movie Review: Wanted

Wanted (2008) 7/10
An ancient weaver’s guild discovers the mystery of becoming super-powered assassins. Wesley (James MacAvoy), a stifled and anxious white collar drone, discovers his father was a member of this cult, and that he has their powers.

For what it is, Wanted is very enjoyable. It turns out it’s damn hard to make brainless, entertaining, comic book fare. Most of it is drivel that makes me believe that I don’t really like senseless action/adventure. Which is annoying, because I know that I do like it, but what I generally see on screen isn’t senseless and entertaining, it’s dumb and unacceptable.

The suspension of disbelief is a delicate balance. It’s a bargain between the filmmakers and the audience. Sitting in our seats, or home on the sofa, we want to believe, we just want the film to meet us halfway. We want the movies to care whether or not we’re still with them, and to act like it’s at least possible we might not be.

There’s lots of ways to do it badly, and lots of ways to do it well. Wanted does it well by saying, “We’re doing the impossible here. See this? Impossible. We have a thinly plausible explanation that we’re breezing by quickly. Wave bye-bye to the explanation and lets get a move on.” You know what? It works.

James MacAvoy is one of those actors who everyone assures me I love. I don’t. He’s okay and all, but when I see him, I don’t run to the IMDb to find out what else he’s been in. Angelina Jolie, on the other hand, is amazing. She’s so beautiful you can almost forget she’s talented, and so talented you can almost forget she’s beautiful. As an assassin who takes Wesley under her wing, she’s perfect; self-contained and self-assured, amused, grounded, and relaxed, she makes it seem as if her part has some depth (it doesn’t).

The movie isn’t winning any feminist points. Jolie is a Smurfette; there are no other female assassins. And, being the lone female, she hits all the clichĂ© notes, including the daddy issues. Nonetheless, her presence is much appreciated.

On the other hand, I think I’m over Morgan Freeman. He’s a great actor and I love him, but his roles are now almost entirely imitations or paradies of his previous roles. Yawn.

Wesley’s disaffection with his lifestyle struck me as a cut-and-paste from Office Space (including the red stapler) and Fight Club. You say “homage,” I say “write your own damn movie.”

Despite its flaws, my verdict is that Wanted is wildly fun, just a crazy drive down twisty streets. The climax is too gorey, and the implausibility could add up if you let it, but you don’t have to let it, because it’s a movie that reaches out and invites you to play along.

Holy cow

I haven’t posted in days. I keep thinking of great posts, things I want to mull over, and then when I get to the computer, I’ve forgotten about them, or I have work to do and no time to mull.

Mulling: A dying art. At least in my house.