I just sat in a theatre and watched "The Big Lebowski" with a group of people, drinking beer and eating pizza. Goddamn this city is great. And it's only Thursday. W00t!
Now I'm watching a documentary called "The Bridge". It's about the phenomenon of people jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge. These film-makers asked the city for permission to mount cameras to film the bridge over a year's time, but they didn't realize what their real intention was, to capture individuals jumping off the bridge. Evidently the rate of suicides is about 24 per year, so there is plenty of footage. The film also interviews the family members of suicides as well as people on the bridge the day that they jumped.
This is really interesting so I'm getting back to it.
Thats right! Someone out there is the 100th unique viewer of this blog. How sad for you.
So I've been feeling a little down the last few days. The holidays are of course a time of both happiness and sadness and are complicated for everyone, and I guess I'm just having the routine holiday blues. Never mind that I'm trying to figure out what the hell I'm going to do with me life :)
BUT, I got a chance to see Juno last night with an old friend, and wow, what a film.
While the critics have a legit point in noting that the use of wise-cracks is a little heavy on the front end of the film, it quickly comes into its own and is just perfect in composition and balance. It makes you want to be these people, any of these people, even a 16 year old pregnant girl (mind you, being Ellen Page would probably be cooler than being most 16 year old pregnant girls).
Seriously, it's that good, with a soundtrack that is quirky and catchy and seems like every song was written for the film (though none were).
So, it's the weekend before Christmas. The last month has flown by what with my new job and all. Lucky for me I took care of my Christmas purchases weeks ago via the interweb.
I hope everyone has a happy holiday! I'll be making cookies this weekend to bring in for the guys working over Christmas day!
So I just finished watching Hard Candy. The basic plot of the film is that a 14-year-old girl traps a pedophile and turns him around until he takes his own life. It stars Ellen Page (of Nova Scotia, Canada w00t!) who is now staring in Juno, which may prove to be the best movie of all time. Those of you less interested in indie films will also recognize her from the X-men franchise.
I'm not the first to say this, but that girl is scary good as an actress and, at age 20, has none of the BS issues that surround her peer group of "actresses". I will be patronizing her films for a long time coming I think.
Hard Candy itself will be burned into my brain for a long time. How warped it makes you feel, pitying the pedophile, cheering on the girl, cheering on the pedophile, disapproving of what she does, approving of what she does... and on and on. Around and around until you are emotionally spent.
So I went to the Portland Winter Hawks game last night. Man they are terrible. Something like a win-loss ratio of 32-5.
Some observations.
1) Hockey fights are awesome. There's something intellectually distasteful about wanting the blood-sport, but at the end of the night it seems like more of a ritual than anything else, and they're fabulously entertaining.
2) Hockey is fabulously more entertaining when you're watching it live. Ever watch hockey on TV? Just not a lot there unless you're very attached to one team. But live hockey is fast and visceral and just great.
3) (Minor League) Hockey's target demo is basically cub scouts. Yup, 7 to 12 year old boys eat it up from start to finish. They love everything about a hockey game. They were fun to watch.
Now I'm watching the Blazers battle for an eight-in-a-row victory against New Orleans. And I care. I think I may have become a dude. Sports? OK, here goes.
So I'm off to see Scotland Barr and the Slow Drags tomorrow night at the Mt. Tabor Legacy Theatre (which I can practically see from my house, goddamn I love living here). Why is that exciting? Firstly, because their name is great. Secondly, because I listened to their tunesation on iTunes and their myspace page and they sound like my kind of band. Finally, because I'm meeting up with a couple of brand new people whom I have never hung with before along with old friends. They are folks I met during SantaCon 2007 (see the recap post from a few days ago).
So, I have a first date that'll be (partly) at a Portland Winter Hawks game. Any of the 30 people who have read this so far have an opinion on event dates? Sports and other spectator events in particular? I'll find out the advantages and disadvantages soon enough I suppose.
Some of you may be aware that American Football is now broadcast in the US under the name "Football Night in America". Fewer of you will realize that this name derives from a long-running program in Canada called "Hockey Night in Canada".
So I present to you the best hockey song ever written. This is Corb Lund (who has a fantastic new album out called Horse Soldier! Horse Soldier! which I can't stop listening too). The original is by Stompin' Tom Connors, a Canadian music legend.
He actually has a couple different last verses to this song. They're all genius. He does a live cover on at least one of his albums.
The other lyrics are:
Oh goodness me, FOX TV, where did you get your sight
Can't you keep track, the puck is black, that's why the ice is white!
And that big red glare you see up there, well we've seen that for years,
for heaven's sakes, all it takes is a couple dozen beers!
Genius. These lyrics reference the old FOX TV broadcasts of NHL hockey where they attempted to highlight the puck traveling across the ice, creating a blurred effect and seriously pissing off Canadian hockey fans.