Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Edward's December 2024 Monthly Mix

 


 The stem cell therapy trip turned out to be a wash. Such procedures are purely experimental at this point (pending FDA approval) But I was told, being in the remarkable shape I am for my malady, I’d be a likely candidate for clinical trials in the future. Vampires! This, of all months, seemed to be a time for their presence, well, sort of. (Also, it was a month for books.) A vampire novel, another horror novel by the author of Dracula. A vampire movie. Coincidental? December is always a good time for me, being I get to visit my oldest daughter and it’s vacay time!

Live Aid Disc 4 on DVD: The last disc is probably the most lackluster of the four discs. We get Darryl Hall and John Oates (who by their energy made me realize they were such a force, especially in the 1970s.) Hall and Oates did bring a bevy of former Temptations out on the stage to sing with them which was really cool. And then we get Bob Dylan. Bob Dylan brought the house down, though I was never a fan. He stood as stoic as a tree, unusually lifeless compared to everybody else who took the stage. Mick Jagger and Tina Turner brought up the rear. Mick’s gallivanting all over the stage was not unlike a marionette breaking free from its puppeteer. Unbuttoning his shirt and flinging it around on one finger, he was skinny, proud of it, and wanted the world to know it. Tina Turner danced-walked out onto the stage to join him, a trotting bottle of nitroglycerine, but with the grace of a cowboy miner tiptoeing to keep it stable. And the grand finale, Lionel Richie assembling everybody for the venerable, “We Are the World.”  

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowland on Kindle: When these books came out, my daughter read them voraciously. I recently asked her if she thought I would like them. She explained that I would, and very much so. I decided to dive in to the first book. I don’t often laugh at passages in books, this one, however, I’m finding very funny. Rowling’s characters are well written out and the book is so full of quirks that make Hogwarts Academy come off like a real and enchanting place. I’m sure had these come out when I was a kid, I would have read them as fast as they rolled off the presses, myself. But I’m glad I’m getting to read them now and discovered the same appeal that infatuated my daughter.

The Lair of the White Worm by Bram Stoker: Known much more for penning the seminal Dracula in 1897, this is every bit as dark. It concerns a young man who discovers he has an uncle he’s never met that turns out to be a very wealthy relative about to leave his fortune to him. The young man, an Australian, ventures to jolly old England to meet this benevolent uncle. When he arrives, the young man is made privy to strange goings on by the uncle’s friend. It seems there is a neighboring woman enshrouded by mysterious happenings and poor misfortune to those who venture too close. This becomes an exciting tale with intermittent scenes consistent with the Victorian period: stuffy guys in formal clothing, sharing cigars and brandy in front of fireplaces, and bantering with stilted language. I liked it.  

The Vampire Show by Richard Laymon: A thick book, but a quick read. This was nothing short of dime store pulp fiction, but nevertheless a fun read. Imagine Roger Corman being a writer instead of a movie maker, this would be a book he would create. Our story involves a trio of best friends in the early 1960s in a small town during a visit of a traveling troupe christened, The Vampire Show, where you can meet Valeria, the world’s only living vampire. Set up for one night only, at midnight (naturally) on the outskirts of town, the three friends conspire to sneak into the show since nobody under 18 is admitted, and their parents wouldn’t allow them to go anyway.

Nosferatu at the movie theater: Bill Skarsgard, who so effectively played the horrible archvillain, Pennywise, in the newer It movies, is an unrecognizable Count Orlock in this remake of the 1922 silent Dracula ripoff. He does a remarkable job. 1838 Germany. A decaying castle filled with rats and last hope sunsets. This movie contains all of the trappings of a classic Universal Dracula movie. There is a scene in which the young litigator, having gone to Transylvania to assist the mysterious Count Orlock with a real estate purchase, is walking toward the Count’s residence. He comes to a crossroads in a forest. It’s broad daylight, but the trees are so thick it looks like night. Suddenly, in the distance can be seen a black mass coming down the road toward him. It’s not discernible until you can make out the manes of galloping horses and we begin to realize it’s a coach sent to pick the young man up. This will become the most memorable scene in a horror movie for me in probably the last five years. The movie is heavy with blacks and grays. The costumes are on point, as is the dialogue which is painted with Victorianism. I was glad when the movie ended and not because it was a bad movie, not at all. It was just bleak and filled with melancholy. It made me glad I didn’t live back then. 

 


 

Baldur’s Gate on Steam: With all of the wondrous rage over Baldur’s Gate 3, I figured it was time to get Baldur’s Gate 1 knocked out. And yes, I know besides the setting the games are unrelated. Still, being the purist I am, that’s not the way I roll. I’m glad I started with this one. The characters have real personality and I care what happens to them, the writing is topnotch. Level caps are weird, over 50 plus hours and I finally hit level 5.  (And I’m in Chapter Four of a six chapter game.) And, being as difficult as these early RPGs were out of the gate, some leveling up consists of simply changing your level number. There are no added pluses to weapons, no fresh skills, no increasing lockpicking from 45 to 46, oh no, it’s simply bumping your character up from level 2 to level 3. The game scenes look handcrafted and are a beautiful play space. Lastly, Beamdog did a wonderful job with the Enhanced Version tweaking the game to run on modern rigs. The game centers on a curse that causes realm-wide corrosion of iron. So, there goes all of the weapons and all of the armor. It’s up to your party to delve into the mines where the iron is pulled and get to the bottom of what’s causing the curse. The plot is as immersive as reading The Lord of the Rings for the first time. If you’ve finished Baldur’s Gate 3, do yourself a favor: go play Baldur’s Gate to see where it all began

 


 

 

Sunday, December 8, 2024

Edward's November 2024 Monthly Mix

 

 


 

November was a busy month. Lots of work and lots of activity on the homefront. I lost my last maternal aunt. She’s been a component of my earliest memory, and now she has departed us. As usual, my own clock ticks on and I am reminded of my mortality. I made my GoodReads reading goal of 20 books this year. Yay! I succumbed to temptation and picked up a Steam Deck. I generally take my Kindle in situations in which I have to wait somewhere (car service center lobbies, patient waiting rooms, etc.) So, now will my reading suffer? I don’t know, but this thing is so much fun, I don’t care!

 

Act of War: Direct Action on PC: I’ve tried playing this game a few times over the last two decades, but for some odd reason it would not work with the AMD processors I was using at the time. With its release on Steam, and my now Intel processor based rig, I was able to fire it up again and this time it worked! The story was written by USAF retiree and action thriller writer, Dale Brown and is pretty much a Command & Conquer: Generals copycat. It bears the same cheesy FMV acting and the usual hyperbolic storyline involving a near future debacle in which terrorist take over major energy sources. Critically lauded, I’m not sure why. I thought the game was difficult enough that I had to employ a money cheat to finish the game. But I have to admire that it took itself so seriously, and that made me want to see it through to the end. 


 

 Battlefield 1 on PC: This is probably the most beautiful game I’ve played on my PC in several years. And it came out back in 2016. The single player campaign had my eyes lugubriously wet with tears, or it would do a 180 and have my flesh tingling with goosebumps, overly excited about what was going down in the mission. Unfortunately, as with all EA Battlefield games, the current multiplayer situation is lacking. Despite having some wonderful mission maps, the only online presence now is the Conquest maps (which are still fast and frenetic and frustrating, those silly snipers! I’ll never figure out why EA consistently undermines themselves and keeps releasing Battlefield games in such quick succession.

Peace Like a River by Leif Enger: (Shamelessly plagiarized from my very own GoodReads review.) I added more Leif Enger books onto my To Be Read list before I even finished this book. This is a testament to Enger's wonderful writing. In the last chapter, several pages before the book ended, I felt a great sob rise within me, a slowly moving floe of ice as big as a glacier. I read through glazed eyes struggling to get to the end. It's not often a book has such a power over me. This is the story of a religious man who’s son shoots a home intruder to death and then goes on the run. The man, a single parent, gathers his children and his Airstream camper and they go on a long-distance journey to find the prodigal son. I’m surprised this hasn’t been made into a Hollywood blockbuster. 

 

Steam Deck on PC or bed, or the kitchen table, or the toilet, or wherever!: I was going to hold out for one of these until Valve released a Steam Deck 2.0, but when they released this in a limited edition white version, I couldn’t resist. I had a Nintendo Switch before, but the poor thing sat in its case where it would otherwise collect dust. This Steam Deck is having the opposite effect. I can’t keep my hands off of it. It’s the ultimate portable mini PC built for one purpose: gaming! It’s a DIY modder and upgrader. And it has a great Steam community it was built around. It’s big for a handheld, and if I try to hold it up while I’m lying down, it eventually gets my hand to cramping. But boy is it spectacular. Next time you’re going on a long flight, or a hospital stay (the inevitable place I’ve come to know well) grab yourself one of these. You won’t want to check out. 


 

 


 

 Slay the Spire on Steam Deck: You, being the adventurer you are, have to fight a multitude of baddies and bosses in dank dungeons. All of your blocks and strikes are dictated by a deck of cards. You can only play 3 cards, initially. Do you choose all blocks? One block and two strikes? Or do you go all out, damn the defense, and simply charge in with total offense? This game will make you take such questions seriously. Each victory awards all kinds of sweet loot such as card upgrades, more health points, or potions that weaken foes. This is one that’s hard to put down, and despite its difficulty, meeting with death and defeat simply makes you want to boot it up and try again. 


 

 

Lord of the Rings – The Fellowship of the Ring on 4K Blu Ray: I rewarded myself with an early Christmas present and picked this up on a Black Friday thingamajig. Let me tell you, this movie looked better than when I saw it in its original theatrical release. 4K puts you right there as if all of these events are happening next to you. It’s almost disconcerting. I remember reading the trilogy of books right before going to see this movie, and as expected, much was omitted from the film, but I thought Peter Jackson did a wonderful job with this movie version. Watching this made me want to finally get back to Baldur’s Gate and finally finish it. This is a movie with a pitch-perfect cast and over the top production values. It may be one of the most fantastic movies I’ve ever seen. 



 


Balatro on Steam Deck: Right up there with the chocolate crack that is Slay the Spire, this is a simple poker game where winning hands allow you to purchase jokers that offer buffs, basically cheating at the game. Imagine a world in which a cheater can be regarded in high esteem! Hypnotic in its iteration, this game will make hours feel like minutes and dazzle you with its early aesthetic like something from an arcade machine in the back corner of a bowling alley in 1970. PC Gamer Magazine reviewer Abbi Stone said, “The Steam Deck should have been called The Balatro Deck.” I can truly believe it. 

 


 

 

Monday, November 11, 2024

Edward's October 2024 Monthly Mix

 


 Stem cell therapy was always the stuff of science fiction and fantasy for me. That was until my cardiologist encouraged me to contact the Heart Center at Cleveland, Ohio. It took me several weeks to make contact with someone, but I finally did and now I’m slated to pay them a visit in December. My cardiologist explained they probably couldn’t fix me, “but I’ve seen them do some amazing things,” he says. I guess we’ll see. In the interim, I’m putting in almost sixty-hour weeks at work which leaves little time for much of anything. I did however, manage to get a star on The Cure’s “Lovesong” and despite my free time, I was able to dabble in a few things. 

 

Lords of the Fallen on PC: I’ve talked about this delightful Dark Souls copycat before. Having killed off four bosses now, I’m beginning to see how everything comes full circle. I can look out on a vista and view some mystical looking spot in the distance. Eventually I’ll find a way to get to that spot. I’ll enter a door that was once incapable of being opened, and going through it, find that I’m in a room I’ve already been in several times, just from a different entrance. Seems I’ve just discovered a shortcut that shortens half the map! One thing I will say that this game has over Dark Souls is the color palette. Though it’s still a gloomy game, it’s so much brighter and shall I say. . . hopeful? 

 


 

Fallout on PC: First starting this game in 1999, and after four attempts, I beat it. It is with great honor I’ll be able to venture into this world from this point on, being able to state I’ve beat Fallout. As I’ve said before, it’s worth the playthrough, if just to see the origins of Deadmeat, and the Brotherhood of Steel, of which I earned my very own power armor. I got to meet the mutants and put an end to them. Admittedly, the game hasn’t aged well. The controls are wonky and the game is difficult. I used a walkthrough, but at this point I didn’t care. I just wanted to finish the game. I’ve read Fallout 2 is even bigger and more expansive. I can’t wait to check it out.  

 

The Birds on 4K Blu-Ray: Deemed, Alfred Hitchcock’s monster movie, this movie struck a chord of inspiration. Remember Richard Dreyfuss in the shark cage being rammed by the shark in Jaws? Well, you saw it first in The Birds when Tippi Hedren escapes the birds by sheltering herself in a phone booth, and the birds try to crash through to get at her. Slow pacing reigns supreme in this film, as alluded by the lack of a musical score. Bet you didn’t realize it, did you? However, you probably experienced the impending dread that prefaced each bird attack in the film because of the movie’s pace. Hitchcock does something else interesting in this movie, he shows a lot of closeups of a person’s face, particularly their eyes, and then we see what they are looking at. It has an intimate effect, creating anticipation and drawing the viewer closer to the character. But the main character in this film is the birds themselves. The birds were trained by Ray Berwick was the bird handler/trainer. It was discovered the crows were the most intelligent and the gulls were the meanest. Once trained to dive bomb humans, none of these birds could be released from captivity again.  

 




 The Reivers by William Faulkner: William Faulkner could be inferred as the 20th Century South’s GNP. His writing clearly has more verbiage than his scribbling peers, John Steinbeck and Ernest Hemingway. And he sends me to the dictionary. Steinbeck and Hemingway never do. This is probably the most comical of Faulkner’s books I’ve ever read. It involves three youths in the early 1900s who “borrow” a car from one of their wealthy grandfathers and head to Memphis, Tennessee where they spend the night in a brothel and lose the car in a foolish trade for a race horse. Then they must race the horse and gamble on the race to try to win the car back. Hilarity ensues, but there is a passage towards the end involving a boy’s corporal punishment (or lack of) however, that I found poignant and moved me to tears. As per any other Faulkner novel, this one has its share of “n-words” because it's the old South, and it was a different time back then. The novel won the 1963 Pulitzer Prize.

Simcity on PC: When this game came out in 2012 it caught an unnecessary amount of flak for it’s always online requirement and its limiting real estate space to build its bespoke cities. And then Colossal Order Ltd.’s Cities Skylines dealt the killing blow to EA’s venerable city building sim. I actually enjoyed SimCity and favored it over Cities Skylines. The poppy colors and vibrant art style, and not to mention the stellar sound design put it a cut above in my opinion. Clicking on a supermarket brought with it the sounds of grocery items being scanned, someone pushing a shopping cart with a squeaky wheel, and the plaintive cries of children being denied candy at the checkout lanes. There was such an ambience to the game. I recently reinstalled and tried to play the game again, however. It had been a minute and a half, but I just couldn’t get into it. Maybe the general consensus was right; the game just needed more real estate. 

 


 

Death Race on Blu Ray: Take the idea of reality television and catapult it twenty years into the future. This is the concept of Death Race. Prisoners at a maximum security penal colony drive weapon clad vehicles in an all out race in which the winner is granted his freedom if he can survive five races. I’d never seen the 1975 David Carridine movie Death Race 2000 (but always wanted to.) Paul W. S. Anderson stated the movie was more a prequel than a clear-cut remake of the original film. With an all-star cast, the movie was filmed as a Hollywood A film and not a B film (despite Roger Corman opining treatments for the film) Also the an original idea for the film was helmed by Paramount Pictures and the Paula Wagner/Tom Cruise team. Tom Cruise did not like the first two screenplays of the film he read, so he passed on it. Jason Statham was cast as the lead, and I was not disappointed. The cars were the main stars, however, each having dedicated mechanics that worked 12-14 hour days 6 days a week to keep the cars running while filming. It’s a fun movie to watch, rough around the edges and graphic, but it will rivet your senses.

The Untouchables on 4K Blu-Ray: Could you imagine Bob Hoskins playing Al Capone in this epic gangster movie? Well, that’s how it almost happened. Brian De Palma much preferred Robert DeNiro in the role, and when DeNiro went to meet with De Palma, he thought Robert DeNiro was much too slight in his manner, softspoken and not rough enough. He was told he would be in for a big surprise when DeNiro showed up for filming. DeNiro used a heavy set body suit, and gained weight in his face and neck, and he had his hair shaved into a receding hairline, and he adopted the mannerisms and voice. He became Al Capone. Brian De Palma said DeNiro did subtle things in the film that you simply could not see behind the camera – a testament to DeNiro’s talent. The characterizations in the film were superbly done in the guise of four men (Kevin Costner, Sean Connery, Andy Garcia, and Charles Martin Smith) who were totally disparate, coming together like a well-oiled machine and working to topple Al Capone and his chokehold on Prohibition era Chicago. The soundtrack created by Ennio Morricone (who won a Grammy for his work on the film, produced the theme song that Paramount still uses today to present preview trailers on their home media. Metacritic summed up the movie perfectly: Slick on the surface, but loaded with artful details. De Palma was going for a clean and pristine look like Nazi Germany. This really shows in the 4K transfer.

 


Sunday, October 6, 2024

Edward's September 2024 Monthly Mix

 

 


 September has become my favorite month and it’s not because it’s the month of my birth. I think it’s because it heralds the coming of autumn. When I was young, May was my month of choice because it announced the arrival of spring and my inevitable follies that only befall the youth. Now that I’m old, and I have more days behind me than ahead, there’s a certain chill vibe to autumn that I embrace more deeply and it’s deepening with each passing year. Unfortunately, like Robert Frost’s poem, “Nothing Gold Can Stay,” autumn is always fleeting which gives rise to winter, which is an altogether different story.  

 

Company of Heroes 2 on PC: You’ve heard me say it before, Company of Heroes is one of my all time truly favorite games. Were I to be banished to some beautiful tropical island with funky umbrella laden drinks and vacation worthy sunsets, and broadband Internet of course, I’d have a copy of Company of Heroes on a killer gaming laptop at all times. In the interim, I’ve been spending time with Company of Heroes 2. I beat the campaign sometime last year, but I’ve been busying myself with the game’s pre-packaged scenarios. Offering three levels of difficulty, Conscript, Captain, and General. Most of these missions are just impossible, let alone trying to play them on General difficulty. But I want those Steam achievements! Anyway, I shall stay the course, at least until I get to the end of the missions. And let’s not forget that stellar soundtrack helmed by Cris Velasco, an American musician who has done everything from God of War to Borderlands 2 to The Long Dark. Filled with operatic haunting male chorus and philharmonic grand orchestras, it’s a soundtrack fitting for a Hollywood feature film.

Mission Impossible: Season 5 on DVD: There were some changes made in season five of this venerable television series, and I’m embracing them all. Lesley Ann Warren has joined the cast as Dana Lambert, a vivacious young agent, with a charm and beauty not unlike the typical girl next door. Sam Elliot (who looks almost strange without his trademark Tombstone moustache) has also joined the Impossible Mission Force. The theme song has a subtle variant, which admittedly, makes me long for the previous theme song style. Shows are introducing more elements of missions involving mafia kingpins and organized crime.

Dell Alienware 34” Ultra Widescreen monitor: As all of my gaming buddies know, acquisition of this bright, beautiful monitor is proof I’m in no hurry to upgrade to 5K resolution. This monitor had been on my wishlist for a long time. I’ve always moved up in computerdom over the years from 640 x 480 to 1024 to 1650 to 1080p, and then I discovered 1440p. It truly is the sweet spot for PC gaming. This monitor being ultrawide and curved, I thought would take some getting used to. It was more like a sense of homecoming when I plugged it in. If you’ve been thinking about takin the plunge into curved, I recommend doing so.  

 Psycho on 4K Blu-Ray: Alfred Hitchcock never cared subject matter or acting. He cared about photography, and the pieces of film that could do something to an audience. And this movie did something to me when I first watched it at 8 or 9 years old. I realized it made an impression on me like a fingerprint tattoo. John Carpenter said this movie was a piece of American history and you can see how movies are made today because of this movie. I’ve seen it numerous times over the years, and picked up the Blu Ray edition when it first released. This new 4K edition was the gamechanger, however, and not for the reason you’re thinking it is. The movie was filmed in black & white, so there isn’t much resolution-wise you can do to improve it. The improvement in this edition comes with a different (and very noticeable) upgrade. The sound! Sound is often overlooked, but in a movie, dialogue is where the story lives, Effects are where the action of the film lives, and music is where all of the emotion lives. In the original film when the policeman who’s been following Marion Crane tails her to a used car dealership where she trades her car in to avoid suspicion for her criminal act, the cop can be seen standing across the four lane street, leaning against his car with his arms crossed. You see cars passing in front of the camera and the sound of their passing is a single monotonic whoosh. The painstaking sound remastering in this 4K edition really comes through when you now hear the cars pass from your left speaker through the center channel and then out of your right speakers. This effect about made my mouth drop open. This newly released version is testament to the old adage, “just when you thought it couldn’t be improved upon.”  

Eternity Eau de Toilette by Calvin Klein: You know me, spicy fruitiness colognes in the warm months and musky leathery man scents in the autumn and winter. Seeing as how fall is approaching, I decided to try Eternity. It’s proved its worth, having been around since 1990. It offers up the masculine smell of barbershops and lemon. I like its tenacity. A few sprays seem to last all day long. The scent though, maybe not so much. It’s an old cologne, and it smells like it. It kind of made me miss my Drakkar Noir, but that said, Eternity ranks number 18 according to Yahoo!’s poll of the 25 top colognes that women love on men. Maybe I’ll keep it around.

Railroad Corporation on PC: Railroad economic strategy games are some of my favorite games on the planet. (I’ve played through Sid Meier’s Railroads! five times.) I’m always searching for the next iteration of Sid Meier’s Railroad Tycoon 3, but by the looks of it, there will never be one. I have found something almost as fun though. Enter Iceberg Interactive’s Railroad Corporation. It takes itself a bit more seriously, graphics-wise than 2006’s Sid Meier’s Railroads! And in this game, rather than owning a railroad, you control a railroad for robber barons. If your job isn’t up to par, you’re fired and it’s game over. I had attempted this game a few years ago, but lost interest due to its complexity. I made the decision to give it another go, however, and so far, it’s been pretty fun. I’m on mission 8 of 12, so it seems I’m doing okay since there are no difficulty levels - - it’s one size fits all.

 

Sunday, September 8, 2024

Edward's August 2024 Monthly Mix

 

 


 

August flew by like a Pegasus. But I'm getting into the routine of my new department at work, and it's with smooth sails and fair winds. The guitar playing is coming along steadily. I'm working on The Cure's "Lovesong" which is a mix of everything guitar. I have some unusual chords, some nice little mini solos going on, and as usual per The Cure, a melody that is happy with lugubrious lyrics. In the world of The Cure, it rains every day. To avoid all of this melancholy I turned to bright and shiny things like good movies, good reading and some really great games. 

 

Lords of the Fallen on PC: When Dark Souls released in 2011, it heralded in a new genre of games, so impactful the genre even called itself, Souls-like, an obvious allusion to the game’s incredible difficulty. I even joke around with the guys I work with explaining, “There are two types of people in the world, those who have beat Dark souls, and those who haven’t. And guess what, guys? I’m one who has!” The Souls formula is simple, but compelling. One starts out as the typical RPG “chosen one,” a level 1 nobody, and you fight things and loot things, all the while building up attributes to take on extremely difficult boss fights in an attempt to level your statistics even more. The first major copycat out of the gate was Deck13’s Lords of the Fallen. Critics christened it the first “souls-like.” It is, albeit with a difficulty considered easier and much more of a storyline complete with talking NPCs. Not to mention, your player character, Harkyn, has much more personality than the desiccated husk of a being you played in Dark Souls. I’ve got almost three dozen hours in the game, and admittedly, it is a struggle. It’s giving my Xbox controller a good workout, and after beating this one (if I do) I’ll be taking a break from another souls-like game for a long while simply because they are so exhausting. 

 


 

Rear Window on 4K Blu-Ray: I recently picked up a box, make that a “book” set of Alfred Hitchcock films on 4K. This first set contained four Hitchcock movies (perhaps his four most well known among the masses.) I wasn’t expecting these films to be so glorious looking as remastered 4K versions. The first movie I watched was Rear Window. It concerns a freelance photographer, played by James Stewart, who is convalescing in his small New York apartment with a broken leg. Confined to a wheelchair, he has little to do but stare out of his windows at the other tenants’ windows, in effect, becoming a voyeur of sorts. His curiosity gets him deep into hot water, however, when he thinks he sees one of the tenants murder his wife and proceed to remove her from the small apartment in little pieces. The movie is a testament to Hitchcock’s ingenuity as a director. The whole film is from the viewpoint of the photographer’s apartment. The movie is a suspense tour de force, and I can now say with confidence it has become my favorite Alfred Hitchcock movie. 

 


 

 

 

 

 

The Blade Itself by Joe Abercrombie: I probably read about this book, the beginning of a trilogy somewhere on my GoodReads site. It’s a medieval fantasy in the vein of A Song of Fire and Ice, without the heft.  The story begins with the misadventures of a young barbarian named Logen Ninefingers, who always has to explain his name by holding up his injured hand, revealing the origin of his name. We are then introduced to a bevy of memorable characters who consistently walk a smudged gray area of good and bad. Abercrombe’s dialogue amongst the characters is great laugh out loud stuff. (And I rarely find comedy funny.)

Vertigo on 4K Blu-Ray: This was the second feature I watched on the Alfred Hitchcock box set I picked up this month. Considered by critics and film historians as Alfred’s masterpiece,  (I personally think that honor should go to North by Northwest.) This movie, another James Stewart vehicle, involves a detective hired by an old college friend to follow his mentally unstable wife as she leaves the house and embarks on mysterious adventures. Virtuous Jimmy Stewart falls in love with the wife, however, and from that point on things really become an imbroglio. Stewart’s character, who is deathly afraid of heights, suddenly realizes he has bit off way more than he can chew. Hitchcock visited San Francisco once and deemed it, “The Paris of North America.” He knew at that point he wanted to film a movie there. The film’s restoration was incredibly painstaking, and the end result as you can see in these stills are easily worth the price of admission for this set.  

 



 



 

 

 

 

 

Digital Photography Essentials by Tom Ang: I piecemealed this book a bit at a time for over a year until I completed it. I quite frankly think it’s one of the best books I’ve ever read on the subject of photography. This book starts out with the assumption you know the basic fundamentals, how aperture and shutters work in cameras and you know a little of what lies beyond the all too familiar Auto button on the camera, but then it takes you by the hand and introduces so many aspects in getting the most use out of your digital camera. The book was copyrighted in 2011, so a miniscule amount of the book might be dated, but were there to be a revised edition, this would be the perfect book to have if you are interested in blowing the dust off your camera and using it as a new window to the world. I generally give my books away after I read them, but this one just might be a keeper.  

The Fellowship of the Ring on Blu-Ray: Oddly, I’d not seen this movie since its theatrical release in 2001. I remember I hadn’t read the books, so immediately before the film released, I gobbled down the Lord of the Rings trilogy, and then proceeded to see the first film with my friend, Vic Berwick. I wasn’t impressed. As a matter of fact, Vic still makes me laugh recounting the two of us in the darkened theater and when he looked over, I was asleep! Perhaps the source material (the books) was too new in my head still. I’m not sure. But seeing this movie again after all these years, I forgot how grandiose it was. The transfer to Blu-Ray is excellent and projects wonderfully on a 4K TV with a good soundbar. Containing a (mostly) all star cast, this was the beginning of one of the most involved film projects of all time. (All three films in the trilogy were filmed sequentially in New Zealand and filming took fourteen months.) 

 


 

Fallout on PC: Here I am again with another attempt. This makes start number four on a game that’s always haunted me that I never finished it. It is an important game after all, credited with renewing the spark of interest for computer role playing games when it released in 1997. Previously, I would get stuck and say, Okay, I’m done with it. And then I’d uninstall it out of anger and frustration. This time I’m using a walkthrough and I have everything set to wimpy and easy. I just want to finish the game. Of course, the inspiration behind this is Amazon’s Prime excellent series, which isn’t wholly true to the game, but it’s true enough. I’ve made good progress in this. I’ve at least saved Vault 13 by procuring the water chip. It’s been said this is when the real adventuring begins. From what I skimmed ahead with the walkthrough, it looks like I’m a good third of the way through the game. (It’s not that long of a game.) The game deserves a special shout out to Mark Morgan who composed the eerie but oh so fitting soundtrack to the game.

Without Remorse (John Clark #1) by Tom Clancy: I read Clancy’s Rainbow Six when it was first published in 1998. It released in close proximity to the stellar game put out by Red Storm Entertainment. I remember enjoying the book immensely as well as the game. I didn’t realize at the time, Rainbow Six was a John Clark #2 novel because the main character, John Clark, had been in a previous Tom Clancy novel. I’ve read several of Clancy’s books, but not in any particular order. (I suggest you read The Hunt for Red October. Now!) Without Remorse really shows that Tom Clancy wasn’t just a hack who wrote techno thrillers for men; the guy really could write great entertaining fiction. This book has elements of Stallone’s Rambo, Charles Bronson’s Death Wish, and even elements of Peter Benchley’s Jaws in it. It’s a fun read.

Alien: Romulus at IMAX: It was on par with the first two Alien movies, and as it turns out, the movie occurs between the first and second Alien movies. Peculiarities I thought that were just that, peculiarities, were the space station the kids found they were going to use to abandon their mining planet. Hard to believe it was just hanging there all along like a ripened apple, just out of reach. And then the way the xenomorphs evolved from facehuggers to fully grown walking terrors in such a short amount of time. David Jonsson, who played the broken android, did a remarkable job. The movie made strong allusions to Alien:Isolation, one of my favorite games of all time. If you’re a fan of the first two movies, this one belongs in your collection.