some things! (did you miss me?)
Hellooooo, children. I think I’m back? I feel pretty okay; I think I needed a hiatus, it’d been a while since I’d taken one. So I’ve mostly been watching reality shows about kpop idols and reblogging pictures of pretty people on tumblr, but now I’m writing ALL the things and I feel up to wading through my flist again. I’m not going to try to go back and catch all the things I missed, so I’ll repeat: if you have anything you’d like me to check out, let me know.
+ It’s been well over 100 degrees this week (and will likely continue to be), but it hasn’t been too awful because the humidity has been reasonable, which is not something I ever thought I would say about Middle Tennessee. It’s drydrydry here right now and all the grass is dead so it isn’t as pretty of a green as it usually is here this time of year, so I’m praying for rain because we need it. But I have to admit that the lack of humidity is nice.
+ In book-related news, I am finally reading Bitterblue and it’s fantastic. I think it’s Cashore’s best book yet, though I’m only halfway through. Little Queen Bitterblue! So lovely!
+ Also re: books, I learned the other day that Eloise Jarvis McGraw, writer of one of my all-time favorite YA novels Mara: Daughter of the Nile (perhaps the book I’ve most often re-read in my life? I’ve memorized sections of it and my copy is falling apart) wrote an adult novel about Hatshepsut. Obviously as soon as I heard this I hied myself to the internet and looked for a copy. But this isn’t just out of print, it’s out of print. The only copy on Abebooks was $350. I found a copy on Amazon that was substantially less but still way, way more than I’d usually pay for a book but I splurged anyway because A) I live very frugally and I feel it’s okay for me to do something like that once in a while, B) I have always been obsessed with ancient Egypt and this is totally Relevant to My Interests, and C) did I mention she wrote one of my favorite books? I will definitely let y’all know if it’s good. I can’t wait for it to arrive! *happy dance*
+ Here’s something you never thought you’d hear me say: I’m writing smutty slashfic. Who even am I anymore? I don’t know, but just writing it makes me blush. I’ve gotten to the point over my years (and years) of fandom that I can read porn straight-faced (though you know me: I mostly skim to get to the actual emotions because who cares about the physical stuff?) but writing it myself is a whole different story. Obviously since this is me we're talking about, the physical smut is just an excuse for emotional porn, by which I mean everyone has too many feelings and they're all incapable of expressing any of them but the ugliest ones.
+ I only have like 10,000 more words to write in my novel. But I keep getting distracted by my shiny new fandoms and running off to write fanfic. I need to buckle down and finish because finishing was the whole point of this thing. I don’t think I’m going to clean this one up for publication; I’m going to set it to the side for a while. But finishing it was the goal, and I need to make it happen.
+ Is it okay for me to admit that I have now seen Brave and that I found it disappointing?
Visually, it was lovely and lush, though I felt that the human animation lacked something, especially compared to Tangled, where the characters' faces moved like real faces. And I'm obviously still obsessed with Merida's hair: best thing about the movie bar-none.
But. I felt that the film lacked emotional resonance for me? My BFF felt the same way, too (she raged a lot walking out and said it's going to be eating at her for days; I assigned her an essay to write me). And you have to understand: I went into this film 100% ready to love every single thing about it. I wanted to, especially because it's a film about a girl's relationship with her mother.
But it didn't touch me like most Pixar movies do. It felt like a mess to me, honestly, the elements didn't jibe, the charaterization was very surface-level, the conflict too obvious. There was no subtleness at all and I wasn't invested. They didn't take advantage of the richness of Celtic mythology, and they really didn't take advantage of the richness of the Scottish musical tradition. It just felt like it could have been so much more. Honestly, the little mini-movie they show right before (as they do on all Pixar movies) was so much more beautiful and moving and lovely (I ADORED it) than Brave was.
All that said, I'm glad that this is a mediocre movie about a girl's relationship with her mother rather than another mediocre movie about a guy saving people or whatever. I'm not upset that it was made, I'm upset that it wasn't as good as I wanted it to be.
+ Something that I watched that wasn’t at all disappointing was Appropriate Adult, a BBC two-part series about a woman who was the appropriate adult (via wikipedia: “a parent or guardian or social worker who must be present if a young person or vulnerable adult is to be searched or questioned in police custody”) to Fred West, the serial killer who with his wife killed at least 13 women in Gloucester during the 70s/80s. It starred Emily Watson, always extremely good, who was very convincing as a quiet sort of housewife-type and Dominic West from The Hour. I liked the contrast between his character on the hour—charming, rich, educated—and his portrayal of West—working class, manipulative, rough-edged and a psychopath. He was excellent, and I hear he won a BAFTA for it, which was well-deserved.
I can’t say that I exactly recommend it, because it was rough. Not physically graphic at all, because it’s all about the aftermath of his arrest, but the things you learn about what the Wests did will obviously never leave your brain after you hear them. Their actions are the kind that we like to convince ourselves are inhuman, and I can’t emphasize that enough. That said, it was an extremely well-done production, I was very impressed. If you think you can handle it, you might want to check it out.
+ I also saw Snow White and the Huntsman a while back, and I liked it. Visually it was absolutely stunning and exactly the type of thing I love. The characters were a bit underdeveloped, but it was trying to be a fairy tale, and that comes with the territory. There was some weak dialogue, some cheesy moments, and some other weaknesses, but all in all I thought it was a good summer popcorn movie with a nice twist of being A) AMAZING TO LOOK AT and B) about ladies.
+ I have watched 2 and a half episodes of Teen Wolf. I am trying to get into this thing because everyone loves it, but I need a goal: tell me when it’s going to become an obsession, please. You know I'll hold out as long as I know how long I need to.
+ The only kdrama I’m all caught up with at the moment is I Do I Do, which is kind of ridiculous. But it’s very light and adorable and has a noona romance that works for me with a badass hbic leading lady and the world’s sweetest guy as her romantic interest. I am going to catch up on Gaksital soon and also get back into Big, which I hear has gotten really awesome.
+ I am a giant sap (things you already knew if you have been here long), so have a video that actually made me tear up:
+ It’s been well over 100 degrees this week (and will likely continue to be), but it hasn’t been too awful because the humidity has been reasonable, which is not something I ever thought I would say about Middle Tennessee. It’s drydrydry here right now and all the grass is dead so it isn’t as pretty of a green as it usually is here this time of year, so I’m praying for rain because we need it. But I have to admit that the lack of humidity is nice.
+ In book-related news, I am finally reading Bitterblue and it’s fantastic. I think it’s Cashore’s best book yet, though I’m only halfway through. Little Queen Bitterblue! So lovely!
+ Also re: books, I learned the other day that Eloise Jarvis McGraw, writer of one of my all-time favorite YA novels Mara: Daughter of the Nile (perhaps the book I’ve most often re-read in my life? I’ve memorized sections of it and my copy is falling apart) wrote an adult novel about Hatshepsut. Obviously as soon as I heard this I hied myself to the internet and looked for a copy. But this isn’t just out of print, it’s out of print. The only copy on Abebooks was $350. I found a copy on Amazon that was substantially less but still way, way more than I’d usually pay for a book but I splurged anyway because A) I live very frugally and I feel it’s okay for me to do something like that once in a while, B) I have always been obsessed with ancient Egypt and this is totally Relevant to My Interests, and C) did I mention she wrote one of my favorite books? I will definitely let y’all know if it’s good. I can’t wait for it to arrive! *happy dance*
+ Here’s something you never thought you’d hear me say: I’m writing smutty slashfic. Who even am I anymore? I don’t know, but just writing it makes me blush. I’ve gotten to the point over my years (and years) of fandom that I can read porn straight-faced (though you know me: I mostly skim to get to the actual emotions because who cares about the physical stuff?) but writing it myself is a whole different story. Obviously since this is me we're talking about, the physical smut is just an excuse for emotional porn, by which I mean everyone has too many feelings and they're all incapable of expressing any of them but the ugliest ones.
+ I only have like 10,000 more words to write in my novel. But I keep getting distracted by my shiny new fandoms and running off to write fanfic. I need to buckle down and finish because finishing was the whole point of this thing. I don’t think I’m going to clean this one up for publication; I’m going to set it to the side for a while. But finishing it was the goal, and I need to make it happen.
+ Is it okay for me to admit that I have now seen Brave and that I found it disappointing?
Visually, it was lovely and lush, though I felt that the human animation lacked something, especially compared to Tangled, where the characters' faces moved like real faces. And I'm obviously still obsessed with Merida's hair: best thing about the movie bar-none.
But. I felt that the film lacked emotional resonance for me? My BFF felt the same way, too (she raged a lot walking out and said it's going to be eating at her for days; I assigned her an essay to write me). And you have to understand: I went into this film 100% ready to love every single thing about it. I wanted to, especially because it's a film about a girl's relationship with her mother.
But it didn't touch me like most Pixar movies do. It felt like a mess to me, honestly, the elements didn't jibe, the charaterization was very surface-level, the conflict too obvious. There was no subtleness at all and I wasn't invested. They didn't take advantage of the richness of Celtic mythology, and they really didn't take advantage of the richness of the Scottish musical tradition. It just felt like it could have been so much more. Honestly, the little mini-movie they show right before (as they do on all Pixar movies) was so much more beautiful and moving and lovely (I ADORED it) than Brave was.
All that said, I'm glad that this is a mediocre movie about a girl's relationship with her mother rather than another mediocre movie about a guy saving people or whatever. I'm not upset that it was made, I'm upset that it wasn't as good as I wanted it to be.
+ Something that I watched that wasn’t at all disappointing was Appropriate Adult, a BBC two-part series about a woman who was the appropriate adult (via wikipedia: “a parent or guardian or social worker who must be present if a young person or vulnerable adult is to be searched or questioned in police custody”) to Fred West, the serial killer who with his wife killed at least 13 women in Gloucester during the 70s/80s. It starred Emily Watson, always extremely good, who was very convincing as a quiet sort of housewife-type and Dominic West from The Hour. I liked the contrast between his character on the hour—charming, rich, educated—and his portrayal of West—working class, manipulative, rough-edged and a psychopath. He was excellent, and I hear he won a BAFTA for it, which was well-deserved.
I can’t say that I exactly recommend it, because it was rough. Not physically graphic at all, because it’s all about the aftermath of his arrest, but the things you learn about what the Wests did will obviously never leave your brain after you hear them. Their actions are the kind that we like to convince ourselves are inhuman, and I can’t emphasize that enough. That said, it was an extremely well-done production, I was very impressed. If you think you can handle it, you might want to check it out.
+ I also saw Snow White and the Huntsman a while back, and I liked it. Visually it was absolutely stunning and exactly the type of thing I love. The characters were a bit underdeveloped, but it was trying to be a fairy tale, and that comes with the territory. There was some weak dialogue, some cheesy moments, and some other weaknesses, but all in all I thought it was a good summer popcorn movie with a nice twist of being A) AMAZING TO LOOK AT and B) about ladies.
+ I have watched 2 and a half episodes of Teen Wolf. I am trying to get into this thing because everyone loves it, but I need a goal: tell me when it’s going to become an obsession, please. You know I'll hold out as long as I know how long I need to.
+ The only kdrama I’m all caught up with at the moment is I Do I Do, which is kind of ridiculous. But it’s very light and adorable and has a noona romance that works for me with a badass hbic leading lady and the world’s sweetest guy as her romantic interest. I am going to catch up on Gaksital soon and also get back into Big, which I hear has gotten really awesome.
+ I am a giant sap (things you already knew if you have been here long), so have a video that actually made me tear up:
no subject
LOLOL Teen Wolf. I will not lie: I watched the first ep a while back because of all the a/b/o fic of it I saw turning up on AO3. I concluded, based on one episode, that not only was I bored by the whole premise, but that it had no better chance of convincing me of Derek/Stiles than the fic I'd read. I therefore decided not to watch anymore.
That said: STILES. Is he not the most adorable thing under the sun? Do you not want to just cuddle him forever and ever? He's so sweet and genuine without ever being saccharine. I adore him. I'm told he continues to be the best part of the show, and also that other people (Lydia and the head jock dude) develop a lot more complexity later. So.
Hurrah for living frugally and splurging occasionally. This is totally my budgeting philosophy. Walk to work, buy nothing ever except groceries (which I do splurge on, because otherwise I wouldn't eat), and then fly places / go to an SPN convention / etc every so often.
YAY novel!!!
That's a pity about Brave. I'm still planning to see it, because I see all the Pixars (except for Cars 2, which I hear was a disaster). It makes me very sad to hear they couldn't handle "a girl's story" with the deftness they've been handling all their other stories over the years (mostly; they pretty much threw 'deft' out the window in the second half of Wall-E, and honestly most of the subtlety of Cars went into the car-related geek-out, not the characterization). :P
no subject
I am quite fond of Stiles. He's a Xander-type, without carrying around all the things that make Xander drive me so very crazy. At least from what I can tell right now.
Hurrah for living frugally and splurging occasionally. This is totally my budgeting philosophy. Walk to work, buy nothing ever except groceries (which I do splurge on, because otherwise I wouldn't eat), and then fly places / go to an SPN convention / etc every so often.
Exactly! I wish I could walk to work, but I really do rarely buy anything that isn't food (recently clothes, but it's always a long time in between clothes-buy experiences) and gas. So maybe if they ever set a date for the SBS Kpop Festival I can actually buy a plane ticket and not feel guilty! :D
(except for Cars 2, which I hear was a disaster).
That doesn't surprise me. I thought Cars was one of the weaker of the films (not a bad one, of course, just not Pixar Level in my mind), so a sequel wasn't necessary to me.
It makes me very sad to hear they couldn't handle "a girl's story" with the deftness they've been handling all their other stories over the years
This, this. I was so disappointed, because I was so ready to love it!