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Thanksgiving, 2022

with special guest star
Billy Graham

For Thanksgiving, most of my family was with their families, but seven of us met for dinner at the Golden Spoon in Federal Way:

• my mom
• Katrina, my sister
• Max, Katrina's long-time boyfriend
• Adelle, Katrina's long-time friend
• Anna, my dead brother Ralph's widow
• Ernest, Anna's adult son
• and me — Doug, the fat hermit

Katrina and Mom I know well, of course, and we get together for breakfast every Saturday with no lulls in the conversation. Adelle I sorta know by default, since she's been buddies with Katrina since I was a kid. Anna I've met four times, I think, and she's OK by me. It was only the third, maybe fourth time I've met Max, and I like him, but he's super-quiet and shy like me. It was the second time I'd met Ernest, and I was neutral going in, but hated him by the time we left.

As I was saying hello to these people in front of the restaurant, Mom interrupted to tap my shoulder and show off a magazine she'd brought. "Do you know who this is?" she asked, pointing at the magazine's cover, with her other hand covering the name above what was obviously Billy Graham's head. It was Time magazine's commemorative issue, published shortly after his death in 2018.

"Yeah, I know who Billy Graham was," I said, "but I don't know why you brought Billy Graham to Thanksgiving dinner."

"I just wanted to see if you knew who he is," she said and I sighed. She also showed the magazine to Anna and Adelle outside the restaurant, again covering his name. 

Then we all went inside, paid and seated ourselves and got our food, and at the table Mom showed Billy Graham to Max, and then to Ernest. Everyone recognized Billy Graham.

Mom and my sister live together, so presumably she'd already shown the magazine to Katrina. And in every mention of Billy Graham, Mom referred to him in the present tense, as if he's still alive.

Other than the come-to-Jesus movies he made, I never much hated Billy Graham. He was the only famous preacher I've ever thought wasn't a charlatan, and now that he's dead they all are, and I said so to my mom, mostly to annoy her.

She didn't hear me so I said it again, and she laughed and said, "No, his son has continued his righteous work." To that, I answered with my two-minute opinion of Franklin Graham (he's a charlatan, and one of the worst) which hushed the table. What, you think Mom's the only one in my family who can be annoying?

'Hushed' is what the table was, for most of the meal. There were many long silences. Most of us are at least kinda shy, and knew just one or two of the other person present. The only outgoing people, trying to spark conversation with the rest of us, were Ernest, who talked about his job through most of the meal, and dropped some conservative crap into the mashed potatoes, and my mom, who talked about Billy Graham, and told the same half-dozen stories she usually tells, and asked the same half-dozen questions.

♦ ♦ ♦ 

The food was better than the last time I'd eaten at Golden Spoon, but nothing special, really. Everything was warm if not hot, and enough of it was good that I didn't leave hungry.

They were out of coffee for 45 minutes, and Katrina needs coffee to survive, so she made several trips to the empty coffee decanter, and three times told three different employees they were out of coffee, before someone finally came 'round and made coffee.

For Thanksgiving at an all-you-can-eat place, it wasn't terribly busy, and we stayed at the table for three hours of intermittent conversation. That's lots longer than I'd expected, but it wasn't too bad, because by luck of the chairs, I was at the opposite end of the table from my mother.

Eventually, though, Mom dragged her chair and resettled between me and Max, and repeated her stories and questions from the first half of the meal, and pulled out some family photos to start asking me as always, "Do you know who these people are?" She also invited me to see Till with her on Saturday, but I said no.

♦ ♦ ♦ 

When the event finally began breaking up, Ernest approached and told me I was riding home with him and his mother. He said he wouldn't take no for an answer, and I told him he'd have to beat me in a fight, and that I wouldn't be throwing sissy-punches. He thought I was kidding around.

People in the family are always offering to give me a ride, like they're rescuing me from the bus. It gets tiresome, because I like riding the bus, but usually when someone offers a ride, they ask. Ernest is the first who's 'jokingly' told me I wasn't taking the bus, and I barely know the guy.

Telling me what I'm going to do, even in jest, is the quickest way to make me despise you. Telling the fable of McDonald's and the hot-coffee lawsuit doesn't help, either.

♦ ♦ ♦ 

Anyway, I already had a ride home. In a few text messages the day before, Katrina had said she'd be visiting our sister Hazel at the nursing home after Thanksgiving dinner. I'd volunteered to tag along, and Katrina had said she'd drop me at my house, which isn't far from Hazel's nursing home.

Katrina had slipped some cookies from the dessert bar into her purse to bring along, and I'd paid the buffet for a small container of candied yams, because that's always been Hazel's favorite (and they were the only flat-out excellent item at the buffet).

So Max went north, Adelle and Ernest went south, and Katrina drove me and Mom and Adelle to visit Hazel.

On the way, Mom made me furious, as only she can do, but first, the set-up: Hazel has been disabled since the 1980s, and she can hardly speak so visiting her is awkward and uncomfortable.

I'm a horrible, horrible man, so I put off seeing her for a few months after moving back to Seattle this year, but since then I've been visiting Hazel about once monthly. Katrina and Mom say that they visit monthly, and it feels like the right pace for me, too. We don't usually go together, though, so Mom simply doesn't believe I ever visit Hazel at all.

Yesterday was my fifth visit to Hazel, and the second time I'd visited Hazel with Mom. 

She often nags me about never visiting Hazel, and I've told her I do visit, but she keeps nagging, and I've told her to knock it off, but telling Mom not to do something only ensures she'll do it.

The worst was a long series of text messages she sent a couple of months ago, when Mom started with, "It breaks my heart that you never, ever visit Hazel, and I think you never will."

I didn't argue, or even answer the texts. Mom won't stop nagging until she's dead, and if she wasn't nagging me about Hazel, she'd be nagging me about something else. 

So after Thanksgiving dinner on Thursday, Mom and I were in the back seat of Katrina's car, motoring toward the nursing home to visit Hazel, and Mom said to me, "I don't know how Katrina dragged you along to visit Hazel." I'd made it through the meal without yelling at anyone, so I ignored it and looked out the window.

Mom changed the subject to ask if I knew Adelle's last name, which is a ridiculous question, so I looked further out the window. I have known Adelle, and her last name, for almost forever, but to amuse or annoy Mom in the car, I made several wrong guesses.

A few minutes later, between stories she's told hundreds of times before, Mom looped back to say, "I don't think you'd bother visiting Hazel if we hadn't captured you for this ride home, ha-ha," and I came close to losing it.

"I visit Hazel as often as you do," I said, "but yeah, I should've taken the bus. On the bus, nobody nags me."

Mom said, "Excuse me?" like she hadn't heard, but she'd heard everything else I'd said in the car, and she'd heard that.

When we got to the nursing home, as Katrina backed into a parking space, Mom said, "I'm so happy that a ride finally roped you into seeing Hazel."

And I said, "Bite me!" louder than I'd said anything all day — not yelling, but almost. Mom said nothing about it, but as we walked inside, Adelle asked what had happened.

"Nothing that doesn't happen all the time," I explained, and then the four of us spent about half an hour with Hazel.

♦ ♦ ♦ 

It's hard to decipher what Hazel says, and I never know what to say myself, but I do visit, without being captured, dragged, or roped in. And I'd come to Thanksgiving dinner, like I was supposed to, and it had been awkward and only sporadically pleasant, but it was an obligation so I'd been there and done my best.

Visiting my tragically disabled sister, with all of us working together kinda like charades, we were able to understand about half a dozen things she said. Hazel was clearly happy to see us, and she loved the cookies and candied yams.

Mom asked Hazel if she recognized the man on the cover of Time, and Hazel said, "Billy Graham" surprisingly clearly. Several family photos were on the wall, so Mom pulled them down one at a time, passed them around, and asked me, and Katrina, and Hazel, and Adelle, "Do you know who's in this picture?" about every picture. Mom knows who's in all the family photos, of course, but she loves asking.

Hazel always enjoyed singing, so Katrina had the bright idea to start singing "Daisy, Daisy" (give me your answer, do), and we all sang along, including Hazel. Her words were slurred, but she still knows the lyrics and can still carry a tune. Our visit ended with a second song, Katrina and Adelle singing a few lines from, "So Long, Farewell," from The Sound of Music. 

I wouldn't go so far as to say it was nice seeing Hazel, but it was nice seeing Hazel smile. It would've been nicer if I hadn't been boiling mad when we walked in. Thanks for that, Mom.

♦ ♦ ♦ 

And next comes Christmas. Nobody's said anything about it yet, except me. Twice, in passing, I've mentioned to Mom that I don't do Christmas, but she "didn't hear me."

1986 was the last time I participated in the traditional yuletide bullshit, where you get together with family and loved ones, exchange expensive gifts, eat a meal, make painfully difficult conversation, and (at least in my family, maybe yours?) at the end of the day, the day's always a disappointment.

Since the 1990s I've lived far, far away from the family, so abstaining was easy, but this year I moved back to Seattle, where the rest of the Hollands live. I expect that they expect I'll be home for Christmas. And home is where I'll be on December 25 — in my home, in my recliner, phone clicked off, alone and ignoring Xmas, same as every December 25th.

But there'll be some battles and a butt-load of nagging from Mom first.

11/25/2022   

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Faces

CRANKY
OLD FART

#236

leftovers
& links

 
Thursday,
Nov. 24, 2022

Are there any people anywhere who gather with relatives on the holidays, and leave in good spirits? 

I am exhausted, from five hours spent with the family for Thanksgiving. The food was OK, there were no big arguments, even a few laughs, but I'd thought it would be an hour or two, not frickin' five hours. My sociability was drained before the time was even half finished.

Worst of all, it was merely banal, not excruciating. There's not even an interesting story to wring out of it.

Well, maybe I'll bore you briefly about one particular thing my mother said, but I'm too mentally depleted to write it tonight.

Here's me being a cranky old fart again, about the word "faces" in news headlines. "Trump faces investigation," for example, or "Cop faces suspension," or "Starbucks faces boycott," or "Microsoft faces fine from European regulators," or this headline from today: "Kremlin faces rising ire from wives, mothers of mobilized troops.

When it's in the news, "faces" often/always seems to mean that something evil and powerful "faces" a sliver of gentle, insignificant opposition that can't and won't mean squat. 

Now, the news you need,
whether you know it or not

Virginia's Republican governor talked about a mental health crisis, but avoided the words "shooting" and "gun." 

Pastor behind Miracle Mansion, a Christian theme park, convicted of fraud 

These companies ran an experiment: Pay workers their full salary to work fewer days. 

World War III averted (this time) 

Regardless of NATO having dodged the bullet of compulsory defense of Ukraine this time, the world remains vulnerable to major escalation of the Ukraine war.

Anchorage eliminates parking requirements citywide 

Quickly, let's recap why this rocks, and why it ought to be happening everywhere:

Requiring that new construction must include ample parking only encourages more people to drive. Fuck those parking spaces. Without them, everyone's more likely to carpool or take the bus, which is a good thing.

King County Metro to pause bus service Nov. 25 to honor transit operator Mark McLaughlin 

What climate change is already doing to children's brains 

And it never stops, never stops...

San Francisco Police authorized to kill suspects using robots in draft policy  

And it never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops...

Over the past five years, however, that atmosphere has turned far darker 

And it never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops...

Links I liked

National Day of Mourning 

The politics of paying Real Rent Duwamish 

Ooh.directory of blogs 

Should all genetics research on intelligence be off-limits? 

These haptic microfingers tickle pill bugs' toes 

Faceless clock makes you think twice about how it works 

Penis fencing 

Mystery links
"Like life itself, there's no
knowing where you're going"

click 

click 

click 

♫♬  Mix tape of my mind  ♫

• "Alice's Restaurant" by Arlo Guthrie 

The End

Robert Clary 

David Davis 

Keith Levene 

Brian O'Doherty 

And belatedly, because the news just reached me yesterday: RIP, Lou Cutell, the actor who so memorably portrayed Amazing Larry.

11/24/2022   

Cranky Old Fart is annoyed and complains and very occasionally offers a kindness, along with anything off the internet that's made me smile or snarl. All opinions fresh from my ass. Top illustration by Jeff Meyer. Click any image to enlarge. Comments & conversations invited.  

Tip 'o the hat to Linden Arden, ye olde AVA, BoingBoing, Breakfast at Ralf's, Captain Hampockets, CaptCreate's Log, John the Basket, LiarTownUSA, Meme City, National Zero, Ran Prieur, Voenix Rising, and anyone else whose work I've stolen without saying thanks.

Extra special thanks to Becky Jo, Name Withheld, Dave S, Wynn Bruce, and always Stephanie...

I've Heard the Mermaids Singing, and six more movies

THE
NEVERENDING
FILM FESTIVAL

#111


Wednesday,
Nov. 23, 2022


What shall we watch today? Post-apocalyptic excellence, pre-apocalyptic excellence, the secret life of an ordinary woman, William S Burroughs being all artsy fartsy, a cheap but effective thriller, stupid science fiction, and "Smart People on Ice." 

• The Cut-Ups (1966)
• I've Heard the Mermaids Singing (1987)
• The Quiet Earth (1985)
• Real Genius (1985)
• Starship Invasions (1977)
• The Stepfather (1987)
• WarGames (1983)

I'm recommending five out of seven, including two BIG YESes — I've Heard the Mermaids Singing, and The Quiet Earth.

— — — 

The Cut-Ups (1966)

This is an 18-minute short in which writer/wife-killer William S Burroughs repeatedly says, "Yes? Hello." After a while he begins also saying "Thank you" and "Look at that picture." Later, he asks many times, "Does it seem to be persisting?"

The imagery repeats itself almost as often as the words, with very short black-and-white clips of white people sitting at a table, unrolling a rug, smoking a cigar, standing near some kind of machinery, walking behind a building, studying diagrams, painting bad modern art, and wearing hats. It's all so very avant-garde!

If you have patience for kooky stuff, you might enjoy it. I enjoyed it, even laughed out loud twice at the absurdity, but it seems to persist longer than necessary.

Verdict: MAYBE.

♦ ♦ ♦   

I've Heard the Mermaids Singing (1987)

Polly (Sheila McCarthy; marvelous) is an amateur photographer, a self-described spinster and "unsuccessful career woman," prone to daydreams and talking to herself. She's 31, good-natured but insecure, loves classical music (the movie has lots), and she hasn't decided what she wants from life.

She's working as a temp, but doesn't get many assignments because she's "organizationally impaired." The agency sends her to work at a small art gallery, where the curator finds Polly's bumbling amusing.

At home, she narrates her VHS diary, recounting awkward and embarrassing events, and allowing us to not merely glimpse inside Polly's head but make ourselves at home, and it's a cozy space. It reminds me of the space inside my own head.

"Isn't life the strangest thing you've ever seen?"

Polly admires the gallery's curator, and soon develops a crush on her, but probably nothing could come of it — the curator is a nice lady and all, but she's 'arty', cultured and educated, somewhat embittered, all the things Polly isn't and never will be.

The movie seems to be Polly's story, but you might notice that you're also getting to know and care about the curator, too.All along the way, it's funny and very heartfelt, a film about art and friendship, and aspirations and rejections.

A plot element involves a piece of art at the gallery, which Polly finds almost too beautiful for words. In a clever stroke by the moviemakers, the artwork is represented by a simple sheet of light in a picture frame. It illuminates the room, and when it's boxed up, glows right through the gift wrap. Polly says she didn't even have to pretend to like it, and that's what art is, I think.

If you're stubborn and refuse to let the movie in, I suppose it could seem completely simpleminded. I loved it, though, let it in, and I've let it in many times. I've Heard the Mermaids Singing has been one of my favorite indy comedies since the night I first saw it, 35 years ago, and it's still a reliable re-watch any time my spirits need some heavy lifting. 

And it has the best post-credits 'extra scene' at the end, ever.

"Come here, I'll show you some more."

Verdict: BIG YES.

For several years off and on in the 1990s, I dated a woman — Maggie; I've mentioned her here a few times — who sometimes and in some ways reminded me of Polly, from I've Heard the Mermaids Singing. One evening I showed Maggie this film, and she thought it was boring and confusing. That's when I started to know that Mags & I didn't have a future together. 

♦ ♦ ♦  

The Quiet Earth (1985)

Zac Hobson wakes up alone — very alone. He drives to a gas station, and the door is open but there's no-one there. He goes into his workplace, and finds only a corpse. 

If you can't tell from the recurrence of this and similar scenarios in my reviews week after week, I like post-apocalyptic movies. Why? Because most people are rubbish, so it's always intriguing to see what a writer or moviemaker imagines the world would be like with a lot fewer people.

In that sub-genre, this is an absolute masterpiece — solid script, fine direction, terrific music, flawless performances.

Yeah, plural performances. Has there ever been a "last person on earth" book or movie where the protagonist really is the last person on earth? Nah, a second person always comes along, so it's not much of a spoiler to say that when Zac finally finds a second survivor, it might be the best such scene I've seen in any post-apocalyptic flick:

They stare at each other across an empty room, then approach slowly, then embrace with closed eyes, almost crying. "God," he says, "it's good to see someone."

Even in the bleakest moments, there's a sense of humor evident. In a few scenes, for no stated reason, Zac walks around in ladies' lingerie, but I know why — it's a slinky, sexy feeling.

When they sing "Auld Lang Syne," in a world where they might be the entire living population, it's heartbreaking.

And it's a sci-fi movie, so how's the science? Good enough for me. This is simply a splendid film, an intimate, revealing, sometimes harrowing look into the survivors' psyche. 

A tiny boo-boo: At least five days after everyone's vanished, Zac goes into a bakery, where very fresh-looking cakes are on display, and he nibbles a strawberry from atop an un-refrigerated pastry. That is not a strawberry that's been left out for five days.

Verdict: BIG YES.

This is barely related to the film, and it's a different kind of sadness: It wasn't paid product placement, because the camera never lingers, but even 40 years ago and on a different continent, we see the same horrid capitalist entities as here and now — Shell, Mobil, Dunlop Tires, Bic, BMW, Freedent chewing gum, Eveready batteries, Visa, Diners Club, American Express (even in Australia), and a Presbyterian Church. Companies that big and everlasting shouldn't be allowed to exist.

♦ ♦ ♦ 

Real Genius (1985)

"Against stupidity, the gods themselves contend in vain."

Mitch (Gabe Jarrett) is a 15-year-old physics whiz admitted to the prestigious Pacific Tech, and Chris (Val Kilmer) is his roommate, another physics superstar just a few years older. William Atherton plays their professor, who obnoxiously pushes his students toward new breakthroughs in physics and lasers. 

For the first two-thirds of the movie, it's about kids dealing with the pressures of going to genius school. In the last third, everything changes when one of the smart kids finally figures out that warfare is the only feasible application for the new improved super-laser they've just invented.

Martha Coolidge directs, sublimely. She captures the pressure these braniacs are under, and treats it respectfully even while mocking it, because hey, it's only college. Even dealing with serious stuff, the film never loses its light touch, and manages to sneak a sliver of subversiveness into a popcorn movie.

Written by Neal Israel and Pat Proft, who also collaborated on the original Police Academy, but their script for Real Genius was reportedly a very typical college comedy about geeks chasing girls. There's some of that here, yeah, but Coolidge brought in PJ Torokvei from WKRP in Cincinnati to replace the plot and add some intelligence. 

Lots of research went into the science, and most of the hi-jinks at the fictional Pacific Tech is based on actual hi-jinks from Cal Tech. Such stuff is over my head, but it's been reported that the film has plenty of inside jokes for actual nerds. There's a bit where another professor (not Atherton) delivers a boring lecture; that's Prof Martin Gundersen, a physicist from USC, winging it. 

There's a mysterious wash-out ex-student who lives in the steam tunnels under the college. I don't know if that's a common legend at other institutes of higher education, but when I lived in Madison, there really was (maybe still is) an eccentric hermit living in the tunnels and utility rooms under the university.

Some great '80s pop is on the soundtrack, and the climactic scene, done for real and without CGI, is amazing. All the elements come together, and make this one of my favorite modern-era big-budget Hollywood comedies.

I don't think I've ever seen Jarrett in anything else, but he's perfect as the awkward prodigy. This is the movie that made Kilmer a star, and he was never more likable than he is here, deftly dealing out one-liners and getting laughs from even the corniest jokes. Atherton is a master at this kind of slithery character.

Michelle Meyrink

Michelle Meyrink plays the only girl among the geeks. She adopts the kind of a baby-voice that usually annoys me, but just this once it fits the character, who's believably brilliant but also troubled and insecure.

Meyrink retired from movies shortly after this, a tragedy from which Hollywood has never recovered and never will. She did, however, become a major star of my masturbation fantasies until I met my wife in the late 1990s, with occasional guest appearances to this day. Yesterday, actually.

Verdict: YES.

♦ ♦ ♦  

Starship Invasions (1977)

Christopher Lee and Robert Vaughn star, and if you're a fan of either, stay away. You don't want to see this.

Two alien species are fighting for possession of Earth. One wears black, the other wears white. One species built the Great Pyramids, but I don't remember which or why. I'm still trying to figure out how the little girl squishing a tomato in the grocery store caused a woman to collapse three aisles away. Best not to ponder such things, though — that way lies boredom. 

This is garbage in every measure and in all departments, but the movie's music deserves special mention. It is so random, so at odds with whatever's on-screen, I twice checked to see if audio was also playing in some other tab on my laptop.

Verdict: BIG NO.

♦ ♦ ♦  

The Stepfather (1987)

I didn't know this was a horror movie when I clicked 'play', but within two seconds the completely "generic horror movie" music gave it away. No exaggeration — "ITC Productions presents," the music begins, and with the title The Stepfather, I was able to instantly predict most of the plot points.

Except I was wrong. I'm an idiot, the king of stupid snap judgments, and this is a butt-load better than I'd expected.

It's a B movie, and there's no mistaking that, but it's a tidy thriller. I was never actually frightened, which ought to be a problem for a horror movie, but it's competently scripted, decently directed, held my attention all the way, and when it occasionally slips into schlock it's still amusing.

I was right about the music, though.

Terry O'Quinn (later to lose his hair and star on Lost) plays Shelley Hack's new husband, which makes him stepfather to her teenage daughter. The girl is skeeved out by him instantly, but he seems like a fine family man, and even whistles wholesome tunes after every murder. 

O'Quinn is effective, both playing good and playing bad. The rest of the principal cast is weak but passable. The actor who plays the good guy — he's trying to pester the cops into investigating the case — plays the role as if he's the madman, screaming at people until he comes off as more worrisome than the movie's bad guy. The actress playing 'teenage stepdaughter' is obviously in her mid-20s, and her high school boyfriend looks 30. 

But it's still pretty good.

Verdict: YES.

♦ ♦ ♦   

WarGames (1983)

Matthew Broderick plays David, a high school hacker who breaks into the school computer to change his grades, and then unknowing breaks into WOPR (War Operations Plan Response).

That's a Pentagon supercomputer that calculates every strategic response to every conceivable geopolitical situation, plotting victory for the USA in a nuclear war. Given a list of games to play during his illicit connection to WOPR, David doesn't choose blackjack or poker, he chooses global thermonuclear war, thinking it's a video game.

When his father yells at him about a mess he's made, the kid hangs up the phone, disconnecting the game… but WOPR is still playing. Nobody at NORAD knows it's a simulation, so there's the increasing chance that our fine military might respond as if it's real, by launching missiles toward the USSR.

Despite entrusting the fate of the world to teenagers, WarGames is an enjoyable, effective thriller, and it's occasionally profound. 

"I always thought there was going to be plenty of time. I wish I didn't know about any of this. I wish I was like everybody else in the world, and tomorrow it would just be over. There wouldn't be any time to be sorry, about anything."

All aspects of the tech are dated, of course. The movie is 40 years old, so the kid does research using a card catalog and microfiche at a library, dials up via modem, and the WOPR looks like outdated even for the 1980s — it's the size of a Pontiac, with a thousand flashing lights.

That's kinda laughable, but tech is never what really matters in a movie. The story is what matters, and this is a good one. WarGames has more message and brains than you'd expect from a summertime blockbuster.

John Wood, known to me from a pretty good episode of The Avengers, plays the reclusive inventor of the WOPR, and he's a cynical man who's given up on the world. There's a scene at his house, where he describes his bleak and complete lack of hope for humanity, and it seemed right to me. It's intended to show us that he's a sad, misanthropic old man, but I think he's simply a realist. That's on me, though, not the movie's fault.

Some of this is set in Seattle but I don't think any of it was filmed there, except some distant shots of the Space Needle. They did hire a local TV anchor to play himself, though — the late Jim Harriott, from the late Channel 4 — and I recognized that guy and his big glasses.

Not yet a star, baby-faced Michael Madsen plays a military officer in the first scene, eager to follow orders and launch World War III. 

Just one complaint, really: Jeez, these kids are entitled. David's bedroom is full of state-of-the-1980s tech. When the movie's plot puts him in a bind he calls his girlfriend, another high school kid, and asks her to buy him an airplane ticket from Colorado to Oregon. She not only buys the ticket easily, she drives her car from Seattle to Goose Island, Oregon to meet him.

Where are these kids' parents? After some comedic establishing moments early in the film, the grownups are never seen again.

Verdict: YES, on the cusp of BIG YES.

♦ ♦ ♦  

Coming attractions:

A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)
Collision Course (1989)
Last Action Hero (1993)
Little Murders (1971)
The Parallax View (1974)
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982)
Strange New World (1975)

11/23/2022   

There are so many good movies out there — old movies, odd or artsy, foreign or forgotten movies, or do-it-yourself movies made just for the joy of making them — that if you only watch whatever's on Netflix or playing at the twentyplex, you're missing out.

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Top illustration by Jeff Meyer. No talking once the lights dim. Real butter, not that fake crap, on the popcorn. I try to make these reviews spoiler-free, but sometimes screw up, sorry. Piracy is not a victimless crime. Click any image to enlarge. Comments & conversations invited.   

 

Declining an invitation

Yesterday was a day off from writing, not even on purpose. There was simply nothing to say.

CRANKY
OLD FART

#235

leftovers
& links

 
Wednesday,
Nov. 23, 2022

The world would be a much better place if people who had nothing to say simply shut the fuck up, so I thought I'd set an example.

Tomorrow, it's Thanksgiving at the all-you-can-eat place, with some of the family. I'm kinda dreading it because family, and also kinda looking forward to it because family.

Most of them won't be there, and none of the nieces, nephews, or grandchildren. Looks like we'll have only seven or nine people.

My brother Dick says he and his wife Young-sook will be having Thanksgiving with his wife's son's family. They barely speak English, same as his wife. Sounds like it'll be nice for her, though as always, awful for him, but that's the life Dick's chosen.

My brother Clay and his wife Karen have been non-committal, hemming and hawing. "Maybe we'll be there," Clay says, but my prediction is that they'll end up at one of their sons' houses.

My sister Hazel can't sit in her wheelchair for more than half an hour or so, so she no longer leaves the nursing home.

My brother Ralph is dead, so he can't make it. Hope his wife comes. I like her.

Dad won't be there for the same reason as Ralph, but Mom will. I'm  dreading and looking forward to seeing her.

My nephew George-the-stoner won't be at the restaurant for Thanksgiving, but he's invited me to his place for Friday, the day after.

George and I have been texting recently, sometimes even about real things, and he's not an idiot. In person he's a bit much, but I like the guy. I'd say yes to his invitation if I could take the bus there and back, but he says there's no bus service near his house, so my answer is no. 

"I'll pick you up and take you home," he says, but that's why the answer is no. The answer is always no, to anyone who offers to drive me somewhere.

It's a rule, for me: If I can't get there on the bus, I'm not coming.

First and least important, I don't like inconveniencing other people. Nobody in my family lives within ten miles, so picking me up and bringing me back is not quick and easy.

But mostly, I don't like inconveniencing me

I'm an extreme introvert, and when I've had enough chit-chat at some social event, I must leave. Now. 

If someone is driving me home, then I can't leave when I want to leave.

I do not want to wait fifteen minutes or half an hour while the driver says goodbye to everyone. I do not want another hour of chit-chat in the car as we drive toward my house. I do not want the inevitable side-trips on the way "since we're in the neighborhood." And I do not want the driver — George, or anyone else — to come inside my house "for just a few minutes" after the drive.

Screw all of that. It you want me to come over, live near a bus route. Especially on a holiday.

And now, the news you need,
whether you know it or not

ACLU sues to let underage daughter witness father's execution 

Woman slows down traffic riding motorized scooter on Interstate 

This is a local story that was played for laughs here in Seattle: A woman took her power scooter onto the interstate, which is illegal. "Technically it is trespassing," says a spokesman for the State Patrol  "You’ll see the 'no trespassing' signs on the ramps."

I was amused like everyone else, but then I stopped and thought: Why are freeways for cars and trucks only? For safety and blah blah, says the article, which goes to greater lengths than most TV coverage to dig deep and explain why this is so dangerous, but bite me.

What's philosophically wrong with pedaling a bike or riding a scooter from Seattle to Bellingham or Tacoma, via the freeway? That's the most direct route.

America's freeways are built and maintained by tax dollars, and they're by far the most expensive public thoroughfares in America. They should be for all the public, with bike lanes, protected from traffic by concrete barriers. Scooters and rollerbladers, skateboarders and wheelchairs and pedestrians welcome. If it feels dangerous, lower the speed limit until it feels safe.

America should be for people, not for cars.

Starbucks to close another unionized coffee shop 

With climate change, crops migrate north 

And it never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops...

Indiana sheriff's deputy accidentally shoots student during high school class 

And it never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops...

Second rural Arizona county delays certification of vote, this one for no reason other than “solidarity” with the other MAGA counties 

And it never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops...

Links I liked

An advertiser's perspective on what's down at Twitter 

Phantom of the Fox Theater in Atlanta 

First kiss on camera was between two nekkid women? 

Your Gmail account has unlimited addresses 

Roo balls 

Mystery links
"Like life itself, there's no
knowing where you're going"

click 

click 

click 

♫♬  Mix tape of my mind  ♫

• "Believe" by Franka Potente 

• "Head Over Heels" by Tears for Fears 

• "Mr Blue Sky" by Electric Light Orchestra

The End

Virginia McLaurin 

Ellen Levine 

Ron Peck 

11/23/2022   

Cranky Old Fart is annoyed and complains and very occasionally offers a kindness, along with anything off the internet that's made me smile or snarl. All opinions fresh from my ass. Top illustration by Jeff Meyer. Click any image to enlarge. Comments & conversations invited.  

Tip 'o the hat to Linden Arden, ye olde AVA, BoingBoing, Breakfast at Ralf's, Captain Hampockets, CaptCreate's Log, John the Basket, LiarTownUSA, Meme City, National Zero, Ran Prieur, Voenix Rising, and anyone else whose work I've stolen without saying thanks.

Extra special thanks to Becky Jo, Name Withheld, Dave S, Wynn Bruce, and always Stephanie...

Not a Hallmark movie

Dean knocked on my door, then knocked on Robert's door, inviting both of us into the kitchen to eat barbecue chicken he'd just made. (Dean and Robert are my flatmates in the shared house, if that needs re-explaining.)

CRANKY
OLD FART

#234

leftovers
& links

 
Monday,
Nov. 21, 2022

We both said thanks, of course. Robert said his chicken was great; I said I'd already eaten, but took two pieces, and put them in plastic for tomorrow.

In exchange for the free BBQ, Dean charmed us with stories of working in restaurants for his whole life. He always wants to talk about it, and 2-3 times a month I let him talk to me, and being a chef is what he usually talks about.

This time he didn't mention unsalted butter, which felt like a victory, and we learned that cocaine was everywhere in the restaurant business in the 1980s. He told several other stories too, most of which were, to be honest, a little interesting, because I hadn't heard them before.

For the most part, it was a pleasant 45 minutes with my flatmates. I appreciate the thought and the kindness of Dean's BBQ, but tomorrow I'll toss the pieces I took. Dean's food handling takes my appetite away.

Dean also asked what everyone's doing for Thanksgiving. I think he was about to offer a blowout meal for the three of us, but I'm eating with family, and so's Robert.

Not until banging this out an hour later did I notice, nobody asked Dean what he's doing for Thanksgiving, and he didn't tell.

I've never heard him mention family, except an ex-wife who despises him. I don't think he has anywhere to go, anyone to eat a meal with for Thanksgiving. 

If I was Mr Nice Guy, I'd invite a lonely soul to join me and my family for the feast — all-you-can-eat at a shitty buffet. If Robert wasn't doing anything, I'd probably invite him, but this is not a Hallmark movie, and there's no way I'd invite Dean.

He makes me ill-at-ease with his eternal talking. Hours of Dean talking to me and everyone in my family about his career in restaurants? Sorry, but nope. I'll wish him a happy holiday, but not with me.

Every redesign at IMDB makes the facts I'm looking for harder to find.

Oh look, they've done it again.

And now, the news you need,
whether you know it or not

Hidden audits reveal millions in overcharges by Medicare Advantage plans 

Evening news, Sunday morning shows ignore largest academic strike in US history 

Anti-woke banking startup cancels itself 

Behind the lawsuit against celebs who shilled FTX before its spectacular meltdown 

The big takeaway from COP27?
These climate conferences just aren’t working.
 

And it never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops...

Ex-detective in Kansas helped men run sex trafficking operation, US says 

And it never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops, never stops...

Judge fines Trump Muppet Josh Hawley for violating public records laws to protect his Senate run 

And it never stops, never stops...

Links I liked

Do's and Don'ts of the Hays Code 

How close are we to nuclear war? 

How the great online toaster hoax was exposed 

Biden's decision to grant Saudi crown prince immunity is a profound mistake 

Candiru 

Urophagia 

Mystery links
"Like life itself, there's no
knowing where you're going"

click 

click 

click 

♫♬  Mix tape of my mind  ♫

• "Don't Look Back in Anger" by Oasis 

• "Star Trek II" by James Horner 

The End

Staughton Lynd 

Dan McCafferty

11/21/2022   

Cranky Old Fart is annoyed and complains and very occasionally offers a kindness, along with anything off the internet that's made me smile or snarl. All opinions fresh from my ass. Top illustration by Jeff Meyer. Click any image to enlarge. Comments & conversations invited.  

Tip 'o the hat to Linden Arden, ye olde AVA, BoingBoing, Breakfast at Ralf's, Captain Hampockets, CaptCreate's Log, John the Basket, LiarTownUSA, Meme City, National Zero, Ran Prieur, Voenix Rising, and anyone else whose work I've stolen without saying thanks.

Extra special thanks to Becky Jo, Name Withheld, Dave S, Wynn Bruce, and always Stephanie...