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Showing posts from December, 2007
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I started to write a reflection of 2007 but my mind wasn't in the spirit. Instead, I think it's best to leave 2007 with this photo which sums up the year. Thanks Uncle Robert for sending this over!

Charlie Wilson's War

The timing of the release of Charlie Wilson’s War could not have been better for the movie. Political events are such that for the first time in many years, people in the audience could pretend to understand the movie. The movie tells the story of Charlie Wilson and the role that he played in the Russian/Afghan war of the 80’s. Most people are there for Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts and not a lesson in history. This was the first time in a theater I have heard so much talking as friends had to provide mini-history lessons to each other. This sadly is because Pakistan figures prominently in the movie and a single reference is made to Benazir Bhutto’s father which confused the audience. But, it made people happy that they even knew the name as when Rudy Giuliani’s name was mentioned a few times. The movie is guaranteed to do well because the audience felt they got it. There are two stories going on in Charlie Wilson’s War . The lead story is that about the man, what he did, and how he d

The Water Horse

A movie about a baby Nessie looks fun enough and should be cute, right? Not so if you’re in the theater for The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep. I think this is billed as a family film but it’s more of a dark tale of WWII, sadness, and a million reasons why wild animals never make good pets. The premise is easy enough, a small boy finds an object that is really an egg and a creature is hatched who later becomes the Nessie of today’s legend. Capering cuteness is what the movie has for maybe two minutes and the remaining 2 hours (give or take) are about a boy who’s waiting for his father to return from the war. The movie is set in Scotland and filmed in New Zealand but pretty views are rare and we are exposed to the bleakness of life in 1942 Scotland. The story is told by an old man in a pub to a young tourist couple and we have the obligatory flashbacks to this setting off and on. The military officers while British and there to protect are while not quite mean, well they’re mean. Th
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I've been home for a one full week and made the best of it! 3 movies, 2 pubs, seeing lots of friends and familiy, and I even took time off work! This week went by the fastest of any week in the past year! It looks like I have a brief travel reprieve for the new year as the Mexico City trip is probably going to be delayed so I'll have a bonus weekend at home! And this was a school free week which made it that much better!

Sweeney Todd

Having never seen the play, I can only look at Sweeney Todd on its own merit. After watching the movie, I have the underlying feeling that this production is best set on stage rather than film. Expectations are always high for a Tim Burton/Johnny Depp collaboration and perhaps I went into the theater with this attitude and I found the movie slow paced and lackluster at times. Sweeney is a dark comedy murder, meat pies, and music all come together in laughter or at least a small smile. With Alan Rickman as the bad guy, there should have been some saving grace to Sweeney but it mostly falls flat. When the cockroaches are funnier than the characters, well, that should never happen. What I liked: There were moments where I sort of laughed, Scabbers had the best role, the look of Fleet Street was visually great, and I mostly liked the story. Not liked: Slow paced, unresolved storylines for minor characters, the feeling that something was missing.
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Dec. 24 - A Karl Strauss Christmas Eve. This turned out to be the haven for families after a long day at Legoland.

I Am Legend

I Am Legend with Will Smith, a dog, and a virus that mutates people into zombie-types is overall a pretty fun movie. Good, but not great since you have to overlook the fact that some of the key plot sequences are set-up by smart people doing a dumb out of character move. Once past that, the movie moves at a fast pace, tells the story of a cancer-curing drug turning deadly, and all hope and humanity lost. Perfect stuff for a holiday weekend! Will Smith is almost always perfect in this type of role. In Legend , he's a research doctor who is determined to find a cure. Isolated for three years he's losing his grip on reality and clings to his dog, the only remaining companion in his life. The zombies are not the walking dead but created by the mutation of a vaccine and the virus mutates to travel by air or by blood (if bitten). 90% of the population is gone but 10% have natural immunity. One can only suppose they are all on another continent. The suspense factor is high, the gore

National Treasure (2)

I went into National Treasure hoping for a fun movie where I didn't have to think. The story was simple, Nicholas Cage solves a puzzle and finds treasure where many before have failed. Got it. Sadly, the mindless romp was a never ending series of implausible events each unfolding in a more mis -managed fashion than the previous caper. I can go with a lot if the fantasy world is set-up correctly but some things cannot be ignored. The lead characters are certainly likable and enjoyable to watch as they interact with one another. Jon Voight takes a turn as Cage's treasure hunter father and he does his role well. Other people are merely tokens who take turns either trying to kill Cage or entice him into helping solve a puzzle and set history right. Helen Mirren has a few brief scenes where she entirely steals the show and makes you wish you were watching Helen Mirren save the day instead of Nicholas Cage but I digress. Okay, I'll go with breaking into Buckingham Palace a
Yuma is back in my life for a weekend. Aussie Mac has returned to the states so I'm off to visit her for the usual Aussie wine and Yuma life at the movies. Today's list is hectic but I'm sure I can cram it all in starting the a much needed oil change for the car before I drive to Yuma, followed by packing, banking, grocery store (I had popcorn for diner last night), lunch in OB with Ms. Kitty and family, and then the power drive through the desert! It seems easier in my mind than it looks on paper!
After 6 weeks of being left alone and free to grow away, I've put a halt to the jungle in the backyard. Once the weeds start getting close to me in height then something is out of control. The recent rain made the soil perfect for the purge and many spiders went running. I probably should have worn gloves but I stopped after I saw the big spider. The children next door are in shock to see me again. They were starting to think the yard was part of their own, and I startled one of them this morning as I was taking out the trash. He ran. It's now nearly 4:30 and he hasn't had his crying meltdown for the day but maybe I missed it. After bouncing back a few balls they seem to have quieted down and are rounded up indoors. It's a good thing Christmas is on a Tuesday because the excitement is starting to build already. Who are these good people sending Christmas cards? I managed to get three off and was done with it. I guess I'm back to New Year's cards once again. Som
I have a two week reprieve before I hit the road again. The last 9 days were unexpected and I've logged in 7 hotel nights for meetings and business since I've been home from Samoa. Today, is the official two week point of staying more or less put in one place. My personal goal is to make sure I get out and see people, go to movies, and remember what it is like to live in a house. I have to keep reminding myself that tomorrow is trash day. My poor camera finally quit on me. I can't take a picture, a movie or even get it to turn on. I'm glad I downloaded all the photos a few weeks ago so nothing was lost. Best Buy here I come! School has wrapped for the year as well. 3 classes down and 7 to go in 2008!
Sometimes the best meals in the world are at the corner Mexican restaurant in your neighborhood. For the past 6 weeks I have had gourmet meals, cruise meals, Samoan, Australian, and New Zealand meals but nothing was as good as the two cheese enchiladas, beans, and guacamole last night at Nati's in OB. Yum! The dinner was in honor of Ms. Kitty's birthday and we all left rolling out of there and happy. Well back to Monday for another crazy workweek and probably crazy drivers as we get into the last week before Christmas.
What a long week! Sometimes work is like being sucked into a vortex where you're not aware of anything else in the world until you emerge. I thought this past week was going to be a nice and easy catch-up week after being gone for so long but no such luck. Instead it turned into four hotel nights and 14 hour days with meetings and events and actual work in between . Now it's a wonderful Saturday and I have two papers to write. The cycle doesn't seem to end. I am ready for Christmas for a valid day off from everything. I still exist but I sense next week is about to be a repeat of the past week. 2:50 pm. One paper done and one to go! I find myself staring at the computer screen with no words forming so it's time for a distraction. Laundry? TV? Beer? Maybe all three!
Snow on the mountains outside of the city. Who knew? If I only needed a reminder that I'm not in Samoa it's the view of snow covered mountains from Carlsbad. But then, this isn't a sight that's normally seen around here so now I'm in reverse culture shock. Last night's cold and rain brought the snow levels closer and more plentiful than I ever remember seeing in my life. Snow-capped hills are not the normal sight as I drive down the road. Getting over the shock of the snow is almost easier than remembering how to drive above 25 mph. In Samoa the speed limit tops out at 25 and is often 15 in places. My life for two weeks revolved driving slow along a 5 mile stretch of road from the hotel to work and back. It's nice not to have to watch geckos run around the room and to know that there will be no mosquitos lurking outside my door. For such a laid back place, this was one of my tougher assignments as 12-14 hour days were the norm and the breaks few and far b
Home at last. I've been up 37 hours, I'm dehydrated, hungry, exhausted. Must sleep.....
Samoans can eat! We opened the restaurant at 10:00 am and tried to keep it a secret opening to prevent record crowds. It didn't work. As soon as the first two customers were fed some sort of mental telepathy went out and near record sales were on the way. Now for the most part, one customer represents one burger, sides, and drink. Here once customer equals two or three burgers, plus a side and a drink. Then they came back and repeated. Just insane! It's nice to know that we have a hit on our hands.
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After a week of work, we're ready to open the restaurant on Monday. Last night's adventure was having the car break down in the rain on the way home from work. People in Samoa help each other out when needed. The family whose house we broke down in front of invited us in (we declined) and then they watched out for us until the two truck arrived. A couple of guys pulled over and offered us help and a ride. We had known all week this would happen as the power steering on the van was getting worse each day. Now we have a replacement car and as we drove it to the hotel last night we arrived home with smoking brakes. I guess that car is getting returned and we'll try again.