31 May 2008
29 May 2008
RIP Harvey Korman
Governor William J. Le Petomane: What?
Hedley Lamarr: "Meeting is adjourned."
Governor William J. Le Petomane: It is?
Hedley Lamarr: No, *you* say that, governor.
Governor William J. Le Petomane: What?
Hedley Lamarr: "Meeting is adjourned."
Governor William J. Le Petomane: It is?
Hedley Lamarr: Here, sir; play with this. [hands the governor a paddleball]
Hedley Lamarr: There might be legal precedent! Of course, landsnatching...
Hedley Lamarr: [flipping through a law book] land, land... "Land: see Snatch." Ah, Hailie vs. United States. Hailie: 7, United States: nothing. You see, it can be done!
Hedley Lamarr: Gentlemen, please rest your sphincters.
Taggart: I got it. I got it.
Hedley Lamarr: You do?
Taggart: We'll work up a "Number 6" on 'em.
Hedley Lamarr: "Number 6"? I'm afraid I'm not familiar with that one...
Taggart: Well, that's where we go a-ridin' into town, a whampin' and whompin' every livin' thing that moves within an inch of its life. Except the women folks, of course.
Hedley Lamarr: You spare the women?
Taggart: NAW. We rape the shit out of them at the Number 6 Dance later on.
Hedley Lamarr: Marvelous.
28 May 2008
27 May 2008
Flicks worth your time
Fanny and Alexander - caught the Bergman epic last week, and after a slow start was duly impressed. After investing 3 hours in the theatrical release, I'll wait until fall to get the 5 hour TV version. Swedes had it good when that guy was around.
Claire's Knee - One of Eric Rhomer's moral tales, this flick is about a middle aged dude's desire to touch the knee of one Claire, a stone fox teenager on holiday in what I think is lake Como. A little too much unnecessary dialogue, but there you have French film - introspective. People looked better in the 1970's everywhere.
All That Heaven Allows - watched this Douglas Sirk melodrama last night and it was damn good for the full 90 minutes. Richard Yates must have loved this flick since he cribbed a lot in his work. As the film version of Revolutionary Road will likely suck, get back to the burbs with this.
26 May 2008
Unreal World
My two previous Millhauser novel reads have been rewarding: Edwin Mullhouse was the story of a legendary comic book author who died at age thirteen, and Martin Dressler - a Pulitzer winner - was the story of the rise and fall of a wondrous hotel developer.
Millhauser revels in sideshow entertainers and the art of conjuring. He is not limited to descriptions of technique; he is adept at creating characters of true emotion and harsh scenes of terror and delight. I should have bought more of his books at Half Price.
Archive find: read your West
Whether one has read it or not, The Day of the Locust, West’s final novel, is the metaphor we in
West,
If one believes that narratives are more relevant records of a society’s lifestyles, attitudes, and mores than history books, then the blueprint for the lower third of our state is Locust. Fans of a California split in two or three need only a handful of novels to make their case rather than a master cartographer, and the 405-south crowd won’t shake West’s depiction any more than Mississippi will elude Faulkner.
24 May 2008
Pissed Jeans
23 May 2008
Loose Balls
22 May 2008
A wife, two cows, and a pig
Knut Hamsun’s On Muted Strings is a sequel to Under the Autumn Star. It takes place six years later and concerns our friend Knut, who has been idling and wandering to no great accomplishment. He decides he wants to return to see the Captain and his fair madame, so he sets off to the country.
He’s wearing a long beard now, and he’s 50. He’s gray and he’s lost some of the ardor that he showered on dames when he was younger. He meets Lars his old companion from the first book who is now living on the Captains estate. Lars wants Knut to grow up, telling him needs what he has; a wife, two cows, and a pig. That’s what went for comfort in the old
She can’t conceive and starts to lose it. She first resists then balls an engineer from the city. The Captain’s no slouch; he puts the blocks to a young married maiden from a parsonage. Fan receives the shit and madame flees to the city to have her gash surveyed by the engineer on a regular basis. Knut follows her and works with the engineer to keep tabs. He returns to the Captain, and she soon follows, at first cheerful and apologetic, then overcome with morning sickness; she has a bastard in the belly. She flees and drowns on an icy river. This exit was very apropos, considering the set-up Hamsun weaves as people, nature, and action combine.
Knut the character in this book is more developed than in the previous. He is, at 50, in full understanding of life’s limits. Life at that age is playing on muted strings. Up next is Hamsun’s Pan.
19 May 2008
Will Ball For Work
Knut Hamsun’s Under the Autumn Star is a brief, startling read. It concerns a wanderer named Knut who is on the lam from internal demons. Idling about his rented cottage to regain his senses he meets a former mate who intends to paint the house and procure work around the countryside. Knut joins him and becomes a hired hand, oddjobbing around and apparently – Hamsun is cryptic here – balling a few of the maidens he assists.
We know little of the character Knut’s background at the novel’s start; only later are clues to some unknown wealth and privilege brought to the fore. He tags along with another man to fell trees and the madam of the household takes a shine to Knut and he starts pining for her. He enjoys the role of servant to the people who don’t know he is of some stature. He tries to forget about her by taking another job but then seeks her out again. She is off to the city, and Knut returns to find her, smarting up the wardrobe and encountering known faces in cafes and other haunts of his past.
This is my second go around with Hamsun. Under the Autumn Star is the book I should have started with last time, because the frankness and pure modernity of a writer straddling the 19th and 20th centuries who didn’t give a fuck about balls or other regal nonsense. The scenes describing work, want, lust, and nature in Under the Autumn Star are the opposite of the 19th century book, and the insight into the complicated and harmed mind of the narrator is something DH Lawrence approached in minor characters only – I’m thinking of the city crowd the Brangwen girl ran with in Women in Love. This book is first rate – will do my best to round out some more Hamsun soon.
18 May 2008
16 May 2008
14 May 2008
Rolling Stones records
What Movies Have You Stolen?
Shampoo - Still my favorite movie. Warren Beatty co-stars with his hair, and the goddess Julie Christie makes me randy. Jack Warden is a riot, and in the 24 hours the film covers, Beatty has sex 6 times I think. Viva old Hollywood.
Before the Devil Knows You're Dead - this flick from last year was hyped as Sidney Lumet's swan song, but it's not that good. I Blame Ethan Hawke. Kudos for many shots of a nude Marisa Tomei, who looks delicious. Lumet's best recent movie is still Q&A with Nick Nolte's best role ever, and the funniest race dialog outside a Larry David sitcom.
In the Mood For Love - loved it when I saw it in the theater, and it sill holds up. Wong Kar Wai can direct the fuck out of a movie, and slinky Maggie Cheung is a stone fox. The lead is Tony Leung, the best actor of my lifetime hands down given his diverse catalog. A great movie for those who love cigarettes too.
Wild Bill - I dug this 1995 western based on Dexter's Deadwood and will watch it tonight when it finishes downloading. Jeff Bridges stars with honey Ellen Barkin as Calamity Jane.
13 May 2008
12 May 2008
Ron Wilson
11 May 2008
The Fishing Report
1 new gate lock
2 pancakes
4 handrolled BaliShag cigarettes
2 sunburns
3 cans of Coors (Tuna did not release)
1 ham and cheese
1 burrito
5 nightcrawlers
Still at large:
Trout
08 May 2008
07 May 2008
06 May 2008
05 May 2008
Alice Walker is a Horrible Mother
Chickens coming home to roost. Reaping what you so.
It's news like this that makes me think there may be a God.
01 May 2008
Who you pickin'?
PP Horse Jockey Trainer ML
-- ----- ------ ------- --
1 Cool Coal Man Julien Leparoux Nick Zito 20-1
2 Tale of Ekati Eibar Coa Barclay Tagg 15-1
3 Anak Nakal Raphael Bejarano Nick Zito 30-1
4 Court Vision Garrett Gomez Bill Mott 20-1
5 Eight Belles (f) Gabriel Saez Larry Jones 15-1
6 Z Fortune Robby Albarado Steve Asmussen 15-1
7 Big Truck Javier Catellano Barclay Tagg 50-1
8 Visionaire Jose Lezcano Michael Matz 20-1
9 Pyro Shaun Bridgmohan Steve Asmussen 6-1
10 Colonel John Corey Nakatani Eoin Harty 4-1
11 Z Humor Rene Douglas Bill Mott 30-1
12 Smooth Air Manoel Cruz Bennie Stutts Jr. 20-1
13 Bob Black Jack Rich Migliore James Kasparoff 20-1
14 Monba Ramon Dominguez Todd Pletcher 15-1
15 Adriano Edgar Prado Graham Motion 30-1
16 Denis of Cork Calvin Borel David Carroll 20-1
17 Cowboy Cal John Velazquez Todd Pletcher 20-1
18 Recapturetheglory E.T. Baird Louie Roussel 20-1
19 Gayego Mike Smith Paulo Lobo 15-1
20 Big Brown Kent Desormeaux Rick Dutrow Jr. 3-1