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Wednesday, March 31, 2021
The Little Shipping Container That Could
Tuesday, March 30, 2021
Junk Barricade
Monday, March 29, 2021
The Lesser of Two Evils
Sunday, March 28, 2021
Saturday, March 27, 2021
Target: Earth
Here we have a globe. Sean gave me this for my birthday, among other minis! I should have included a 28mm miniature with the photo, because then you could see that this is supposed to be a very large globe at that scale; I'd estimate it would be three or four metres tall.
In any event, I painted it black with red crosshairs to suggest this is the sort of globe that might be found in the hidden underground lair of a maniacal supervillain bent on world domination. Alternatively, you might see such a globe on the bridge of an invading starship.
I wish the crosses were more uniform, but given that I painted them by hand, I think they look okay.
Friday, March 26, 2021
Scotty Finds The Daily Grind
Here we have The Daily Grind, a 28mm-scale model from Marvel's Crisis Protocol game. I painted it in tones of brown and green, partly as a knockoff of Starbucks, partly because, well, coffee is brown, and I like mint chocolate chip frappuccinos, hence the green.
Thursday, March 25, 2021
It's Green
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
Scotty's Dumpster Dive
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
There Be Barrels Here
Monday, March 22, 2021
Strange New Walls
Sunday, March 21, 2021
Film 10,000
I knew that this month I`d see my ten thousandth movie, and I`ve been carefully considering which film to watch for that particular milestone. Unfortunately, earlier tonight I got carried away watching some shorts and accidentally went over the line. Argh! But counting backwards, I now retroactively recognize The First Shot (Brandon Hicks, 2021) as Film 10,000.
Saturday, March 20, 2021
Trouble at the Call Box
Friday, March 19, 2021
Bloody Iron Maiden
The gore-stained interior isn't much better, I'm afraid. I wish I could explain what went wrong here.
Thursday, March 18, 2021
Justice Reimagined
To my utter surprise - and maybe it's because my expectations were so low - I did not hate Zack Snyder's Justice League (2021). In fact, I can honestly say that I even enjoyed it, with reservations. This version of the film has more natural humour (though only in sparse doses), Cyborg and Flash are far better developed Batman gets a little more dignity, the action sequences are more effective overall, and the final battle in particular offers genuine jeopardy and suspense--it feels like there are real stakes. The plot actually makes sense now, for the most part. Even Steppenwolf's story is fleshed out, enough to make him an actual villain instead of just CG animation. And we get to see more of Jeremy Irons' Alfred and J.K. Simmons' Commissioner Gordon; both are treats. Amy Adams' Lois Lane doesn't fare quite as well, but she's still more important to the film than she was in the original theatrical release.
On the downside, the score is terrible except when it includes snippets of Zimmer's themes from past movies. There are still moments that feel out of character for our heroes. There's way too much slow motion. The big new character cameo is welcome to fans, but still feels tacked on. Some sequences could be cut without hurting the film at all. Some of the humanizing moments from the theatrical cut are gone and I miss them, but on the other hand, those cuts make this version more tonally coherent - even if I'm not a fan of Snyder's portentous, somber take on the genre.
As a bonus, comparing this version of Justice League to the theatrical release is a great way to discover the importance of editing.
Wednesday, March 17, 2021
Doom Buggy
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Dune Buggy
Monday, March 15, 2021
FISK
Sunday, March 14, 2021
Black Suit Superman
Saturday, March 13, 2021
The Words Behind the Pictures
Having seen all the films that Charlie Chaplin has directed, I suppose it's no surprise that he's also my most-seen writer, too, given the amount of control and involvement Chaplin had in his films.
The next three names in the list--Maltese, Foster, and Pierce--all wrote a bunch of Looney Tunes shorts.
Ben Hecht, next on the list, has a fascinating filmography, writing superb films like Notorious, Spellbound, Scarface, Design for Living, Stagecoach, The Thing, and Strangers on a Train, but also z-grade stuff like Queen of Outer Space, the 1967 version of Casino Royale, and Switching Channels.
Felix Adler wrote Three Stooges shorts.
Ian Fleming makes the list thanks to James Bond and Chitty-Chitty-Bang-Bang.
David Lynch, of course, writes or co-writes most of the material he directs.
Clyde Bruckman is another writer of Three Stooges shorts, but also features from comedy greats such as Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd.
Woody Allen, like Chaplin and Lynch, writes much of his own material.
Stephen King makes the list, I suspect, because of "story by..." credits for the many adaptations of his novels and short stories.
Laurent Bouzereau produces short documentary "making-of" subjects that appear as special features on many of my discs.
Orson Welles, again, is another film polymath.
George Lucas makes the list thanks to Star Wars, Indiana Jones, American Graffiti, etc.
Sylvester Stallone, I suspect, is here thanks to the Rocky and Rambo franchises.
Elwood Ullman is another Three Stooges writer. What a fun job that would have been...
Richard Matheson is a well-regarded prose fantasist, SF author, and contributor of teleplays to The Twilight Zone, among other shows. Here for adaptations, much like King, I suspect.
Ethan Coen is of course one-half of the famous Coen Brothers writing-directing team.
And finally, David Cronenberg is another director who writes much of his own material.
Friday, March 12, 2021
Letterboxd List Progress March 2021
If I were to guess which list I'll finish last, it'll probably be 1,001 to See Before You Die.
Thursday, March 11, 2021
Ninjas on Ice
Here's a quartet of ninjas, all of them formerly DC Heroclix figures, rebased and repainted by me. I turned these guys into ebon-clad ninjas mostly because of their poses, but also because hey, I might need ninjas for roleplaying games sometime in the post-COVID future. Too bad they wore their black pyjamas to an arctic environment, though.
Wednesday, March 10, 2021
Power Ring
Tuesday, March 09, 2021
Garden of the Defending Angel
This monument looks like it's been more recently maintained than that of The Valiant Four. Perhaps it's of a more recent vintage.
Monday, March 08, 2021
There Really Should Be More Than One Day for Women
It's International Women's Day, so I'll just salute the many incredible women I've known over the course of my life--women who have changed the world through their words, actions, and being. Your accomplishments are building the more just world that the women of tomorrow will inhabit.
Sunday, March 07, 2021
If I Were Stupid Rich . . .
. . . I'd buy some robots from Fred Barton Productions. Barton's custom 1:1-scale replicas cost up to tens of thousands of dollars each, and boy howdy would I love to have one (or a few) in my theatre room.
In order of preference:
The robot belonging to the Mysterious Dr. Satan
Mr. Barton also creates other replica props, including a 44" C-57D cruiser model and a 1:1 time machine from The Time Machine.
Saturday, March 06, 2021
Strange New Worlds Wishlist
Strange New Worlds started filming not long ago, so here's my pie-in-the-stars wishlist for the show:
1. Be true to the title. Show us the wonders of the universe, inspired both by Star Trek continuity but also by real-world science. The first episode of For All Mankind season two demonstrated how to do this effectively. Maybe even start with our own solar system, even if it's just the Enterprise picking up some crew from human colonies on Venus or the Moon, Mars, Titan, etc. before the ship embarks on its five-year mission.
2. Return to the tried-and-true episodic format, the one that gave us classic episodes such as "City on the Edge of Forever," "The Trouble with Tribbles," "The Inner Light," and "Who Watches the Watchers?" If you must include a season arc, make the stakes relatable at a human scale. Let's not save the entire multiverse again, like Star Trek: Discovery, or even just the galaxy, like Star Trek: Picard. How about an arc that saves a work of art, or a relationship, or the soul of just one person?
3. Hire Bear McCreary to score the show. Failing that, Brian Tyler.
4. Hire some real SF writers to contribute verisimilitude and a sense of wonder to the stories.
5. Build an interesting ensemble cast and develop those characters almost as much as the leads.
6. As with the original series, run still frames of previous episodes over the end credits.
7. Have Captain Pike do some variation of the "Space...the final frontier" intro in the opening titles.
8. Let's have an Andorian, a Tellarite, or an Alpha Centauran in the cast. Or all three, better yet.
9. Have the protagonists lose once in a while, and grow from that experience.
10. When the series ends, let's have a big series penultimate episode followed by a more introspective epilogue episode in which Pike, knowing his destiny, hands over the keys to Kirk. Then do a Kirk: Year One limited series leading into the events of "Where No Man Has Gone Before."
Friday, March 05, 2021
Arctic Explorer
Thursday, March 04, 2021
The Valiant Four
There's a range of HeroClix characters that come in "sketch" versions; that is, they're meant to look like pencil drawings of superheroes before they're inked or coloured. To me, they look like they're hewn from stone, so I put glued four of them to a plain black base, glued that base to a larger, more ornate base, then added sand and foliage effects. I've tried to create the impression of a work that once stood in a carefully-maintained place of great honour, but as the civilization that built the monument faded away, the statue was left to the ravages of time.
Wednesday, March 03, 2021
Seeing More in She and Sea
Anirban Ray's She and Sea is a short film about a relationship gone bad and the despair that can follow a breakup. The film is, I regret to say, somewhat lacking in many departments. Almost every stylistic choice is misguided, the acting is stiff, the dialogue ludicrous, and the music...the music! Oy.
And yet, I give those involved props for giving this project their all. She and Sea is is sincere in its message about human suffering and what happens when we aren't kind to each other. So even though we may see any given film as "bad," that doesn't necessarily mean that they're without value. In fact, watching this makes me feel a little closer to Oman, a country I knew virtually nothing about before watching this short film. In my heart, I know that people everywhere are pretty much the same, but it's lovely to see that truth illustrated.
Tuesday, March 02, 2021
No Helmet Large Enough
Monday, March 01, 2021
Ultraman in Miniature
Considering how pleasant a surprise the pilot of Superman & Lois was, I hope they'll consider Ultraman as a villain. I think these producers might have the chops to pull it off.