Tag Archives: stuff on screen

Dear Baz, I’m feeling slightly violated

Dear Baz Luhrmann,

Really loved your latest film, Australia. I know a lot of people didn’t get it, but frankly Baz, I think those people just don’t get you. Anybody who’s seen and loved the Red Curtain Trilogy is no doubt familiar with and loves your style, and can appreciate the slightly camp vein that runs through all of your work, as well as the bold, original choices you make. I think you are ace, and I love the way that in this film you both captured the spirit of our country and maximised the time Hugh Jackman spent shirtless.

Baz, you made me laugh (especially in the scene where Nicole’s character sees kangaroos for the first time – classic) and you made me cry (“I sing you to me Mrs Boss”… holy crap, I bawled my eyes out)… but then, alas, you had to ruin it by having ELTON FUCKING JOHN record the theme song played over the credits.

FOR FUCK’S SAKE, BAZ.

Now, look, before I get lynched by an Elton John-loving mob – I am no stranger to the musical delights of Sir Elton. B-B-B-Benny and the Jets is, as far as I’m concerned, no less than a work of boogie genius.

But I can’t help but wonder, as wonderful as our fine British friend’s menthol-cool musical stylings consistently are… was there no Australian artist you could think of who could possibly use a break on the international stage off the back of a major vehicle such as this film? A Pete Murray or a Bernard Fanning perhaps? A David Campbell? Or even a more established and respected stalwart of the Aussie music industry? The supreme king of eighties Australian soft pub rock, John Farnham, comes to mind. Middle-aged women don’t throw their panties at him for nought, Baz.

Of course there’s not much you can do about this now, but… well, it’s just something for you to mull over in retrospect I suppose.

Thanks again for all your top work, Baz. And thanks for including some premium Rolf Harris wobble boarding in the score. You’re a legend.

Sincerely,
Digressica.

…And here’s some stuff I’ve liked this week

The Declaration, by Gemma Malley

The Declaration is a YA novel set in a dystopian future England. It’s 2140 and years ago, scientists found a ‘cure’ for old age (as though it was a disease or something, which interestingly is how a lot of people seem to talk about it when they promote anti-ageing products and scientific developments. Scary). They created a drug that could completely halt the aging process and actually prevent death. Naturally this led to a massive increase in population that the planet and its resources could no longer sustain, so laws were introduced to inhibit reproduction. Which always works out for the best. It’s an interesting and very quick read.

Incidently, I think I am addicted to buying books, and actually to bookstores in general. My mother and sisters started refusing to enter a bookstore with me by the time I was around 12 or 13, because it would take them hours to get me out.

A very shiny manouvre of fate has me working very near the biggest bookstore in London – the seven-storey Waterstones on Piccadilly. Or as I like to call it, The Place Where Awesome is Made. So whenever I am feeling like a social zombie (which is increasingly often), I drop in and pick up some paper happiness that I can take home and use as an imaginary buffer between me and the rest of the world.

Lemonia, Primrose Hill

Fabulous and hugely popular Greek restaurant on Regent’s Park Road that I’ve been meaning to try for ages. Finally went with LC Hammer in tow this weekend, and was not disappointed. Really good food, really great atmosphere. I recommend the moussaka and halloumi.

Burn After Reading

Coen Brothers + Frances McDormand + John Malkovich + Brad Pitt + clever and highly original screenplay = super good times.

Trojka, Primrose Hill

While I was in the trying-new-things-in-my-neighbourhood mode, I did lunch at Trojka on Sunday, a Russian Tea House on Regent’s Park Road that, again, I’ve been saying I’ll try forever. It was great – not the food so much (the food was fine – although the borsch was a little lukewarmish), but the always fantastic experience of Eastern European customer service. You come for the latke, but you stay to be scowled at and ignored by an eye-rolling, out-of-work Russian model slash waitress.

I felt the one unacceptable part of the Trojka experience was that they were playing the soundtrack to The Bodyguard on a loop.

Rain Man

Usually the thought of seeing Josh Hartnett act in anything makes me want to punch myself in the face until I cry, but this was getting some great reviews so I thought it might be okay. It was actually great. Adam Godley was brilliant as Raymond, the autistic brother, and – surprisingly (to me anyway) – Josh Hartnett was pretty terrific. It’s playing at the Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Ave in Soho until 20 December, and I recommend getting a ticket.

The mental, the differently-abled and the fabulous

Apologies for the extended radio silence. I haven’t completely disappeared from the airwaves; I just went home to the southern hemisphere for a couple of weeks and was obviously far too busy and important to post, opting instead to carelessly shunt aside my lovingly created blog and indulge in a two-week maelstrom of unseasonal winter sunshine (interspersed with thunderstorms), blurry nights out at beachside clubs (featuring sticky floors and unfriendly bouncers) and vegemite on toast without a trace of irony or patriotism.

If I had actually planned this trip to Oz in advance, I might have been organised enough to drop a post before I left. But alas it was all very last-minute, which to the untrained eye might look like a mildly exotic streak of spontaneity, but actually was more due to a minor nuclear meltdown in some part of my brain that I guess came temporarily unhinged. Danger, Will Robinson!

So my thought process, apparently, was that when life gets you down, when you have a complete mental spazfest and you don’t know how to fix everything up all neat like, the OBVIOUS solution is to flyyyy! Fly, my pretty! Fly away!

Because – derrr – when you come back from your little sojourn, everything will have miraculously fixed itself in your absence. Suffering writer’s block every time you sit down to work on the novel you keep telling yourself you’re writing? Feeling too completely inept to achieve anything at work? Worried that all the social retards at your magical life-changing seminar series are somehow “getting it” while your under-developed brain is just too simple and childlike? Suddenly horribly aware that in the face of overwhelming evidence, you might now consider the existence of God (or Whatever) to be equally as probable as leprechauns, garden fairies and anybody ever solving the world food crisis? Shocked and appalled that for once you’re just not getting every single bratty little thing you want? And any number of other fairly insignificant problems that your inner drama queen has blown up to ten times their original size, like horrible paralysing sea monkeys?

Well, have I got a solution for YOU!

Yes, the logic astounds. So needless to say I came back to London (quite happily) to find that not only was my life and everything in it exactly the same as when I left two weeks earlier, but there was actually nothing particularly wrong with it in the first place.

Huh. How ‘bout that.

I have no theories behind this minor life event. It remains a mystery, like the Bermuda Triangle or Pete Doherty’s enduring fame.

So because I have been away from this thing for so long, I am burning up – BURNING UP! – with things to talk about, and I shall begin with

The Paralympics
Does this festival of differently-abled athletics seem a little… patronising? I’m genuinely asking, because I can’t decide how I feel about it all. What is the point of the Paralympics? And because the Paralympics exist, does that mean disabled people aren’t allowed to compete in what I probably shouldn’t call the “fo’ real Olympics”?

A friend of mine was telling me about a girl with only half an arm (well, she had one full arm, and one that was kind of a stump or something. I’m sorry, I have no idea what the PC term for this is, so if anyone can enlighten me, please do) who won gold in some bike riding marathon thing (probably not the official name). Apparently people were saying that if she’d been in the Fo’ Rizzles, she’d have won bronze.

If she’d known this, would she have wanted to bypass the Paralympics and go straight for third place in the Olympics? Would the fact that she was competing against… oh gosh, whatever you call non-disabled people… make it somehow a more significant win?

And knowing that this girl could have kicked most of their arses, how does that make the Fo’ Riz Olympians feel? Perhaps this is why they have to separate the Olympics from the Paralympics. Just in case some stud in a wheelchair decides to get his awesome on and sail into a victory, making all the rest of them feel like utter knobjockeys. Imagine if that girl really had competed in the Olympics and come in third. What a kick in the guts for the winner… she gets the gold medal and STILL has her thunder stolen by Stumpy and her bronze. Tough gig.

Agyness Deyn
In my favourite part of the London Lite – the text column – someone raised a most excellent point this evening. Why is everybody obsessed with Agyness Deyn? It’s not that I don’t think she’s pretty. She’s pretty stunning. I like her eyebrows especially. (I’m not being sarcastic; I really think they are cool.)

But… there just seems to be something of an imbalance between the level of interest in her and the number of interesting things about her. I can only count one – her eyebrows. Well, I guess that’s two.

I’m so confused.

You know who actually IS interesting? Maureen Johnson is interesting. That’s who.

Maureen Johnson
Oh I love her! Love to the power of love. I don’t remember how I came to find her blog one day a few weeks ago, but I am now obsessed with it.

Maureen is a young adult fiction author from New York, and I have not read a single one of her books. I hadn’t even heard of her before accidentally stumbling upon her blog, but I guess now I will have to read some of her work, because she is like awesome made solid. Funny, insightful, genuine and fabulous.

She is so seriously cool, that I’m left pondering why people like Pete Doherty and Agyness Deyn and Amy Winehouse and whoever else is the Train Wreck Du Jour keep getting our attention and print space, when clever and cool people with lots of interesting things to say like Maureen are left to languish in comparative obscurity.

I would like to make it my mission to let people know the radness they are missing out on if they do not read Maureen’s blog and buy her books. I am going to have Maureen Johnson t-shirts made.

Large Hadron Collider
I am super excited about this. I know it’s old news by now, but aren’t you excited still? The day they kicked this baby off, I was refreshing Radio4’s dedicated Big Bang Day website every five minutes. The updates were mostly just things like, “Oh lovely, now we’re all bathing in champagne and our own cleverness, which we’ve managed to turn into liquid because we’re clever scientists, what a marvellous day this has been”, but it was all just so exciting!

In case you have been living under a rock, the Large Hadron Collider is a big ol’ sciencey kinda machine built at CERN, the world’s biggest particle physics lab in Geneva. Its Big Sciencey Destiny is to fire protons around a huge tunnel the length of the Circle Line (a line on the London Underground, for those of you reading this from outside the centre of the universe) at the speed of light, and smash them together to see what sciencey things happen!

And oh, the things that will happen! Not only could they recreate the conditions surrounding the Big Bang, but apparently this machine could do lots of other fun stuff as well. The people in charge have said it could lead to a cure for cancer or bird flu, and maybe even solve the problem of radioactive waste.

I am sure it is far more complicated than the image in my head, but what I imagine (and please don’t ruin this for me with the real sciencey truth, if you happen to know it) is that the protons speeding around the Circle Line, when they smash into each other, will spontaneously burst into things the likes of which we’ve only dreamed of.

Boom! Look, a little tiny universe, with little tiny humans! There’s me! Look how tiny I am!

Boom! Look, a cure for cancer! It says it right there on the label!

Boom! Look, a unicorn! A garden fairy! GOD! There you are! You’re shorter than we expected, but welcome!

It’s a whole new world of possibilities, people, and I for one am going to start planning a new wardrobe.

Defining the creep factor

Today I’ve been working on my little book (I am writing a children’s fantasy novel) and obsessing over villains and how to make them really, really scary. Well, I’ve been obsessing over this question for awhile now actually, as anyone who’s been a victim of my line of villain-related questioning will know.

So here’s what I needs ta know, aiight.

  • Who is the scariest villain of all time?
  • Why is he or she so damn scary?
  • What makes a good villain?
  • Is it more important that a villain has a story behind their villainy, or that they are unpredictable?
  • Do men make scarier villains than women?
  • What’s scarier in a book: the unseen/unknown, or something that’s physically confronting?

These are my scariest keep-me-up-at-night villains:

The Wheelers

The Wheelers

Fucking terrifying mofos from Return to Oz, the 1980s sequel to The Wizard of Oz. This film starred a young Fairuza Balk (the scary chick from The Craft) as Dorothy, and presented a MUCH less cheerful vision of Oz than its 1939 musical counterpart. As well as electro-shock therapy performed on children, Return to Oz featured these terrifying creatures with high-pitched giggles who rode around Oz on four wheels attached to their elongated arms and legs, and wore scary long-haired masks on the top of their heads. You knew they were coming when you heard the squeaky-squeaky of their wheels.

My best friend from high school and I used to walk around the empty streets of his neighbourhood late at night freaking each other out with sudden declarations of, “You know what would be super scary right now? If the WHEELERS just came around that corner. OMG. Totally.”

Mombi

Mombi

Another treat from Return to Oz (obviously this movie has scarred me for life). Mombi was a seriously sinister princess who had a gallery of women’s heads that she had chopped off real women, and she would wear a different head each day.

At one point, just to crank up the creepiness, Dorothy is wandering through the gallery of disembodied heads, all of which are watching her, and comes across Mombi’s real head in a cupboard. She accidentally wakes it up, the head screams “DOROTHY GAAAAAAAALE!” and then the headless body comes lumbering out of the bedroom to fuck Dorothy up. For fucking reals.

The Gentlemen

The Gentlemen

Can’t even shout, can’t even cry
The Gentlemen are coming by.
Looking in windows, knocking on doors,
They need to take seven and they might take yours.
Can’t call to mom, can’t say a word,
You’re gonna die screaming but you won’t be heard.

Okay. Now… imagine that said in a sing-song nursery rhyme kind of way by a little girl. Then imagine silent, gliding skull-faced men in immaculate black suits who have stolen the voices of an entire town and are slowly making their way through it overnight, taking seven hearts out of seven chests.

SO brilliantly creepy, you’d never realise it was a plot from an episode of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Hey! It won an Emmy, okay?

There are obviously loads of others that I’ve missed, but these are the three that always stand out in my head (and my nightmares).

So who keeps you up at night?

Puck you, miss

I feel bad about that marathon previous post, so here’s something bite-sized.

In a strange turn of events, the piece of really, really good news I got turned into really, really sad news. And the really, really bad piece of news turned on its head and is dandy once again. I think.

Has anyone been watching Summer Heights High? Chris Lilley is a genius.