Shankania – The Nation State of Angry Poetry

Shankanalia 12I’ve been quite calm of late, it must be the drugs. Those savage spikes of rage are troubling others less at the moment. How nice for them. Not to worry, there’s still plenty in the daily mimble to anger one. Right now it’s mostly about the bland smugness that comes with believing that doing what’s right for you entitles you to treat other people like shit. Yes, I’ve been into town again…

Follow @shankanalia on Twitter for irregular poetic updates.

Shankania – The Nation State of Angry Poetry

Button or Chestnut
Your tiny little words,
Rammed with cuntish ignorance.
Pitiful wanky mind slut,
Ejaculate your brain fungal spores,
Spongiform fuckwits.
Fuck off.

Shank Verse
Oh my god you fucking freaks!
Eyes on backwards,
Up your arse:
Colonic interrogation.
The filthy shitty prose
You dribble…
You stain the world.

Your Face Fills Me With Desire
Stupid fucking knob-jockey.
Punch you in the throat,
Choke you with your stupid face,
Lock you in a box,
Toss you in the fiery sea.
Relish your screams.

Follow Steps 1 Through Fuckit
Your instructions
(Many thanks):
Detailed,
Precise,
Empty of fucking worth.
My questions are unanswered;
My ire engaged-
Write them with your blood.

My What A Lovely Shirt
A vile stream of gagging trolls
From under the earth
Laying waste to baskets
Shelves and bins.
Hard won gold pissed away on worthless trash.

Consume, Consume
Hideous weeble mass,
Mismatched teeth and feet.
Drawn by the beacon
Screaming sale.
Buy,
Consume,
Waste.
Worthless tat
Complements the fat.

Throwing Shapes
Your spine has a dent in it.
Sorry about that.
It’s because of who you are,
You see,
That I’ve added this deformity:
Your spinal gruel
Makes me laugh.

More of The Same

Lego Blog: Series 11 Minifigures

Series 11 - Surprise

They’re Back!

We have been waiting for this with an unreasonable degree of excitement, eyes frantically scanning the shelves of every shop we went into for the last month – ever since we saw what Series 11 included. For me, this is the best series they’ve had for a while; it’s certainly the first for at least three series where we have felt compelled to acquire them all. In fairness to my own obsession it is dwarfed by my other half’s need to have them: that makes me feel slightly more sane. So here’s the gang in all their motley glory.

They’re continuing several running collections – robots, space guys (ah crap! I’ve just realised I’ve missed him, no – three figures –  out of all the cocking pictures – so this is 12/16 of the set!), scientists and beasties.

Brutal Favouritism

image

image

My other half went nuts about the Yeti some time ago – he’s got a lolly! Also the elf and the gingerbread man. They are all rather pretty. The Gingerbread Fellow’s head is a biscuit and he’s charmingly freckled all over. There are a lot of arm and feet details in this set – the costume designs are getting increasingly detailed and awesome.

For my part I have a lot of love for the lady robot ((she’s got bubbies, and a key). She looks perpetually surprised which is a bit odd but I’m looking forwards to putting her with Mr Roboto from a much earlier series.

Delightful

imageimageI’m also rather fond of the British policeman, whose design is from the ’20s or something. Great moustache and truncheon too. The elf has traditional dinky legs and the adorable teddy bear. You get a nice brick with a ‘gift’ plate on top too. Honestly they’re all quite fantastic and have been worth every moment of blind bag squeezing. This time round WHSmith’s got them first (in Beeston), followed by Sainsbury’s. It’s been a fairly thrilling ride! There are some great new bits and bobs – the lady scientist (a weirdly much saner counterpart to the earlier Monster Fighters mad scientist) – she has blue gloves and two vials of awesome.

Huge Colour

Series 11 - NightmaresSeries 11 - DoScienceThe scarecrow and (I don’t know how best to describe this one) ‘tribal guy’? are perfect for supplying nightmares. The mask is rubber and he has a cool paint job on his face underneath too. There is literally no shortage of favourites here. I really like the welder, though it’s a slight shame it’s a full head piece and can’t be flipped up.

Idiocy and Innumeracy

Finally, there’s the last three who I stupidly forgot to include. I’m blaming that on them the last we acquired. More rollerskates, a nice sundae and yet more awesome space soldier fellows. I like that his face is just a set of crosshairs. And we finally have a mad cat lady such as other half aspires to… It’s a great set and I’ve had to order even more minifigure display cases. Ho hum, roll on series 12!

Series 11 - Welder Series 11 - Missing 3

 

 

Film Review Shorties: Elysium / Pain and Gain (2013)

Elysium (2013)

I loves me some good science-fiction action. The promise of more by the director of District 9 had me excited a year or more ago. The addition of Matt Damon surprisingly didn’t dampen my enthusiasm, despite the dull posters showing the back of his head and a stack of K’Nex. As with Pacific Rim I studiously avoided all trailers and information, and I’m glad I did; it really does improve my enjoyment of films. I frequently write during adverts and trailers anyway (I’m not paying to see them) and I think I’m going to do it more.

Anyway… Elysium – awesome space-station wheel in the sky for rich folks. Earth life sucks – population explosion, global corporate governments, hideous poverty and all the other awful things we seem utterly bound for. It’s exactly the dystopian future that had me thinking of Neal Asher‘s new series and Richard Morgan’s Altered Carbon with a huge poor population envious of their brutal callous overlords, who in this case have fucked off into orbit to have the lives they want.

The story is that of a poor chump, Max who has always dreamed of going to Elysium (ever since being little in a nun-run orphanage). Life hasn’t really worked out and it gets much worse when he gets his arm broken by a robot cop and then takes a tonne of radiation poisoning at work. He has days to live and nothing to lose – cue action. There are some nice twists and painful scenes to watch and I don’t really want to give away the story (be blissfully unaware like me). It pounds by at a satisfying pace, beginning with a flashback to Max’s childhood friendship with Frey and their hopes and dreams. That gets referred back to a lot during the film, which certainly irritated a number of my friends. I quite liked it. For all the action and drama that get packed in this is a classic sentimental sci-fi story that ends exactly as it should.

The supporting cast really makes this work, though it’s unfortunate that once again Frey is shunted into female mother-hostage-victim role, despite being a nurse and having the potential to be a strong character. There are a host of criminal renegades to enjoy, on both sides of the good/bad divide. William Fichtner is the face of corporate evil (complete with skin branded company logos on his face). It’s his character that becomes the focus of Max’s attempts to get to Elysium. To be fair he actually gets there relatively easily, once he’s got his exo-skeleton power suit bolted on (that’s a disturbing surgery scene right there!) Sharlto Kopley plays a very disturbed and disturbing corporate mercenary who is nonetheless rather amusing and very watchable. Jodie Foster is Elysium’s no-nonsense totalitarian minister of defence who has few qualms in blowing up ships full of refugees and sending Kruger (Kopley) after Max and Frey.

Visually this film is beautiful, Neill Blomkamp has created a thoroughly credible, filthy, awful future Earth (his robot policemen are very similar stylistically to the aliens of District 9) and it contrasts extraordinarily with the graceful Elysium. The space station itself has an open, park-filled atmosphere in a huge toroid wheel which I don’t think I’ve seen before. That and the small shuttle craft and general feel of the technology reminds me of ’70s and ’80s sci-fi book covers – loved it. The weapons, when they come out (and boy, do they) are messy and violent. I’m told by teh internets that the film is about the dangers of immigration, but that doesn’t match my feelings in watching it – it’s a great sci-fi action film with a backdrop of massive over-population, corporate political power and privilege of the rich elite. If all yuo get from watching it is “immigrants are bad” you probably should have stayed at home and read the Daily Mail.
Watch it.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oIBtePb-dGY&w=560&h=315]

Pain and Gain

Now this is a film that most right-minded humans should hate. It has the usual Hollywood “based on true events” crap, as if that justifies taking ‘a thing happened’ and bending it unrecognisably away from reality. It’s also Michael Bay directing it, so no one’s hopes for the film should be set too high. I must admit that I was primarily drawn to the film by two things – the rather jaunty music and style of the trailer and the presence of Dwayne Johnson (aka ‘The Rock’). The trailer presents the film as a wacky caper with a bunch of buff losers who rip off a wealthy criminal and get into predictable action scrapes. I’ve also found Johnson to be quite reliable in films, from Welcome to the Jungle upwards – the guy is huge (though his musculature inflates and deflates alarmingly between roles) and really has presence. His action skills are superb and he seems to have a minor gift for comedy.

So those were my expectations and priming for the film. I wasn’t let down – it bounds along brightly coloured and gaily packed with comic characters who worship the inane egomaniacal self-help gurus of the ’90s (loathsome exploitative scum to a man, easily comparable with the worst of fraudulent mediums and religions). Hilariously they are also body builders – in itself an absurd cult of steroid abuse. Mark Wahlberg‘s voiceover narration is pretty entertaining “I believe in fitness”, sure – why not. But life is unfair and despite their pectastic skill sets, Wahlberg and Anthony Mackie (who’s usually tiny) find that they really aren’t making the money and getting the life of people who y’know, work really hard for it. Wahlberg’s muscle-neck gets obsessed with the prospect of robbing a client at his gym.

This the point at which the film becomes at once highly entertaining but also gradually comes loose from the comedy trailer. The guy they rob is not a criminal at all, he’s just a hard working US immigrant (Tony Shalhoub on fine form) who is quite a bit of a dick, but then he has embraced the American dream… They also recruit The Rock, an ex-con with an ex-drug and alcohol problem (there’s no reason that should cause any problems) to help add more muscle to their top heavy team. They kidnap the guy and torture him for a month in a sex toy warehouse. There is much room for humour, and it is mercilessly exploited. After that, they try to kill him (still milked for laughs) but overall, they’re successful and while Wahlberg becomes a model neighbour, Mackie gets married (to his nut nurse – the always brilliant Rebel Wilson) but poor Johnson gets back on coke and goes fairly crazy. That’s also funny. Then they go for another rich target, while the not-quite-dead-but-broke-and-pissed-off Shalhoub gets ex-cop PI Ed Harris (he and Peter Weller are now twins) to investigate. Then it finally goes horribly, horribly wrong.

It’s only in retrospect that I’m at all torn about the film – during it I enjoyed it immensely. Especially when at the 2/3 point a message pops up saying “this is still a true story” – it seems incredible and it no doubt is. We can at least be assured that the actual thugs were a good deal more ugly than this bunch. However, these guys do awful, awful things to entirely innocent people. While watching it my sympathy was entirely with the bodybuilders and I laughed throughout. It is very clear though that they are the bad guys, and the film is played completely for laughs. It’s quite bizarre and I’m not sure how I feel about it now. It could just be a tribute to the consistently terrible films of (now departed) Tony Scott in its garish style, direction and lack of moral compass. Either way it’s Bay’s best film for a looong time. I think I’ll watch the trailer again.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1nWkHxQDsE&w=560&h=315]

Related articles

This week, Monday 9th September 2013

I’m Late I’m Late

The Future

But I am not, of course, pregnant. This appears to be a blessing, though the superficial benefits of having a few months off work do occasionally appeal to me. It’s high in my mind as one of my colleagues is about to vanish on maternity leave and I shall be covering most of her role. So the next few weeks will be a mad smorgasbord of learning things, attending meetings (which I generally refuse to on the principle that they are worthless opportunities for others to expound upon their own self-importance – get a fucking blog dude, join the club), and wrestling with different ineptitudes and failing systems. Yay me. It has an impact though – I reckon it’s gonna be adding a bit (standard measure of 23 tasks of Hercules) to my workload (and that’s with me aggravating folk by turning down their insane requests) and that will hard to fit in neatly and remain entirely relaxed. I’ve already been experiencing the stomach crawling tension that accompanies unwanted change; I don’t like change.

♥ This week’s scribbles

Tuesday Autofiction: Morning Horrors The anticipatory fear of the day.

Thursday Lego Blog: Work in Progress – Jabba’s Droid Dungeon It’s just not right…

Saturday The Desert Crystals Part 20 “Eye In The Sky” Something will happen!

Updates on my thrilling life

Writing

The coming work/life balance changes are going to hit my writing, which saddens me. Stuff has to give, for a while at any rate and there are improv-related things I can’t avoid and other social aspects of having a life that I shouldn’t skip. So I’m going to attempt to intentionally reduce my weekly writing plans – I want stuff I can keep up with, without feeling anxious if I fail at what I set for myself. Regular, planned posting of stories has become very important to my sense of internal well being.

Last week was a case in point – various events collided with emotions last mid-week and scuppered by intended part 20. I’m very annoyed with myself for missing it, and I’ve been having some anxiety about failing to write this post until Monday evening!

Last week’s scribbles

Tuesday Shankania: The Nation State of Hate Poetry Tongue-lashings of micro verse.

Wednesday Lego Blog: Series 11 Minifigures The obsession runs riot.

Friday Film Review Shorties: Elysium / Pain and Gain (2013) Some films to watch / avoid.

Lego

It’s really hard to make droids that look like Star Wars droids without having the right minifigures. I’ve spent some time this week staring dully at heaps of intricate Lego pieces unable to find ways to make the droids that appear in Jabba The Hut‘s droid dungeon. Frustrating. However, I’ve made some bits that seem to work okay so I shall press on! I’m running badly out of the bricks that would match the rest of Jabba’s Palace so I’m going to assign it to some darkened corner where architectural influences have been varied… as has paint. I’m loving my new ‘boot’ tray for scattering bits of Lego around, but unfortunately (or unfurtunately as I just wrote), it is also beloved of our cat.

Improv Comedy

Pretty exciting actually – Parky and I have planned our most ambitious season of shows and workshops – you should join us!

Check out courses and workshops herehttp://missimp.co.uk/improv-comedy-training-in-nottingham/improv-comedy-courses-in-nottingham/

Check out the awesome show schedule (and my new mini-show icons) herehttp://missimp.co.uk/improv-shows/

It’s all genuinely very cool. There’s much teaching to be done and fun to be had! Speaking of which, I’ve persuaded my work to send me off on The Maydays 5 day residential improv festival at Osho Leela! Victory = writing properly on training applications. I’m kinda nervous, partly because it’s next week (I like a run up to knowing where I’m going to be) and I don’t like being away from home. It is however something I want to do and now need to make the psychological effort to look forwards to it!

There’s Gorilla Burger this week too, which is always excellent and I believe we’ll be murdering another film or play at the end of the evening. You should come along!

Media Intake

Books
I finished reading Rivers of London by Ben Aaronovitch. It was brilliant and I’m going to struggle not to dive right back into the sequel. For now I’ve alleviated the addiction by buying new books, including a bunch of short stories by Adrian Tchaikovsky Feast and Famine. I’ve also enjoyed A. Lee Martinez’ Chasing The Moon

Events and Excitement

Gorilla Burger – Thursday 12th September

7.30pm at The City Gallery, Nottingham.
Improv comedy, bring your own drinks – we’ll let anyone on stage!

Nottingham Comedy Festival: Pub Poetry – Tuesday 24th September

7.30pm at the Canalhouse, Nottingham.
Open mic comic poetry and spoken word for everyone (in a pub).

Nottingham Comedy Festival: MissImp in Action – Friday 27th September

8.30pm at The Glee Club, Nottingham.
High energy improvised comedy show.

Autofiction: Morning Horrors

Panic FlowerThe Ghastly Future

There’s something about the morning that just feels rich with the potential for horror. For a start I don’t like the morning. It seems an unnecessary part of the day that, given a choice, I will usually skip. It’s perfectly normal for us to wake up at eleven or so over the weekend. It feels better. I know there’s a slice of the day where no one is around very early on, but I’d rather experience that same peace at say, two in the morning. I certainly perk up again in the evening, or quite late at night. It’s a kind of alertness that I rarely experience before the sun’s at its zenith.
As far as I can recall I’ve always been a night owl rather than an, well I don’t know – morning pigeon? Bloody things hooing down our chimney. I’m grateful for sleeping tablets to shade out that sort of distraction to an irrelevance. As a very small child I was apparently quite prepared to sleep through the night. I never saw that much Saturday morning TV either, and despite the rosy-hued nostalgia they were probably fairly awful. It also means that Operation Yewtree isn’t haunting my memories of childhood as badly. There’s nothing that happens in the morning that couldn’t just as well take place in the afternoon or night. I used to endlessly reset my alarm in the mornings and after showering would huddle in a comatose heap next to a radiator. Thinking about it I had the same problem with swimming, but maybe that was the sheer exhaustion of the activity followed by being suddenly cold and then hot again. It’s a transition that I still despise – again, I can see no good reason why it can’t be pleasantly cool all the time. Bleedin’ world.

Sleep and Drugs and Belly-Aches

Maybe it’s that my mind gets neatly closed up by amitriptyline in the evening, so that even if I go to bed with that unsettled internal sensation of tension it’s only a few minutes until I’m asleep, but when I wake up it can come rushing back. I think it’s the prospect of the future – night and sleep are an end (in my mind); conclusions to the day with no prospect of further waking. I’ve always liked the idea of simply dying in my sleep – slipping from one state of non-existence into another. Before taking the delightful drugs I was plagued for years by awful sleep and heavily involving semi-lucid dreams; I’m grateful to be presently spared those exhausting experiences. It’s possible then that the waking is the awful part that I dreaded most after an abysmal night’s sleep – all that potential for refreshment and rest is now gone and we’re cruelly injected into another endless day.
Of late I’m waking with a gnarl of tension in my belly that I recognise as a vague but very real concern about future events. They don’t need to be serious prospects or problematic ones to generate that tension. It’s something I’ve never managed to resolve. For a long time I wasn’t able to distinguish that sensation from hunger, which seems weird now. Maybe eating can be sufficiently engaging to distract the mind from other worries. Not a good road to go down though. It makes the day hard to look forwards to. If I have responsibilities, places to be – fun, nightmarish or mundane – they all generate that same sense of boding tension. Eventually routine activities do become anxiety free, but I don’t know how to cleanse myself of that. For example, next week I’m going to a five day residential improv course – that’s good right? Nonetheless it’s burning a hole inside me that won’t be assuaged until at least the third train transfer on the way, and probably not until I’m arranging junk in my room. It makes it very difficult to want to do new things or to go to different places.

Lego Blog: Jabba’s Palace Part 2

Jabba’s Palace, Special Revision

image

FettThe recent Lego Star Wars set for the palace is lovely, but it’s small. I’m glad I didn’t pay full whack for it (thank you ASDA) because I would have been pissed off spending a hundred quid on it. The figures are lovely and the overall design is mucho pretty but you can’t get much into it. I know there’s the Rancor add-on, but that goes underneath and while it’s a clever way to develop the model I have height restrictions (like any good ride) and it just won’t bloody fit.

I’ve already had to reduce the height and while doing so built an extension corridor between the guard tower (and tiny front door) and the throne room. It’s not big enough and the design was a bit wobbly since it could be detached from both sides. It also didn’t really carry the theme of the build – I mean it’s okay and I was pleased but I felt I could do better.

The 1st Revision

See what  I mean? It’s nice but I still can’t fit much more in there (I’m still failing at that).

  

2nd Revision (not Special Edition)

This time I took a different approach, dismantling the guard tower so I could integrate the corridor (and lose the immense drop and smashability of the model). I figured it would be better to match the throne room’s base design than the tower (they’re at very different heights) and just step up from the tower. Then I hit the usual difficulties of limited brickage, but I wanted to make it look as seamless as possible by matching the corridor heights and doorways that already existed. That forced the use of bricks in some places but freed up enough slopes to make a consistent roof for it. It’s also much more stable than the initial roof which was patched together really messily.

  

  

The Future Return of the Jabba’s Palace

One problem I didn’t manage to resolve at all is the weakness of the guard tower’s base which is four plates  held together just with a couple of tiles. Even though the corridor feels like it’s twice as long as before it’s still quite narrow due to limited bricks and the depth of the guard tower. What I’d really like to do next it deepen the whole thing and get a door which is more like the vast wide door in the film (and maybe enable rotation of the whole tower because the front is so pretty but it’s hidden at the back of the model.) Ho hum.

Also ongoing is the droid dungeon project – check out a sneak preview below…

You can see more pictures of the set in glorious colour here on Flickr.

Related articles

The Desert Crystals – Part 20: Eye in the Sky

desert crystals2Part 20 – Eye in the Sky

Another ragged scream tore through the early morning darkness. The early morning darkness was the same as it had been all night and likely would be all day. The pitch blackness of the Sky Cliff was unending, save in the imaginations of the men and women lost inside. It seemed to be darker on waking than on going to sleep, though that itself was fitful and filled with twitching to wakefulness, soaked in sweat with a cry on the lips. The incessant screaming was not helping. There is a limited number of finger tips that can be stuffed into ones ears and only so many pillows and blankets can be wrapped about ones head.

Rosenhatch was a case in point. He had attempted to bundle his head deep in his bunk, but found it was all too easy to suffocate – not just because of the sheets, but because his cat Maxwell possessed the uncanny ability to balance atop the bundle and dig his claws in with each shriek. That had affected their sleep. Maxwell regarded the sound as a callous intrusion into his preferred somnolence. The cat had grown weary of the lengthy night and had retreated to their cabin until daylight and distraction emerged once more. In between long naps he had batted Rosenhatch’s mislaid glass and stationery underneath the bunk, where they would probably remain.

Until the man had begun his tiresome screaming the whole journey had taken on a restful tedium, though Maxwell would have preferred the earlier sun-baked portion to have persisted; he’d identified an ideally precarious perch on the railing to the rear of the airship to idle away the days. There had been a lot of noise recently, but Maxwell had spent much of that inside Rosenhatch’s coat. Then had come the unnecessarily long night and the constant smell of sweat and meat. When the missing cabin boy fell back onto The Dove’s Eye the crew had been delighted, if somewhat put out by the avalanche of gore that had shepherded him home. Maxwell had perked up a little at that point and successfully acquired a length of sticky gruesomeness to hide beneath the bunk, along with the stationery, for surreptitious gnawing and growling at.

His ears twitched irritably as yet another strangled cry penetrated the thin walls of the cabin. He dug his claws meaningfully into the semi-slumbering heap that shifted beneath his weight. Maxwell jabbed his claws in deeper, warning Rosenhatch that he was entirely comfortable and really ought not be disturbed further. His self-appointed master was destined to persistently disappoint the cat, and peeled back the layers of blanket to stare frustratedly at the ceiling. Maxwell glared balefully at him.

“It’s not my fault Maxwell. The poor lad’s got something awful in his eyes, probably from swimming through all that rotten charnel.” Now that he thought of the vile stuff that had splashed all over the fore deck of the airship Rosenhatch was sure he could still smell it – disgusting, he’d probably never get it out of his nostrils. “Harvey and the captain have the boy tied to a bunk so he doesn’t scratch at them.”

Maxwell elegantly displayed a total lack of interest by stretching to his full length and then frantically grooming his left paw. Once the left was quite damp he began to drag it over his left ear and cheek.

“I don’t know what else we can do with him – they’re frightfully swollen. We’ve washed them out with water and a splash of alcohol. I wasn’t sure about the latter, but that old sky mate with the beard swore by it. It didn’t make much difference. Pouring it in his mouth seemed to work better.”

Maxwell switched to the other paw and applied it to his right ear.

“You know, sometimes I can’t help feeling a little responsible for these things,” Rosenhatch murmured self-indulgently. Maxwell broke off from his important washing to blink slowly at the untidy, tired-looking man. “I suppose you’re right – it’s hardly my fault he was kidnapped from the ship by winged night beasts. Still, we should at least look in on him again. Come on.”

Rosenhatch scooped up the grooming cat and re-ordered his limbs into a cradled position. Maxwell squirmed until he had a paw sticking straight up with extended claws dug into Rosenhatch’s collar bone, and bright eyes peering over the crook of his arm. He shambled out of their cabin and into the corridor containing two haggard sky mates leaning against opposite walls. They were nominally guarding their stricken colleague, but mainly sought to dampen the cries, which explained the waxy cloth sticking out from their ears. The three nodded to each other wearily and Rosenhatch pushed open the door.

Jacob Bublesnatch looked better than he had when they’d taken him aboard; a good deal of scrubbing with their limited water supply had taken much of the filth off him, particularly his face, but he was drawn and exhausted. Some food and water (and the vile rum that Gremble Chank, the bearded patcher, had insisted also be splashed in the lad’s eyes) had been forced into him. But none of them knew what to do for Jacob’s eyes, whose flesh stood out scarlet and swollen, with vivid welts of white and green striping his lids and cheeks. His eyes themselves bulged, splitting even his inflamed eyelids apart to reveal the seamy yellow orbs inside. Worse still, horrid shapes fluttered inside them, like jelly filled with ants. They were a fairly nauseating sight and even Rosenhatch blanched as he drew up a chair to the bunk.

Harvey would be fascinated, but his bulk could not fit inside the cabin – besides, he had quite startled Bublesnatch – perhaps mandibles were not the first sign of friends and family he had hoped to glimpse. The Giant Centipede was up on deck, continuing to map out the caverns of the sky cliff. The captain was determined to leave the place as soon as possible but it had become clear that even with Harvey’s delicate senses to aid them they were quite lost. The topography of the caves had definitely changed since they had glided inside.

The understandable concerns about navigation went some way to explaining why poor Jacob’s dreadful ocular calamity was receiving less attention that it might have done otherwise. Rosenhatch (along with Maxwell) was the only one at the boy’s side when he began to writhe uncontrollably. A long thin wail of despair and pain vibrated up his chest and through his clenched and splintering teeth. Maxwell sharply leapt out of Rosenhatch’s arms and onto the shoulder-high shelf above Jacob’s bunk. Rosenhatch quickly forced a sliver of leather into the boy’s mouth lest he crack a tooth or bite his tongue off and tried to hold the boy down by his shoulders.

As he turned to the door to shout for aid an awful bubbling sound made him turn back. It was a gurgle unlike the worst of digestive complaints and he frowned at thought of its source. Jacob’s left eye bulged suddenly out of its engorged socket and burst in a brief fountain of foul fluid like an unfortunate cheese. Rosenhatch’s own screams brought the men running; Jacob had lapsed into blissful unconsciousness while the ruined eye wept shiny slime and tiny stick-legged maggots crawled out of the hole in his face.

Next Week: Part 21 – Nascent Horrors

In the same series:

The Desert Crystals – Part 19: Newly Bespectacled (captainpigheart.com)

The Desert Crystals – Part 17: Stolen in the Breeze (captainpigheart.com)

This week, Monday 16th September 2013

Droid ShotA Whirlwind of Terror

Alright, that’s a slight exaggeration. Last week was, although relatively quiet, very busy at work attempting to grasp new systems by their hair and slam them into submission against the desk. After all five days, moderate success was achieved, which bodes only slightly less awfully for the future. Oh well. This week at least will be challenging in quite a different way… I’m fighting back against my comfort zone, somewhat to my own surprise.

♥ This week’s scribbles

Tuesday Things I Hate #1: Fucking Adverts I just don’t understand the damn things.

Thursday The Desert Crystals Part 21 “Nascent Horrors” It’s a bit gloomy in the dark with things in the shadows..

Friday Film Review Shorties: White House Down / Riddick  A pair of fairly terrible films.

Updates on my thrilling life

Writing

Aaargh, last week felt like chaos – not that it went particularly badly, I mean I got the three things written that I wanted to, but I do feel bad about writing less. Hopefully this week I’ll have time to write more (I have about ten hours of train travel in my immediate future!) and that I’ll even include some quality… I may blog about my week, if I get time during the day; if not I’ll fill y’all in the week after. We have Pub Poetry to look forwards to on Tuesday 24th September – a glorious opportunity to share and listen to some comic spoken word / poetry / prose. I believe Martin and I shall be attempting some beat poetry…

Last week’s scribbles

Tuesday Autofiction: Morning Horrors Tongue-lashings of micro verse.

Thursday Lego Blog: Jabba’s Palace Part 2 The obsession runs riot.

Saturday The Desert Crystals Part 20 “Eye in the Sky” A charming bit of body horror.

Lego

I’m pleased with the last extension to Jabba’s Palace and I think I’ve put the finishing touches (heaps of droid junk) to my Jabba’s Droid Dungeon – I’ll have to take some pictures for you next week. It also means that I’ve finally emptied the Lego tray that filled one of our sofas for three weeks, so everyone is happy!

Improv Comedy

Last week’s Gorilla Burger show was splendid fun – Eddie is continuing to hurl new formats and ideas at the stage. On this occasion he brought out costume and props to drive Corner House Blues, It was a longform set based around a nowhere land police station and the characters that emerged from the costume choices and changes, and each segment ended in song! It was really good fun and he, Amy, Colin and Jamie did a really splendid job. I may not have told Eddie that yet. Eddie – it was really good.

What else happened there? I was drinking for a change so some of it is a bit of a blur. I do recall dubbing poor Seth in a scene that started with “I’m sorry I fingered your wife”. Well, I had fun! We rounded out the night with an Unspeakable Act – the audience selected Back To The Future II – that’s the one I can’t really remember properly. We got heavily into time travel begatting and singing Dolly Parton songs, or at least Martin did and I made up a song about her enormous breasts, which was also good in Gregorian chant…

This week I’m off to Osho Leela in Dorset for The Maydays 5 day residential improv festival. Exciting!

Events and Excitement

Nottingham Comedy Festival: Pub Poetry – Tuesday 24th September

7.30pm at the Canalhouse, Nottingham.
Open mic comic poetry and spoken word for everyone (in a pub).

Nottingham Comedy Festival: MissImp in Action – Friday 27th September

8.30pm at The Glee Club, Nottingham.
High energy improvised comedy show.

Things I Hate: Fucking Adverts

coaladvert2

Why Do You Waste My Time?

The advent of the VCR was a wonderful thing, followed in time by the DVR and latterly the TV recording box in all its near-identical flavours of branded recording boxitude. Partly it’s the sheer unadulterated convenience of being able to set a thing to record and then watching it whenever I want to, especially nowadays when I don’t need to swap a tape or fight through the irritating Video+ codes or menus (thank you Mr Box Tied To My TV), but it’s really because I get to see the show I want to, not the idents that make me want to scream with their dull repetition and particularly not the advertisements every fifteen minutes for products that make me want to end the human race. I can just… skip them. It’s wonderful; it renders television almost as good as a DVD box set, depending on my availability for eye-gorging.
My enjoyment of TV has increased in direct inverse proportion to the amount of advertising I absorb. I wonder if companies realise just how much their adverts can make someone want to burn down their headquarters rather than purchase their tat. I’ll allow that there are some beautiful ads out there, with gorgeous direction and animation. If I want to see those, I’ll look them up on YouTube. I will still skip through them, because I can remember them. I don’t need to watch the fucking things nine times during a single programme to decide I never want to buy your product. Perhaps I am abnormal in my response… It’s always possible. I do know that advertising slides off me quite well. The chances are pretty poor that I’ll remember what shitty car or deodorant you’re pushing. Sorry. Maybe that’s why they annoy me so much – they don’t really have much of an impact on me, still less now that I don’t watch them. It’s a kind of empowerment.

Once Riled, Twice Enraged

Since I don’t watch the things at home, the only time I have to endure them is at the cinema. We get there bright and early you see, so we can sit exactly where we want to. We then give the impression of hostility to ensure that we have a reasonable twat-free zone around us. Sure, we then have to sit through twenty-five minutes of ads and trailers, but I don’t usually watch them. Why would anyone? It baffles me. I just whip out me tablet or phone and either play games or get in nearly half an hour of writing time. I’m certainly not going to stare at the screen just because it’s there. I’m not a complete sucker.
Anyway, we see a lot of films and although I’m generally busy, sometimes we see films with friends or I’m feeling uninspired or weirdly sociable and maybe we’ll watch the ads too. There’s not a lot of variety. It’s also amazing how much more you can hate the ads before a film when you suffer them twice in a single day. This happened on Sunday, and I found myself growing increasingly angry with the adverts. Partly it’s that every advert is a lie, a manipulative, deceitful string of stereotypes designed to make you feel worse about yourself and envious of others. That alone sends me some way along the emotional spectrum. It’s also how fucking inane they are. The examples below were furiously scribbled while snarling at the screen and mocking the universe in which they exist. It’s a fair representation of the string of ads you’ll get before any 12A or 15 film.

What I Learned From The Adverts Before My Film

Vodka, the notably rather flavourless drink is actually exciting / suave / like taking acid. It isn’t; it’s a decent mixer and a handful of brands are quite nice straight. If your vodka makes it seem like I’m in a forest or surrounded by snakes you have not given me vodka. I’m confused about why being in a room full of snake people represents a good night out.
We are young and stupid (with terrible hair) – especially you boys. You are so stupid that you are prepared to trade your skateboard / pet / car for a bland orangey drink. Girls will take everything you have and then mock you by demonstrating how a vending machine works. This is a bad example of economics.
A well shaken can of dyed, sugarless carbonated water is as thrilling as watching a gardener ejaculate over himself. Women like this, though their pupils notably fail to dilate with excitement. Also, it is an hilarious jape to toss a semi-pressurised metal container towards a ĺawn mower – nothing could go wrong here. I’d like to see the alternative one where his legs are taken off by shrapnel and the picnicking diversity squad is questioned by police. (The “reverse”-sexism doesn’t concern me in the least – this is one shit advert versus a million that denigrate women.)
Selling the scent of a product is admittedly difficult. Perfumes get around this by showing us something totally unrelated to the product. Perhaps the young people with crap tattoos shot in black and white is what this product smells like. But I’ve been into McDonalds… they don’t smell all that good. I wish I could be skilled just at walking in slow motion and being adored by other airbrushed and emaciated people. Maybe if I smelled like a celebrity I would be slower.
Hurray! A bank! Some banks, I’m sure will enable me to have a happy balanced home and work life, just by holding my money and investing it for their shareholders and rewarding me with an interest rate mocked my the change I can find on the street. Even more reassuring, a bank has returned from the brink of doom (all those other mean banks bullied it) and it still has all of its original values about financing the common man and woman which aren’t even slightly compromised by spending millions of its customers’ savings on an exploitative (if beautifully animated) advertising campaign.
A range of inferior beers and lagers are actually not drinks at all, but embody the creative spirit of the age, and I too can be part of it if I just swallow their terrible pissy beverage. I’ll make an exception here and name the brand because it is utterly disgusting. Carling lager – this is an indisputably poor beverage most comparable to lining your mouth with rusty water and then encouraging someone to shit in it. The taste of further Carling will make this slightly less awful. The current spree of witty little ads tells us that nothing beats the sheer perfection of Carling, and should you somehow fail in life you will be denied the drink. Remarkable, I would sooner fail at every endeavour than stoop to sip from the puddle next to the urinal that the brewery gathers it from. It’s a mark of shame against my home town of Burton on Trent that such utter shit is excreted where once was brewed Bass and Ind Coope. If I know you, and see you drinking Carling I shall be forced to put it to its only proven use: encouraging violence.
Also, aeroplanes are like horses.

Oh, and that I’m on the verge of cancelling my mobile phone contract because of their patronising and expensive adverts. Give me fucking bandwidth instead of pouring money into the man whose face looks like a forearm stuffed in a scrotum.

The Desert Crystals – Part 21: Nascent Horrors

desert crystals2Part 21 – Nascent Horrors

As the first grub popped up into the air accompanied by the gush of septic ocular juices, Rosenhatch was turning to the door and bellowing for aid. Maxwell, his cat, was better placed to enjoy the prone man’s erupting eyeball. He had decamped from Rosenhatch’s arms onto the shelf placed at shoulder height between the tiny cabin’s twin bunkbeds, irritated by the noises made by the distressed Jacob Bublesnatch. Those screams had earned him a cabin intended for four, though he was not in a position to appreciate it. Being a cat, Maxwell was quite uninterested in the human’s suffering, he just twitched an ear with displeasure at each ragged breath. However, a growing sound of wet scratching had perked his interest, though he suspected it would be rather unpleasant for Jacob. He was entirely correct, and hunched in readiness when the horrid hatching occurred.
With a curled paw he batted the highest of the grubs out of the air, straight into the wooden window frame which it struck wetly and fell to the floor. He ignored the rest of the splattering spawn and leaped spryly under the bunk to pursue his prey. The two guards burst in moments later, one stopped to stare at Jacob’s ruined eye, the other immediately bolted to vomit copiously. Rosenhatch’s yells died away in his throat as the eye maggots slowly climbed out of the boy’s face. The sight was transfixing and he was completely unaware of Maxwell’s below-bunk activities.
“Quickly, jars – boxes, anything we have,” Rosenhatch declared to the pale gentleman who had entered the room behind him. Shalk Tarmain gazed around him in sudden urgency, hands in a state of curious readiness to assist – anything to avoid looking directly at Bublesnatch. The crew cupboards held a number of small tins and a jar of sweet liquorice. All were swiftly upturned and emptied on the shelf. Shalk passed the heap of containers to Traverstorm. The equally pale explorer seized the first tin (with a charmingly naive painting of a Ver-rabbit at play), flipped it open and scooped up a tinfull of gruesome filth and maggots. He snapped the lid shut and placed it on the shelf, “don’t just stand there, we’ve got to get them all.”
Shalk looked appalled, but hesitantly extended the jar with a shaking hand. It was like gathering an exploded yolk with a spoon, it sought escape with a slurring, bubbling consistency, but once over the jar’s lip slid suckingly inside, drawing along the insectile worms in the foul paste. Once the first few were in, and Shalk had seen that he could avoid touching the disgusting mess, he was more help to Traverstorm and in just a moment the pair had filled all the tins with all the squirming, rank creatures they could find.
“Is that them all?” Shalk asked, laying the last of the tins down and placing a heavy leather folder on top. Traverstorm eased open the folder to see his own face looking back at him from the cover of The Journals Biologinary. It was the famous issue with his profile cheekily regarding the skull of an antpostle, almost no one had been hurt on that expedition. He sighed and closed it firmly.
“I hope so, I don’t think we should let them crawl about the ship. We’ve all got to sleep after all”.
Shalk shuddered at a vivid imagining of the things sliding across his face as he slept. Not that sleep had come easily these days since they’d been within the Sky Cliff. The dull warmth and faint scent of blood might have been described as ‘womb-like’ by the old bag patcher, but Shalk doubted babies slept as badly as this. The whole crew was running on empty – it’s hard to keep peering into the dark without hallucinating monsters and strange shapes. None of that was helping the airship navigate through the vast caves that riddled the cliff’s innards. Learning about the fate of the cabin-lad’s eyeball would hardly settle the crew…
A knock on the door drew the men’s attention away from the pile of monster-filled tins. The knocker entered shortly after. It was Tarin, Lord Corshorn’s granddaughter who usually tended the engines lying in the aft belly of the airship. Her long black hair was bound in a wreath around her neck which rested on the leather armour that covered her from throat to ankle. Traverstorm had never seen her in the rest of the ship before.
“Captain wants updating on the boy, if you’ve a moment-” she began before catching sight of Jacob’s shivering silent body, “ah. What the tarber happened to his eye?” Traverstorm recounted the lad’s misfortune as briefly as possible. She kept her calm well, he noted.
“Not dead yet then? Strong lad.”
“He is, and I’ve hopes it’ll not come to that,” replied Traverstorm, laying a protective hand on the boy’s shoulder, “though I’ve grave concerns about his other eye.”
They all turned to inspect Jacob’s remaining eye, from a judicious distance. It was still swollen and wracked with scarlet lines, slow ripples ran under the eyelids to round the cheekbone. None of them wanted to discuss it further.
“I need to consult with Harvey, I think. And also to clean out this wound.”
“Your centipede’s still on deck feeling out our way. I’d say he’s as lost as the rest of us.”
“These caves can’t be endless, he’ll find us a way out.”
“Might not matter – we’re going nowhere.” Tarin grimaced as she spoke and Traverstorm realised what was missing.
“The engines – what’s happened?” He’d been so distracted by the revolting grubs that he hadn’t noticed the ever-present hum and burr had ceased, and the ship hung silent in the night.
“Don’t know. They seem fine but they just aren’t going. I’m taking a party under the ship after you’ve talked with the captain.”
Traverstorm didn’t envy her that. He turned to Shalk, “stay with Jacob, I’ll be back shortly.” He took one of the tins and left the rest with Shalk.
Shalk was less than thrilled to be left alone. He pulled himself up to the opposite bunk – as far as he could get from the restrained youth. The silence of the ship was eerie and unnatural for a skymate. Not as unnatural as what was happening on the other side of the cabin, but still. A sudden yowl and hiss from the shadows beneath Jacob’s bunk made Shalk jolt upwards, banging his crown on the top bunk. He sprang to his feet, knife immediately in hand, then kneeled to peer carefully under the bed. A growl preceded the flight of a whitish lump which came from the shadow and slapped against Shalk’s cheek. It fell to the floor and began to scramble towards him. Shalk let out a panicked shout and dived out of the cabin, slamming the door behind him.

Next Week: Part 22 – Dead Air

In the same series:

The Desert Crystals – Part 20: Eye in the Sky (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 19: Newly Bespectacled (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 18: Cut and Dried (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 17: Stolen in the Breeze (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 16: Look But Don’t Touch (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 15: Blood’s The Thing (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 14: A Timely Intervention (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 13: A Chamber of Horrors (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals: part 1 (captainpigheart.com)

 

Film Review Shorties: White House Down / Riddick (2013)

White House DownWhite House Down (2013)

I was drawn to White House Down by its dreadful poster which seemed to depict the president of the United States (or ‘POTUS’ as I understand he’s known in the trade) played by Jamie Foxx holding hands with a vaguely military-looking fellow, Channing Tatum. That seemed quite amusing, and I also liked the suggestion by my other half that this was the sequel to Black Hawk Down; sadly it isn’t but it’s quite fun if you maintain the pretence. This is another film about American incompetence and blowing up the White House. The other one was Olympus Has Fallen earlier this year which was also entertaining. This is almost a remake of that film with various features slotted into the painting by numbers screenplay. I’m not certain I can tell the films apart even now.
Most of the set up is just silly, but who cares because Roland Emmerich is going to blow up the White House again. “Blah blah I want to be a Secret Service agent and my daughter hates me but loves politics and the president” – Tatum’s backstory. “I am a black president who wants to pull out of the Middle East and upset all those big money military companies” – Foxx’ backstory. So far, so yawn. Tatum has quite an engaging relationship with his daughter but it’s all bland sentiment, as is Foxx’ remarkably one dimensional president. Thankfully we don’t have to wait long before the “plot” kicks off with a man obviously masquerading as a cleaner detonating a bomb in the senate building (I think- they all look the same to me and it doesn’t really matter). From there the White House is quickly stormed by a gang of well organised military types and complete morons. Very soon father is separated from spunky daughter, lots of people are dead (it is incredible how incompetent films consider all American police, military and clandestine agencies to be) and the president is being betrayed by trusted advisers (hurray for James Woods). Outside the White House Maggie Gyllenhall is busy looking pensive and worrying about what to do.
Skip the story and character stuff and you do get a reasonable amount of explosions and gunfire. There’s a fun chase round the estate in bulletproof cars and some silly scrapes and stunts. It is so far beyond predictable that you can likely tell the story just from the poster. Foxx and Tatum are best friends forever by the end. That does skip the “highlight” scenes of the film though which are just sick – I’m not sure how many times the eleven year old girl is slapped, threatened or has a gun screwed into her head to make her cry. It’s not an appealing sight and is frankly rather troubling. But it’s okay – by waving a flag on the lawn she makes fighter pilots abandon their mission to bomb the White House and everyone is okay (except for those shot at point blank range with a spinning gun thing).
Fairly dreadful, but entertaining enough on the way to the inevitable conclusion. Will Emmerich ever make something as fun as Independence Day again? Doubtful.

RiddickRiddick

Ah Vin Diesel, a man moulded from a clingfilm-clad lump of lard. He is distressingly pasty and shapeless, and that’s from someone whose idea of tanning is a sprinkling of freckles. I fear his finest work was the voice of the giant in Iron Giant, although Pitch Black was an excellent little sci-fi thriller. It’s that specific legacy that made me want to see Riddick, even though I’d watched the catastrophe that is Chronicles of Riddick which undid any good work done by the first film. Riddick is a pleasing anti-hero – a psychopath cannibal with eyes that shine in the dark. They played it well in the original, made him tedious in the second and I really thought this could be a return to form. Unfortunately it’s mainly a vanity piece for Diesel.
The first twenty minutes, possibly more (it could easily be half the film) are spent following a badly injured Riddick limp about punching alien dogs in the face. We get a voice over explanation of how he fell out with the Necromongers (y’know, like fishmongers) and got dumped on another crappy planet. He gets better, befriends a zebra-mutt puppy, poisons it and him until they’re both pretty tough and he can amble about punching other aliens in the head, or with his hilarious bone-axe. He does have a quite crappy time of it. He’s not really strong enough to hold that much film on his own though; I was quite enchanted by the puppy-beast – it’s like One Boy and His Dog. They go off and find shelter from a coming storm which will inconveniently wake up hordes of two-legged scorpion things – tsk. Thankfully it’s a mercenary station, a bit like a cabin on top of a mountain, but for mercenaries: this is not really explained, but it seems that mercs are like the Red Cross – somewhere on that planet there was also a big dog with a barrel of rum round its neck. He calls for help so some mercs will come to nab his bounty and then he can nick their ship. Perfectly good plan, which is complicated by the first crew, who are a pack of rapist arseholes (with a religious kid, for luck, and presumably other uses when their imprisoned rape victims die) and the arrival of a second, much better put together crew with Starbuck from Battlestar Galactica. There’s a lot of bickering between the merc crews which is fairly enjoyable until everyone starts threatening to rape Starbuck. She’s a tough lesbian so she can take it, and she gives some good hard punches of her own. Honestly, this is exactly how the film progresses.
There’s a bunch of betrayal, shooting at shadows and the killing of Riddick’s pup (sadly inevitable) followed by his capture. That’s mainly an opportunity for Riddick to also threaten to rape Starbuck (though to his vague credit he does say that she’ll be begging him to be “balls deep” in her – by the way, her character is called ‘Doll’). Finally the storm arrives and a new round of betrayal and punching aliens can begin. After a while it ends and the survivors are all pals and Starbuck does indeed ask nicely for Riddick to be balls deep in her, after rescuing him from his endless punching of aliens. Isn’t that nice?
It’s a perplexing film that completely fails to recapture the delights of Pitch Black. It’s more fun when he’s on his own because at least then the misogyny wasn’t the main feature of conversation for everyone. The aliens are quite satisfying, if rather derivative. I liked the alien zebra-dogs a lot. More of Riddick and His Dog would have been nice. They utterly squander his character and murky charm by the end of the film, but by then you’ll have lost track of who’s dead and who still wants to rape Starbuck. Very odd, entirely missable. I’m hoping it hasn’t retrospectively ruined Pitch Black.

Related articles

Pub Poetry – comic spoken word joy – Tuesday 24th September 2013

Open Mic Poetry Karaoke

A fun, free and informal night of lighthearted and downright comic spoken word and poetry in pubs with Real Ale: without beer, literature is nothing.

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Bring your own poems, short stories, songs – whatever you have, as long as it involves words and might be funny. If you don’t want to read your own, bring someone else’s. Or you can just come and listen, have a drink and a giggle and meet some new folk.

There’s beer, there’s spoken word and there will be a limerick competition.

No need to book a slot in advance (it’s much more casual than that!), but if you’d like to contact us beforehand, feel free to email Nick at missimpnottingham@gmail.com

So far we believe we will have pirate stories, improvised beat poetry, maybe a song or two and fine, funny poets. Join us!

Starts at 8pm with periods of reading, drinking and writing limericks. All jolly good fun. See you there!

We’ll have some poetry books lying around, so if the urge takes you…

Price: FREE

at The Canalhouse, Canal Street, Nottingham NG1 7EH

This week, Monday 23rd September 2013


Marvels and Improv Magickings

CapnPigheart

Gosh, I’m back in the real world today, quite exhausted and wild-eyed from a week away in Dorset. It has been an incredible five days of improvisation in a place I would never normally visit – a very strange culty place (oh yeah, literally a cult -check out the dude who set it up – I have no faith in rich gurus) – but all that was quite avoidable since we were doing improv with sixty other amazing people.

It’s really very nice to be home with my Marilyn, Merly and stuff though.

♥ This week’s scribbles

Wednesday Slightly Broken: Soul Searching with John Cremer A great week but fuck me, some of it was tough.

Thursday The Desert Crystals Part 22 “Dead Air” There’s something out there.

Friday Book Review: Feast and Famine by Adrian Tchaikovsky A fabulous book of short stories.

Updates on my thrilling life

Writing

Well last week went really well, mainly because I got to have a good old rant on Tuesday and did all the rest of my writing on Wednesday on the train to Gillingham (Dorset – apparently that’s important). I love writing on the train, and I love that we have the technology to do it. Brilliant species, providing we agree that my tablet is better than bears. I’m back in the swing of Desert Crystals after that catastrophic week or so ago (it feels like I’ve been away for a month) and the story is cruising along horribly/well.

This week is already almost devastated by my total lack of planning over the weekend. I made lots of notes on improv workshops though… in a notebook. Yes, I used a pen for the first time in ages. It’s a particularly lovely little moleskin notebook with a Lego brick in the front (happy present!) and my handwriting in it is truly appalling. I’m going to try to write about the improv wonders…

Writing? Read it – we have Pub Poetry tomorrow – Tuesday 24th September – which will be a grand chance to read your funny stuff and listen to comic spoken word / poetry / prose. Martin and I shall beat poeting…

Last week’s scribbles

Tuesday Things I Hate: Fucking Adverts An unnecessary rant about how offensive I find advertising to be.

Thursday The Desert Crystals Part 21 “Nascent Horrors” It’s in his eyes…

Friday Film Review Shorties: White House Down / Riddick (2013) Two bad films.

Lego

Zero activity. Sadface. Well, I did talk at length about Lego with a very nice chap called Josh from Bristol’s improv scene.

Improv Comedy

I almost have no words for how exciting and terrifying the last five days have been with The Maydays down in Dorset. A five day residential improv festival is exactly as awesome and knackering as it sounds! Four workshops a day with shows, jams and a showcase. I’met so many really funny and creative people who I’m desperate to play with again that I’ve become rather overwhelmed by it all. I’ve done things as diverse as improvised Shakespeare, singing in the dark, doing a show with a man wearing nothing but one of my socks, staring in a man’s eyes for an hour, consuming a lady’s wombmeat, fighting off daddy longlegses and bellowing mock-Nazi songs at night (I blame new merchants of the grotesque Necrotic Sausage buddies Sam and Jules).

It’s been one hell of a week and I’ve no idea when I’ll manage to document it all or track everyone down on t’web. I can do little right now but thank The Maydays and friends for their fine workshops, comedy and companionship.

Books

As you might imagine I’ve not really done much reading either… but I am most of the way through the first of Jim Butcher‘s fantasy series – The Furies of Calderon. It’s not as fun as the Dresden Files, but it’s got a rare fantasy vibe that I’ve been loving under the duvet at night.

Events and Excitement

Nottingham Comedy Festival: Pub Poetry – Tuesday 24th September

7.30pm at the Canalhouse, Nottingham.
Open mic comic poetry and spoken word for everyone (in a pub).

Nottingham Comedy Festival: MissImp in Action – Friday 27th September

8.30pm at The Glee Club, Nottingham.
High energy improvised comedy show.

The Great Nottinghamshire Show – Saturday 28th & Sunday 29th September

Smithy Row, The Market Square, Nottingham.

Saturday:
11.00-11.30am on the Main Stage
12.50-13.30pm on the Mini Stage
Sunday:
3.15-4.00pm on the Main Stage

Slightly Broken: Soul Searching

Outside My Comfort Zone

Slightly Broken3I spent most of the last week in Dorset with The Maydays and some fifty-odd other improvisers for their fifth residential improv festival. It’s a hell of a thing! For me it felt like an especially big deal for a number of reasons that may seem quite trivial: I don’t like being away from home, or rather, I really like being at home with my other half, our cat and all of our things. It’s also where the people I know are, and the routines that make me feel comfortable and that gently circumscribe my life with familiarity. I’m not… great with strangers.

I find it very difficult to make the transition from stranger to person. Frequently other people help with this, by introducing someone or being in a group activity in which interaction is unavoidable; if it can be avoided, I’ll avoid it. There are degrees of knowing people too – generally I can babble quite happily if we have a shared interest, or if I’m in a position of responsibility (like being in charge of a workshop), or playing a role such as compere. Since I’m perfectly content to just slope off and spend time (hide) on my own reading or something (avoiding human interaction) it’s easy for me to do so.

Last week I knew I was going somewhere that was likely to be a little odd (the place is a kind of spiritual retreat) with a lot of people I didn’t know. I knew a few: Lloydie (one of ours), two of The Maydays quite well (Heather & Joe) – though not especially socially (see previous workshops and avoidance of personal interaction…) and another two (Jules and Katy) having met them a couple of times. It wasn’t looking promising. Nonetheless, I went. Travelling anxiety subsided once I was on a train and further when I’d actually arrived and been shown my hidey-hole. Then came the horror of meetings. Sure, there’s got to be some adjustment – it took Wednesday night and into Thursday afternoon before I stopped wanting to run away and go home.

Beginning To Adapt

The first afternoon session (of the four per day) was ‘Meisner’ – I signed up because I didn’t know what the word meant (it’s some guy’s name); I also had a decision making process that selected it. It turned out to be about intimacy and observation, making connections with people. In this context that’s connection for improv of course. We were odd-numbered so I ended up being paired with Steve Roe who was running the workshop. I’d heard of him in relation to Hoopla and the London scene so was quite excited anyway, and getting paired meant that we did all of the demonstrations and all of the exercises. He’s a delightful facilitator and teacher and I enjoyed the workshop enormously. It sounds very strange to tell it now, but it was essentially an hour and a half of looking closely at another person and describing them, beginning with general clothing to appearance, habits and feelings.

It works through repetition, eye contact and physical intimacy. For example, we started with “you have a black and red jumper” “I have a black and red jumper” “you have a black and red jumper” “I have a black and red jumper” and extended to “your smile quirks down before going up” “you have a darker patch of skin on your forehead” “I do have a darker patch of skin on my forehead” (something I was once very sensitive about – thanks teenage friends) to “you are confident” “I am laughing” “you are sad” “you are disappointed”.

It sounds weird but it is strangely hilarious and very personal. I’m fairly good at not making initial judgements about people (they’re all robot monsters) and this was an incredible way to meet someone. It forced and imposed an intimacy with a stranger that I would never have contemplated and served to ground me in the reality of being with people, especially Steve, and I think fixed me for the week. There were moments when I felt that peculiar liquid juddering tension in my jaw that I know is indicative of some emotional state I can’t quite describe or access. It was moving, perhaps because I was permitting myself to open up and accept where I was and what I was doing. That sense of approachability and connectedness allowed me to deal with the people and fully take part in the festival.

There were other emotional challenges that I discovered throughout the week – singing and Shakespeare both moved me in ways that I found unexpected. Partly it’s the beauty and surprise of the language and the way you express yourself when given freedom to expand without conscious control or direction. It made for an exciting week of extending myself into other people’s lives.

Surprising Joy

On the last day we only had two workshop slots. I started with part two of Shakespeare which was magnificent – people said such stunning things, surprising themselves and everyone else. For my part I adore improvised Shakespeare, the language, the floweriness and emotional content feels intense and intensely satisfying. To follow that I signed up for ‘Animal Vegetable Mineral’: a workshop in which you could play anything but a human. Sounds great! But not enough people signed up… so I had to join the other already full groups. I chose John Cremer‘s ‘Soul Searching’. I hadn’t been able to get in any of the others and this one sounded appealing; I also liked the diminishment of choice and having to be there – gives it that lovely sense of ‘fate’ (a concept I do not believe in). This turned out well since it gave the group an even number of participants which was probably essential.

I’m a little fuzzy on the very beginning of the workshop, but we were mixed into pairs and asked to briefly describe the hardest part of the week for ourselves. For me it was meeting strangers and engaging with them; for others it was the challenge of Shakespeare or singing or just performing at all. Then we did super-short scenes with our partner based on them – they were uniformly hilarious. For my fears the scene was simply being greeted and then seized and hugged, while nervously shifting out of the way. My partner’s was the start of the Shakespeare class with me speaking in iambic pentameter “everyone can do it – except you”. Subtle… Funny though, for their truthfulness and the escalation. It was rather lovely to see everyone’s fears on display like that – they’re good things to laugh at.

Second, John switched us around again and we talked about the part of the week where we succeeded, that we overcame that fear or worry. Again, we did scenes of them afterwards: for me it was Meisner (as above) and we swiftly escalated from “you have a t-shirt” to “I like you” and then on to “you’re a real person and I like you”. My partner’s was the liberating experience of finally stepping out from back stage and being confident enough to perform “you can be both kinds of people”. It was already proving to be a rather more moving experience than I had anticipated, and I could feel the relief and joy in the room as the scenes were played out.

Making It Real

We were swapped round again and asked first to think about why we had those fears – what was it that made us hold back, to remain within the magic circle that stopped us from acting. Then we talked about them with our partner. I’m not going to reveal what my partner shared with me, because I don’t have their permission and I’m writing about me. Suffice to say that what they said shocked me. I realised I had a choice to either find something I could use to account for my feelings, or I could just bite the bullet and say what was real. I shared that I hold myself back from others because ultimately I feel that having been abused as a teenager I’m terrified that I’m going to repeat and pass on that harm. The best way to protect others from it is to avoid that contact. I’m immensely grateful to my partner for their support, generosity and comfort during this exercise.

For a moment I honestly thought we were going to do scenes off that, but no. We remained with our partners and John spoke for a while about how people get trapped by beliefs and conditionings that are placed upon us by family, education, culture – all without our consent, sometimes without that intention and without regard for what our futures might be. I’m inclined to agree – we’re told what we should be doing, what we’re bad at and that we ought to do such and such, whether we care about them or not. I sweated blood to get my GCSE Maths because it was made to feel vital, but I’ve never done more with it than figure out the dimensions of a room. Often it’s one person in particular who has made us feel this way, one person’s actions or inactions that has branded itself on our minds and made us feel that fear.

Jesus Fuck Why Am I Here?

This is when the workshop really skewed into something utterly different from anything I’ve ever done before. It’s quite possible that I’ve got this bit mixed up and in the wrong order. John asked us to look into our partner’s eyes and recognise the hurt, the pain that’s in their eyes. And you can, you really can see it there, just where the eyelids fold down over the eyes and in the colour. John asked us if we could identify that person who placed such fear in us. At this point we were sitting down in our pairs, mostly cross-legged only inches apart. I think that’s when I felt everything twisting around me, a freakish surreality and I realised my hands were shaking. I guess this was about an hour into the workshop.

Next we formed a standing arc a fair way back from the stage area. John talked about how people fail us and how actions are revisited upon the next generation – that the people who hurt us may well have been hurt themselves. We so rarely know their stories – be they teachers, family, friends or strangers. We don’t know what happened to them, we don’t know what they felt or thought. The exercise was for the pairs to come to the front and sit down and say just a few simple things – addressing their partner as if they were the person who had hurt them:

“You are X, you were my Y. You did your best, but I don’t have to listen to you any more”

Our partner’s role was to accept this and simply say “thank you”.

I’ve rarely had such a visceral reaction to a suggestion before and for a moment I thought I was going to throw up, or burst into tears or just refuse to take part and leave the room. But I didn’t do any of those things – we watched in silence as several other pairs went first. The naked emotion on people’s faces as they named family members, old school “mates”, teachers was heart-breaking. I didn’t want to be last (or first), and when we felt we were next we went ahead and did it. It was one of the hardest things I’ve done. I think I went second, so I was addressed first and given the power to accept my partner’s statement. Saying “thank you” and (at least temporarily) releasing them from that burden almost stopped me breathing. I’ll admit I wasn’t doing a great job of remembering to breathe anyway and John did keep reminding everyone to breathe, which sounds absurd, but it was necessary.

The Hardest Thing in Life Is That Other People Are Real

Then it was my turn and right up until I spoke I didn’t know what I was going to say, but I said “You’re Ric, you were my friend. You did your best, but I don’t have to listen to you anymore.” What I wanted to say was “you were my abuser” but I’d grasped, despite my head furiously disagreeing that the point was to accept people as people, instead of just demonising them. I was pretty shaky by the time my partner said “thank you” and we returned to our place in the arc. That’s when the shock of it kicked in and I felt that liquid shuddering up the side of my face and I started crying. I wasn’t the only one… but it’s probably the first time I’ve cried at all in many years. Again, I’m grateful for the arm round my shoulders – I don’t think I could have gotten through that without someone to touch.

Everybody did it. As a final exercise we sat in a circle and spent thirty seconds each in silence while everyone else told us what qualities they saw in us. That reduced (that’s not the right word – enabled?) plenty of people to tears again.

It was an extraordinary experience, liberating I think, not just for the confronting and dismissing the people who hurt us, but for being able to recognise and celebrate those transcendent moments where we overcame our fears and felt that bright joy of success or belonging. John’s point was not that we had now fixed ourselves, but that we are now open to stepping past those boundaries we’ve ended up with – the experience and memory of having done so shows that we can be free of the past and its constraints. I’m not sure what else I can say about the event right now, but it felt deep and powerful. I’m grateful for the opportunity to do something I never imagined I could do.

http://www.themaydays.co.uk/

This week, Monday 30th September 2013

It’s A Needlessly Exhausting Life

RoboLadyI’m not entirely sure how I’ve just slept for twelve hours; it’s a good job I’d taken the day off work… I didn’t really take a break after getting back from The Maydays residential improv course and the following week was well busy like! In fairness, it would have been even busier had not a couple of things been rearranged. Even so… I got back at about midnight and headed off to work in the morning. I think that’s the point where I should have taken a day off really. I’ve spent the week fairly mindfucked as a result and have not succeeded in acquiring the necessary chunks of sleep to catch up. Not to worry…

Tuesday night heralded the return of Pub Poetry. It’s always a delight to compere and I forget just how pleasing it is when people who have never read before get up and perform something. We also had lots of the regulars back with their poetry and even better, I’ve just managed to recover at least part of the night from my H2 Xoom recorder (like an idiot I managed to unplug it before turning it off and got one of those 0kb files that so terrify me. Fortuitously I discovered a wonderful free data recovery app called TestDisk which has turned it back into a real file!) so I should be able to dig out some amusing bits, including Martin and I having a stab at improvised beat poetry. I’m not sure it was very good but we did enjoy it.

I took Wednesday afternoon off, in theory to be able to get some sleep, but in reality I had dire need to create a birthday card and to write the only thing I managed to scribble last week… we’ve had shows, birthday parties and god knows what else to do this last week.

♥ This week’s scribbles

Wednesday The Desert Crystals Part 22 “Dead Air” There’s something out there.

Friday Book Review: Feast and Famine by Adrian Tchaikovsky A fabulous book of short stories.

Updates on my thrilling life

Writing

A total disaster. I had to concede that I was just too tired and busy to write anything last week. I’m struggling with the sense of personal disappointment – I have let all of myself down. The post I did write, about John Cremer’s workshop and my personal experiences of meeting and interacting with many interesting and fun, but undoubted strangers, was a tough write. I’m glad I’ve managed to document that workshop, and the Meisner one with Steve Roe as well.

Realistically I’m going to have to face the fact that I cannot write as much as I want to at the moment. Work and improv both are just going to be too manic and involving to permit me to manufacture extra time. Maybe I should get up earlier – but that might just kill me as I’ll doubtless stay up just as late as usual…

Last week’s scribbles

Wednesday Slightly Broken: Soul Searching The harrowing, but enlivening experience of improvisation and group therapy slammed into one.

Lego

Nil. We have plans however to take a pilgrimage to a Lego shop in November! Also (I say ‘nil’ but I don’t mean it…) we got our Lego Star Wars Advent Calendar in the post this morning: we are ready for Christmas.

Improv Comedy

Adding to the knackering week has been much improv activity – jam on Thursday as usual but with a slight change as lovely Calum brought his guitar along which let us do some love ballads and scenes into song. We had lots of fun, I especially enjoyed a song about Enid Blyton‘s Faraway Tree that I had with Andrew. Charming and racist.

Showtime! It was also the last Friday of the month again and we were back at The Glee Club for another MissImp in Action. We continued last month’s experimental format which split the show into four equal segments – starting with a half hour of short form from some of our newest improvisers followed by two very fast action-packed montages. It was a great first half, with a very supportive and clap-happy audience who tugged fabulously weird, funny and sweet scenes out of our players. The second half started with an Assssscat (or Armando or whatever you want to call it) which I was the monologist for. Then we finished with Unspeakable Acts – mangling The Fellowship of the Ring in our inimitable style, killing off key characters and destroying plot points with abandon. It was very good fun.

On Saturday and Sunday we took to the street, performing with Little Wolf Parade as part of the Great Nottinghamshire Show. It can be very odd performing improv to a passing public but we did our usual stuff, mostly ignored the audience and had some fun. Thanks for including us!

Books

Along with everything else that I’m not getting done, I’m not reading enough either! I have now finally finished The Furies of Calderon, the first in Jim Butcher’s fantasy series. I enjoyed the ‘furies’ – the elemental spirits that people are somehow teamed up with, and the epic scale battles. I still wish it had the humour of the Dresden books though. I also got through volumes two and three of Atomic Robo – a comic I adore which fuses science fiction, science, silliness and action into a near-perfect book.

Events and Excitement

Friday 4th October 2013

Consenting Partners_SQ_SMConsenting Partners

We’ve taken some of our most entertaining improvisers, teamed them up with each other and are letting them loose to perform a series of unique, uncontrolled and unpredictable  shows. First up we’re serving weird and wonderful two player improv followed by a dessert course of three-way fun. Make no mistake, this is an intense experience requiring teamwork, Vulcan mind-melds and a six-pack of Pandora’s Boxes of imagination.

The Corner
8 Stoney Street
(off Broad Street)
Nottingham

8.00pm – £3 on the door only

https://www.facebook.com/events/1385634221667320/

Thursday 10th October 2013

Gorilla Burger: improv comedy carnage

Gorilla Burger2_SQ_SM

Jam show – a chance for anyone to get on stage, plus special show slots!

The City Gallery
14a Long Row
(off Market Square)
Nottingham
7.30pm – £4

https://www.facebook.com/events/1408367312713244/

Friday 25th October 2013

MissImp in Action – live improv comedy show

MissImp_in_Action-SQ2

Thrilling all-action end of the month show sporting the best of MissImp inventing scenes and playing games.

The Glee Club
The Waterfront
Canal Street
Nottingham
8.30pm (doors open at 8pm) – £4.50 in advance/£6 on the door (£3 students/MissImp)

https://www.facebook.com/events/630962766948498/

Listen! The Recreational Entertainment

Franklyn de Gashe – a walk in the park

Recreational EntertainmentHe’s a time-travelling, serial-killing poet and gentleman. In this charming tale of elephantine-auto-mobile development he finds himself in need of a tonic. A gentle stroll through the parklands of London will surely suffice to relax the skull after a night of severe indulgence.

A wondrous expanse of baise green beneath the smoggy sky. My mount picked up speed as it relished the grass between its skeletal toes. With my peasant-beating spear I directed my chair towards a certain copse in whose leafy shade I was confident of finding gentlemanly diversion.

The rest of the story is here and you can listen to it below at either Soundcloud or Reverbnation, as the fancy takes you.

Soundcloudery

[soundcloud url=”http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/113392711″ params=”” width=” 100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

Reverbnation

http://www.reverbnation.com/captainpigheart/song/18758354-the-recreational-entertainment

The Desert Crystals – Part 22: Dead Air

desert crystals2Part 22 – Dead Air

A thin envelope emerged nudgingly through the rough gap between floor and door. When all but a corner had been poked through a final flick of propulsion sent it skidding across the room. The envelope spun full-length twice before grinding to a regretful halt at the foot of a thick table leg. Seen from above it seemed glumly erect, like a disappointed pennant half-heartedly enthusing for its cause. As a flag it had but a field of beige to excite and draw the eye, with no rampant ducks or blazed escutcheons to inform or inflame the viewer. The lacklustre impression was further reinforced by the handwriting that sloped unevenly across its obverse until a long streak of rainwater slurred the final letters across its face. The surviving scrawl spelled out simply “For Your At”.

Notes of similar ilk passed beneath the door several times a day, so its presence hardly tweaked a brow on the face of either the man or woman who sat on opposite sides of the desk whose leg the note had brushed. The desk top was a wasted no man’s land: pencils lay chewed, snapped and brutally over-sharpened; note pads held little but angry doodles, crossed out names and savage crumplings; angle-poise lamps tilted at each other with aggressive cants, their cones of light fighting for dominance. At either edge, propped alternately on elbows or fists crouched the combatants. They were intent on ignoring each other, to the exclusion of successfully undertaking any other activity.

The stalemate had lasted all morning, and as the sun rolled over its peak the pair were regretting their earlier words – it was already past the time of day when they would usually slope off to the Decorated Elbow and seek inspiration in a pint. The routines of the editors of The Journals Biologinary had been established many years ago, irrespective of which humans occupied the roles. Such traditions were one of many reasons why the Journals had attained such notoriety and respect. Along with their reliably exciting stories and spiky editorials the lifestyles of the Journals’ staff were erratic and newsworthy in their own right (though never commented upon within the periodical’s pages). Frankly it is difficult to maintain a glower when one has any regard whatsoever for the retaining youthful beauty in one’s features.

In as conciliatory manner as can be achieved Estfel Trabine teased a paperclip loose from a clutch of photographs, folded it between his fingers and flicked it across the table. The paperclip bounced off his colleague’s forehead and skittered back across the desk, coming to rest on the image of a Stolen Werebeetle. Melee Galabrendle raised her eyes to meet his.

“That felt something like an apology Estfel.”

“Well, let’s not go too far. Call it an invitation instead.”

“How kind. Your generosity overflows like bathwater.”

Estfel’s façade almost cracked as he replied, “and the warmth of your smile would ignite a poor man’s candle.”

“What manner of invitation to soothe a wounded colleague?”

“Why, our coats await only our exit from this place of frustration…”

“It’s too late for the Elbow, we’ll never get our table now.”

“You’re right, as is so often the case dear Melee. Perhaps a compromise?”

“I’m always open to reason,” Melee was unable to resist adding with a smirk, “and it is delightful to hear your principles snapping like nutbirds’ wings in the wind.”

Estfel’s attempt to maintain his serious demeanour quivered as he replied, “your openness is one of your finer characteristics, certainly counteracting your vile temper.”

“We’re drinking your special reserve then?” Melee drew back from the desk, stretching and rubbing her elbows.

“I suppose that’s fair,” Estfel said equably.

He pulled open the lower drawer on his side of the desk (thoroughly concealing the letter that sought to intrude upon them) and with a clinking rattle of glassware produced a squat bottle two thirds full of slowly sloshing liquor. On Melee’s side, a middle draw provided two mismatched tumblers: one square and thick, the delicate with the tentacles of an Elming Squid etched around its bulbous bowl shape. She carelessly laid them on the desk top and awaited the bottle’s uncorking.

As is traditional with Quaverscant whiskey Estfel allowed the bottle’s contents to cease its swishing progress and only poured it when it had returned to a calmness. Estfel gently tilted the bottle and encouraged the syrupy spirit to creep towards the lip with rhythmic stroking of the opposite side of its neck. A hideously dangerous brew, Quaverscant whiskey was violently explosive when moved suddenly while in contact with air. The ritual that emerged to govern safe drinking was clearly marked on the bottle’s label and rigorously adhered to by any person with a vestige of intelligence, or sobriety. Melee and Estfel admired the way it rolled into their glasses, its chocolate deep colour topped with a glimmering gold meniscus that hugged the edges of the tumblers.

They left it a moment longer to steady itself in the glasses while Estfel recorked the bottle and replaced it in his drawer. They raised their glasses gingerly, mock-mimed clinking them together and took a deep swallow of their sluggish drinks.

“Well,” began Melee, as she savoured the sensation of the Quaverscant sliding down her throat, like a long slow kiss (as the bottle promised) or a tentacle’s suction cups melting inside your mouth (as other fans described it).

“On reflection, it was perhaps hasty to dismiss the notion of a feature on the common beasts of the Allwright Marshes,” Estfel offered, idly watching the spirit in his glass attempt to climb up the vertical sides.

“That was my feeling too,” Melee agreed, “if you recall.”

“Very well, an apology is undoubtedly due. First though, we ought really to finish this delicious drink, which as you’re very well aware is my last bottle.”

“I would not wish to waste it. To your good health and a return to editorial sense.” Melee inclined her glass subtly towards him and finished the drink.

“Do you know Melee, it may be too late for the Elbow, but it’s almost opening time for the Stout Apothecary – perhaps an early dinner..?”

Melee roused herself with a shake of the head and a nod.

“Alright, but all the drinks are on you.”

Estfel chivalrously grumbled his agreement and, without glancing at the rather sad little envelope that had hoped to intrude on their day, left the office with Melee’s elbow poking him in the ribs.

Next Week: Part 23 – Vanishing Distance

In the same series:

The Desert Crystals – Part 21: Nascent Horrors (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 20: Eye in the Sky (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 19: Newly Bespectacled (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 18: Cut and Dried (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 17: Stolen in the Breeze (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 16: Look But Don’t Touch (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 15: Blood’s The Thing (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 14: A Timely Intervention (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals – Part 13: A Chamber of Horrors (captainpigheart.com)
The Desert Crystals: part 1 (captainpigheart.com)

Stuff in the Post: Skinner Co Pendant!

Look What I Got In The Post!

I like getting post, as long as it isn’t just bills and statements: they mostly go straight in the shredder. Sometimes I even open them first. It’s also the joyous season of the catalogue so we’re getting some quality gazing-at-tat time too. Today I got a lovely scuffed envelope from far off Canadia. With no explanation or note I found it held a magical pendant with a mystical symbol. It called to me from beyond the envelope of time and our universe; a voice without crooning to me in my mind; the metallic weight in my palm drawing me down into the unbridled madness of occult lore…

SkinnerCo Pendant_SM

The Magic Of Flash Pulp

It is of course the dashing new logo for Skinner Co, that unfeasibly prolific, dynamic and creative force operating from the dark heart of Canada. Between Jessica May, Opoponax and JRD Skinner they produce the only podcast in which I listen to every episode – Flash Pulp. There they present tales of pulp fiction – mystery, crime, zombie horror and more, all weaving into one complex tale that’s now over 340 episodes long!

If you haven’t indulged in their realm of wonder you’re a fool, or simply didn’t know about it, in which case you’re a fool for not sensing it psychically through the void. Can you not hear their whispers?

They have also spawned a delightful network of fans and associates, The Flash Mob. I’ve been very happy to contribute to the weekly FlashCasts with the odd story or two. I’ve been away for a little while with too much work and improv business and I’m gagging to get back in with the mob.

This was a lovely reminder that I’m still in the Mob! Thank you guys!

Things you should go to now:

http://flashpulp.com/

http://www.skinner.fm/

http://twitter.com/SkinnerCo

Even Merly is faintly interested in my post:

Merly Cuddle Bundle_SM

My Uncle is Missing in Scotland

Update: my uncle was found on Sunday, but sadly not alive – https://captainpigheart..com/2013/10/07/thanks-for-everything-but-hes-gone/

I realise that might sounds a bit like a joke title, but it really isn’t. I feel fucking horrible. I can hardly keep breathing properly. I discovered recently that I’m not particularly good at breathing anyway… apparently you’re supposed to keep doing it, but I’ve found that I hold my breath almost all the time. It’s an excellent way of increasing tension in the upper body and shoulders. That’s a good thing, right? Ah. Well, that would explain the chest pains and day long headaches then.

image

Why so tense? It’s not me, it’s my uncle. He’s missing. I don’t know if you’ve ever had a missing family member; I think this is my first. Just under two weeks ago he went hill walking in the West Highlands of Scotland, from near Fort William. It’s basically wilderness up there, and huge and empty. We haven’t seen or heard anything of him since a nice landscape shot on 22nd September on Tinto Hill. Him not being in touch isn’t unusual. Colin’s a private guy and has long travelled alone, all around the world. We’ve got postcodes from Australia, the Middle East, even the actual Timbuctoo. But  he hasn’t come back from Scotland.

He’s almost always at our improv comedy shows at The Glee Club in Nottingham on the last Friday of the month (the 27th in this case) but he was a no show. My friend Rupes left a message on his Facebook wall asking if he was coming, since he’d bought a ticket, but didn’t hear anything. Not surprising, Colin’s an occasional Facebook user at most. I’d planned to send him a message after the show, but my phone had worn itself out and the weekend wiped the thought from my mind. He probably wouldn’t have replied anyway – I reckon I get about one reply in every three text messages! Plus I’d vaguely remembered he was on holiday and might not be back, so it didn’t really seem significant.

It was only the following Wednesday when I got a call from my Mum to ask if he’d been there on Friday that it took an awful cold breath inside me. He hadn’t turned up for work (exceptionally strange) and his employers at Rolls-Royce had become concerned and contacted his sister. It all rather snowballed from there – my brother in law confirmed that Colin’s car isn’t in his drive in Derby. Now Mum’s in Scotland and mountain rescue are out with dogs and police to try and find his car.
Lots of friends and family, and friends of Colin have been in touch to either share a picture and information out into the extended social network in hopes that someone, somewhere remembers seeing him. There’s an item up on the BBC website now, and I really don’t know how I feel about that. Is it a good thing when a missing person has to be shared at that level?

Hopefully it means more people will see it and someone will have seen Colin.

http://bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-24411262

Missing Derby man Colin Barnfather may be in Highlands

Colin Barnfather had planned to go walking in the Kinloch Hourn area

Police have appealed for help to trace a missing man from Derby who is thought to have gone missing while walking in the West Highlands.

It is believed Colin Barnfather, 54, travelled to Lochaber in late September with the intention of going hillwalking and camping.

It is thought he planned to walk the Kinloch Hourn area.

Mr Barnfather is 5ft 8in tall, of medium build, with short, grey hair. He had a green, single person tent.
He is thought to have been wearing outdoor clothing and drives a blue Honda car.

Police are particularly keen to hear from anyone recently walking in the area who may have seen or spoken to Mr Barnfather, or seen his car in an area favoured by hillwalkers.

It’s not a great picture of him, but that seems strangely traditional for news media. He’s an incredibly competent and resourceful person, hardy, well-organised and vastly fitter than most people half his age.

He’s the only uncle I’ve got and I’d rather like him back. There’s very little I can do except fret and watch the phone in hopes of it beaming in good news. We haven’t had much of that yet, but they do say no news is good news. That sounds like one of those platitudes I particularly despise but it seems to encapsulate the helpless flailing quite well.

Please do share the news article and picture, especially if you know people in the area, or who might have been there recently. Much appreciated.

Thanks for Everything, But He’s Gone

Colin Barnfather_2The Agony of Waiting for Bad News

The last four days have been unique in my experience. I’ve been fortunate enough to have never had a relative go missing. And then my uncle, Colin Barnfather went missing up in the Scottish Highlands. He’s been found, but he’s not coming back.

My Mum and her husband have been up there for the last few days with the Fort William police and the Mountain Rescue teams, scouring the huge and beautiful wilderness. They found him today. It seems he fell from a ridge and likely died on impact. That was at least five days ago, so he’s been dead since before we thought he was missing.

And what have I been doing in this time? There was almost nothing I could do. The most useful thing I’ve done is share a picture and some words. I guess that’s a lot more than we could have done fifteen years ago. I’m very grateful to all our friends, family (and complete strangers) who have passed on his details through this vast extended network we now have. Lots of people have also sent their best wishes, which is very touching.

I only had one uncle, and he was an enigmatic, funny, interesting guy. I find it hard to say at what point he became a major feature in my life. He’s a quiet man, with a ridiculous loud laugh that always instantly pinpointed his location in a room for me.

When I was much younger, probably as far back as I can remember, Colin was a quiet smiling dark presence and a moustache. Ah the moustache! He was probably the first person I’d seen or knew who had a moustache. I do recall being fascinated and possibly slightly scared of it. In my memory he seems so tall, but in fact he ended up being somewhat shorter than me. My god but he stood up straight. I don’t think I’ve known many people who were fitter, despite being twenty years older than me I was frequently shamed by our relative fitness. But then I do have twenty years to catch up and get fit (this is not going to happen).

I don’t think he really knew what to do with us when we were very little (my brother, sister and I), other than be there at family occasions, smile and sometimes be slightly gruff. I find myself the same with my nieces. In very many ways Colin is the family member I considered myself to be most like: I don’t look a lot like my Dad or my Mum, or very much like Colin for that matter. But we both have rather nice eyebrows – and a moustache. So that made sense. He often seemed a quiet, introverted person, which was certainly something I could associate with in my teens.

What drew us together I think, was fantasy and SF. He got me onto the Discworld novels. By then I was already well saturated in SF, but Pratchett shifted the relationship to one of ritual and tradition. For years I’d get the next hardback Discworld novel for birthday or Christmas (not always from Col), and if not that then some other relentlessly awesome SF or fantasy. Eventually I was able to take great pleasure in returning the favour, seeking out newer, weirder and sometimes better SF and fantasy for both Colin and my Mum. It became one of those things we talked about. SF does seem to run down both sides of our family, which is an immensely satisfying legacy to drown the generation in.

I’m not certain when our relationship shifted beyond that of biannual gift giving. I think it must have been around when my Nanna died, leaving Colin and my Mum alone. I don’t think either of them ever really got over that.

I just had a flashback to being at Nanna’s house when she lived on Lawn Avenue in Allestree. I was fascinated by the room that Colin used to have there – I should mention that our family are terrifying hoarders, I mean really awful at throwing things away (it’s possible that my siblings have partially evaded this curse / gift) – and his old room still had intriguing things like a globe of the moon and odd little cars and a duvet that felt enormous.

Anyway, it must have been around then that we found a certain kinship in humour and attitude to life. That is to say, somewhat cynical, often sarcastic (and often hugely unpopular). I think that’s why both Marilyn and I got on with Colin so well – we made each other laugh. We also seemed to naturally slide into the pen for the darker sheep of the family side (which I was happy to take from my brother, once he turned all respectable). For reasons that were unclear to any of us, people felt they should just leave their kids with us at events. It might have been because we all gravitated towards the toys and colouring pencils, but a trio of people less likely to look after your kids would be hard to find.

He became a much more regular facet of my life when we started doing monthly improv comedy shows in Nottingham. To both of our surprises he was there virtually every month. It is immensely satisfying to make your family laugh, and his distinctive laugh made me laugh too whenever I heard it. It’s also been very personally rewarding to have that support. I hadn’t realised until a few days ago just for how long and how deeply embedded Colin had become in that monthly event – not just for me and Marilyn, but for the rest of the gang. From the chaotic days at the Art Org where we’d do the show and then have to break down the set, with Colin always helping and chatting, to the new days at Glee where we can go straight to the bar and get an hour or so of conversation and socialising. He’s been a proper fixture, and all the messages of support and comments from our mutual friends have been wonderfully uplifting.

Colin and me, doing what we did most of the time that we were together.
Colin and me, doing what we did most of the time that we were together.

At times I worried that he was lonely – he was a single man living on his own (with heaps of stuff), and it sounded like a lonely life. Except it wasn’t – there wasn’t just us looking forwards to seeing him, there was everybody else he saw at work and in his insane fitness regime. It’s sad, but these past few days have put me in touch with so many people who loved Col just as much as I did and saw him even more often. I’m delighted (entirely the wrong word, but I don’t know what to use instead) to find that he affected so many people, made so many people happy with his cheerful, determined personality, that he was loved so widely for being exactly the person I loved.

There are a great many people who will miss my uncle. I will miss Colin. He was like the big brother I never had. Thanks Colin, for being yourself – that’s I liked about you. That has always been inspirational to me – you can fit in without giving up anything you hold dear; something worth knowing.

While I’m sad that he died alone, far away from everyone it is exactly the sort of place he loved – alone, far away from everyone. So it’s hard for me to feel too bad about his dying there. If he could have chosen to, he would have come back, so that he could go out and off on his own another time. In this case, he couldn’t choose otherwise and I feel as if he would have accepted that, in his fall and known it was a beautiful place to die.

The place where they recovered Colin's body yesterday.
The place where they recovered Colin’s body yesterday.

For Others 

That said… if you are going to go out walking alone, or even with others – leave a note. Tell people where you’re going. I’m so grateful to the people who helped to find my uncle, from the Fort William police to the Lochhaber Mountain Rescue team who recovered his body, to the RAF and navy helicopter crews who dropped teams in the wild. Finding Colin a few days earlier wouldn’t have made any difference, but it might to someone else.

http://www.walkhighlands.co.uk/news/clive-campaign-aims-to-speed-up-rescue-call-outs/009623/

This week, Tuesday 8th October 2013

Is This Week Really Not Over Yet?

It already feels like weeks since we found out that Colin had gone missing; in fact it’s only been five days. That compression and expansion of time is fascinating. I don’t know if it makes things better or worse – it’s just something that we as humans do. Our impressions of the time that we spend with other people also concertinas dramatically, seeming at once infinite and yet vanishingly too little. It’s been an emotional few days, and will continue to be so as we work towards a funeral and the inevitable nightmare / bizarre bazaar of sorting out Colin’s worldly goods.
♥ This week’s scribbles

Monday Thanks for Everything, But He’s Gone A few thoughts about my uncle, who was found on Sunday.

Wednesday Book Review: Feast and Famine by Adrian Tchaikovsky A fabulous book of short stories.

Thursday Shankchism: The Gash of Angry Poetry Just a few enraged poems from a calm mind.

Friday The Desert Crystals – Part 23 “Vanishing Distance” It can be hard to get perspective high above the clouds.

Updates on my thrilling life

Writing

Not a complete failure last week, mainly because I made few plans and did most of my writing before everything kicked off on Thursday, except for my book review, which I have finally written and will share on Tuesday. Last week’s Desert Crystals was one of the hardest instalments to write, but I’m not sure why. I like adding new characters, especially ones who bicker, which is sort of how I perceive my own relationship with many friends. I don’t know where the story will go next; it’s like improv, I just have to remember what’s already happened and the next step will seem inevitable.

Once we’d found out about Colin I knew I’d need to write about him. I’m a heart of stone kinda guy for actually showing emotions, and for me writing is how I express my feelings. Writing on Sunday night did relieve some of the awesome tension I’d managed to build up in my chest, shoulders and neck, especially when WordPress lost my first draft… anger is an emotion, right? I feel much better for having been able to quickly capture my feelings and memories at the time. I’m painfully aware of how hard it is to genuinely recall such states later. It felt important that I created that memory file.

Last week’s scribbles

Wednesday Listen! The Recreational Entertainment An audio tale for your ear-y pleasure – one of Franklyn de Gashe’s lighter yarns.

Friday The Desert Crystals – Part 22 “Dead Air” New faces in the story, from the offices of the Journals Biologinary

Saturday Stuff in the Post: Skinner Co Pendant! My good friends over at Flash Pulp sent me a present.

Lego

I finally constructed my last birthday Lego gift – a terrifying Lego Atlantis scorpion-crab thing! An excellent build but scary as all hell.

Improv Comedy

Sadly little activity last week. Our boy Martin is runeing in Norway so we skipped Fisticuffs last week. I also missed the jam because I had to test some software implementation (don’t ask, the pistol is virtually under my chin already). It’s especially galling because Ben was running the jam on soundscapes and The Bat. I’ll catch it up another time.

This week we have much improv: Monday night is the start of the MissImp improv beginners course that Parky and I are running. I may not be terribly focussed, but I’m looking forwards to both the distraction and teaching improv to some newish humans.

On Thursday it’s Gorilla Burger once more. I may be taking a bit of a back seat, depending on how the week shapes up. But I’ll certainly be there, in body with beer.

Books

A good book week. Books are an excellent distraction and since the first half of the week was deliberately quiet I actually got some reading done! I started and finished Derek Landy‘s Skulduggery Pleasant – Death Bringer. I’m reading them horribly out of order, but it doesn’t seem too problematic. I wish (again) that they’d number the fucking things clearly. And… breathe… It’s a great supernatural detective series (for teenagers I suppose) which is funny, violent and touching, with especially marvellous characters – the eponymous Skulduggery is a dead man who brought his own skeleton back to life and has now acquired awesome sidekick Valkyrie Cain. They have a pleasing relationship and are both quite mad.

I’ve also read Transformers More Than Meets The Eye volume 4 which is maintaining a high quality comic with loopy and detailed adventures. If you’re not into Transformers then you’ll hate it, but as a lifelong fan I’m delighted with the reincorporation of characters and events and the massive expansion of the narrative. It’s also funny, which is especially cool. Comixology makes me happy.

I’m now getting deep into Makers by Cory Doctorow. You can download it for free from that site as Doctorow has a a seriously fuck-you attitude toward ebook publishing copyright. I’ve got it in paperback, and now I’ve got a back up for when I’m on the move. It’s a delight – a fast paced vision of how the world could be if we just let people make stuff.

Events and Excitement

On Saturday I’m compering a belly dancing night! I’m not certain how I’m getting there, or more to the point- getting back as it’s out in the sticks:

Mehira’s Jewels Hafla with The Baladi Blues Ensemble

Hilton Village Hall, Peacroft Lane, Hilton Derbys, DE65 5GH.

7pm- 11.30pm

Thursday 10th October 2013

Gorilla Burger: improv comedy carnage

Gorilla Burger2_SQ_SM

Jam show – a chance for anyone to get on stage, plus special show slots!

The City Gallery
14a Long Row
(off Market Square)
Nottingham
7.30pm – £4

https://www.facebook.com/events/1408367312713244/

Friday 25th October 2013

MissImp in Action – live improv comedy show

MissImp_in_Action-SQ2

Thrilling all-action end of the month show sporting the best of MissImp inventing scenes and playing games.

The Glee Club
The Waterfront
Canal Street
Nottingham
8.30pm (doors open at 8pm) – £4.50 in advance/£6 on the door (£3 students/MissImp)

https://www.facebook.com/events/630962766948498/

Book Review: Feast and Famine – by Adrian Tchaikovsky

Because life goes on, and this is a book that Colin would have enjoyed.

Beyond the Shadows of the Apt

Feast and famineThis is the sixth ‘Imaginings’ collection of short stories, I haven’t read the others although I’ve heard of most of the authors. This one jumped into my attention because it’s by the author of one of my favourite series, The Shadows of The Apt. These are proper tomes of epic fantasy which blur into science fiction and something broader than merely fantasy. I’ve been reading them avidly as well as the numerous related short stories Tchaikovsky has made available on his website. Since I’ve only read his exceptional fantasy writings I’d no sense of his range or style when writing about anything else, so acquiring Feast and Famine on Kindle was a joyously impulsive click and download.

It’s a neat collection of ten short stories, some previously published in magazines and others original which span a range of genres, lengths and styles. There’s also a very nice introduction by fellow British author Ian Whates (for whom I keep receiving the second or third books in his series and so haven’t started reading them yet), which gushes in exactly the way you’d expect (and rightly so!) I was delighted to find that Tchaikovsky handles all of his subjects with the same care and gentle wit that he does in his fantasy sequence, granting real characters life in even the shortest story. All the stories made me smile and it’s one of the rare short story collections that I’ve read from cover to cover, normally I find I need a longer tale to get my teeth into, but I quite happily flipped to the next story and consumed them all too quickly.

I’ve got lots of favourites already even from so few tales. Partly it’s because I adore science fiction and it starts with the titular Feast and Famine set in deep space with a rescue mission and intriguing alien life. And that was just the start! There’s time travel, slashes of horror (the rather touching Care) and of course a Shadows of the Apt story which expands on a character who appears all too briefly in the main series. I can’t possibly go through them all – you should read them yourself – but I also loved the Lovecraftian The Dissipation Club and the theatrical The Roar of the Crowd (which is laced with life in amateur dramatics).

Some of them are surprisingly beautiful or laced with a sly humour (Rapture and The God Shark) that made me laugh out loud. Best of all, they are all different and have provided a very pleasing insight into one of our finest writers; I can’t wait to see what comes next since he’s about to finish off the final Shadows of the Apt novel (no!). Ah hell, they’re all really good, and are frequently deeper than the genre they find themselves written in. I suspect that will prove to be Tchaikovsky’s trademark, that whatever genre he chooses to write in will feel richer and more rewarding than it has ever felt before.

http://shadowsoftheapt.com/

Get it here, on Kindle or fancy hardback special edition: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Feast-Famine-Imaginings-Adrian-Tchaikovsky/dp/1907069542

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Shankchism – The Gash of Angry Poetry

Shankanalia 9Life seems to be brimming with an excess of stresses at present. Partly it’s just so damned busy, which sure is a good thing – it’s nice to have stuff to do, but I do crave those times when we never went out at all and just hid in a cave behind a book, randomly pasting pictures onto things.

Never mind, the primary stresses now are work-related and that’s no surprise since the government in their limited wisdom, selfishness, greed and outright idiocy are tearing apart the organisation I work for. Typically they’re doing it with pitiful planning and forethought. It makes one left not really knowing if there will be a job to be had in six months time. Ho hum.

Follow @shankanalia on Twitter for irregular poetic updates.

Shankchism – The Gash of Angry Poetry

The Future’s Bright, The Future’s Full of Fire
Fuck you,
You arrogant thoughtless twat.
Innovate?
Excavate your face with a mashed up phone.
Bright idea?
Fucking twat, we’re well past that.
Keep up…

Balancing Acts
I’m too busy to do that thing that you need
That you’re doing for me
Instead of your work.
Out to lunch
In body and mind.
Oh well I guess fuck all is fine.

Precisely Similar
Like for like.
Except it’s not
Like for like.
Like, it’s like-
But not very like,
Like it was.
Likely, you’ll like it;
I don’t like it, like it is.

Operational Effectiveness
Nothing ever simply works:
Too hard for a working thing
To do what it should.
Like a person:
Defective,
Bumbling,
Broken.
Useless dead thing.

We All Wear Masks
Your face requires removal
Scalpel-wise.
Staple it to my fist,
And hit you
With your own face.
Knuckle lips
And fingernail eyes
Thumb your nose.

I Offer You My Fist, Sir
To punch is much too nice;
To gouge a treat.
Stabbing’s a generosity
You’d don’t deserve.
E’en an evisceration
Scarce matches your execrability.

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