Last Week Roundup: Films, Writing, Stuff

I’ve been meaning to return to the habit of scribbling film reviews, and and a couple of night’s of crappy sleep has fried my brain to a vexing degree, which provides me with an opportunity. The brain may as well be offline, and while I’m loath to not write anything at all, I suspect any fiction will be largely comprised of fictitious terms and make less sense than usual. So what else has been going on… here are a couple of TV/film reviews, plus a wrap up of what I was writing and thinking about last week.

The Mandalorian (season three)

I’m deeply invested in the ongoing story of Baby Yoda and Mister Shiny Helmet, and despite them horribly curtailing Grogu’s training with Luke Skywalker in an attempt to make The Book of Boba Fett worth watching (didn’t work), I am very happy to see them reunited and doing things. If I weren’t so in love with them, and with Bo Katan and much of the rest of the cast I’d be spending more time complaining about the very bad pacing, wildly swinging tone and subject matter of the series. I’m not convinced the Star Wars team have much of a plan about how to do a TV show, and certainly haven’t spent enough time deciding what this show or story is. It’s a testament to the loveability of the characters and especially the Mandalorians that they survive the showrunners. Seeing Mandalore, and watching the scattered Mandalorians get back together is wonderful. I care so much more for some of these characters than I do for those in any other fiction. Not an episode has gone by without my exclaiming that the Mandalorians are all nuts. I’ll even forgive the appallingly named “mythosaur”. If you don’t like Star Wars, you will hate this beyond reason. I however am thrilled to watch Grogu’s growth and his relationship with Mando. Moff Gideon has been wonderfully wicked, and we’ve had some of the very best action scenes in the skies, space, hand-to-hand and against monsters that we’ve ever had in Star Wars. Certainly kicks the crap out of most of the stuff in the films. The final episode had me both tense and in near-tears, and despite an ultimate victory I’m going to miss Grogu’s yes/no space perambulator.

The Three Musketeers (Part 1): D’Artagnan

I love a good swashbuckler, and we really don’t get enough of them until yet another musketeer film comes out. It’s important to note that this is part one, and you wouldn’t know that until it pops up in the opening credits. It does have a proper ending though, so even if part two never appears at our local Cineworld I won’t feel too robbed. If you’re seen any decent version of Dumas’ story you’ll be on very comfortable ground here (Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds has been my best education in this): a bunch of very stab-happy nobles and randoms form the sulky, petulant King’s Musketeers. They’re busy saving the queen from a plot to expose her fondness for the naughty Brit, Buckingham who is involved in the increasingly violent Protestant movement in La Rochelle (a place I only know anything about from our secondary school French text books all being based there, for reasons). History, etc. The men are typically creepy sex pests with added sword skills, though only one of them ever fires a musket I think. The exception is Porthos who is bi/pan/something or other and seems far less likely to shove his hand up a random lass’s skirt. That’s nice, I guess. Anyway. The sword fights are great, the whole thing is lush and looks wonderful. It definitely assumes a fair degree of knowledge of the story, which is fair enough for a French production. The absolute stand out performance is Eva Green as Milady (the cat from Dogtanian), she’s absolutely on fire and having a whale of a time in truly splendid costume too. Well worth watching.

Last week I wrote a bunch of stuff:

Film Reviews

This is a fairly massive dump of short movie reviews. If you’re even vaguely interested to know what I thought of Renfield, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, John Wick 4, The Super Mario Bros Movie, Ant-Man 3: Quantumania, 65, Assassin Club, Shazam! Fury of the Gods, Cocaine Bear and Little Eggs: An African Rescue, hit the link and find out.

Short Stories

All lamentably written first thing in the morning as part of my (now) ongoing Daily Stories Project, and consequently both unplanned and unedited. These three new ones now bumping the total up to 54 entries! First up, The Drowning Pool, about a young fellow of royal blood who must soon bond with a monster. It’s a version of a story that I keep musing over and hasn’t yet found a more complete expression – it will doubtless return in another form in due course. Next up, Wreathed in Shadow, which I rather like. It is simply the journey of a pair of magicians through several elemental realms. All of these stories are vaguely personal, since they’re the eruptions of barely conscious thought, but this one contains a little more character neuroticism, and has some ideas I think are cool (and as far as possible are not nicked directly from The Night Watch novels by Sergei Lukyanenko). Lastly, Pretty Little Monsters. Friday brainfog saw my eyes alight on the spine of a book and steal part of the title as inspiration. I really like the idea of chimeras and mad scientists, even when they’re sort of trying to make the world a better place.

Have a read but do please excuse the spelling and grammar: they are all written between 8-9am and yeah, I’m not truly awake until I’ve had coffee afterwards.

Mental Health Track

Far less interesting than the other things, and very much a personal indulgence as I try to take some measure of responsibility for the interior of my skull and whatever that meaty black box inside is up to. The daily updates range widely from musing on whatever I’ve woken up fretting about to some of the dreams I have, with added conscious narrative. Mental health is a good thing to keep an eye on whether it’s good or bad. Your taste for reading these may vary depending on just how much self-indulgence and off-the-cuff philosophising about theory of mind you can handle. MHT 004, MHT 005, MHT 006, MHT 007, MHT 008, MHT 009, MHT 010

Reviews: Aliens, The Marigold, Polite Society

Reviews - Aliens - The Marigold - Polite Society

Here are three ace things to ingest with your eyes: Aliens at the cinema, The Marigold by Andrew F Sullivan, and the brilliant Polite Society.

Film: Aliens (1986)

It was a real treat to catch this on the big screen at last. I first saw this when I was thirteen or so and was appropriately terrified. In time that fear has morphed into a tonne of affection for this absolutely banging action movie. This and T2 are definitely Cameron’s finest work and ideally he’d only ever be given second films in a series to work on where he can turbo-charge them and make them orgies of cool violence (plus The Abyss and True Lies, of course). From the very stressful dream sequence of Ripley and poor freaked out Jonesy to the smackdown with the xenomorph queen this is every bit as fun as I’d hoped. It’s astonishing how long we go in the film before seeing the actual aliens, steadily racheting up the tension. Everyone’s brilliant, from Sigourney Weaver and Michael Biehn to Carrie Henn as the wildly traumatised child. Standout punchable corporate baddie Paul Reiser is excellent too, as is the endlessly quotable Bill Paxton as Hudson. This is either the director’s cut or some new near-identical version with some extra scenes of the colonists which I only half remember, but it’s the proper two and a half hours of monsters, explosions and oh-so-macho colonial marines who seem like massive dicks to begin with, but all are redeemed in death and sacrifice. The aliens still look ace (well-worth looking up the bin bag alien queen they mocked up while designing the monsters), even if the spaceship model work doesn’t look that good any more (and against Star Wars, it never did look great). I was struck by how unambitious the futuristic technology is – even 57 years on from Alien it’s still BBC micro level computing, and the in-house video phones are wonders of failed retro-tech. For a world that’s built full-AI androids like Bishop (probably the first film I saw the wonderful Lance Henriksen in) and hibernation chambers (and possibly everything in Bladerunner) it’s all amazingly low tech and barely a hop above what we had in the 80s. The less said about the sequels the better, I guess… stick to Alien and Aliens I’m delighted we saw this at the cinema, it’s a great film.

Book: The Marigold by Andrew F Sullivan

Another delight this week: body horror and cynical building developers in a future Toronto. Slightly challenging to summarise… Toronto is slowly being consumed by both the rising waters of climate change and the rapacious developers building new towers that no one will ever live in. There’s a cost to building though, and it’s blood. The sacrifices have all gone tits up though, and now there’s a new toxic fungus spreading through the city, consuming both the city and its people. A scattered range of characters from Stanley Marigold (developer of the titular Marigold tower), public health investigators, a even-worse-version-of-Uber driver, a girl whose friend disappeared into a sinkhole and more residents of the Marigold combine to tell this charming yet horrifying story of ecological collapse, dystopia and humanity. I enjoyed the writing immensely, it’s rich and evocative and occasionally horrifying, like Jeff VanderMeer and Ray Bradbury, but manages to remain entirely coherent and cohesive. I both do, and do not, want to visit Toronto now.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/61773985.The_Marigold

Film: Polite Society (2023)

This couldn’t me much more different to Aliens, but I enjoyed it just as much. This is a brilliant mash-up of family drama, school friends, martial arts action, and a hint of biomedical horror (not played for fear though). All that set in a British-Pakistani family in London; two sisters – one still at school who wants to be a stunt woman, the other an art school drop-out. When the drop-out gets involved with a handsome young man whose mum is overly-involved in his wife-shopping, it all gets much more complicated. The action is beautifully done, from scraps in school and being kicked through a bedroom by her sister, and Priya Kansara (Ria) positively glows in both the comedy and the action. Her relationship with Ritu Arya as her sister is an utter delight. The fights escalate, as does Ria’s desperation to get her sister out of her upcoming marriage. There’s so much to enjoy, including a stunning Muslim wedding/heist, big boss fights, sweary teenagers, and a deep sense of fun. I’ve rarely seen big action / kung fu movie and Western tropes incorporated so seamlessly and with such delight into a completely different kind of film. My favourite thing is that when the heightened action takes place, it’s never diminished by treating it like a fight the characters only imagined to be really cool. Beautiful costume work too, all the way through, though the wedding does gleam. Really, really wonderful. I hope it gets tonnes of awards and work for everyone involved.