Media Consumption Wednesday
13 Nov 2014 02:51 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Movies
The Expendables
Good-natured way over-the-top ensemble old guy action movie, directed by Stallone, with cameos by Schwartznegger and Bruce Willis, and a good performance by Mickey Rourke.
Nosferatu
I have never acquired a taste for the kind of acting that is often done in silent movies and my experience of Nosferatu suffered from this, but I'm glad I watched it. I wish I knew more about all the ways it was influential on movie-making. There's a famous scene where Nosferatu rises straight up out of his coffin. I found myself mumbling "wire-work."
Episodics
Hawaii Five-0 (reboot)
We're watching season 2, and enjoying this more since Masa Oki became a regular character
Fiction
Twice Tempted by Jeaniene Frost (#2 in the Night Prince series)
Vampire romance. I like them except that the plots are too heavily driven by manufactured relationship angst of kinds that would make a sensible person run screaming in real life.
Fire in the Blood, Blood on the Water (Vampire Files #5-6) by P.N. Elrod
It's the early 20th century in Chicago, and a journalist who was recently made into a vampire (Jack Fleming) works with a human British P.I. who used to be an actor (Charles Escott). They associate with gangsters and femmes fatales a lot but they mostly have modern middle-class values (e.g. the vampire doesn't hunt human victims but drinks from cattle at the Chicago stockyards). Although these are technically 2 novels, they come in an omnibus (Vampire Files part 2) and Blood on the Water doesn't really stand alone. I was pretty annoyed at the ebook because it was a badly done OCR conversion and had not been adequately proofread. For example, there is a character named Escott, but his name is spelled Escort half the time. And one character has a book called The Invisible Matt on his desk. I like the protagonists a lot and there are quite a few very competent female characters in the series. And this vampire has a really good romantic relationship that has no manufactured angst at all.
Nightingale's Lament (Nightside #3) by Simon R. Green
I want to like this series more than I do. Green has a fabulous imagination at times, but it's mixed in with a lot of fairly cliched noir tropes and moralism.
The Moor, Laurie R. King (Mary Russell #4)
This is really well written in loving detail. I loved her descriptions of the moor and it was amusing to see Holmes reacting to people wanting to talk to him about The Hound of the Baskervilles. The mystery itself I didn't care that much about...the villains were not very interesting, and for the most part the solving of the mystery wasn't very interesting either; it was more of an excuse to get Russell and Holmes interacting with local folks. For calibration purposes, I don't know anything about Sabine Baring-Gould. I will read more of this series.
The Sittaford Mystery, Agatha Christie
Audiobook. I picked this up while reading The Moor and was amused to discover it is also about Dartmoor. It's a little Dartmoor fest over here.
Games
Little Inferno
This is the most adorable, bizarre game ever. You have a fireplace and you can buy stuff and burn it. Weird things happen when you burn certain stuff. And you have a penpal. If that sounds boring, I hope you go try it out anyway.
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Date: 13 Nov 2014 10:56 am (UTC)(Hint: It turned out to be cheaper just to hire a real vampure.)
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Date: 13 Nov 2014 11:05 am (UTC)Wow that sounds REALLY WEIRD.
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Date: 14 Nov 2014 06:50 pm (UTC)(sorry for verbing)
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Date: 13 Nov 2014 02:13 pm (UTC)Is The Sittaford Mystery very landscape driven?
Heh, i have enjoyed world of goo, even if i am not a very completion oriented gamer. Thanks for the Little Inferno link.
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Date: 14 Nov 2014 06:46 pm (UTC)Little Inferno relies very little on hand-eye coordination and timing, unlike World of Goo.
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Date: 14 Nov 2014 04:35 am (UTC)I'm sure he'd say thank you if he weren't busy Burning All The Things.
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