firecat: damiel from wings of desire tasting blood on his fingers. text "i has a flavor!" (Default)
firecat (attention machine in need of calibration) ([personal profile] firecat) wrote2014-11-13 02:51 am

Media Consumption Wednesday

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.
andrewducker: (Default)

[personal profile] andrewducker 2014-11-13 10:56 am (UTC)(link)
Now you've seen Nosferatu you should really see Shadow of The Vampire, which is the absolutely true story of how the movie was made.

(Hint: It turned out to be cheaper just to hire a real vampure.)
andrewducker: (Default)

[personal profile] andrewducker 2014-11-13 11:20 am (UTC)(link)
It is - but it's awesome!
jesse_the_k: Professorial human suit but with head of Golden Retriever, labeled "Woof" (doctor dog to you)

[personal profile] jesse_the_k 2014-11-13 03:21 pm (UTC)(link)
+100. shadow of the vampire is more creepy than almost all the horror movies (I can stand to watch, I'm wimpy like that). It's also quite funny.
spiralsheep: Evil commandeers the costume budget (chronographia Servalan Evil Costume)

[personal profile] spiralsheep 2014-11-13 11:45 am (UTC)(link)
I was about to suggest exactly the same film. :-)
spiralsheep: Evil commandeers the costume budget (chronographia Servalan Evil Costume)

[personal profile] spiralsheep 2014-11-14 07:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Or some sort of sinister conspiracy!!1!!
wordweaverlynn: (Default)

[personal profile] wordweaverlynn 2014-11-14 03:18 am (UTC)(link)
Almost exactly what I was going to say. John Malkovich. Willem Dafoe. Eddie Izzard. Really, truly worth seeing.
bibliofile: Fan & papers in a stack (from my own photo) (Default)

[personal profile] bibliofile 2014-11-17 05:49 am (UTC)(link)
I've been wanting to see that movie since I saw that all three of them were in it (okay mostly Eddie Izzard, but I like Dafoe and JM doesn't exactly suck as an actor). I have got to get back to watching movies again.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)

[personal profile] elainegrey 2014-11-13 02:13 pm (UTC)(link)
I loved the description of the landscape in The Moor, and can't really remember the villains. The electric lights at Baskerville Hall made me reflect on my expectations and the reality of the Victorian times. I have delighted in the Mary Russell series.

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.
thnidu: plus sign (plus)

[personal profile] thnidu 2014-11-13 05:30 pm (UTC)(link)
More κύδος for the Russell & Holmes series!
stardreamer: Meez headshot (Default)

[personal profile] stardreamer 2014-11-13 05:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Nightingale's Lament was the first Nightside story I picked up. I liked it very well, but the other books in the series have been disappointing. I think it's because one of the things I look for in a series is character growth, and I haven't seen it here.
saoba: photo of large breakers in oregon surf (Default)

[personal profile] saoba 2014-11-14 04:35 am (UTC)(link)
Turns out Little Inferno is just what the Spousal Unit needs after a long day of 'fix the customer, not the machine' engineering.

I'm sure he'd say thank you if he weren't busy Burning All The Things.
rhivolution: David Tennant does the Thinker (Default)

[personal profile] rhivolution 2014-11-15 10:47 pm (UTC)(link)
I found The Expendables surprisingly enjoyable too.