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Category Archives: unfiled

Posts from my previous blog, which have not yet been recategorized.

Haiku Factory Special International Guest Host Edition!


janjan.jpgSo, as I’ve mentioned before once or twice, Janelle has been visiting the past few weeks. Tonight she goes back to Australia to continue her studies, but before she catches her cross-Pacific flight, I asked her to blog some of her thoughts about Vancouver and her visit here. Which she’s not shy about revealing, in this, our very first Special International Guest Host edition of Haiku Factory.

  • “The most photographed landmark in Vancouver is the lame Gastown steam clock. It’s amazing that you have Gastown with all the rich tourists surrounded by the most depressing human wasteland. Vancouver has a huge homeless and drug problem – worse than anywhere else I have seen. I’ve literally seen people walk up to this invisible line and turn around and go back. I can’t blame them for that, you know. You don’t want to go there.”
  • “I love shopping in Vancouver. At first I found it difficult to find the things I wanted because it’s so hard to tell what places are good. I went to Zellers because Eric said it was cheap, so I thought it might be like Target at home (which I love), but it was just a junkyard! Yaargh! And then I went to The Bay and got a 15% discount on top of all the regular mark-downs just for being a tourist. Advertise that, man! Advertise that.”
  • “Eric moved to Main Street since the last time I was in Canada. Never have I eaten in so many restaurants in such a short period of time. I looove Nikkyu sushi, especially the deep-fried spicy tuna roll. Honourable mentions to Hawker’s Delight (yes! cheap and cheerful!), Nirvana, Zipang Sushi (mmmmm), Solly’s (for the bagels, not the service) and Bert’s (pancakes! also, bacon and maple syrup do go together!). Brickbats to the fact that my waistline is bigger now than when I arrived.” [Editor’s note: mine too. Sucks.]
  • “But most of the coffee was not to my liking at all — way too strong for my weak-ass Australian tastes. I miss a coffee that tastes like coffee, not freakin’ rocket fuel!” [Editor’s note: she’s specifically thinking of the Main St. Bean Around the World and JJ Beans. Thankfully there’s Salt Spring Coffee, which we both like. Usually. Unless the girl who only fills the cups up half way is there. That tends to set Janelle off.]
  • “Okay, now I have things to say about IGA (the local supermarket). At first, it was so hard to find things there. It felt like things weren’t sensibly organised. For a good part of my trip, I thought fresh noodles were not available except at T&T Supermarket. But then I found them — in the middle of the fruit and vegetable department. Makes sense, huh? I also found it a problem that there was not enough choice of brands. But not if you wanted chips — there’s plenty of flavours I’ve never heard of. ‘Mesquite’? Is that French for something?”
  • “Which brings me to an important subject: Canadian lollies [Editor’s note: ‘lollies’ = ‘candy’]. People, where is the choice!? For those of us that do not enjoy gummy lollies, there is nothing! And the shitty American chocolate… it’s terrible! I cannot wait to be standing in front of my entire aisle of confectionery in Australia. Gummies, be gone!”
  • “This trip, I could finally tell the difference between American and Canadian accents. No matter what you guys think, you really do say ‘aboot’ and ‘eh’. A lot. At least as much as I say ‘crikey’.”
  • “The drivers just stop for everybody. That’s fucked up.”
  • “I don’t want to be a whinger (will people know what that means? it means ‘whiney complainer’), so here come the positives about Vancouver. Pretty — gorgeous in fact. Friendly (it is!). People will talk to complete strangers and feel comfortable. Strolling the seawall would have to be one of my favourite ways to spend a sunny afternoon, and the fish and chips at Deep Cove, along with the scenery, are awesome. And I like Stanley Park, but not the racoons — they’re quite frightening. And I come from the land of sharks and numerous household pests that can kill you — like snakes, spiders, and crocs. I don’t like squirrels either. Rats with furry tails. I do love the big seagulls — they’re huge compared to the ones I’m used to. And the crows make a totally different sound here.”
  • “The streets around Main are so pretty — the trees everywhere overhanging the road. The houses are picturebook cute and painted all different colours. Just a lovely neighbourhood. And I liked that you can stroll at night and still have sunlight, even at 9 or 10 o’clock. Strange at first, but I soon got to love it.”
  • “Until the dark and frosty Canuck winter… this is Janelle, signing out.”

house-cleaning the blog: The Dark Knight! Hellboy II! Spaced!


As I’ve mentioned before, the lovely Janelle has been visiting these past few weeks, and updating this blog has somewhat fallen by the wayside. Still, I do try to keep things at least somewhat up-to-date, so that when I’m finally inspired to write something brilliant, I don’t have a backlog of bloggage to get through first and thereby forget what it was I wanted to say.

  • Saw Wānkāner The Dark Knight. Loved it as much as pretty much everyone else on the planet. It’s dark, brilliant and challenging. I’m finding more and more I appreciate movies with complex moral themes, and this film really delivers in its depiction of Batman and The Joker both trying and failing to impose their own simplistic ideals onto a Gotham that stubbornly refuses to choose either honour or corruption. Plus, the action scenes are spectacular, the acting superb and the cinematography and production design impeccable.
  • Also saw Khŭjayli Hellboy II, and while it’s no Dark Knight, it’s a lot more satisfying than the first Hellboy — kind of a light-hearted superhero version of Pan’s Labyrinth, with some of the most incredible creature design I’ve ever seen. After seeing this, I’m really glad it’s Del Toro who’s making the Hobbit movies.
  • My Spaced DVD box set arrived yesterday, complete with tons of extras and commentary tracks. I really do believe we are in a Golden Age of television, and those first few Y2K-era shows, like Spaced and Buffy the Vampire Slayer were like the first shots across the bow of the old idiot-box mentality.
  • Since moving to my new apartment, I’ve made it a special project of mine to try out as many local restaurants as I can. And just between you and me, I’m doing so awesome at this mission that my pants barely fit. (And to think, I just recently met my 2008 weight-loss goal. *sigh*) I’ll be posting a round-up of my discoveries soonish. And then going on a diet.
  • And finally, don’t you love it when two great things come together? Werner Herzog dedicated his most recent film, Encounters at the End of the World to Roger Ebert, who wrote this open letter of appreciation in response. Both are people I admire tremendously, and have shaped my own ideas about art and life, and I find the letter quite touching.

Jeez, I’m being overwhelmingly positive and sincere, aren’t I? I promise more snark and hipper-than-thou posturing in future posts. Fret not. Or fret. Whatev. (See? I still gots it!)

What is it? — The Crispin Glover Road Show


what-is-it-poster-copy.jpgBeing the adventures of a young man whose principle interests are snails, salt, a pipe, and how to get home. As tormented by an hubristic, racist inner psyche.

Ah, crazy ol’ Crispin Hellion Glover. Portrayer of George McFly, near-decapitator of David Letterman, chronicler of clowns, and general surrealist-at-large. His 21st-century project of note is putting his Charlie’s Angels salary into making a trilogy of off-the-wall movies, and touring the world with them.

Actually, the show, which we saw at the Pacific Cinemateque last night, is somewhat more than that. It’s really three shows for the price of one — there’s a slide show (“The Big Slide Show”), the film, and a discussion with the audience. “The Big Slide Show” kicks the whole thing off. Glover showed and performed pages from eight books he had made by taking old books he had found and altered by editing the text and adding pictures and comments. The results varied from hilarious to profoundly disturbing and were the most flat-out entertaining part of the evening. In fact, I really dug them — to the point of thinking I’d like to do something like that myself. I’ve always liked the odd timeliness of old and forgotten ephemera and the idea of layering new things on top of old.

The second part of the show was a screening of the first part of his planned “IT” trilogy, What is it? This is a calculatedly strange and provocative film. Featuring a cast of mostly actors with Down’s Syndrome, a few monkey-headed porn actresses and the screams of Fairuza Balk, It is a piece of latter-day art-filmy surrealism. Unlike a hundred similar film-school projects, though, Glover is able to avoid the pitfalls of pretentiousness (or worse, tediousness) by injecting it with liberal doses of self-aware humour, technical skill and a strong — if not always obvious — vision.

The film was followed by a long — if sometimes rambling — Q & A. While the film is definitely surreal and experimental rather than narrative, Glover made it clear he is no obscurantist — in fact, he was pleasantly open and unpretentious. He talked about how he wanted to create something that would offend and provoke, and give people something to think about, as a kind of antidote to the unchallenging blandness of most modern cinema. To be honest, I think it’s great that he’s trying to do that, as well as personally engaging his audience with his live shows. He claims no plans to ever release this or the other “IT” movies on DVD, both because he wants to use the tour to recoup his production costs, and because he wants to prevent the films from losing the kind of context they get from having the creator accompany them on this kind of road show.

And seriously? This film needs that — What is it? is not a self-contained film so much as a jumping-off point for Crispin Glover to personally engage the audience. Without his exigesis it’s.. well, not a bad film, perhaps — but definitely an incomplete and unsatisfying one. With it, it’s a good night out that leaves you with plenty to chew over on the way home.

Spaced on DVD?


spaced-snip.jpgWell, this is potentially pretty awesome. Supposedly, Spaced — the brilliant Y2K-era British sitcom (or “Brit-com” to use a term I invented just this minute) from the guys who did Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz — is finally (finally!) coming out on Region 1 DVD on July 22. Possibly. Maybe.

If you don’t know the show, it’s the story of two twenty-something “creative types” who have to pose as a professional couple to get a nice flat in London. Aaaaand that’s about it: they hang out with friends, try to get jobs, go to clubs, attend neighbour’s gallery shows, and play video games. The hook is the combination of affectionately-drawn characters and surreal pop-culture-riffs — everyday life becomes the scaffold on which to hang J-pop interludes, fantasy action-movie sequences, and dense layers of movie references. I already acquired the series via “other” means, but I will quite happily shell out my cash for a legitimate DVD version, if only to push it on everybody I know. Features will apparently include commentary tracks by Quentin Tarantino, Kevin Smith and Diablo Cody, among other illustrious hipster personages.

The reason I qualify it all, though, is that I can’t find the official source of the announcement. Just a bunch of gossip sites quoting each other. And Amazon seems to have not heard the news, because there’s no entry, and no pre-orders. Plus, any internet-based announcement involving Quentin Tarantino should set off warning bells. But hey, fingers crossed.

Amusing anecdote: First time I saw an episode of Spaced, I was pretty unimpressed — it seemed too hip and precious and not enough funny. Now, I would say it’s one of the best shows I’ve ever seen. The moral? I’m an idiot, but at least I’m trainable.

update: It’s listed at the BBC America web site, so looks like my skepticism was misplaced. This time.

Eric-approved films of 2007


Now, I don’t go to see a huge number of movies in the theater, but it seems to me that 2007 was a really, really good year for movies. Now that I’ve seen There Will Be Blood, I can finally compile my own personal list of my favourite movies of 2007. Yes, I pretty much have gripped life by the balls.

My five favourite films of 2007, in order:

  1. No Country for Old Men. The deepest, most complex and terrifying film of the Coen brothers’ career.
  2. Juno. The warmest, funniest movie I saw in 2007.
  3. Zodiac. Kind of the anti-serial-killer-movie movie. I love it for its obsessive approach to obsession.
  4. Once. Enough to make even a lonely cynic like me believe in love.
  5. Rescue Dawn. Genre film that also manages to be a challenging dissection of Herzog’s favourite themes.

And five other films I liked a lot: There Will Be Blood, Knocked Up, Hot Fuzz, Into the Wild, Death Proof.