sunrise

sunrise
Sunrise over the Atlantic

Help stop the slaughter of dolphins right now!

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Another Earth


Released: 2011
Sci-fi, Drama
Director: Mike Cahill
Starring: Brit Marling, William Mapother
Running Time: 92 minutes
Rated: PG-13

The breakdown: A young woman goes back to visit a man after she changes his life from a fatal car accident years earlier.

This was an indie film that I had never heard of.  The plot is that one night a duplicate Earth is found in our own solar system and appears to be moving towards our Earth.  There's a young teen who's been accepted into college early and is out celebrating with alcohol the same night as the announcement is made of Earth 2.  She gets into her car drunk and is listening to the radio as the announcement is made and looks up to the sky to see it, but it's very far away and she has to look for a long while to find it.  While she's looking she doesn't see she's veered into the oncoming lane of traffic and causes a fatal head on collision with a family in their car, waiting at the red light.
After the accident she's arrested and put into jail for 4 years.  After her release, she gets a job, and tries to find the courage to locate the man who survived the accident to apologize for killing his son and wife.
She was a minor at the time of the accident so the man was never told who she was or anything about her.
She feels she must apologize to him, so one day she goes to his house and knocks on his door, but she loses her nerve and makes up a story about how she's from a cleaning agency and offering house keeping services.
The man accepts her offer and through this initial meeting she keeps going to his house, cleaning, but every time with the intention of actually telling him who she is and why she's there.
She also enters the contest that's offering a ride to the other Earth as it gets closer.  Scientists are eager to find out whether it's a mirror image of our planet and if there are duplicates of each person on our own Earth.
 
It's an interesting movie and worth a look if you like science fiction or dramas.  The acting was good, along with the plot (some ideas are silly like another planet comes closer to us and then getting so close without affecting tides and our gravity) has some minor holes, but I ignored them due to the rest of the movie being good.  A few camera shots were overused and awkward, but still forgivable.
I say watch it if you get the chance.  It's a good ending with some thought-provoking moments.
3 and 1/2 out of 5.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance


Released: 2011
Action, Fantasy
Director: Mark Neveldine, Brian Taylor
Starring: Nicolas Cage, Ciaran Hinds, Idris Elba
Running Time: 95 minutes
Rated: PG-13

The breakdown: A sequel featuring Johnny Blaze helping a young boy survive against the devil's best efforts to take over his body and become human.

I remember liking the first one, so it couldn't have been as bad as this sequel was.
First off, let me sum up the story for you.
Johnny Blaze is hiding out alone in Easter Europe trying to keep his alter-ego, The Ghost Rider, from hurting anyone.
One day, he is found by a stranger who says he needs his help.  There's a young kid that has the devil after him.  The devil wants to take human form and this boy is special as he is the devil's own son, birthed by a human mother.
If Johnny will help, the stranger explains that his friends can remove his curse and leave him to be human again.
Johnny agrees and sets off with the stranger to try to find the boy.

That's all you really need to know.  Nicolas Cage, I think, with age is getting worse as an actor, or perhaps, I've lost my tolerance for his bad acting.  The storyline is weak to begin with, but Cage's performance and lack of good dialogue really brings down the film.  They try to be funny several times in the script, but it comes off lame.

Do not waste your time on this one.

2 out of 5 stubs.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

The Exorcist


Released: 1973
Horror
Director: William Friedkin
Starring: Ellen Burstyn, Max von Sydow, Linda Blair
Running Time: 122 minutes
Rated: R

The breakdown:  After exhausting all other medical methods, a desperate and scared mother tries the church to help her very disturbed daughter to feel better.


So, I know that this is on the top of a lot of scariest movies of all time lists.  I know there's so much talk about this movie and it's well respected in the horror community.  I guess, for these reasons, I was expecting a lot of the movie.  I expected at least to be scared once.

First off, if you haven't seen it, here's a quick rundown.
An actress is temporarily living in Washington D.C. shooting a movie.  She lives with two housekeepers, a personal assistant, and her 12 year old daughter, Regan.  The father is estranged for reasons never explained and lives in Europe.
Meanwhile,

A young priest is losing his faith after struggling to come to terms with his elderly mother's terminal illness.  He's been trained in psychology and used to be a boxer.  He's getting ready to possibly leave the church.
Meanwhile,

An elderly priest in Iraq is on an archaeological dig site.  While there, the team finds strange objects, but the most strange and focused on, is a small carved figurine, possibly resembling some ancient representation of the devil.
The elderly priest takes the figurine with him telling one of his associates he must do something and has to leave Iraq.  The figurine is never seen again, nor do we know what happens to it, or what, if any power it has.

Meanwhile, the actress' daughter is getting sicker and the mother is getting quite worried.  She begins taking the girl to all sorts of doctors, who can't find anything physically wrong with her.  Then they turn to psychologists for help.  After every medical possibility has been exhausted the medical team refers the actress to the church for an exorcism.

The actress' family is not religious but finds a cross under her daughter pillow in bed.  She asks everyone who put it there, but no one confesses.

The girl gets more and more ill, violent, and very dangerous.

The movie concludes with the big exorcism scene.

I can see why some people think this movie is super scary.  The idea of an innocent young child being turned into a deadly strong, mentally strained, physically abusive force is a terrible idea to live through for a parent.  Also for the religious, the idea of the devil himself taking over your child is also difficult to imagine, but for me, it wasn't so scary.

I thought some of the special effects were good.  The acting was solid, the story's essence was intriguing, but I think they left some of the things to be interpreted a bit too vague.  The statue in the desert and the small figurine was shown, but no connections were made, and nothing ever explained.

The cause of this particular girl's possession was never explained either.  Was she ever near the figurine?  How do those things connect?  Are they supposed to?  Does it have something to do with the house?  Who knows?

Overall, a good movie, but not the scariest of all time for me.
3 out of 5 stubs.

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Shame


Released: 2011
Drama
Director: Steve McQueen
Starring: Michael Fassbender, Carey Mulligan
Running Time: 101 minutes
Rated: NC-17

The breakdown: A man struggles with facing his sex addiction when his sister unexpectedly needs a place to live for awhile.

I had never heard of this movie and I like Michael Fassbender so I was interested.

Fassbender plays a man who's pretty selfish.  He has no real relationship with a woman and lives alone in New York City.  He works a normal white collar job and no one suspects he's a sex addict.  He's constantly looking at porn magazines, on the internet, or pornographic movies.  He also does this at work and seems to take several breaks a day to go to the bathroom to masturbate.  He hires prostitutes to have sex with at his apartment, or sometimes finds women at bars and has sex with them wherever, the street, or a hotel.

So once his sister drops in on him, saying she's broken up with her boyfriend and needs a place to live for a bit, he's not so happy.  She's very needy and not financial responsible as she has a job as a singer and only gets work sporadically.  She's younger then him and immature.  You get the feeling she's not capable of taking care of herself in any way.

Eventually Fassbender's obsession comes to light to his sister as she walks in on him masturbating, sees his live camera chat with a sex website, and other things, so he's a bit embarrassed, but does not ask for help.

Things escalate when he makes a move on one of his co-workers, and after they show his sister is a bit more mentally unstable then originally thought.

The title comes from the last scenes of the movie where Fassbender and his sister really go over the edge separately one night in New York.  I won't ruin it for you if you want to see this one.

I give it 4 out of 5 for being a strong character study of Fassbender's character.  He's an excellent actor and one of my personal favorites, and his talent is not wasted in this movie.  I did have a problem with the director staying too long in the moment with some of the camera work and scenes....It just didn't make sense sometimes and makes the movie's pace slow down too much.  The most unappealing part of the movie was Carey Mullligan singing "New York, New York" originally recorded by Frank Sinatra about 4 counts slower.  TERRIBLE!  And she sings the entire song, so it's too boring and one of those long moments that could've easily been condensed.

As I said, it is NC-17 so expect a LOT of sex scenes, a LOT of nudity (including several full frontal shots of Michael Fassbender), and a lot of cursing.  If you can handle this kind of movie, I highly recommend it.

 

Friday, September 14, 2012

Girl with a Pearl Earring


Released: 2003
Drama
Director: Peter Webber
Starring: Colin Firth, Scarlett Johansson, Tom Wilkinson
Running Time: 100 minutes
Rated: PG-13

The breakdown:  Johannes Vermeer paints a picture of his teenage maid that he is falling in love with, even though he's already married with several children.  Totally a work of fiction based on a book written by Tracy Chevalier with the same title.

A young girl is forced to leave her family to help them make money since her father is blind and cannot work any longer.  Her mother finds a residence for her to be a maid in, in town.  She starts working for a large family with many children, a wife who is always pregnant and Johannes Vermeer as the head of the household.  The maid is naive and quiet, but does her job well despite being watched by everyone.  Her beauty and youth make the Mrs. very uncomfortable and when Johannes makes her his assistant, the wife really gets jealous.
The painter and maid spend lots of alone time together in the attic where he does all his work.  They are attracted to each other, but there's another young man who's the butcher's son who likes this maid as well.  The butcher's son warns her not to be seduced by the older man.
Unfortunately the painter sees she has a good eye for color and understands the painter a lot better than his own wife.  He teaches her a lot about how color paint is made and where it comes from. Eventually, the richest man in town notices the young maid as well and wants a picture done of her with intentions of having her for himself after the painting is done.
The eldest girl in the house wants this new maid gone, so does the wife and mother in law, so she has the deck stacked against her.  Vermeer has her sit for him, borrowing his wife's pearl earrings for her to use in the picture.  Secrets finally come to light at the end of the film and the conclusion I'll leave for you guys to discover.

Not a lot is know about the "Master of Light" Johannes Vermeer.  I studied his paintings in college and was amazed at how well he could truly control light in his works.  His nick name is given with good reason, a lot of his paintings look photo realistic as far as the sunlight is concerned.  "Girl with a Pearl Earring" is a well known piece of Vermeer's and there is a lot of mystery surrounding it.  No one knows who the girl is or where she came from, but the look on her face certainly tells a lot to the viewer.  Vermeer might have lusted after this girl, or had an affair, but there is a sense of intimacy there on her face.  Truth is, there's not a lot of information of Vermeer's life and how he was as a person, but the speculation of who this young girl is, was the inspiration for the book that this movie was based on.

It was an interesting idea for a movie.
3 out of 5 for being good, but not spectacular.


Thursday, September 13, 2012

A Painted House

A Painted House By John Grisham
First Published: 2000
Drama
Pages: 384
Author: John Grisham

The breakdown:  A young boy named Luke is only 7 years old when his whole world changes.  He lives with his family on a small cotton farm and life is difficult.  One summer, his life is full of secrets, some big, and some small, but he carries all of them with him.


So I read this book because I needed something for the plane ride and my dad recommended it to me after he read it and loved it.  I was expecting a lot and was pretty let down.

I really didn't like the ending, but overall, thought it was kinda' boring.  I'll tell you the short version and let you decide.

A small town farming community is plagued with murders involving dangerous strangers in the early 1950's.  One family, the Chandlers, and especially the youngest Chandler, Luke is having a lot of bad news thrown on his shoulders and expected to keep it all to himself.  The family farms cotton and life is hard for them.  They barely have anything, but really just want to break even by farming and selling their crop.  In one house lives, Luke, his parents, and his dad's parents all together.  When picking season comes they need a lot more hands to help out before the winter comes.  They hire what they call the "hill" people who come down from bigger towns up north to make some extra money.  The family they hire are called the Spruills and they make a camp on their front yard for the season.  They also hire the Mexicans.  They live in the Chandler's barn and there are 10 of them.  Within the group of the Mexicans is a dangerous man named Cowboy who carries a switchblade and doesn't talk much.  Luke tries talking to him, but gets some bad vibes off him and stays away.  Within the Spruills, there's a dangerous teenage boy named Hank who never knows when to quit.  He's got a mean spirit and Luke stays as far away from him as possible.  But within the Spruills, is also Tally a teenage girl that Luke is in love with.  She gets him to go on long midnight walks with her when he's not supposed to leave the house, but he'd do anything to spend time with her.  Eventually, in town, on a Saturday night, a fight breaks out with some really nasty brothers.  Pretty soon it's 2 on 1 and Hank steps in to get the town boy free of the 2 mean brothers.  After he slinks off, he fights the 2 brothers, and then a third one joins in.  Problem is Hank never stops fighting even after the brothers are all down and he takes a 2x4 to one of the brothers and kills him.  Luke does not want to talk about this to anyone as Hank lives on his farm and if the police arrest him, he knows the rest of the family will leave and the Chandlers will be very short handed picking cotton.

I won't bother telling you the rest.  It's continually a boring book (to me) where you expect more of the story and it just never appears.  The ending is a bit open where you're not sure what's happened with certain characters and that really bugged me.

2 out of 5 bookmarks for being well written, but the characters and subject matter are just not interesting enough for me.  I say skip it.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

50 First Dates


Released: 2004
Comedy (but not really)
Director: Peter Segal
Starring: Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore
Running Time: 99 minutes
Rated: PG-13

The breakdown:  A man falls in love with a woman that cannot build new memories.

I treated myself to this piece of crap last night.  I do not like Adam Sandler because he doesn't actually act.  He just treats every movie like what would Adam Sandler do in this situation and says it or does it.  He doesn't actually play a character, he just plays himself in every movie I've ever seen him in.  That's not really acting.

I also don't like Drew Barrymore.  She was probably best in Firestarter and E.T. and then it was all downhill from there where her acting has gotten worse and worse.  I don't even think she's convincing as the spokesperson for Cover Girl Cosmetics.

So these two together make a really terrible couple.  The script is not funny, the plot is totally unrealistic, and the "acting" from the main two leads is abysmal.

So here's the plot.
Adam Sandler is supposed to be this hot playboy on one of Hawaii's islands who sleeps around with tourists and never wants to settle down.  He pretends to be things like secret agents and lies through his teeth to women.  He's really a veterinarian and does genuinely seem to care about animals.

One day he goes into a restaurant and sees Drew Barrymore's character.  They start talking and hit it off.  They agree to meet the next morning at the same place, and when they do, she acts like she's never met him.  He's pulled aside by the waitress and she explains that due to a head injury during a car accident last year, Barrymore cannot keep new memories.  She has total short term memory loss after one day.  So while she sleeps, she loses everything that happened the day before.  She wakes up everyday and thinks it's the day right before the accident, her father's birthday.

Sandler finds out that her family has been lying to her as to not upset her and just pretends everyday is the father's birthday.  They watch the same movie, eat the same meal, do the same things, all for her benefit.  Adam Sandler decides he wants to pursue a relationship with her and makes a video that she can watch everyday so she's up to date on what she's missed over the past year and it's explained to her that she had an accident and lost her memory.

Over time, he falls in love with her, and they sort of date.  The family approves of him and he asks her to marry him.  She says yes, but of course, forgets everything the next morning.   She eventually breaks up with him, saying that she's holding him back from the boat trip that he wanted to take for the past 10 years and that it will be too hard for him to take care of her everyday.  He reluctantly agrees to her wishes and he gets ready for his boat trip.  Her father comes to see him off in port and says she's living now in a care facility for memory loss and teaching art to the other patients.

SPOILER**********If you want to see this movie stop right here.






He sees this as a good sign and leaves his boat to go find her.  He asks her if she now remembers him and she still doesn't, but she says she dreams of him all the time without understanding why.
They get married, have a baby and sail around the world with her father in tow.

Somehow I know this movie appeals to some people, but for me, it's complete rubbish.
Do NOT see this movie.
1 out of 5 for the animal actors.


Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Peace

Today is difficult for many.
There's not much to say to ease pain or suffering within a human being.
Everyone deals with horrific things like September 11th differently.
Time always lessens the pain to a level where we can all at least function to get through
another day.
Today, as always, I hope for peace for all of us and the rest of the world.
Peace be with you.

Monday, September 10, 2012

In Bruges

In Bruges
Released: 2008
Drama, Crime, Comedy
Director: Martin McDonagh
Starring: Brendan Gleeson, Colin Farrell, Ralph Fiennes
Running Time: 107 minutes
Rated: R

The breakdown: A hitman's first job goes terribly wrong as he kills an innocent bystander as well as his target.  His boss sends him to Bruges, Belgium to lay low for a few weeks with another more experienced hit man.

I wasn't expecting to watch this movie, but we only have one tv and my husband was getting ready to watch it so I sat down with him to see it.

I must say I hate Colin Farrell, always have, always will.  He really tries in this movie to be a good actor, but he just can't get there.
Anyway, he plays a new hit man and on his very first job, he kills a little kid by accident when he shoots his target.  His boss, played by Fiennes, is not pleased at all and sends him on a little trip with another more experience hit man played by Gleeson.  Farrell was definitely the weakest link here when you see the other two real actors perform.  But he still can't ruin the movie, because it is worth watching.
So while the two hit men are out on this trip to a very old Medieval city, Gleeson wants to take in the sites and enjoy himself, while Farrell can barely stand how bored he is.  While they are there, they both kinda' wonder what it is they are doing exactly   It's possible they are there to do another job, or maybe it's just to take a break, they really don't know.  Things start to get interesting when their boss calls Gleeson and tells him what the purpose of the visit is, and when Farrell finds a woman that he wants to date in town.

I won't tell you anymore since this is a gem worth finding for yourself.

I give it 3 and 1/2 out of 5 for Gleeson and Fiennes.  There are some genuinely funny and thought provoking moments in this one.  Be prepared for sex talk, violence, and lots of swearing.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

50/50


Released: 2011
Drama, Comedy
Director: Jonathan Levine
Starring: Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogan
Running Time: 100 minutes
Rated: R

The breakdown:  A young man discovers he has cancer and finds out what kind of person he really is.

For some reason this movie got really good reviews, but it was just ok for me.

A man in his late 20's finds out he has a rare form of cancer.  He goes through the beginning of the treatment trying to stay away from his family, living with a girl who clearly isn't too much into him, and tolerating a high school buddy who's only obsession is sleeping with women.

After the chemo starts, things start to unravel as his sessions with his counselor help him see want he wants out of life.

If you really want to see it, I won't discuss the rest of the movie with you, but I say skip it all together.  It certainly isn't the worst movie, or the best movie, but just in the middle of the road for me.  I did like the greyhound dog in the movie.

2 out of 5 for just being so-so (no pun intended).  I should mention this is based on a true story of some friend of Seth Rogan's.  Even if it's a true story, it's still just so-so.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Cars 2



Released: 2011
Animated
Director: John Lasseter, Brad Lewis
Starring: Owen Wilson, Larry the cable guy, Michael Caine
Running Time: 106 minutes
Rated: R (just kidding!) G

The breakdown:  Some of the residents of Radiator Springs go on a world wide trip, following Lightning McQueen around on a long tour of races.  Mater gets mistaken for a secret agent and hilarity (is supposed to) ensues.

I usually like Pixar films, and I really did like the first Cars movie, but this one just didn't feel the same.  I enjoyed the first movie, probably because of the lovable characters and the fish-out-of-water story, but with a focus on the tow truck, Mater, this movie falls flat and ends up being boring.

This movie starts out like a Cars version of a James Bond film, where we see secret (car) spies on a dangerous mission out in the middle of the ocean.  Turns out a British intelligence agent is on the hunt for a bad guy and he ends up escaping any danger in the opening scenes.
As far as the characters of Radiator Springs, Lightning McQueen has just taken a break to go back and visit them when Mater accidentally springs into motion a new world tour race for McQueen to take part in.  McQueen takes his friends with him as a pit crew, and they travel all over the world.  The British agents are also on this race tour looking for their bad guys, and mistake Mater for an American secret agent and you can imagine where that goes.  There's a lot of chases, and action, but there's too much focus on Mater, and one film is trying to be too many things.  Plus I always say that most films with 2 directors doesn't work out right.

I say skip this one and just rewatch the first.
2 out of 5 for good voice acting and Michael Caine.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close


Released: 2011
Drama
Director: Stephen Daldry
Starring: Tom Hanks, Sandra Bullock
Running Time: 129 minutes
Rated: PG-13

The breakdown:  A child loses his father to the 9-11 attacks and proceeds to go on a mission throughout New York to try to find out what a key that his father left behind opens.

I had a good feeling this was going to be a crappy movie when I saw the previews for it.
For one thing, the kid that's the main character tried very hard to enunciate every single word in his voice overs instead of just talking like a normal human being, but be clear.  It was distracting and very annoying.
For another, it uses 9-11 as a plot device and unless it's an excellent story with great characters it shouldn't be done.
For example, the story line is that the kid loses his father in the attacks on the World Trade Centers.  This wasn't necessary for the story.  Why not just make his father die in a subway accident, or have a heart attack, or get mugged on the streets and then shot?  There's a lot of ways this boy could've lost his father through death, but why choose this event?  I'll tell you why, because the author probably thought people would pay more attention to the book he wrote and the movie that was made from it, if he had worked in the worst terrorist attack in world history.  There's no good reason for it, and the only reason I can see is profit for the author...sad, very sad.  If it had been a true story, that's different, but it's not at all.  Although, I'm sure some people got that impression.

So here's the plot.
A family lives in New York.  On 9-11 the father dies in one of the buildings that collapses.  He calls his wife, and the house leaving multiple messages that he's ok, but the 6th message is cut off when the building collapses and it's presumed that he died.  The boy has some sort of disease that resembles Asperger's Syndrome which makes for difficulties with social interaction and intense interest in a few subjects.  The boy hides the answering machine from his mother and never tells her of it, thinking he's protecting her from pain.  This really pissed me off.
A year later, they are both trying to deal with the loss of a loved one.  The boy lashes out and tells his mother he wished she had been in the building and died and she agreed.  Ungrateful little bastard.
This boy goes through his father's things looking for a way to feel closer to him as they did all sorts of games and scavenger hunts while he was living.  He finds a vase and accidentally breaks it, which reveals a key with the word Black written on it.
The boy methodically meets all people with the last name Black in the New York area and tries to find out what the key does and what his father was trying to tell him.
It turns out, a man named William had sold the vase to the boy's father and the father had no idea the key was inside the vase at all.
The boy is upset that he's been chasing around a meaningless key that had nothing to do with his dead father.
He goes to a swing set in the park where he used to spend time with his dad.  His father had told him at the beginning of the film how he had swung there often when he was alone and how much he enjoyed it.  The boy, assumingly due to his disease, is afraid of swings, bridges, and other things, but finally gets on it and realizes it's fun.  He turns the swing over and finds a note from his father telling him how proud he is of him.
His mother is going through the boy's things and sees a scrapbook he's made of all the people he met and of his father.  At the beginning of the film, they show a man falling through air, I'm assuming they are trying to give the impression the father jumped as he was on the 105th floor.  At the end of the film the mother sees the boy has made a pop book and shows a picture of the WTC buildings with a man falling up into the building instead of down and dying.  Both references made are that the father jumps, but why would the voice mail that the father left earlier in the film, end when the buildings collapsed while he was talking if he jumped?  (The boy was home when the last call came in and he didn't answer the phone, so he's watching the tv and seeing the building collapse as his father's voice stops and the call ends.  It's pretty obvious what happened to the audience.)  Inconsistencies I can accept in SOME movies, but this one begins and ends with a huge mistake.  You either make the father die by jumping, or he dies when the building collapses but don't make yourself look foolish by making such a huge error in a major motion picture.
The end.

To tell the truth, I hated the kid from the beginning and the 9-11 plot device really pissed me off so I couldn't watch the film for longer than a few minutes at the time.  So I just fast forwarded through most of it and stopped when it looked like something was important.

Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock were good as usual, but this boy was really annoying and I didn't care about his character at all.  The movie was mostly boring and incredibly slow paced.  They should've titled the film, Extremely Boring and Incredibly Slow Paced.

Wayyyyyyy too long, wayyyyyy too annoying child actor, and nothing worth watching.  I can only assume it got nominated for an Oscar or 2 because it had some reference to 9-11.

SKIP this one please.
1 out of 5 for Bullock, Hanks, and some minor special effects.  What a complete waste of time!!!!!


Thursday, September 6, 2012

Crate & Barrel's Halloween selection, or lack thereof

If you read my last post, you'll know I wasn't impressed by Bath and Body Works Halloween stuff this year.  Well, they are a little bit better than Crate & Barrel, if you can believe it.

Maybe I'm not remembering right what Crate & Barrel had last year, but it had to be better and more then what they threw out this year.
Here's the highlights of this season's offerings....
Set of 4 Halloween Decorating Stencils
A cheap and small set of cupcake stencils.  These are $3.95
Set of 6 Halloween Stir Sticks
and these stir sticks are only $5.95

And these are the highlights? You say.

Yeah, the other stuff is a random coffee mug, a plate or bowl, some candles or candle holders shaped like gourds, and a pumpkin shaped vase or two.

Nothing stellar, everything lack-luster.

It's almost to sad to talk about anymore.

If you want some exciting home/kitchen stuff for Fall, check out Williams Sonoma or Pottery Barn.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

I'm so disappointed by Bath and Body Works Halloween stuff

Well, my title says it all.
I've been waiting for weeks to see what was going to come of Bath and Body Works Halloween season merchandise and I can easily say, it's not great.  It's not even that much.
Last season ('11) they had all sorts of scents, candles, candle holders, and little decorative touches that were totally irresistible and cute.  I bought quite a few items there and felt satisfied at their selection.  It erroneously built me up to expect some similar things this year, but I was let down.
I'm not sure if someone just thought no one really bought them last year, or no one cared this year, but the selection is pitifully small.

About 2 (count them 2) new candle holders:
One being this haunted house that holds 3 small candles inside it
Haunted House Luminary Mini Drop In Candleholder - Slatkin & Co. - Bath & Body Works
Yes, it's cute but it's also $50.00!
Then there's Mr. and Mrs. Frankenstein
Frankenstein Mini Drop In Candleholder - Slatkin & Co. - Bath & Body WorksBride of Frankenstein Mini Drop In Candleholder - Slatkin & Co. - Bath & Body Works
The bride of Frankenstein is new, but Frank was around last year.  The only difference is that his mouth is a little more open and his stitches have moved.  Both of them hold small candles and are $6.50 each.

They have a few more things, but the choice is so small this year, I just feel really underwhelmed.
They don't even have any cutely decorated Halloween candles to offer.  They have the usual hand anti-bacterial tubes, the soaps, a soap cover, autumn scented candles....that's it.

I'm wondering if this is really it or is there more that they're hiding, only to be released closer to Halloween?  Somehow, I doubt this, but I can hold out hope for a little bit longer.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Sheridan's

I've wanted to visit a restaurant I've seen in town for about 4 years now.
I finally got my chance a couple of weeks ago and then just this last week I visited it again for lunch.

The first time I went, I had something off their brunch menu.
A chicken, bacon, cheese panini and man was it good.

Grilled chicken, slices of green apple, pieces of bacon, and smothered in melted cheese.
Really, really tasty.  On the side was a pickle and some sweet potato chips.

This time I decided to have the pulled pork sandwich with some sweeter sweet potato chips and a pickle.  Also really tasty, although this time the sweet potato chips had a dusting of sugar and cinnamon on them that made them super yummy.  The pulled pork was covered in bar-b-que sauce and the pork was robust and not too fatty.

They have seating inside as well as a garden seating area outside.  They are closed on Monday's but open for brunch/breakfast/lunch and dinner for the rest of the week.

They also run their own boutique hotel attached to the restaurant and offer wine tasting along with cute ideas like date night Thursdays.

Sheridanhouseandcafe.com

Located at:
5133 South Lake Drive
Cudahy, WI 53110

Monday, September 3, 2012

I'm starting my own business

After not working for the past few years, I'm pretty much fed up with the job application process and getting passed up for employment.  My only option now is to hire myself.
I've tried to think of what would be the least amount of work for me, i.e. doing something I love and selling it.
I could write my own love sci-fi story, which I still might, but in the meantime, it's Halloween products.

I've decided to take wooden plaques, hat boxes, cigar or recipe boxes and paint them using professional paints, brushes, and stencils.  I've already seen these sold on places like Etsy or Ebay, but I plan on mine giving a bit more visual punch.  The graphics I've seen used are pretty cutesy and I want to offer some that are a bit more sinister.

I'll show you examples of my work as soon as I've completed some.  I'm currently stocking up on supplies and finding the right techniques.  Don't worry, you'll able to purchase them as well, somehow, through my blog.
Wish me luck!
And I must find a name.....Do you have any ideas?
Put your suggestion in the comments section immediately following this entry.







Sunday, September 2, 2012

I Love A Rainy Night

Just like Eddie Rabbit's 1980 weather anthem, I do love a rainy night.

It seems to be normal to be in love with water in general for the human species.  Though I think most people say they love to be near the ocean, river, or lakes; I love those too, but rain has always been the most accessible natural water source for me.

Where I grew up there used to be fantastic afternoon rain storms with great lightning shows, so it probably helps that the rain was a treat for me when it happened; and it happened a lot more in my childhood then any other time in my history, so it's nostalgic as well.

There's something about the energy that surrounds the storm.  The changing barometric pressure, the winds, thunder and lightning that usually precede the rain.  I suppose it's like a lot of other great stress relievers in the sense that you build up a lot of pressure, just to let it all go.
Same with yoga, and shooting guns for me.  Same process.  Mother nature revs up and then lets go with the unleashing of rain showers.  Plus rain smells great, clean and natural.

I love rain storms no matter what the season, and rainy days can be just as great to me as sunny ones.

What's your favorite weather?
What's the perfect temperature for you?

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Here I was thinking they were advanced and stuff

What Was Behind Mysterious Collapse of the Mayan Empire?


The city states of the ancient Mayan empire flourished in southern Mexico and northern Central America for about six centuries. Then, around A.D. 900 Mayan civilization disintegrated.
Two new studies examine the reasons for the collapse of the Mayan culture, finding the Mayans themselves contributed to the downfall of the empire.
Scientists have found that drought played a key role, but the Mayans appear to have exacerbated the problem by cutting down the jungle canopy to make way for cities and crops, according to researchers who used climate-model simulations to see how much deforestation aggravated the drought.
"We're not saying deforestation explains the entire drought, but it does explain a substantial portion of the overall drying that is thought to have occurred," said the study's lead author Benjamin Cook, a climate modeler at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, in a statement. [Dry and Dying: Images of Drought]
Using climate-model simulations, he and his colleagues examined how much the switch from forest to crops, such as corn, would alter climate. Their results, detailed online in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, suggested that when deforestation was at its maximum, it could account for up to 60 percent of the drying. (The switch from trees to corn reduces the amount of water transferred from the soil to the atmosphere, which reduces rainfall.)
Other recent research takes a more holistic view.
"The ninth-century collapse and abandonment of the Central Maya Lowlands in the Yucatán peninsular region were the result of complex human–environment interactions," writes this team in a study published Monday (Aug 20) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The team, led by B.L. Turner, a social scientist at Arizona State University, concurs that by clearing the forest, the Mayans may have aggravated a natural drought, which spiked about the time the empire came to an end and population declined dramatically.
But this is just one contributing factor to their demise, Turner and colleagues write, pointing out that the reconfiguration of the landscape may also have led to soil degradation. Other archaeological evidence points to a landscape under stress, for instance, the wood of the sapodilla tree, favored as construction beams, was no longer used at the Tikal and Calakmul sites beginning in A.D. 741. Larger mammals, such as white-tailed deer, appear to have declined at the end of empire.
Social and economic dynamics also contributed. Trade routes shifted from land transit across the Yucatán Peninsula to sea-born ships. This change may have weakened the city states, which were contending with environmental changes. Faced with mounting challenges, the ruling elites, a very small portion of the population, were no longer capable of delivering what was expected of them, and conflict increased.
"The old political and economic structure dominated by semidivine rulers decayed," the team writes. "Peasants, artisan – craftsmen, and others apparently abandoned their homes and cities to find better economic opportunities elsewhere in the Maya area."
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Maybe they were more like us then I thought.