Thursday, May 22, 2008

Journeys Through Forests, New Friends, Old Friends, Indy 4, Getting Married Movie Style

Yesterday was one of the more interesting days I've had in a while. First, a few friends and I went hiking through Forest Park. I've included some pictures here. I've lived close to Portland almost my entire life, yet for some reason this park has escaped me, until now.

Forest Park is nestled right against downtown Portland. My friend, Gabe, lives close by so this week and last we, and a few others, have gone exploring. This park has it all: tall old growth trees, cathedral like canopies, beautiful streams and ponds, a castle like ruin called Stone House, salamanders, slugs, and hollow trees. It's a quiet sanctuary from Oregon's metropolis which is less than a mile away.

Afterwards I hung out with Gabe at his place. Not long afterwards, Gabe's girlfriend, Ariana, came over. They were nice enough to let me have dinner with them, and afterwards the three of us went to a movie called "Run Fatboy Run" about a man named Dennis who, five years after leaving his pregnant girlfriend at the altar, decides to become a more prominent part of her -- and their son's -- lives again by competing against her new boyfriend in a London marathon. I hope you don't feel spoiled by me telling you that in the end Dennis completes the marathon and wins back the respect of his son, and the heart of his ex-girlfriend, who he still loves. I will discuss this movie again later on because it was still fresh in my mind when I saw a midnight showing of "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" a few hours later.

After the movie was over I said goodbye to Gabe and Ariana and walked around the corner from Gabe's apartment to my friend Mike's place.

Mike and I are both avid Indiana Jones fans and he had invited me, and our friend Bryan, to a midnight showing of "Indiana Jones." I had actually known Mike since the second grade and I've been friends with Bryan since kindergarten. It looked to me that the majority of the audience at the Indiana Jones midnight showing were mostly high school kids. So that would mean that Bryan and I have been friends since before many of these people were alive. And Indiana Jones had been around before either of us were alive! That in itself is a sobering thought.

. . .

I wrote all that on May 23, now it is June 16 and I am finishing this post. I promised earlier that I would discuss Indy 4 when it came out. Now all is said and done and almost all my friends have said they hated it because of the aliens or whatnot. The aliens didn't bother me, really. I wish they weren't computer animated, and that they would have made a puppet or had a really skinny guy in an alien costume, like in the X-Files. That would have been fun. But before I talk about what really struck me as disturbing about Indy 4, I'm going to say what I did like about it, for the record:

I thought the Russians made great bad guys. They looked almost just like the Nazis. The uniforms were a different color and they spoke Russian instead of German. I'm guessing the average Indy fan can't understand a lick of either language so who cares, right? Other than that they were practically interchangeable. It occurred to me that by setting the movie in South America during the 1950s they could have easily brought back some Nazis because that's where all the Nazis were at that time. But they probably wouldn't have been able to show up out of nowhere and point their machine guns at Indy like the plot required the Russians to do a dozen times or so.

I liked that the villain was a product of the Soviet mind control and telepathy experiments. That was a very nice touch.

The quicksand scene was probably the single greatest scene of Harrison Ford's career. This is the second:



I liked that they brought Marion back almost thirty years later. She wasn't the Marion we remember, though. I would have liked it even more if she would have gotten into a drinking contest with the Russians.

I liked that Indy survived a nuclear explosion in a lead refrigerator. I know a lot of people complained about this, but really, how else are you going to survive a nuclear explosion? And it's even more plausible than . . . well, I'll get to that later.

The flesh eating ants were cool.

Now I am going to talk about what really disturbed me about Indy 4, and I'm going to talk about some plot points in detail, so if you haven't seen Indy yet don't say you weren't warned.

About three quarters of the way through the movie we discover (along with Indy) that Shia Labeouf is really Marion and Indy's love child. You see, Indy and Marion were about to get married, but Indy left her at the alter while she was pregnant. At the end of the movie, Indy wins her back and they get married.

Wait a second! I had just seen a movie a few hours earlier where the exact same thing happens! It was called "Run Fatboy Run." Is this what Hollywood is teaching us these days? That in the end it really doesn't matter if you are a chubby English bloke or Indiana Jones himself, you can still leave your pregnant girlfriend at the alter, but you will be able to win her affection again?

Now what is really more realistic? That these lessons Hollywood is teaching us about how to treat your fiance are true? Or that in order to survive a nuclear blast simply insert oneself into a lead refrigerator?

If a nuclear blast is like hell, with fire and dead and melting things and all that, I suppose one could say that hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Orc Report

I haven't checked my youtube account in a while, so when I did so today I found that my most popular video, "the Orc Report," now has 314 views! Last time I checked it was at somewhere around 280. It's getting up there! So to celebrate it's surpassing the 300 mark I am posting it here for all of those who have not seen it.

And no, in case you were wondering, I am not the only person that's watched it, and watched it 314 times.

Just to sum up what it's about, I made this in April of 2007 shortly after all the trees were cut down on the BYU-Idaho campus. This investigative report reveals why.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Another Episode of Listening to the Classical Radio Station

Mother's Day Afternoon. I am driving home to get to the Mother's Day party. I am listening to a listener request program on the classical music radio station. Coincidentally this is the same program I was listening to that I described a few months ago in this blog post. Unfortunately nothing so transcendental is about to happen to me this time, just a simple observation is all.

The music that's playing is, I would describe as, hauntingly beautiful. It is slow and melodious and there is a deep female vocal part that, combined with the violins, communicates to me a sense of longing and exile. Really quite remarkable.

The piece finishes and the announcer comes on (do you call them disc jockeys when it's the classical station?) and I must point out that this particular gentleman has a very deep gravely voice and British accent which I find delightfully erudite, but my parents think is obnoxious because he sounds like he's caressing the microphone as he speaks.

He says: "That piece gets to me every time I hear it. That is the second movement of Symphony Number 3 by Henryk
Górecki, the 'Symphony of Sorrowful Songs' requested by Lloyd in Happy Valley."

What kind of place is this happy valley? I believe this footage holds the answer:


Saturday, May 10, 2008

Thought for the Day

"I've loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night."
-Galileo Galilei

Friday, May 9, 2008

Another Post That Puts Me On My Nerd's Soapbox

I don't think George Lucas will ever read this blog, but I really want him to, because I would like to offer up an idea. And I know that in recent decades Mr Lucas hasn't listened to a lot of ideas from other people (forgive me Mr Lucas if you actually are reading this and refute that as not being the case, it's just that that's what it seems) I really want him to consider this idea.

I just watched the trailer for the new Star Wars Clone Wars animated movie coming out in theaters on August 15. If you haven't already, you too can watch the trailer at starwars.com. I'm not saying that this doesn't look good. I'm not saying that I wont go see it, because I will. It's just that if animated films is the new direction of the Star Wars franchise, it seems that setting them in the Clone Wars isn't as interesting as other possibilities.

Didn't George Lucas say that he was originally planing six more movies after the original trilogy? There were episodes I, II, and III which were made, and episodes VII, VIII and IX which were never made, supposedly because they dealt with the continuing story of Luke Skywalker and friends, and now those actors are all too old to come back.

However, since Star Wars is now going in the direction of purely animated films anyway, why not make an animated Episode VII, VIII and IX? And instead of giving the characters with faces that look like they were made for a Play Station video game, give the animation a photo realistic feel like they did with Beowulf. And make the movies about the continuing adventures of Luke, and Han, and Leia. The original actors don't even have to be in it, they can just be animated versions of what Mark Hammil, Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher looked like thirty years ago.

If Mr Lucas was fibbing and he never came up with stories for Episodes VII, VIII and IX, then they can be based off of the Thrawn trilogy books which were written by Timothy Zahn and take place five years after the Return of the Jedi, and indisputably the best of the Star Wars books written by other people.

This is just one Star Wars fans opinion, but I'm getting a bit tired of Republic Clone Troopers and battle Droids. I want to see X-Wing fighters back in action, and the return to the Millennium Falcon with Han Solo and Chewbacca on a whirlwind intergalactic adventure! I want to see Luke Skywalker continue to develop his Jedi skills. But this meager blog will never reach George Lucas's sphere of reading material, so all I can do is go back to dreaming.

And participate in productive activities that will benefit society while I'm at it.