gridlore: Doug looking off camera with a grin (Me - PowerPuff)
[personal profile] gridlore
Despite my lack of posting on the topic, I am still reading and watching movies (Netflix rocks.) Here are some brief reviews.

I think I'm done with my Greg Bear phase. Read Eon and The Anvil of Stars and while both books were good, I finally put my finger on what it is about his writing the bothers me. I can't connect with his characters. I honestly don't care if they live or die, and without that connection the books become travelogues through some very interesting spaces.

Followed those two up with another book that turned out to be rather disappointing. Homeward Bound by Harry Turtledove. This is the last (hopefully) in the "Worldwar" series. The concept is fun: aliens invade in 1942. But they are only slightly ahead of us technologically, and based their invasion plans on scouting missions made during the Crusades. So they are badly shocked to find us flying around and shooting at each other, and then at them. The first four books were good, the second set (Colonization) added a few wrinkles before really just running out of steam. Homeward Bound is set mostly on Home, home world of The Race and covers the arrival of an American ship there. More fun cultural clashes, and some good politics but the big secret is so poorly disguised that the first time the fact that the Americans were hiding some breakthrough in physics I immediately guessed what was going to happen. This book just sputters to an end. The entire thing had the feel of something that Dr. Turtledove felt he had to write, to tie up some loose ends.

Another long running series has a new entry: At All Costs, the latest Honor Harrington epic from David Weber. I really think this is the last Honor Harrington book. They'll be more in the setting, but Honor really is suffering from Jack Ryan syndrome.. she's too powerful to be interesting. Good enough read, and I was interested in some of the plot twists.

Onto the movies.

Netflix has now graced me with three films that I've watched and returned. Two were old favorites, one was one I meant to see in theaters but missed.

Titanic. Laugh all you want; I love this movie. Not for the cheesy love story, but for the details of the ship and the era.

Rock'n'Roll High School. Ah, a great throwback to my teen years, and endless nights at the Friday Midnight Movie. Very little plot, low budget, but its got the Ramones!

Miracle. Hey, a sports movie I haven't seen. I'm not a big hockey fan, but clearly remember the showdown between the USA and the Soviet Union in Lake Placid. I can still remember lying on the living room floor hearing Al Michaels make his immortal call...

The movie does a great job of showing what it took to take a group of college kids who had never played together and forge them into a group that could defeat the best team in the world. Never maudlin, and with a great sense of humor, the film is an excellent look at quite possibly the biggest upset in sports history. And well shot. Even though everyone probably knows how the game ends, I was cheering for every goal, and on the edge of my seat as the camera focused on the puck skittering along the boards as Michaels calls Eleven seconds, you got ten seconds, the countdown going on right now. Morrow up to Silk. Five seconds left in the game. Do you believe in miracles? Yes!

Nice touch in the closing credits. As each player is shown we find out what the player is doing now.

Date: 31 Oct 2005 00:32 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cmdr-zoom.livejournal.com
re: Greg Bear - Niven, for all that I'm a fan of his stories, has much the same problem. Many of his characters (not all) are tourists/tour guides/excuses to show us the Cool Setting he's come up with. He even remarks on this tendency in the introduction to Rammer/A World Out of Time.

Date: 31 Oct 2005 00:35 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gridlore.livejournal.com
Yeah, but at least Niven's characters have some spark to them. I believed in Jerome Campbell, Beowulf Schaffer, and even in Speaker to Animals. Bear's characters seem lifeless to me.

Date: 31 Oct 2005 01:18 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nilita.livejournal.com
As I mentioned, much of the film Miracle was filmed in the town 6 miles from where I live, a ski town which quite resembles Aspen. A lot of locals were extras in the movie. I haven't seen it myself; I should prolly get around to it.

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gridlore: Doug looking off camera with a grin (Default)
Douglas Berry

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