23 August 2005

the star-t of something big

Since I've been adding little asterisk-ed asides* to all of my posts lately, and because the top left corner of my silly ugly graphic is somewhat bare, I have added a massive yellow asterisk, as you may have noticed. The font does funny stuff, but for now it's fine, I think.


* Such as this one, you see.

17 August 2005

bugged

So much for my company's supposed security. Despite keeping us from our personal email* and desktop wallpaper our network and computers were compromised today. Apparently a hole in the plug-n-play service built into Windows 2000 was published recently, and, despite a fix appearing not long thereafter from Microsoft, our workstations were not prepared for the onslaught. Apparently in the last day or two some fourteen variants of the same exploit have been worming their way around, and it hit my computer at about noon. As far as I can discern all it did was to shut down my computer, but others didn't fare so well (one had all of her emails erased. Lucky her).

I, of course, assumed that the NT ADMINISTRATOR mentioned in the shutdown notice (which admittedly didn't look familiar) was someone in the I.T. end of things, and they were going to come after me for my custom wallpaper and unapproved software. When I began hearing cubicle mumblings about viruses and shutting down I paid attention, and slowly the rumors spread about a virus outbreak.

Of course Zotob and RBot and the others are technically worms, but who am I to argue? Some of my coworkers don't quite comprehend computers the way I do.

You see, I sought out a fix, and found the aforementioned Microsoft hotfix. I put it on a floppy and set out to find as-yet-uninfected computers to vaccinate. I gave the disk to somebody and she put it in the drive, and then asked me, "Now what do I do?". Immediately I realized that my instruction of "Run the one file on this disk" might've been insufficient so I walked her through the three click process.

Of course, less than half an hour later someone official wandered around telling us that we don't in fact need to turn off and unplug our computers (from the "blue cord" only, they'd said) but instead just reboot around 3:45.

Naturally the rumors had begun around 1pm, and there were many, many empty cubes for an hour or two while rumor and reality clashed. In the end we're all back up and running. What is really amusing is that there were whole departments of people unwilling to heed the hearsay and stubbornly kept working. Here they had an opportunity to socialize for an hour, and they turned it down. I don't know who's crazier, them, or the people supposedly securing our computers.


* Even Gmail (via https) is now blocked. Somehow they've even managed to plug that hole, much to my chagrin. I still have some tricks up my sleeve--and my own wallpaper, not theirs--but dammit, I shouldn't need to try and beat them. We should all be on the same side here, and naturally it should be my side. Stupid policies.

12 August 2005

not a hit

I didn't really enjoy Bang the drum slowly. It's a forgotten baseball movie starring Michael Moriarty* and an almost unrecognizable (in appearance and demeanor) Robert De Niro.

It's supposed to be a story about friendship, about sticking up for the underdog and integrity (except when conning easy marks at cards), and selling life insurance. It is, in fact, a story about friendship and sticking up for the underdog and all the rest, but it's not a great one.

Maybe I'm just not a baseball movie fan.

I enjoyed the original Longest yard far more when I watched that last month than this. Even though they are less than two years apart, the difference between the films extends far beyond the difference between baseball and football. But that latter distinction does matter: baseball is the sport of intellectuals, and football, the lunkheads.

Odd, then, which one is our supposed national pastime, isn't it?

But back to the movies. Drum is apparently rather faithfully adapted from a 1956 novel of the same name.

I don't know the statistic off hand, nor do I care to check it, but if I were to guess I'd say the baseball novels outnumber the football ones by, oh, a hundred to one.

Of course I'm making all of this up; these are the conclusions of a fan of neither sport. To my knowledge I've never read either sport's fiction.

So anyway, Drum is more cerebral. It's about friendship, and bonding, and so on. Several sequences feel drawn out and tedious, as though they'd be hilarious on paper but are barely carried by the strong acting on screen. When the coach grills our protagonist about what he may or may not have been doing in Minnesota, repeatedly, the stories he concocts get more convoluted and complicated (but more or less corroborated) but in a fashion much better suited to a medium in which one is able to flip back to re-check the story from before.

As an aside, I don't believe that Abbott & Costello ever approached the subject of football. The Monty Python guys eschewed both football and baseball, sticking to their own 'football'.

I'm rambling. The baseball movie rambles. So much so that it needs a narrator to keep things moving.

The closest football movies get to having voiceover narration is the announcers during the games. But I'm talking about baseball, and Bang the drum slowly. To be sure, it's better than Bull Durham (about which I have written before), but that's like choosing between two of those reality shows where they follow schlubs on embarrassing dates.


* It wasn't until well after finishing watching this that I realized why Michael looked so familiar. He was the prosecutor for early seasons of L.A. Law, but his character was so different (from ballplayer to lawyer) that without help I would likely never had made the connection.

What is odd about this, of course, is that De Niro's never really played anything similar to a ballplayer either (except perhaps his boxer in Raging bull) and doesn't seem to know how to do it, distractingly so. He's just not a convincing ballplayer.

11 August 2005

's hell

War is hell. That's really all I can say, having finally seen all of HBO's Band of brothers. It's quite a powerful series, following the U.S. Army's Easy company from their training before Normandy up to V-E day, done in a very visceral style. You know, like the beginning quarter of Saving Private Ryan, but much, much longer.

As a series, though, Band falters more than once. Having been spread over parts, each with a different director and other inconsistencies (a couple had a DVD chapter stop right after the opening credits; most didn't) with the styles of visuals and narration, it was more distracting than it should have been. Switching the focus from soldier to soldier is one thing, and not so bad at that, but constantly changing the look and feel of the show meant I needed to get used to each episode's style all over again, every time. In this regard it very much reminded me of From the Earth to the Moon, another HBO (mini-) series*. That show, of course, was much less violent.

Band may be violent, but it never seems inauthentic. The battlefield scenes are almost too vivid (complete with the currently-in-vogue shaky camera motion) and realistic. I've never been in a war and now, more than ever, do I know that I'd never want to be in one either. War is hell. I don't know what more to say about it. I'm not so dedicated to my country, nor so dead-set against some evil to take up arms and fight and potentially lose my life. I suppose I owe my respect to those who do (and for that matter, my freedom and livelihood). So thank you all, but can't we all just get along?


* Also produced by Tom Hanks, oddly enough. His son Colin didn't ever appear in that, to my recollection, and fortunately so. That kid just doesn't have his dad's acting ability, yet.

10 August 2005

editor to the stars

Another day, another mistaken All Movie Guide synopsis.

This time it's for the little-known 1954 Charlton Heston love story/distaster movie The naked jungle.

The movie's an interesting combination of a watered-down love story and a watered-down disaster movie; ironically it ends with everything being flooded*. Charlton Heston stars as an iron-willed cocoa bean plantation owner deep in the jungle of South America, and Eleanor Parker as the mail order bride who turns out to be much more than he can handle, being a thirtysomething virgin.

Anyway, to the AMG mistake du jour. In their synopsis, 'written' by Hal Erickson, it mentions this:

Charlton Heston plays South American plantation owner Christopher Leiningen, who spends most of the film preparing for the hellish onslaught of deadly soldier ants.

I was watching the time display. It wasn't until forty eight minutes (perhaps forty eight and a half, even) had passed that the whole Marabunta issue is broached. The birds that pique the Commissioner's (and his government's) interest are seen at the beginning and mentioned once, but for the subsequent 45 minutes there follows nothing but the love story plot. How this can be taken then for 'most' is rather a stretch of the word, in my opinion, when taken into consideration that the movie clocks in at ninety five minutes. You might be able to call forty seven of ninety five half, except that even once he is warned of the approaching hordes, he still goes about antagonizing his wife and so forth. Had I paid closer attention I probably would have only found maybe twenty minutes of 'preparing', and maybe another ten of truly 'hellish onslaught'. But hey, at the end of the day Hal Erickson probably gets paid, and I'm left to watch movies and wonder if protracted speeches in them about the relentlessness and organization of soldier ants as a fearsome enemy in a movie from the fifties is meant to be some sort of jab at communism or not.

In fact it reminded me of a MacGyver episode I watched once, but only until the special effects really kicked in and the real ants (and the animated ones) showed up. You see, in that episode, the producers couldn't procure actual ants, 'soldier' or otherwise, and were forced to reveal the attacking hordes solely in scenes of stock footage. One time Jungle was too obviously showing stock footage, unless Charlton's binoculars were somehow able to filter color to black and white. For all I know the MacGyver footage was taken from this film. It wouldn't surprise me.

I don't think I'll inform AMG of their mistake this time. I have yet to see acknowledgement of my other attemps to correct them, so for now, I'll just rest on my, well, whatever it is that people who point out trivial mistakes and poor semantics rest on.


* i.e. watered down.

9 August 2005

retread

So I've been thinking. I may have been overly critical of Herbie rides again before when I wrote that it was "so ridiculous it’s not even funny". Bearing in mind that it was created to appeal to children (and grownups with a sense of whimsy and fondness for VW bugs), I managed to find a couple noteworthy points here and there.

It does, in fact, have some subtle touches that can go unnoticed unless you're paying attention. Early on, when we first meet Willoughby Whitfield (Ken Berry), we see clues to his zen-like aloofness whereby he is not flummoxed at all by Herbie rolling onto his foot. His utter nonchalance at his foot pinned under the car's tire betrays a total inner calm, an otherworldliness that allows him to be neither concerned about his toes being squashed or anything like that; nor does he think too long to determine that somebody must've left the parking brake on, leaving the little car to roll just far enough to stop him in his tracks. For him to take something like a car rolling itself around, over a foot, on what looks to be level ground, without questioning too much, must be a sign of his true enlightenment.

But Herbie rides again isn't just about enlightenment. It's about redemption, too. When sort-of-sentient streetcar #22, laden with Mrs. Steinmetz's (Helen Hayes) possessions, hurtles down San Francisco's famous hilled streets, a drunken rancher, in a ten-gallon hat, who looks to be passed out from a couple gallons of booze, hops on for a ride. Sobering slowly but amiably, Mr. Judson (John McIntire) strikes up a conversation with the knitting widow, and before long they are fast friends. They are also fast heading into the bay, which provides more of the tension than anything between them, sparks-wise. It isn't until he appears later at her firehouse, heroically wielding a firehose in her defense and otherwise protecting her and her ersatz fortress, that he truly shines. He's actually a rough and tumble guy, ready to fight for his woman and his rights, no longer the washed-up drunk we saw when first we met him. Willoughby goes through a similar arc, from being pushed around (he calls himself a rabbit) to pushing back, and in like fashion Nicole (Stefanie Powers) transforms from judgmental hothead to sentimental sweetie, but neither in so quick a timeframe as their cowboy pal, and more predictably so.

Also, I think that cinema in general needs more scenes of groups of suited lawyers being chased, whether by Beetles or otherwise.

So it has more than I had, at first, thought going for it, but when I weigh everything I like about it against everything I don't, the latter wins out. The bad stuff is just too bad to outweigh the good. Take the DVD cover, for example. Disney must've thought that the car, with Ken Berry perched in a silly pose atop it and Stefanie smug inside, flying in front of the Golden Gate must not have conveyed well enough the sense of whimsey, so an artist added big blue doe eyes to Herbie. Girly looking doe eyes, I might add. This is entirely unnecessary! A VW Bug is already rather anthropomorphic, Herbie doubly so, and for this sequel to apparently need to stress that is a sign of desperation or something worse. It's another extraneous addition that only compounds the rest of the extra (bigger, better, more) junk that outweighs what really made the first film so fun: its heart. Not gags. Not more sentient machines, just heart.

And footage of fast cars*.


* This may be the reason they found fit to include, as a dream sequence for Herbie, several minutes lifted directly from the first film.

This dream sequence was much better executed than Alonzo Hawk's (Keenan Wynn), wherein he is first chased by (obviously model) Bugs with chomping toothed hoods and then encircled by feathered-headdress-wearing, tomahawk-chopping mini Herbies apparently readying to burn him. Other cheesy model sequences in the film proved less silly but just as distracting, as though they couldn't afford a convincing enough scale model and instead opted for what looks like a dime store toy. Even as a kid I think I knew it was faked.