greygirlbeast: (Default)
Caitlín R. Kiernan ([personal profile] greygirlbeast) wrote2011-07-21 12:27 pm

"It's a hollow play, but they'll clap anyway."

Oh my fucking dogs. We didn't get to sleep until 4:30 ayem, then woke at 10 ayem. I woke from a hellish dream (thank you, both of you, you who know who you are, you and that fucking day in October 2005) into the mouth of an overheated water buffalo. More on that shortly. The overheated water buffalo, not the hellish dream or heat-induced sleep deprivation. Our heat index is already 97˚F.

Where was I? No, where am I? Oh, here. Great comments yesterday, kittens. Let's keep it up, through another scalding day.

Just sold "The Prayer of Ninety Cats" to Subterranean Press for Subterranean: Tales of Dark Fantasy 3. Nope, don't know the book's release date yet, but I'm very happy with the sale.

As for yesterday, well...other than a LOT of email, the less said the better. Work that should have been done was not done. However, I have devised a way to recover. It calls for me finishing Blood Oranges at the end of the third week of August, instead of at the end of July. Fortunately, there was wiggle room. Now, I just gotta get back on that goddamn horse by Monday.

If you're reading this, Merrilee, I've not yet acquired a second coolerator. The one we needed was out of stock. AC units are crazy out of stock up here, which is hardly surprising. Our windows really aren't conducive to window units, so we need another (and smaller than Dr. Muñoz) portable unit. So, no longer broke, but still broiling.

---

One thing that has occurred to me is how little the "triggery" people actually know about human psychology. Sure, if you've been attacked by a dog and maimed, you're going to have issues with dogs. Obviously. Well, no. Many, but not all, people will react that way. Let us avoid oversimplification. Anyway, point is, there are going to be hundreds or thousands of other "triggers," most of them working on a subconscious level, that you'll never be able to guard against. Which leads to all the "unexplained" anxiety and panic attacks experienced by people with PTSD. Which brings us back to the problem of oversimplified pop psych. Mostly, I think the "triggery" folk are desperately trying to control their lives, when all our lives are, genuinely, all but completely beyond our control.

---

Last night, we watched Colin and Greg Strause's Skyline (2010). When I saw the trailer in the theatre, I was impressed and hopeful. But bad and lukewarm reviews kept me away. In truth, it's a perfectly enjoyable big bug sort of sci-fi invasion flick. Sure, it needs a script in the worst sort of way, and the acting's pretty off key. And talk about "unsympathetic characters," what a lot of sleazeballs. However, this is irrelevant, as the real stars are the SFX, which is how it works with the Bros. Strause. And the SFX and creature design, that part's exquisite. It's just a shame no one hired screenwriters who could, you know...write. Or directors that could direct people, and not just CGI programmes. But, like I said, it was fun to watch – quite a bit more than Battle Los Angeles. And unlike Battle Los Angeles, it had a pleasantly and more realistically bleak ending.

After the movie, we watched the first three episodes of Steven Speilberg's Falling Skies. Well, the two-part pilot and the first regular episode. Not bad, in that TV non-space opera sf sort of way. Watchable. Some good moments here and there. But it does feel like television. Which is to say that it feels constrained, and I don't believe for a minute all those people would be so clean six months after becoming nomadic refugees from an extraterrestrial invasion. Creature design is so-so. I find this sudden bloom of alien menace films interesting. True, it's a nice break from zombies. But I wonder at the cause. Probably just the usual Hollywood clusterfuck, especially given that both Skyline and Battle Los Angeles flopped at the box office. The only truly good film to emerge from this, of course, is Abrams' superb Super 8 (a joy, all round).

---

Two films I'm very excited about just now – excited about their potential – are Andrew Stanton's John Carter (US release date 9 March 2012) and Matthijs van Heijningen Jr.'s prequel to John Carpenter's The Thing (US release date 14 October 2011). I do worry the latter could go horribly awry, but the trailer looks very promising. As for the former, I think I have faith in Stanton to do it right, and I love the trailer. I was a huge fan of Burroughs, and especially the Mars books, when I was a kid. Anyway, here are both trailers:

John Carter:



The Thing:



---

I'm living in an age
That calls darkness light.
Though my language is dead,
Still the shapes fill my head.
-- Arcade Fire

I have no tribe.

Okay...gotta try to be productive.

Hotter Than Hot,
Aunt Beast

Re: The Summer of much discontent

[identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com 2011-07-22 02:06 am (UTC)(link)

Funny how two words seem stricken from the media's vocabulary: Global Warming.

Well...it's complicated. But, yeah.


The movie trailers look great. John Carter had me at flying ships.


It had me at the rainy street scene.

How freakin hard can it be to keep a frozen specimen frozen in that environment?

The problem is, I think, that it's intentionally thawed from the original block.

[identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com 2011-07-22 02:07 am (UTC)(link)

Creative...

[identity profile] greygirlbeast.livejournal.com 2011-07-22 02:07 am (UTC)(link)

I keep hoping that the Martians have the right number of arms ...

I'm pretty sure they will.

[identity profile] opalblack.livejournal.com 2011-07-22 02:12 am (UTC)(link)
I could never work in the presence of humans.

They do have that effect, don't they?

[identity profile] opalblack.livejournal.com 2011-07-22 02:49 am (UTC)(link)
I always knew it would happen eventually. Australia has never suited me. It's not that hard, for me at least, dual passports are a blessing. I have a place to stay while I unfuck my brain a bit, and I'm getting rid of everything I own and taking my two cats and one suitcase. It's time, you know? Time to shake off the detritus of a life half lived, walk the fuck away and start over. Something about turning thirty maybe. More directly, the realisation earlier this year that I felt safer in Belfast than I do in Brisbane. Stupid PTSD, I KICK IT!

Should the possibility of another Ireland trip come up while I'm there, you can stay at my place if need be. You'll always be welcome, wherever I am. Venice is my forever home, but I have a lot of moving around to do before then. Possibly some wagon time, even.

I know you've got Spooky's family and other such ties to place, but if you ever were to emigrate (NHS dental FTW!), I've got your back. The paperwork and that isn't so monstrous.
ext_4772: (Scorpio)

[identity profile] chris-walsh.livejournal.com 2011-07-22 04:56 am (UTC)(link)
I thought of you when I saw the John Carter trailer. (Almost sent it to you, but I wanted to be something more substantial than the "hey! here's a link" guy.) It has the potential to be a lovely, moody work, with an attitude of "Can we save this world?," not of "RAAAARRGGH I'VE STABBED EVERY SINGLE BLOOD-BEARING ORGAN IN THIS THARK." Anyway, I'm reeeeeeeally hoping it's good. (I'm invested partly because I've read both the first John Carter and the first Tarzan novel, and much preferred A Princess of Mars.)

I kept thinking of the overused word "beautiful" when looking at the John Carter trailer. Reminded me that I find much Mars-inspired art beautiful. Like the Bob Clampett tests for a 1930s animated John Carter of Mars (http://slyoyster.hypervocal.com/movies/2008/john-carter-of-mars-or-what-could-have-been-for-animation/):

[identity profile] alumiere.livejournal.com 2011-07-22 09:54 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not sure why I didn't think of this sooner, but it may help. A big bowl of ice water (as much ice as you can fit), with a fan blowing over the top; basically a swamp cooler. They do add some moisture to the air, but it's cool air, which does make a difference.

We used them when it got really hot at Pennsic, and our group camped on a swampy island between two streams (back when I could do those sorts of things). I seem to remember they wouldn't work so well if humidity was really high (like 95%), but otherwise they did.

Heatwave

[identity profile] jadakath.livejournal.com 2011-07-22 08:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I quite like Falling Skies, been watching 'em all.

Want me to ship you a AC overnight?
It is 110 here too but freezing AC everywhere you go.

How was Harry Potter, the final? We're going on Sunday.

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