Jake Shimabukuro

mardi 29 novembre 2016

Hawaii's own Jake Shimabukuro recently did an interview in Southern California in prep for an upcoming performance there. Did you realize that he is already 40 years old? I still think of him as super-talented "kid". Guess I need to pay more attention.

Anyway, in the interview he said to the OC Register reporter:
Quote:

"Out of all the instruments, Shimabukuro said the ukulele is not taken as seriously – and he has found that to be a good thing. Having been born and raised in Hawaii, where the ukulele is a respected instrument and important part of the culture, he said it is amazing how many people all around the world laugh at him when he tells them what he plays.
“The thing is I’ve never felt offended; I’ve actually always admired that about the instrument. People aren’t intimidated by it,” said Shimabukuro, “I wish people would have that same attitude with playing other instruments. It’s such a wonderful thing to make music; it changes you and brings so much joy in your life. I feel like we all owe it to ourselves to experience the joy of creating music"."

You know, he's right about the ukulele giving easy access to making music, just think about all those school kids plinking away on their ukuleles during music class. And during school performances, the kids lucky enough to have an uke in their hands always seem so happy.... even if they haven't mastered many of the chords yet, it is pretty easy to just sort of strum along and have fun.
Jake Shimabukuro

Jones Act affects foreign goods shipped to Hawaii

The Merchant Marine Act of 1920, AKA the Jones Act, affects the shipping of goods to Hawaii from foreign ports. A bit of background, courtesy of Wikipedia:
  • The Jones Act requires all goods transported by water between U.S. ports be carried on U.S. flag ships, constructed in the United States, owned by U.S. citizens, and crewed by U.S. citizens and U.S. permanent residents.
  • The Jones Act prevents foreign-flagged ships from carrying cargo between the US mainland and noncontiguous parts of the US, such as Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska and Guam. Foreign ships inbound with goods cannot stop any of these four locations, offload goods, load mainland-bound goods, and continue to US mainland ports. Instead, they must proceed directly to US mainland ports, where distributors break bulk and then send goods to US places off the mainland by US-flagged ships.
  • Because the Jones Act requires all transport between US ports be carried on US-built ships, the Jones Act supports the domestic US shipbuilding industry.
Has the Jones Act outlived its intended purpose? A century after its adoption, is it now more harmful than helpful? From the Grassroots Institute of Hawaii:
Quote:

One of the reasons the Jones Act was created was to ensure a vibrant United States shipping industry.Fast forward to 2016: the American shipping industry has been in a steady decline for decades. In 1947, the total U.S. flag seagoing merchant fleet — America’s commercial shipping industry — was comprised of 3,696 ships. As of 2015, that number has dropped to just 167.

Sen. McCain attempted to basically void the act in 2015. According to The Triton:
Quote:

He called the act “an antiquated law that has for too long hindered free trade, made U.S. industry less competitive and raised prices for American consumers.”
How does the Jones Act affect prices in Hawaii? Think of the products from, for example, Japan and China (TVs, automobiles, food, etc) that Hawaii buys. All of those shipped products must first go to a mainland port, then be unloaded and reloaded on a ship bound for Hawaii. That definitely adds $$ to the cost of products we buy.


What good does the Jones Act still do for the U.S. today, a century later?


I wonder if the Jones Act is on the mind of President-elect Trump?
Jones Act affects foreign goods shipped to Hawaii

Kahaluu Lagoon still polluted

StarAdvertiser:
Quote:

Two years after the Department of Health warned residents to stay out of Kahaluu Lagoon and the channel leading to Kaneohe Bay because tests indicated raw sewage from cesspools was likely polluting the water, there’s no indication that the water quality will improve anytime soon. Health officials say that while hundreds of cesspools in the area are likely causing the high bacteria counts, they are still studying the issue.
TWO YEARS, and still more time needed for their studying the problem? The State thinks it is likely that cesspools are the cause of the pollution, and the bacteria count seems to indicate that is the probable source.
Quote:

Health officials began testing the water in 2014 after canoe paddlers, boaters and fishermen complained of rashes and skin infections that they suspected were linked to the waterway. The results were alarming. Bacteria counts used to gauge the presence of sewage were as high in some places as water samples taken from the Ala Wai Canal in 2006 when city officials dumped 48 million gallons of raw sewage into the waterway after a pipe burst in Waikiki.
So not only is there a dangerous contamination (think along the lines of Hep A, lepto, staph), but a recreational resource is off limits. Why hasn't the state really jumped on this issue of discovering the source, and moved ahead with rapidity especially due to the health risks? Without figuring out the source of the problem, it is impossible to start making a plan to remedy the situation. You can bet that if was Waikiki (and tourist dollars were in jeopardy), the State would be acting faster. Could it be that the county folks just don't matter that much to the State when it comes to having a clean and safe environment, "No rush"?
Kahaluu Lagoon still polluted

Digital invasion of privacy

lundi 28 novembre 2016

Especially with the photo capabilities of cel phones plus connectivity, are expectations of privacy almost a thing of the past? Where is the line drawn between what someone can expect to be private, and what is more socially acceptable for another person to post?

Currently there is an incident where a woman who took a photo of a nude "senior" woman while in a locker room at a gym. The photographer then posted the photo on Snapchat, with a mean "body shaming" comment about the woman. The photographer faces a misdemeanor count of invasion of privacy.

LATimes states "Some states have increased the penalties for taking secret images, making it a felony". I wonder what Hawaii's laws and penalties are? In today's camera-at-hand lifestyle (ie cel phone), are we all fair game? Has Hawaii been proactive in protecting the pubic?
Digital invasion of privacy

Is cost of living really why so many move?

Islanders Away ...... why does it happen? Many times we hear that it is due to the high cost of living here in Hawaii. But is there more to it than that, is that an "easy excuse" to give that is acceptable without other people pressing for more information or giving their unwanted advice?

The StarAdvertiser has a story about the zoo director leaving his position.The director, "whose resignation is effective Dec. 15, has been making $164,000 annually". But a press release by his new employer in Abuquerque said he "had accepted a post as its deputy chief executive at $110,000 a year."

Humm, the decrease in wages of over $50K are going be offset by a lower cost of living? Well, maybe I should look into the average cost of housing in his destination of Albuquerque, N.M. before I decide.

Anyway, what I'm really wondering is why do people leave, and is cost of living a strong consideration but there are actually other important things at play too? Such as limited employment advancement opportunities? Poor performing public schools? Traffic problems (Oahu)? Social/cultural disharmony? Why do folks move away?
Is cost of living really why so many move?

Big money.... worth it?

Ever wonder how our local kids do on $pay$ when they grow up and make it into professional sports? I came across a list from Hawaii Business, for the highest paid players who were born in Hawaii, or grew up here, or attended school here. I'll not post the salaries/bonuses, but will note that the highest on the list is at $8 million for 2016.

So, as it turns out, a sports scholarship for college can help with tuition, and some sports-stars from Hawaii even go on to high paid professional sports positions. That's terrific!

Although, the trade off for ALL professional sportsmen (especially football) is needing to consider if earning your living by banging your head is worth the trade-off of potential brain injury. WashingtonPost:
Quote:

.."more than 40 percent of retired National Football League players … had signs of traumatic brain injury based on sensitive MRI scans called diffusion tensor imaging".
In other words, choose what sports you play wisely?
Big money.... worth it?

Tools for borrowing from the HNL Tool Library

A new concept has come to Honolulu, a "tool library". Their website has an assortment of tools that are in stock, and for a small annual fee, a member can borrow tools for a week. It sounds like a useful option for those who have a one-time-need for a tool (why purchase if you can borrow?).

The hours are limited (Wed and Sat for a few hours), but likely those will be expanded as demand grows.

Contact: HNL Tool Library, http://ift.tt/2fLLjNm

I've a few projects around the house that need to be done. But its not a lack of tools, it is a lack of knowledge. Such as the seat of a chair where the pieces of wood have become unglued. And the drain pipe that has a crack in it. Too bad the Tool Library does not come with a handyman too. :D
Tools for borrowing from the HNL Tool Library

Waianae school absenteeism

dimanche 27 novembre 2016

The StarAdvertiser has a report about the Court trying to address the high absenteeism at Waianae Intermediate School.
Quote:

The school, with 913 students in grades 7 and 8, had the highest chronic absenteeism rate last school year among middle schools at 38 percent, reflecting the percentage of students absent 15 days or more. The state average for middle schools was 14 percent that year.
Quote:

Waianae Intermediate students on average missed 21 school days — amounting to more than four weeks of school — compared with the statewide average of nine absences.
So, they have focused on the problem and stats, and put in place a specialized truancy court. The outcome this year:
Quote:

A total of 68 students were referred to Truancy Court last year: 40 eighth-graders and 28 seventh-graders. “The majority had 60 to 90 absences,” Remigio said. Of the 49 truancy petitions the state ended up filing for the group, 31 cases were diverted from court because the students demonstrated improvement. Eighteen of the cases were brought to court, and 16 of those students improved enough during their court visits to have their cases closed.

So far, it sounds like there had been notable success.
One has to wonder just how much the parents are part of the problem for some of those students? If a parent does not become involved and instead allows their child to be chronically truant, maybe there needs to be a special court program for the parents, too.
Anyway, the program seems to be offering a pathway to educational success for some students that might otherwise end up dropping out. That is good!
Waianae school absenteeism

Needed: wide mouth jars

Looking for a resource that sells wide mouth jars, plastic lids, 1 gallon (for Kombucha). I can get them online, but would rather deal locally and also save on the shipping charges. Anyone do any fermenting and know who sells that type jar? Thanks.
Needed: wide mouth jars

Kombucha, Hawaii style

Anyone make homemade Kombucha? Do you have a favorite recipe? There is something brewing in my kitchen right now by a family member, but he's currently just a beginner. Suggestions?
Kombucha, Hawaii style

DNA testing

Have any of you had your DNA tested "for Ethnicity" ? I'm thinking of having that done (I'm into genealogy, so it ties into that interest). I've a few concerns/questions about it in general, though, before I turn my DNA over to .... cyberspace (the results are online, at least for one company I am considering). Here is their disclaimer:
Quote:

Your privacy is important to us. We use industry standard security practices to store your DNA sample, your DNA test results, and other personal data you provide to us. In addition, we store your DNA test results and DNA sample without your name or other common identifying information. You own your DNA data. At any time, you can choose to download raw DNA data, have us delete your DNA test results as described in the {XXX}DNA Privacy Statement, or have us destroy your physical DNA saliva sample. We do not share with third parties your name or other common identifying information linked to your genetic data, except as legally required or with your explicit consent.
Another question I have is comparing the companies that offer testing. Right now there is a sale on at least one of those companies. Maybe price will be my decision-making point. (Black Friday/Cyber Monday sales are in effect.)

I'm interested in seeing what Hawaiian component there is in some of my family.

I'm interested in trying to get the testing that is currently available done for some of the most senior of Kupuna in the family.

My son says they used to also offer health-related genetic testing, but the FDA banned that a few years ago. I wonder if that is back in any of the testing, so a bit more research for me to do on that.

DNA testing, anyone?
DNA testing

Millions and Trillions

LA Times:
Quote:

The Dodgers, who have spent more than a billion dollars on player payroll in the first four seasons of Guggenheim Baseball Management, face a mandate to reduce debt in order to conform to Major League Baseball rules.
A BILLION dollars on player payroll? Wow. What could that same amount of money do if spent elsewhere? It seemed like an astronomical amount to consider, until I took a quick peek at comparing it to the 2017 US Federal Budget estimate. That is an eye popping 4.15 trillion dollars.

It is enough to make me want to hurry and close the internet tab on the budget, and hope it falls out of my mind quickly. I'd look at the National Debt as another comparison, but I don't think I have enough mental energy to make it through.

But bringing this back around to baseball, how can it be justified to spend that much on one team's payroll?
Millions and Trillions

Electoral College 2016

In the 2016 Presidential election, Hawaii voters predicted the "losers". Statewide, we voted for Bernie Sanders (lost) and Hillary Clinton (lost). Ballotpedia:
Quote:

Democratic caucuses took place in Hawaii on March 26, 2016. Berrnie Sanders defeated Hillary Clinton 69.8 to 30 percent. Republican caucuses took place in Hawaii on March 8, 2016. Donald Trump with 43.3 percent of the vote.
But what I really wanted to bring up is the current "movement" (of sorts) to try an upset with the Electoral College voting to be done on Dec. 19.

You'll recall about the Electoral College, from the LA Times:
Quote:

It's made up of the 538 Americans who actually elect the president. The number corresponds to the seats a state has in the U.S Senate and the House of Representatives, plus the three electoral votes allotted to Washington, D.C. The magic number is 270, the bare majority required to win the presidency.
In theory, the Electoral College could go rogue, and vote in whomever they wanted. Or, mess with the numbers enough that no candidate receives enough votes, in which case the House of Representatives would claim a winner by their vote. LA Times:
Quote:

Under the Constitution, the House of Representatives decides, with each state delegation casting a single vote for one of the top three vote-getters. Republicans control a majority of state delegations, so this route still benefits Trump.The House has decided presidential elections only twice, in 1800 and 1824
I'm not predicting a major shakeup, but it is still interesting to consider the possibilities.
Electoral College 2016

Online advertising of items for sale.

samedi 26 novembre 2016

Do you sale household items, cars, tools, etc by adverting online? I've used Craigslist in the past, but use caution on how my ads are placed (such what personal info is available) to try and reduce dealing with .... weirdos, for lack of a better word.

A friend says they instead use a local Facebook Group that is centered in their neighborhood. And, I've heard there are specialty groups (like for moms that are selling children's items). My friend says she feels that using the groups is a more secure method than using Craigslist, because with FB "you know who you are dealing with". (Assuming the buyer uses a real name/profile.)

How do you advertise online? Is safety even an issue for you? I dread coming home to a broken in garage because I've in the past let some stranger around my house, and they turned out to be a thief-with-a-plan.
Online advertising of items for sale.

Drunk drivers

Hawaii24/7: "Eight Big Island police officers were honored this week by Mothers Against Drunk Driving-Hawaiʻi, in cooperation with Big Island Toyota, for their efforts and dedication this year to the fight against drunk and drugged driving."

Do you someone who was arrested for DUI? Did being arrested convince them to stop driving while drunk? I do know someone that being arrested was a real "reality check" for them! Of course, I know that many people are repeat offenders, they did not learn a lesson from their arrest.

Hawaii's laws accommodate a sentence of requiring an ignition interlock device for offenders. "One year for first offense; 18 months for second; two years for third." Maybe the system should be required even longer. I'm not concerned with the finances for them (monitoring is about the cost of a monthly cel phone bill), I'm more concerned with keeping the roads safe.
Drunk drivers

Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates (2016)

vendredi 25 novembre 2016

Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates (2016)
Anna Kendrick, Aubrey Plaza, Adam DeVine, Zac Effron. Directed by Jake Szymanski.

If you can’t disconnect your brain and just enjoy four good actors being goofy and stupid, there’s really no way to appreciate a film like Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates, unless, like me, you are a deep admirer of the actors themselves. My fan-love for Anna Kendrick and Aubrey Plaza is so deep that it almost doesn’t matter what the film is, and I know for certain that many people feel this way about Zac Efron. A movie like this isn’t so much a story as a witness to an execution of comedic over-the-top acting chops, if there is such a thing, and if you can appreciate Anna Kendrick sobbing her poor young heart out while George Clooney awkwardly pretends to sympathize in an Oscar-nominated performance in Up in the Air, why not go along in the opposite direction as she shares a bunch of MDMA with the bride the night before a wedding, and then takes her clothes off so she can cavort with a corral of hotel-owned horses she decides to set free?

Adam DeVine and Zac Effron are Mike and Dave, two idiot brothers whose younger sister is about to be wed. They’re warned by their family—the bride included—that they are expected to have dates for this wedding, because they have a history of coming to family events stag, and then embarrassing everyone with life-endangering stunts and guest-insulting flirtation. The family hopes that dates will keep the young men in line. Because they’re idiot horndogs, at first they resist, but because they love their sister (nearly as much as they appear to love each other), they acquiesce, putting an ad on Craigslist, searching for dates to the Hawaii wedding.

The Hawaii part of the deal inspires a lot of responses, as well as an appearance on The Wendy Williams Show where Tatiana (Aubrey Plaza) and Alice (Anna Kendrick) see them. The ladies are having problems. Alice, recently abandoned at the altar, repeatedly shows up for her waitressing job drunk. Tatiana, her best friend, joins Anna in her drunkenness, and they are both fired. A trip to Hawaii could help them reset their lives, so they make up fake identities, Tatiana declaring she’s a teacher, and Alice claiming to be a hedge-fund manager. Just the sort of nice girls Mike and Dave know will please their family.

All that setup seems unnecessary for a pretty thin story, but I suspect it serves to loosen a viewer’s brain, a kind of focused stretching before a basketball game. First, get to like the characters, understanding that they’re basically nice people, if stupid and misguided. Then, get used to the possibility that their likeable stupidity means they are about to do some really stupid, unbelievable stuff for the sole purpose of making you laugh, or (alternately) be reminded that Kendrick and Plaza are super cute, and that Effron is a hunk. You paid for the rental; you might as well stick around for that.

This is the second Kendrick-Plaza movie and the third Kendrick-DeVine movie, and these are good team-ups, and this is where the film mostly works, because goodness knows there aren’t a lot of genuine laughs. The hope that there might be some singing, with three of the four principals starring in hugely successful musical projects, might be another appeal, and some of that is delivered as well. There’s a happy pleasure in seeing this young talent get a little crazy and have fun, and if one can forgive the characters for promising more than they deliver, shallowly motivated by a trip to Hawaii, one can certainly excuse the actors for doing the same thing.

5/10 (IMDb rating)
51/100 (Criticker rating)

PS: This is not Pitch Perfect or High School Musical. Screen it before you watch it with your kids.
Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates (2016)

transportation network companies

mercredi 23 novembre 2016

Anyone experienced with Uber or Lyft? Have you ever used them for a ride, or perhaps work or drive for them?

There was a news report a couple of months ago about drivers being arrested at Honolulu airport for not having the proper permits. Are they still banned from the airport?

Its always sort of bugged me about what screening is done, or ISN'T DONE, for drivers. Not that all regular taxi drivers are solid citizens, but at least it is a marked car. I'm I too old school? To me the idea of someone just jumping into a private car with a stranger is sort of like hitchhiking, how do you know who you are really dealing with?
transportation network companies

Black Friday & Cyber Monday

Anyone planning on doing Black Friday shopping this year? In years past, I've done so, but only when I had something special in mind that was on sale for a big enough discount to fight the masses. TV .. stereo... jackets... But there is nothing I need this year that will tease me into a store.

But I might try Cyber Monday. Last year, I could not find anything I wanted. Maybe this year I'll spot something I need and then save some $$.

Do you usually shop on Black Friday? Have you found good deals on Cyber Monday?
Black Friday & Cyber Monday

Rank the Star Trek Films

dimanche 20 novembre 2016

First, the corpus.

Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Kahn (1982)
Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986)
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)
Star Trek Generations (1994)
Star Trek: Fist Contact (1996)
Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)
Star Trek: Nemesis (2002)
Star Trek (2009)
Star Trek Into Darkness (2013)
Star Trek Beyond (2016)
Rank the Star Trek Films

Song of the Sea (2014)

mardi 15 novembre 2016

Song of the Sea (2014)
Voices of Brendan Gleeson, David Rawle, and Fionnula Flanagan. Written by Will Collins. Directed by Tomm Moore.

Ben is resentful of his little sister Saoirse, who still cannot speak at the age of six and who is little more than a thorn in his side. His father and grandmother are of very little comfort, and it seems all Ben has are the stories his mother told him when he was younger. Sometimes, Ben shares these stories with Saoirse, more to frighten her than encourage her, but these legends of Ireland seem to resonate with Saoirse even more meaningfully than they do Ben.

Song of the Sea has a lot in common with the earlier film by Tomm Moore, The Secret of Kells. Both are rich with the folklore of Ireland, both are highlighted by beautiful artwork and music, and both reach into the sensitivities of their young audiences, touching on cultural identity and familial loss. Maybe it doesn’t take as much courage as I imagine for a storyteller to wriggle into those spaces where children are vulnerable, but I find it admirable when he or she executes it in non-gratuitous, effective ways. The sentiments are so genuine that I would caution parents to screen this film first before deciding whether their children are emotionally equipped to handle its themes.

The story, art, and larger themes are perhaps just a click or two below The Secret of Kells, but Song of the Sea spends more time than its predecessor on character development, offering a slightly more satisfying experience. This may be nitpicking, though, because both are lovely to look at, although this film is a lot cutesier, which may be an improvement or not.

I like it.

7/10 (IMDb rating)
73/100 (Criticker rating)
Song of the Sea (2014)

New York, I Love You (2008)

New York, I Love You (2008)
Hayden Christensen, Andy Garcia, Rachel Bilson, Natalie Portman, Irrfan Khan, Orlando Bloom, Christina Ricci, Maggie Q, Ethan Hawke, Chris Cooper, Robin Wright, Anton Yelchin, James Caan, Olivia Thirlby, Blake Lively, Bradley Cooper, Drea de Matteo, Julie Christie, John Hurt, Shia LaBeouf, Burt Young, Shu Qi, and a few others. Directed by Jiang Wen, Mira Nair, Shunji Iwai, Yvan Attal, Brett Ratner, Allen Hughes, Shekhar Kapur, Natalie Portman, Fatih Akin, and Joshua Marston.

New York, I Love You is the second (of three, so far) in the Cities of Love series, preceded memorably by Paris, je t’aime and succeeded forgettably by Rio, I Love You. It is a good place for it in the chronological order, for if the series ends now, it will be the little downward-pointing bridge between the first and third films, the down staircase in the devolution of a great idea.

The concept of several short films by different directors, featuring different actors, with the loosely unifying theme of love is translocated to another great city that celebrates and destroys love in all it shapes and colors: New York, where there is a broken heart for every light, and all that. Although I’m about as personally knowledgeable about the Big Apple as I am the City of Lights, because I’m an American and I’ve seen a movie or two, I feel qualified to say that the stories in the first film seem to have emerged from the Paris’s many alleys and stages, while the stories in this second installment could have taken place in almost any city in the country.

This is a huge disappointment that could have been allayed by vignettes that deliver the promised goods. And they give it a good shot. Consider:
  • A Hasidic jeweler (Natalie Portman) and an Indian diamond merchant exchange barbs about the product they’re about to buy and sell, a give-and-take that leads to complaints about their respective religions and an unspoken sympathy.
  • A film composer (Orlando Bloom) works against a deadline, but the film’s director demands he read Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment for inspiration before he puts the music together. He complains to the director’s assistant (Christina Ricci), who offers support, and he is too stressed to receive it as anything more than the gesture of a sympathetic co-worker.
  • Ethan Hawke, playing whatever you’d call the opposite of against type, puts moves on a beautiful Maggie Q, who is unimpressed while Hawke explains what he would do to rock her world.
  • Robin Wright steps out of the restaurant where she’s dining with her husband. She bums a cigarette from Chris Cooper, standing on the sidewalk outside. She complains about all the ways marriage has become a disappointment, comparing it with the excitement of one-night stands.

There’s a lot of potential here, and while the majority of the eleven short films is fairly satisfying, none inspires a real wow, none really hits you in the gut in the manner of several chapters in Paris, je t’aime. A few, like the Hasidic jeweler scene and a Fatih Akin scene involving an aging painter and a Chinese herbalist, deliver some nice, romantic arrows to the heart, but most don’t swing hard enough for the fences, eliciting more of a “that’s nice” than a “holy moly.”

I don’t fault the actors, most of whom find some really good notes in their short times on screen. I especially like Robin Wright, Chris Cooper, and Julie Christie as an aging actress visiting an old hotel whose young bellboy (Shia LaBeouf) may have a crush on her, ‘though it would be tough to find a bad performance anywhere in this. Maybe Hayden Christensen and maybe Orlando Bloom are less than inspiring, but nobody sucks.

It’s unlikely anyone will hate this film, but not many will love it, the way they might love Paris, je t’aime. That’s a lot more than can be said for the film that follows, so it may be worth a look. I’ve spent far worse Tuesday evenings, like the Tuesday evening I watched Rio, I Love You.

6/10 (IMDb rating)
68/100 (Criticker rating)
New York, I Love You (2008)

Brooklyn (2015)

jeudi 10 novembre 2016

Brooklyn (2015)
Saoirse Ronan, Emory Cohen, Domhnall Gleeson, Jim Broadbent, Julie Walters. Written by Nick Hornby (based on the novel by Colm Tóibín). Directed by John Crowley.

At the height of the #OscarsSoWhite controversy surrounding the Academy Awards of 2015, Best Picture nominee Brooklyn was held up as an example of the enormous disconnect between the Academy and regular movie audiences. It’s a white, European-accented story set more than half a century ago when people still arrived on America’s shores in boats, at Ellis Island. There is a systemic problem that’s a large part of the disconnect, and I am sensitive to it, but Brooklyn is an unfair symbol of the cause, because although it’s exactly the kind of movie that always gets nominated by the Academy but largely ignored by the public, it’s a darn good picture worthy of its critical laurels, and I wish protestors had picked on something else.

It’s a very simple plot: Ellis Lacey has nothing in Ireland her home, so she comes to America to seek a life for herself. A Catholic priest arranges a department-store job and night-school tuition, and we follow our young immigrant through a newcomer’s travails as she fights through alienation, loneliness, and homesickness until of course she meets a guy.

The guy is charming and ambitious, rough around a few edges but from a loving Italian family, and they fall in love. Just as they begin to make plans together, Ellis has to return home, promising she’ll be back in a month’s time. But the Ellis who returns to Ireland is not the Ellis who left, and of course she meets a guy.

It’s a story that’s been told a hundred times, but it never gets old, because it’s really the story of our nation, part of our cultural identity many seem to have forgotten, one that continues to be written by people with darker skin, slanted eyes, or manners of dress that label them on sight as coming from afar. Ellis’s tale is specifically hers, and the movie succeeds because she’s a likeable character and because the details of her transition are related poetically by the actors, writer, and director. There is nothing special or noteworthy about this character’s immigration experience, and that seems to be film’s point. My mother, your grandfather, our neighbors: they’ve got stories like this too, and they are all beautiful, and they will all make us cry if we sit still and hear them.

It is a lovely, convicting movie that deserves to be more than to be coopted as a hashtag. It deserves to be symbolic of something stronger and more inspiring.

8/10 (IMDb rating)
86/100 (Criticker rating)
Brooklyn (2015)

old bathtub

mercredi 9 novembre 2016

Any old time plumbers out there?????
My old tub, house made in the 60's, needs more support under it.
I'm thinking they put wood blocks to prop it up when installed.
It looks like the front panel can be taken off.
I attached two pictures of the tub.
Am I correct????

Attached Images
File Type: jpg tub001.jpg (157 Bytes)
File Type: jpg tub002.jpg (157 Bytes)
old bathtub

2016 General Election Day

mardi 8 novembre 2016

November 8, 2016 (today) is General Election Day.

This thread is about the process of voting in the General Election and your experiences in casting your ballot. If you already cast your ballot before today you can relate your experience here as well.
2016 General Election Day

Life, Above All (2010)

vendredi 4 novembre 2016

Life, Above All (2010)
Khomotso Manyaka, Keaobaka Makanyane, Harriet Lenabe, Lerato Myelase. Directed by Oliver Schmitz. Northern Sotho, with English subtitles.

Oliver Schmitz directed one of my favorite chapters in Paris, je t’aime, drawing a jagged line of rising and falling emotion across a poetic handful of minutes. There are sections of that film I like more, but none of them combines story with feeling, while also teetering on the head of a pin the way the Schmitz vignette does. I had to see something else from him, and Life, Above All was a 2011 finalist for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar, so it seemed like a good place to start.

Set in South Africa, it offers the story of Chanda, a twelve-year-old girl whose mother is so grieved over the death of Chanda’s sister that she sends Chanda to pick out the infant-sized coffin. The baby’s father is Chanda’s stepfather, and he is so messed up on alcohol that his absence from the household while spending all his time with another woman in town would be a blessing if it didn’t shame his wife so publicly.

The town is not exactly affluent, but neither is it the kind of place where American charities send assistance. People live in houses with electricity, some of them with telephone landlines and modern appliances. Yet its residents seem to share a deliberate lack of sophistication about certain symptoms of illness, and when anyone falls mysteriously ill, nobody says the word, but everyone’s thinking it. Out of sheer necessity, Chanda takes responsibility for keeping her mother and siblings on their feet.

There are whispers about her best friend, who is poorer and without supportive parents, who may resort to hanging around at the truck stop in order to pay for necessities, but Chanda swears loyalty to her friend, adding to her self-appointed duties a tenacious defense against the gossip.

This story of bravery is kind of a tough sell, and the film works admirably to be convincing. Still, a small bit of my disbelief refused to be suspended. I mostly did cave in, because there’s a bit more to it than just others being beneficiaries of this uncommon bravery. The film takes us to something I really do want to believe in—that one person’s righteousness has the power not merely to save some, but to transform others.

My inability to go all in with this film means it doesn’t have quite the emotional payoff I want, and I can’t quite explain it. Maybe I’ve seen it before, or maybe I’m a grouch, or maybe I need the director to convince me that this girl is real, perhaps by telling me more about her. There is one really nice scene where she is invited to a party, and she gets to be the young schoolgirl she’s supposed to be. I need more of this. I do love the ending of this picture; I just don’t completely love the stuff that leads up to it.

7/10 (IMDb rating)
70/100 (Criticker rating)
Life, Above All (2010)