Stonehenge

National Geographic had a new documentary last week called “Stonehenge Decoded”, a curious title since that was the name of a book published over 40 years ago. One that I read at the time. Stonehenge has always been of interest to me so I watched the show eagerly. An archeologist has a new theory that Stonehenge was a monument to the ancestors and therefore celebrated death, while Woodhenge and the nearby Durington Walls celebrated life. Perhaps. It seemed like another elaborate explanation based on very little evidence or one explanation out of thousands that could be constructed from the puzzle pieces found so far.

Anyway, it made me think of when we were there. It was August 5th, 1971. Lance wasn’t 2 years old yet. We had the run of the place. I don’t think you can walk into the monument itself anymore. Here is our day at the site.

Karen and one of the trilothons
To give you a sense of scale, here is Karen standing by one of the trilothons.

Thorpe family at Stonehenge
This shows we were actually there.

Lance on the Alter Stone
Lance on the Alter Stone, also in the picture are Karen and Judy Thorpe, Michael Bellamy, and Paddy Thorpe

You can see the indentations on the top of the stone. These were filled with stagnant water. Lance had to stamp his foot in them and it stunk for a long, long time.

Midsummer Sunrise View
From this point you would see the midsummer sun rise directly over the heelstone.

Lance at Stonehenge
Lance at Stonehenge

Karen and Butch at the Heelstone
The Heelstone is also bigger than you think.

Posted in Autobiography | 6 Comments

Last Gourmet Club Dinner of the Year

After a little delay because of remodeling, we finally had our last gourmet club dinner of the year. This time it was at John and Sue Hawns.

The Menu

Menu Cover

Menu

The Presentation

Scallops and Lamb Holland America Line Signature Salad

Broiled Salmon with Curried Eggplant Chutney, Roasted Asparagus with Shitake Mushrooms, Rice with Roasted Pumpkin Seed and Pine Nuts

Chilled Lemon-Wine Mousse with Raspberries

See you next year!

Posted in Gourmet Club | 2 Comments

Movie Reviews – May 2008

Here is what we saw:

Title Made Saw Rating
Underdog 2007 5/3/08 3
In the Valley of Elah 2007 5/5/08 3
Babel 2006 5/8/08 3
In the Name of the King 2007 5/9/08 2
The Last Mimzy 2007 5/11/08 3
Erik the Viking 1989 5/14/08 2
Ironman 2008 5/16/08 4
Inside Man 2006 5/19/08 3
Deja Vu 2006 5/20/08 3
Lord of War 2005 5/28/08 2
Transformers 2007 5/29/08 2
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull 2008 5/31/08 3

Here are my reviews:

Underdog

Wally Cox, who was the voice of Underdog in the old cartoon series, was always someone I liked, even back to Mr. Peepers days. I can’t say that I remember one thing about that show or even Underdog for that matter, but I have a warm and fuzzy feeling about both of them. The interesting part about this movie was it wasn’t a cartoon like the original, but was live-action. Underdog was a beagle who was trapped in Simon Bar Sinister’s illegal, biological testing program. Simon injected him with some concoction and the dog developed superpowers he didn’t know that he had. He escaped and was adopted by a boy who just happened to be the son of the good lab assistant. It looked like he was going to be able to lead a normal life finally. At first he was fairly inept at using his superpowers, but as time went on he got better and better. Simon and his evil assistant tried to get Underdog back time and again but failed. Eventually they suckered him into a trap and took the superpowers away. Simon then injected himself with superpowers of his own and also gave the serum to three big mean dogs. The boy saved the day by restoring underdog’s powers and they were set for the final showdown. Underdog wins of course and gets Sweet Polly Purebred, the main squeeze of the movie. This movie was not a serious piece of work but it was fun to watch. I liked it.

Netflix – 3 stars

In the Valley of Elah

A soldier, home from Iraq, dies under it mysterious circumstances and his father, a retired military investigator, sets out to find out what happened. The police are investigating but when they discover that the body is actually on military land the Army takes over. The father discovers that the murder actually occurred on the shoulder of the road that runs by a military base and convinces the local police that they have to take the case back. Especially since the Army does not seem particularly interested in following up. The soldier has been stabbed, dismembered, and burnt. He is only just barely identifiable, presumably by DNA evidence. The way the investigation proceeds is the main action in this movie. In the end, the crime turns out to be fairly senseless, sort of like most murders I guess. The reference to the Valley of Elah has practically nothing to do with this movie. It is a reference to the place where David and Goliath did battle and applies to some problems the son of the police detective is having. The ending is sad but all in all, this is a pretty good movie
Netflix – 3 stars

Babel

This movie consists of four storylines that are more or less interconnected. The first tale is about a poor Moroccan tribesmen who buys a rifle from his friend so his sons can shoot the coyotes that are attacking his sheep. The second story is about a man and his wife who are on a sightseeing tour in Morocco. The third is about the couple’s nanny back home in San Diego who is taking care of the couple’s two children. And the fourth story is about the deaf-mute daughter of a Japanese businessman who had been on Safari in Morocco once and who gave his rifle to his Moroccan guide. The sons of the Moroccan tribesman who bought the rifle from the guide are testing it out while they are tending goats and aim at a tour bus that’s driving down the highway. The bullet hits the wife, one of the vacationing American tourists, putting her life in mortal danger and delaying the couple’ s departure. They tell the nanny she has to stay with the kids. She doesn’t want to miss her son’s wedding so she decides to take the kids with her to Mexico. Over in Japan the daughter of the businessman is having coming of age problems, compounded by being a deaf-mute. She starts to exhibit some self destructive behavior in order to get attention from normal “hearing” people. All four storylines are intertwined and are developed a little at a time, and as you can probably guess, each is fraught with peril. I found the movie dissatisfying but I do have to say it was well done. I give this one a low three.

Netflix – 3 stars

In the Name of the King

This movie is a fantasy adventure based on the video game Dungeon Siege. Farmer, a man who lives in a small village but who can somehow fight with the best of them is called to action when his town is attacked by the evil and brutish Krug. In the process his son is killed and his wife is kidnapped. He sets out to rescue her and along the way he more or less joins forces with the King’ s men. The evil sorcerer is in cahoots with the Kings nephew. They make off with two of the Kings legions and are determined to overthrow the King and put themselves in power. When the legions find out what’s going on they declare that they are loyal to the King, they desert the evil nephew, and start doing battle against the Krug. There is lots of daring-do and swordplay here with a climactic final battle and the desperate mission by our hero and his pals into the heart of the wicked sorcerer’s lair. Farmer turns out to be the king’s long-lost son. He rescues his wife. And by the end becomes the King after winning the battle where the old king is mortally wounded. Despite the fact that there are many big stars in this movie, this film is a real clunker.

Netflix – 2 stars

The Last Mimzy

A family goes to their beach house for a little vacation and while there, the children discover an intricate box on the beach. They bring it home and when it opens the boy discovers a crystalline object that has shifting triangular patterns in it. Later, it opens for the girl and she finds a stuffed rabbit that can talk to her. It tells her it’s name is Mimzy. Each of the children starts to develop amazing abilities. The boy becomes an engineering genius. The girl can levitate objects. And they both can communicate with each other by telepathy. These abilities are toward some purpose, but as things develop you are not sure whether these are benevolent or harmful. As they noticed the changes in the kids, their parents and teacher become more and more concerned. When the boy inadvertently causes a power outage the Department of Homeland Security eventually traces the problem to the kids’ house. They are not amused. The family is held in isolation but using their newfound skills, the kids escape and head for the beach house where some of the objects from the box are still around. They discover they have to send Mimzy back to where she came from. And everyone is desperately trying to stop her because they are scared of what will happen. Of course, only good can come of it. I’ll leave you to watch the movie to find out what it’s all about.

Rachel DVD – 3 stars

Erik the Viking

Erik the Viking is a Monty Python movie made in 1989. Erik is tired of living in the age of Ragnarok and longs for the sun. He sets out across the western sea to find the horn of resounding. On it he can blow three notes; the first to take him to Valhalla, the second to awaken the gods, and the third to bring him home again. He does all these things but the plot really doesn’t exist to tell a story, it’s merely there to provide a framework to hang all the Monty Python type jokes on. There are some pretty funny lines and site gags, unfortunately not quite enough.

Netflix – 2 stars

Ironman

Tony Stark is a brilliant inventor and the heir to a weapons industry empire. While demonstrating his latest invention, a deadly missile, he is taken captive by Afghani rebels and forced to re-create that weapon for them. Locked in a cave with a doctor who is also being held captive, instead of making the missile, he fashions a suit of iron from leftover parts, wrecks havoc, and escapes. The doctor has taught him a valuable lesson about wasting his life and on his return to civilization, he re-creates the suit that saved his life, but with access to all his technology, improves upon it. Once clad in this high-tech outfit he starts saving the day. For the exciting conclusion he is betrayed and challenged by his once close friend. This movie is so darned fun you can hardly stand it. I thought Karen would think it was so-so, but she liked it as much as me.

Theater – 4 stars

Inside Man

A semi-disgraced detective is put in charge of a hostage negotiation team. A gang of robbers has taken over a bank and is holding about 50 hostages. They make a lot of demands but they don’t seem to be going anywhere. As the movie progresses we realize that they have a different agenda than robbing the bank. Another “negotiator” appears and she too has an agenda of her own. When all is said and done the hostages walk out of the bank and the robbers seem to disappear into thin air. How they accomplished whatever it is that they did accomplish is a clever twist at the end of the movie.

Netflix – 3 stars

Deja Vu

An ATF agent is called in to help the investigation of a senseless bombing of a ferry full of sailors that are on leave. Invited to join an exclusive team that is part of the investigation he soon discovers that they possess a technology beyond anything he had imagined. If you can suspend your disbelief about the preposterous plot, the midstream plot redefinition, and the ending, you will have a good time here. Let’s just say this movie deals with the manipulation of time, and the inevitable attempt to travel therein. One of the funnest factoids about this movie is that James Caviezel who plays the villain also played the son in “Frequency” from 2000. Both of these involve playing with time.

Netflix – 3 stars

Lord of War

A struggling Russian immigrant in the Little Odessa District of New York decides that he wants a life as an international arms dealer. He tries to get a job with an established merchant but is told he is nothing but an amateur. He decides to go into business for himself and has a certain amount of luck. Over the years he becomes one of the world’s top contenders. Interpol is after him and he has a don’t ask/don’t tell relationship with his wife about what he does for a living. Eventually she suspects what he’s doing and things start to break down. It’s not like this is a bad movie. There are moments of humor but it’s not a comedy. Mostly it just drags and is dreary. Just when you think there is going to be a moral, he keeps on keeping on.

Netflix – 2 stars

Transformers

A father buys his son a ramshackle old Camaro which turns out to be a Transformer. The Transformers, it would seem, are on earth to recover the cube or spark of life or something like that. And of course there are two sorts, good and evil. The Camaro whose name is Bumblebee is one of the good ones as it is Optimus Prime, their leader. On the other side we have the evil Megatron. They have various high-tech battles throughout the movie and eventually they find the cube which plays a major part in the final showdown. I can’t say I really expected too much from this movie being based on a bunch of kids’ toys. And it was probably better than I expected. But unlike the kids toys where you can recognize the parts of the car or truck or boat or what ever, the Transformers in this movie transformed completely. The only thing recognizable about the shape they changed from was the color scheme. It was very hard to make sense of the transformation and the movie makers saw to it that the action was so fast you couldn’t get a good look at anything. That was really frustrating.

Netflix – 2 stars

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

This is the latest adventure in the Indiana Jones saga. He’s back after a 20 year absence and does look 20 years older, but he is still buff and ready to go. The movie starts with him being hounded by FBI agents and he runs into a boy who tells Jones his mother is in trouble and has sent for Jones to save the day. But before he can go, he is kidnapped by Russian agents and taken to Area 51 to raid a warehouse of who knows what treasures. This one apparently being an alien. Somehow he survives an atomic explosion inside a refrigerator. He makes his way to Peru and then the Amazon taking the boy along with him. They find a mysterious crystal skull. It turns out the skull has been stolen from a ruin and is actually the real skull of an alien. The movie brings together all the signature devices of an Indiana Jones movie, ancient monuments that still function to threaten intruders after thousands of years, treasures, and in this case even aliens from another dimension. All in all, it’s the same old Indiana Jones fun and despite how ridiculous the whole business is, you can’t help but like it.

Netflix – 3 stars

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Doppelgänger

When we were in Racine last weekend visiting Karen’s sister Sue, I gasped when I saw this ad for a Toyota dealership. I wasn’t the only one. At least two others gasped too. As you see below, the ad featured a friendly mechanic that has an uncanny resemblence to you know who. Judge for yourself in these two different approaches.

Doppelganger 1

Doppelganger 2

Posted in Daily life | 5 Comments

An Art Project for Rachel and Grandpa Butch

A couple of months ago Rachel stayed over on a Thursday. Usually she stays on the weekend so this was something special. It also happened to be free day at the Museum of Art. We thought we would take a look and of all the artwork displayed there, the one that impressed her the most was a small scale, multimedia mural by Dick Pinney called “Where Have You Been, It’s Almost Dark?” Here is what it looked like…

Where Have You Been, It's Almost Dark

Here is the part that Rachel said was her favorite detail…

Detail from Where Have You Been, It's Almost Dark

This last weekend Rachel stayed again. I asked her if she would like to undertake an art project. I had done a little research and I had discovered that there are at least a dozen Dick Pinney murals in the Cedar Rapids area. I wondered if she would like to go and visit each of them, take a picture, and put together a little scrapbook. She said she would so the first place we visited after seeing the one at the Art Museum was at the Eastern Iowa Airport. It was completed about 1991 and was called Flight Aviation in Cedar Rapids. Pam, at the airport, told me that piece of art cost $10,000 in its day. Here’s a look at this one.

Rachel and the Airport Mural

And here are a couple of closer views.

Airport Mural Close Up

In the weeks to come we will visit more of his artworks and keep you posted here.

Posted in Sculpture | 4 Comments

Waterbed Follow Up

So, you ask, “Whatever happened about that leaky waterbed?” It took us a while to figure out what we were going to do. But in the end we decided to go with a regular bed. We just couldn’t face having to drain and fill the waterbed time after time. After we emptied the waterbed, we disassembled the frame, pedestal, and base. The carpeting was soaked and it had been a few days since the leak and we just didn’t think we could get the water cleaned out of the carpet. I took our frame down to the basement, the only place where we had enough room to lay it out, and started to tear up the carpeting. While the carpeting was soggy and nasty, the floor underneath had not sustained any damage. In fact, there was more deterioration under the windows where condensation had dripped down and soaked into the sub flooring over the years. We decided we would like to have a hardwood floor instead of more carpeting and we thought we would try to do it as a home improvement project on our own.

We looked at Menard’s, Home Depot, and Lowe’s and decided we’d like a dark wood the best. The thought of having a floating floor appealed to us because it was the easiest to lay down. There are three sorts; solid hardwood, engineered, and laminate. The engineered flooring is like plywood there are several layers of cross grained woods with a hardwood layer on top. The only problem with that was we couldn’t get interlocking tongue and groove which is necessary for the floating floor. It only had a regular tongue and groove and that meant we would have to nail it down and a flooring gun for my compressor would cost a couple of hundred dollars. The same was true with a solid hardwood floor. We opted to go with the interlocking tongue and groove but we could only get that in laminate. The cost of all three options was about the same so it didn’t really bother us.

We had a little problem putting it in at first because the interlocking part wasn’t working the way it should have and their suggested procedure for laying the floor down just wasn’t working. After a while we did figure out how to make it work right and once that happened, progress was fairly rapid. Here’s how the room looked when we were done.

New Laminate Floor

Now we had the irksome task of researching new beds. If we stuck with the waterbed we were going to have to buy a new liner, heater, and mattress. This would be a fairly expensive proposition. Heaters are usually over $100, a liner is 20 or $30, and the mattress itself would be about 65 or $70. But as I said earlier we weren’t all that excited about dealing with the leaks of a waterbed any longer. We went to a couple of stores to look at regular mattresses and got a severe case of sticker shock. We saw some mattresses that cost over $2000. They have three levels these days; firm, plush, and pillow top. Pillow top is the softest, but seemed fairly hard to someone who had been sleeping on a waterbed for the last 35 years. We decided to go with the pillow top anyway. In the old days you would buy a mattress and box springs. Nowadays, there really are no box springs. That part is merely a reinforced box to raise the mattress. The springs are now in the mattress and whatever padding the mattress has is on top of those springs. Since “box springs” are nothing more than a platform, we decided to use the pedestal and base from the waterbed for the platform, at least for the time being. Its shape does not exactly match the mattress but is fairly close and would do for the moment. We will eventually buy a couple of new pieces of plywood and some additional boards for the pedestal and trim the outside with a beautiful strip of hardwood. We will probably get figured White Oak or Red Oak since that’s what the other wooden things in our bedroom are.

Furnishings Restored

New Regular Bed

So after a month of sleeping in temporary quarters, we were finally back in our own bedroom and slowly, little by little, we are adapting to our new bed.

Posted in Daily life | 7 Comments

Tattoos, Weirdos, and Sign Painting – the Beginnings of a Graphic Arts Career

My father, Raymond Miller Thorpe, had beautiful handwriting. I first noticed it when I was in junior high. He was also very good at writing in Old English script. That interested me and I asked him to show me how he did it. He dug out an old drafting textbook from his college days that had the Old English alphabet laid out. It also had some tips about directions to do brushstrokes or penstrokes as it were, and the like. I practiced and practiced and eventually got fairly good at writing in Old English myself. In those days junior high students often wrote on the covers of their notebooks and I did the same. Many things that I wrote were done in Old English of course. At the same time many teachers required that the papers we handed in were written in ink. The Schaefer pen company had a line of inexpensive fountain pens. Instead of having to lug around a glass bottle of ink, they had devised a plastic cartridge that you could put into the barrel of the pen and when you screwed in the nib, a projection pierced the cartridge and allowed the ink to flow. Usually these pens included a couple of spare cartridges when you bought them, blue or black ink were the normal choices. But I discovered that if you went to the stationery store, Sandford’s in my case, they had any number of other colors of ink available in the cartridges. My two favorites were red and peacock blue. Interestingly, the peacock blue looked just like the ink of a tattoo when you drew on the back of your hand.

Schaefer Cartridge Pens

So with four colors of ink available to me I was able to start a budding career as a tattoo artist. I used to charge a penny a letter for Old English names that I drew on the backs of people’s hands. One customer, Marion Himes, used to have me letter his girlfriend’s name on his hand every lunch hour. These tattoos gave me enough spending money to buy a couple of treats afterschool. I’ll say more about that in a future blog.

Many junior high boys built models. Sometimes it was a boat or something, but usually it was a model car. It was around this time that Ed “Big Daddy” Roth came up with his first custom hot rods. We had never seen anything like them before. He was also selling T-shirts and sweatshirts that had outrageous illustrations on the front or back. Usually they were some kind of hot rod with the monster driving it. They had huge slicks, a 4 foot gearshift, and the front end was several feet off the ground.

One of Ed

I immediately started to imitate them, creating individualized pictures for the people I drew them for. A completed sweatshirt might bring in four or five dollars, a respectable amount in those days. Especially for teenager. I also did any number of sweatshirts that had British motifs. A favourite was the lion and unicorn crest, but I also did the RAF badge for Ray Scuffham and later, the logo for Watney’s Brown Ale. I wish I had some copies of those drawings now. If any of you readers have one tucked away somewhere, please let me know.

One summer, probably around 1965, my grandparents visited from England. Mom and Dad wanted to take them around and show them some of the local sites so they had me stay with my friend Bob Lohr in Des Moines for a week or so. Bob worked at a car wash along with another very good friend of mine, George Vignovich. I just hung around while they were working. At the time George had a fairly hot car. I drew pictures of it and the manager of the carwash saw me. He asked if I could paint signs. I told them I had never done it but that I was good at lettering. He bought me a bunch of brushes and paint and the rest of that week I painted signs for him. I asked George and Kay to send me a copy of a Christmas card I sent to them many years ago hoping it was one of the wierdos I used to do. But it was a side view of George’s car, and not the front on view I was hoping for.

Posted in Autobiography | 5 Comments

Movie Reviews – April 2008

Here is what we saw:

Title Made Saw Rating
The Darjeeling Limited 2007 4/2/08 4
Kon Tiki 1950 4/3/08 3
L4yer Cake 2004 4/6/08 3
Tales of Rat Fink 2006 4/7/08 3
The Assassination of Jesse James 2007 4/9/08 3
One Night with the King 2006 4/11/08 3
The Seeker: The Dark is Rising 2007 4/12/08 3
An Inconvenient Truth 2006 4/24/08 3
Memoirs of a Geisha 2006 4/25/08 3
The Nativity Story 2006 4/30/08 3

Here are my reviews:

The Darjeeling Limited

Three excentric, estranged brothers meet up and travel across India on a train called the Darjeeling Limited. They are on a quest, unrevealed at first, and hope the journey will heal old wounds and rivalries. Owen Wilson is the oldest brother and except for a few flashbacks, acts through the entire movie with his face all done up in bandages. Shot in India, you just don’t see movies like this. It is so quirky and strange that you can’t help but love it. Be sure to watch the bonus materials about the making of the movie.
Netflix – 4 stars

Kon Tiki

In the late 1940’s Thor Heyerdahl theorized that Polynesia was settled by Indians from South America, not from eastern Asia. He was generally ridiculed at the time. Recent DNA analysis has proven him wrong, but almost 60 years ago none of those tools existed. The chief argument was that primative peoples couldn’t make long ocean voyages with the unsophisticated watercraft available to them. Heyerdahl knew that the Indians on the west coast of South America had balsa rafts. There were historical accounts. He built one and called it Kon Tiki. Then he sailed it from Peru to the west almost 4300 miles and arrived at Raroia 101 days later. At the very least, he proved it could have been done in ancient times. This movie documents that voyage. The film won an Oscar for best documentary in 1951. I first became familiar with Thor Heyerdahl with his book Aku Aku about Easter Island and the gigantic stone statues there. Later, we got a bunch of books from my uncle when he moved to Oregon and the Kon Tiki book was among them. I read it eagerly. Still later, he undertook the Ra Expeditions and I followed them with interest too. Personally, I think that most modern people underestimate the capabilities of those ancient peoples and even if Polynesia wasn’t settled by South American Indians, I think there is still a possibility that there was some interaction.
Netflix – 3 stars

L4yer Cake

Lance recommended this movie to me when we were talking about Snatch and Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels. An unassuming drug trafficker who is just ready to retire gets drawn in to a couple of activities that he wants no part of. His “boss” wants him to find the daughter of a friend who has run off from a drug rehab program. Also, there is a stolen shipment of ecstasy floating around and his boss wants him to broker the deal. Things are not all what they seem. The boss’s friend doesn’t really want his daughter found, especially by our hero’s boss. And the ecstasy was stolen from some extremists so anyone involved with it is in danger of being killed. Like a layer cake, there are lots of levels and plot twists to this movie. Again, on Lance’s recommendation, you should watch it with the English subtitles on. A high 3.
Netflix – 3 stars

Tales of Rat Fink

This film documents the career of 60s icon Ed “Big Daddy” Roth. Roth was an innovator and according to the film was the one who originated flames on hot rods, pictures on T-shirts, Fiberglas custom cars, and of course Rat Fink. The movie was put together in a cheesy way but there can’t have been too many images of Roth made on high quality movie footage. It is an assemblage of animated stills, home movies, animation, and some modern live-action. John Goodman provided the voice for Big Daddy Roth and a variety of other stars did the voices of various hot rods that Roth had an effect on. Big daddy was kind of an idol of mine and despite how amateurishly this film was done, it was a delight to watch.
Netflix – 3 stars

The Assassination of Jesse James

Jesse James and his band of outlaws robbed stagecoaches, trains, and banks. They showed one train robbery, but other than that, the show was about the personal interactions of the members of his gang. Of particular interest, of course, were the dealings he had with Robert Ford. Ford finally kills James about two thirds of the way through the movie and is himself killed at the very end. This movie was a very somber affair and it was another one that we had to turn on the English subtitles to be able to understand. Casey Affleck again mumbles his way through an entire movie. The others just talked with plain old, hard to understand Southern accents. Many scenes were shot in barren winter landscapes. Even when the sun was shining you had the feeling that everything was bleak. All through this movie a person got hints of the TV drama Deadwood, little bits of music, et cetera. If it didn’t show such an interesting time in history, I might have rated this movie a little lower.
Netflix – 3 stars

One Night with the King

This movie told the biblical story of Esther who lived in Persia. She was an orphan and lived with her uncle who was a scribe at the palace. Famed for her beauty she is selected from all the land to become the queen of the Emperor. The King’s adviser believes that all Jews must be eliminated and their property seized. At great personal risk Esther convinces the king not to do that. I have to admit that I’m not really right up there with my Bible stories. So I got out the trusty old King James and had a quick read. It’s only about six pages. They got all the major points right but did a lot of fiddling with the back story in the movie. They were able to come up with a reason why the adviser hated Jews so much but the Bible itself doesn’t really say anything about that. All in all it was an interesting tale.
Netflix – 3 stars

The Seeker: The Dark is Rising

The youngest of six brothers finds himself in danger. He is being pursued by a nasty, somewhat medieval, character on horseback and has no idea why he’s being chased. The people at the local manor house fill him in. He is the seventh son of the seventh son and a paladin for good. But when he says, “Hey, I’m only the sixth son,” they tell that he had an older twin brother who was born just minutes before him and disappeared when he was a baby. He is given a quest to retrieve six objects that can be hidden anywhere in time, and is also given the capability of traveling there. He messes around for a while and doesn’t get the objects as quickly as he could because, don’t you know, that there is a deadline that all of these objects must be collected by. If he doesn’t succeed the dark character who is pursuing him will have an an unlimited power for evil. Of course, he gets the next-to-last one with seconds to spare and the final object is himself. With his success he is able to find and return his lost brother. Normally I like this kind of the movie and this one had good actors in it, but something was just missing. It didn’t seem very well organized. Low three.
Netflix – 3 stars

An Inconvenient Truth

This movie was Al Gore’s slideshow. He uses a high-tech audiovisual lecture to make his point about global warming. Between segments of the lecture he spends a little time reminiscing and reflecting on what he is teaching you. He makes an impressive case and we wonder if everyone will wake up soon enough.
Netflix – 3 stars

Memoirs of a Geisha

This movie is set just before World War II. It starts with two sisters being sold to geisha houses in prewar Japan. Our heroine is pretty but her sister is a little plain. She is accepted at the best geisha house but her sister gets sent along to the next one. It is a long time before they see one another again. They plan to escape but circumstances conspire against them and only the sister gets away. Our sister has been receiving geisha training but as a punishment for trying to escape they turn her into a slave. While doing her duties she runs into a man who treats her kindly and she falls in love with him. She is only about 12 at the time, but hopes that one day she can be with him. Another famous geisha from a different house sees the girl and recognizes her potential. She makes a wager with the woman who owns the geisha house that if the girl can earn back her debt within six months of becoming a journeyman geisha, she will have her freedom. She offers to pay all expenses up to that point. Also in the plot are her friend and the evil geisha superstar of the house who has it in for the girl. She learns her lessons well and is granted her freedom and inherits the geisha house into the bargain. World War II comes and puts an end to just about everything. The girls have to go into the country to be safe and at the end of the war, she is called upon once again to be a geisha and to influence the American general of the occupying forces. This was a pretty good movie. The look of it was just great. You had the feeling that this is exactly what prewar Japan looked like.
Netflix – 3 stars

The Nativity Story

This is the second biblical movie this month. It tells the story of Jesus’s birth of coarse. Most people are familiar with the story line. Two things made the movie a little more interesting than would normally have been the case. One, they deal with Mary’s unwed pregnancy which puts her in jeopardy to some degree. Maybe I didn’t clue into it when I first heard the story as a child. I must say I have not reviewed it in depth since I’ve been an adult. And second, the Magi, or as I like to call them, the three wise guys, interacting with one another is fairly funny. Does anyone know what Joseph, Mary and Jesus did when they were in Egypt?
Netflix – 3 stars

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Tree Limb Follow-up

You may remember last December I related a story about one of our tree limbs breaking off and falling onto the roof of our house. It was snowy at the time as you can see in the picture below.

Last Winter's Broken Branch

Because of the danger of slipping and falling or having a heavy tree limb fall right on us, we decided not to try and do anything with the tree limb right then. Today we finally got around to taking care of it. Lance and family came up in the morning and we crawled up on the roof with a chainsaw to start cutting the limbs apart. The biggest limb was too heavy for us to even move at first. But as we cut a bit off here and a bit off there, it became light enough for us to be able to drag it to the center of the roof where it wouldn’t come crashing down onto the porch if it got out of balance. Once we got started it looked like a pretty big job but soon realized that it would not take as long as we thought it would. We tried to cut the pieces a manageable size, then we threw them over the edge of the roof into the drive back to the shop.

The Job Begins

Lance Cuts The Biggest Limb

While we were doing this, Cherise and Rachel went to Target and Karen and Ben had a chance to get Karen’s new Red Stick Dogwood planted.

Karen and Ben Planting the Red Stick Dogwood

We ended the morning having Chick-fil-A for lunch.

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Wood Duck Surprise

The other day when client Melissa Holcomb was visiting my office Karen told us that something strange was going on. There was a duck perched in a tree in our backyard. I had to wrap a few things up on the computer before I could come upstairs and when I arrived Melissa was looking through the binoculars and sure enough, there was a duck just sitting on a limb. They let me have a look. I got my digital camera, put it on full telephoto, and took this picture.

Wood Duck Perched in Tree

Later, after I had uploaded the pictures to the computer, I zoomed in on this picture. I know it’s not too good but it’s the best you can do with a simple “point-and-shoot”.

Sketchy Close Up of the Wood Duck

Then I did a net search and found this picture so you can see what they actually look like. Our view through the binoculars was much better than my telephoto view and this is really what we saw.

Picture of a wood duck from the internet

Just a day in the life when you live in the woods.

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