Month: November 2004

  • The Incredibles

    I’ve got a bit of a headache that’s centered just behind my right eyeball, so I’ll try to keep this brief.

    The Incredibles is Pixar’s crowning theatrical work. Period.

    Okay, I can expound on that just a little bit. For one thing, as was stated elsewhere (though I can’t remember exactly where right this minute), Spider-Man 2 is now officially the year’s second-best superhero movie. This movie’s got the whole meal deal: Drama, folks in funny outfits, several kinds of comedy, meaningful character interaction, clever ruses, action sequences that are both amusing and effective, snappy dialogue… yeah. It just doesn’t miss a beat.

    So I can get this wrapped up with a minimum of muss and fuss, I’ll leave you with some bullet points.

    • The “newsreel” stuff is golden; they capture the feel of an Untouchables-style exposition perfectly.
    • Mr. Incredible isn’t a doof. He’s blind to a few things, but in that painfully-real way that many guys are blind when they find themselves trapped in suburbia.
    • Elastigirl rocketh most mightily. ‘Nuff said.
    • Everything pays off. Watch for things that are given lip service at one point and show up again later. Some of them aren’t so subtle, but a few really are.
    • The kids aren’t wholly unlikeable. You don’t spend too much of the movie rooting for someone to slap sense into them.
    • The poignant moments are actually poignant. Nicely done.
    • Uh, go see this movie. Yeah, that’s it.

    That should cover it, though I’m sure I forgot some things…

  • A Productivity Alert

    In case you’re wondering, I have a perfectly good reason not to have written a single damned word on my NaNovel today. A very, perfectly, truly good reason. Yes.

    You see, yesterday my beloved employers saw fit to replace my cranky, misbehaving old geekphone with, uh, this.

    And, you know, I had to spend some quality time this morning doing very important things to get it up and running to my high standards of usefulness. That’s right!

    So the fact that I installed this on my new phone has nothing to do with my lost NaNoWriMo productivity this morning. I categorically deny any and all reports that I spent three hours playing MIDI files from my old sound files collection and/or that I found on the web in search of spiffy new ringtones. I’m also most assuredly not desperate to find a non-crappy anime MIDI website. Not at all.

    There’s nothing to see (or hear) here, move along now…

  • Sorry, Everybody

    Yeah, these pictures pretty much sum up my feelings, too.

    (Warning: Some profanity to be seen in the link to follow.)

    UPDATE: New URL. Dunno why they dumped the old, easy-to-remember one. Ah well.

    Sorry Everybody

  • A bit of a lull in the output…

    Okay, so I’ve only cranked out a few hundred words per day this past day or two. I can live with that. I’ve got a nice quiet weekend ahead during which I can get in all kinds of writing. My morale is still strong or at least as strong as it’s likely to get until I pass, oh, 40k or so.

    Wish me luck. I just might need it.

    (Sorry, but I’m not posting an excerpt this time. I’ve not written anything nearly clever enough to share in the last two days)

  • How… disappointing.

    To say that I’m not thrilled about how things turned out would be an understatement. We’ve got four more years of smirking shrubbery to look forward to, and Oregon passed a measure that writes discrimination into the state constitution.

    Color me underwhelmed.

    My only real consolation is that very nearly half of everyone who voted is in the same boat I am right now. Misery loves company, wot?

  • The off has been kicked.

    I did it. I wrote a bit more than 1,700 words of my NaNovel. And, yes, I gave up and went with the super-silly concept. Why, you ask? For starters, I have no shame. More importantly, though, the less I have to think about where the story’s going, the easier it’ll be to write.

    On the one hand: Yay!

    On the other hand: Aw, crap. I have to do that 29 more times before month’s end.

    Right. Excerpt time. Keep in mind that a NaNovel is, by definition, unfiltered dreck. (It beats coming up with compelling and interesting posting content from my real life, let me tell you)

    David finally spoke. “Unless you’re going to suggest we use Michael for this, you’re the best option available.”

    Sighing deeply, I felt myself getting cornered. “I wouldn’t suggest that. You know I wouldn’t. Now that you mention it, though, what do you have him doing?”

    “Right now he’s got a small group out doing covert ops training, then we’re going to give him a couple of our aspiring political geniuses to grind the rough edges off of their technique.”

    I nodded my agreement with that. “He’s the best teacher we’ve ever had. Most of what I know about political wrangling came from my time under his wing.”

    “And it keeps him busy while we think of a way to convince him to take a real job around here,” David said.

    “I don’t need to tell you to be careful, I know, but be careful.” Michael McGee was only a couple of years back from the dead, in a manner of speaking, and the grief that had sent him off into the void for his own peculiar kind of suicide wasn’t completely healed. Without having to ask, I knew that Elaine and David were careful not to assign him any students with so much as a passing resemblance to his beloved Jessica.

    Elaine vanished, apparently content to leave David the job of sealing the deal. I didn’t wait for the renewal of his pitch. “You can’t rely on me and mine to fill in all of the empty places around here forever, man. We’ve done our part and then some. If I have to work, fine, but not this. It’s demeaning, for the love of all that’s holy!”

    “Fine. Give me a name. The job’s there, and whether we record it or not, it needs doing. We can’t. Michael can’t. Amy and Xian are assigned elsewhere already, and you know as well as I do that you couldn’t do as good a job as either for that gig. Tara and Lynn are already on assignments of their own. Buster’s handling combat training, Daniel’s still doing damage control on the demon mess, and those are all of the people we have who are competent and trustworthy.”

    “So I’m competent but not trustworthy?” I knew I’d lost by this point, but I couldn’t resist throwing that at him.

    “Very funny, Andrew.”

    Sighing was becoming a habit. “I’ll give you credit, old friend. You at least tried to wheedle me into doing it instead of shoving the cold hard facts down my throat.”

    “I just wish,” he replied, “that you’d given me credit for that to start with so I didn’t have to play hardball.”

    I had no graceful way to reply to that, so I did the smart thing for a change and kept my mouth shut.

    “We’re agreed, then?”

    “We’re agreed. But I’m going to use a puppet simulacrum. There’s no way in Heaven or Hell that I’m actually shapeshifting into the form of a household pet.”

    “Whatever makes you happy, Andrew.”

    “Blow it out your ear, David. Now, how about some more cheesecake?”