June 2025

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15 161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Page Summary

Active Entries

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Wednesday, June 6th, 2012 01:42 pm
I am supposed to be drafting instructions to the Ministry of Magic's' lawyers, but the subject matter is such that I can feel my brain cells dying as I type so I'm taking some time off to mull things over.

I had a very pleasant long weekend, the longer because we Ministry of Magic witches and wizards had an extra day because of the Queen's Birthday and I took mine on Friday. That meant I had a full five days in which to relax.

I met [livejournal.com profile] gloria1 on Sunday morning for breakfast, which was very pleasant as always. Then [livejournal.com profile] julianj2 came over on Monday to watch some films.

We saw something he'd brought first, a film called "Nice Girls Don't Explode", which was very…odd. I don't think I got as much out of it as I would have if I was from the US. I thought some of the jokes were above me.

Then we watched "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy", the version with Gary Oldman as Smiley. Neither [livejournal.com profile] julianj2 nor I could remember the identity of the mole, though I've both read the book and seen the previous TV version. The film requires 100% of your attention; you can't look away for a minute or you'll miss something. Not even the minute in which you're admiring the faultless attention to detail in the interiors, and wondering how we survived the 1970s in those ugly surroundings.

And finally, brains turned to mush by watching Tinker Tailor with exaggerated attention in case we missed a moment of Gary Oldman with a thoughtful look on his face, we watched a film called "Centurion", starring Michael Fassbender as a Roman, Quintus Dias.

There were no thoughtful looks in this. Fassbender was ripped, well worth a leer, but I'm afraid the Romans behaved almost completely unlike any Romans I've ever been told about on Time Team or elsewhere. So bad was that that [livejournal.com profile] julianj2 said we didn't have to watch it if I wasn't enjoying it. But I actually was having a good time ripping it to bits. I particularly loved the way that the women characters, none of whose names I can remember, managed to keep their hair, make up and nails perfect while being (variously) warriors on the range or a weird witch of the woods.

In health news

The tablets I'm taking seem to be having no effect whatsoever. I feel exactly the same as I did before, right down to the tendency to fall asleep at odd moments.

I therefore assume I'm one of those people for whom diabetes has no obvious symptoms.
Thursday, June 7th, 2012 12:46 pm (UTC)
How frustrating with the symptoms. Maybe it just needs time (here's hoping). I *loved* Tinker Tailor, and while I agree it's one of those 100% attention movies, that means you pick up new details on a re-watch, because the movie is so jam-packed with STUFF. I've seen it four times so far (twice in theatres and twice since I bought the DVD) and found something new every time. And there's a weird Fassbender connection, as well. He was originally cast as Ricki Tarr, but shoots on X-Men: First Class ran long, and Tom Hardy was a last-minute replacement. I think different casting would've meant Ricki would come across very differently. For one thing, Hardy looks MUCH younger (I think they're actually around the same age, but Fassbender must have been born with wrinkles). A thirty something Ricki would give a different quality than the twenty something Ricki that we saw with Hardy.

And I too have seen Centurion, and yes, it was terrible enough to be entertaining.