May. 26th, 2008

realthog: (real copies!)

Probing among the DVDs in our local ShopRite while waiting for [profile] pds_lit  to select the right brand of talcum powder (I think it was), I spotted a DVD called Marianne Faithfull Live in Hollywood. It does seem to me important that I have something to play on my portable DVD player while languishing in hospital, and this was a recording of Faithfull's I'd never heard of before. Oh, and it cost only $2.50.

Picosecond after picosecond went by while I wrestled with my conscience, but eventually I decided the expenditure was worth it.

When we got home, I looked at my purchase. It seemed strangely . . . heavy. Opening it up I discovered that, in addition to the 143min DVD of the concert, there's a 55min audio CD of the highlights. This latter is, as I type, playing EXTREMELY LOUDLY and being comprehensively appreciated.

By way of evaluation, I'd say the CD isn't up to the standard of her other live album, Blazing Away -- to be fair, just about nothing is -- but it's pretty stunning nonetheless, with a nice mixture of old stuff and new (the gig dates from 2005). And the booklet that comes with the package is like a CD's booklet -- i.e., it's much better than you'd expect from a DVD.

Oh, who's a happy piglet?

 

book #31

May. 26th, 2008 07:13 pm
realthog: (real copies!)
 
While working at my desk through (a) Rhonda Byrne's dire The Secret and a stack of essays about it, (b) F. LaGard Smith's bizarre Out on a Broken Limb (1986), in which a Biblical Fundamentalist assails Shirley MacLaine for being a bit wacko in her ideas (the funniest moment is when he berates her for accepting this crackpot "evolution" stuff), and (c) Martin Gardner's jolly The New Age, taking notes here and there as I've been going through all three, my scant intervals of leisure-reading time have been occupied by Elmore Leonard's 1990 novel Get Shorty.

This is, I think, only the second of his novels that I've read, the other being Out of Sight (1996), which I devoured last fall . . . discovering as I did so that this was the basis for a movie I'd already seen and liked on cable at some stage, starring J-Lo and G-Cloo. (I'd known the movie was based on a Leonard novel, but I'd long forgotten the movie's title.)

Chili Palmer is a Mob debt collector in Miami. When things go awry in the Mob hierarchy, Chili pursues Leo, an obsessive gambler who managed to swindle an airline's insurance company and lit out for Las Vegas, neglecting to pay his debts to the Mob before his departure. In Vegas, Chili gets back the money but promptly, tempted by the environment, loses it all gambling. By the time he realizes his folly, he finds Leo has fled again, this time to Hollywood. The remainder of the book is taken up satirizing the movie industry, as Chili -- along with sleazoid producer Harry and ex-scream queen Karen -- attempts to sell a major studio and a major star (who happens to be Karen's ex) on a script Harry's gotten hold of. Except what inadvertently happens is that Chili, who don't hold with no posturing thespian assholes, manages to sell everyone on the notion of making a movie about a Mob debt collector in Miami who pursues an obsessive gambler to Vegas and . . . You get the drift.

To be honest, I preferred the 1996 novel to Get Shorty. That's not to say I didn't find Get Shorty plenty of fun: I did. But Out of Sight seemed to have a story to tell -- and a good one -- whereas Get Shorty, even though it included a plethora of excellent scenes and setups, somehow didn't. Nonetheless, with its zinging dialogue and its wry sense of irony (jeez, I sound like a blurb writer all of a sudden; sorry for the lapse), the novel has certainly put me in the mood for some more Elmore Leonard, down the line. Of course, depending on how bright I feel post-op, for the next few months my "leisure" reading is going to have to be largely devoted to those Bogus Science-related tomes that don't demand to be read at my desk. Next up, a slim vol on the afterlife by Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, oh joy.

 

March 2013

S M T W T F S
     1 2
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
2425262728 2930
31      

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 7th, 2025 10:54 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios