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sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2006-08-20 03:32 pm

A man of four-and-twenty that hasn't learned of a trade

A series of semi-related updates. To wit—

One of my oldest friends has been in town since Thursday for the wedding of one of her oldest friends. We lived next door to one another in Arlington, with a hedge of lilacs between our houses; once a pumpkin from their garden snaked over into ours and was politely poached for a jack-o'-lantern that fall. When I was much younger—she's a couple of years older than I am—she used to come over and babysit for me and my brother, and now she has three children of her own.* She leaves tomorrow, but it's been really good to see her. I think the last time we talked in person, I was in college.

We finished Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy the night before last; I have now determined someday to own the DVDs, if only for the performances of Alec Guinness, Ian Bannen, and Ian Richardson. I would have picked up the book for comparison, but all the libraries around here seem to be closed on the weekends. Is this some conniving plot by booksellers? Not that I object to owning more John le Carré, but it's the principle of the thing . . . We'll probably start Smiley's People (1982) tonight. And then I suspect I'll make my brother watch The Spy Who Came In from the Cold—the first le Carré I ever read, one summer in my grandparents' house, and the first role in which I saw Richard Burton. I don't think either was a bad place to start.

I also took my brother out for his first legal purchase of alcohol last night: we went to the Legal Sea Foods in Burlington Mall and were mistaken for a couple by the waitress. "She's much older than me," my brother helpfully explains as the woman checks our IDs. Dryly, she says "Nice," and my brother protests, appalled, "She's my sister!" To which the waitress eloquently responds, "Er," and disappears. We had appetizers; he ordered a mojito made with twenty-three-year-old rum and I got my Jamaican national drink. And by the kind loan of [livejournal.com profile] nineweaving, we came home and watched Still Crazy (1998), which was delightful. Stephen Rea and Bill Nighy particularly stood out for me as, respectively, the former keyboardist and lead singer of the rock band Strange Fruit, whose career came to a spectacular end one night at an open-air festival when their sound system was struck by lightning: twenty years later, Rea's Tony Costello is attempting to regather the band for a nostalgia tour and maybe a record deal into the bargain. Whether any of the Fruits can stand one another long enough to rehearse, however, is an open question; never mind surviving their own neuroses, of which Nighy's Ray Simms has plenty. These days, Tony supplies condoms for hotel vending machines, though he still slouches around with the louche swagger of a certified sex symbol and despite having Stephen Rea's face pretty much gets away with it—but at least he's aware that he's entered middle age. Ray, on the other hand, freezes up every time he's reminded that he has a birthday coming; he has the half-terrified, half blissfully zoned inarticulacy of someone who left most of his brain cells back in the heyday of glam rock but unfortunately kept the hair and the clothes, and doesn't quite know where the intervening decades went. They're both fantastic, and so are the other characters around them. But the most impressive part of the movie, we thought, was the fact that the music doesn't suck. And Bill Nighy and Jimmy Nail can sing.

Lastly, my short story "The Boy Who Learned How to Shudder" will appear this month in Sirenia Digest #9, so if you want to read one of my rare forays into science fiction, you had best subscribe. Brain-piercing tentacles. Come on. You know you want to . . .

*I still haven't quite adjusted to that: it's weird enough that I have so many friends who are married, let alone some that are parents. Her eldest child is a voracious reader, however, so there must be something in this genetics business after all. And I haven't met the youngest, but in photographs he's criminally cute.

[identity profile] tithenai.livejournal.com 2006-08-20 09:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Dryly, she says "Nice," and my brother protests, appalled, "She's my sister!" To which the waitress eloquently responds, "Er," and disappears.

Perhaps there's a planet that governs the mistaking of siblings for couples, perpetuating such nonsense during its ascendancy?

[identity profile] kraada.livejournal.com 2006-08-20 10:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Google says Mercury is outgoing in Leo. Maybe that's it?

I think it's funnier though when couples get mistaken for siblings, personally.

[identity profile] rushthatspeaks.livejournal.com 2006-08-20 10:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I thought that Stephen Rea was a certified sex symbol. Or is that just me?

[identity profile] setsuled.livejournal.com 2006-08-20 11:53 pm (UTC)(link)
What are the other two?

[identity profile] setsuled.livejournal.com 2006-08-21 12:57 am (UTC)(link)
Maybe. I can't speak with authority, as I haven't seen The Crying Game, but I am an admirer of its director, Neil Jordan. Rea was in a lot of Jordan's movies, two of my favourites being The Company of Wolves, and The Butcher Boy, both of which I highly recommend. I also like Interview with the Vampire, though I felt Rea was a little oddly cast in that one.

I was disappointed by V for Vendetta (maybe you saw my long, long review (http://setsuled.livejournal.com/166730.html)), though I thought it had its good qualities, Rea among them. Had you read the comic?

[identity profile] setsuled.livejournal.com 2006-08-21 02:30 am (UTC)(link)
it felt a little like a folktale and a little like a film noir and I can't remember the last time those two genres crossed.

It sounds really good. I've been meaning to see it for a long time.

I love Angela Carter, so I keep meaning to see The Company of Wolves and then never get around to it.

A lot of people I know love Angela Carter. I feel kind of bad about the fact that the one book of hers I read (I can't remember the title) I really didn't like. I fear it's probably me, as what bothered me about it was that the prose seemed too self-conscious to me--it never felt like a story that got off the ground. My mind's eye couldn't conjure any image beyond some woman writing. Maybe I'll try her again when I'm older. But I do love The Company of Wolves.

I had, which meant that I liked the film if I viewed it as an entirely different entity. As an adaptation, it had serious problems.

That's pretty close to my reaction. It seemed to me a piece of fun propaganda adapted from a truly great and complex work. Like Lego Shakespeare.

[identity profile] setsuled.livejournal.com 2006-08-21 04:12 am (UTC)(link)
She has an extremely conscious style—it's ornate and lush and baroque and all those orchid-like words, and you may very well hate it.

Looking at her list of works, I think the book I read was Nights at the Circus. And the problem I had with it wasn't so much the lushness of the prose as what seemed like a lack of attention to character and environment. Or maybe lushness of prose was a cause of that effect, I'm not sure. I remember thinking it seemed like a long synopsis, and I remember continually feeling jerked out of a character's point of view by an anachronistic allusion or something. I remember thinking it seemed post-modern, like a punk performance of a fairytale that might have been more interesting and challenging in the mid-1980s.

. . . Does that really exist?

Heh. I just made it up, but it wouldn't surprise me if it does exist.

[identity profile] setsuled.livejournal.com 2006-08-21 04:46 am (UTC)(link)
Well, I feel a lot better now. And I can with more confidence add the titles you recommend to my big pile of books to read. I am still reading your Singing Innocence and Experience at the moment. I just read "Featherweight," which I thought was rather sweet even while it subverted sweetness in a delightful way.

[identity profile] clarionj.livejournal.com 2006-08-21 12:56 pm (UTC)(link)
You've had so many stories and poems published recently that I think your audience is in need of another collection. Any plans for that? Yesterday I had to visit my sister with multiple sclerosis--she's wheelchair bound and has lost most of her sight--and she'd been wanting to hear some of your work. She chose ... okay, title, where are you, something about the downward road ... the Scholomance school, which I'd read myself a few times. I was happy to see her reacting as I did, chilled at times, needing to have me stop so she could comment. I love sharing things I love. When she fell asleep, I got to read "Constellations, Conjunctions," and I loved that too. I had planned on reading her the story about the painting guy and autumn (I'm so sorry I can't remember titles--it's quite normal for me; it's not your stories; I don't remember names well either) -- you know, that very textured one, but then I realized it wasn't in the collection, but in one of my copies of Not One of Us. Damn. She's a painter and I knew she'd love it; also she loves astronomy, so next time I visit, I'm reading about your beautiful constellation girl. God, Sonya, when she reversed at night--that was simply one of the most gorgeous things I ever saw.

So, thank you for a very enjoyable Sunday (oh, and I got to read a bunch of your poems too ... again). As for this post, thanks for the image of old friends and jack-o-lanterns ... I'm ready for those autumn days.

[identity profile] justbeast.livejournal.com 2006-08-21 04:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Boy who learned how to shudder, eh? That's one of my favorite tales.
Sounds like I have to check this out.

(also, what /is/ the jamaican national drink?)

[identity profile] justbeast.livejournal.com 2006-08-21 05:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh wow. I /have/ to try this now.