Nokh vegn di Khelmer khakhomim
I am quite tired.
This afternoon's mail brought my contributor's copy of Mythic Delirium #24, containing my poem "Wisdom." Just go and buy a copy; this one's important to me. I thought of it while visiting
darthrami and
strange_selkie two Aprils ago and it took until last year's Readercon to write, probably because its inspirations were a line from Avatar: The Last Airbender ("All this time, what I thought was a great metropolis was merely a city of fools. And that makes me the king fool") and the knowledge that most of the Jews of real-life Chełm did not survive World War II. There are other things in it, but mostly Yiddish literature and film. And a nice illustration by Daniel Trout.
What I was doing in the afternoon was seeing X-Men: First Class (2011), with which I have some arguments—it's a major-studio summer blockbuster—but the double act of Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen should have been impossible to follow and James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender actually pulled it off; I'd happily watch them in a second film and I approve of neither of them being saints. Somehow I had failed to realize the director was Matthew Vaughn until we got to the end credits,1 but he styles the film like it's 1962 and he's practically canonized Charles/Erik. Also Nicholas Hoult makes an adorable Beast and it's kind of stupid that I haven't yet seen Winter's Bone (2010). Further analysis will have to wait.
I am going to stare at Lovecraft Unbound (2009) or my pillow, whichever comes first.
1. I also keep forgetting that he directed Stardust (2007), but I am very fond of his debut film, Layer Cake (2004).
This afternoon's mail brought my contributor's copy of Mythic Delirium #24, containing my poem "Wisdom." Just go and buy a copy; this one's important to me. I thought of it while visiting
What I was doing in the afternoon was seeing X-Men: First Class (2011), with which I have some arguments—it's a major-studio summer blockbuster—but the double act of Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen should have been impossible to follow and James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender actually pulled it off; I'd happily watch them in a second film and I approve of neither of them being saints. Somehow I had failed to realize the director was Matthew Vaughn until we got to the end credits,1 but he styles the film like it's 1962 and he's practically canonized Charles/Erik. Also Nicholas Hoult makes an adorable Beast and it's kind of stupid that I haven't yet seen Winter's Bone (2010). Further analysis will have to wait.
I am going to stare at Lovecraft Unbound (2009) or my pillow, whichever comes first.
1. I also keep forgetting that he directed Stardust (2007), but I am very fond of his debut film, Layer Cake (2004).

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There've been some pretty sweet fanfic ideas about bringing Darwin back, though--as people have pointed out, his power basically makes him impossible to kill permanently, which starts to wear on him later in life. I think my favourite was the one where someone on my flist (I'll check the name in a moment) made Alex cough really hard at one point, expelling him in gaseous form from where he'd been nesting in Alex's lungs all this time.
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I approve of that: he was way too cool for his quick exit. I do not say this only because I envy anyone who could develop gills by dunking their head in a fish tank.
(It was iphignia939, who's also been doing her best to restore Destiny--Mystique's eventual precognitive girlfriend--to the timeline, by carving off an AU where CHarles and Erik don't break up.)
Is Destiny slated to turn up in the films? I would approve of that, also.
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Given that Matthew Vaughn filmed Charles and Erik like a couple, I'll keep my fingers crossed.