Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Mish-Mash

Fall is one of my favorite times of the year, and I SO thankful we're finally seeing fall weather. I swear, I thought it would be summer until December. That's just not natural, folks. Of course, today I'm wearing a sweater and roasting! Ugh.

What have I been up to? Editing. Reading. (I finished An Ice Cold Grave by Charlaine Harris last week and started No Regrets by Shannon K. Butcher today.) Interestingly enough, writing.

I've been working on several short stories in my spare time. And while I like the characters and storylines, it's like pulling teeth to get anything down on paper. It's beyond frustrating. Then yesterday, when I should have been working at my day job, inspiration struck. I had a name, a face, a specific occupation ... and I rolled with it. Hello, Writer Jana! We haven't seen each other in several months. Nice to know you're not on a permanent vacation!!

This is the point where I should say I'm participating in the 70 Days of Sweat challenge or NaNoWriMo. I should; I know I should. Days like yesterday don't happen for me. Do I wish they would? Hell yeah. My fingers couldn't type fast enough to keep up with my brain. It was amazing!

But (you knew it was coming) word counts stifle my progress.

I'm obsessed with word count, so obsessed in fact, that I check my total after almost every paragraph. I didn't do that yesterday, well, at least until I'd finished the chapter. Then I made a noise and said, "That's all?"

It's difficult to untrain myself from checking the word count. I've been doing it for months and months, so to think I have written 1000 words when I usually have about half that, it makes me feel like Charlie Brown and that damn football. I'm never going to kick it!




However, despite my freak-outs and the fact I failed so miserably during the first 70 Days challenge, I'm doing it again. Wish me luck!!! I will kick that stupid football, I will!

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Movie Meme

[01] — Look up TEN of your favorite movies on IMDB.
[02] — Click the "trivia" link in the sidebar.
[03] — Post a fun and random bit of trivia from each film.
[04] — Tag five people.


1: Gone With the Wind
Olivia de Havilland always meticulously researched her roles. As she had not yet had a baby in real life, she visited a maternity hospital to study how various women coped with the stresses of childbirth for the scene where Melanie has her baby. Off-camera, the scene's director, George Cukor, would occasionally pinch her toes to make her feel pain. [Since this is my most favorite movie ever, I'd always heard Cukor twisted de Havilland's ankle when he wanted her to have a contraction.]

2: Dirty Dancing

The lake practice scene was filmed at Lake Lure in the mountains of North Carolina in October. There are no close-ups because the actors were so cold that their lips were blue.

3: The Last of the Mohicans

One of the reasons Michael Mann decided to shoot the film in North Carolina instead of New York was that he felt the woods of North Carolina looked more like the old-growth forests of the Adirondacks, which still show evidence of logging during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Many of the scenes were shot at Biltmore, George Vanderbilt's North Carolina estate; the forest in the estate was carefully planned and planted about 100 years ago.

4: The Royal Tenenbaums

Although the exteriors were largely shot in New York, Wes Anderson intentionally avoided virtually all shots of skyscrapers or other distinctive New York landmarks. In one scene, Royal and Pagoda are talking in Battery Park (on the southern tip of Manhattan) and Anderson intentionally had Kumar Pallana (Pagoda) stand directly in front of the Statue of Liberty so it wouldn't show up in the shot.

5: That Thing You Do!

Tom Hanks named the beach band (Capn' Geech and the Shrimp Shack Shooters) after two seafood restaurants near Beaufort, SC, where many scenes in Forrest Gump were filmed. Capt. Geech's was on Lady's Island, but is now closed. The Shrimp Shack is still open for business on St. Helena Island.

6: Forrest Gump

With every transition of Forrest's age, one thing remains the same- in the first scene of each transition he wears a blue plaid shirt.

7: The Godfather

The presence of oranges in all three "Godfather" movies indicates that a death or or an assassination attempt will soon happen. Tessio plays with an orange at the wedding. There is a bowl of oranges on Jack Woltz's table. Vito buys oranges right before he is shot. At the Commission meeting, bowls of oranges are placed in front of Don Tattaglia and Don Barzini. Vito dies after playing with a slice of orange in his mouth.

8: Steel Magnolias

Is shot in the small Louisiana town of Natchitoches. Reportedly, the filmmakers placed such a great strain on the locals, particularly those who volunteered to be extras, that several years later, when the film The Man in the Moon (1991) was shot in the same town, extras were difficult to find, as so many townspeople had been burned by the Steel Magnolias crew.

9: 9 to 5

In an interview with Isaac Mizrahi, Dolly Parton states that when she wrote the song, she used her long acrylic nails to create the beat to the theme song.

10: O Brother, Where Art Thou?

References to Homer's Odyssey:
- The names of George Clooney and Holly Hunter's characters (Ulysses and Penelope)
- one-eyed Big Dan as the Cyclops (blinded with a burning pole)
- the three girls by the river as the Sirens
- Ulysses' wife marrying someone else when he comes home
- the old-man disguise
- the changing of one of Ulysses' companions into an animal
- the Baptists as the Lotus-eaters
- the Ku Klux Klan has a rank of Grand (or Exalted) Cyclops
- they catch a ride on a hand-pumped railway that is being operated by a blind prophet, who tells them that they will not find the treasure they seek. The prophet character in the Odyssey was Teiresias, whom Odysseus consulted in the underworld when he needed information on how to get home again
- the movie theater scene as the trip through the Underworld
- Odysseus nearly drowned, but clings to a piece of wood
- Odysseus and Everett both reveal themselves by performing an act no one else could: Odysseus strings a special bow and fires it through seven rings; Everett sings "Man of Constant Sorrow" as only the leader of the Soggy Bottom Boys can "Pappy's" given name, Menelaus, is the same as the king who declared war on Troy in the first place
- the Latin equivalent of the Greek name Odysseus is Ulysses
- "Sing in me O Muse...”, the line at the beginning of the film, is the first line of the Odyssey -
the killing of the cattle of Helios by the "fools" in the Odyssey is mirrored by Baby Face Nelson shooting the cows
- every time Ulysses falls asleep something bad happens
- the song which plays throughout the movie is called "Man of Constant Sorrow", Odysseus means "man who is in constant pain and sorrow"
- Pappy's opposition for Governor's has the first name Homer
- when Ulysses first meets Big Dan in the restaurant there is a statue of Homer in the background
- There is a "Blind Bard" who pays the boys to "sing into his can". Homer was often (and probably erroneously) thought to be a blind bard who told his stories verbally to his students.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

WTF?

Gone With the Wind is my all-time favorite book. I've loved Scarlett since I was 16 years old, which is longer than I've loved anything that's still alive. I can, as my mother-in-law likes to mention, quote Gone With the Wind chapter and verse. (I also love the movie just as much as the book. For a book lover, that's unusual, in my opinion.)

So I'm flipping through my November RT magazine and am confronted by a full page color ad for Rhett Butler's People.

Swoon and die!

I understand the validity of keeping characters copyrighted, I do. But was nothing learned from Scarlett? I was introduced to Alexandra Ripley, who wrote some fairly decent books herself. Of course, I would have been happier had Ms. Ripley introduced original characters instead of taking her own characters and plugging them in as friends of Rhett's when Scarlett decides she's going to chase Rhett from Atlanta to Charleston to Kentucky to Ireland....

Is it wrong that after all my ranting I'm excited to read this book??

When Crack Attacks (or WTF -- Part 2)

I swore I wouldn't read about you again, Meredith Gentry. I swore it!! But I'll be damned if I don't want to read this:



Curse you, LKH!! Curse you!!!

Monday, October 1, 2007

Monday Meme

This cracked me up!!

You Are Apple Cider

Smooth and comforting. But downright nasty when cold.

Hello, World!

I'm alive. Thank goodness!!

Last week, I felt itchy throat begin. Wouldn't you know it by Wednesday, I was a zombie. I downed drugs, I drank orange juice, I missed work, I took naps.

And *cue theme* I feel better!! Yee haw!

Now if I could only have those 2 days back...

Monday Meme - The Grammar Edition

You Scored an A

You got 10/10 questions correct.

It's pretty obvious that you don't make basic grammatical errors.
If anything, you're annoyed when people make simple mistakes on their blogs.
As far as people with bad grammar go, you know they're only human.
And it's humanity and its current condition that truly disturb you sometimes.