Tuesday, April 19, 2016
YouTube finds: Helen Mirren's version of The Tempest
I've been wanting to see this forever but somehow never did. But now that it's #ShakespeareWeek, I went looking for Shakespeare on YouTube to see what sort of Shakespeare goodness I could find. Imagine my delight when I discovered the full movie is up. Directed by Julie Taymor, who conceived he fabulous stage version of The Lion King, the movie is a visual treat and stars Helen Mirren in the role of Prospera. Shakespeare productions are always fiddling around with the sex of their protagonists, much in the way the playwright himself played with it, but here the sex-change works beautifully in a way that female Hamlets never have for me. If you love the play--and I do, I've seen around seven productions of it--check it out here.
Labels:
Julie Taymor Helen Mirren,
Shakespeare,
the Tempest
Surprising Shakespeare Brand Name
so it's #ShakespeareWeek and I was Googling around looking for Shakespeare silliness and I discovered that there's a Shakespeare brand of fishing equipment. I know Shakespeare isn't the first name that comes to my mind when I think "fishing" so I went looking for something he might have said about the sport. (Was fishing a sport back then? Or was it just another way to catch dinner?) Turns out there is a famous quote from Hamlet:
“A man may fish with the worm that hath eat of a king, and eat of the fish that hath fed of that worm”
Monday, April 18, 2016
Shakespeare Week
It's #ShakespeareWeek and Goodreads is celebrating in a creative way. They've asked various authors to imagine a deleted scene from a play. They start off with Christopher Moore's deleted scene from Julius Caesar and it's just as hilarious as you would expect. Read it here and get in on all the fun.
Labels:
#ShakespeareWeek,
Christopher Moore,
Julius Caesar
Sunday, April 17, 2016
Youtube finds: Night Heat
I love Youtube. Every once in a while when I'm looking for something to watch while I'm eating lunch or dinner, I'll head over there and see what I can find. Rummaging around on Youtube is like going through the stuff in your parents' attic; you never know what you're going to find. I can't remember what I was looking for when I stumbled across episodes of Night Heat.
Night Heat was a Canadian cop show that originally aired between 1985 and 1989. In the LA market, it played late night, and from the first episode I watched, I was hooked. It was a contemporary of Miami Vice (1994-1990) but the two shows could not have been more different in look and feel. Where Miami Vice was all neon noir and hip sountracks and pastel clothes, Night Heat was gritty and down to earth, the cases more personal, more intimate.
Night Heat was a Canadian cop show that originally aired between 1985 and 1989. In the LA market, it played late night, and from the first episode I watched, I was hooked. It was a contemporary of Miami Vice (1994-1990) but the two shows could not have been more different in look and feel. Where Miami Vice was all neon noir and hip sountracks and pastel clothes, Night Heat was gritty and down to earth, the cases more personal, more intimate.
Labels:
Allan Royal,
Jeff Wincott,
Keanu REeves,
Night Heat,
Scott Hylands,
Tony Rosato
Thursday, April 14, 2016
Interview with Gerard Brennan
Gerard Brennan's latest novel is Undercover, a Belfast cop
thriller. His short stories have appeared in a number of anthologies;
including three volumes of The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime and
Belfast Noir. He co-edited Requiems for the Departed, a collection of
crime fiction based on Irish myths which won the 2011 Spinetingler Award
for best anthology. His novella, The Point, was published by Pulp Press
in October 2011 and won the 2012 Spinetingler Award for best novella.
His novels, Wee Rockets and Fireproof, were published as ebooks by
Blasted Heath in 2012. He graduated from the MA in creative writing at
Queen's University Belfast in 2012 and is currently working on a PhD.
What was the first short story you ever
published (and when)? Were you paid for it?
I wrote a
story called ‘Pool Sharks’ after I spent a weekend in Wexford. We were lucky
enough to score a lock-in at the local pub and things got a bit messy. I became
obsessed by the fact that we could have gotten away with murder that night.
Then the hamster wheel started spinning and the story was born. This was back
in 2007, when I’d started to get serious about writing. The story got accepted
into a horror/crime anthology titled ‘Badass Horror’. And yes, I got paid! I
still get paid for it from time to time, in fact. The publisher, Tim Lieder, is
passionate about compensating his writers. Fair play to him.
Did you find it hard to transition from
short stories to longer works?
Not really.
I just needed to catch an idea that wanted to be a novel. Then I sat down and
put the hours in.
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Review of Gerard Brennan's FIREPROOF
Mike Rocks has a
bad attitude. Sent to hell for murdering a man, he doesn’t seem to be taking
his fate all that seriously. Despite having his own personal demon tasked with
tormenting him for all eternity, Mike is not impressed. And that presents a
problem for Lucifer. Big Red really can’t have it getting around hell that Mike
is impervious to the pain of damnation so he offers him a job. He wants Mike to
“take a crack” at developing a new religion—Satanism, of course. Mike jumps at the
chance and no sooner has he signed the phonebook-thick contract than he finds himself
back in West Belfast, with a handsome new face (he thinks he looks Italian) and
a thirst for vengeance as strong as his thirst for a pint. He quenches both at
his former local, and that’s when things start to go sideways.
Back in hell
for a tune-up with Lucifer, Mike finds himself on a short leash with an imp on
his shoulder kibitzing on his every move as he puts the devil’s plan into
operation, starting with a sales pitch to a group of not-too-bright teenagers.
What follows is a dark (very dark) comedy of crime and punishment with
trenchant observations on pop culture and religious dogma gracefully woven into the fabric
of the story.
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