Saturday, June 13, 2009

Things that make me sad...




The Rainbow Bridge


Alan Alda


Remakes



People who play Clowns


The New York Mets




Sigh.


Monday, June 1, 2009

My Secret Weapon Revealed.





"If you want to know how to play the blues, live beyond your means."
-- Eric Clapton


Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Things That Are Harder/Easier...





... now that I have a 4 month old.


Harder:

Going to the Movies.

Sleeping.

Blogging.


Easier:

Dancing.

Singing.

Smiling.



Here's a diversion...

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Movie Review Haiku




Let The Right One In

inspired angle
coming-of-age's sweet ache
the twist Vampiric


**** stars (our of 5)



Friday, March 20, 2009

Spring is here! And STILL the Yankees Suck.




The HeathenBlog is going to completely ignore the snow pouring from the skies like volcanic ash that Bobby Jindal freely mocks, and give a hearty "huzzah!" for making it to Spring! It was a close one, but we did it.

Spring brings flowers. And locusts. But most importantly, baseball.
The WBC is a nice distraction from basketball (with a lowercase b), but we crave the excitement, pageantry, and wholesomeness that is Gary, Keith, and Ron.

We have high hopes for our team this year. What can possibly go wrong?



Tuesday, March 3, 2009

"Y'all got Honey Nut Cheerios up in here?"




Because he loves them, I love them. Who? Omar Little, from The Wire.
The HeathenBlog is headlong into Season IV, and was very skeptical of those trumpeting this show as "Best Drama Ever".

We'll see...




Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Magical.


The HeathenBlog is just a sucker for a great fight scene. Who among us can forget Shatner vs. Lizard-Man, Roddy Piper vs. Keith David.

Griffin vs. Bonnar.

Unless, of course, you are not obsessed with violence. Perhaps you should move your things to Switzerland.

Here is, I believe, a found jewel, with the building blocks -- the very atoms -- of what makes a fight scene so glorious. It's not unlike listening to Robert Johnson and realizing it's where Led Zeppelin sprang from.




"Viddy well, little brother. Viddy well."


with a nod to khoward, and his love of ketchup...

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

The Trilogy Meter...


Very well done, via Dan Meth.


(click to embiggen)


What say you, fearless (or, at least, reasonably hard-to-scare) reader?


Friday, February 13, 2009

Progenitor


Chief Tyrol, on being a father...

"It sucks... except the parts that don't."




Monday, February 9, 2009

New Favorite NY POST Front Page...


Apologies from The Heathen-Blog for our absentee-ism -- we've been a bit... distracted.

But not so distracted to hail our new favorite New York Post Front Page:



Hooray! Long Live The King!


For the record, here's our old favorite (albeit from The New York Daily News):



Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Lie.


The Heathen-Blog welcomes it's newest reader, Lila Rae.
I think you'll find her comments a bit childish, but have patience. We have big plans...



Lila Rae Mensher
1/18/09
8 lbs., 2 oz.
20 1/2 inches




Friday, January 9, 2009

Movie Review Haiku: The Salton Sea



The Salton Sea

"Tweakers" with a twist
Strong ensemble cast delights
in meth and role-play



**** (4 Stars out of 5)

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Some Handy Tips for a Successful New Year...


...from Thelonious Sphere Monk.
He considered these things.
Perhaps we would all do well to do the same.



So for NYE, here's Monk doing Round 'Bout Midnight.




And my thoughts on the year? Best summed up by Love and Death:

Priest: "Mercifully, God was on our side."
Boris: "Yeah. I'm sure things could have gone a lot worse if He wasn't. It might have rained."


Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Finally.





The Heathen-Blog has so much to be thankful for this season.

Like this.

And this.

Also, this and this. And most certainly this.
Did I mention this? I bet I didn't.

Of course, it wasn't all fun and games... but here we stand, still.
Ready for a new year, full of vim and vigor.
And the future looks very promising.

Have a aggressively wonderful holiday, my cyber-friends...

hb

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Heathen-Blog's Top Christmas CD


As someone who came rather late to the Christmas Party, I feel I am uniquely positioned to provide unbiased conjecture regarding Holiday Music.

Growing up a little Jewish boy, my only thoughts about the music from that other side of the aisle was that it was everywhere. And why did everyone look so happy? Thirteen years ago I found out.
Christmas can be pretty great.

So, here is my pick for Best Christmas CD:




Seriously. It's outstanding.

17 songs, each more happy and soulful than the last.

If you don't have this, and you need the spirit, get it.
If you're too strapped this season, write me. I'll get it for you.

James will shriek and implore you until the the spirit burrows into you.



A little taste is HERE.


And for my Jewish friends, perhaps this.


Tuesday, December 2, 2008

'Tis Coveting Season



Drunk -- "A toast!"
Leo Bloom -- (agreeing) "A toast... to what?"
Drunk -- "To... to toast, I love toast."



I am one of those rare individuals who cannot differentiate between "wants" and "needs".
And so, I really, really need this. More than anything.


The Darth Vader Toaster


I will be completely inconsolable this Holiday Season if I am made to eat toast without Darth Vader's image burned into each delectable slice.

A close second is THIS.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

"The Shield" ends. A Haiku.




brutally novel
the addictive thriller's close
leaves me less complete







Friday, November 21, 2008

"Forcible-Culture Fridays"

OZYMANDIAS

I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,
Half sunk, a shatter'd visage lies, whose frown
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamp'd on these lifeless things,
The hand that mock'd them and the heart that fed.
And on the pedestal these words appear:
"My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing beside remains: round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away.


Percy Bysshe Shelley, 1818





Sunday, November 2, 2008

The Big Apple Film Festival




Click HERE for tickets to our showing at
The Big Apple Film Festival...

Congregants across the Holy Land can't stop talking about our film, "He's My Dad".

If you love movies, and have never been to a Film Festival before, here's a great one to attend --
along with outstanding movies -- which because of the Studio System you may never have the chance to see again -- Film Festivals are programmed with Seminars, Panel Discussions, Q & A Sessions, and Parties.
Lots. Of. Parties.

So,
jump HERE for tickets to my film (shown with 5 other great films!).
jump HERE for the whole lineup of The Big Apple Film Festival.
jump HERE for my film's website, oobermensh.com.
jump HERE for a look at the new frame-by-frame Digital Restoration of "The Godfather".
jump HERE for a photo of a tarsir, nature's wisest animal.



Friday, October 31, 2008

All Hallow's Eve


You are never too young (or too old) to enjoy Halloween.



Friday, October 17, 2008

Zap! Bam! Zing! Wap!




"To name my greatest strength? I guess it would be my humility. My greatest weakness? It's possible that I'm a little too awesome... "

CLICK to see Presidential Candidate Barack Obama's Roast & Comedy Routine at the Al Smith Dinner last night, 10/16/08.

This is worth your time.

Unless, of course, you hate our troops.
Why do you hate our troops?

If you didn't like him before this, you're really not gonna like him now...


Tuesday, October 7, 2008

"Sweet Victory can be distracting"


And so, I return home from Springfield, Illinois. Home of The Abraham Lincoln Museum, a Pub Food called "a horseshoe", and the heralded Route 66 Film Festival.

Firstly, the most important piece of news:

Horseshoe
(From Wikipedia)

This open-faced sandwich begins with thick-sliced toasted sourdough bread, and a couple of hamburger patties or ham. The meat is topped with french fries and smothered with a "secret" cheese sauce. With its many variations, it is a local favorite not often found outside Central Illinois. It also sometimes known as the freedom sandwich.

I chose beef. I chose... poorly.

I did, however, accomplish this:




Well, would you look at that...
The Mid-Western folks liked "He's My Dad".
Perhaps one day our films CAN be shown in Texas!

Long live The Hoogland
Center, and the pageantry of its Award Ceremonies.

Frivolous photos and fun facts to follow, highlights including:

  • Late Night at Bennigans
I see two very nice looking women across the Bar at the Bennigan's where my brother and I are drinking. I decide to go over and give them a couple of postcards of the film, try to impress, get them to the screening. I hit them with the Pitch: "It's about a former Serial Murderer and his relationship with his sassy, 11 year-old daughter..." The sweet looking one says "Ohh! My boyfriend LOVES serial killers! He has a tattoo with 6 of their actual signatures on his leg!".
The other girl says "Does he have Gacy?"
The cute one says "Hell YEAH
he has Gacy!"
I slink away, suddenly wondering if the deadbolt on our door is thick enough.


  • Pleasant facts about Springfield:














And much more!



Monday, September 15, 2008

Political Mondays






A few facts from wikipedia:

Abraham "Abe" "Grampa" J. Simpson

Almost all of Abe Simpson's biographical information is supplied by himself. Many of his stories seem to be wildly inaccurate, often physically or historically impossible, and occasionally inconsistent even with each other, suggesting that Abe is quite senile. Not many people know that Abe is a decorated war veteran.


Maude Flanders

Maude Flanders was the happily married wife of Ned Flanders. With Ned, she had two children, Rod and Todd Flanders, in whom she instilled her unwavering piety. Maude was a woman with many qualities: faith, chastity, charity. Maude Flanders was a devout Christian who once attended a Bible camp to learn how to be more judgmental.



For more facts - which really don't seem terribly important - leap HERE.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Kubrickian Friday



Stanley Kubrick's widow, Christiane, has made available 900 boxes of material belonging to her late husband -- scripts, letters, designs, props, and photographs.


And so, some Letters...


SPARTACUS, 1960

June 5, 1959
To Laurence Olivier

Dear Larry, I am sorry the rushes were late yesterday and I was unable to come by for that drink. I hope that when you see the finished film you will be less disturbed about certain things than are now. In any case, I should like to thank you for the decent way you have behaved about the things with which you were in such disagreement. Good luck and Best Regards, Stanley.


June 26, 1964
Notes on a proposed deal with Columbia Pictures

I cannot accept this under any circumstance. I do not agree under any circumstances to be required to make any changes or revisions of the script, the picture or my style of combing my hair when ordered by Columbia. I do not wish to consult with Columbia on songs or instrumental numbers. It is utterly impractical and inconsistent with the artistic control I should have over the picture... I must have complete, total and final annihilating control over the picture.

Columbia should only be allowed to attend rushes at my invitation.



2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY, 1968

March 31, 1964
Dear Mr Clarke,

It’s a very interesting coincidence that our mutual friend Caras mentioned you in a conversation we were having about a Questar telescope. I had been a great admirer of your books for quite a time and had always wanted to discuss with you the possibility of doing the proverbial really good science-fiction movie. My main interest lies along these broad areas naturally assuming great plot and character.

1. The reasons for believing in the existence of intelligent extra-terrestrial life.

2. The impact (and perhaps even lack on impact in some quarters) such discovery would have on earth in the near future.

3. A space probe with a landing and exploration of the Moon and Mars.

Would you consider coming sooner with a view to a meeting, the purpose of which would be to determine whether an idea might exist or arise which could sufficiently interest both of

us enough to want to collaborate on a screenplay?




A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, 1971

Kubrick does not cede control easily, as seen by the involvement he ensures he has when the film head for the 1972 Venice Film Festival. He asks nine questions of its organisers.

July 26, 1972
To Umberto Orlandifont

What is the make and type of the projectors which will show the film? Will the film be shown on 2,000ft reels. Is there control of the sound inside the auditorium during the screening? If so, where, approximately is it located? Is there a sound system or telephone which is connected with the projection booth? Please describe this. If someone wanted to leave the auditorium during the screening and go into the projection booth, how long would it take to get to the projection booth and would it create a disturbance? Where is the film actually to be screened at Venice? What is the name of the place and its address? Are all the films at the festival being screened in the same room?



BARRY LYNDON, 1975

August 3, 1973
To the make-up team

I saw Ryan’s make-up tests and basically I think you are on the right track. I would criticise, however, that the ageing make-up on Ryan in close-up looks exactly like make-up but I think with a little less on the day it will be all right. The make-up for his young Irish look doesn’t work. In my opinion it looks like make-up and doesn’t contribute anything towards making him look any younger. I think we should just drop this. The bows in his hair in Germany and Dublin are too large and in many angles look unattractive. They should be smaller and I would like to see them redone and rephotographed next week when you have him again. best S K





EYES WIDE SHUT, 1999

June 27, 1995
From Frederic Raphael (Screenwriter) to Kubrick

Dear Stanley, Do you know the joke about the Jewish tailor, to whom his customer said, "The good Lord made the world in six days and you've taken six months to make one bloody pair of trousers? To which the tailor answered, 'Ah, but look at the world and then look at the trousers.' Why did this story occur to me? As ever Freddie.



And, since you made it this far, here are two treats:

HAL9000 Desktop Wallpaper


A TV Promo, filmed as a one-take tracking shot from the point of view of Stanley Kubrick as he walks through the "Shining" set, ending up in his director's chair as the crew prepare to shoot the famous scene of Danny Torrance, the son of Duvall and Jack Nicholson's characters, riding round and round the deserted corridors of the Overlook Hotel.




Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Movie Review Haiku





Rosemary's Baby

A thinking man's scare
Falling in love with Mia
Makes the spiral ache



**** Stars (out of 5)