• Cinema
  • Words

‘Twilight’ Sharpens Its Fangs

Twilight

The first of Stephenie Meyer’s young-adult vampire series, Twilight, continues to gather cast members on its march to the big screen. Variety reports that Peter Facinelli is now on board, cast as Carlisle, the patriarch of the Cullen Clan. Also on board is Kristen Stewart as Isabella Swan (fresh off this weekend’s Jumper) and Robert Pattinson as the preternaturally pretty Edward Cullen. Lucky for Pattinson. He’s been killed off as Cedric Diggory, so it’s a nice turn of events that he finds himself at the forefront of a fresh franchise.

Or was that too many F’s?

The novel is quick and simple. Meyer’s protagonist, the smitten Isabella Swan, moves from Phoenix to the Olympic Peninsula and quickly learns that thanks to the perpetually gloomy weather, Seattle is where all the beautiful vamps hang out. She immediately falls for Edward Cullen, who, despite having been alive for over a century, still goes to high school, and she spends the rest of the novel trying to catch her breath at the mere sight of him.

Oh, and there’s a chase scene.

Twilight The idea of the novel appeals to me. Mercy knows, I love vampires. But its execution was flat and frustrating. I didn’t mind the reckless re-imagining of the Vampire archetype at all; I like to read new interpretations of the myth. But Isabella spends the entire novel swooning over Edward, and when action finally kicks in, it’s entirely external. The Cullen Family springs into action to protect Isabella from a nasty vamp. These fun and games, when they do come, move nicely and with terrific energy, but Isabella merely closes her eyes and hangs on.

Glaringly obvious to me as I read the book was that I’m hardly the demographic for the subject matter. In other words, I’m not a sixteen year old girl. This, in spite of my looks. But I read Scott Westerfield’s “youth-oriented” Uglies Trilogy (now in its forth volume, and certainly the subject of a future post.) I wasn’t a sixteen year old girl then, either. And I gobbled up that series up with a big spoon and a fancy curly straw. Be that as it may, Meyer’s vampire series (also a trilogy) have been wildly popular, so the jump to movies was inevitable.

As much as I’d love to have Melissa Rosenberg’s job adapting the novel, I honestly don’t know what I’d do with it. My instinct would be to kick up the conflict between Bella and Edward somehow and give Bella a bigger role in deciding her own fate rather than merely chain her to the plot. Also? I’d have the vampires drive spaceships and there would be a character named Boris Glensinsky who collects hood ornaments and gives them to his schnauzer.

Or would that be too much?

  • Music

Love Psychedelico!

Love Psychedelico - Early TimesAn oblique reference to Love Psychedelico on my friend Rachael’s MySpace page led me to discover this stunning duo from Japan. Love Psychedelico are Kumi and Naoki, the former on vocals, the latter on guitar. I guess they’re technically J-Pop, which is a genre about which I know very little. in fact, the average Horned Tulip knows more about J-Pop than I do. Wikipedia points out that Kumi’s vocals, which bounce gleefully between Japanese and English, are unusually articulate for the genre. Fair enough. The entry also cites The Beatles and Led Zeppelin as influences. That, I figured out on my own. And the other thing I figured out on my own? I really, really like them.

Love Psychedelico

Their music is bright and melodic, and even though more than a fair share of the songs brush the five minute mark, there’s a lean, sinewy feel to them. Kumi’s vocals pierce the upper registers with a tough, rhotic twang, which in any other context I might find annoying, but here it’s bracing and minty fresh. The song posted below, “Everyone, Everyone” is not exactly representative of their work, but it’s the one that made me sit up and hit the Rewind button. It’s available on the LP comp, “Early Times,” which collects some of their best work under a single roof (not to be confused with their first album, amusingly entitled, “The Greatest Hits.”) The Beatles influence is front and center, with its “Hey Jude” sing-a-long “clap your hands!” quality. I’m completely addicted.

Love Psychedelico – “Everyone, Everyone”

On The Web: myspace, wikipedia, official site

  • Music

Minimalistix – Struggle For Pleasure

MinimalistixSometimes I just want to show you something cool. It’s one of the main reasons I started this blog so long ago. Sometimes I’ll be kicked back in a chair at a coffee house, music on, working on a beat sheet for a script idea when a tune will kick off that is so cool I just want to lean over to the person sitting next to me and hand them the headphones and say, “Hey. Put these on. Listen.” So imagine that this is, indeed, what I’m doing when I post this music stuff. And try not to pick up your stuff and move to a different table. I’m only trying to share.

Minimalistix grew out of founding member Peter Bellaert’s passion for club music. In 2000, he released “Struggle For Pleasure.” Rarely has a progressive house track captured my imagination quite like this one has–indeed, anyone’s for that matter. It shot up the club charts and loitered at the top for some time. I can’t remember where I heard it first. I think it was Dave Seaman’s “Desire” set for Renaissance. But around that same time Jimmy Van M’s Bedrock comp was making the rounds. The track closes out the first disc of that set (which is phenomenal, by the way.) It’s the ideal club track. It’s got a thundering bass line, frayed at the edges by a messy percussion sound and a stuttering echo effect. The pulsing intermittent synths pull the whole thing together. The build is nice, engaging the attention through its subtle variations and leads to that famous, bubbling breakdown. I’ve excerpted it below. For your pleasure.

Happy Sunday. I’m only trying to share.

Minimalistix – “Struggle For Pleasure”

Minimalistix: official site, discogs page, wikipedia

  • Music

Monade – Monstre Cosmic

Monade - Monstre CosmicI know, I know, I just posted about Monade a few weeks ago. Here we go again. Monstre Cosmic is out, and after a few spins, I’ve decided I’m officially enamored with Latitia Sadier’s Stereolab-lite side project. With this album, Monade expands and stretches the warmth and melody of the previous two efforts and gives us ten more tracks suitable for sun-drenched lounging on a Sunday afternoon.

“Étoile” is my favorite cut so far. It’s a pretty, swaying piece, sung in French, that perfectly captures the Monade vibe: gentle, accompanying keyboards, a bouncy, picked bassline, a restlessness in tempo and Sadier’s voice floating above it all (aided by bassist/vocalist Marie Merlet’s ever-so-slightly more delicate voice.) Check it out and see what you think.

Monade – “Étoile”

Monade: allmusic, amazon, Too Pure

  • Words

Blue Cat Screenplay Competition

Blue Cat

As of right now, there are 17 days, 15 hours, 29 minutes and 22 seconds until time’s up for submissions to this year’s Blue Cat Screenplay Competition. I only bring it up because if you’re thinking about entering, you might want to to rethink that. Well, I mean, unless you don’t mind settling for second place. I entered Element yesterday. We all know that clinches the top spot.

The competition isn’t a new one. Gordy Hoffman and Heather Schor have been turning over stones since 1999 in search of the undiscovered screenwriter. And it’s not just a screenplay competition. Hoffman’s organization also puts on workshops and live script readings. The entry fee is $50. First prize is $10,000. If you’re a top notch screenwriter that’s a guaranteed return on investment of a million percent. Plus you get a one page analysis of your script, suitable for framing. Very nice.

I don’t normally enter contests. I mean, I love rejection as much as the next guy, but usually it’s because I don’t have the required number of pennies and nickels to cover the entry fee and I always end up entering the contests that people like Ana Lily Armirpour and Young Kim Il enter, people with real talent, people who don’t just spill coffee on three-hole paper and call themselves Julius and Philip Epstein. But on this particular morning I decided to toss Element on the pile. Why not? I could certainly stand to be taken down a peg or two.

Oh, and I can’t ignore that wonderful name. Blue Cat. My nascent web design company is called Cobalt Kitty Design. Do you see the convergence? The cat, as they say, might just be in the bag.

  • Music

Juliana Hatfield: Tracks Posted Online

Juliana Hatfield

For about a month or two now one of my favorite artists, Juliana Hatfield, has made almost thirty previously unreleased tracks available online at her website. I kinda discovered them by accident. I don’t usually make it a habit to venture by the websites of my favorite artists. Band sites tend to feel like an obligation for the artist, rather than a passion, so they often lie dormant like South American volcanoes, only belching up new content when there’s sudden activity beneath the surface. I don’t hang around them much unless it occurs to me in a “Hey, what’s X up to these days?” sort of way.

So it was a nice surprise to see the mp3’s on Juliana’s site. They’re available for download on a “pay what you can” scheme, twenty eight tracks collected over the years all lined up nice and pretty, preceded by a fat yellow PayPal button. I grabbed them all yesterday. They’ve been on repeat since.

My interest in Ms. Hatfield grew by degrees. Back when they first emerged, I thought The Blake Babies were sweet and hooky. Her first solo effort, Hey Babe, was a blast and then Become What You Are (the album most casual listeners remember) was another step forward. Although I though the hit single “My Sister” was effective, I found it melodically and lyrically awkward. I was more impressed by Hatfield’s guitar chops. It wasn’t until Only Everything that I really sat up and took notice. It was a dreamy pastiche, and it appealed to my passion for arrangement and melody. Her lyrics took a quantum step forward. I loved it. Still do. In my early writing days I would grab a spiral notebook, park myself at the Earthling Bookstore Cafe in Santa Barbara and listen to the album on repeat.

She went to the mat during that time in a dispute with her label, and it feels like she was tempered by the struggle. While the albums that have managed to appear since then all have their share of sweetness, there’s a steel-edged cynicism there as well. Label disputes notwithstanding, she’s put out a lot of material. Aside from her solo stuff, she’s also managed to put out an album with her fellow Blake Babies and two albums under the side project, Some Girls. During these years of productivity many quality tunes have fallen through the cracks and remained (mostly) unavailable till now. It’s this material is that has been gathered on her site.

The songs are as varied as they are interesting, but they all demonstrate her uncanny knack for melodic hooks and her unparalleled pop sense. Only got a few bucks? Try a few of the standout tracks: “The Only One,” “This Is What I Think Of You,” (a simple breeze of guitar and wordless vocal) “Stupid Thing,” “Just Like That,” “Invisible,” and ” I Can’t Kill Myself,” which I find fascinating because it’s a glimpse into the Only Everything era album, God’s Foot, which is locked in the Atlantic vaults, a petty casualty to the acrimonious label split.

And if you go there, read this. Pay what you can. This is how it should be. An artist creates. Sets the work out for us and we pay. Slice out the fat in the middle.

Juliana Hatfield: official site, allmusic

Juliana Hatfield – “Somebody Is Waiting For Me (from the album Beautiful Creature)

  • Putting the Strike Into Perspective February 11th, 2008 at 1:12 pm · · Interesting article over at Variety that turns the telescope of hindsight back on the past few months. As the strike wraps up (it’s not over yet, folks!) and we wander among the rubble there will be a lot of articles like this, asking whether it was worth it. Answer? Yes. · (0)

    Sixsquare Version 3.0 At Last

    Sixsquare version 3.0

    Over a year ago I wrote this:

    Did you notice? I haven’t posted anything in a couple weeks. That’s because this blog is going on a temporary hiatus. Very temporary. I’ll certainly be back. And when I return, I’ll be blogging with more focus. As much as I enjoy blogging about whatever strikes my fancy, I decided that this thing is in serious need of some fine tuning. I’m going to narrow things down.

    Well, I did. Sort of. But the word “temporary” was apparently grabbed off the street, hustled into that blog post and forced, at gun point, to stand in for the words “absurdly long.” I’ve been blogging in earnest since about November, and I even attempted a vague remodel of the site. But that remodel really only consisted of buying a couple throw pillows and arranging them over the old site. I was never happy with it. The red letters emblazoned across the top reading, “Under Construction,” became simply part of the decor. I wanted something more complex, more functional, more representative of me. I am, after all, rather complex and functional and, if this blog is to believed, well-represented by torn bits of paper.

    So here it is. I hope it pleases the eye. There are a few features and issues you might need to know about. If you’re interested, read on after the jump.

    Read More »

    • Cinema

    Shutter

    Compare these two trailers. The first is from Thailand. The second is, of course, from the U. S. of Remake. I’m not going to go on a rant about how Hollywood is dead or the ferrets have taken over the Executive Offices of Paramount or what-have-you. That’s a tired dog. And I don’t entirely agree. But I will express amazement that we Americans can’t even make a trailer spookier than the original. Is it the language barrier? Is it mistrust of the American intelligence quotient? Is it our coffee? What gives?

    [youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nwy8QSQliGk]

    [youtube:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eIxDl2-qnVs]

    • Music

    Anne Marie Almedal – The Siren & The Sage

    Anne Marie Almedal - The Siren & The Sage

    Norwegium.

    From that distant land come many artists. Some I know, many I don’t. I’m aware, for example, that Flunk is from Norwegium. They haven’t been particularly well-received here, for being perhaps too Bjork-ish, but I rather like them. Gorgoroth comes from Norwegium, too! Remember them? They’re not Bjorkish at all. (Gaahl, their lead singer, is one of the most un-Bjork characters in the whole Black Metal scene.) Also from the land of burning churches and audio shrapnel? Burzum, Mayhem, Darkthrone, Dimmu Borgir and Emperor. You have to wonder, looking over these acts how it came to pass that Norwegium also gave birth to Anne Marie Almedal.

    Dulcet of voice and dulcet of face, Miss Almedal stumbles from the northland like Conan from the land of Cimmeria, with eyes of volcanic blue and… alright, I’ll knock it off with the stereotypes. Seriously, we shouldn’t be surprised. After all, Norwegium has also spawned The Kings Of Convenience. How anti-Black Metal can you get? Annie is Norwegian, too (and as it happens, sits right after Anne Marie Almedal in my iTunes library.) The melody for Annie’s “Chewing Gum” drags Gaahl out of fevered sleep in a cold sweat with sheets tangled around his body. Also from Sweden’s neighbor? Sondre Lerche and Serena Maneesh. It is, indeed a land of many facets. Musically, anyway.

    Anne Marie Almedal

    Almedal, formerly of the band, Velvet Belly, has just released The Siren & The Sage. It plays like Nick Drake by way of Vashti Bunyan and Alison Goldfrapp. In fact, “Trouble,” the second track on the album, has a crescendo so similar to that of “A & E” that it could almost be its parallel universe cousin crossed over into this world. It’s a lilting collection of tunes, with lyrics that celebrate spring and romance and catching leaves and well, actually, even insanity. If an album is a journey, this one is a journey on a strange, musical cloud that carries you through an emotional landscape and then, with the final cut, “Happy Ending,” deposits you back on your couch with gentle hands. That works for me.

    Mostly, what this album does for me is make me wonder what’s next. I like it just fine. It’s a nice drifty wisp of silk. Quite a lovely one, at that. But if she takes one more step forward in style and production she’ll be a force to reckon with. She’s got sweetness and looks, but what makes her interesting is that slight undercurrent of darkness, that Nick Drake-ishness to which I referred earlier. Maybe that dark streak is what inspired her to cover Massive Attack’s “Safe from Harm” (see it here.) Maybe it’s just the word “Siren,” which connotes both beauty and danger. I dunno.

    For an excellent glimpse into Almedal’s inspiration and her musings on creativity, check out CC’s interview with the artist here. And head over to mySpace for a smattering of songs. Almedal, if my spider sense is telling me right, will be the next big Norwegian thing. So brace yourself.

    What’s that? It’s not Norwegium? It’s Norway??

    Nobody tells me anything.

    Anne Marie Almedal: The Siren & The Sage: iTunes

    “The First Picture Of You”

    • Music

    Van Halen vs. M&Ms

    EVH Guitar

    I’d really hoped to get the new design running full steam by today. I uploaded it Sunday and tinkered for a couple hours, but there are just too many details getting in the way of a full transition. I’m using the Sandbox theme as a foundation, which is extremely flexible. It’s a coder’s dream, but it’s also remarkably complex. I’ll need one more Saturday to iron out all the issues. But hey, it looks pretty good and it represents me far more than this theme does. It’ll be fun to use. And soon, like Van Halen, Sixsquare will be reborn.

    Okay, not quite like that.

    But as long as we’re on the subject, the allmusic blog reminded me of the old Van Halen story about brown M&M’s. Have you heard it? Rumor had it that they liked M&M’s but hated the brown ones. Their rider specifically requested M&M’s in their dressing room come showtime, but that in under no circumstances were there to be any brown ones in the mix. None. Zero. Then in Colorado they went on a rampage that caused 80,000 dollars in damage to a Colorado venue where they were scheduled to perform. The reason for the outburst? There were brown M&M’s in their bowl. I’d always thought that story was apocryphal. Turns out it’s not, but the truth, as always, has been distorted.

    The rider point is true. They actually did have a detail that specified no little brown candies, but it had nothing to do with the color or taste (if it had one would think DLR would specify “green only.”) But the request was buried in the center of a blizzard of technical specifications. It was their way of testing to make sure the venue folks were actually paying attention to the exacting structural requirements of the mammoth Van Halen traveling circus. If there were brown M&M’s in the mix, guaranteed they’d overlooked other (possibly dangerous) specifications as well.

    So, come the Colorado concert, they find there are — you guessed it — brown M&M’s in their dressing room. And according to Roth, there was a bit of a tantrum backstage; a hole in the door, an upended buffet. That sort of thing. But that wasn’t where the 80 Grand figure came from. According to Roth, in his autobiography:

    The staging sank through their floor. They didn’t bother to look at the weight requirements or anything, and this sank through their new flooring and did eighty thousand dollars’ worth of damage to the arena floor. The whole thing had to be replaced. It came out in the press that I discovered brown M&M’s and did eighty-five thousand dollars’ worth of damage to the backstage area.

    Well, who am I to get in the way of a good rumor?

    Indeed. Van Halen were nothing if not good showmen. Snopes, as usual, has the full story. And for fun, check this out. It’s a vocal-only track from “Runnin’ With The Devil.” Even a cappella, it’s classic David Lee Roth.

    David Lee Roth – “Runnin’ With The Devil (a capella)”

    • Music

    Goldfrapp A&E Redux

    Sorry for the relative lack of posts this week, folks. We really want to get this site revamped for the end of the weekend, so I’ve been under the hood with the spanner and the torque wrench. By Monday (possibly sooner!) we should be sparkly and new. In the meantime, here’s the marvelous Goldfrapp video that I almost posted a couple weeks ago. Mute seems to have put their official stamp on it.

    • Music

    Radar Bros. – Auditorium

    Radar Bros - AuditoriumAnother surprise tumbles from the weekly flood of new releases. It’s Auditorium, the new one by Radar Bros. These guys are consistently good. Each album is a rolling, melancholy stroll through gentle acoustica and wistful heart-caressing melody. “The River Shade” off their last album was one of my picks of 2005. Damn, has it been that long?

    Auditorium, like The Fallen Leaf Pages, strums along at a mid-tempo amble and weaves in and out of a soporific haze. Sounds dreadfully boring, doesn’t it? It’s not. This is music that does well when you’re sinking into a book or messing around with paint brushes. It’s not highway music. It grows on you from the inside.

    Radar Bros

    It’s also, as I’m discovering right now in my post insomnia haze, very difficult to write about. So just listen to “Lake Life” and see for yourself. These guys just wrapped a residency at The Echo in Silverlake, which, frankly, did nothing for me here in New Mexico except increase the impatience with which I anticipate my mid-March return to Los Angeles.

    Radar Bros. – “Lake Life” 

    Radar Bros. – official site, bio at Merge Records, itunes

    • Music
    • Television

    Sia Furler and Bionic Woman

    Bionic Woman

    I got two hours of sleep last night. Insomnia visited my room like a big ol’ buzzard and pecked at me from the headboard. So today’s post is not only late, it’s bound to be a bit cantankerous. But it might have been anyway, really. I caught the pilot of Bionic Woman the other night via hulu.com and there were problems. I want to expound.

    I’d been meaning to check out the show, but I just hadn’t gotten around to it yet. I was, of course, a childhood devotee of The Six Bit Man and his distaff counterpart, Jamie Summers, and this is the age of Women-Who-Kick-Ass, so I’m front and center for this kind of thing. But I was underwhelmed.

    Now, I’m not gonna kick the show on the basis of the single pilot, though. It’s early yet and it would be brutally unfair to dismiss it on a solitary viewing. I haven’t met a character I like yet and the tone and characterization within that first hour were wildly uneven, but given time, it might just grow on me.

    Instead, I’m going to pick on the way they use Sia Furler’s “Breathe Me.”

    First of all, they shouldn’t have. Two years ago, Six Feet Under did it. As Sia herself described, it pretty much brought her back from the dead, which is a funny thing to say given the premise of the show. And they used it at the most pivotal, heart-wringing point in the entire series’ run — its final six minutes. Viewers were already primed and emotional. That coupled with the gorgeosity of the tune folded into an emotional haymaker than people talked about for months.

    “Breathe Me” is a powerful, emotional song. But it’s not a crutch. You can’t use it to prop up a scene that otherwise seems forced and awkward. That’s what they try to do in Bionic Woman. After Jamie escapes from the military hospital where she finds herself after a horrific accident, she finds herself at home, confused and fearful about what she’s become. The plot, which had been screaming forward at a breakneck pace, skids to a halt. She considers suicide. Maybe. It’s hard to tell. She ends up on the roof (will she jump? won’t she?) She makes a decision. And all the while, Sia’s purring “Breathe Me” in the background.

    I appreciate the moment. I recognize that she has to go through something like this. But we have to understand it through the character and the motivation. Not the music. Please don’t try to trick us into feeling something. Give us a reason to care and then blow us away with a thrilling and unexpected song choice. Give us synergy.

    Just not Sia. That’s been done before.

    [Note: The song is in the series trailer as well. I still think it’s the wrong choice, but in this context it works much better. I actually like the contrast between the violence and the melody. ]