2010 Movies

  1. Couples Retreat – Good movie, pretty funny – but one complaint … Does Vince Vaughn ever play a different character than the one in this movie? Or the one in Dodgeball? Or the one in The Break Up? Or the one in any other movie he has been in? I feel like I know the character before the movie even starts.
  2. Wolfman – I haven’t seen the original, but I’ve always been a fan of the werewolf genre, so I was looking forward to this one. I liked the movie a lot, but was amazed by the gore. I really didn’t expect quite so much. Good movie, though. Very dark.
  3. Avatar – This one surprised me. I fully expected to sit through three hours of hippie Earth-saving propaganda – but it was actually pretty awesome. So much so, that I saw it three times while it was in the theater – two of the three in 3D. Some of the themes were a little heavy-handed – and I can’t tell you how strangely annoyed I was with the substance “unobtanium” – but all in all, a great movie. This is one I wouldn’t mind owning.
  4. The Crazies – An almost zombie movie! I’m not entirely sure if they were or were not zombies, but there was a serious zombie vibe coming off of them. This one was a fun movie. I would not rank it as high as 28 Days Later or the most recent Dawn of the Dead, but pretty good.
  5. Up in the Air – This one I would not have chosen on my own, but went with a group from work. I’m not entirely sure if I liked it or not. It was almost like the writers were reading a how-to-write-a-screenplay book and this movie was the direct result. Its structure was pretty predictable, I thought. It wasn’t a terrible movie, just not that great, either.
  6. Hot Tub Time Machine – Okay, I scoffed at this one when I first saw the preview. If it hadn’t been for the same group that made me see Up in the Air, I likely would not have seen this movie. They definitely redeemed their movie picking skills with this one. Very funny movie – and it was much smarter humor than any of the previews implied. I was pleasantly surprised with this one.
  7. Nightmare on Elm Street – Growing up, I had two favorite horror movie franchises: Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th. There wasn’t much substance, but plenty of cheap thrills, topless women, and disemboweled sinners. Both franchises eventually fell into that strange place where they weren’t sure if they were funny or scary – and they both suffered for it. While this reboot wasn’t a homerun by any stretch, it was a good start. While I really missed Robert Englund, I will see the sequel if they make it.
  8. Iron Man 2 – I really liked the first Iron Man.  Spike TV plays the movie all the time and I’m always okay with stopping to watch it. So, I was really looking forward to the sequel. It was a fun superhero movie, for sure, but it seemed unnecessarily dark when it came to Tony Stark. I don’t want to watch a cool superhero devolve into self-pity, self-loathing, and general whininess. I want to see him kick ass and blow shit up. Add to that my general dislike of Mickey Rourke – and I’m not sure where that leaves me. I didn’t hate it, but it wasn’t my favorite movie of the summer, either.
  9. Inception – Wow. Loved this movie. I’m still not entirely sure what happened, but I liked it. There was one problem, though. My name is Joe Wilder, and I am a Red Bull-aholic. I have to have it to make it through the day. Without my Red Bull, I am a sleep-addled zombie.
  10. The Last Exorcism – Fun movie here. Not at all what I expected, though not necessarily in a bad way.
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2009 Movies

2009 Movies

  1. The Day the Earth Stood Still – Pretty decent movie. I have to admit that I did not realize it was a remake of an older movie, so I have nothing to compare it to, really. My primary complaint – and the thing that kept it from being a really good movie, in my opinion – is that it just sort of … ended. I had the distinct impression that someone lost the last few pages of the screenplay and they decided to just go with it anyway. It was kind of weird how abruptly it cut off.
  2. Taken – The only thing that could have made this movie any better would have been if Liam Neeson had a light saber. If you want a “justice served” kind of movie, you need to see this one. I thought it took a little while to set everything up, but I realize it had to justify his response to the kidnapping. Once the actual kidnapping took place? Wow. Neeson’s character was brutal and unapologetic and just flat-out awesome. And the best part? The movie avoided the “feel bad” spiral for the character. It made no effort to show you the pitfalls of revenge and how we should all be above it. You are shown an event, character makes a promise, character delivers, and you cheer him on the entire time. Awesome.
  3. Push – I read a review before this movie that it was like an episode of Heroes on speed. After having seen the movie, I am a little confused as to whether or not the reviewer watches Heroes. Some episodes are slower than others, yes – but I don’t see the comparison – other than both the show and the movie showcase people with powers. While the movie was definitely good, I felt like they were holding back all the way through. In stories of this nature, I like the moment where the primary characters come into their own – where they realize how to use their powers and really start to screw people over with them. That part of the movie was missing. The characters only get moderately better at the use of their powers (except the bad ones) as the movie goes forward and you are left kind of out of the loop in how those powers may or may not have affected the outcome of the movie. You saw them start to grow – but you were left hanging. Maybe setting up a sequel? I’d probably see it.
  4. The Unborn – The concept had promise. I wanted to see the movie since I saw the first preview. While I certainly enjoyed it, there was something missing. Not entirely sure what it was, but I feel like something important was forgotten. My only other issue is that the entire premise for the movie (and all of the advertising) was not really what was happening. Again, it wasn’t bad – just not really what I expected. One place where it excelled, though, was with the disturbing images. It’s nice to see that movies can occasionally remember that you don’t have to be disgusting to be disturbing. A solid PG-13 movie can stick in your head just as much as a nasty, gory R rating.
  5. Yes Man – When Jim Carrey is doing what he is best at, he is awesome. This was one of those movies. While it definitely had a “feel good” aspect – which I would normally avoid – it was pretty good. There were many laugh-out-loud moments, which were awesome. The thing I like about Jim Carrey is that unlike some of the other comedy actors (here’s looking at you, Will Ferrell), he doesn’t seem to be reaching for the funny. Jim Carrey strikes me as more self-deprecating and less outwardly mean, like some of his counterparts. This movie is great if you are looking for a good laugh (or many) and you like that whole “feel good” thing that goes with it. Plus, it might make you look at how often you just say “no” to things when you probably shouldn’t. Look at that – learning, laughing, and feeling good all at the same time. Ugh – now I feel used.
  6. The Watchmen – The previews looked good, though I wasn’t sure about the guy dressed up in what looked – to me – like a Dollar Store Batman costume. Come to find out his name is “The Owl” – still, that doesn’t make it better. This movie was just shy of three hours long, which was pushing my patience. The story felt stretched to cover the allotted time and I felt like my mind was wandering way too much during the movie. Also a little surprised with the big blue naked guy – who stayed unabashedly naked through most of the movie. Was that necessary? I hope he got paid extra for it. I won’t see this movie again. Not very good and I spent about an hour after the movie trying to figure out where it went wrong.
  7. Last House on the Left – I know this one is a remake, which I typically don’t like, but I was willing to see it because it was re-made by Wes Craven – who made the original. Not a bad movie, but a little too graphic at times. I know we are supposed to witness the atrocities committed by the villains so that we can better understand [and commend] the reactions of the parents, but did they really have to go so far? There is a pretty intense scene where the victim is raped – and it was pretty dramatic and seemed to go on forever – when everyone in the audience already got the point. It was kind of disturbing and all I could think was, “Did I just pay $9 to watch this girl get raped?” It seriously bordered “disturbingly voyeuristic” at times.
  8. Knowing – The previews they have been showing for this one (for months on end) had me pretty excited about the movie. I liked it, but not as much as I thought I would. The effects were pretty awesome, primarily the scene with the airliner crashing into the interstate. That was unexpected and as intense as an event like that should be. Where it all ended up, though? Not sure. Definite points to Nick Cage, though – who seems like he might be learning to act.
  9. Fast & Furious – I have resisted the urge to watch any of the Fast & Furious movies up to this point. I couldn’t tell you why the premise (and resulting fads) irk me so much, but they really do. Agreeing to see the movie with Aunt B and roommate R, I gave in and watched the first one – seeing as how they were hyping the “original parts” on all of the promos. Surprisingly, I liked the movie. I don’t know exactly what I thought it would be, but it wasn’t that. Going into the new movie fresh on the heels of the old, I enjoyed it quite a bit.
  10. I Love You, Man – The previews made this movie look a lot funnier than it actually was. I don’t mean to take anything away from it, as it is truly a funny movie – but there was something … off. Perhaps it was the painful awkwardness of the main character, or his inability to have a normal conversation with anyone around him? I get that the point of the movie revolves around this issue, but it was hard to watch at times. While much of the movie was laugh-out-loud-and-spit-out-your-Coke funny, much of it was also cringe-worthy.
  11. Haunting in Connecticut – I heard this movie was based on a special from the Discovery Channel. I realized mid-way through the movie that it was almost scene-for-scene based on the special from Discovery Channel. I’m not sure if I was happy or disappointed with that. It’s a movie on the big screen … surely we could have deviated just a little more? Definite points for the creepy vibe throughout the movie. I think many of the latest horror movies would do well to learn something from this one.
  12. X-Men Origins: Wolverine – Who knew Wolverine and Sabertooth were brothers? I guess it makes sense, but that’s coming from someone who has never cracked one of the X-Men comics. Loved the movie. Big action, big explosions, big noise, lots of people getting thrown around like rag dolls; awesome. For someone unfamiliar with the comics, I liked the background provided by this one, though I have no idea if it is true to the original stories. It was also kind of fun to pick out the characters you know from the previous movies, most of them still kids. Will get this one on DVD, for sure.
  13. Angels and Demons – I read this book several years back and loved it. In fact, I could never figure out what the hype was all about with The DaVinci Code, because this book was so much better, on all fronts. Right before the movie came out, I listened to this one on CD again, just as a refresher. Now, I realize concessions have to be made when you create a movie from a book, not only for time, but also to re-craft the story around the things you had to take out. So, while I could be all shocked and upset that they changed it so much from the written version, I will concentrate my complaints on the motive for the crimes committed in the movie. There wasn’t one! The book had a (if not sensational, misunderstood, and a touch delusional) rock solid motive for the villain to perpetrate the crimes against the Church – and an even more awesome reveal after the explanation of motive. The movie, I guess, couldn’t be bothered with going into the actual why of it all. I’m not sure I understand what happened there. The ending felt kind of … off.
  14. Star Trek – Okay, if you have two camps – one for Star Wars and one for Star Trek – I have a Darth Vader tent. I have never cared for any of the Star Trek TV series. They strike me as mostly cheesy, lame, boring, contrived, and way under-budgeted. Oh, and old. Everything about this supposedly futuristic franchise seems somehow dated. The movies weren’t quite as bad, but I think that falls back on the budget issue. A once-every-so-many-years movie gets a much bigger budget than a once-a-week television show. Either way, make sure you duck the bolts of lightning about to rain down from on high – I loved this movie. Saw it twice! It was a refreshing re-start to the series.
  15. Terminator: Salvation – Awesome effects, awesome robots, awesome explosions. What more do you need? This movie was great (especially if you can forget the leaked video of Christian Bale freaking out on the crew), but I do have some reservations about the previews they have been showing for the past year. I have known for the last year that one of the Terminators in the movie didn’t actually know he was a Terminator – and that he is somehow chained up in a place where John Connor will show him that he is, in fact, a Terminator. So when the movie starts and we focus on this guy trying to figure out what is going on, we already know he is a Terminator, even though he doesn’t. That could have been left for a pretty great reveal later in the movie – if they hadn’t been splashing it all over the internet for the last year. Some forethought is always appreciated, people. Oh, and one more gripe … a heart transplant? Outside? Under a tent? In the desert? Maybe I have been corrupted by the ever-present prime time medical drama, but I’m thinking there is a much higher risk of infection that way.
  16. Drag Me to Hell – Damn. This movie was awesome. Why can’t all of the other people making horror movies give Sam Raimi a call before they start production? This one had great jump-out-at-you scenes, awesome creepy scenes, incredible sound track, many laugh-out-loud scenes, and never once took itself too seriously. This is what horror movies used to be – and should be again. I do find myself wondering about Sam Raimi’s oral fixation, however. I was a little surprised how many times bad stuff went in or came out of the people’s mouths in this movie — bugs (in the form of vomit), handkerchiefs, arms, flies (living), embalming fluid (double shot – both out of one mouth and into another), kittens — you get the point. Great movie. Saw it twice, in fact. Seriously, how can you not love a movie where a possessed goat bleats the word “Whore”??
  17. The Hangover – For months, I have only seen a poster for this movie in the theater. I had no idea what it was about and the poster really wasn’t getting my attention, other than the acknowledgement that it was, in fact, hanging on the wall. Then I saw an actual preview for it, which definitely got my attention. Loved this movie. While I didn’t actually spit any Coke on anyone, I felt like every time a took a sip of my drink, the people in front of me were in danger. The movie was funny from start to finish and you just didn’t know where it was going next. Definitely see this movie.
  18. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen – Let’s just take a quick moment here to reflect on my love for the new Camaro (…) Wow. That is an awesome car. I would even take it with Bumblebee colors. I liked this movie a lot, even with some of its gaping plot holes and [unintentional] WTF moments. Giant robots? Check. Giant robots in giant fight scenes? Check. Many, many cool weapons and explosions? Check. Exuberant cheesiness? Check. Hot girl who is actually a robot with a ten foot tongue? Umm … check? One thing that kind of surprised me about this movie: the language. While I am not at all a prude when it comes to language in movies (Hello, Kevin Smith – I love your movies!), it was a little weird to hear so many of the robots say “shit” and to hear one of them call someone a pussy. Isn’t this an adaptation of a kids’ cartoon?
  19. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince – Once again, I like how these movies are getting darker as they go. This one was pretty awesome. I was a little disappointed in what seemed like an almost anti-climactic ending, though. It built up to what seemed like should have been a massive fight, but it felt like they ducked out before the fight could happen. For such a huge event at the end of the movie, it felt like there should have been more of a response to it. Up to this point, I really haven’t been too interested in reading any of the books – but I was told how those scenes were actually written, which definitely got me curious. They are all going on my reading list now.
  20. Orphan – Umm. Wow. This one was unexpected. I figured it was going to be another disturbing child movie, like most of the others. I heard a couple of reviews on it, mostly referring to it as sick and disturbing. Hey, sounds like my kind of movie! It was definitely disturbing. The acting was pretty good, I thought, but hats are definitely off to the creepy little girl. My biggest complaint is the marketing campaign around the movie and the often used phrases: “Biggest twist of the summer,” and “A twist you won’t believe.” So now I spent about 7/8 of the movie trying to figure out the twist. I will say the twist was very creative, though. I certainly wasn’t expecting it. This is a movie I would see again. Liked it.
  21. I Love You, Beth Cooper – Funny movie, but painful at times. Some of the stereotypes get tiring after a while, you know? I found several of them pretty annoying, but there were a couple that I thought were awesome – most notably, the ditzy blonde. She was great and made me laugh through most of the movie. The thing that struck me most about this movie was a pervasive sense of sadness underlying the main events. Whether it was the time wasted in high school, the fear of the unknown, or [insert other tired cliche here] – it was there. All in all, I liked the movie. Good popcorn kind of fun.
  22. G.I. Joe – I was worried about this one. How many of my favorite cartoons from the second grade can successfully be made into movies? And even at a young age, the cheesiness of the original G.I. Joe was evident. The toys, however – the toys were awesome! I have to say, though – this movie was pretty awesome. Hot girls fighting in way-too-tight clothes, big explosions, cool vehicles (toys!), cool weapons – it was all there. Definitely a fun movie with the potential to be watched many times over – with the surround sound up really loud, of course.
  23. The Final Destination (3D) – Ok, I admit it. I love this franchise. This was a nice addition, though I feel they have lost a little more creativity with each installment. A quick aside here – years and years ago, my good friend M and I had an ongoing conversation about everyday items which could be deadly. We pretty much decided that anything could be deadly, depending on how it was used (or mis-used). The only single item we couldn’t attribute a deadly use for was a blade of grass. But then we decided if you had many individual blades, you could essentially use them to choke someone. Then this series of movies came along and it played right into this conversation – and that was what made the movies so awesome. You knew the highlighted character was about to bite it, you just didn’t know how. The camera lingered over a collection of items, creating a certain equal dread and ominous portent attributed to a rake, a butcher knife, or even a cracked coffee mug. That was the fun part. Which object would be the instrument of death? And even better? When many objects came together in sequence to deliver the eventual outcome. That lack of creativity mentioned above? They seem to have forgotten the suspense part; the which object part. There was no surprise. If you saw something out of place or if the view went out of the way to show you an object, it was going to be used. Aside from that complaint, I liked it well enough. We saw it in 3D – and I have to say – I don’t think I have ever been subjected to so many entrails flying at my face. That was a little … strange.
  24. Zombieland – You already know my affinity for zombies, so how could this movie go wrong? It was funny and fast-paced and completely engrossing. I like how they didn’t downplay the apocalyptic nature of the zombie infestation, but still made it one of the funniest movies of the year. And a character named Tallahassee? How cool is that? The only other place I can remember our fair city being mentioned is Lost – and they always act like it’s some kind of cesspool you would only ever visit to commit a crime or some other nefarious deed. This one’s a keeper!
  25. Paranormal Activity – This was a pretty good year for horror movies. And this one didn’t buck the trend. Once again, someone remembered how to best make a horror movie. While Sam Raimi’s Drag Me to Hell was wildly overstated the entire way through, this one is quite the opposite. There is no soundtrack and you never actually see the villain. Yet each event leaves you feeling just a little more creeped out. It is terrifying in the most subtle way. After thinking about it for a while, I think the scariest part of this one is not so much what is happening to the couple, but the fact that they don’t realize what is happening – as it’s happening to them. You have to watch what’s going on and it gets more uncomfortable and intense with each passing night. Awesome, awesome movie. Sadly, this is one I don’t think will translate well to home viewing. The pacing is intentionally slow and if you aren’t completely plugged into it, the scariness will be lost. Simple household distractions will take you right out of this one and the movie will suffer for it. My biggest complaint here is that they showed the best scenes on the preview. Granted, you have no idea how bad they actually were until you see them in context, but still.
  26. 2012 – Another movie with lots of hype. It mostly lived up to it. Special effects were crazy. I was told before going in to expect a movie “heavy on effects, light on story” … that’s about right. If you like watching the planet tear itself apart, this is definitely the movie for you! A solid addition to the year, and one that will be fun to watch at the house with the surround sound turned way up.
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The Resulting Void of Modern Dentistry

I learned a valuable lesson tonight. As many lessons go, it was one I should have figured out before having to learn it by personal experience – but that is too often the way with me. Let me give you a little background.

I have mentioned before – and many of you know first-hand – that my mom had a few health problems over the last year. As those problems started to recede, Mom and I made a deal with each other: no more self-diagnosing. We would see doctors when needed and would each make sure to get regular check-ups and ensure our good health.

This has not been so easy for me, because I have an unnatural fear of doctors. Don’t get me wrong. I wouldn’t run away should I pass one casually on the street. Medical dramas do not frighten me. I have spent much time visiting loved ones in hospitals without suffering ill effects from close proximity to those in the medical profession (save for wanting to throttle and/or maim one or two of them). So, perhaps I should rephrase the statement. I have an unnatural fear of doctors who are tasked with evaluating me.

They don’t even have to speak; I know what they are going to say: “Lose weight. Quit smoking. Your blood pressure is high. You have approximately 22 minutes and 32 seconds to live. Please pay my assistant in full before you croak. Have a nice [what's left of your] day.” I understand they likely wouldn’t be this obvious, but I can see it in their eyes – the shifty yet resigned look of disdain and disapproval in which doctors have become the world’s leading experts.

That said, you know who I fear even more than your standard doctor? The dentist. In my mind, the dentist is even more sadistic, judgmental, and scathing in their appraisal than even your most jaded and pessimistic doctor. With this in mind – and the misguided belief in conquering the worst of your fears first – I made an appointment with the dentist back in October. Keep in mind that before my first appointment, I had not seen a dentist in … 20 years? Let’s just say it’s been a shamefully long time.

Day one wasn’t so bad. A quick check-up for the dentist to tell me I needed a bunch of fillings and to schedule appointments through the end of 2008. No pain. My second appointment was for a cleaning. This one was not so much fun. First off, I got the hygienist I really didn’t want – the hottest girl in the building. While many might request such a girl, all I could think about was the cesspool of nastiness which surely must be residing in and between my teeth and gums and that this girl was not the one I wanted to have to work on it. Seriously, how do you go from “Oh my, you have a dirty mouth” (heh.) to “So, what are you doing Saturday night?” I personally don’t know how to bridge the gap between the two. I wanted some androgynous robot looking person to be the one cleaning my teeth for the first time in my adult life. I took faith in that once she put on all the gear (gown, glasses, hat, mask, etc), I wouldn’t have to see how pretty she was. Nope. I’m fairly certain she is the girl they get to model the surgical garb. The cap was tight-fitting and let these wispy locks of blonde hair curl out and fall over her obviously designer safety glasses which seemed somehow tinted to magnify the deep blue of her eyes. Her voice was soft and she talked the entire time she scrubbed, scraped, and made me bleed (I wondered a couple of times if I was really expected to answer, considering). I could see through her expensive glasses that she was quick to smile and her visible features seemed genuine as she did so. And the entire time, I am thinking, “This is complete and utter bullshit. Where’s my robot? I wanted a robot!”

I went for several more visits through the year, all of them with the actual dentist who falls into the ‘androgynous’ category once he dons the appropriate safety gear. These were mostly uneventful visits, except for the work on my bottom teeth. Those of you who have had fillings in your bottom teeth may be familiar with the numbing process. He puts the needle somewhere in the soft skin under your back molars, hits a nerve with the Novocain, sending a shockwave through your face on contact – then that entire bottom side of your face disappears, or so it seems. I also lose complete feeling and control of my tongue, which became a little bit of a hassle for the dentist and his not-quite-as-attractive-as-the-hygienist assistant. I had no idea what it was doing, but I guess it was all over the place. They pretty much had to hold my spazz-matic tongue in place to complete the fillings. And the quote from my dentist which I will never forget? “I know we’re great friends and all now, but how about you try to stop licking my hand?” That was just wrong.

So, aside from the obvious orthodontic work I need, there was one major thing I was looking forward to with this whole dentist business: having my lone exposed wisdom tooth taken out. It grew in a rather precarious position, facing full forward and butted up against the molar directly in front of it. The tooth was a little high, the upper half rising above the tooth in front. This raised portion of the tooth has kept me from completely shutting my mouth (top molars against bottom molars) without off-setting my jaw for about the last ten years. I was ready to be done with it. We tried to get it done before the end of the year for insurance reasons, but we just couldn’t get it in the schedule. The date was set for this past Friday.

Not really wanting to do it once the date was set – and spending two weeks alternately freaking out about it and looking forward to not having the tooth there anymore – the date trudged inevitably forward. I asked a bunch of questions to anyone I knew who had already experienced an “extraction” and was met with mixed reviews. For some people, it was a walk in the park; for others, it was a nightmare. Strangely, I was not too concerned with the pain associated with the days after the extraction. I was far more anxious that it would hurt while they were pulling the tooth – and at that point, what can you do? You can’t tell them to stop. That wouldn’t work. I was convinced it was going to hurt like a mother and I was going to have to sit through a four hour process while my hot hygienist and all of her equally hot friends sat in the room dividing their discussion between pole dancing techniques, their desire for men with no fear of pain, and the amusing faces and sounds I made while my sadistic dentist went to work on my mouth with a hammer and a chisel.

Thankfully, that is not how it went.

The day of the appointment, I show up and learned something I didn’t already know (among many others) – I have Junior for a dentist. He comes in, numbs me up with some kind of gel and then with an alarming number of shots with a huge tube of Novocain – and then he tells me that because of the positioning of the tooth and possible complications from the extraction, he was going to have his dad do the work. His Dad?? Seriously? And then he steps into the hall and says, “Dad, could you do this extraction for me?”

You know what? I have an enormous amount of faith in both my step-dad and my dad – in their abilities to do the things they know how to do, and their ability to learn new things – but I would never look to either of them and say, “You know, this cross-wind is a little crazy today. Could you land this airplane for me?”

That was my first thought – and it was a little freaky. I didn’t realize initially that while my dentist’s office posts the sign outside, “Dr. M and Associates”, that the Dr. M on the sign is actually Dr. M Senior and that my dentist is Dr. M Junior. Simple enough explanation, but still not something I wanted to hear when already so freaked out and anxious.

Dr. M Senior comes in the room, gives me another shot – just to be sure – and gives me a couple of minutes to get numb. I spent the time chatting [slurring/mumbling near-incoherently] with the dental assistant (I’m sure they have a title other than ‘assistant’, but I don’t know it). She commented that I looked nervous. I played it down as much as possible, not mentioning that my mind was already trying to find a good reason to bolt. She told me not to worry, that I actually wouldn’t feel anything – just pressure. This is what other people have told me, so I was starting to buy into the theory, finally. Any way you look at it, though – it was too late at this point. I fell back on one of my oft used quotes to myself – “This too shall pass.”

In all seriousness, I do say this a lot to myself when required to do something unpleasant. Even some of the most unpleasant things will fade from memory in time, I figure. The unfortunate part which also sticks with me is that this applies to the good things as well as the bad. Okay, serious note done.

The senior dentist comes back in the room, asks if I am numb, pokes me in the gums with some torturous looking pick device – and without preamble, starts to work. Here’s where I want to go back to that “pressure” statement I heard so often in the days leading up to this visit. “You will feel pressure, but no pain.” Yeah, that doesn’t really do it justice. What it actually felt like is that he was unhinging and ripping my bottom jaw from my face – but for whatever reason, it didn’t hurt. It was strange and alien and altogether unpleasant, I thought. I have no idea how he actually accomplished the extraction, but it felt like he was sticking that pick under my tooth and using it as leverage to wedge it out of my mouth, switching from side to side. I don’t think I am too far off base. It was, in the best word I can think of to describe it, a primitive process.

Here’s another point for dentists the world over: please remember when sticking drills, picks, pry-bars, or other plastic or metal objects in people’s mouths – please be careful the instrument you are using does not stick to the lip of your patient. Not cool. I felt like my lip was split in three places when I walked out of there.

Either way, it was over way quicker than I thought it would be. I was in the midst of that uncomfortable invasion of space with your dentist, where he is pretty close to your face and you are unsure whether to keep your eyes open, staring off to the side to avoid looking up his nose or into his eyes, or just closing your eyes and hoping he doesn’t commit some nefarious trick of dentistry while you aren’t looking – I choose to close my eyes – when he casually goes, “Hmm” … I open my eyes to see what is going on and notice he is looking at something. He then holds it up – it is my tooth – and way bigger than I expected! I was so relieved it was over, but then he delivered the bad news: there was still a sliver of it stuck in there. So the next 20 minutes were spent with him digging and digging until he found it. Then another 10 minutes of uncomfortable x-rays taken from the back of my throat forward to make sure he got it all. At this point, I didn’t even consider the hot hygienist might walk by and see me gagging and concerned I was about to choke on the x-ray equipment. I just wanted to be done. And finally, I was.

The weekend was spent in a Vicodin induced coma and thankfully, the pain wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be.

When I finally got around to looking at the inside of my mouth, I was quite shocked by what I found. I’m not entirely sure what I expected, and it really does make sense to me why it should be there, but a gaping hole where my tooth used to be was not it. There is a hole in my mouth. More accurately, there is a hole in my mouth to which I cannot see the bottom. This bothers me a little bit. My mind fills in the gaps for me, illustrating tiny insects and critters that have moved in and now have a dark and moist, slightly coppery, new home. So I try not to think about it too much.

Which brings us to my opening line, which I never intended to be quite as far from this one in the structure of this post. I learned a valuable lesson last night.

For the past week, I haven’t been much on eating anything crunchy. The idea of crunchy food is quite unappealing, in fact. Instead, I have eaten a lot of soup. I am finally starting to get to that point where I want real food again, but figured I should start slow, with foods you don’t have to chew, like pasta and rice.

Lesson learned: do not eat rice with a giant hole in your mouth. Because, in all honesty, the hole is not that giant. In the grander scheme of things, it is a small hole – unless, of course, you were comparing it to an over-sized piece of rice. Then you would call it a perfect sized hole. I felt it happen and I immediately put down the bowl and feverishly thrashed at the offending grain of rice with my tongue. It was in there good and all I was doing was pushing it farther down. Shit.

Now my imagination lurches into overdrive, building speed and aimed right at the wall. What happens if it gets stuck in there? How will I get it out? All I could see was a rotting piece of rice, a new home to a host of maggots and spiders which would live furtively in the void which used to contain a tooth that never actually hurt me, but was a simple annoyance and I should have just left the damn thing alone. But no, I am impatient and don’t want to wait for anything and I just wanted to be able to shut my mouth again and keep my bottom teeth from going more crooked than they already are. And what did that get me? It got me a piece of rice stuck in a healing wound which was going to heal over, trapping the rice and maggots and spiders down there until one night in my sleep, when I least expected it, they would break the skin and crawl/slide down my throat and out of my mouth and all over me just like that chain e-mail said about not licking store-bought envelopes and you should buy the self-stick kind to keep this very thing from happening. And even if none of that happened, the wedged rice would not eventually come out, but start to rot, which would spread rot to my gums and by proxy, my jaw, until it progressed to my skin and I had to go to one of those radical doctors to have the whole lower half of my face removed so that I looked like that guy who got taken out by Rusty Nail in the movie Joyride.

It had to come out. Not later. Not soon. Now.

I looked in the mirror, could just barely see the top edge of the rice. What could I used to get in there? A toothpick! It seemed slightly ironic to me that you would still use a toothpick in the hole where a tooth used to be, rather than on an actual tooth or the space between teeth, but I let it go. I found a box of toothpicks and went back to mirror. Studying the wood splinter, I realize this is no normal toothpick. It’s a weapon! I don’t think I have ever seen such sharp toothpicks. This is the kind of thing that if you fell while you had it in your mouth, it would easily shoot through the roof of your mouth and lodge itself in your brain – and was thin enough that you may not have even realized it happened, but found out when you went to a doctor a week later for a persistent headache and a weird nervous tic in which you shout sexual obscenities at total strangers – culminating in your appearance on one of those shows like The 100 Strangest Things Found in the Human Head, alongside the guy who fell on his nail gun and didn’t realize it shot an 8 inch spike through his head.

So – very carefully – I put the toothpick in the toothless hole and dug around (with extreme caution) for a couple of minutes before extracting the mutant grain of rice. Whew! Catastrophe averted, lesson learned. No bugs here. I think I am going to swear off rice and stick with the larger pasta varieties for a couple more days.

Is this hole going to stay this way forever? Will it go away? Will at least become more shallow? I hope so. I can’t be thinking about maggots and spiders every time I eat a piece of rice for the rest of my life.

And, on that note, it’s late. Until next time.

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2008 Movies

Okay, like the last two years, I kept track of all the movies I watched at the theater in 2008. Once again, it looks like I spent an awful lot of money! (side note – you can find the lists here for 2006 and 2007)

This year, I tried to add a little more of my completely unsolicited commentary for each movie. Interestingly enough, some of my views have changed after further mulling over what I saw. I will comment on that after you read my unedited reviews, which were generally written within a day or two of having seen the movie.

Here goes:

  1. Alien vs. Predator: Requiem – Not so sure about this one. Most of the movie was highly predictable and even the unpredictable parts were … predictable? Not a bad movie all in all, for it being a monster-action movie, but I wish I would have waited for the dollar theater … or video.
  2. One Missed Call – You know, I thought this one had a lot of promise. I liked the idea and the previews were pretty good, but I have to admit I was concerned about the premise. Too easily it can intrude into the territory of ‘hokey’ … which I think was just narrowly avoided here. My biggest complaints come from weird spacing throughout and the fact that everyone in the movie bought in to what was actually going on so quick, with very little argument. That was kind of strange, I thought. Overall, it was all right.
  3. 30 Days of Night – Okay, you guys know I love me some vampire movies and I was looking forward to this one, as I thought it was a pretty cool idea. But even as much as I love vampire movies, they always piss me off with stupid shit. This one wasn’t too bad, but I have some concerns. First off, why were the vampires dressed like they just came from a black-tie charity ball? They were portrayed as crazy monster-type vampires, yet they were dressed to the nines. Second, you mean to tell me that after 30 days in sub-freezing temperatures, the blood is still wet? Seriously? Last thing, and by far the most offensive – what the hell is up with all the waste? I thought they were supposed to be drinking the blood, not pouring it all over everything in sight. The blood was pooling on flat surfaces (and sprayed all over others) at an alarming rate for a vampire movie. Surprised they didn’t all starve to death, if we’re being honest. Still, though – I liked it.
  4. Cloverfield – I was concerned about this one. Eight months of hype based on little to no real information can be taxing, to say the least. Could the movie live up to its own PR engine? In a word, Yes. Awesome movie here. Be careful, though – the whole thing is filmed in the first person view with a handheld camera. I had to look away from the screen several times to keep from hurling. Other than that, loved the movie. It’s been too long since we had a decent “Monster-Terrorizing-City” movie.
  5. Jumper – Here’s another one I was looking forward to seeing. This movie is like the ultimate fantasy – skip across the world doing whatever, whenever you like, with little to no consequences. Except for the part where there are consequences. The previews looked awesome and in general, I liked the movie a lot. My problem is that I never really understood the ‘consequences’. Who were the people after him? Why were they after him? One or two sentences of explanation do not an explanation make. I feel like a lot was left on the editing room floor on this one.
  6. Vantage Point – Awesome movie. Plenty of twists and turns, keeping you on your feet all the way through. I loved the idea of seeing one event through the eyes of so many different people. I also loved the groans throughout the theater every time you get the white flash and it reads on the screen, again, 12:01pm – or whatever time it was.
  7. Iron Man – Loved it. I wasn’t planning to love it. In fact, I thought the idea of the whole movie was kind of silly. I was not previously familiar with the character of Iron Man, but was not overly impressed when I realized Robert Downey, Jr. was playing the lead role. I’m eating crow now, I can admit. I thought the movie was awesome and I hung out on the edge of the seat the entire time. Note to movie makers – stop putting important stuff at the end of the credits. You suck.
  8. Forgetting Sarah Marshall – Hilarious! Loved it. This movie masters the art (in several places) of awkwardness. In fact, the awkwardness is sometimes painful to watch. Good movie, another laugh out loud favorite here.
  9. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull – This is for all of those people I have scoffed at and generally ridiculed for never seeing the Star Wars movies … I have never watched the Indiana Jones movies. Well, I probably have seen each of the movies in their entirety, just not all in one sitting – bits and pieces here and there. It was never for a lack of interest in the movies, just something I never did. That said, I enjoyed the most recent installment well enough. I was a little surprised by the ‘other-worldly’ element, though. Has that been a theme in the earlier movies? I will have to finally sit down and watch them to see, I guess. There was something that kind of bugged me, though. For all of the money spent on this movie for talent both in front of and behind the camera – what is up with all the choppy transitions? I normally don’t notice things like this as much (or give leeway when I do), but I can’t tell you how many scenes cut from one camera angle to the next with the actors not doing the same thing as they were in the last. It was to the point of distracting. For the over-the-top feel of the movie (which seems very intentional), there were a lot of over-the-top facial expressions. You see Harrison Ford making an over-the-top expression in one scene, then we cut over to another angle of him making the face … and he’s not making the face anymore – a similar face, but not the same. And it kept happening throughout the movie. Like I said, distracting. Liked the movie, though. I am a new fan of Indiana Jones.
  10. The Happening – You have no idea how much I was hoping for another Signs or Sixth Sense – and not another miserable waste of my time like The Village. What I got was something pretty much in the middle. I should have known better when the most common advertisement for the movie was that it was M. Night Shyamalan’s first “R-rated movie” – when that is your selling point, that the movie is rated R? Now you’re just catering to under-17 crowd who will clamor to see it. I didn’t think the movie was terrible, though. For the most part, it was pretty good. I thought the message was … heavy handed. I was a little irked that the one religious character in the movie turned out to be a raving lunatic, but that seems to be the norm anymore. Just not sure about this one. The first words out of my mouth upon rolling credits were, “Leftist Propaganda” … which is a bit of a switch, as I am used to calling the Right on their propaganda bullshit. Hmm … It was just okay for me.
  11. The Incredible Hulk – This one was chosen simply for the timing of its release. A lot of things going on at the home-front and haven’t been able to make it to the movies in a while. This is one of five I wanted to see, so it was chosen as having been released first – see it while it still has regular showings at the good theater. I wasn’t very excited about, as I just couldn’t get out of my head the train wreck that was the first Hulk movie a couple of years back. I was very pleasantly surprised. At just under two hours, the movie grabs you up front and keeps you going the whole time. The CGI was good, the acting wasn’t terrible, and lots of shit got blown up. What more can you ask for? Plus? Tony Stark showed up. They are really playing up The Avengers lately … I really hope it lives up to its hype when it finally gets here.
  12. Wanted – It has Angelina Jolie in it – is there a better reason to see it? Unfortunately, she has become so skinny that she isn’t quite as attractive as she used to be. I think the director figured that one out, too, as she was mostly filmed from the neck up. The movie was good, but a couple of times it came dangerously close to stretching my believability factor. I can deal with the basic premise of the story, people with heightened senses and some telekinetic abilities, but when you start going into the territory of unbelievable car chases – that’s when you start to lose me. I will say it again, though – Angelina Jolie looks remarkably turned on whether she is kicking ass, having her ass kicked, or just sitting in a chair staring into space.
  13. The Dark Knight – Wow. Loved it. I normally don’t get so excited about the comic book movies, but I have been looking forward to this one for about the last year. I was constantly surprised by how dark it was and that it kept getting even darker as it progressed. The Joker was awesome. I was worried that Heath Ledger’s performance was being over-hyped because of his untimely death, but he really did an awesome job at it. This movie also had something that a lot of other movies could learn from – even for as violent as the movie was, it showed you very little. Several people took gunshots to the face, lost a pencil in their eye, or suffered some other creative form of dismemberment, but they didn’t feel the need to actually show it to you. Awesome. You don’t have to get all gory and nasty to get the point across, you know. Thanks for finally figuring it out.
  14. Hancock – Another good one from Will Smith. Unexpected direction, but definitely fun to watch. Well, maybe not quite fun to watch, but it had nothing to do with the movie. Pansy emo kids were sitting behind us acting like the skinny little assholes they were. Bastards. It was kind of funny to watch them quake a little when my buddy R pretty much threatened their lives.
  15. Pineapple Express – I had never even heard of this movie until everyone said they wanted to see it; not the first preview or even whisper about it. I gave it a shot, though, and was not disappointed. I usually don’t go for the pot humor movies – they generally are kind of dumb, I think. While this one definitely had its ‘kind of dumb’ moments, I actually liked it a lot. There were many really good laugh out loud moments – and I almost had another Coke moment all over the people in front of me. Very cool.
  16. Step Brothers – Not typically a Will Ferrell fan here and I’m not sure if this movie changed my mind. It was definitely funny, but sometimes it felt like they were trying just a little too hard. Some of the jokes were hysterical while others left you thinking … okay, that was a stretch. Over all, not bad, but not on my “to-buy” list by any means.
  17. Zack and Miri Make a Porno – I will go see almost any Kevin Smith movie. And once again, I loved it. Raunchy, funny, great story, and he somehow makes you feel like you know all of the people in the movie – and know someone just like them in real life. Awesome move. I’m not sure if I will ever be able to eat chocolate icing again, though.
  18. Quantum of Solace – Good movie. Very intense and edge-of-the-seat, I thought. I still love the James-Bond-wasn’t-always-so-cool feel to the restart of the franchise, though it occasionally comes dangerously close to feeling like a Jason Bourne movie. You know what would really set the new Bond movies apart from Bourne? Q. Where is Q? Where are the awesome toys Q always provides? Bring Q back!

As I said earlier, some of these movies would have far harsher reviews if I were to write them now. In fact, I had to stop myself from changing some of the original text as I was preparing this post. Most notably, those movies are: One Missed CallIndiana JonesThe Happening, and Step Brothers. Not sure what changed so much between here and there. I think Indiana Jones falters because of all the negative press it got by many of the hardcore fans of the original movies. The Happening just started to piss me off the more I thought about it. The others just faded and tarnished with time, I think.

So, that’s 18 movies for the year. When I first saw the number, I was thinking I just haven’t gone to the movies as much this year, that 18 movies just didn’t seem like very much over the course of an entire year. This, of course, prompted me to go over the posts from previous years. This being the third year I kept track, it falls kind of in the middle. I saw 22 movies in 2006 and 16 in 2007. So it looks like I am right on target.

On a very positive note, the financial end of it changed quite a bit this year. No more M&Ms. The whole healthy kick I have been on does not agree with a monster bag of Peanut M&Ms for each movie, which saves $4.50 per visit to the theater. Working it out again – 18 movies at $9.50 admission (prices have gone up!) = $171.00. Then add in 18 large Diet Cokes at $4.00 each ($72) = $243.00 given to the greedy bastards in Hollywood and to the even more greedy bastards at AMC Theaters.

You may think it’s wrong of me to call them greedy bastards, especially the movie theaters – but when they charge $4 for a large coke and $4.50 for a bag of M&Ms? They’re lucky I stopped with “greedy bastards” …

Here’s to another year full of movies. Looks like some good ones coming out this summer. And the theater is still full of movies I haven’t seen yet – many of the December 2008 releases looked pretty good. I’m going to have to see if I can fit those into January somewhere.

Until next time …

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2007 Movies

Okay, here’s the time of year where I review how much money I have spent at the movie theater, knocking back $5 Cokes and $4 M&Ms … here’s the quick run-down:

  1. The Good Shepherd – Could this movie have been any longer?
  2. The Messengers – Good, creepy fun!  Finally, they decide to not show us too much!
  3. Ghost Rider – Not saying the movie was bad or anything, because I have watched it again and liked it a lot.  I have little memory of watching it in the theater, though, as I slept through it.
  4. The Reaping – Another good horror movie.
  5. Spiderman 3 – Could have done without Emo-Peter Parker, but loved the movie.
  6. Knocked Up – God, was this movie ever funny!  “You are not going to fuck me like a dog” has got to be one of my new favorite movie quotes!
  7. Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer – Decent comic book movie here, but I found myself distracted by Jessica Alba’s very fake looking hair through the whole thing.
  8. Transformers – Awe. Some.  Loved it.  Probably one of my favorites of the year right here.  I had no interest in it to begin with – especially when I heard it was going to be live-action – but it was pretty great, really.
  9. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix – These things just keep getting darker, no?  Keep it coming.  Good movie.
  10. The Simpsons Movie – Okay, should have known better.  The Simpsons are very funny in their half hour increments, but kind of tiring for any longer than that.
  11. Rob Zombie’s Halloween – Meh.  I expected a lot, but then I remembered who made it.  Dude.  You suck.  You took an awesome movie and turned it into a Public Service Announcement.  A violent one in which you don’t really care who lives or dies. You know, suspense kind of depends on actually giving a shit about the characters and what happens to them. Beyond that, we’re just watching people get beaten to death – and that’s kind of … disturbing?
  12. 1408 – Thank you, Stephen King, for restoring my faith in horror movies.  Loved it.
  13. The Kingdom – Awesome. I probably wouldn’t have seen this one normally, but I won tickets through the local radio station.  Very good movie.  The Friday Night Lights guy can’t seem to save himself from getting blown up, though.  That must suck.  What happens when you get typecast as the guy who always gets blown up? Maybe he should start wearing a red shirt.
  14. Transformers (IMAX) – Okay, as if I didn’t love it enough the first time, it qualifies for a second mention here, because – really – IMAX.
  15. I am Legend – Advertised as vampire-zombie hybrids. I was snagged. Lived up to the hype. This one’s a keeper.
  16. National Treasure: Book of Secrets – It took me forever to see the first one, but I liked it a lot. This one lived up to the first, but I found myself not as … involved. You find yourself watching the adventure rather than being part of it, as the first one did for you.

Not too bad – better than last year, at least. At $8 per movie (conservative with AMC’s new screwed up pricing), and the aforementioned $9 in concessions, we are at $242 for the year.

Hey, don’t knock it – I could have spent it on hookers and drugs.

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2006 Movies

  1. King Kong – Admittedly, this was the second time I saw it.  I slept through the first third of the movie, but the drums woke me up once they hit the ritual sacrifice.
  2. When A Stranger Calls – Seemed much like the first 10 minutes of Scream.  I like Drew Barrymore better and believe her performance was far superior.
  3. Ultraviolet – I just am not sure what to say about this one.  The fight scenes were awesome and I thoroughly enjoyed looking at Milla Jovavich’s belly for an hour and a half, but the story was lacking in a way that I just can’t explain.  I don’t think I would recommend this one.
  4. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire – Honestly, this is another one that I saw for the second time.  I watched the first time in 2005, but it just came to the IMAX theater here in Tallahassee.  It is such a different experience in IMAX that you just have to mark it as a new movie.  I love how these are getting darker as they go, even including the death of a student this go-round.  Here’s to more of the same!
  5. V for Vendetta – I am going to have to see this one again. It was my sister’s birthday and no one could make up their mind about what to see or when to see it.  The short of it is that after about 9 hours of beer drinking on a Saturday, we decide to see the 11:00 for this movie.  The hour or so of this movie that I saw was awesome!  The rest of the time I spent peacefully sleeping in the theater wasn’t too bad, either.
  6. Silent Hill – My horror loving self had been eagerly anticipating this movie since I saw the first preview back at the beginning of the year.  I was not disappointed.  For me, it had just the right mix of darkness and abject horror, and not so much gory free-for-all.  Yeah, there were gory parts, but it wasn’t tackily overdone.  Good movie.
  7. An American Haunting – Another good horror movie for the year.  They really went after one of my favorite ideals in this movie, which is to not show you too much.  The best way to send a haunted house movie into hokey-ness is to try and show you the ghost.  So they didn’t show you much – and it was good.  I do wonder, however, about the real-life Bell family (if there are any of them left) and what they thought of the fictional spin on the end – can anyone say “slander?”
  8. X Men III: The Last Stand – I have said it before: I love super heroes. This one was no different.  Plenty of my favorite scenes, where the guy or girl with all the power realizes just how powerful he/she is and gets the fight on.  Lots of fight scenes, all decently choreographed.  We have to give a great big We have to give a quick “Boo!” to the makers of the movie, though, as you shouldn’t put important parts of the movie <i>at the end of the credits!!</i>  Lucky for us, someone told us we needed to stay through the credits, so we saw what <i>really</i> happened.
  9. The Omen 666 – So you go into this one just a couple of days after the infamous 06/06/06, looking for a devilish good time.  It delivers, but there is a kind of weird thing going on here.  You know how you see a remake of an old movie and you might complain that it is too different, changed too much from the original?  This movie is the complete other way.  It is almost <i>exactly</i> like the original – just with different actors, updated sets, and cell phones.  Very good movie, but they really could have changed <i>something</i> up.  At least a little.
  10. V for Vendetta – Okay, this one was already listed, but this time I actually <i>saw</i> the entire movie and this time I saw it at the IMAX theater.  This one is a keeper.  I’ll likely buy it when it comes available on DVD.  That scene at the end, with thousands donning their Guy Fawkes finest, the 1812 Overture blaring over the town speakers … wow.  That will take your breath away.  This movie might make it into my top ten.
  11. Poseidon – Once again, saw this one in the IMAX theater.  I lately find myself waiting to see a movie if it is going to IMAX, with the only drawback being that it usually goes there about three months after the movie is released.  Either way, this was pretty awesome.  The intensity was ratcheted up there pretty far, so I spent the latter half of the movie reminding myself to breathe.  That might have also had something to do with the whole “everyone drowning” thing.  See this one if you are into disaster type movies.
  12. Lady in the Water – M. Night Shyamalan pissed me off with his last movie, <i>The Village</i>, so I really wasn’t sure about this one – especially with all the vague previews.  I am happy to say, though, that I loved the movie.  It was dark, but with just the right mix of humor and fancy.  Impressive.  Sadly, it looks like the director in question is getting closer to being completely full of himself with every new movie.
  13. My Super-Ex Girlfriend – Decent.  I was pretty excited when I saw the preview for this movie; certain it was going to be hysterical.  Unfortunately, most of the truly funny parts were in the preview.  The other thing that pissed me off – don’t use the song <i>She Fucking Hates Me</i> and silence the <i>Fucking</i> part.  I know you were trying to keep the lighter rating, but it just comes across as cheap.  Bastards.
  14. Talladega Nights (the Ballad of Ricky Bobby) – Not bad.  I normally wouldn’t have seen this one in the theater, but ended up going with a bunch of people I work with.  We had a good time, had some good laughs, but I think the movie relied too heavily on the quick and easy jokes.  Lay off the stereotypes.  The line that had me tickled, though (through the next several scenes): [paraphrased] <i>Grandson</i>: I love you Grandma. <i>Grandma</i>: Then stop trying to toss me the radio while I am in the shower.
  15. The DaVinci Code – Excellent.  I read the book first, so I was spoiled, but I thought they did a damned good job of sticking with the story and not showboating and abusing the natural publicity surrounding the story.  To the woman behind us who felt the irresistible need to say what was going to happen <i>just before it happened</i>: Fuck you.
  16.  Wicker Man – Wow, was this movie ever <i>not</i> what I expected.  So many times in this movie you are thinking, surely this [insert random event here] will happen now – but it never does.  Pretty good, but again, the previews don’t even begin to give an accurate depiction of the movie.
  17. Clerks II – I loved the first movie – loved.  You work in retail long enough (Hell, even for a couple of weeks) and you realize this movie is everything you always wanted to say, but couldn’t.  The sequel did not disappoint.  Not quite as edgy or abrasive as the first, but good, all the same.  And how can you complain when a new pop-culture icon is introduced?  World, meet the Pussy Troll.
  18. Superman Returns – Yet another awesome IMAX movie here.  My only issue is that Superman really needs to read the chapter about “abuse of power” – because he spends a lot of time doing just that.  Dude is a major stalker.  Unfortunately, this was a work-sponsored event – and I completely lost my cool with a hysterical laughing fit right at the end (and most tender part) of the movie.  That sucked.  The movie rocked, though.
  19.  Saw 3 – Damn.  This one was … graphic.  I liked the first two movies, as they were dark and disturbing with not <i>too</i> much unnecessary gore.  This one was dark, disturbing, twisted, and just generally … disturbing.  The first couple of gory scenes went so far over the top that of the three of us who went to see it, two couldn’t look at the screen and one ran out of the theater ready to hurl.  A definite improvement could be found once the gore was gone and the actual story kicked in, though.  All in all, not bad.
  20. The Covenant – Saw this one at the dollar theater.  It’s kind a teen horror flick, but not bad for all that.  It certainly looks to me like the writer/director was a fan of <i>Buffy the Vampire Slayer</i>, primarily seasons 6 and 7.  Good effects, decent acting, okay scripting, lots of girls wandering around in their underwear or just wearing a towel – makes for a pretty good movie.  Don’t see it for the depth, though – it’s just a fun take on witches.
  21. The Return – Sarah Michelle Gellar. Need I say more? A little difficult to watch her not be bad ass here, though.
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Good Grammar Costs Nothing

Yeah, I know it has been a while since I posted last; and for that, I apologize. To explain myself, though, I had pneumonia … again. Pneumonia sucks, for those of you who haven’t had it. This time it was “Walking Pneumonia.” I didn’t catch from the doctor exactly what that meant, but from the symptoms I would tell you that you wake up feeling not completely dead, but as the day wears on, you feel worse and worse.

The thing about pneumonia that makes it unlike any other kind of sickness I have ever had – is that it completely saps you of energy. Lying in bed, just trying to turn over becomes an ordeal, something you might need to take a break on your side before completely flipping over. It really sucks. Then you have to deal with the fever. It makes you feel like your eyes are boiling inside your head, like your skin could catch fire at any moment. Miserable.

So I am thinking this is a pretty good excuse for not writing in a while. And just for that – and B’s MySpace comment that I should write something – I scrapped the previously planned work on my book (which is coming along nicely, by the way!!) to have a few words with you about grammar – and writing in general.

In fact, it was on B’s MySpace page that I saw one of my favorite quotes: Good Grammar Costs Nothing. You really think about it, though, and you wonder – is my grammar good? I think mine could use some work, actually. To be quite honest, I don’t know how to use half of the grammar devices available to me.

The semicolon? Yeah, right. I know you should use it when listing items when those items already have commas, to avoid confusion. Commas? For those of you who read music – you know the breath mark? It looks like a comma. Therefore I use commas as breath marks in writing. If you see a comma, it denotes a pause or a slight change of direction in the sentence. So, if you add a dot to the comma (a semicolon), that would imply a slightly larger change of direction, no?

The dash ( – ) versus the ellipses (…) – I only recently found the difference between the two. For those of you wondering, the dash implies a break in thought. The ellipses should be used to mark a passing of time. I try to use them correctly when writing for an audience, but any of you who have received e-mails from me know that mine are peppered with ellipses. I think I just use them in place of periods.

Then you come to the age old question: does punctuation go inside or outside the quotation marks? I know the answer to that one now. Punctuation marks go inside the quotation marks – even though it looks stupid and wrong. Let’s see an example of that, shall we?

Did Kate the sexy barmaid say, “These tips suck?” (in this example, Kate Beckinsale is playing the role of a scantily dressed barmaid)

Looking at that sentence, it would appear Kate the sexy barmaid was asking a question, almost doubtfully, as if the tips were actually pretty good and she was considering going home with the last guy who tipped her. In actuality, she was overheard saying that the tips did indeed suck and she was going to put on her super-sexy leather vampire costume and kick some poor-tipping ass.

That would have been far more apparent had the question mark been outside of the quotation rather than inside.

Speaking of that – do you realize the addiction the English-speaking American public has to the word “that?” [and the pesky question mark rears its ugly head yet again, quite unintentionally]

This word is a curse. People use it all over the place, in everything. More examples:

“Did you know that I have a thing for Kate Beckinsale?”
“I can tell that you are wondering what happened to Sarah Michelle Gellar.”
“I can assure you that I have room in my heart for both women.”

Each of the above sentences can effectively be written – and mean the same thing – without the word “that.” And the period. This is why I use italics so much. It eliminates the problem altogether.

My pet peeve? Using prepositions at the end of sentences (at least the obvious ones – the prepositions, not the sentences). How redneck does it sound when someone asks, “Where is her vampire teeth at?” Ha! Many rednecks also have issues with verb-subject agreement, so I thought I should throw that in there, too.

I find myself sometimes re-wording an entire sentence (or scrapping it altogether) if I can’t come up with a way to keep from ending it with a preposition. Some words to help in the re-wording: from which.

Okay, I am going to stop for now. I think that I have made my point.

How many times before they all get it do you have to say, “You shouldn’t end sentences with prepositions?”

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The Devil’s Bride

So I’m minding my own business, watching The Daily Show, when a Jeep commercial comes on my television. This is when I came to one of the most profound realizations of the past couple of days: Bobble-Heads are creepy.

I really can’t say I have put much thought into it before tonight. I’m not much of a toy collector, so I never would have thought of getting one for myself – or admiring one someone else would have. I can only think of a couple of times I’ve even seen one in person, and at the time it struck me as kind of funny and reminded me of a high school friend we often referred to as Te-“neck”-sha. Keep in mind that the name didn’t come from events I will now describe, but came instead from a car accident she was in, which forced her to wear a neck-brace for several months. The Great Statue of Ydnew also had to wear a neck-brace, but there were no clever names for her. Perhaps, if she had been known as the Great Statue of Ydnew at the time, we could have possibly called her the Great Neck-Brace of Ydnew – or even The Great Ydnew of Neck-Braces – but, alas, it was not meant to be.

When Te-“neck”-sha was pissed off, the bones and sinew in her neck would melt into something with a consistency similar to a light gel. Her eyes would get impossibly big, her eyebrows would turn into angry slashes, and her mouth would turn cruel; and then it would happen – her tirade would come forth, a string of obscenities usually, and her head would swivel around a central point on her gelatinous neck while her eyes never left that which had earned her fury. Granted, if you were on the receiving end of said fury, it would make for a most unpleasant experience. But to see it live? Fun-ny.

So, yeah – the first time I saw a Bobble-Head ended with me chuckling just a bit.

Until the commercial. Bastards.

Have you seen these commercials? With their little Beelzebub inspired devil dolls? I’m thinking someone in the advertising division at the big Chrysler-Daimler company needs some serious therapy – or to be hugged more – or just generally to never be left alone – with weapons of any kind.

You have a boy Bobble-Head and a girl Bobble-Head riding down the street in a new Jeep (an ugly one I might add), their monstrous little heads bobbling all over the place. You can see it in their miniature dead eyes, the malevolence and complete disregard for any kind of authority – real or imagined. It takes me back to that God-awful movie Natural Born Killers, bringing to mind a multi-state killing spree perpetrated by these two little demons. But wait! There’s more.

They pass a tree and the camera pans up to the higher branches, showing us a Bobble-Head evil squirrel staring out over the neighborhood with homicidal glee. You can picture the little tree-rat scurrying from house to house, dumping tiny vials of cyanide into people’s water softeners, cheerfully chattering away to his invisible body-guards. Does cyanide even come in vials? I’m not really sure, but it would have to be something small enough for the death-rodent to carry in his creepily small hands, I’m sure. Have you ever really thought about that? Why the fuck does a squirrel need opposing digits? To hold the knife with which he will cut your throat, I tell you.

Riding along in their ugly new Jeep, the devil’s newest recruits decide to stop a gas station. It doesn’t really say why they stopped at the gas station. It’s not as if one of them went inside for a quick pee break – or even got out of the car for actual gas. They just stop at the store. The next scene shows them pulling away while the uber-sad looking gas station attendant – also a devil doll – watches them forlornly, his dejected little head shaking side to side in a very displeased fashion. Why, you wonder?

I thought about this scene just a little. You can tell there is an obvious edit there for time – or subterfuge – see it how you need to see it. Satan’s whore pulls up with her little bitch boyfriend, the camera pans away to look at something else – and a quick cut of the reel! Then the couple pulls away. What they didn’t want you to see is that they actually went inside the store, bludgeoned the old man’s wife to death; ass-raped his dog; brought a rabid mountain lion into the building; and locked it in the station with the old guy, his dead wife, his crying dog, and all his worldly possessions – I think he lives in an apartment above the station. So the deep lines and furrowed brow on his bobbing little head? I’m pretty sure those were formed either by worry or resentful resignation. You can make that call.

The even creepier part of all this? There are a couple of mechanics outside the station – and they did nothing. You know they must have heard the screams of the old lady, the whining of the butt-tunneled dog, the roaring of the mountain lion, and likely the sobbing of the old dude as he had to watch it all transpire. You never know, I guess – they could have been in on it from the start. Hell, maybe they even called out a hit on the old guy for paying them too little. Or maybe he was their dad and did some under-the-covers-hand-shaking when they were little. People are pretty fucked up. Bobble-Heads? Even more so.

Showing them as their ugly car pulls away, Slatan (short for Slut of Satan) looks at her little bitch boyfriend – that’s right – she turns her evil fucking head towards him, bobbling all the time! She is wearing this impossibly malicious smirk on her face, head bobbling to the music like it’s all innocent. I can read between the lines, people.

The commercial ends with that fugly Jeep driving off into the sunset.

You know, I am not one of those people who thinks that good can never win, that evil is stronger, or that all things necessarily have to go bad on a long enough time line. I would like to think I am at least a little optimistic (except when it comes to the current Administration, of course). But I challenge to watch this short series of commercials and tell me that Jeep holds my same anti-pessimistic views.

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Somebody Sedate Me!

Have you ever really paid attention to pharmaceutical commercials? In some cases, they are almost as entertaining as the program you were watching when you saw the advertisement.

Never mind the paid actors prancing happily – or sleeping peacefully – by the end of the commercial. The fun stuff comes towards the end of the piece, when the low monotone guy or the comforting motherly type goes into all of the side effects you may encounter when taking the drug.

I have a theory about people. Most everything we do revolves around one of two things: sex and power. To be honest, though, I think you could narrow it down to just one of the two – but I am not sure which. You could say that people strive for power for the sake of having more sex – because we all know that power (personal or professional) is really kind of sexy. I used to think this was the root of all action, was sex. Possibly a bit abstract, but I now find myself wondering if it’s not the other way around. Maybe it really is all about power and sex is a side-effect all its own of said power. Or you might say that sex is the ultimate power over another – or the result of a loss of power.

Either way, I think these things are the driving force of our actions – to one degree or another.

So now let’s go back to pharmaceuticals and the sometimes hysterically funny side-effects and conditions of taking them.

A couple of my favorites are the following:

1) Herpes medication. The attractive young people in the commercial tell us about the medication and that it can help to prevent skin outbreaks. Careful to use actors who represent the every-person of American society, they project the idea that Herpes is a disease anyone can have – which is very true. You won’t find even one street ho in the thirty second spot. Yet, at the end, they warn us that if your immune system is compromised due to advanced HIV, you shouldn’t take this prescription.

2) Erectile Dysfunction Meds. Face it – the idea of rushing to a doctor for a priapism is pretty damned funny.

3) Sleep Aids. I have seen two commercials for this stuff over the past couple of weeks and they are both pretty funny, though they say the same thing. First, our trusty advertisers tell us we are not abnormal for having problems sleeping. Insomnia is common and is a growing epidemic in our country. We work too hard and don’t take enough time off from our jobs. We need help sleeping. Don’t be ashamed. Beyond that, the entire ad shows people going to sleep – lying in bed, closing their eyes, and going to sleep. The comforting motherly lady comes on next and she delivers the best line of the commercial: Brand X causes drowsiness and you should wait to see how this medication affects you before operating machinery or driving a car. She doesn’t even saying it condescendingly, as I probably would – because everyone is going to pop some sleeping pills and operate machinery while driving a car! She doesn’t even say “DO NOT” operate machinery – she says “WAIT TO SEE HOW YOU ARE AFFECTED!” Anyone else see a problem here?

4) Weight Loss Meds. These are the funniest of all and they tie directly back to the statement about power and sex. Let me explain. I’m not sure how the meds work, but they somehow or another stop your body from absorbing fat. Your body not absorbing fat comes at a price, however. Nothing is free, you see. The authoritative monotone guy at the end of the commercial tells us the possible side effects: “Frequent gas with possible oily discharge and increased frequency of bowel movements and the inability to control them.” (emphasis mine!) Did I hear that correctly? Yes, I am afraid I did. Why are you going to take this stuff? To lose weight. Why? To have more power. Why? To have more sex. Again, you can reverse those if need be. You know what, though? I can tell you the quickest way to not have sex: Shit yourself. So the girls/guys will talk to you now that you’re skinny? Try shitting yourself and see how long they will talk to you. The other thing? A fat person can walk through a bar and probably find at least someone who will talk to him/her. Shit on yourself and everyone acts like you have the plague. Go figure.

I’m sure there are more, but these are all I can come up with at the moment.

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The Devil Wears Polka Dots

So a couple of weekends ago I spent some time with the family and had one of those proud/sad/happy moments where you just really aren’t all that sure what to feel. My baby sister graduated from high school. I think the proud part is pretty obvious; the happy part, too.

With the sad part, I am sure you can relate. I am 10 years older than my youngest sister. It wasn’t so bad when our middle sister graduated 6 years ago, as J was still the youngest and was just in middle school. A and I were still young, and J was still the baby. This past weekend, driving J and her boyfriend E for a very brief night on the town (jeers to Vero Beach for closing at 1:00!), it strikes me (finally) that J is no longer our “baby” sister. And we are getting old.

Either way, this was graduation weekend. There was a night out, a ceremony, and a pretty cool graduation party (and after party). The night out was at Bombay Louie’s and was a decent experience, complete with all the writhing eighteen year olds you could shake a stick at. I generally am not so much with the eighteen year olds and their drunkenness, real or imagined. They make me kind of crazy, really. I was in good company, though, so that made the trip worth it.

Have you ever really watched the faces people make while dancing? Next time you are in a club, you should pay more attention. People are funny. You have those who bite their bottom lip in utter concentration, some who stare into the middle distance, others who smile and look from person to person, and still others whose look of bliss coupled with their gyrations would make it appear they are doing more that dancing is not all they are doing on the dance floor. Just saying.

Friday was the graduation ceremony. We had to be there two hours before the festivities began to be sure we had decent seats. Various people in our group had various opinions on the wisdom of this move. You see, when I graduated (and many of you, likely), we had the common sense to do so in an air conditioned building with normal seats. Vero Beach? Not so much. You get to sit in their football stadium. On concrete. In the sun. For four hours. While 570 people graduate.

Damn, people, haven’t you ever heard of a G.E.D.? It’s quicker, easier. Try it sometime. I also had the common sense to graduate in a class of 200 or so. That is called “being polite to your family.”

Of course, it was all worth it to hear J’s name called and see her walk across the stage – at the very end of the ceremony.

That is the curse of our last name. Everything goes in alphabetical order. Everything. Except, of course, if it’s bad. Then they go in reverse alphabetical order. Fuckers.

So Saturday was the actual party. The setup was nice, with a bar right in the middle of the room. Graduation fare if I have ever seen it – especially with this crowd.

My family is a lot of fun when you get them all in the same room – drinking. Well, I guess “fun” depends on who you are and if you have lately gained their ire. For those people, “misery” is a far better word. Why? Because my family is closely related to that of Satan. Yeah, there are some evil fucks in the Wilder clan.

You know, once I even had one of them ride in the ambulance with me to the hospital, where they sat by my bedside while I was in the throes of a cocaine overdose – after I had sex with my aunt. Except for none of that actually happened. That was just the story they told – to my parents.

So, yeah, it really is a lot of fun to watch some of these people get drunk and make utter asses of themselves – for a little bit, at least. Then it starts to wear thin and you wonder why everyone puts up with it. It can’t be simply for the entertainment value, though it is sometimes high.

This particular gathering wasn’t so bad, though. The four year olds are probably too young to remember being called “pussies” by the drunk lady – or to remember the lizard she killed. We can only hope.

Personally, I was enjoying the bar (as was everyone else). My step-mother commented the next day that the bartender must have really liked us, by the way he was stacking those drinks. I beg to differ, however, that he really hated us and was tired of us leeching on his Saturday night … so he decided to kill us. Those drinks made the DFAT drinks look like Kool-Aid in comparison.

I enjoyed several Long Island Iced Teas and even more Margaritas, leading to a calm and peacefulness from which even the more wicked elements of my family could not detract. It might have also helped that for most of the night, they seemed little more than fuzzy figments of an overworked imagination. J, A, and I spent much of the night together, having as much fun as we always do when we can spend so much time together. A tried her hand at the magical bartender’s LIT and Margaritas, but it didn’t end so well for her. I give her all the credit in the world, though, as she went to bow down before the porcelain god and came back to the party good as new. She really is a trooper, that one.

Either way, J is a high school graduate and must now endure mine and A’s constant nagging that she needs to go away to college – now, instead of in two years – and that she has to go to one in either Tallahassee or Tampa, our respective homes.

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