Not really into football?
Then you might need some other diversions on New Year’s Day while recovering
from the festivities of the night before. Two possibilities are below, both
from my read/view list last week.
**** ****
The Hike by Drew Magary (copyright 2016)
Surrealistic novels
seldom work for me. When they do – Angela Carter’s scifi novels, for instance –
it’s because they are anchored by having something real to say, even it’s hard
to put your finger on exactly what it is. It’s not surrealism for its own sake.
Drew Magary’s very readable The Hike
works. Not all the metaphors in it are easy to articulate. Don’t try. It’s
enough to feel them there.
Ben is a 38-year-old businessman with a wife and three kids in suburban Maryland.
He travels a lot to conferences and to meet with vendors. We meet him on one of
these trips. He checks into a rather rundown hotel in the woodsy Poconos. He
decides to hike for a little ways on a wood trail in back of the hotel. He witnesses a brutal crime. The killers
also see him, and in his efforts to escape them finds himself on a path that
even Alice would find bizarre. She, after all, didn’t turn into a crab, which
Ben does at one point. Along the path are a monstrous cricket, a giant woman,
and a winged creature with smoky minions. The only reward offered to Ben for
surviving years on the path – if he does – is to return to his wife and kids.
A lot of us feel like
giving up, as Ben often does, on life’s road, but most of us persist anyway.
For all the weirdness, the character and story are relatable.
Thumbs Up.
**** ****
Len and Company (2015)
This is the sort of indie
film that is quietly satisfying in a way that no blockbuster ever can be.
Rhys Ifans is perfectly cast as Len Black, an aging former
punk rocker who found financial success as a music producer even though his
personality seems unsuited for the business side of music. Much of his success
came from shepherding the career of pop singer Zoe from age 16 onward, despite
her sound being miles distant from his own tastes. Zoe is played by Juno
Temple, who nails the part and has as much insight to the characters as anyone
could have; Juno’s father, Julien Temple, did his early directorial work with
the Sex Pistols.
Len is having a late middle-age “does any of this mean
anything at all?” crisis. He wants nothing more than to be left to his own
cranky self-absorbed self on his decaying estate in Upstate New York while he
watches DVDs and ruminates. He doesn’t get his wish. He gets a surprise visit
from his son Max, who wants Len to hear a demo tape by his own band but is
unsure how to approach Len in his currently massively indifferent mood. The
hesitation is not unwarranted; when Max does finally broach the subject Len derides
him for a privileged upbringing that Len himself (unasked) provided, which, he
claims, is sure to make his son’s music shallow. Zoe also shows up at the house
partly out of concern for Len and partly for answers about why he embarrassed
her by walking off an awards show. He is not any more responsive to her than to
Max. Len knows he is a being jerk, but at the moment he doesn’t feel like being
anything else.
The movie is not about the action but about the characters
and how they choose to play the cards life dealt them. It also reflects the
often mutually uncomprehending interaction of Boomers and Millennials. The
characters do evolve a little by the end but don’t become entirely new people –
few of us do in the course of only a few days. A little, though, is sometimes
enough.
This is simply a well-written and well-acted little drama,
though not for anyone looking for car chases and fight scenes. Thumbs Up.
Putting aside the larger
issues and allowing myself a moment of solipsism (to accompany all those other
moments), the biggest lesson to me of 2016 was to take nothing for granted. I’ve
learned that before but have a habit of forgetting it. Perhaps it will last a
little longer this time than will my New Year’s Resolutions, whatever those
might be (I haven’t decided yet).
My prognostications this
year were as faulty as those of most folks. An old college buddy (Hi, Don) and lifelong
bachelor is originally from Chicago so naturally he is a Cubs fan. Just before
the Cubs won the World Series for the first time in 108 years I sent him an
e-mail:
“My 6 impossible things to believe before breakfast:
The Cubs win the World Series
Trump wins the election
Amanda Seyfried falls in love with my Facebook profile
My property taxes go down
ISIS surrenders
You get married”
With only a few days left
in the year I have yet to hear from Amanda, but at this point I’m reluctant to
rule it out. I also should start planning Donald’s Bachelor Party.
I won’t dread or anticipate
anything in 2017 because you never know. Well, sometimes you do, but we’ll
leave six inevitable things for another blog.
I was
reading a collection of Dave Barry essays earlier today: Live Right and Find Happiness (Although Beer Is Much Faster). Dave
rarely says anything I find inherently surprising, but he says what he says far
better and amusingly than I ever could. On this occasion, however, he truly
caught me off guard. A fellow Boomer, he comments that our parents – those
hardworking Greatest Generation folks – were happier and more fun-loving than
we are. He was prompted to say this by an episode of Mad Men (Season 1 takes place in 1960 during our mutual childhood)
in which the characters, for all their carousing, don’t seem to have fun:
“Unlike the Mad Men characters, the
grown-ups back then had fun. A lot of
fun.”
I
hadn’t really thought about it that way before, but he is right. The kid’s
perspective with which I’m still inclined to think of my parents had blinded me
to it, but he is very right. True, they didn’t have the blow-out wild teens and
20s that Boomers had as (mostly) singles in the prosperous freewheeling era that
the Greatest Generation had created. They didn’t have the time, money, or
opportunity for that. (I’m generalizing, of course, but for the bulk of the
generation the generalization is accurate.) They were too occupied by the
Depression, World War 2, career-building, and early marriage with kids. They
were nose-to-the-grindstone during working hours, yet they still managed to
play hard as adults on top of all that. Nor did they scale back in their
30s and 40s as Boomers did. I recall an endless parade of babysitters as a
young kid because every weekend one of my parents’ friends (and they had many)
was throwing a house party. They dressed up for them, too, in sports jackets
and cocktail dresses. Of course, the party-giving cycled around to our house
every so often, and I tried to spy surreptitiously when I could. People
chain-smoked, loudly cracked off-color jokes, and drank astonishing amounts of
alcohol while playing records, dancing, and playing actual games such as
charades. I remember limbo parties in the early ‘60s. When there wasn’t a party
to attend it was probably because we were off camping or at the beach or some
such place.
I’m
nowhere near as ambitious with my playtime any more than with my worktime. I do host some houseparties, but never more than a half dozen per
year (usually fewer) of any size including summer BBQs, while I attend perhaps one or
two by other people. They are far tamer than those of my parents, and a clean
shirt counts as “dressed up.” (I do see friends more often than that, but two
or three people do not constitute a party; I go out to random clubs and
concerts more often than did my parents, but if you count social organization
get-togethers such as the Rotary, they went out more.) I don’t think we’ve ever
played charades at any of my parties and it’s been five years since anyone
danced at one – and that involved a video game. I’m also much less quick to
just hop in the car for a vacation trip than were my parents even though I’m
single with no kids, so the logistics are far simpler. Nearly all my friends
are the same way: not hermits but decades past being party animals. Millennials
are actually more restrained in their behavior than Boomers (or Xers) were at
their age; we’ll have to wait and see whether they make up for it later in life
or if they still prove to be even lamer than we are.
Our
parents knew what the Big Stuff was and why it mattered. They spent their lives
facing it. So, they didn’t sweat the Small Stuff, which included such trifles
as second hand smoke and seat belts. They knew life is hard, but they had fun
while they could without letting that fun interfere with the Big Stuff. They
were a flawed generation, as every generation is in its own way. Social
attitudes were commonplace then that are cringeworthy today. Yet, there were
many many ways in which they simply did it better, and now that I think about
it they played better too. It’s probably too late to try to emulate them in that way, but maybe
I should break out the limbo pole for the next party. Or maybe not. If I go
under it I might never unbend again.
Yale
professor Paul Bloom begins by defining his terms. Many people use the word
“empathy” broadly to mean being kind and generous. He uses it in the narrower
sense used by psychologists to mean (to quote Bill Clinton) “I feel your pain.”
This is not the same as sympathy, for we can feel for someone without feeling
with them. Psychologists also distinguish between emotional empathy and
cognitive empathy. The latter is an intellectual understanding of what another
person is feeling without feeling it oneself. Bloom doesn’t have a problem with
cognitive empathy per se, though he
notes that it is morally neutral. It is not true, for example that psychopaths
lack empathy. On the contrary, they often have exceptional cognitive empathy.
They know what you are feeling: that’s how they manipulate you and exercise
their cruelty. They just don’t care. They lack emotional empathy. Yet even if they
had this, it’s not clear they would have sympathy and compassion,
which are more important. After all, folks with Asperger’s also have
limitations on emotional empathy, yet they are not any more likely than anyone
else to be cruel intentionally.
So
what is Bloom’s beef with emotional empathy? He thinks it is just fine for
enjoying literature or a movie, but that it is a terrible basis for morality: “It
can spark violence; our empathy for those close to us is a powerful force for
war and atrocity toward others.” We tend to empathize with whomever is in front
of us, whether, as examples, it is a victim of a crime or a youthful
perpetrator with a troubled past. Bloom suggests what the world needs is not
more empathy but more rational compassion: step back and look at the big
picture.
Bloom’s
book is not just an extended opinion-piece. He brings in neuroscience and
various social studies. Some of what he says might seem obvious, but I’ll give
him credit for a contrarian title.
Thumbs
very mildly Up.
****
****
Razor
Girl by Carl Hiaasen
Despite
the everglades, the abundance of beaches, and the artificial landscapes of
Disney World, Florida does not rank high on the list of visually interesting US
states. Socially, however, it is in the top tier for weirdness, colorfulness, and diversity. This
weirdness has attracted the attention of numerous authors both homegrown (e.g.
Jeff Lindsay of the Dexter novels)
and visiting (e.g. Tom Wolfe: Back to
Blood). One of the most prolific native writers is Carl Hiaasen. Carl probably
is still best known for Strip Tease,
thanks to the Demi Moore movie based on the book in the 90s, but he has
published a new book every two or three years since the early 80s. His latest
novel, released earlier this year, is Razor
Girl.
In an
odd way Hiaasen reminds me of Jim Thompson, whose gritty noir-ish novels so perfectly captured the flavor of low-life
America in the 1950s. Hiaasen is just as on-point although, his setting being
contemporary Florida, his lowlifes sometimes have money. His imagery is at one
and the same time gaudier and tawdrier than anything in Thompson.
This
one is set primarily in the Florida Keys. The complex plot defies brief
summary, but it involves con artists, a redneck star of a TV reality show, the
star’s agent, murder, an unscrupulous sand replenishment contractor, organized
crime goons, and a cantankerous ex-cop turned health inspector named Yancy. The
eponymous Razor Girl arranges car accidents, usually as an insurance scam but
in this case to facilitate a kidnapping. All the different characters and
subplots emerge and interlace easily, and Hiaasen presents it all with dry
humor.
Razor Girl is not high-lit, nor does it try to be.
It is literary snack food. But it’s tasty snack food. As a recreational read,
Thumbs Up.
We all
have incomplete educations. Moreover, what we have often dissipates over time
as is amply demonstrated on Are You
Smarter Than a 5th Grader, an enjoyable TV game show on which
successful adult professionals (some of them academics) repeatedly reveal they
are not. All questions on the show come from 5th grade textbooks.
Yet, since 2007 only two contestants, including Nobel winning physicist George Smoot, have won the million dollar prize. Our failings run the gamut
from Accounting to Zoology. Earlier this autumn Libertarian presidential
candidate Gary Johnson badly damaged his campaign by flubbing a question on
Aleppo, but he has plenty of geographically-challenged company. In a country in
which a majority of people receive at least some higher education beyond high
school, most Americans nonetheless cannot even find Syria on a map. (They can’t
find Afghanistan either, even though American troops have been fighting and
dying there for 15 years.) Back in 2013 Washington
Post columnist Ezra Klein argued in all seriousness that this
doesn’t matter so long as they can Google the answer: “In this era of labeled
maps, Google Earth, and, well, Google, the question isn't whether you can find
Syria on a map. It's whether you can find useful information about Syria in
your browser.”
I
can’t state emphatically enough how much I disagree – not just about Syria in
particular but about the whole notion that an internet connection is a
substitute for knowledge. It is not. Nor is it a substitute for skill. It is
not unimportant to be able to add or spell just because one’s laptop has a
calculator and autocorrect. Knowing how and when to look up additional
information is all very fine, but creativity and thoughtful analysis depend on
the ability to make connections among disparate bits of knowledge in one’s own
head. That doesn’t work if the bits aren’t there. If we let a machine think for
us, any kudos for the result belong entirely to the machine.
That
said, I’m acutely aware of the huge gaps that exist in my own education. One
way to fill in enough gaps at least to fake it at a dinner party with truly
well-informed people is to read cover to cover An Incomplete Education: 3684 Things You Should Have Learned but
Probably Didn’t (Third Edition) by Judy Jones and William Wilson. This
certainly is a goal of mine, so last week I read the book. What’s your weakness?
Art history? Anthropology? Poetry? Psychology? Philosophy? How about the names
of the various types of carriages or the details of pre-decimal British
currency? An amazing amount of information (yes, including about Syria) is in
this 700 page compendium. It’s no substitute for in-depth studies, of course,
but it will get one through that dinner party without sounding like a dullard. It
also gives the reader a framework for more self-education if he or she is so
inclined. Besides, who knows what new thoughts will come from all those new
bits of info inside one’s own head? We’ll have to see if any pop into my own.
Thumbs
up.
Sam Cooke. (I considered Know
Nothing by Travis, but video embedding for the song is disabled by request
of the rights-holders.)
In 1976
journalist Gail Sheehy authored a book called Passages that continues to sell well today. In it she described
each of the several decade-long stages of adult life along with the associated
characteristic crises, challenges, and responses. Her observations have merit, but
if, instead of our decimal number system, we used base 8 or base 12, I suspect
we would divide our lives into 8- or 12-year stages instead. This suspicion is
reinforced by a 2014 study in the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences that notes the importance of ages
ending in 9. At 29, 39, 49, and so on, we are more likely to cheat on partners,
take up a new sport, open a new business, get engaged, or commit suicide than
in other years. Birthdays of _9 years hit us harder than others. The prospect
of a new decade and the imminent expiration of the current one make us think
about what we have, what we missed, and what we still have time to do.
Age-awareness
is not just a personal psychological matter. There are real world consequences
to age. There is a difference between 29 and 30 or between 49 and 50 on online
dating sites and (however much employers deny it) with job availability.
Cut-off dates, overtly stated or not, are built into much of life.
1976: My
sister looks happier about
my birthday than I do
Since
today is my birthday (which prompted this blog) I can attest that at least one
year ending in 4 also is portentous, though that owes much to an arbitrary rule
of the US entitlement system. I can’t say the 9s, though, ever did much for me
– or to me. Perhaps it is just denial, but it always has taken a few years into
a new age-decade for me to think of myself as being in it. After few years
delay, however, the stereotypical reactions finally do set in – for example the
classic 40s worry, “If I don’t do this now [marry, divorce, adopt, learn to
play an instrument, or whatever] I never will.” Those thoughts can lead to some
very rash decisions. I know they did in my case.
Nonetheless,
in any year there is something satisfying about a holiday that is all about
oneself – and the other 1/365ths of the population who share it. True, I no longer
expect to unwrap boxes with toys inside, but I’ve learned to appreciate the
present of just being here for one more change of digits. For that reason (plus
Thanksgiving, on which my birthday sometimes falls) November is my favorite
month. I’m fond of the number 28 too, though not enough to use in a PIN.
Devil Doll: Queen of Pain, posted below for no other reason than containing the
lyric, “But now it's the month of November: your favorite time of
year.”
On
this day after Thanksgiving the turkey coma has lifted but, reinforced by
leftovers for lunch, a turkey high lingers. The precise historical details of
this particular holiday are not important, as much as they, like everything
else, are politicized. (The 1993 movie Addams
Family Values addresses this with dark humor about as well as any.) In
truth it is just a seasonal harvest feast given a thin origin myth – and not a
very good one. That’s fine. Any excuse is fine, for a desire for ritualized feasting might be embedded
in our very nature.
Hunter-gatherer
groups throw big get-togethers for various tribes, clans, and bands – some of
them from far distances. It’s a good way for exogamous peoples to find spouses,
to learn about their neighbors, and just to have a great party. Since no party
is complete without an excess of food and drink, it is entirely possible that
agriculture started as a way to host parties. Archaeologists Neil Canuel,
Jennifer Shanse, and Brian Hayden argued exactly this in their 2013 paper “What
Was Brewing in the Naftuian?” A better diet for less work can be had by hunting
and gathering than by farming, so it always has been something of a mystery why agriculture began 10,000 years ago. One thing agriculture offers is an abundance
of cereals for brewing beer: the missing ingredient for boozy feasts. A
secondary effect is a surplus of calories that can feed an urban population: it
makes civilization possible. So, whatever the origin myth of any particular seasonal
celebration, the feast connects us in deep way to our past and to the
beginnings of modern life. Every culture ever since has come up with excuses to
have one. Besides, who doesn’t like a drumstick washed down with Riesling?
Sixteen
of the usual suspects (a few family, but mostly not) showed up at my place
yesterday and dutifully made gluttons of ourselves. It was grand fun but I’m
hiding the bathroom scale until January 2.
Somehow
I don’t think the NASA meals would have enthused all of my guests
Back in the 1980s, before
browsers and WorldWideWeb pages, the early internet users communicated on
Usenet groups. Usenet is still an option. It is preferred by some for the same
reason that many internet providers currently block access to it; by its very
nature it offers a greater level of anonymity with the attendant advantages for
both legitimate and criminal purposes. Users in the ‘80s were relatively few,
and therefore social pressure was a real force for collegiality and
congeniality. Rude people found themselves pounced upon or excluded until they
learned to play by the rules. They soon did. A challenge arose every September
as a new wave of college freshman, many of them operating computers for the
very first time, posted in the crude offensive mean-spirited fashion one
expects of college freshmen. By and large, however, they were educated in
netiquette in a month or two. This was similar to the “small town effect” that
keeps folks polite and honest in small communities. As Amy Alkon points out in
her book I See Rude People, you can’t
very well rob the local liquor store if the owner knows your mother. As
populations grow larger and anonymity becomes the norm, however, social
pressures lose much of their force: there is no penalty for being a boorish
jackass.
A cultural change came
to the internet in 1993 when pioneering providers of access to the Web such as
AOL and Prodigy welcomed a rising flood of new users. The new users were far
too numerous to moderate by social pressure alone, and belligerency quickly
became widespread. Veteran users refer to this as the onset of the Eternal
September. There is no sign yet of September ever ending. This past election
year gave us some particularly dark September days as professional propagandists
exploited the readiness of internet users (of any political stripe) to share
pre-packaged insults and slanders of the opposition. Especially popular are the
memes showing some nutcase member of the opposition behaving like an ass (there
never is a shortage of such people), thereby implying that everyone in
opposition is the same. But politics is just one small aspect of online
loutishness.
Why do we behave that
way online? (That’s the editorial “we,” of course, which might or might not
include you and me.) For the same reason we do it elsewhere. All primates are
hardwired to be cocky posturing trash-talkers. When chimpanzees or baboons do it we call
it displaying, but it is the same thing. It makes evolutionary sense: the genes
of high-ranking primates get transmitted and survive more often. Achieving a
high rank means taking down your individual rivals a notch and forming
alliances against rival groups. Most real-world displays, whether among humans
or nonhumans, do not lead to violence. They cause the less confident rival to
back down. If neither backs down there is still (overall) a 50/50 chance of
winning a fight, so the numbers favor pushing your luck. Humans need social
cohesion, too, of course, so social pressures also evolved within bands to keep
this sort of competition within bounds. They didn’t evolve to deal with the internet,
however. We can’t rely on our instincts to behave with proper netiquette.
Fortunately, we have
other tools than instinct. After all, our intellect allows us to develop and
believe in the most amazing philosophies that run counter to every instinct we
have. At least some of that capacity can be directed toward living in an online
world with trolls – mostly by ignoring them. Their words have only the power we
give them. Eleanor Roosevelt: "No one can make you feel inferior without
your consent."
An occasional vacation
from virtual space back into meatspace is warranted too. This Thursday a motley
assortment of the usual suspects will be at my Thanksgiving table. They range
in age from teens to seniors and span the political spectrum. Being
face-to-face in a non-anonymous environment, I expect little trash talk, except
perhaps about the Brussels sprouts.
The final bout of the
season for the hometown Corporal Punishers of the Jerzey Derby Brigade was a see-saw
nail-biter that wasn’t decided until the last jam. Brandywine scored the first
points and built up a 20 point lead in the first few minutes. An effective
power jam by #12 Evil Beauty seemed to put Brandywine on course for a
comfortable victory. But jams by #3684 CaliforniKate and #235 A Bomb gave the Corporal
Punishers a one-point 44-43 lead. #1945 Bomb Schell took a 2-point lead back
for Brandywine. Both sides put up strong blocking walls, and it was clear that neither team was going to have an easy time of it. At halftime Brandywine
had a 19-point lead, but this time it seemed anything but secure.
For most of the second
half Brandywine held onto its lead, but with 11 minutes remaining in the bout CaliforniKate
tied up the score 152-152. In the next jam against stiff blocking #8 Li’l MO
Peep pushed the Corporal Punishers into the lead. Evil Beauty took it back for
Brandywine 164-165 and A Bomb reversed it again 167-165. With a minute
remaining, a Corporal Punisher lead 185-170 brought victory within sight, but an
exciting and superb jam by Evil Beauty in the very last jam of the night added
22 points.
Brandywine took the win with
a final score 185 – 192.
MVPs: 1776 Merica (blocker) and #12 Evil Beauty
(jammer) for Brandywine; #93 Freudian Slap (blocker) and #3684 CaliforniKate (jammer)
for the Corporal Punishers.
There was no outcome of the
election that could have made me happy. So, with only enough peeks at the news
to keep apprised of events, I diverted myself through much of the evening with
two spins in my trusty DVD player.
**** ****
As You Like It (1936)
My choice to watch this
film was prompted by the Asimov guide to Shakespeare, which I reviewed a few
blogs ago.
As You Like It is one
of Shakespeare’s airier comedies, most remembered for the “All the world’s a
stage” speech. The plot is convoluted, which is why (re)reading the play or
consulting a guide like Asimov’s is recommended, especially before viewing this
particular production of it. The ‘36 version is notable for starring a young Laurence
Olivier as Orlando and Austrian actress Elisabeth Bergner as Rosalind, though
Bergner’s Viennese lilt is not an asset here.
The rightful duke has
been overthrown by his evil brother and now inhabits the forest of Arden with
his merry men. The rightful duke's daughter, Rosalind, is still back at the
castle and retains the friendship of her cousin, the usurper’s daughter Celia. Rosalind
meets and falls for Orlando, who has brother issues of his own. Orlando joins up
with the rightful duke in the forest. Rosalind, fearing the usurper, disguises
herself as a man and also heads off to the forest with Celia acting as her
servant. The disguised Rosalind goes by the name Ganymede (Jupiter’s boy toy in
classical mythology). There is much homosexual playfulness when “Ganymede,”
unrecognized by Orlando, convinces Orlando to practice wooing Rosalind by
pretending “he” is Rosalind. As another complication, a shepherdess named Phebe
falls in love with Ganymede. There are other subplots involving rustics, lovers,
brothers, and fools.
Crossdressing characters
require a delicate balance to achieve comic effect, at least on film. (We are
more forgiving of stage performances for a variety of reasons.) They have to be
credible enough plausibly to fool the other characters, but not so credible
that the audience itself doesn’t recognize them. There is a story, which may or
may not be true, that Tony Randall didn’t get the part that went to Jack Lemmon
in Some Like It Hot because he was
too convincing as Daphne; even a smidgeon less convincing than either Tony
Curtis or Jack Lemmon wouldn’t have worked either, however. In the ’36 As You Like It, Elisabeth Bergner isn’t remotely plausible as a man. She never
looks like anything other than a very beautiful woman in a tunic, and the slightly
lower pitch she gives her voice is still feminine: nowhere near as deep as,
say, Marlene Dietrich. This undermines the intended nature of the wooing scenes
with Orlando and gives the scene with Phebe an entirely different flavor.
I can’t complain about
the writing, of course. As in most film versions of Will’s plays, there are
cuts, but nothing crucial. Olivier is fine as Orlando. The sets, locations, and
camerawork are good. Yet I can’t quite give this version a recommendation. Too
many casting, staging, directing, and acting decisions are misguided and distracting.
A reluctant Thumbs Down.
**** ****
Nerve (2016)
It’s long been known
that actively discouraging bad behavior works only up to a certain point. After
that it is counterproductive. In the US, Prohibition was a particularly
disastrous example. A few years ago a study by Jessup and Wade at the
University of Sussex concluded that people drink more after seeing ads that
warn them of the dangers of drinking. The obsession with political correctness
among youth has led to popularity of games such as Cards Against Humanity in which being outrageously offensive is the
whole point. In recent decades most kids
in first world countries have grown up absurdly overprotected: helmeted,
padded, and supervised to the extreme. It is no surprise then that, in
response, extreme sports are all the rage – also, the extreme selfie. Every now
and then a fatality makes the news when someone tries to take a selfie on a
cliff, or on a subway track, or in a lion’s enclosure, or some such place, and
it doesn’t end well.
In Nerve, Vee (Emma Roberts) is a high school senior introduced to the
game Nerve. Nerve is a kind of online Truth or Dare accessible on a smart
phone. The game has “watchers” and “players”; the watchers challenge the
players to do embarrassing or hazardous things – including extreme selfies – in
exchange for money. The stunt must be captured by phone. The cash rewards can
be a few dollars for a mild prank or a huge jackpot for something truly insane.
Vee is seduced by the early rewards but the challenges grow increasingly sinister.
The one rule to the game, however, is never to go to the police; it is a rule
that is enforced.
There are major flaws in
this movie. For one thing, none of the characters is very likable and they
endanger more people than just themselves, so it is easier to be annoyed at
them than to fear for them. For another, the ending is contrived to put it
gently. Nonetheless, the premise is clever enough, and the danger builds as it
should.
This was a very close
call, but I’ll give the film an ever-so-slight
Thumbs Up. That may seem odd after the Thumbs Down above, but I hold
Shakespeare to a higher standard.
What’s the scariest thing about Halloween? It’s that the following
day is November 1, due date for the dreaded 4th-quarter real estate
taxes. Taxes are no fun anywhere and never have been: a Sumerian proverb
inscribed on a clay tablet dated c. 2400 BCE reads, “You can have a landlord,
you can have a king, but the man to fear is the tax-collector.” Indeed. The
advantage of property taxes over other kinds to the powers-that-be is that the owner
can’t pretend the land doesn’t exist; it can’t be hidden away as gold nuggets
can be. And if he doesn’t pay up, the property can be located, seized, and sold.
Easy-peasy
Sumerian tax receipt
November 1 is particularly scary in New Jersey, since NJ has
the distinction of the highest property taxes of any state in the nation. Despite
a 23-cent per gallon increase in the gasoline tax that also went into effect this
month, our gas tax is still only the 6th highest, but for real estate
we’re #1. Back in 2011 the state legislature put a 2% annual cap on local property
tax increases but left escape clauses. An obvious one is revaluation: in
Prospect Park last year, for example, the tax rate went down but the tax levy
rose 5.2% anyway due to revaluation. Also, towns and counties can exceed the 2%
limit to meet certain types of commitments. This year 60% of towns and counties
exceeded the nominal cap.
I sometimes hear homeowners (especially those who pay taxes through
a mortgage holder, and so don’t examine the tax bills closely) tell me, “My
taxes went down for 2017.” No they didn’t. That impression is an artifact of
the way taxes are calculated. A tax bill shows the last two quarters of the
current year and the first two quarters of next year. The amount owed for each
of the first two quarters of next year is based on an average of all four
quarters of the current year – this average is always lower than the last
two quarters of the current year. When a 2017 budget is passed (almost
certainly higher than the 2016 budget) the extra cost will show up in the 3rd
and 4th quarters of the 2017/2018 bill. If you compare the first two
quarters of 2016 (by digging out last year’s bill) to the first two quarters of
2017, 2017 will be higher.
The good news, if one can call it that, is that it is fully
three months to the next quarterly payment. The other good news is that this
particularly nightmarish election season will be over on November 8 – good only
in the sense of “over.”
Then there are Thanksgiving and November birthdays,
including my own. I can eat away my grumpiness with turkey and cake. Hmm… I’m
already feeling better.
The Kinks: “The tax man's taken all my dough... All I've
got's this sunny afternoon”
Basic
plot (with a few *spoilers*): In the 1930s Bobby Dorfman (Jesse Eisenberg), son
of an NYC jeweler, moves to Hollywood and gets a job running errands for his
Uncle Phil, played by a surprisingly well-cast Steve Carrell. Phil is an agent
with major film industry clout. Bobby becomes enamored of Uncle Phil’s
secretary Veronica, aka “Vonnie” (Kristen Stewart), unaware she is Phil’s
mistress. Vonnie returns affection but her heart belongs primarily to Phil.
Bobby decides to move back to New York and manage a nightclub for his gangster
brother Ben. Bobby becomes successful and marries another Veronica (Blake
Lively). Bobby and Vonnie cross paths again when Phil and Vonnie, now married,
show up in New York on business.
Thumbs
Up, but if you usually don’t like Woody, this one won’t change your mind.
****
****
Asimov’s
Guide to Shakespeare
By Isaac Asimov – 1970
As
mentioned a few blogs ago, I occasionally pluck a book at random from my home
library for a re-read. This one is proving especially pleasurable the second
time around. (I’m still in the midst of it.)
Though
best known as a science fiction writer, Isaac Asimov (1920-1992) was a
polymath, a professor of biochemistry, and an author of more than 500 books.
Besides his fiction, he wrote nonfiction on almost every imaginable subject.
Few people were better at elucidating complex ideas for a popular readership. This
800 page guide to the plays of Shakespeare is both accessible and erudite.
Let’s face it, William can be a bit daunting for modern audiences and most of
the volumes of academic treatises written in professor-ese on his work only
make matters worse. But Shakespeare wrote some pretty good stuff, and with a
proper non-pedantic overview he can be great fun.
Asimov
in his introduction comments on several of the advantages that native speakers
of English have, largely due to the accidents of history. He then adds, “But
most of all, we who speak English can read, in the original, the writings of
William Shakespeare, a man who is certainly the supreme writer through all the
history of English literature and who, in the opinion of many, is the greatest
writer who ever lived – in any
language.” Hyperbole? Maybe, but Asimov’s enthusiasm serves him and us well.
Highly
recommended. In particular, if you are going to catch a performance of one of
Will’s plays, first reading Asimov’s relevant chapter on the play is sure to
enhance enjoyment.
Thumbs
way Up.
****
****
The
Revenant (2015)
This
is about as far away from a Woody Allen movie as it is possible to get:
wilderness, survival, revenge, and brutish manly men in a harsh environment.
156 minutes of it.
Directed
by Alejandro G. Iñárritu, the film is based on a real event in 1823. Fur
trappers in the Rockies have a problem when one of them, Hugh Glass (Leonardo
DiCaprio), is badly mauled by a grizzly and is unable to travel. While the
others go ahead, three of the team – Fitzgerald, Jim, and Glass’ half-Pawnee
son Hawk – stay behind with instructions to wait until Glass either dies or can
travel. Fitzgerald kills Hawk and convinces Jim to leave Glass for dead.
Considering how badly Glass is mangled and how unforgiving the mountain winter
is, his death seems surely imminent. Instead, motivated by revenge, Glass
somehow survives and struggles to find his way out of the mountains and back to
the trading post. The handful of people with whom he crosses paths along the
way are as dangerous as the bear.
The
Revenant is beautifully filmed amid spectacular scenery. The bear attack –
though computer generated fx – is utterly convincing.
This
is not the type of movie I commonly pick – and in fact I didn’t pick this one.
It was the majority preference at a get-together. Yet, I have to give it a
Thumbs Up simply for the quality of the filmmaking. As survival tales go, this
is certainly well done.
****
****
What
the F: What Swearing Reveals About Our Language, Our Brains, and Ourselves
By Benjamin K. Bergen -- 2016
For
words and phrases that make up such a substantial proportion of everyday
speech, remarkably few academic studies of profanity exist. Bergen endeavors to
make up for that. He employs the modern usage of the word “profanity,” ditching
the old distinction between blasphemy and mere vulgarity. The taboo words that
constitute profanity come in four types: 1) blasphemy, 2) references to sex, 3)
references to excretory functions, and 4) slurs, whether racial, sexual,
ethnic, physical, or what-have-you. Slurs aren’t always included by definers of
profanity, but I think Bergen is right to do so.
Bergen
explores when, where, and how we use profane words and phrases, and how they
are processed differently in the brain from other speech. He examines how usage
varies among different social groups and classes. Though Bergen is primarily
discussing English, he also details differences with other languages as to what
is taboo and to what degree. (The title is the only place Bergen avoids using a
particular explicit word, presumably so that the book will be displayed openly
on bookstore shelves.) He explores how words change over time, becoming more or
less acceptable. An example of a word drifting toward profanity is one with
which I have personal experience. There are lots of Richards over age 50 who go
by the name Dick. My dad did. My parents called me Dick. A few people who have
known me since childhood still call me Dick, though nobody else does. Almost no
one under 50 goes by that name: they are all Ricks and Riches. In a similar way “cock”
is increasingly replaced in common speech by “rooster”; if one uses the former
word to complain about being awakened by the chicken next door, one might be
misunderstood.
All in
all, What the F is a useful light on
a much overlooked corner of linguistics. I’m also pleased to see a defense from
Bergen of free expression – something on which one not always can count from
contemporary academics, many of whom seem bent on ever-lengthening the list of
taboo words and phrases. He has little patience for censorship; the damage done
by taboo words is outweighed by damage done suppressing them. Bergen also argues
that there is no evidence exposure to profanity harms kids.
October
weather in these parts is variable, to put it gently. We might get a foot of
snow (as in 2011), a hurricane (as in 2012), or a heat wave (as in 2014). We
might get all three – or none. The past several days, after a chilly start to
the month, we have been treated to sunny balmy 82 degree (28C) days. The nights
have been pleasant, too. One doesn’t always appreciate shirtsleeve nights in
August, but in October they are infrequent and therefore especially welcome.
Wednesday
was just such a night. With all outside lights shut off, I sat outside in the
dark for a while. I do that sometimes. The sky was clear, the stars were
bright, and aircraft too high to hear crisscrossed overhead. Despite the
peaceful scene, I soon was on primal alert – not by intent but by instinct. My
home is surrounded by woods and crepitation beyond the tree line meant something
large was moving about. The odds are that the sounds in the woods were made by
deer, but I wasn’t going to walk over there to find out and I was keenly aware
of the distance from where I sat to the back door. For most of human existence
large predators have been a serious threat. We have been on their menu. Inside
our cozy homes on land stripped of large predators (other than our own kind) by
our forebears, we tend to forget that – but only intellectually, not
emotionally. Predators still haunt our thoughts. Sounds and shadows in the dark
still get our adrenaline pumping. Our bodies still react as though hyenas are
stalking us.
Here
in New Jersey’s suburban fringe, it’s a pretty safe bet that you will not be
eaten by hyenas. Mountain lions, once native the state, no longer exist here. Coyotes
and black bears do, but neither animal is much interested in people. Bear attacks
do happen on rare occasion, but almost always as a result of a surprise
encounter that startles both person and bear. Bears are quite capable of being
dangerous: last year one killed a deer in my yard and left half of it for me to
clean up. One could kill a person just as easily, but for whatever reason they
don’t make any special effort to do it. So, I was safe and secure in the dark
whatever my limbic system said to the contrary.
Makers
of horror films try to tickle these same limbic structures with their fare –
and we are treated to a lot of their fare in October. Back inside my house,
having had enough of the real horror unfolding on TV (the final Presidential
debate), I selected the flick The Cabin
in the Woods, which takes place at another…well…cabin in the woods. Filmed
in 2009 but not released until 2012 due to MGM’s bankruptcy, this movie got
very disparate reviews when in theaters: for every enthusiastic “Wicked fun!”
there was another “Disappointing.” Upon having seen it, this doesn’t surprise
me. Joss Whedon and Drew Goddard, who had worked together on Buffy, like to mix genres: in this case,
horror with a kind of off-beat comedy – not outright satire, which is fairly common
(e.g. Student Bodies), but something
more idiosyncratic. I can see why hardcore horror fans were perplexed by it – even
annoyed. But I’m with the crowd that found it fun.
"athlete, scholar, whore, fool, virgin"
A
stereotypical horror film involves a group of isolated young people whose lives
are in peril from some attacker(s), be the attacker a beast, a supernatural
entity, or just a plain criminal. The members of the group are predictable
archetypes with predictable behaviors who meet predictable fates. What if
there is a deeper reason for these archetypes than just “convention?” What if
they are a half-conscious echo of something real? What if each year human youths
are offered up as ritualistic sacrifice by a secret organization to placate Ancient
Ones? What if the ritual is all important: that the youths must transgress and
be punished in some defined way? All of that is the premise of The Cabin in the Woods. There are
multiple sacrifices around the world and many cultural variations to the rituals,
but in each case the attention to ritual matters; at least one of the
sacrifices has to succeed each year or the Ancient Ones will be angry. What
happens if, for some combination of reasons, one year all of the ritual
sacrifices fail? In Cabin the
isolated youths unwittingly risk this happening by not being true to their
archetypes.
Many
people wonder if there is more to the world than meets the eye. Some hope there is.
Cabin once again warns to be careful
what you wish for.
Thumbs
Up, but not for everyone: in particular, not for pure slasher aficionados.
In last night’s entertaining
bout in Morristown, NJ, the Jerzey Derby Brigade (JDB) on its home track faced
Shore Points Roller Derby visiting from south Jersey. Both teams deployed
similar tactics, using the diamond formation blocking technique to good effect.
Shore Points fields a strong team, and, despite animated skating on both sides,
took an early lead and soon built it to 30 points. Shore Points skaters #17
Meggo and #25 Lemonade repeatedly proved hard to stop, occasionally sailing
through dense blocking. Minutes before the end of the first half, however, the
game took a dramatic turn. JDB jammer #3684 CaliforniKate closed part of the
gap. Then in a power jam against Shore Point blockers thinned by penalties,
#235 A Bomb lapped the pack 5 times thereby giving JDB a 1 point lead (90-89)
at halftime.
It is October after
all, so halftime was marked by a Halloween costume contest – also by
congratulations to #33 Doom Hilda celebrating 10 years of derby.
In the second half,
#17 Meggo immediately recaptured the lead for Shore Points – a lead narrowed by
JDB #8 Lil MO Peep in the subsequent jam. Blocking grew fiercer with skaters
repeatedly taken off their feet. Shore Points #85 Buns N Roses was taken down hard
enough to leave the track temporarily, though she later returned to jam. Shore
Points once again built up a lead as it had in the first half (until the last
few minutes of it). Despite spirited jams right up to the end by CaliforniKate,
A Bomb, and Lil Mo Peep, the point spread was too much to overcome in the last
minutes of the second half. Sore Points prevailed with a Final Score of 162 – 220.
MVPs: #8 Lil MO Peep (jammer) and #93 Freudian Slap
(blocker) for JDB; #17 Outbreak “St. Marie” Meggo (jammer) and #96 Curse Me
Thirsty (blocker) for Shore points.
Messy: The Power
of Disorder to Transform Our Lives (copyright
2016) by Tim Harford
Harford, senior
columnist at The Financial Times and
author of The Undercover Economist,
extolls the virtues of disorder. He is in good company. Asked Albert Einstein,
“If a cluttered desk is a sign of a cluttered mind, of what, then, is an empty
desk a sign?”
There are places where
neatness counts. On a factory assembly line you don’t want random parts strewn
about where they can trip workers and jam machinery. But where a mess doesn’t
represent a physical hazard it aids creativity and productivity. Not just
physical messiness: the most productive brainstorming teams are those in which
the members don’t get along very well. Members of those types of teams have the
least fun, to be sure, but they outperform genial teams, which are prone to groupthink
since members are reluctant to challenge each other’s assumptions in a way that
could undermine friendliness. Working on multiple projects at once, as did
author/screenwriter/producer Michael Crichton for example, doesn’t dilute focus
so much as keep it fresh; we all weary of something we do day in and day out,
so diverting ourselves with another project cam refresh us and promotes
creative cross-fertilization of ideas.
Harford doesn’t merely
make assertions. He walks us through numerous psychological and sociological
experiments on how disorder and order in various physical and social
environments affects individuals and groups. Regrettably, most of us find
disorder uncomfortable – our messes are likely a result of laziness rather than
disordered activity. We like things arranged neatly. Our relationships too: people
tend to seek out like-minded people and comfortably narrow their perspectives
accordingly.
We can benefit from
less neatness. As the Joker advised in The
Dark Knight, “Introduce a little anarchy.” OK, maybe he’s not the best
example, but, one must admit, he was creative.
Thumbs Up – not way up,
but up.
**** ****
The Last Days of
Night (copyright 2016) by Graham Moore
Historical novels often
center on political figures and statesmen if only because there is a fair
chance the reader knows who they are. But most of the world’s interesting
people are and always have been private citizens: inventors, businesspeople,
artists, writers, entertainers, and thieves. In The Last Days of Night the backdrop is the epic patent battle
between Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse to determine the future of
electric power in the United States – Edison championing DC current and
Westinghouse AC. The viewpoint of the novel is that of Paul Cravath, the
27-year-old attorney chosen by George Westinghouse in 1888 because pricier and
more experienced lawyers didn’t want to damage their own practices by opposing
the powerful and often vengeful Edison.
The major players in
the novel are real including Edison’s henchmen and the opera house singer Agnes
Huntington. The battle was not confined to courtrooms; it involved arson,
corporate spying, and sabotage. Almost as a gruesome prank, Edison invented an
AC-powered electric chair in order to demonstrate the dangers of AC power: this
despite Edison’s public opposition to capital punishment. His aides greased
enough palms to get the New York legislature to approve the device for
executions. A key figure in all this drama was the brilliant but oddball inventor/scientist
Nikola Tesla who technically worked for Westinghouse but cared for little
outside his laboratory. Tesla’s quirks raised many eyebrows among those who
worked with him. For example, Paul Cravath, sitting at a table with Tesla at Delmonico’s, observed him calculating
the volume of his dinner. Paul asked him if he always did such calculations
prior to eating. Tesla answered, “Well, of course not; do not mistake me for a
crazy. I can only ingest a dinner the cubic volume of which adds to a number
divisible by three.”
The novel is
well-researched and well-written. Moore takes a complex web of events and
delivers it as a concisely coherent narrative. Moore honed this skill as a
screenwriter, notably of The Imitation
Game. He also has written a script for a film version of The Last Days of Night, which is in
pre-production.
Enjoyable and
Informative. Thumbs Up.
**** ****
Sugarshock! (copyright 2007) by Joss Whedon & Fabio Moon
Back in the 20-naughts,
in between the TV series Firefly and Dollhouse, writer/director Joss Whedon
experimented with a variety of old and new media, releasing books, comic books,
and film both the old-fashioned way and digitally. Sugarshock! is a one-off digital comic written by himself and
illustrated by Fabio Moon. It was posted online in 2007 and won the Eisner
award for Best Web Comic. It was popular enough that Dark Horse eventually
released a paper-and-ink edition as well, which is the one I bought.
“Sugarshock!” is a rock
band at some unspecified future date. It is fronted by the Viking-hating
(“Don’t be a Viking!”) Dandelion Naizen. The bass player is a robot. Dandelion
doesn’t explain her Viking prejudice, and she keeps letting Norse mythological
references (“By Odin!”) “accidentally” slip into her speech. Dandelion, we
suspect, can’t possibly be as flaky she likes to seem, but then again maybe she
is. She accepts an invitation to an intergalactic battle of the bands only to
discover that “battle” is not meant metaphorically.
Inventive, funny, and a
good story. Thumbs Up.
**** ****
A Hell of a
Woman (copyright 1954) by Jim Thompson
I plucked out this novel,
one of several Jim Thompson books on my shelves, for a re-read a while back. Two
blogs ago I predicted, “I’ll probably enjoy it again. I’ll let you know.” I did
and I do. Few people write so well as Thompson about the lowlife dregs of
society – not people who are poor in cash but instead poor in character.
“Dolly” (aka Frank
Dillon) is a sleazy door-to-door salesman for Pay-E-Zee stores. He skims off
his company’s books as much as he dares but still can’t get ahead. He is
contemptuous of his wife Joyce who is just like all the previous women in his
life: “Tramps, that’s all I got.” It doesn’t seem to occur to him that he is
the one picking them. It doesn’t seem to occur to him that any part of his “rotten” life could be caused by anything but lousy
luck and meanspirited bosses.
His life takes a turn
when he meets the beautiful Mona whose unpleasant aunt is sitting on a $100,000
insurance settlement (close to $2,000,000 in today’s dollars). We already know
that no turn in Dolly’s life can be for the better; he wouldn’t allow it.
Intrigue, sex, betrayal, and murder ensue.