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Wednesday 27 July 2011

PROGRESS
In life how we feel about progress tends to define us as human beings, but generally there are three stages in mankind’s evolution with progress


1.  We make something

2.  We make that same thing better.

3.  We then proceed to whinge about it ...FOREVER!
...And in the three clips below I think I have proven that this is the case, so no jazzy arguments or anything just a quite show and tell with one of my favourite ever pieces of classical music before my journey to Brighton later today.
Enjoy.
  1. We make something.  Pachelbel’s Canon.  A fantastic bit of music that seems to encapsulate triumph and disaster at the same time.

  1. Canon Rock.  Mattrach’s version and my favourite too.

  1. Rob Paravonian’s Pachelbel rant.  Nuff said.
    Thanks for listening.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JdxkVQy7QLM

    Saturday 23 July 2011

    THIRD IN AN OCCASIONAL SERIES
    FORGOTTEN FILMS THAT SHOULD BE REMEMBERED.
    Okay so today’s film is unusual in that it wasn’t really remembered at the time of its release.  It was a box office flop and didn’t even take off even after it’s video release (which some films have done, most notable examples: “Highlander” and “Taken”.)  The star of the film I am looking at today is probably more famous for the film he didn’t star in rather than the things he did.   The other stars in this film are a woman who I can’t remember seeing in anything else and a guy who was more famous for being a robot car.  Ladies and gentlemen, for your reviewing pleasure, I present to you (and this is probably the first time you’ve heard of this one) “Her Alibi”.

    HER ALIBI (1989)
    Not a clip his time but a poster and actually I think quite a classy poster.  It’s funny how in the eighties stacked up to other bad video covers this looked quite samey actually, but now over time I think it has become a bit of a classy image.  I actually introduced this film to a friend of mine called Phil Johnstone and he repaid that treat by actually obtaining the poster.  That poster held a place on my wall for a good two or three years, and it still a striking image, unlike these underneath which have not fared so well, so for that, Phil, I say to thee, thank you.  









    Now again this is one of the lonely trips to the top shop for me and Lee to select a video as our personal lives where less full than Simon Cowell’s wardrobe, but this time we agreed on this one.  We figured it might be okay even though we weren’t expecting much, but what a treat we got.  To those unfamiliar with the film, here’s a brief synopsis.  Tom Selleck plays Phil Blackwood, a former best-selling writer who has fallen on a dry patch, and whom his agent, Sam (wonderfully played by William Daniels) is trying to drag him out of.  After a visit to the local court room however Phil Blackwood sees the beautiful Nina (Paulina Porizkova ...No, I’ve not seen her in anything else either!) who is charged with murder.  He decides that she couldn’t possibly have done this and takes the crazy step of offering to provide her with an alibi, that he and she were having an affair, but after inviting her back to his house to convince the cops that the alibi is real it seems more and more likely that his recent error of judgment is going to be his last.  Will he be inspired by her or incinerated by her?

    Her Alibi is what I would class as a really, really good Sunday afternoon film.  When it is funny it is laugh out loud funny.  The film uses a really good narrative trick of having Phil’s latest book, that the unforeseen events in his life are inspiring, voiceover his actions and reactions when they are happening as can be seen below.  

    The film is very much a throwback to the great Cary Grant and Bob Hope romantic comedies of the thirties and forties, and if this film was being remade for a modern audience then it would have Paul Rudd in the Tom Selleck role, Dustin Hoffman as Sam the agent and someone not dissimilar to Audrey Tatou or Franke Potente as the slight yet sly Nina.  That’s how I see it.  But the big tragedy about this film is that a remake may be the only way most people will get to see Her Alibi because although it was only made 22 years ago, for us in the UK it is largely unavailable and I will tell you why?


    Due to the onset of DVD only selective films have been moved over to the format.  While this means that we do fortunately miss out on such duds as School Spirit, He's my Girl and  She's out of control, it also means that, unless you still have a video player and the original rental copy, this is sadly one of those films that has been lost in time.  Which is a shame as it's consistently funny and charming, the writing and direction are first rate and it is a film that deserves to find a new audience.  If you do happen across it do share it with someone because Her Alibi is a film version of a box of chocolates  . . . You know what you're gonna get, but you also know you're gonna enjoy it.  Phil, take it away...




    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LiZ-SaBXl7M&NR=1
    https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0dno9rnd57gSc6VvlF0nvEPWyFiOxZKDNjMXA1KU-w2uxrjHDpLpPsqaa1lcKSTwAwWklRGq4RS44NGVg8n2AQaG6vq4Zw28KKIhLZYYTwjDdm6T8W1xEbxKSuX661ehYCuB9nn4DUi8/s1600/300173.1020.A.jpg
    http://cf1.imgobject.com/posters/a59/4bc950c8017a3c57fe023a59/her-alibi-original.jpg
    http://www.movieposterdb.com/posters/10_03/1989/98308/l_98308_447e65a6.jpg
    http://cdn.mos.totalfilm.com/images/s/school-spirit-1985--300-75.jpg
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGA_-fKXxks&feature=related

    Friday 22 July 2011

    trust me...

    (So before I begin today's story a note on what inspired said story...



    Unusually I will tell you the inspiration for this one.  I was reading an article were Shia LeBeouf was commenting about how he was avoiding entering that "De Niro" stage of his career of picking safe roles (For a guy who's just filmed his fourth sequel, that's a pretty bold statement) and I remember thinking "what's your problem, Shia?"

    And so I imagined a scenario were the two actors would square up against each other.  Enjoy!)



     “Thank you all for coming, some of you, voluntarily, others ...less so,” said Doctor Robert as he quickly scanned the room.  This group therapy session had patients with a variety of delusions and treatment in its various stages  There were those that were brought in dosed-up to the eyeballs and others still, in a way, feeling around their psychoses.  Doctor Robert had been working with this group for the last nine weeks and was just getting the hang of what their problems were.  Then Greg walked in.
      “Increase the dosage to 50 cc’s” he said to the nurse as he entered the room in jeans and a checked shirt.  He was going to the be the toughest “nut” to crack.  Pardon the pun.  He was someone who suffered from perhaps the most dangerous of all delusions.  The delusion that he was a Doctor.  Doctor Robert observed shrewdly as Greg walked casually into the room, no notes, no white coat, his pretense of authority in his youthful gait and manner being all the more tragic knowing his past, knowing what drove him to such a delusion.  Doctor Robert merely sat there and shook his head before starting the session.
      “Good afternoon, Greg,” began Doctor Robert.  “Thank you for coming.”
      “That’s Doctor Greg, Robert,” Greg retorted whilst rolling his shirt sleeves up.
      “Greg,” began Doctor Robert.
      “I SAID IT’S DOCTOR GREG!” replied Greg angrily.  “I didn’t attend 3 years of medical school to be referred to as Mister.”
      “Yes, I’ve seen Austin Powers to, Greg,” Doctor Robert responded calmly “And it’s 4 years not 3.”
      “Yeah, like you’d know,” Greg replied.  Over the weeks there therapy sessions had become more fraught as Greg had learned ever more about Doctor Robert’s method and was trying to use them to turn the tables on him.  Outside the hospital he’d been a successful young man, but when the downturn hit he lost everything, his job, his fiance, his home, hell they even repossessed his car.  Coping with such a huge loss of self-esteem his psyche had tried to create a new identity to cling onto and this was it.  Doctor Robert had seen it all before, many times, and shaking Greg from his delusion was perhaps going to be the biggest challenge he’d faced in a while.  But he’d not been beaten yet. 



      “I would know.  I am a Doctor,” said Greg, staring defiantly into Doctor Robert’s warm gaze.  He had some steel behind his eyes but almost all delusional’s had what they thought was rock solid walls around their fake persona.
      “How long have you been working here, Greg?” Doctor Robert asked, calmly folding his arms as he sat back in certainty in his chair.
      “How ...how long?” Greg stammered.  Doctor Robert nodded.  “Two years.”
      “Two years?” asked Doctor Robert.
      “Y ...yes,” Greg answered, flicking calculations through his head.  “No wait it’s just a year.”
      “Just a year?  You don’t sound so sure,” questioned Doctor Robert.
      “Yeah, it’s a year, I got confused cause I’m just entering my second year.”
      “So with college and university that would make you...?” continued Doctor Robert.  Greg stared intently at Doctor Robert while working the numbers and gulping hard.
      “It’s 32, Greg,” Doctor Robert said, flatly.  “That would make you 32.”
      “Yeah, that’s right I’m 32.” Greg continued.
      “You’re 32?” asked Doctor Robert.  
      “I’m 32,” said Greg, flicking a hand through his sandy brown hair.  “I have boyish good looks.”
      “Really?” replied Doctor Robert.  “Let me explain something to you, Greg.  Doctors in the real world don’t look like they stepped off the set of Grey’s Anatomy.  They look like saggy face old crotches, like me.  Not little boys who look like they belong more on a Wall Street trading floor.”
      “Really?” asked Greg, folding his arms.  
      “Yeah,” replied Doctor Robert.  “You’re suffering from an acute personality disorder, but I can help you, Greg.  If you let me.”
      “You can help me?” Greg began.  “I don’t think so, Robert.  I’m not the one with the problem here.”


    The two men stared at each other arms folded, mirroring each other like an old married couple.  Doctor Robert pitied Greg, but he couldn’t let that stop him from reforming his severed ties with reality.  The rest of the group just watched, most of them transfixed by Doctor Robert’s mental assassination of Greg, and the rest too medicated to care.  Greg rolled his sleeves up, pursed his lips and began to speak.
      “For me, Robert, it was 3 years in medical school,” began Greg.  Doctor Robert raised his eyebrows quizzically, drawing even more lines on his ever aging face.  “Yeah, it was.  I was a prodigy, Robert.  I finished school 2 years early and only spent 3 at med’s school.”
      “You really expect me to believe that, Greg?” asked Doctor Robert.
      “No, but you know what?  What you think is irrelevant,” continued Greg.  “Reality is sometimes everything but what it should be.  Sometimes it is different, and I’ve suffered because of it my whole life, but I’m not gonna left that stop me from doing my job and helping you, Robert.”
      “I think you have that in reverse, Greg,” said Doctor Robert.
      “No I don’t .  You forget I know you, Robert.  I know what really happened to you,” Greg said, almost whispering.  As he leant forward, his elbows on his thighs, as he did he noticed the tinniest of twitches in Doctor Robert’s face.  Greg knew that he had to plough on. 
      “This is our ninth session now” said Greg, “and I’ve come to know you very well in that time.  And I’d be lying if I didn’t...”
      The door opened and Nurse Janice Selas placed a cup of coffee on the book case, as she did for him every session.
      “Here’s your coffee, Doctor,” she said without looking at the group.
      “THANK YOU. NURSE!” shouted both Greg and Doctor Robert.  The sympathy they had for each other evaporated as their professional manner changed to pure rage.
      “I’ll ...put it in the “Observation Room” for you,” replied Janice as she took the cup back outside.  Doctor Robert and Greg glared at each other arms folded.
      “Like I was saying, I’d be lying if I said I was going to give up on trying to get you cured,” Greg concluded, unable to disguise the hostility in his stare.
      “You know, Greg, you’re not going to get anywhere by continuing with this charade,” Doctor Robert continued.  This little upstart was attempting to burrow inside his head, cause doubt, chip away at his confidence but it wasn’t going to work.  He’d ben here too many times to fail now.


    “This is no charade, Robert.  This is real.  You’ve been sent to this unit because you were caught out impersonating a Doctor.” Greg said, diverting his words back onto a gentler track.
      “Greg.  It’s you that was caught in a hospital pretending to be a Doctor,” replied Doctor Robert.  Greg leant back in his chair shaking his head in anguish.  “Greg, you nearly killed somebody.”
      “No I didn’t, Robert.  This is my job, this is what I do, for a living,” Greg countered.  He was good.  Doctor Robert had to give him that.  And the delusion was so firmly set it would take bringing out his full medicinal knowledge to drag Greg back to reality.
      “Wolfsbane ...Medical uses?” asked Doctor Robert, arms so firmly crossed he was almost cutting off the circulation to his fingers.
      “Well, it’s been a while since I had such basic medical knowledge tested but I’ll take that,” replied Greg with a rye smile.  “It has been used in Western medicine but now is usually only found in Asian and Chinese medicine.  Safer alternatives have since been found to a highly toxic compound, old man.”  
      The words old man were like sandpaper rubbing against Doctor Robert’s ego.
      “Still know the ABC of respiratory system, old timer?” asked Greg, mockingly.  Doctor Robert felt his heart rate quicken as Greg did everything he could to antagonize him, drive a wedge into his sanity, but he had to remain calm.  He had to hold firm.
      “Yes, Greg,” Doctor Robert replied calmly.  “Even a psychologist like myself knows of the airways, breathing, circulation triumvirate of resuscitation.  Speaking of which, if I am the poor deluded mental patient, you claim I am, what would you use to cure me?”
      “Ah, well, that’s a good question,” began Greg, who suddenly came to life, sitting straight-backed in his chair.  “I would recommend a three-pronged course of attack to break your delusions, firstly therapy sessions, like this one.”
      “Very good,” interjected Doctor Robert,
      “Thank you, but you’re not gonna distract me,” countered Greg.
      “I wasn’t trying...” began Doctor Robert.
      “Yeah, whetever,” Greg came back.  “I’d then move on to electro-convulsive therapy.”
      “It makes it sound nicer avoiding the word “Shock” and adding the word “Therapy” doesn’t it, Greg?” asked Doctor Robert.


      “It doesn’t really hurt the patients,” replied Greg.
      “And you would know, how?” asked Doctor Robert.
      “I’ve sen the treatment,” Greg responded, coldly.  “I can tell.  The last course of action to bring you out of your deluded state is medication.”
      “What kind, Greg?” continued Doctor Robert.  “What specific drugs?”
      “What specific drugs?” asked Greg.  For the first time during their discussion he actually looked nervous.  “Erm, well, I er ...”  
      Greg stopped, looked at the rest of the group while his mind wandered before sighing and looking at the floor, resigned.
      “I don’t know,” said Greg.
      “I don’t know,” repeated Doctor Robert, the contempt almost showing in his voice.  “You don’t know, do you, Greg?”
      Greg shook his head, his masquerade in tatters.
      “You nearly killed someone, Greg,” continued Doctor Robert.  “You’re pretending to be a Doctor nearly killed a poor girl in surgery, Greg.  You have to face that.  You have to accept it.”
      “No, I, no.  It wasn’t me,” said Greg, shaking his head as if trying to shake away the doubts that were now circling around his psyche.
      “If you face it I can help you, I can...” began Doctor Robert before a sudden movement in the room shifted his attention.  A patient who had sat there, silent, for the entire exchange suddenly strode up out of his chair and headed for the “observation room”.  
      “Where are you going, Mr Connors,” asked Doctor Robert as the patient impassively continued towards the door.  “KURT, GET BACK HERE!” Doctor Robert, shouted but Kurt continued through to see Nurse stood there still holding the coffee that she had brought in for the Doctor.
      “Ah, thank you, nurse,” said Doctor Connors, taking the coffee off her, shaking his head.  “You know it’s hard to believe that these poor bastards are so desperately deluded to think they’re Doctors.”
      “Don’t you think you’d better get back in there, “Doctor”?” she asked just before he took a sip.
      Doctor Connors took a look back in at the group through the two way observation mirror and nodded in agreement as “Doctor” Robert, continued to shout in for Kurt to return.



      “Yes, yes I suppose you’re right,” he replied as he placed the cup back in her hands.  “Just keep hold of that for me, will you, while I go back in to observe?”
      Kurt headed back in and retook his seat, the defeated pose he held before he left the group gone and a more confident pose supplemented in its place.
      “Thank you again for rejoining us, Kurt,” said Doctor Robert.  
      In the “observation room” nurse Janice turned out of the small broom cupboard of an “observation” lounge into the real thing, where Doctor Paul Allen and his students watched the convoluted exchange in the amazing group therapy session.
      “You’re coffee, Paul,” she said handing him the cup.
      “Thanks, Janice,” he replied his eyes, along with everyone of his students transfixed on the level of personality disorder going on in the room.  
      “I don’t why you have two observation rooms  here, Doctor,” said Janice angrily.
      “Well, we had to have this room built so the students can see in, that old one just wasn’t big enough,” explained Doctor Paul.  “Now this room is finished we can get the first room demolished.”
      “Hmph!” Janice retorted before leaving in the door behind the students this time.  In the therapy rom the debate continued to wage over who was in charge, where now “Doctor” Kurt was arguing with “Doctor” Robert. 
      “There you have it ladies and gentlemen.  The true fallout of the credit crunch.”
      “So all of those patients think that they’re Doctors?” asked one of the students.
      “Yep,” countered Paul, making a mental note of where the discussions were leading while also conversing with his students.  Later on he would listen back to the sessions as they were all taped and have one-to-one sessions with each of the patients, but these group sessions allowed him to witness first-hand the length and depth of each patient’s delusional state.
      “And they all used to be bankers?” asked another student.
      “Precisely,” replied Paul. 
      “What caused this?”  Asked the first student.  Somewhere inside his own psyche Doctor Paul flicked the switch that he always had at the ready from Doctor to human being and opened up what were at this stage only theories, but they were all he had.

    Wednesday 20 July 2011

    IT’S THE CLIMB

     “Hey there,” said the cute brunette in the back of the jeep.  “Wanna come party with us at camp Zabeldorf?”
      “Nah, thanks,” replied Pete. tugging on his backpack ruggedly.  “Me and Mount Susudio have a date with destiny.”
      “You can have sex with us both,” chirped the spritely blonde in the driving seat.
      “No thanks,” replied Pete, flashing his best boyish smile.
      “FAG!” the blonde shouted before driving off. Those crazy chicks.  They just didn’t understand the joy of the climb; conquering that sheer cliff face and the joy of the view at the top was sadly better than anything they could give him.  He trundled off at a moderate pace.  The mountain was summoning him.
      He hit the bottom of the rock face at 11am and checked his equipment; everything was there.  He looked up at the imposing visage.  From down at the bottom it’s subtle nooks, crevices and outcrops were all but invisible, throwing down a fierce visual gauntlet.  It was only when he got up close to it’s fearful face that it revealed its more subtle lines and deep ridges that he could get feet and finger holds.  Before he began he caressed the surface of the rock.  As the sun beat down it heated the rock that created a bond, a feeling of intimacy between man and nature that just couldn’t be felt anywhere else.  With a deep breath and a huff he mounted the beast of a mountain, and started the journey.
      The sun that warmed the rock today was no ally, beating down and generating an impressive 28 degrees heat that meant that Pete had to stop a couple of times extra to replenish his ever diminishing water levels.  Progress for that reason was slow, but a hundred metres came and went, two hundred metres, same.  This for Pete though was the boring part, staying sane while making the first thousand metres.  After that the water erosion of several thousand years the fissure that it had carved out and had split the cliff 

    face would appear.  It was waiting there for him to enjoy.  Determined he pressed on and, after a while, he felt himself get in the rhythm that everyone needed in order to have a good climb and eventually it started to feel like the mountain was moving like a conveyor belt beneath his body.  Concentration was coming easy and stage by stage he and the wall were increasingly feeling as one.  The crack was just above him now and he slid his arm inside.  As he did a piece of the wall came loose and crashed upon his left hand.
      “Ow!  Shit!” said Pete.  He moved his hand sideways and managed to dislodge his thumb and three fingers but the little finger was wedged tight.
      “Dammit!” said Pete.  He daren’t risk yanking his hand out as he could wind up tumbling down the mountain with only the guy rope there to stop his fall and, although he knew it there as a safety measure he never wanted to know that it worked.  Pete yanked at his finger a few more times but no matter what he did it just wouldn’t come.  Pete looked up at the rest of the rock face.  He had just got to the good part.  He didn’t have supplies to get caught on the mountain overnight and wanted to finish as the sunset so he could walk back into town.  There was nothing else for it.  If the mountain wouldn’t remove itself from his finger then would have to remove himself from his finger.  He reached down to his boot knife with his free hand.  The blade reflected the sun in his eyes as he turned the blade.  He always made sure that the edge was super-sharp if ever this moment came, but always hoped that it wouldn’t.  He placed the blade against his little finger knuckle.  The skin parted at even the slightest touch from the blade.  He then put his remaining weight on the blade.
      “AAAAAAAAAGGGGGHHHHH!” he screamed.  The sound bounced and bounded up the walls of the split rock face.  The reverberations ricocheting through even the slightest cracks running through the crevasse, birds of all types, both the hunted and the hunters scarpering at that glass-shattering sound.


      Pete hauled himself into the split and reached back with his good hand to remove his back pack while keeping his left hand jammed under his right armpit.  He was losing blood and had to work fast if he was to have any chance of survival.  Removing the first aid kit he placed a dressing over the wound in order to try and stop the bleeding and then began wrapping bandages frantically round it while swearing constantly.  He held his hand beneath his arm and settled in the huge tear in the rock to regain his strength with some food and knock some painkillers down.  He looked down and then up.  He was caught dead in the middle of the rock face.  Either a thousand metres down or a thousand metres up, that was the choice he had.  He also knew that while it may seem safe to head down 80% of all rock-climbing/mountaineering accidents came about during the descent and he didn’t fancy his chances of surviving the climbdown while missing a finger, whereas going up ...well from this point on it was largely a case of just lodging himself against both sides of the rock and forcing himself up.  He could probably do that pretty easily.  Couldn’t he?  Yeah, course he could. He looked at his left hand at the dark blooded stump where his little finger once was, he could mourn that loss as soon as he got to the top.  
      He drove himself up the mountain passing the 1100, 1200 and 1300 metre stages with relative ease and three stop points.  After every hundred metres he felt that little bit worse.  Not because of the pain but due to him now chasing the sun.  Every time he moved further up the rock face the sun’s light moved every further up the rock.  It was disheartening, but he had little choice but to move ever onward.  Ridges came and went and as time elapsed the easiest part of the climb unfolded simply.  It was just a case of pinioning himself between one side and t’other.  A foot shape gap appeared perfect for his left foot and he placed it there, a ledge above seeming prefect to act as a double point of leverage.  Unfortunately his scream earlier had weakened the rock face and, as he pulled, the rock wall came loose, the largest part of it being a thirty kilo boulder that slid down and crushed his left foot.



      “YEEEEAAAAAGGGHHHH!  FUCKING HELL!” spat Pete as the boulder shattered every thing that used to be his left foot.  Suddenly going for mobility over strength seemed less of a good idea.  Again Pete found himself trapped; so close to escaping at the top of the canyon and yet also so far away.  The tears trickled through his dust-encrusted face making him look like a sad clown from a living room painting from the nineteen seventies.  He grabbed at his leg to try and tear the smashed foot free, as he did he felt the bones mashed against broken nerve endings shooting razor-like pain signals through to his brain.
      ‘NNNNNGGGGHHHHHH!” Pete spat, through pain-laced tears.  He attempted to pull the rock but the bottom was lodged firmly into the foot-shaped gap.  Having lost a finger already on the climb the thought of losing his foot as well was almost unbearable.  He knew it was always a risk doing what he did but an entire appendage?  He looked up at the ever-growing shadow above him as the sun made its constant journey around the Earth (well, that’s what it was doing from his perspective.)  He knew his foot was damaged beyond repair and realistically there was only one thing to do, but he also knew that this time, he would need a little help.
      He spun his backpack around and removed the medical kit.  In the top lid of the kit were 10 small needles all loaded with 10 little assistants.
      “Say hello to my little friends,” said Pete doing the worst Tony Montana impersonation ever.  He removed one of the needles and squirted out just a smidgen of liquid.  Right now it was important not to waste any.  He was 1300 metres up and the thought of having to climb a further 700 metres while his system while digesting morphine was both exhilarating and terrifying, but with all the pain he was in with his finger and now his foot, what choice did he have?  He injected the sweet warm liquid and waited for it take effect.  
      He removed the knife and tried to pries the rock away bit it was not for moving.  He placed blade against his ankle, going as near to the broken foot as much as he could.  The skin again seemed to part in fear at the sharpness of the blade as it pressed even gently against it.



      “Okay then, now time to cut away!” said the blade.
      “All right, then.” replied Pete to the knife and began to slice through his leg.  The morphine took the edge off the pain (like wearing ear-muffs) and he couldn’t hear his own screams as the blade made hard work of his tendons, muscle and bone.  Eventually the blade bit through and the rock and his foot tumbled 300 metres down the crevasse, his foot wobbling from side to side like it was waving him goodbye.
      “OH NOW YOU CAN FUCKING MOVE, CAN’T YOU?” Pete shouted as the errant foot tumbled away.  He had to work fast again as he was losing a lot of blood, time however was more on his side as he’d already removed the dressings first.  He applied them quickly through short breaths as the pain strayed into his vision, creating an unwanted moment of dizziness.  He wanted to wait after the dressing was applied, that was what the morphine was telling him.
      “Wait, relax, get your strength back, you’ve got time,” it said in his own voice.  But he knew it wasn’t him saying that.  He knew that upward was outward and down here was death.  He headed up but now the climb was made treacherous due to the loss of a digit and an entire appendage.  He pummeled the rocks on either side, dragging his broken body up the two rock planes, as he did the sweat oozed down him, sliding into the bandages stinging the wounds as it soaked in.  He was tempted to stop and shoot up some more but the major with-drawl symptoms wouldn’t begin to send him insane for another 3 hours.  He made another 100 metres and went on, even though he should’ve probably stopped for something to eat.  He reached the 1500 metre mark and the top above started to look even more tempting.  His breath had started to become really short and strained and he was starting to see double, but he kept repeating “move and live, stop and die, move and live, stop and die,” over and over again like a mantra.  The morphine at the moment was still just about helping, keeping him company and keeping the worst part of the pain away.  Another 50 metres surged beneath him as he propelled continuously up there.  The end was now in sight, just a little over a four hundred metre track circuit and that was a as easy as falling off a ...Well, best not think about falling, not just at the



     moment anyway.  He placed his left hand on a ledge and pulled himself up, as he did so the ledge gave way.  Pete bounced from side to side as the rock face turned a blind eye to his plight, eventually he slowed his fall a fraction as his right arm smashed against an outcrop, shattering the bones.
      “NNNGGGHH!” exclaimed Pete at the roughness of the landing.  The fallen ledge then landed on the same arm from the elbow down.
      “AAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRGGGGGGGHHHHHH!” he screamed.  Yet again he found himself pinned in, he looked up again and the opening seemed to move even further away.  Just over a track circuit away felt like a marathon.  Pete pushed at the rock.  With all his limbs and digits attached he might have had a chance of moving it in the past but today?  It felt like fate really wanted him to die on this mountain but Pete was not for believing in fate.  He reached round with his free hand and unfastened the back pack on the right and slung it off his left shoulder.  He could hear his old friends the morphine needles almost dancing with joy as he removed the medical kit from the pack.
      “Hey, Pete!  Long time no see,” said the syringes merrily.  
      “Those crazy morphine guys,” thought Pete as he withdrew another syringe.  The warm liquid tickling his innards as it entered his bloodstream.  This time as he withdrew his blade from his sheath he felt a small giggle escape.  He pressed the blade against the elbow joint.
      “YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!”
    The girls had enjoyed camp Zabeldorf.  They had spent the day by the lake skinny dipping and getting stoned.  It gave then a thrill the fear that Jason Vorhees may show up at any minute and do them in.  True, they were a little put out earlier when the cute guy wouldn’t put out, but hey, that was his loss.  He was forgotten now and they were just looking forward to getting back to the Motel and getting wasted as the light started to become extinguished behind the mountains.  As they drove over desert roads that played havoc with the jeep’s solid suspension the headlights flicked across an animal moving 

    Hey kids don’t do drugs ...CAUSE YOU’RE PISSING ME OFF!



      If there’s one question I get asked more than other it’s “Mike, will you just shut up?” but as well as that one there’s another one and that is “How come you’ve never been drunk/done drugs?” and the answer is twofold.  One, I’ve never been interested, and two, because I’m the guy who’s always been there fixing other people’s problems when they’re in their drunken or drugged up states and have caused themselves no end of trouble.
      Thankfully no longer being a teen/tweenager and moving in such crowds and also being a parent of children who are not yet at the getting shit-faced and stoned stage I haven’t encountered such problems like that for many years...UNTIL TODAY!
      Having booked the afternoon off from work and then realising I didn’t need the time off I did what anybody would do in that situation and had the time off anyway.  Actually that’s a bit of an overstatement.  I knew that if I went an hour early with the time I’d worked during the rest of the day I could effectively have half an hour off but get home an hour earlier (Trust me it does work but just not in English).  Anyway, I was on the bus coming back and for an hour of the journey no big deal, until this heavy-set guy gets on board at Chorley.  He’s carrying what looks like a bottle of beer and toddles off to the back seat.  The bus continues on its journey but then, on the dual carriage way pulls into a lay-by.  Now at this stage its fair to say that there was a funny smell upstairs, not having been around cannabis for quite some time I didn’t recognise the smell straight away.  The driver however clearly did and came upstairs.
      “HAVE YOU BEEN SMOKING DRUGS ON MY BUS?” he barked at the guy.
      “I’ve put it out now,” Tubby replied.
      “OFF MY BUS!” the driver continued.
      “But I’ve put it out now,” replied Cheech McChong.
      “I SAID OFF MY BUS, NOW!” the driver went on.
      “But I’ve put it out now,” Vincent Vega replied timidly.
      “HAVE YOU GOT DRUGS ON YOUR PERSON, DO YOU WANT ME TO CALL THE POLICE OR ARE YOU GONNA GET OFF THE BUS?” asked the driver.
      “Where am I gonna go from here?” replied El Stoner.
      “THAT’S NOT MY PROBLEM!” the driver responded before heading back downstairs.  Blotto Otto then weighed up his options and decided walking stoned into town down a dual carriageway was better than going in a police van and missing his appointment at the job centre and so he left and we set off again ...BUT, now late.
      As the bus pulled close to the stop I could see my connecting bus sailing past.  The next bus however wouldn’t be long and so I waited, and waited, and waited, then four busses went past the other way.  I knew that to walk home would take about 20 minutes but in terms of choices I was limited.  I headed back up the hill and back home and the hour I wanted to gain had been whittled back down to 25 minutes, my life yet again ruined by drug-use.
      I know that those left-wing liberals in the Guardian think that drug-use is fine, bur clearly my experiences show the dangers inherent in illegal drug-taking.  One can only hope that those fat cat’s in city hall read my blog and learn from my experiences.
    http://static5.depositphotos.com/1037987/479/i/450/dep_4796781-Young-Man-Sitting-In-Playground-Smoking-Joint.jpg



    THE SECOND IN AN OCCASIONAL SERIES
    FORGOTTEN FILMS THAT SHOULD BE REMEMBERED
      Well here we are again remembering more forgotten films and today’s choice is a slightly unusual one as I’m sure it’s on that everyone will have heard of but I imagine a few people reading will not have seen.  It’s from the eighties. the decade that cinema largely forgot, with abysmal styles, terrible music (well definitely in the latter half) and AIDS, the disease that made everyone scared of sex (Just what you want when you’re a horny teenager, thank you, Universe!)  But within that decade there still managed to be some cracking films made, but, many of them have been forgotten and now occupy bargain bins in supermarkets everywhere for only £2.  The film I am looking at today is one of those films, made in 1989 it is an intimate portrayal of the breakdown of a relationship and the commencement of another one, or two in a way.  It is a masterful debut film by a 26 year old who would eventually become an oscar-winner for a remake of a television series, and it’s main star would sadly never really reach the heights he showed with this incredible performance.  Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Sex, Lies and Videotape.


    SEX, LIES AND VIDEOTAPE (1989)
      So, imagine if you will, me and some friends trying to choose a film at the local video store as our dismal social lives led us once again to this predictable place.  On this night the general consensus among my friends was “Oh yeah, let’s get this one, YEAH!”  Now, although it’s hard to believe and to be honest I still don’t have any idea why, I didn’t want to see Sex, Lies and Videotape as a watch.  I don’t want to make out I was Mr Puritanical when it came to choosing a film because I wasn’t, but I just didn’t fancy it.  So we took it back, watched it, they hated it, I loved it.  I still love it, because like Tarantino years later, Soderbergh realised that sometimes it’s worth pursuing the exploitation angle to get bums on seats, even if your film isn’t anything like what it says on the tin.
      If you haven’t seen the film then the story is quite simple to relate.  It is the story of four people in a little American suburban town.  Annie is married to John but is sexually repressed, Cynthia, Anne’s sister, is anything but repressed and is sleeping with John, who is a scumbag lawyer.  Into these three people’s lives walks Graham, played amazingly by James Spader, a man who is independently wealthy (although we never find out how ...Heathcliff anybody?) and who is in town to seek some sort of relationship or sense of closure with a woman he used to know whom he pushed away and hurt.  And that’s it.  No really, that is it, that’s all there is to it.  There’s no gunfights, explosions, dramatic cross edits, playing around with the timeline or anything fancy like that.  It’s just a bloody good film that covers a whole range of issues, from betrayal, lies (both John’s and Anne’s) emotional stuntedness, repression, attention seeking and unfulfilled longing and the value of absolute truth.  There’s no nudity in the film (well female nudity anyway) there’s no drug use and it probably doesn’t deserve it’s 18 rating.  The performances are fantastic, with Andie MacDowell, Peter Gallagher and Laura San Giacomo all embodying their roles as Anne, John and Cynthia respectively with distinction but it is James Spader as the quietly disastrous Graham who is mesmerizing in this, I want to say Kitchen sink, but it’s more like, dining table drama.  The dialogue is notable in it’s ordinariness, again something that Tarantino certainly picked up on, and the direction always feels like we’re catching everyone out.  The music isn’t really music and is more like a collection of sounds thrown together to go with a scene but it all works superbly, although as it comes to an end you’re not really sure why.
    In short Sex, Lies and Videotape is a film like no other that holds a power long after the final credits have gone.  Unfortunately though as the trailer is trash I have instead got these two early scenes which hopefully will convey some of the mood of the film.  E la.


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XdFjxhDOKNQ&playnext=1&list=PLE85090625FE79C83
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=djEBjPu0CQE&feature=related