Spring in Sonoma

February 24, 2009

Early spring time in Sonoma, always a lovely time. I believe that you can learn a lot about a town by its cemetery – if the graveyard feels like it’s grown with the people, the town is bound to have character. Sonoma’s cemetery is spread around a hillside, with tons of old trees and gravestones that date back into the 1800′s. There’s a couple of hiking trails that connect to the surrounding hills, making the area a fun place to take a Sunday stroll. Keeping company with ghosts has never been easier!

sonoma cemetery 544x408 Spring in Sonoma

Silent Reviews

February 23, 2009

  • Hell Kitchen, Episode 2 – Yes
  • The Biggest Loser – Meh…
  • The Curious Case of Benjamin Button – Yes
  • Frost/Nixon – Yes
  • Top Gear Season 12 opener – Yes
  • NNS race in Fontana – No
  • NSCS race in Fontana – Meh… (but hey, my driver won!)
  • The 81st Annual Tony Awards – Yes (but if I was Peter Gabriel, I’d be pissed)
  • The 81st Annual Academy Awards – Not so much (but still fun enough to watch)
  • Hugh Jackman – Yes

Best of Oscar, The Conclusion

February 21, 2009

Well, we did it! Victoria and I finally followed through on something that we’d been talking about since we started dating over four years ago: watch all Best Picture nominees of the year before the Oscar telecast, hoping to gain some real investment in the awards show. If you haven’t read the reviews yet, you can follow the links below:

Series introduction
Part 1: The Reader
Part 2: Slumdog Millionaire
Part 3: Milk
Part 4: Frost/Nixon
Part 5: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

It was a great experience. And we learned a few things along the way: for example that watching five movies in three weeks is quite a bit of work. That abiding by somebody else’s (the movie theater’s) schedule doesn’t come as natural as it once did. We watched two of the movies during the week, and working through lunch just so that I could leave on time to meet Victoria straight at the theater felt positively anachronistic.

But even in the age of home theater, 60 inch TVs and Blu-ray the experience of watching a memorable movie in the theater is still unmatched. It creates memories. A theater becomes synonymous with a certain movie. Especially when you have access to smaller, “art house” type cinemas. We watched Slumdog Millionaire and Milk at Sonoma’s Sebastiani Theater, a small, single-screen affair where we also watched Little Miss Sunshine and Cars. We were just as lucky to catch Frost/Nixon at The Lark, an restored non-profit theater in the heart of Larkspur. They serve alcohol! icon wink Best of Oscar, The Conclusion I remember watching Rent, Juno and a re-run of Donnie Darko there while drinking my beer.

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Best of Oscar, Part 5: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

February 21, 2009

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Written by Eric Roth, directed by David Fincher, and starring Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Taraji P. Henson and Jared Harris.

(Mild story spoilers follow.)

Benjamin Button is born into truly remarkable circumstances: his body’s internal clock is running backwards. Looking like an arthritis-ridden, old and crumpled baby when he is born on the final day of World War I, Benjamin gets increasingly younger through the years. Abandoned by his shocked biological father, Benjamin is raised by substitute parents at a retirement home instead, where Benjamin’s condition doesn’t easily reveal itself. It is here, at an early age, that Benjamin meets Daisy Fuller. We immediately hear destiny calling: the connection is instant, Benjamin’s and Daisy’s lives become intertwined, and as their paths keep crossing through the decades, the inevitable love affair develops. And of course Benjamin lives a truly extraordinary life. “Young in body, old in spirit” takes on a whole new meaning as we watch Benjamin Button go through the ages, see him reconnect with his estranged father, and, through Benjamin and Daisy, witness a unique split-screen perspective that explores the meaning of growing old.

[Read more]

Best of Oscar, Part 4: Frost/Nixon

February 19, 2009

Frost/Nixon
Written by Peter Morgan, directed by Ron Howard, and starring Frank Langella, Michael Sheen, Kevin Bacon and Matthew Macfadyen.

(Mild story spoilers follow.)

It’s hard to believe that it’s been 35 years since Richard Nixon was forced to resign as president of the United States. We’re trained to automatically rate Nixon as one of the, if not the, worst presidents the US has ever had. But for having made such a long and lasting impression on American politics, many details of Richard Nixon’s ‘crookedness’, as well as the aftermath of his resignation, have been lost in the decades that followed. Several generations are simply too young to ever have fully understood the meaning of the Watergate events, which is certainly true for me. Frost/Nixon, based on Peter Morgan’s play, is doing its part to rectify the situation.

The setup of Frost/Nixon is remarkably similar to modern times: a controversial president has left the office with record low approval ratings and allegations of misconduct; through all this said president never wavered in his uncompromising style or attitude (he most certainly never admitted to errors in judgment or flat out wrongdoing); the American public is coming to terms with an unproductive (and potentially unnecessary) war…; and although a new president is in office and life has supposedly moved on, the nation is still reeling with the distinct feeling of unfinished business, of missing resolution.

In 1974, it felt like Richard Nixon got off the hook.

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“Secret Recipe”? Yeah right.

February 18, 2009

Am I the only one who is amused by Coca Cola ads that tout the commitment to their “secret recipe”? When, you know, HFCS profoundly changed the taste of their drink over the last three decades? Yeah, the Coca Cola Company is certainly committed to the purity of their drinks. Not marketing.

How We Met Their Mother

February 17, 2009

himym how i met your mother How We Met Their MotherVictoria and I agree: How I Met Your Mother is the best sitcom currently on TV. ‘Til Death held the distinction (at least in our minds) for a while, but apparently the writers decided that it was time to systematically destroy that show, instead.

So HIMYM it is. It’s funny, it’s life-assuring, it has that extra little bit of mystery (who is Ted going to marry?), and it has an attractive cast that we’re familiar with from other movies and TV series. Not since Friends has a sitcom assembled a group of actors with such great chemistry. Victoria and I aren’t exactly long-time followers of the show, though. I do remember watching a few of the early episodes (how can you forget a show with an episode called “The Slutty Pumpkin“?); but we only started watching all the DVD sets a few months ago, after Victoria caught one of the later episodes on TV and luckily insisted that we watch it.

Now we’re all caught up with the show’s mysteries and storylines. The writers have been battling with one fundamental problem from the start, of course: to stay true to the premise of the show, we cannot meet Ted’s future wife until the series is closing in on the end – the question of who will turn out to be the future Mrs. Mosby is one of the show’s big overarching themes, after all. The show’s source of information (the future Ted Mosby) is intentionally written as an unreliable narrator, which keeps doors open (and seasons flowing). Many of the romantic interests that Ted meets turn out to be flukes, if simply by necessity. But as a self-proclaimed HIMYM geek, I think I already know who Ted is going to end up marrying! And I will happily present that theory behind the cut (which, RSS readers should know, is right here). Think of it as a SPOILER barricade for everybody not caught up on seasons 3 & 4.

[Read more]

Best of Oscars, Part 3: Milk

February 16, 2009

Milk
Written by Dustin Lance Black, directed by Gus Van Sant, and starring Sean Penn, Emile Hirsch, Josh Brolin and James Franco.

(Mild story spoilers follow.)

In 1970, on the eve of his 40th birthday, Harvey Milk tells his soon-to-be boyfriend that he hasn’t accomplished anything yet in life. This will certainly change over the next 8 years, as Milk moves to San Francisco’s Castro district and works on becoming the first openly gay elected official in the US, championing civil rights in a time when American gay rights were virtually non-existent. The biopic Milk documents Harvey’s rise: from the early days when he was simply “the mayor of Castro Street”, through several elections, his eventual appointment as one of 11 San Francisco city supervisors, to his untimely death in 1978.

Harvey Milk’s life is very well documented, so let’s focus on the movie instead. I’d heard of Milk way before the movie was ever advertised, when my friend (and then co-worker) Wolfi took the day off to work as an extra in the film’s crowd scenes that were being shot in San Francisco. To be honest, I didn’t know anything about Harvey Milk or what he stood for until I watched this movie. As I expected, Milk educated me very well in that regard and gave me a lot of appreciation for the history of the American gay rights movement.

[Read more]

Silent Reviews

February 16, 2009

  • RENT Live on Broadway (Blu-ray) – Yes
  • Daytona 500…
    Gavin DeGraw’s national anthem – WTF?
    Digger Cartoons – No
    Race – No
  • Food poisoning – NO

NASCAR Hauler Timelapse

February 15, 2009

Now that the 2009 NASCAR season is officially underway, I want to kick off my own season by posting the 2nd timelapse that I recorded when NASCAR was at Infineon Raceway in 2008.

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This took about an hour in realtime.You can watch the other timelapse (filmed concurrently on the dragstrip) here.