Buying a new computer comes
with a problem: making the new computer as much like the old computer as
possible. This takes a month. Doesn’t matter how large the archive is. Over the
course of a month’s use, your new computer will throw things at you on a daily
basis.
There are plenty of what-the-fuck moments.
I turned things up to eleven. Windows 11. If I could drip disdain off
that, I would. Sloped type will have to do. Going to a new operating system,
you find that something obvious is no longer listed under a really obvious
category.
Purely for the sake of change, it’s been
listed elsewhere. You resort to the computerised equivalent of a crystal
fucking ball, soggy goat entrails, the bone runes, and wild fucking guesses to
take you to the place where you can not quite do the thing.
Getting there really is just part of the
journey. Once you are there, you still have to get there some more. And then
your troubles start afresh. This goes on…daily…until, over the course of a few
weeks, you’ve finally relocated all the things that have been put in different
places.
I’m a month in, and I’ve covered everything.
(This is a lie.) It is aggravating. (This is the truth.) The computer itself is
fantastic. I won’t have to upgrade until it becomes a lump of fused circuits. My
archive is the same, but that archive has to change.
So when do you review your archive?
Periodically. But always when a new computer becomes the latest home for the
same old archive. Some essential files are no longer essential. I look in a
folder marked ESSENTIAL FILES, and I
see I still have software parcels there from several computers ago – and things
were very different, then.
When I typed by candlelight, with a sepia-toned
background, in a cave on the edges of the great wasteland, I found those
primitive computer tools quite useful. But this computer is in high orbit over
the planet, and I must put the stone axes away. And so…
Once again, I find myself reaching for the
flamethrower. The old archive is installed. Sounds like I am putting a puppet
government in place. The basic rule of computing is unchanging. THOU SHALT FIND EMPTY FILE FOLDERS UNTIL THE
ENDS OF TIME.
Been burning those. They burn quickly. Given
that I am using a new system, the new system has been hindering my efforts
aiding my quest. I had a warning about data allocation. This was an e-mail
problem.
That’s when I remembered I had an e-mail
archive. From computer to computer, the e-mail mountain has always stayed in
the background. You look over your shoulder, and it glowers in the distance.
I have loads of e-mail addresses for
different purposes. Personal. Business. Assassination. (That last one is also
business – but never personal.) Here I am, checking my archive again. But…the
e-mail stuff is somewhere else. And somewhere else, it is giving me a warning.
If I am not careful, there’ll be a landslide. Even far away, that’s a problem
I’ll have to clear up.
Will I clear this up? I’ve been chipping
away at it. Number of unread e-mails? Close to zero. Occasionally, there’ll be
a mad flurry of messages from three companies at once…and I’ll find a
ridiculous number of messages waiting for me. Ten. Holy fuck, what’s happened?
Nothing’s happened. No emergency.
Electronic messages arrive in dribs and
drabs. But then they build up. An e-mail comes in. I read it. Often, that’s the
only action I need to take. Or I’ll answer one. And then, as there’ll be
further action down the line…I shunt these e-mails to folders.
They sit and wait. If nothing happens, gasp, nothing happens. And here I am,
now, with a new computer, receiving a warning. So I check. Holy fucking shit.
Number of unread e-mails? We’re at zero. Number of e-mails in folder? Oh.
I’ve taken a look. Peeked in. Reached for
the disinfectant. First, I found some e-mails were dropped into the wrong
folders. I made corrections. Then I did a lot of burning. Messages going back
years, dealing with companies that stopped trading. People retired or died.
What was relevant then is not relevant now.
For historical purposes, it is interesting
to see what was going on, where, how things turned out…but tumbleweeds gathered
in one place take up a whole lot of space for a whole lot of nothing. Burn,
burn burn…
I had 400-odd e-mail entries there, for one
e-mail address. How many of these were still relevant? All of them – for taking
up online storage space. I was given a warning. Warning heeded. I roasted 200
e-mails in the flames.
By fuck, that’s a tedious process. And
so…I’ll burn more when I feel like it. Killing 200 certainly relieved
space-concerns. I look at a few of those e-mail boxes and they are as fresh as
they’ll ever be. No e-mails in there.
A few have a single e-mail left. This tells
me I updated a password for a site, and that site is keyed to a particular
e-mail address. Handy, if I have two accounts for the same site. The lone
e-mail is a signpost telling me that account is tied to here and not to there.
Junk mail is non-existent. As I have junk
mail folders for EVERY account, I am happy to report that Windows is filtering
like a fucking zealot. I just wasn’t interested in helping the late Sani Abacha
liberate his considerable fortune from those pesky Swiss bank accounts. He can
pay his own processing fees. Through his many surviving relatives, I guess.
Music is, for some reason, the hardest
transfer from old machine to new. Everything copies over. But Windows now only
operates a legacy Media Player. I know this as the player tells me so when I
hover the mouse over a very familiar icon.
Every time Media Player was “upgraded”
people complained. It doesn’t seem to be a particularly complex piece of kit.
Don’t fix it. You’ve made it better. Okay, now fix it. You’ve sent it to live
on a nice farm, far away in the countryside.
Here’s a
legacy photo of the Media Player, gambolling through the fields, enjoying
retirement. You can see Farmer Giles in the background, readying his shotgun
for use against a plague of rats.
And that’s the last legacy photo we see of
legacy Media Player. I moved the archive across, and found loads of unknown
albums. They were all one track long, and they were all track one.
I went looking for albums that were known,
named, and had been mugged of their first tracks. It used to be the case that
fixing this shit…well, it was easy, right. No longer. I cast the mystic runes,
sent a text message to
This is why it can take a month to recreate
the office you were using before. For a week, you are too busy to listen to
music. I’ll put some music on. What’s the
worst that can happen? Oh.
And so it goes with MANY OTHER THINGS. I
want the name of the fried mushroom of an employee who decided to plant the
menu in the fucking middle. The middle. We read from left to fucking right in
the English language, you low-rent Satanist!
It’s not the Satanism I object to, but the
low-rent nature of the move.
Then there was this fucking invisible screen
just out of sight at the top of the screen. First, I had to identify it by
running online searches guessing at what the fuck it was. When I strayed into
the general area, I honed my search.
This did not improve my mood. But at least
my search was honed. I’ve forgotten whatever the fuck it was. All I had to know
was the location of the sub-fucking-menu housing the command to delete its
thorny arse.
There’s a calendar. But it isn’t the
calendar. It looks very like the calendar from before. Today I discovered the
aching need to place an event on that calendar. But, no, not on that calendar.
Right, then. It must be an app. (It is.) And
that app must be listed here, somewhere. (It fucking wasn’t.) I’m looking for a
fucking calendar app, not the Northwest fucking Passage. If you aren’t looking
for the arse-end of the moon, you shouldn’t have to go to the arse-end of the
moon to find the place you are looking for.
Turns out,
Any-fucking-way…
Opening a calendar I can add an event
to…proved a tedious prospect. I found it quicker to grab a piece of paper and
scribble a reminder there. Job fucking done. Move the fuck along. Nothing to
fucking see here…except a piece of paper, obviously. And I don’t have to travel
to the arse-end of the fucking moon to read that.
RLLauthor@outlook.com and @RLL_author GO TO AMAZON KINDLE STORE AND TYPE RLL. YOU WILL FIND MY BOOKS.
Saturday, 1 February 2025
NEW COMPUTER…SAME ARCHIVE: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Thursday, 2 January 2025
HOW MANY BOOKS IN DECEMBER: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Recap from December 2024’s blog post.
*
How many books have come into the house in the month
of December? That’s easy. No books. So now I’ll set myself an easy challenge.
How many books will have come into the house by December’s end?
No more
than…five…is my guess. And I will try to hold true to that. How? I’ll just not
buy any. But wait a bit. There are things on order. Damn it. Yes. That’s true.
How many? I have no clue. You see, I don’t want to know, and I don’t need to
know.
*
Now that I’ve caught up to
January, how many books actually came into the house in the long month of
December? Two. Okay. That’s no more than five. Easy guess. But how many books
did I read in the month of December? With last month’s blog post in mind, I
decided to keep score throughout December. If I tracked the number of books in,
I had to track the number of books out. And something else, besides.
Zero books went out. One day, this will be a
problem.
What else, though? I knew I’d track the
number of books read, as well. December is a monumentally busy month, or feels
busier. Yes, there’s a holiday atmosphere, and that contributes – paradoxically
– to the feeling of great activity.
Maybe
it’s the colder weather that makes things feel as if more’s going on. Nat King
Cole never sang about those lazy, hazy,
crazy days of winter, after all.
How
many books did I read in the busy month, then? My tally says sixteen. Maybe
seventeen. Not sure if I noted the last one on a scrap of paper. We’ll say
sixteen, for sure. I was on a mad mission to read a book a day, but life
intruded. Could I read a book a day for a month? Yes, if I pick out loads of
short books to read. True, they’d be short. But…those light tomes still take up
space on the shelves. And a book read is a book read.
How many unread books are on my shelves?
Unknown. Books are crammed…everywhere. Across how many rooms? Oh, and hallways.
It’s a rule that I don’t keep books in the kitchen. Unless they are pamphlets.
Instruction manuals for kitchen gadgets. They go in a drawer, and are fine
there. One day, the kitchen gadget is done. The corresponding instruction book
is recycled.
No, the kitchen isn’t a tribute to clouds of
cookery, but steam does form on occasion. I kept a bookcase or two in the
kitchen for a short time while I rearranged things upstairs. But nothing
permanent sat in the kitchen on slick shelves that would attract condensation.
Never read in the bath. That’s a top tip.
I was told plumbers spend a ludicrous amount
of time fishing mobile phones from toilet bowls. Unjamming dead electronics
sounds like no fun. So…never answer the telephone while you are on the throne.
Maybe that’s a better tip than not reading in the bath.
Off the top of my head, I don’t know how
many bookcases there are here. And I don’t have to care. As I don’t know how
many books are on my shelves, I can’t really say how many unread books are on
my shelves.
If I
could divide the books into read and unread collections, gradually adjusting
the dividing line, a slow rising tide of reading, then I’d need an extra five
rooms. Books go where they fit. And to store them in read/unread sections is
impossible at this stage.
Instead: chaos. Occasionally, this means I
will accidentally read a book I thought I hadn’t read before. Chief suspect
here was a book on renaissance art. This was a gift. And it was time to read
that gift. Except, after delving in…yes, I realised I’d read it before.
It was a good book, so I finished it again.
What’s at the other end of the scale? A book I’ve walked past, convincing
myself I’ve read it. No, I don’t think so. But then…how would I know for sure.
Is such
a volume more likely to be wedged into the top end of a distant bookshelf?
Almost all books here are upright. And almost all books here have writing on
the spines. Almost all books here have spines readable if you tilt your head to
the right. There are exceptions.
Hardly any books lie flat. Those that do lie
across a line of books of equal height. The uppermost volume is almost always
connected to the books it lies atop. An author puts out one more book before
death. And there’s just no way to rearrange the books on shelves. Can’t be
done. But there is that tempting space on top of books…
I use that space rarely. While I still
have space elsewhere, I needn’t resort to using that awkward gap at the top.
Books that lie flat feel a bit isolated. Maybe I think I’ve read all of those.
Some books will remain unread…
Dictionaries. Those are dip-in tomes, and
you are a fool to read a dictionary from cover to cover. I say that having read
The Devil’s Dictionary in its
entirety. Trust me. It’s a dip-in book, too. Ah, well. A book read is a book
read, whether I liked it or not. At least I needn’t read the damned thing
twice.
How many books will come into the house this
year? I must cut back, as ever. Let books come in, but read more than you let
in. I must review the concept of sending books out. There’s charity. And
there’ll be gifts.
You can’t recycle hardback books. That’s
what charity shops are for. I’d have to think really badly of a paperback book
to recycle it. There are categories, I guess. Outdated books. But those might
be useful as snapshots of history. Would I feel the need to stare at those
snapshots? If not, do I need to store those?
Taking a look at the shelves above my desk,
I see they are accessible. The shelves below my desk are obscured by my desk.
There’s a book hierarchy. In this case, it’s a lower-archy. Some things I won’t
need quick access to. Until suddenly I do, and then I curse the arrangements.
What are the arrangements? They are
office-based. I can’t operate the computer and its many gadgets without
clamping a few USB hubs to the shelves. Books lurk behind the cables. Why waste
the space back there? It’s a bookshelf, after all.
Books in and books out. Need to work on that
second one. Books read and books unread. Then there are books read again. At
the thorny end of the scale there are abandoned books. Books I tried to read
and noped out of finishing…are few and far between.
You need to be really bad at writing to come
up with a book I won’t finish. Hell, my allergic reaction to Ambrose Bierce
half-killed me. But I made it through The
Devil’s Dictionary. Once. A second time would send me into author-phalactic shock.
Books damaged beyond reading? No fires and
no floods. There’s no mouldy old manual or worm-infested writing. Books
produced to the very limits of reading? I have a few. There’s a limit to the
concept of the tiny font. If I have to be miniaturised so that the letters appear
as vast sculptures on the horizon, then maybe rethink your book production
process.
Odds and ends. My entire library seems to be
made up of those. Massive manuals, tiny tomes, and a few items that barely
qualify as books – they are all here. I want to read all of them, apart from
the reference volumes. And I mean to dip into all of those.
Will I keep score this year? I still have
items on order, and feel I always will have. My guess for January is…two books
in. I am definitely cutting back…on books in. Books on? Well, books on the
shelves are going to keep living on those shelves. Worn-out books? I try to
look after them, so that’s a small category. Dusty books? I have no way to
avoid those. All bookcases with doors on them had the doors removed for reasons
of space. I don’t need to provide space in which to open the doors if I take
the doors away. Every room with books in becomes an aisle. And the upper hallway
has gone that way, too.
I think taking the doors off rooms is a step
too far. Going by the layout, I’d only get one extra bookshelf in here, and
that’s hardly worth the bother.
Yes, I have glossed over digital books. The
space they take up is time. Priority goes to physical books in front of me. And
to the left of me. To the right of me. Not behind me. I have some limits. Need to leave room for the chair at my back.
Sunday, 1 December 2024
BOOKS AT CHRISTMAS: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Not Christmas books. Those
are books about Christmas…or they are not about Christmas – just set then.
Great Christmas movies? Bah, humbug! That was a hint about a great Christmas
movie. I’ll leave you to discover it on your own.
Christmas movies?
Batman
Returns.
Lethal
Weapon.
STAR WARS.
A James
Bond film. You’ll have to guess which one, as many of them are shown at
Christmas – which makes practically all of them Christmas movies. Do you know how
Christmas trees are grown? I’ll leave you to discover that on your own.
Christmas movies. Okay. But Christmas books?
Do I read Christmas-themed books at this time of year? What would I consider a
book with a Christmas theme? There’s an obvious candidate by Charles Dickens.
The
Chronicles of Narnia feature…koff, koff, spoiler alert…okay, eternal
winter, and no Christmas as a major theme. So maybe, just maybe, if you do
believe in fairies, talking lions, and Turkish Delight…Christmas might return
to Narnia. Don’t accept sweets from strangers.
It’s easier for C.S. Lewis to add Santa
Claus to The Lord of the Rings than
for J.R.R. Tolkien to add Galadriel to The
Chronicles of Narnia. Tolkien couldn’t stand the thought of Santa Claus
ripping down fictional barriers and being a guest star in a fantasy land.
Mainly as he’d been busy as fuck impersonating Santa in letters to his
children.
Narnia is all the better for having Santa
Claus in it. If, indeed, Santa puts in an appearance at all. I’ll leave you to
discover that on your own.
Do I consider Christmas books to be those
with snowy settings? Is there more to it than that? Vitally, is there less to
it than that? For reasons of the plot, C.S. Lewis gave us a Christmassy story.
And there is snow. The snow also melts away, in the end.
What about a story with a Christmas
connection, angle, or timeline? The
Midnight Folk, by John Masefield, leads to a very festive sequel called The Box of Delights. Perhaps the setting
becomes more Christmassy for being written in the mid-1930s. But what sort of
festivities feature in Masefield’s tale? I’ll leave you…etc.
Scrooge inhabits Christmas. He is haunted by
it. That was a spooky spoiler. In the land of Narnia, it’s always winter.
Christmas was frozen out. Until…ah, but that’s a spoiler. I suppose there are
stories you forget are set in December…
But there are fantastical tales that don’t
have the month of December in them, or any other month of the year. Those
stories develop their own calendars. And may yet be Christmassy as fuck.
There’s a rule about much-loved classics. Beware those who tout the phrase around.
Particularly if they insert the word holiday into proceedings. A much-loved holiday classic. One we’ve
never heard of.
To return to the movies for a
moment…animated movies…there’s a cartoonish
cartoon based on the much-loved classic book I’d never heard of. The Polar Express. What the fuck is
that, and why the fuck does everyone in the cartoon look like melted rubber?
You may vomit at the very concept of Narnia,
and that’s your business.
Perhaps you’ll barely make it through more
than five minutes of The Lord of the
Rings. I read the whole thing and discovered that I’d never need to read
one of Tolkien’s stories ever again. C.S. Lewis, being eminently more readable,
and with a sense of humour, is an author I return to. But not specifically at
Christmas.
So what of books at Christmas? Not Christmas
books. Books I find myself reading at Christmas. Oh. Gifts. Christmas presents.
If I think of those books, they aren’t Christmassy in scope, theme, and use of
language…
The best gift of a book at Christmas is
always one you are going to buy for yourself, as you know roughly what your own
taste in books is like…though even you might unpleasantly surprise yourself
with an ill-thought-out choice. So buyer beware – never surprise yourself with
an off-kilter purchase.
But always delight in an off-kilter purchase
that proved true.
You are not buying yourself a Christmas
present. No. It’s a festive excuse to buy a book. As if you fucking needed an
excuse. You aren’t going to wrap it and leave it under the tree for a stunned
you to pick up in wonderment.
For years, I’d just buy myself music I’d
heard somewhere. That was my festive treat. Always have a back-up – music to
listen to. I still buy music in, around this time of year. But the point of
this blog is to consider books, and not festive discounts on music purchases.
Books are great gifts if you like the books
given. And if the books aren’t for you, they are for someone. Have I ever given
away books I received as gifts? People have always chosen well, when furnishing
the gift of a book.
So…that’s never come up. It would be awkward
to receive a duplicate of a book. But there are checks and balances in place. What would you like? Do you already have BLAH DE BLAH? I find that saves a lot of bother.
It would be nice to receive an entire
bookcase as a gift for more books that’ll turn up sooner rather than later. But
I’d have to be asked if I have space for yet another bookcase. The answer is
always NO, and then I conjure up more
space anyway.
How many books sneaked into the house this
year? I never care to hear the answer. Why not? I always think the answer is
around five. And it never fucking is. How many books leave the house? That’s
the tricky part.
I haven’t had a charity clearout in some
time. And I didn’t dump much on the charity shops, even then. If I really need
to, I’ll cast a cold eye over one or two volumes. Then I’ll take them to that
nice farm in the country, and I’ll point out the rabbits.
How many books have come into the house in
the month of December? That’s easy. No books. So now I’ll set myself an easy
challenge. How many books will have come into the house by December’s end?
No more than…five…is my guess. And I will
try to hold true to that. How? I’ll just not buy any. But wait a bit. There are
things on order. Damn it. Yes. That’s true. How many? I have no clue. You see,
I don’t want to know, and I don’t need to know.
It’s true. I count my books by tonnage and
not by volumes. The only thing stopping the floors collapsing is the lack of
floorspace for more bookcases. It’s a complex mathematical calculation, to be
sure. And it goes like this…
Floorspace is represented by the symbol F.
U,
or Utility, covers the usefulness of
the assembled volumes.
From Einstein’s formula, we have C – in this case, standing for CASE. That’s the type of unit which
absorbs floorspace and holds books.
K
gives us F.U.C.K. That’s what I think
when I have to think of the number of books already here. The K might as well stand for KETAMINE at this point. I’m going to be
on horse tranquilisers just thinking about moving another bookcase to make
room.
But I need not add five books to the library
this festive-tide. I suspect five. There are 30 days left. If I want to be
picky, I wouldn’t place bets on books arriving after Christmas itself. And we
have to knock off a few days for lack of postal activity.
Then there’s a week in which I will be
recovering from the annual food coma. Last year I decided to cut back, and
foolishly added parsnips to the Christmas dinner. I should have added lumps of
concrete. Less filling.
I suppose the most Christmassy book of all
is a Christmas cookery book. That’s a gift once, just in time to be no use that
year. But forever available for study, thereafter. I don’t believe I have any
cookery books in the library. It’s better just to get on with the cooking.
But that flies in the face of an entire
industry, based around festive meals! So? Do any of these cookery books implore
you not to add fucking parsnips to a meal that you are already trying to cut
back on?
Didn’t think so.
I am reminded of Christmas annuals. Hardback
anthologies of comic book characters. They year would always be the next one.
So a 2024 Christmas annual is dated 2025. The format is for the next year.
You are getting to buy the book early for Christmas, even though it’s
technically a book for the New Year. Just a publishing quirk, designed to flog
as many copies as possible. It’s like a sell-by date for a much-loved classic.
A quick online check of Christmas annuals
shows this chicanery is still going on.
This blog post is now host to a question.
Will there be more than five new books in the house, by month’s end? It’ll be a
very short blog in January.
Friday, 1 November 2024
KARLA’S CHOICE: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Fact, in a world of fiction. Clear
reflection, for once, in a wilderness of mirrors. George Smiley left the Circus
with unfinished business. His chronicler, John le
Carré, is no more. The family firm, concerned with the writing of stories,
passed to his son. And so, I picked up KARLA’S
CHOICE – written by Nick Harkaway.
The premise is that intelligence officer George
Smiley left the secret world of espionage behind, that he’s happy away from
managing shady activity, and there’s a decade or so of a gap to fill in the
chronology. And now the story can be told.
What
happens between THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM
THE COLD and TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER
SPY…well, that’s the topic of this continuation/fill-in book. To get into
that, just a little, first I must bring an old file from Cold War storage…
*
George Smiley is
a character who sipped, like Horace Rumpole, from a minor immortality potion.
Before A LEGACY OF SPIES came out,
you could point to assorted Smiley stories and say, with confidence, that the
dates didn’t quite match up. Characters simply had their ages revised, for
convenience.
This is the Batman Effect. Batman’s history extends back around a decade or so
when considering his many adventures. He stays eternally fit and is forever 29
years old unless stated otherwise. The character is deliberately an older caped
crusader in The Dark Knight Returns,
for example.
Inconsistencies in A LEGACY OF SPIES are overlooked.
*
Why mention this observation
from yesteryear? Nick Harkaway, in his introduction to KARLA’S CHOICE, tells much the same tale. He thinks of all the
Smiley portrayals. Various actors from television, the movie, and audio
adaptations. I think of Smiley once…
This particular once. Only SMILEY’S PEOPLE puts that character’s
name in a book’s title. Harkaway had one eye on that, I’m sure, when he took
Smiley’s Cold War adversary, Karla, and bumped him up to star status on the
cover.
Co-star status. The cover tells us this is A JOHN LE CARRÉ NOVEL. Not a George
Smiley one. It is a George Smiley one, but it is from le Carré’s universe.
Graham Greene has Greeneland, a
country of everywheres. No matter where you are in the world, in Greeneland you
are always in the same place – five minutes from betrayal if you are on the
ball. That’s five minutes after betrayal, if you aren’t.
But le Carré only occasionally flirted with
Greeneland. If anything, he subscribed to Tolkien’s draughty character-building
England, and took over management of a small misty corner of it when the resident
wizard left for the dreaming spires of Oxford the Far West and a
community of weed-smoking elves.
Not
for le Carré the excessive usage of a literary crutch holding Cold War novels
upright: flashy expensive science fiction gadgetry of the Yankee variety, which
he considered akin to the use of magic in a non-magical world when writing
espionage fiction – stripping away the label of espionage fiction in the
process of employing said wonders. With one mighty gadget, our hero clichéd
free. No.
Instead, he relied on muddy tea, clanking
lifts, Victorian brickwork, and rattling radiators of a between-the-wars
vintage. Oh, and Russian interference with same.
Karla is the bogeyman. He’s mostly an
off-screen villain: Sauron, with hints of Lenin’s face. An all-powerful ring in
a le Carré story is going to be a spy-ring. And that’ll be an all-powerful
spy-ring…with many flaws.
In the television adaptations, Karla is an
almost unknown force of nature. He provides the Russian wind which blows
through the Cold War. In portraying him, Patrick Stewart says not one word. But
he brings the adversary to life.
The non-speaking role in the flashback is
important as a driver of many plot-threads. Smiley meets Karla and tries to
recruit him, early. This encounter plants seeds of doubt in the boss, Control, looking
for a traitor. Control considers the possibility that Smiley was recruited by
Karla at that meeting, instead. Or that Smiley was already a traitor before
then, and used the meeting to catch up with his Russian master.
Control was strong on paranoia. He took
three lumps of it in his toffee – a strange mix of tea and coffee served in
Victorian institutions that exceeded their original century by some time.
TINKER
TAILOR SOLDIER SPY has a list of suspects, including Smiley for several
reasons, but it is the flashback meeting which furnishes a prominent mark
against Smiley’s name. Why mention Karla and his non-speaking role?
I’ve gone over it several times. When
reading this John le Carré novel, written by le Carré’s son, the question of
voice comes up. Once Alec Guinness played Smiley on television, le Carré found
it difficult to shake the performance from his head. And so, he wrote fewer
stories about the character. Guinness, ever the imp, stole more than a few le
Carré mannerisms for the role.
Reading KARLA’S
CHOICE, I can hear Beryl Reid when Connie Sachs enters the tale. No one
says actually quite like Hungarian Toby
Esterhase. He seems to speak that way by bringing remnants of at least two
other languages into English and hiring the word actually as the face-paint on the foreign words, to whore its way
around a sentence or two.
There’s
a Hungarian connection in this novel, so Toby is brought into the narrative –
and a welcome addition he is. Connie Sachs is always great fun, if alcoholically
tinged with great sadness. And that’s her point.
So, yes, characters are preserved. The
timeline is a moveable feast, but at least a feast is had. And Harkaway confesses
this in his introduction. He’s damned right to do so. Expectation is high.
We’ve been down this road before…
When A LEGACY OF SPIES came out, le Carré
went back and filled in a few gaps so that THE
SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD would make sense in light of TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY. And there,
date-of-birth and character age were on the moveable menu.
In terms of age Smiley may very well pass
for 63 in the dusk with the light behind him. He hovers in the perpetual
Twilight Zone of fifty-something years old under your average pub lights on a
bitter mid-week November night, and sixty-something to any doctor evaluating him
for signs of heart trouble.
With that loose age in mind, Harkaway
visited the well his father had returned to. KARLA’S CHOICE gives us more about that time between THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD and TINKER TAILOR…
In dropping his bucket into the well,
Harkaway had to give us another layer between those books that didn’t ruin the
extra layer of icing his dad had already added to the cake with A LEGACY OF SPIES. Difficult terrain.
Many mines on that field. The best approach was to say…
Well,
dad shifted the dates around a little and where’s the harm…do you want this
book or not?
I am strongly reminded of the oft-mentioned Penge Bungalow Murders. Horace Rumpole, Old
Bailey Hack, consumer of Chateau Thames Embankment, and husband to the
formidable Hilda, would trot out this running joke on an hourly basis. But Sir
John Mortimer left the gag dangling. It was better to travel than to arrive.
Until, in the end, he wrote Rumpole and the Penge Bungalow Murders.
Inconsistent? Rumpole isn’t a reliable narrator. If you believe that, I have
Tower Bridge to sell you. And the book? A triumph, meeting impossible levels of
expectation? It’s not about the murders. No, it’s about Rumpole’s meeting
Hilda. A triumph.
On a side-note about voice, and image, Leo
McKern is Rumpole. His caricature adorns the book covers. Turning back to le
Carré, you’ll find all sorts of editions of his books have very vague people on
the covers.
Except for one of the covers of KARLA’S CHOICE. One man, Karla, is
inside the head of another – bespectacled Smiley. Smiley could be a vague nod
in the direction of Sir Alec Guinness, though reminds me of Alan Arkin in
profile. Karla seems to have been conjured up from publicity stills of East
German Stasi man Markus Wolf.
Le Carré almost used Wolf as a character, taken from his lawnmower. Then he learned Wolf
was a real spymaster over in the East. If you believe the bit about the
lawnmower, let it be on the basis that you’ve checked that brand exists. It
does. We’ll leave off there, unless you, like control, also take three lumps of
paranoia in your tea. And coffee. It’s toffee.
What do we get in this book? Karla,
scheming. He has a walk-on part. Many cogwheels click around. Do we have le
Carré’s voice, and is Harkaway his own man? Yes and yes. He writes in the
terrain of his dad, but not in his dad’s shadow.
Harkaway respects the landscape of
lamplighters and scalphunters. He wheels Connie Sachs on for a turn. But
Harkaway gives us more. Connie is one of the Norns, weaving a thread and
telling the tale of a man’s fate. She can’t do this alone, and has two other
Norns in attendance, as is the custom. Harkaway uses another name for them. But
they are Norns, just the same.
This extra level of detail contradicts
nothing in the original novel cycle. Even if there were contradictions,
remember this is an espionage novel featuring Russian agents. The future is
certain. It is only the past that is unpredictable.
There’s a bit of a blip, but it is easy to
overlook. Yes, there’s another book in the series. THE LOOKING-GLASS WAR features Smiley. But it doesn’t matter. He’s
hardly in it. That story takes the Special Operations Executive from World War
Two and imagines the organisation’s floundering and flapping along well beyond
its use-by date.
In that sense, it’s a bit of a curio that le
Carré himself rejected and accepted and rejected by turn. Ultimately, he
appeared to have settled on the idea that the bruises died down with the
passage of time.
Voice. Character voice. The voice of the
setting. Voice of the argument, theme, being put forward. Those voices of TV
and movie and radio/audio book actors. Smiley’s voice as a character and as
Alec Guinness.
Yes, le Carré’s voice and influences on him.
His influence on Harkaway’s voice. (Harkaway sneaks in a spot of blurry family
background that le Carré used extensively for THE PERFECT SPY. It’s his family history, though. So, fair game.)
Then there’s the spectre of Kim Philby.
Graham Greene and le Carré each had to deal
with betrayal by Kim Philby. In le Carré’s case, he gave us TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY. Philby, in
commenting on le Carré, set about a casual almost disinterested scathing
dismantling of le Carré’s voice and purpose. By contrast, Graham Greene turned
up to see Philby in Moscow, and sloshed vodka as they spoke of old times and a
changing world.
Greene provided a plug for THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD, and
Harkaway seems to have returned the favour somewhat with a not-so-sly reference
to Greene’s work in this continuation/fill-in novel.
It’s difficult to evade the very long shadow
of Greene in writing espionage fiction. Yes, le Carré fell foul of this with THE TAILOR OF PANAMA. That book has
everything to do with Greene’s work OUR
MAN IN HAVANA. For those embarking on the task of writing spy books, read
Eric Ambler first. Then you’ll have a different shadow to leapfrog away from.
I have to avoid the plot of this book. That
means I must skirt around plotting in other books in the series. Where would I
place it in the running? Same advice as ever. Read the Smiley books in order of
publication…
Start with the two murder mysteries. CALL FOR THE DEAD. A MURDER OF QUALITY.
Then Smiley takes a back seat to proceedings in THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD. But events in that book come to
haunt him.
Smiley has a token role in THE LOOKING-GLASS WAR. After that, he’s
back in THE KARLA TRILOGY – TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY, THE HONOURABLE
SCHOOLBOY, and SMILEY’S PEOPLE.
He turns up almost reluctantly in THE SECRET PILGRIM. Then we have the
fix-it novel that connects THE SPY WHO
CAME IN WITH THE COLD to THE KARLA
TRILOGY. A LEGACY OF SPIES fills
in some crucial gaps.
Okay, but to read this book, KARLA’S CHOICE, I’d say – bare minimum –
read CALL FOR THE DEAD, THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD,
THE KARLA TRILOGY, and A LEGACY OF
SPIES before even thinking about tackling Harkaway’s continuation.
I have my suspicions about certain aspects
of the plotting that could lead to another continuation book or two. More
unfinished business. But I can’t really give you the plot here. Except to say…a
man goes on the run, and everyone would like to find him.
Smiley, called back to the job, goes after
this man. Karla, Moriarty to Smiley’s Holmes, lurks in the deep background but
haunts many a page. Characters collide, some old, some new, and Harkaway does
justice to his dad’s legacy. Of spies.
Thursday, 10 October 2024
EMPTY STAR WARS TELEVISION: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
There is no spoon, and there never was one. Second and third
spoons need not apply. (Plays ROGUE ONE
soundtrack in the background. That’s not commentary or subtext. ROGUE ONE has its faults, its high points:
I just chose a soundtrack at semi-random.)
Fans of THE ACOLYTE …look away, now. If you
enjoy the show, enjoy it while looking away from this area.
Where to begin with
a non-show in which nothing much happens? Nothing much happens. That’s a non-spoiler
non-alert. I was waiting for the show to start when it reached its predictable
end in episode eight.
THE ACOLYTE. We need a bit of
background. Not much. This show is set in a galaxy that’s long ago and, oh, so far away. I
fell in love with you before the second show. (Shout out to Darth Coolidge,
Darth Bramlett, Darth Russell, and Darth Carpenter for the song tie-in.)
That’s true. STAR WARS is my thing. But I didn’t fall
in love with THE ACOLYTE before the
second show. Typically, almost a law for Disney STAR WARS, the TV show dropped with more than one episode on release
day. And it kept on dropping.
Spoiler. I didn’t
fall in love with THE ACOLYTE after
the second show. By the eighth, I wondered if I’d just seen the first
zero-content TV series connected to STAR
WARS. You may argue that other zero-content shows preceded this one. Who am
I to stand in your way…
To the deep space background,
then. STAR WARS gives us a story
about the Jedi: interplanetary hippie peaceniks who will, on occasion, dish out
death-pain with big sticks of buzzy light.
The Jedi are in decline, all but extinct,
roundly beaten up, and stomped down by the Sith – enemies of all the good
things Jedi believe in. A once great Galactic Republic turned into an Evil Empire™ overnight. With a little
help from Sith operating in the shadows, you understand.
Yes, the Jedi are
done. But it’s time to fight back. And so, we get STAR WARS movies. At first, three of them. And the word Sith isn’t mentioned once. The actor Don
Henderson says the word in a deleted scene from the first movie. I find the
lack of its inclusion disturbing.
Later, that first
movie became episode four. And we had three more movies set before it. Easy as 1,
2, 3. Except, there’s a spin-off that links episode three to episode four: ROGUE ONE. That makes it episode four,
even though it has ONE in the title,
and the first movie that became episode four is now the fifth film in the
series.
To watch them in
order, that’s 1, 2, 3, ROGUE ONE, 4,
5, and 6. I have them in 4K and still can’t bring myself to watch 7, 8, and 9
again. It’s going to take an effort. I feel they have to follow on from all the
other movies, and that’s a hell of a binge.
There’s another
spin-off with the character Han Solo. That should be after 3 and before ROGUE ONE. It sits off to the side.
No one counts those
Ewok movies. On television, there are
many many episodes of spin-off shows.
They flit in and out of the main history. Basically, the primary space thrust
of the timeline is…
Okay, 4, 5, and 6
tell the story. Then 1, 2, and 3 fill in the gaps BEFORE. The concept of BEFORE is important. Jump back around a
hundred years before the movie series to the televisual time of THE ACOLYTE. The evil Empire does not
yet exist. There are no Sith, and there haven’t been any Sith for a long time, a long time.
The Jedi preside over the Republic as
peacekeepers. Cops. Space Samurai. You get the idea. Oh, and there are no Sith.
Did I mention a complete lack of Sith? This is what the Republic believed.
Before the Dark Times…before Darth Lucas sold the property.
But they were all
of them deceived. For another ring
was made.
Hang on…wrong saga.
Everyone was
deceived. If the Jedi are Space Samurai, and they are, then the Sith are interplanetary
spies. Robbers. Space Ninja. You get the idea.
I’d never heard of
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
On this side of the Atlantic there’s the Health
and Safety Executive. HSE is also
a virus that’ll fuck you up. It’s nasty.
Anyway, I think HSE looks like just the right sort of
name for a Sith character. Greetings,
Darth Hse. And you brought the ruins of the battle-droid, I see. Your little
joke. We Sith are known for our humour, after all.
Insert EVIL CACKLE™ there.
But THE ACOLYTE went with Osha instead. She’s all about health and
safety in the workplace. This isn’t generally true of STAR WARS. The saga is full of high walkways with no safety
barriers or railings. It’s a science fiction scandal. I’ve asked fellow delegate
Binks to arrange emergency powers in the Senate. That should fix a lot of upward
mobility problems.
So. This television
show is STAR WARS way before STAR WARS. That’s been done. There’s a
whole prequel trilogy covering old ground, remember. But this goes way back
before all that. It’s an even longer time ago in the same galaxy we’ve seen
already. Before the before.
If the Republic is
doing well, and it’ll be a Republic for a science fiction lifetime yet, then
what are the stakes in a story set in the deeper past? Where’s the risk? Can
you point me in the direction of the drama? So many options here. Let’s not go
with a limiting choice…oh.
There’ll be Jedi.
And they will investigate criminal stuff. Not the regular crime beat. The tough
cases. Crime Scene Investigation: Scum
and Villainy. But what are the stakes, though? Where’s the conflict? Will
we see any operatic drama in our Space Opera? (There is no conflict.)
This is a hundred
years before STAR WARS. You aren’t
going to change history, here. Yes, made-up STAR
WARS history, but, y’know, still history. We are going to see the Jedi
investigate things. Don’t quite know what.
And there will be
Sith. Except that there aren’t any Sith.
Shock horror, the
Sith were around the whole time. Lurking. Skulking. Sneaking. Gollum wasn’t sneaking! Er…maybe he was,
after all. We’ll get to that bit.
Okay. We know from STAR WARS movies that, near the end of
the Republic, Sith haven’t been seen for AGES. True story. From a certain point
of view. We have the word of the cone-headed Jedi. So it must be true. I
searched for cone-head Jedi to reach
video clips confirming this.
If a STAR WARS character in a STAR WARS movie isn’t named aloud in a STAR WARS movie, any name attached to
the character is only listed in the closing credits to plug the merchandise
related to that character. A tale of many action figures. That’s an old song.
If lucky, the character is named eventually on film, somewhere down the line.
A world-weary view,
you say. I don’t make the merchandising contracts.
Ki-Adi-Mundi, Mr
Cone-head, tells us the Sith have been
extinct for a millennium. He does this in a movie. His emphasis on the
timespan is irrelevant. There was a time when the Dodo had been extinct for
five minutes. Dodo ain’t coming back unless someone pulls some Jurassic Park shit with…actual preserved
Dodo shit and questionable midichlorian sperm samples.
Once the Empire is
a thing, the Imperials go around announcing the Jedi are all but extinct.
Everyone keeps messing this up when considering absent enemy forces. We haven’t
seen any. They are clearly dead. Most
sincerely dead, as averred by the coroner. What’s the point?
The point is this.
In STAR WARS history, the Sith are
gone. They were hiding. The Sith agents make a surprising return and create an Evil Empire™ out of confusion and chaos.
So far, so good...concerning the bad.
And so…in the before the before part of this history, back
a hundred years you go into television land, you have a problem.
In THE ACOLYTE, way before the Dark Times,
before the Empire, you can’t throw Sith into the story that’s set ages before
all the upheaval. UNLESS. You show Sith
skulking in the shadows, being Space Ninja Bastards. (This gets too literal at
the end of the show, when Gollum turns up and does a bit of sneaking.)
What if the bad
guys are discovered? As a writing choice, you must then wipe out all the good
guys who discover the bad guys. This is a basic building block of any story you
attempt to tell in that manner, just to preserve the (made-up) history.
Reminder of that
history. The Sith were destroyed. Then they turned up and created an Empire of
pure EVIL. They used the element of surprise to plan a load of shit, before
they were discovered too late to stop huge events already long in motion.
Setting a story
before they arrive on the scene is okay…as long as no one knows they’ve arrived
on the scene way before.
Just do
Ninja Missions. Have close calls and dramatic escapes under the distracted eyes
of the pesky Space Samurai. Make the show heavy on the viewpoint of the Sith.
It’s about the baddies as the main characters. Yes. Do that.
Setting the story
BEFORE the other bit BEFORE, you have one job. If anyone spots a villain
wearing a Sith label, no one gets out
alive. Job done. Can you make it entertaining, though? Please make it about the
characters. Conflict. Drama. Upset. Sacrifice.
Lights. Camera.
Inaction.
Our story opens in
the closing seconds of episode eight. That’s my view. Episode eight is a set-up
for another series. That’s all it could be. So I thought. And it was, when it
arrived. That’s what I found predictable. Not the only problem. But, yes, that.
Never make your
show into a trailer for the next show. That’s liable to get the first show
cancelled, so there is no second show. The main symptom of this diseased error
is a primary story clearly in the captivity of the secondary story you haven’t
told yet. Nor will you tell it, thanks to the symptom of story weakness spread
across your meandering tale.
Part of the problem
is this: I want an hour of STAR WARS
TV so you can develop characters I could care about. But the longest episode is
listed at 49 minutes. Then we knock off the opening titles, recaps, and apocalyptic levels of end credits…
Okay. You made it
shorter. Go for the unexpected bonus. The erosion of screen-time should give us
a slam-bang science fiction serial jam-packed into a half-hour serialised format,
right? Think Flash Gordon or Buck Rogers. Hell, I’d take King of the Rocket Men in a pinch.
Give me chapters
full of Plunging Death, Dangerous
Evidence, High Peril, and throw in a Molten
Menace or a spot of Ten Seconds to
Live for good measure. Republic Pictures would repackage these super-short
efforts into longer features. I’d take Republic Pictures over the Republic
depicted in this STAR WARS TV story,
any day of the week.
Nothing is going to
happen. In the trailer we see a masked figure with a red lightsabre facing a
Lone Jedi Dude. So. There’s your Sith and Jedi problem in the trailer…
If you preserve
even a hint of STAR WARS by staying
true to previous movies set long after this moment in history, if you hope to save
the basic integrity of the overall saga, then as storytellers, as TV writers…
You do so by silencing
those characters who witness the mere existence of the masked figure with the
red lightsabre. Rocks fall. Everyone dies.
STAR WARS never
cared too much about continuity, scientific accuracy, or avoiding holes in the
plot. But we’re talking about a basic bitch chunk of storytelling here. What do
we know about this deep past? Nothing. Surprise us. But to connect it to the
movies, you must deal with this Sith problem if you show Sith waving Sith
weapons around.
You could have done
a story set in the past all about smugglers. No Jedi. And no Sith. Or maybe
hints that some people are Sith. Make it a crime/spy story, in space. Test
loyalty. Pull the rug out from under the characters. No blasters! Well, no.
Loads of blasters. No lightsabres.
Crime/spy story in
space. No Jedi. As far as we know. But ANDOR,
hell that’s been done.
The Sith aren’t
there at all, even if they are there. This is how we roll. Beyond preserving
that, what do you have? Little, unless you stray from the usual Jedi tales. The
stakes, then, are murky.
Keep the hidden existence of the Sith hidden. That’s
it. And so it goes. Phew, that was a close one. After a hell of a high-wire
walk, we did it. Spread over eight episodes. We made it. All the way to the
end. Which is more than a lot of the audience did. We made it. One job.
Success. Until near the end of episode eight and…
For fuck’s sake. You had one job. Over eight episodes.
Ah, the episodes…
They barely pass half an hour of TV each. In
at least one case, we were offered just under half an hour. I checked once.
Once was enough.
So, essentially,
we’re looking at what amounts to four episodes that run for an hour each. And
even looking at that level of the equivalent of two movies, you still ask where
the money went. It didn’t turn up on the TV screen.
Short episodes. And
yet, they drag. There is no unexpected bonus of cramming loads of action into a
brief episode. The opporchancity is frittered away. Instead, there’s this faffery
about hiding the Sith. And little else, beyond the tinny jangling of well-worn
keys.
Keeping the Sith
secret could have worked. Maybe it all worked for you. That’s your business,
not mine. I wish you well. If the focus of the show had been with the Sith from
the start, and the relentless threat of discovery at every turn…then you’d have
had tension.
We’d be on the side
of the Sith as they hide out. Almost uncovered. Maybe uncovered, but they laugh
it off or throw down some ruse. Hell, I’d be up for a Sith sacrifice to
preserve the secret. Would’ve been something.
Darth Carbonara was
awesome. Using those funky moon boots to walk up the walls of the doomed space
station as it fell from orbit, I thought she’d jump to the Jedi ship at the
last second.
But leaping into
space and taking her secret lightsabre with her, burning up in the atmosphere,
was a legendary sacrifice.
Cue twenty YouTube
videos on how Darth Carbonara survived the freefall using her Sith Skillz,
based on the type of lightsabre she wielded and a half-remembered bit of advice
on attuning to your surroundings she picked up from the deathbed of her old
master.
Instead, we had
this series with no content. If you liked the show, you liked the show. Not my
business.
Many
of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view.
Spoiler. It was
really sad when Jedi #4 and Jedi #5 died to preserve the integrity of
admittedly shaky STAR WARS lore.
Maybe they were Jedi #5 and Jedi #6. Let’s not trivialise that. Just as sad,
really. Whoever they were.
#TRULYMISSED.
#GONEBUTNOTFORGOTTEN.
#TOTALLYFORGOTTEN.
#IFNOTICEDATALL.
#SADFACE.
#SUPPORTTHECHANNEL.
#BUYMEACOFFEE.
#UTINNI!
Here’s the basic
tale. Jedi are being hunted. The
trailer tells us so. This is a problem with STAR
WARS: dialogue is often indirect. The passive statement tells you the Jedi
are being hunted. An active statement
comes across as dramatic. Someone is
hunting Jedi. Hell, now I am interested in someone hunting these Jedi.
It turns out there
are these two sisters. Identical twins, by the look of them. One grows her hair
longer, we’ll say. She has a cult tattoo, as well. Covered by her longer hair. Cults
feature heavily in the story.
I feel remiss in
not having mentioned Basil the Space Beaver. He’s a merchandising gimmick.
Once upon a time,
on a planet far away, several years ago, there was a cult. That cult was
steeped in the lore of the Dark Side of the Force. This is the magical mystical
religious scientific stuff that gives Jedi and Sith access to mad funky space
powers.
Too lazy to pick up
that coffee cup from across the room? Use the force and levitate the damned
drink to you. Communicate across space using telepathic interplanetary Skype
calls. And so on.
Right now, the
story is about someone who wants revenge against a particular group of Jedi
over an incident that happened sixteen years before. So, in the flashback scenes
I guess we’re 116 years before STAR WARS.
Yikes.
We’ll get there.
Basically, the Jedi turned up years ago and mishandled a mission to recruit two
young girls who were very strong with the Force. One twin sister died. For
reasons of drama and action, we learn both sisters survived.
Cue Darth Vader
muttering about a twin sister. On second thought, nah, forget that.
The “dead” sister
went off to train with a Sith Dude. And the living sister went to train with
the Jedi. It didn’t work out at Jedi HQ. She left the Jedi to become a member
of some kind of galactic repair team. Your spaceship is still under warranty
and she, Osha, turns up to fix the broken thing.
Osha has a cute
robot that’s a merchandising opporchancity.
Someone is going
around flat-out murdering Jedi fools. She looks like Osha. Therefore, she is
Osha. It isn’t long before the Galactic Cops go after Osha. But there must be a
better explanation for this. Surely Osha’s Evil
Twin™ is still alive and she’s the killer…
Come on. That’s too
obvious. Osha must be the killer. Take her in for questioning.
I should introduce
a spoiler for The Matrix…
There’s only one Matrix movie. Thank me later. Second and
third spoons need not apply. There sure as fuck isn’t a fourth one. Spoiler
alert. In The Matrix, Trinity –
actress Carrie-Anne Moss – gets into a bonkers fight right there at the start
of the movie. She’s trapped in a room.
Then she’s off and
running. She is up against supervillainous agents: Men in Black™. Dramatic shit. She hurtles herself across the
rooftops...only to face what looks like certain death.
EXCEPT. That’s part of the plot. To understand
what The Matrix is you really just
have to see it for yourself. Or watch videos online, explaining it, I guess.
Now. Imagine you
want to start THE ACOLYTE on a high.
Carrie-Anne Moss gets herself into this Trinity-style fight. It’s Carrie-Anne
Moss. With a fucking lightsabre. Well,
hell, Jeeves, sign me up to that shit.
And now imagine the
start of The Matrix, but Trinity
doesn’t make it out of the room alive. Bummer. That’s what we are treated to.
And you can hear the committee it took to make this TV show squealing into
their ersatz coffees…
That means, right from the start, no one is
safe.
NO ONE IS SAFE. They tell us that in the
fucking trailer. I know no one is safe. Anyone who catches a glimpse of the
Sith must die. Of all the stories to go with, you went with a severely limiting
tale.
You gave us
Carrie-Anne Moss for a fight knowingly referencing The Matrix, and she dies?
This show cost a fortune. You couldn’t pay her for more than that?! Spoiler
alert for THE ACOLYTE.
There’s a whole
thing about flashbacks. We’ll be seeing more of Carrie-Anne Moss later in the
show and earlier in the timeline. More flashbacks. Too many flashbacks. In one
case the flashback-too-far, what else to call it, serves as an extended recap
of previous episodes for people who have the attention-span of no
attention-span.
We view what should
be a great set-up. Someone is hunting Jedi. So we’ll bring in a character who
follows the trail. The good sister. Osha. Your
sister is hunting Jedi. It’s revenge for how you were all treated sixteen
years ago on that far-off planet with the pretty tree.
There’s a planet
with a pretty tree.
We see subtitles telling us the names of these
planets. Unless you are on an UNKNOWN
WORLD. If it’s an unknown world, how did anyone know to go there, or give
it a subtitle? Well, the world was so unknown that they didn’t know it was an
unknown world: kinda sorta blundered across it. But the subtitle droid stepped
in and plastered letters across the screen.
The planetary subtitles are never explained.
Do they have to be? No. But they are bound to be used in YouTube videos telling
you why every dead character in STAR WARS secretly survived to come back as a
Jedi/Sith or the Bendy Jesuit from the DUNE
movies.
KID VADER: I hate sand.
Osha should be the ideal candidate to lead the team in
search of Mae, her twin sister. Or I should say “twin” sister. Maybe I should
say “twin sister” instead. What would be better than having Osha leading the
charge against evil forces?
Oh, I don’t know.
Maybe skip this storyline and show elements of the Republic going after
smugglers and scoundrels and rascals, and the like. Show that there are evil
factions operating from the shadows, as a precursor to the Empire that’s on the
way. Robot armies. Early clone technology. Space werewolves. Hell, at this
point I’d accept FINDING SPACE NEMO.
STAR WARS is A Disney property. I
thought we’d be in for an identity switch along the lines of FREAKY FRIDAY. Instead, another Disney
production loomed into view: THE PARENT
TRAP.
Fuck, you’d get
more mileage out of TWINS OF EVIL,
and that’s a Hammer movie about identical twins. One’s a vampire. The other
isn’t. Yes, it’s absolute nonsense.
But you’d be better spending your cinematic
time in the company of Jodie Foster on a Friday, Hayley Mills and Hayley Mills
trapping some parents, or the Collinson sisters maybe kinda sorta being evil
twins, as you’d expect from their movie’s title…
The big problem
with THE ACOLYTE is the reluctance of
the twin characters to get involved. If only at least one of them went off on a
damn-fool idealistic crusade…
Your character can
refuse the mission at the start. In the first (fourth) STAR WARS film, Luke Skywalker is interested in the idea of taking
action. But when he’s presented the choice, he turns that offer down. Then the
plot gets in his way and he’s all fired up for adventure. He goes off to the
wars out there in the stars.
But THE ACOLYTE…gives us identical
characters who don’t want to travel the path on offer. Spoiler alert. The good
one is tempted to the bad path and the bad one is tempted to the good path.
You see the obvious
identity-switch coming from light years away. It ain’t no spoiler. There’s a
whole cast of characters, but I’m trying to keep this blog post down in size.
Something below the length of a Space Slug.
Yes, the Jedi are
Space Cops. And they have a Space Cop Cadet along for the ride. She’s all about
restoring public order and arresting people and clapping cuffs on wrists and
taking names.
On the way to
grandmother’s house in the woods, she glimpses a Sith. We’re going to need a
bigger spoiler. I should say something about Obvious Bad Guy. How does that go?
Obvious Bad Guy is Obvious. What do you call a Plot Twist that runs in a
straight line? You don’t call it a fucking Plot Twist, that’s for sure.
And I have to
reference Admiral Ackbar. This fish guy turns up for the defeat of the Empire at
the end of the main saga. When not realising it’s a trap or concentrating all
firepower on that Super Star Destroyer, he’s a pretty chill dude. A late
arrival to the movies, he’s there at the end and that counts for a lot.
Except…the saga
goes on for a few more movies beyond the end. He’s there once more, out of
retirement, I guess, for one last hurrah against a new generation of villains.
Admiral Ackbar dies
so fast that you blink and miss it. His death might as well be off-screen for
all the difference this makes. There then follows a tragic announcement that
he’s gone.
Not dead. Gone. To
the shops, perhaps, for…whatever intergalactic fish guys go shopping for. A
space vape. I dunno. Anyway. To casually dismiss a character in an off-screen
death, or near as damn it, is to Admiral
Ackbar someone.
With this in mind,
I’ll turn to the Wookiee Jedi. Holy flying fuckballs, there’s a Wookiee Jedi.
And the Sith Chippendale is sure to hunt him down. This is going to be fucking
awesome.
Wookiee is hiding
out in the woods, in his fucking element, while the villain closes in, all
Sithed up with no place to go. The clash is going to be absolutely fucking
awesome. You’ll see a Wookiee Jedi go full-on prime-fucking-eval on this Sith
Bastard and you…
You fucking wha?!
Wha?
Seriously. Wha the
fu?
Did the story just…Admiral Ackbar the Wookiee fucking
Jedi?!
What’s the point?
The point is the point of a lightsabre that slashed the Wookiee while he was
sitting in his chair. Outstanding action scene of the decade goes to…well, not
to that fight, obviously. Off-screen bullshit.
There’s a lot of
cape-flapping, key-jangling, lightsabre-ism, and the truly awful
resurrection/reassembly of lines from better STAR WARS products. Ooh, the character said the thing. Wait, saying
the thing in that context is absurd. Don’t worry. Another thing will come along
shortly, and someone will say that.
(No, I am not
touching that fucking abysmal ALIEN
movie, Crapulous, and its recycled
mangled characters and recycled mangled lines. Get away from the franchise, you bitch. I prefer the term artificial sequel, myself.)
Money? I was
stunned to learn the average cost of an episode was almost $29 million dollars.
And I struggle to see where the money went on the television screen. The huge event
in this show is the arrival of the Jedi chorus line in the woods. Need to talk
to that Wookiee. Oh, too late.
Killed off-screen in your chair, watching the Twi’lek formation swimming event
on the Galactic Olympics. Farewell, Wookiee Jedi. You will be remembered. Who
the fuck am I kidding? His name was…
Toast.
Everyone is sad.
Then the Sith Dudebroguy turns up. Masked, of course. He looks like a serial killer
from a slasher movie. Then he sparks up his red lightsabre and the battle is
on.
He’s there to kill all of the Jedi. Any of
these Jedi could remember, from training, that the Sith used to be around back
in the day and they had red lightsabres. So the Sith are back in town. Except,
in the woods.
Which means…
Everyone who fights
in the woods must die. They can’t report to Jedi HQ that the Sith are back in
town, the Sith are back in town. Shout out to Darth Lynott for the musical
reference.
I don’t want to
dwell on the cost of an episode and a bunch of unknown Jedi weaving in and out
of the woods…but they’d have achieved the same effect filming in a park at
night, waving neon tubes around.
One by one, and
sometimes two by two, the Jedi fall to the Sith. And this works. So keep doing
this. Wipe out all those who know. You’ve destroyed any hope of suspense, but,
hey, you have one job in telling this story. Everyone who realises the bad guy
has a red lightsabre…everyone dies.
What about Space
Cop Cadet Blondie? They wouldn’t dare kill off the blonde…if you believe that,
I have a Hitchcock movie to sell you.
After much faffery,
we follow Lone Jedi Dude from the trailer, back on the ship and heading off to
fix things. And the writing comes in and smacks the story up the side of its
fool head. I hate it when the writing comes in and does that to a tale.
Sadly, the
interplanetary telephone isn’t working. It can’t work. Mustn’t work. If a Jedi
survives the slaughter, which he does, then he can’t fly back to HQ or even
phone home like Spielberg’s Extra-Plastic-Terrestrial.
You see how tied to
the concept the whole narrative is. No deviation. Can’t avoid it, swerve,
stumble over, or dodge. The Jedi Team died a fucking death. Leaving this guy to
inevitably go up against the Sith Dude once more…and die in the process...later.
For a whole bunch
of characters set on running away, they spend an awful lot of time stopping in
the middle of a chase. It’s a thing. A whole thing. But I never got around to
the music…
Heavy spoiler. Come
on, you’ve seen clips on the internet. Is there a place for songs in STAR WARS movies or TV shows? Yes. There
are musical numbers. Aliens playing in the cantina band back in episode…four.
And Jabba’s Palace hosts a musical number in episode…six.
Is there a place
for musical numbers in AGATHA ALL ALONG…yes.
That works. It’s riffing off The Wizard
of Oz musical. But the musical bit in this STAR WARS show just reinforced the cult theme. You see, kids, the
Jedi and the Sith are all about recruiting powerful youngsters to their
respective causes. And that narrative paints all sides as horrible.
The grand notion of
a flawed yet benevolent Republic, with its ancient order of magical guardians,
the Jedi, is shot down in flames, painting the Jedi as little more than a step
removed from being child-enslavers. Or worse.
Yep. That’s the
heavy hint in the narrative.
Remember this, if
nothing else. No one killed STAR WARS.
It is still there, on my shelf, ready to watch whenever I feel like it. Even if
Disney takes it off the streaming
service for eternity.
I didn’t make it
past the first episode of that Willow
TV show. And it is gone. Show needed a sense of urgency. More urgent than the
one Disney provided. The original movie shares a lot of midichlorians
DNA with STAR WARS.
Plucky adventurers.
Mad characters. Encroaching evil. Not a Darth Vader character, honest, guv. And
not an Evil Royal behind it all. Madmartigan isn’t Han Solo and he doesn’t fall
in love with the princess who happens to be the daughter of the evil one.
So that’s okay,
then. No, the show wasn’t urgent enough. But to kill it off by removing it from
the streaming service. Now I know who really fired that shot at the start of Bambi.
Spoiler alert for Bambi and Finding Nemo. There will be blood. Anyway, look at that
interesting thing over there…
I don’t want to
take this over ten pages, so let’s skip to the very end. Ultimately, why can’t we all just get along? There are Sith to
fight, that’s why. We reach a point at which all of the Jedi who go up against
the Sith…they are taken care of.
Yes, they went to
live on a nice moisture farm in the country. It’s too far to visit, out there
by the Dune Sea. But Uncle Owen, the farmer, writes regularly to say everything
is going to be okay. We’re all fine here, now, thank you. How are you?
No, I didn’t
mention the Jedi woman with the green skin and the laser-whip. Indiana Jones in Spaaaaaaaaaaaaaace. Turns
out, she whipped the Sith Dudester when he was young, and left scars on his
back. And she puts the whole mystery together like an episode of MURDER SHE WROTE on fucking steroids.
There’s a heavy
reference to shifting the Balance of the Force. We didn’t need that, or the
idea that anyone else could be a pupil of
mine, before he turned to evil. Sure, strip-mine scripts that are set in
the future if it makes your typing sessions easier on the fingers. Understand,
though, that I will hunt down the people who taught you how to read and write.
But the context, mutter-mumble.
Here is the green Jedi, who had an evil pupil thought dead. She discovers that
her pupil is alive. He has to be Sith. So, remember, you have one job. Every
Jedi who learns of the Sith must die, to preserve the fucking story.
Instead, she lives,
and she takes her peculiar problem to the head of the Jedi order…Yoda. We see a
glimpse of Yoda here, and more of Yoda in later historical documentaries.
That’s it, though,
right there. Fucked up beyond all recognition. You did what you set out to do.
Introduce Sith to Jedi for a lively session at the dance in the old barn. And
that would have worked, if you’d killed all the Jedi who were up dancing.
No. You had to go
and do that bit at the end, where the green Jedi goes to reveal all to another
green Jedi. And I have few words left, beyond raw expletives, at this point.
Update. I should’ve
said the Wookiee had a fight in a flashback, but the damage was done. He
couldn’t die in the flashback. Just in the here and now, in a chair, watching
synchronised Twi’leks aim for gold in the Space Olympics.
Oh, and a character
showed up, skulking in a cave. It was Gollum, looking for the One True Ring.
But it fell through the TV cracks into another show that caused J.R.R.
Tolkien’s rotating body to give off a high-pitched whine that fells birds on
the wing to a distance of five miles out.
THE ACOLYTE bows out disgracefully by
plundering a scene from the end of another STAR WARS property, giving us the oddball
hope that setting this show up for a sequel automatically killed off any chance
of making a sequel.
As for finding
faults in ROGUE ONE, here’s a
classic: they had Billie Lourd right there. Should have hired her to dress up
as her mother instead of giving us CGI Carrie Fisher. If you haven’t seen ROGUE ONE, that’s a spoiler. I haven’t
ruined it for you…merely prepared you for that moment.
With the right hair, makeup, and costume,
Billie Lourd would have served as younger stand-in for her mother long enough
to make the scene work. Carrie Fisher looked like Debbie Reynolds and Billie
Lourd resembles both of them. Why head down the Uncanny Valley™ of face replacement for so short a scene?
Luckily, I am not
in charge of making STAR WARS.
Unluckily, it appears no one is. But that’s okay. No one killed STAR WARS. Right there, on my shelf, any
old time I want to watch it. Don’t give in to hate. But, also, you don’t have
to like sub-standard fiction.
Sunday, 1 September 2024
BUYING COMIC BOOKS ALREADY ON MY SHELVES: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Read what’s in front of you.
It’s a hell of a lot easier. Easier than what? It’s far easier than climbing
into the loft and moving crates of comic books around to get at the stories you
hunted for. This is a problem with comic books…
By the time you discover a story, take
interest in a tale, you see the saga in question was released over twelve
issues…no problem…back in the Early Jurassic. Ah. Some problem. If this is a
cult comic book and not a popular mainstream one, good luck finding issue #blah
of Too Much Tea Man™.
He’s never appeared in a collected edition.
The notorious issue #blah, coming between #5 and #8 in the series was a
double-length comic with a fucked-up printing of dozens instead of more than
dozens: a sad state of affairs, given the death of a major character in
that issue.
The company sent me 23 copies by mistake, if
anyone is interested.
I found it easier reading those rival
superhero stories about Too Much Coffee Man™.
By coincidence, it’s quite hard to get hold of issues #6 and #7 in that series.
Time passed. The Jurassic is no more. We are
floundering in the Digital Age, now. And yet, we’ve discovered a way to farm
trees more responsibly. Physical products are still a thing. So there are more
collected editions out there than you can shake a NO-PRIZE at.
Archival
copies. Reprints. Restorations. Anthologies. Super collections. Omnibus
editions are omnibus editions for a reason: you need a horse-drawn double-decker
bus to cart them around in.
I decided I had enough spare shelving to
store chunky versions of classic stories on. Stories that, for the most part,
I’ve already read. Some of the omnibus editions on my hit-list contain comic
book works I haven’t read. There’ll be a story segment before the tale I’ve
tackled and another leading away…
This is the episodic nature of comics. What
does my spree of purchases lead to? Two things spring to mind. In several cases
I am buying stories reprinted in a much larger format. Also, with
duplication…what plans do I have for the material already on my shelves?
The larger format means I don’t take smaller
faded stories away from my bookcases and slide massive restored tales into
position in place of the same old material. I can’t. There’s a fear that a few
of these books are going to be too deep to fit even the deepest bookcase.
I can, and do, restructure bookshelves when
reorganising after a buying-spree. All the shorter books cram in there under a
low ceiling. And I make a new roof for the taller books that land on my
doorstep. This is the boon of adjustable shelves.
But books that jut way out off the bookshelf
are a problem whether down next to the floor or up nearer my passing face. I
will now briefly pause this blog in aid of a rapid study of the premises. Books
as hazards. Let me see…
*
Cracking an ankle on a
low-flying hardback book or accidentally brushing your teeth off the spine of a
novel at high altitude…these whimsical pursuits are not for me. Or you. My
immediate problem was the hallway leading to the books.
One day, I’ll clear that hall. And, on that
day, I’ll fill it up with more stuff that must be moved around, made ready for
recycling, or just plain dumped. It’s classed as moderately difficult terrain
today. Passable with a low-level dose of mountaineering prowess. Grade two on
the Alpine Indoor Exercise Evaluation chart. Let’s leave it at that.
A check of the shelves spread across the
upper level of the house tells me…I have a lot of shelves…tells me that I own
hardly any tomes, volumes, grimoires, codices, palimpsests, folios, or plain
old books that jut out far enough to cause hazard to life and limb.
Hardly any.
These books do exist. But they exist around
the corner, out of sight if not out of mind, and I must advance forward to
access the mighty tomes. I can’t physically walk past from left to right or
right to left. Yes, I double-checked.
So. I can’t trip up or take an unseen swipe
to the head from the side. But this may all change with the arrival of massive
archival volumes of comic books. Massive? Bigger than the usual collections.
*
I leaned to my right to inspect a bookcase
already frothing with comic book BRICKS. Call it research. These omnibus
editions. What to say of those?
They are tall, some, and wide of shoulder,
others, but no comic omnibus there threatens to trip me up as I head to bed.
Luckily, if I did trip…I’d land on soft covers. Unless returning from that
direction…which is always a risk as I need to head yon way if I want to access
the door.
Pesky considerations of visits to the
bathroom and kitchen and the outside world aside, I think I am doing quite well
on the book front. Or…I’ll do quite well until the volumes of mass collection
arrive.
Then, I think I’ve had it. The only thing
that’ll save me is an empty bookshelf that I can’t walk past, left to right and
back again. Luckily, I have a spare waiting in just the right place. But now I
must face another consideration.
Not the old material. The duplicate stuff.
If I can’t give the old stuff to friends, I can hand the comic books to
charity. That is easy enough to take care of. No. There’s the impractical
aspect to the practical business of consuming large tomes.
Yes. The other problem arises. Where to read
mighty books? There’s just enough lack of space here, at the computer, to rule
out the so-called space here at the computer. So it’ll have to be the bed.
Never read books on the stairs. That’s a top tip.
And never read books at the top of the
stairs. That’s an even topper tip.
Will the new arrivals fit in? It’s not the
size of them, but the sheer bulk. When I think of the books in my library, I
tend to think of them in terms of tonnage.
How high is the tonnage? To that, we must add the weight of the shelves.
Yes, I could buy the comic books digitally. Stan
Lee was very positive about digital comic books.
The experience of reading a printed comic book will never change, but now, thanks to the digital age, there are many different ways to enjoy the same story.
Okay, loads of dangerous things are more
dangerous than books are. What are you doing with asbestos in your house? Get
that fixed.
Dangerous pursuits? Not checking the
position of a switch when changing a bulb. Never get dressed in a hurry at the
top of the stairs. That’s the place the irate husband is heading for, after
all.
I’ve learned the hard way that books, like
guns, are heavier than they look. The worst culprits have glossy covers. They
slip and slide and wriggle, trying to escape from the tidy stack in your hands.
Art books are often built for reading on large tables. Those are the awkward
books, designed for the size of a hand humanity has yet to evolve. Dust jackets
don’t help out.
He somehow garrotted himself with the
topmost book in the stack being transferred from library one to library two,
officer…yes, we think the ultra-glossy cover contributed to the disaster…
Naturally.
Being ambushed at the ankles by an oversized tome starring the prints of
Hokusai...was also a factor. Strange to think the only book he held firm in his
grasp was YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE. Irony.
I’ll borrow from Krivitsky.
Any fool can commit a murder, but it takes an artist
to commit a good natural death.
And then, I’ll most likely cop it as I try
to fill the available shelving. I say I have a spare shelf available, yet I
could use the whole bookcase at a pinch. I’m buying books I’ve (mostly) read.
Purchasing outsized duplicates and handing smaller volumes to charity.
I’m in a recycling mood. And I just want one
convenient volume to read, instead of thumbing through dusty comic book issues
or battered trade paperbacks. No, I don’t collect comics. I just happen to read
them. Once I’ve read them, they are still around to read again. I don’t treat
them as disposable and I don’t leave them sealed, unread, and yet strangely
revered.
If you collect comics and don’t read them,
that is up to you. It’s not something I understand. But it is difficult to
condemn you. We both have book collections measured in terms of tonnage. The
big question is…will the old books that leave the house weigh more than the
fresh duplicates coming in?
I try not to think about this. Instead, I
listen for the creaking of overburdened floorboards.
Wednesday, 14 August 2024
SCRIPTING A DUNGEONS & DRAGONS™ VIDEO: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
(This is the full version of the blog post. When recording for video, I had to get used to noise suppression all over again. The software cut a few opening syllables from several sentences. I went in and edited the audio rather than doing a second take.)
Usually, when it comes to
making YouTube videos on roleplaying games and boardgames…
Wait a bit. You can’t hashtag board games. That’s where the one-word
spelling comes in, and I am stuck with its utility now…
When planning videos, I’ll have an idea for
a Dungeons & Dragons™ explanation
or something along those lines. This needs props. I film those, with one eye on
the general idea. Okay, I’ll talk about this game, that publisher, and those hobby
accessories.
If I
have those hobby accessories, I’d damn-well better film them. And if I don’t
have the items to hand, I’ll film around them. This is how JAWS came to be a much better movie than originally envisioned. If
you can’t film the broken rubber shark, film around it. Show the shark’s
viewpoint, not the malfunctioning shark prop’s flippery-floppery. Rely on John
Williams. He’ll see you through.
Repeat
as needed.
For assorted copyright reasons, I won’t be
relying on the score from JAWS in my
video. Spielberg maintained Robert Shaw’s sobriety throughout the production by
running the actor through a game of Dungeons
& Dragons™. Shaw insisted on playing a cleric called Mr Blue.
John Milius dropped in as Bear “The Bear”
Bear. He and Shaw dangled Wizardy Chappie over the cliff until he revealed the
secret password.
Wizardy Chappie was played by Richard
Dreyfuss, who then lied about the password anyway. This is why JAWS was a nightmare to film. And
that…is a roleplaying fact.
Lights, camera, action. Place a prop. Film
it. Replace it. Film the next one. Switch camera angles. Leave a camera in shot
for the sheer hell of it. Film the next thing. Usually I’ll be listening to someone
else’s roleplaying video in the background as I film mine. How many shots will
I manage in an hour? Enough.
I drop those snippets into the editing
software and strip out the random audio. Yes, I may move the order of shots
around quite a lot. And I might have to ditch footage. Shoot things again. Or
shoot a new item that I should have included in the first place.
With the order of shots arranged around an
idea, I write up a script. Shots lend themselves to talking-points. That’s why
I film them in the first place. The script is done. I record the audio. That
audio is edited. I throw the audio track onto the video compilation.
That’s when the real editing begins. I
extend the length of a clip or shorten it, in keeping with the narrative pace.
After that, I look at the visual gaps I’ve left behind. Those must be filled.
I’ll use clips from previous videos. Or I’ll film more new stuff. Maybe I’ll
repeat a clip several times for effect. Gradually, I fill those pesky gaps.
I might cut more audio out. You realise you’ve
made a point that is…bullshit. It’s a
technical term. There’s a statement based on shifting sands at high tide. You
misread a source. Or you contradict yourself with wild abandon. The primal audio
flies in the face of the civilised video evidence, and you retreat to higher
ground.
Usually, not always, I make time to throw in
a roleplaying fact. These roleplaying facts are utterly fake. You’ll know this
by the phrasing. And that…is a
roleplaying fact.
Or a boardgaming
fact, depending on the topic. Rarely, I find that I don’t use the phrasing at
all. It’s a thing on the channel, but it doesn’t define the channel. Dry
understated caustic humour? That’s just the default setting in Scotland.
For this entry, I decided to script a blog
post and make it the audio for a YouTube video as well. Some people use the
term DungeonTube. I asked Doctor
Google about this and encountered requests for directions to The London Dungeon
by means of underground rail.
There was also pornography.
DungeonTubers,
apparently, cover topics in dungeons: specifically, that’s Dungeons & Dragons™. Generally, there is also pornography.
Already, the wearisome term DungeonTuber has gained a pejorative
aspect. Whether they’ve accepted corporate cash to shill out products or not,
some roleplaying game hobbyist YouTubers…
Damn it, I half-typed Hobbit YouTubers and I’ve lost the train of thought. It’s
underground, and heading in the direction of a London-based dungeon. Hobbit YouTubers. I’m not here to
disparage the height of certain or even uncertain YouTubers.
My point, misplaced in the mists of typing,
is that DungeonTuber is heading for a
change in meaning. A YouTuber who makes videos about dungeons, dragons,
dungeoneering, delving, and the organised looting of ancient temples…could be
described as a DungeonTuber.
Potatoes in The
Temple of Elemental Evil are far too easy to describe as dungeon…tubers.
Anyway. Point. The term is shifting to occupying
the space of little more than an insult for house shills, real or imagined. YouTuber
accepts money for plugging dungeon products. Oh, a DungeonTuber.
I take in a whole load of YouTube videos on
roleplaying games. There isn’t one channel presenter I can think of who uses
the label. We’ll go out on a limb here. I think that’s unlikely to change.
You always go out on stout limbs. And always
fall from shaky ones.
Speaking of presenters. Yes, we all have
limited time on our hands…and around our elbows, I guess. So while recording
videos, I listen to YouTube videos in the background. These are accidentally
recorded onto my video clips. That’s why I strip out the audio.
To save even more time, I listen to virtually
all YouTube videos at double speed. If you start off with a fast high-pitched
voice, I might listen to you at 1.5 speed – otherwise only bats can hear you.
Why don’t I watch them? Many dungeoneering
and dragon-ish YouTubers are talking heads. Low on visuals. I don’t need to see
them to hear their points.
This channel is the other way around. You
see the props, miniatures, maps, and so on. My channel was based on watching a
particular type of video. I won’t name the exact one. A quick check shows the
one I’m thinking of has been taken down since.
With one eye on making boardgame videos, I
watched a video that was all about seeing players having fun. You couldn’t make
out the board at all. The camera might as well have been in a field next to the
venue.
I went there to see the board. And, barely
seeing the board, I decided I couldn’t make videos of that nature. If I want to
illustrate a point in a discussion on this channel, I’ll throw in an
illustration if I have to. Here’s the board. The bar is pretty low, but I still
vaulted it.
Now that I’m typing this up, I know I’ll
fill in gaps in the video editing with previous shots of game boards. If I show
you a game in a video, I could show the box, the game, the components, a few
third-party accessories that make gameplay flow more smoothly…
But at least I will show you the game, and
not a distant shot of the house it was played in. From space.
What else to say of making videos about
boardgames and roleplaying games? I used to make videos weekly. Life got in the
way. Now I make them when I feel like making them. Often, I feel like making
them and life gets in the way.
The one thing I haven’t been able to shake
is cardboard damage. I open and close many a box here at this table when the
cameras aren’t rolling. Preparation isn’t everything, but it’s where I start
and so should you.
As a result of all this cardboard activity,
tiny particles drift across the black felt cloth. These bits and pieces build
over the course of a few seconds into unacceptable levels of snowfall. I wave a
magic wand and vacuum the hell out of the surface to make the gaming table
semi-presentable.
Another feature, and this may not be for
you, is the unconnected background. I’ll populate the background with items
from a different video. Either I use stuff I filmed last time or things I’ll
put in videos next time around.
This is a working game table. Often, I’ll
leave the wooden organisers in the background with coins on prominent display.
Those are signs of a Buffy game
rumbling along. Buffy is a
roleplaying game that uses drama points to generate twists in the plot or handy
bouts of healing in the heat of battle.
And I don’t like to disturb the display. Mustn’t
knock the coins down into the abyssal depths at the back of the table. Players
need drama. So the roleplaying display features in the background.
No
virtual tabletop for me. I run the table from here, in what Mary Shelley refers
to as the deserts of Scotland. My
players are scattered across the Cosmos. We may be in several countries,
operating at different times, but we are united by different dice around the
same table.
And that really is a roleplaying fact. Here's the video.