Can I say anything positive
about the Gladiator sequel? What is
the title? Gladiator 2. That’s not
it. Gladiators. Far too obvious. On
the cover, it’s a very Roman Gladiator
II. Unfathomably, Sir Ridley Scott™ harks back to ALIEN with the title lettering appearing in a vaguely animated
form. So, on screen, the movie is GLADIIATOR.
But really, the movie is Gladiator Again. A film you’ve already
seen as Gladiator. By the numbers.
Tick off the story points from a checklist based on the first movie. This time
around, there are far more computer effects on display. And almost everyone in
the film is miscast. Except for those who returned for the sequel.
Connie Nielsen and Sir Derek Jacobi are cast
perfectly as the same characters they played before. Jacobi was cast in Gladiator off the back of the grumpy
director’s memory of the actor’s TV role as Claudius. And Jacobi was cast in Gladiator II off the back of the grumpy
director’s memory of the actor’s role in Gladiator.
It would be terribly awkward not to mention
Russell Crowe. And also terribly awkward to mention Russell Crowe. He does indeed
appear in this sequel, using footage from the first film in flashback. Can’t
really fault the casting, there. But practically everyone else has wandered in
from another film.
Chief contender in the miscasting category
is an actor who truly has wandered in from another film, and brought his own
plotline with him to blur the thin story of this one. Denzel Washington is fucking
great in this movie. It’s just…that he was cast off the back of the grumpy
director’s memory of having worked with Denzel before.
Every second on screen, Denzel fills the
movie with crackling sparks…and a plot from somewhere else. If they’d stripped
all the pesky Gladiator and Gladiator II stuff out of this film,
then there’d be another film entirely. One starring Denzel Washington. And one
we’d all be interested in.
Okay. So what’s the thin plot, here? There’s
a man lost in the turmoil of battle. Sad things happen. He is forced to become
a gladiator. Quickly, he learns how to handle his new life in an arena out in
the sticks. There, he meets Oliver Reed Denzel Washington. No one buys
or sells any giraffes.
There’s a shot at taking out the villain in
the much larger arena in
It’s Gladiator
Again.
Our hero is the down-on-his-luck adult who
was the kid from the first film. At least that’s a valid reason for waiting
over two decades to make a fucking sequel. I’ll almost give them that. It might
have worked, too, if they’d cast the child actor in the adult role. But they
cast, miscast, someone else.
Spoiler.
Russell Crowe’s character is very dead. Most sincerely dead. He could’ve been
alive and in the sequel. We’ll talk about
Back to the secret kid. Not that the kid was
a secret. Maybe his real daddy was a secret, in the first film. Vague hints. We
couldn’t have anything more than vague hints. You see, Maximus Derivative
Sequelus…
Fuck it. The whole point of Russell Crowe’s
character in the original film is that he’d have his vengeance in that film and
not the next. Maximus had to avenge the death of his wife and son. And for that
reunion at the end of the film to have an emotional impact, out in the filtered
wheat fields, his character couldn’t have a secret son after banging Connie
Nielsen’s character.
But here,
as too many movie and TV scripts utter, here
we are. The secret son has grown up, turned his back on the Evil that is
I’ll
see you…on the beach! That opening bombast is partly Saving Private Ryan, partly Ridley Scott advertising something – we
aren’t sure what – and partly snippets taken from Frank Miller’s 300. The gladiatorial movies share the
same stunning levels of historical accuracy with 300, I am happy to report. I wouldn’t have batted an eyelid if a
tyrannosaur turned up in that fancy arena, replacing the computerised rhino.
Maybe look for that feisty reptilian action in
the third glorious movie: Gladiators
Three. An epic return to form as the two dead fuckmuppet Emperors from this
movie are brought back to life by ALIEN™
technology to ride into battle aboard their steam-powered pet dinosaur Duke
Daisy. It’s a musical comedy. I can hear the critics sing, singing a song of
angry men. Starring the desecrated digital bones of Ian Holm…
I’ll stop there. Just don’t get me fucking
started on that fiasco.
How often do I think about the
Really should stop calling him Ridley. People will think Daisy Ridley
directed Gladiator II. No, even when
watching a Rome-themed movie, it appears that I never think of the
There is no homo-erotic subtext in one film
or the other film. (It’s in both films.)
Plot twist. Gladiator Haribo and General
Stand-In are now at odds with each other. Oh no. One is the secret son of
Russell Crowe’s character Maximus. The other secretly worship’s Russell Crowe’s
character Maximus. Only in cinemas.
The opening of this movie is full of blood,
thunder, thud, blunder, bombast, bomb blasts, napalm, death, and one or two
digital sequences. I counted one or two. Then lost interest in counting the
rest.
There’s a new score featuring reheated
elements from the original score. Inspirational speeches abound, though they
are served up late from the microwaved leftovers from the first film.
Speaking of microwaved leftovers from a
better movie, the Emperor was replaced by two of the most miscast actors in a
What we do in life echoes in the sequel. Are
we not entertained? You’re damned fucking right we are not entertained. Ridley
has one eye on another pointless ALIEN
sequel, showing us what would happen if the alien infected a family of baboons.
They could have spent a whole lot more money
on the computerised baboons. Wouldn’t have mattered. Strangely, I found the
rhino a hell of a lot easier to accept. There’s a sliding scale of acceptance
in this movie…
It runs…rhino, yes. Baboons, no. Rubber
sharks…fuck off. All of the computer
models for animals are miscast in this film. Even the rhino. But that hardly
matters. Here, they are outshone by the miscast humans. Loads of ’em.
Pedro Pascal, General Stand-In, is miscast
as a man who is miscast in a film. Yes, even his miscasting in this movie feels
a bit off, a bit extra, in the department of wrongness. In the final analysis,
that’s nothing. Nothing. Compared to…
Matt Lucas as a Roman game-show host. Yes.
That bit of stunt casting. Miscasting. David Hemmings wasn’t available. Death
will affect the casting process that way. Yes, we miss Oliver Reed as well.
This farce of a gladiatorial movie almost
had me nostalgic for Gor. That’s a
lie. I will never have nostalgia for Gor.
Not even for all of the Oliver Reed scenes in Gor. They should have called this Gladiator: the Rematch. This time it’s personal. Only in cinemas.
Gladiator:
the Rehash. Okay. I get it. If the role is also part of the title, then
we’re going to see some gladiatorising at some point. Gladiator Rising might have been a far better bet as a title. Is
there any director out there, way out there, more inconsistent, more fucking
random, than Ridley?
Advertising jobs saved him. Made him. He
owed it all to Captain Birdseye. If you listened to Captain Birdseye, though, Ridley
was an arsehole. Mucking around at the BBC, Ridley was almost in a position to
design the Daleks for Doctor Who. Why
didn’t he design the Daleks? Because they’d have fucking resembled him. And Ridley
wouldn’t have fucking cared.
Scrolling down the patchy Scott filmography…it’s
definitely a thing. By fuck, he veers wildly from film project to film project.
He’s still going as I type, so, luckily for him, GLADIIATOR won’t be his last film.
At least no one made the GLADIATOR sequel about Russell Crowe
returning from the dead as an immortal assassin hell-bent on killing Jesus. Yes,
that was my response when I first heard about it. Either
RLLauthor@outlook.com and @RLL_author GO TO AMAZON KINDLE STORE AND TYPE RLL. YOU WILL FIND MY BOOKS.
Sunday, 1 June 2025
GLADIATOR AGAIN: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Friday, 2 May 2025
SEQUEL OF GOR: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
In my last blog post I
changed a bulb and watched the Gor film.
At double speed. This was an improvement. In a stunning development, Jack
Palance turned up at the end of that movie extravaganza and promised a sequel.
Who in their right fucking mind was going to
fund a sequel? Ah. Distributed by the Cannon people. Fired from a big gun, this
movie missed. It’s certainly a skill, missing the planet you are on.
But we are not on our planet. No. We’ve been
transported to the world of Gor. This movie contains a montage of the previous
film at the start. By fuck, if I’d known that I’d have skipped the first
fucking film.
Our hero, Carl. Whoops. Tarl Cabot. Damn it.
I’d have saved time and effort by reading Almuric
comic books instead. Ironhand Esau Cairn would wipe the floor with Carl.
Whoops. Tarl Cabot. On with the story…
The story is a two-word script. When
characters aren’t shouting Cabot! they
are yelling Guards! Our hero…he
isn’t…our hero Cabot is summoned back to Gor by his flashing magic ring. It is
most precious to him. That was a lie.
Landing in the same dead stretch of desert
as before, he arrives with a new sidekick: Sleazy. He and Sleazy retread the
original movie. No, seriously. Practically fucking nothing happens across
90-odd minutes of sand.
Insert STAR
WARS quote about sand here. Thank me later.
What’s new in town? Fucking nothing. There’s
a warning flash. OZONE LAYER DEPLETED. This pops up every time we encounter the
leading lady, here relegated to a supporting role, whose hairspray-drenched
mane threatens to have a wholly separate career.
Cabot has been summoned arbitrarily. There’s
no real rush for him to be here, except as a sequel cash-in. Jack Palance looks
as though he’s had teeth pulled to star in this movie. I’m sure he had better
times before, and he’d have better times ahead.
But in this film, he looks as though he’s as
happy as a man having his teeth pulled one by one between takes. Maybe two by
two. Who knows? The best thing to say about Palance’s performance is that he
gets to wear a funny hat. No. Really. That’s all I’ve got here, and that’s
pretty weak gravy as it stands.
Gor is a free land. Except where people
aren’t free. We see the same scenes again in this movie. No, I’m not talking
about the flashback to original footage. After that, we pretty much retread the
original God-awful production.
Our hero meets people from the first film.
Not Oliver Reed. He fell to his death. But a half-hearted script could have
brought him back and no one would’ve cared. Certainly not Ollie. There’s a
king. And his evil queen. Blah-de-blah. The end. Roll credits.
The evil queen takes on the leading lady
status here. She hams it up. That’s all you can do. Cabot’s buddy Sleazy makes
moves on the queen and she uses Sleazy to prove she was elsewhere when the king
was mysteriously stabbed.
We have this side-action going on with Jack
Palance doing chemistry lessons for pay. The drink he concocts is irrelevant.
What’s important? The knife. This is what the queen stabs her husband with. Cue
the rest of the script.
Guards!
The king is dead. Long live the queen, I
guess. (It’s not that kind of movie. Spoiler for the end of the film. She’ll
never play piano again.) Someone killed the king. Was it Sarge? Rosemary the
telephone operator? Quick, get Scoob and the gang to investigate.
Yes. Someone killed the king. We’re all very
sad, here in movie land. But it wasn’t the queen. No. Sleazy stands up for her.
She was with him. If you catch his drift.
Right. So. The queen couldn’t be a murderer.
She was too busy committing adultery. Got it. Checks out. Would stand up in
court. Seems legit. I’d had enough of Sleazy when he and his atrocious dialogue
entered the start of the film like a virus entering a bloodstream. Maybe even a
human bloodstream.
But. I’d really had enough of him by now.
He’s the new thing in the story. And he shouldn’t be a thing. Have you seen the
Lethal Weapon movies, with Leo Getz?
Stop trying to make him a thing.
What about MARVEL products featuring Martin
Freeman and Julia Louise-Dreyfus? Stop trying to make them a thing. Joe Pesci
and those two, in certain films. In other things, I have no problem with these
people.
We revisit the first Gor film, in spirit. (Must we?) There’s a dance number. And the
leading lady from the first movie must get into a bitchy fight with a warrior
woman, all over again. And then another fight, after that.
Cabot, meanwhile, must go on the run. Into
the beige wastelands. Our queen, evil as ever, wants Cabot brought back alive.
She’s sent Sleazy off to the dungeon. Well, he is in leather. And the queen
decides to send a minion to hunt Cabot down.
All of this goes fucking nowhere. Cabot gets
into the usual low-rent fights you’ve grown accustomed to in this vague update
of a sword-and-sandal movie. The difference is the soundtrack. Needs more
cowbell.
Cabot almost dies of thirst and then almost
dies of quenching his thirst. The assassin appears out of nowhere after zero dramatic
build-up whatsoever, and Cabot is captured. I’ve no intention of relaying
events in chronological order. If I did that, one of my kidneys would rebel,
force itself up through my torso into my throat, and throttle my tongue.
Jack Palance seems to have the same contract
Oliver Reed had. Spread a few minutes of performing across the whole movie. The
evil queen is having the most fun out of an entire cast not having terribly
much fun.
Cabot is captured. Oh no. He’s going to be
taken before the queen and shouted at, I suppose, if she wants him alive for
breeding purposes or as a contract bridge partner. What is the point of this
film?
Jack Palance – it doesn’t matter what his
character’s name is – Jack, he offers Tarl Cabot a deal. Just go home. But that’s
fucking rubbish. So is the end of this movie. It looks like Jack Palance is
planning to poison the evil queen. But she stabs him first.
And then. The queen dies. Slain by her own
assassin, who throws his big spear at her. Carl Tabot does fuck-all except
shout excitedly from the sidelines. Wait, that isn’t his fucking name. Fuck it.
His pal Sleazy ends up back in the real world, and is taken away by the police
for having the audacity to appear in this sewer of a sequel.
I’m not judging you if you like the film – I
simply don’t have the energy for that. Did I not mention the title of the
movie? Outlaw of Gor. It’s the script
that’s the real outlaw here. Film in sand. Check. Use costumes from the earlier
production? Bring back the same faces. Can you cut the budget?
That’s twice, now. I’ve watched two films in
the same so-called setting. At double speed. Nothing happens. The same dance
numbers and gladiator girl combat. Everyone in bikinis. Not Jack Palance.
Wander, lost, in the landscape. You could have driven a bus behind the
characters, and no one would have noticed the mistake. Audience would just go
with the idea that the bus driver discovered another magic ring.
Shame there wasn’t a third movie. No, I
lied. What would a third movie be about? Let me take a wild guess. Going by
production timelines, I’m guessing Gor
III would have gone straight to video in 1991.
So we’d have Liam Neeson as the villain for
five minutes. Carl. Damn it to fuck. Tarl. This fucking guy. Tarl Cabot is
hanging around Downtown Sand Dune Number Six and he encounters a mysterious
sorcerer.
It’s Wade Webley. A stockbroker who…yes,
evil stockbroker. Is there any other kind? A stockbroker who has a glowing
ring. You’re making your own jokes up, now. He has found his way to Gor, and
likes what he sees.
Lots of women in bikinis.
He reveals that he’s not a sorcerer. Just a
guy armed with the technology of another world. His evil plan is to sell shares
in the planet Gor and then foreclose on the widow’s mortgage, taking control of
the beige land.
Carl Tabot™
stops him with a swift sword to the kidneys. This takes up the last ten minutes
of the film. In the first half hour, there’ll be a dance-off, two bikini
battles, and Jack Palance hiding behind the palace curtains.
Palance gets the same amount of time as
Oliver Reed had, but it’s a minute more than the span allotted to Liam Neeson –
barely recognisable in a state-of-the-art prosthetic mask…made from a
Hallowe’en mask. It’s Captain Kirk’s face, spray-painted gold.
We witness oodles of hairspray. Characters
are lost in the desert. They reach the sea, and find Charlton Heston laughing
as he walks back along the beach. Liam remarks that the production reminds him
of Krull, without the budget. Or Excalibur without the knights.
My work here is, just like the franchise,
mercifully done.
Saturday, 19 April 2025
HOW MANY WRITERS IT TAKES TO CHANGE A LIGHT BULB: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
So how many writers does it
take to change a light bulb? One writer. There’s no one else in the room when
you are writing a story. Though, when a writer changes a light bulb, you are hoping
for a really good twist that illuminates.
And once the light bulb is in and switches
on over the writer’s head, hell, that answers the question of where the writer
gets all those ideas from.
I could spend the rest of this blog post
making jokes about writers and light bulbs, but I am recovering from the trauma
of changing a light bulb. Don’t know what the fuck I was using for illumination
before I performed essential maintenance.
The dim bulb that flickered its last wasn’t
really putting out any Lumens, Candles, or a hint of a Lux. Wattage could best
be described as rumoured to exist at some point in the distant past – that
faraway star snuffed it and died long ago, leaving only faint impressionistic
memories of light.
Typically, the inevitable death of a bulb
happened after dark. Luckily, I have two lamps on this side of a Great Wall of
Books. By the light of one, repair the other. I reached for a new bulb that
isn’t new at all. It’s been lying in wait, ready to pounce at the right time.
Well, the time came after sunset. And now, I
can see. I think the replaced bulb was powered by a tiny candle hidden deep
within the mechanism.
Maintenance this month has been of the
essential variety and attacked me from all sides. There was a lot of it. Had to
be done. If I don’t blog now, I won’t blog at all. Yes, I could spend the whole
blog doing a dog-ate-my-homework
sketch.
But instead, I’ll talk about a movie I
watched. Fantasy movies still have a pretty bad rap in the film industry. Make
them cheap, throw them out fast, see what sticks. Cut the budget for the
sequels. Fade out.
Occasionally, fantasy films are really good.
They are few. We’ll go with the argument that STAR WARS is a fantasy movie about a wizard, a princess, a farmhand
who doesn’t know he is a prince, and an evil knight with a magic sword.
For Arthurian fantasy, there’s Excalibur. There’s a wizard…
Okay, we can shuffle the elements around. We
have a boy who doesn’t know he is a king. And there are plenty of lightsabres
in Arthur’s story. For fire-breathing fantasy, there’s the Disney movie Dragonslayer. It’s enjoyable nonsense. I
find Sir Ralph Richardson’s turn as a wizard quite appealing.
When he’s miscast in a movie like Rollerball, you wonder who was on drugs
during that computer scene of his: you, watching, or the casting director
foaming at the mouth in a dark red corner somewhere.
We’ll give old Ralph a pass in Rollerball. The computer scene itself
looks like it wandered in from another movie and brought the actor along in its
wake. My point is…
I could go on, listing this fantasy film or
that one. Good. Excellent. Stellar. But that’s not the aim here. You don’t get
far in the fantasy movie landscape before you fall off a cliff into a lake of
acid.
Of assorted Dungeons & Dragons movies, I will say only this: caution. I believe Jeremy Irons funded
the purchase of a castle in
For the money, clearly.
Sooner or later…and I’ve come late to this
one…you encounter a movie named Gor.
I encountered it last week, in low resolution, at double speed, on the
information super back road that is the internet. This is now the only
acceptable way to watch Gor. You’ll
save yourself a lot of time…
By reading this and deciding not to watch
the movie.
We’re in familiar territory here if you know
your Edgar Rice Burroughs. American man is transported from civilised world to
barbaric planet and must learn epic combat skills or die trying. Yes, I have a
review here…
I
don’t like sand. It’s coarse and rough and irritating…and it gets everywhere.
(A. Skywalker.)
Gor.
What is it good for? Absolutely nothing. Our hero, if you can call him that, is
Tarl Cabot – which sounds like the guy’s own porn name. Surely that’s a typo. I
have the overwhelming rage in me to fix that and call him Carl Cabot.
At least then he’d be in the company of
characters like Lief Langdon from Dwellers
in the Mirage by A. Merritt. Anyway, back to Gor. We’re dealing with a man out of his own time and place. He
arrives in the most beige fucking fantasy world I’ve yet seen.
I’m with Mr Skywalker here. Don’t like bland
sand. This fucking movie. It’s cheap and filmed nastily on a dry golf course at
the arse-end of the back of fucking beyond. At least, that’s how it feels.
Our hero is a professor spurned by blondie.
He drives off in the rain and his wayward vehicle hits a tree. And he dies. The
rest of the story about being transported to another world is just a
hallucination of the people behind this production.
Anyway, Tarl – should be Carl – has a magic
ring that sends him to the world of sand. He can be a loser there instead of
back home. Meanwhile, Oliver Reed shows up to film his scenes on the weekend:
in short takes between trips to assorted pubs.
Or that’s how it all appeared to me. Ollie
is up against it in this production. His whispered menace competes against an
energetic soundtrack that has been hijacked from another movie. The composer is
using notes in Morse Code to transmit SEND
HELP.
Action in the film just doesn’t live up to
the adventure promised by the score. Maybe that’s a good thing. I can’t see the
cast living up to any real action on offer if real action stumbled in out of
the darkness.
No, I’m not saying the leading lady was
hired for her ability to emote with her tits. However…I am saying that. But we
mustn’t lose sight of the plot, such as it is. Our hero, Porn Name Guy.
Incidentally, that reminds me of Flash
Gordon.
Stop me if you’ve heard this one before.
You’ll truly understand the pacing of Flash
Gordon if you realise, in that movie, you are never more than ten minutes
away from an Italian porno.
Oliver Reed shows up as a budget Oliver Reed
playing a toned-down Brian Blessed from Flash
Gordon, minus the wings. And flecks of foam in the beard. Ollie wants this
big glowing rock for reasons unknown.
He
might have explained those reasons during a whispered monologue, but, frankly,
with characters like these it was hard to care.
Ollie’s instant son is instantly killed by
our instant hero in an instant accident. And then our hero flees. He gradually
joins a low-rent Dungeons & Dragons
party that’s too cheap to have an elf in it.
There’s the first third of the movie for
you. Our man wears native costume, and crosses the desert after a spot of
training. Travel concentrates on viewing everyone from behind, to show off the
hero’s arse-cheeks. It’s not all about the bikini-clad women in this non-epic.
As far as the director is concerned, I’m
starting to think Tuff Turf was the
highlight of his career. We get into a spot of mischief at a settlement. This
is the sort of crossroads you’d expect in four or five fantasy movies of
variable quality.
There’s no variable quality here. It’s
consistently awful. The movie felt like one of those films you saw after
midnight on a weekday that felt like a hallucination the next morning, whether
alcohol featured or not. Particularly if
not. Tiredness robbed you of half the plot, and that was no bad thing.
Know what the movie needs? A heavy. Surely
this guy’s the heavy from Crimewave…yes,
yes, he is. We have a low-rent Brian Blessed in the form of Oliver Reed. To
this festering stew of a film we must add a knock-off Bud Spencer look-alike in
the shape of Paul L. Smith.
This leads to a catfight. Our heroes win
something or other. The right to continue into the depths of the dry golf
course. Our D&D party is built up
to include the hero and heroine, a wise older character, another dude who is
too cheap to put on elf ears, and a little person hired for comedy relief
purposes.
They trek a few hundred yards into an
elaborate built-up super-bunker on the golf course, and then must deal with…a
hole. A hole opens up. And it pads out the movie. It could be the hole in the
plot formed from all the tiny holes in the plot so far.
Maybe the shoddy nature of the golf course
has infected the production, and they’ve thrown a mad ad-lib into the mix. The
mix of shit and gravel that is this film. What the fuck is this film? When fans
of the Gor books write in to complain
about the adaptation…
Yikes.
Our heroes attract the attention of a guard
and dispose of him. The cunning disguise of putting on a helmet and pretending
to be the guard…would work in a game of D&D.
Not so convincing in this movie.
Eventually, after much sand…
I
don’t like sand. It’s coarse and rough and irritating…and it gets everywhere.
(Oliver Reed, coming back from the pub.)
We reach the pointless infiltration of the
villain’s lair. Some of the costumes may have been recycled from Flash Gordon, but I can’t be arsed
checking the accuracy of any of that. Our villain, the wri…the dir…the produ…Oliver
Reed…decides to invite our hero to join his merry gang.
For, y’know, reasons ’n’ shit.
Throughout the movie we see women in bikinis
and men thinking about calling their theatrical agents and asking
soul-searching questions about careers thus-far.
Oliver Reed finishes his last remaining
speeches. In his head, he’s playing Falstaff in
We’re about an hour in and there’s a dance
number. Of course there is. And we have a character moment. This allows us to
care about Tarl Cabot. It doesn’t. I lied. A woman is presented for branding.
Our hero flexes his mighty thews and enemy guards fall before him like ripe
grain before the reaper’s scythe.
No. I lied again. He just watches. Maybe he
likes to watch. Then, when it is the leading lady’s turn, our hero must mark
her with the branding iron. He rebels, and starts a change of government right
there. Cool.
Except. Why didn’t he save the first woman?
Dick. We move to the open revolt and getting the hell out of Dodge. But first,
remember to grab the big glowing stone. It is really important. For…reasons. I
mean…someone paid money for the prop, so fucking use it.
It’s not enough to free the oppressed and
reclaim the stone. No. It’s important to get captured and face Oliver Reed one
more time. He has to pay…for luring us into this cinematic diarrhoea.
Things I neglected to mention.
One. An
ineffectual flaming portcullis trap. Straight from the mind of Gary Gygax. Roll
well enough on the dice, and our heroes easily survive Cabot’s Sphere of Conflagration.
Two. The less said about trying to pick a
lock with a sword…the better.
Three. Oliver Reed would bounce back from
this mess and deliver lines about queer giraffes in Gladiator. There, in his sober head, he’s still playing Shakespeare
at
But let’s deal this movie the final blow. I
have to say, this is some feeble shit I had to sit through. It’s been more than
a heartbeat since I sat through something this bad. The Acolyte still takes that crown, though.
Wookiee Jedi? And he’s going to fight the
bad guy? (Dies off-screen in his fucking chair. Still hurts. Dies in an office
chair, staring at his accounts. Harsh.)
Our hero has equipped himself with a bow.
More importantly, he’s found ammo as well. Earlier in the movie he watched
while a woman was branded. Here’s the same woman again. She’s threatened with
fiery death…and he just watches.
Did he really not like the look of her? Was
she not using enough hairspray? The leading lady consumed the hairspray budget,
it is true. Well, this ritual sacrifice goes as expected. Twice in the film our
leading man has the chance to step in and save this woman. He fails
spectacularly.
What’s left? Save everyone else. Fire an
arrow through Oliver Reed’s neck. No, seriously. Then he can fall to his fiery
death – just to confirm that he’s still alive as he hits the flames, and then
there is no way back for him in a possible sequel.
Sequel?
To this warm garbage? It isn’t good enough
to be hot garbage. This reheated garbage. A sequel? You are fucking kidding me.
But wait a bit. Here’s Jack Palance…who has form in the cheap fantasy section
of cinema…
He turns up to introduce himself. O………kay.
Meanwhile, our hero returns home. Where he punches out the dude who annoyed him
and stole his gal. There’s a moral in here somewhere. The moral is…YouTube
should allow me to watch shit films at Warp Factor 10, Mr Sulu.
The scenes in our world, at the beginning
and end of the movie, should have been cut out of the movie – along with all
the other scenes. But we return to sequel territory. The tale ends with Jack
Palance, this time in a mad fucking hat. There’s a wild declaration about ol’
Jack’s drive for power, here.
And the only man who can stop him is the guy
who just fucked off back to his own planet. Right. Gotcha. No chance of making
a sequel to this nonsense, right. Who is behind the production?
Cannon. A hit-and-miss company with many a
cinematic stinker under the brand. Some gems, it’s true. Cannon’s financial
history is of greater interest than the film output. Of course Cannon would go
after the sequel. I’m not sure I have the mental strength to see me through
another one of these efforts. Not even at double speed, and skipping the
credits.
Tuesday, 11 March 2025
CLEAR THE FUCK OUT OF YOUR HOUSE EVERY FIVE YEARS: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
Obviously, I send stuff to
the bins on a regular basis. There’s another mountain of cardboard stashed in
the bin this week, and it appeared out of nowhere just after I demolished the
last one. The recycling of plastic bottles is endless. Some stuff can only go
to rubbish instead of recycling. So…off it goes.
Rarely, I’ll have to take steps over more
specialised waste. Pharmacies still take dead batteries. The only paper I don’t
recycle is shredded paper that goes into used paint tins, destroying the last
of the moisture in there before responsible disposal can occur.
Every five years or so, I go for the big
clearout. There are big clearouts annually. But after half a decade, it is time
to revisit the same old problem. Not enough space. And that’s in a place where
I’ve made the most out of the atoms available.
I’ve been told I’m living as though I am in
My old chair died. I replaced it with a new
chair. And that chair – the one I am sitting in as I type – is every bit as
good a chair. However, it is a teeny tiny wee bit smaller. Suddenly, I feel
that I have room to breathe.
I overcame the temptation to reclaim the
extra space in the name of five storage units and a small table. The extra
space makes it easier to get to things around the new chair. How stuffed is
this place? You know you’ve packed a lot in when rooms have extra lights.
A reasonable person will place storage units
around the walls, and not allow them to project into the room – cutting off
light from the central bulb. And a more reasonable person will turn the room
into a meandering path through storage, with miniature streetlamps dotted
throughout the forest trail. Yes, it is that dim in there. And here. I’m typing
under one of those lights right now.
Every five years or so, it’s time to do
battle. This is 2025, ending in 5,
and so, for convenience, here we fucking go. I’m late blogging this month, from
all the clearing I’ve arranged over the past week.
Yes, I had a big clearout last year. Wasn’t
ruthless enough. That carried over into this year. And…
This year, I decided I must be more
ruthless.
What stays? Toilets. That’s a legal thing. Also,
for my convenience. What goes? Things that lose relevance. You open a drawer
and find all the instruction booklets there. How to care for your washing
machine. That washing machine left the house three years ago. Why didn’t the
pamphlet go to paper recycling when the machine went to recycling?
One isolated pamphlet. But there are many
drawers, and loads of similar things scattered around rooms, across floors, and
in the loft. At least the loft is always in motion. At one time it was a static
affair. But that takes you to a solid point…
The solid point is…the loft is packed solid, and I can barely get in there or across it.
That’s when I made the loft into temporary storage. Things go there out of the
way. Then I arrange for items in the loft to go all the way away.
They go to Recycleton-by-the-Sea. All of
those items are down the local pub having a pint. How do you tackle a massive
clearout? In small stages. By that, I mean one large stage at a time. Drawing
things out of a room sends them cascading down many hallways that are instantly
difficult to navigate.
You can’t get rid of things when you decide
to get rid of things. The big struggle is to extract them from a puzzle of a
room. Hallways fill up as you create islands of temporary storage. The goal is
the garden. From there all roads lead to Recycling. And possibly to
When a cumbersome thing goes into a room and
stays there, that’s okay. But when you pack more things in along the route back
out, you realise getting a cumbersome item out again is a task beyond mere
mortals.
My advice is never to construct storage inside
the room that it stays in. Build the damned thing downstairs. Then wind your
way along the tricky path to the final resting-place of this bulky unit or that
stately bookcase.
Foolishly, when there was space in rooms, I did assemble storage inside the room.
During this massive clearout, I had to pension off a shaky bookcase. And by
fuck, it was a million times easier going in than it was coming back out. That
was just going from its spot next to the door….through the door.
Ideally, certain units are supported by
walls. Wall, bookcase, bookcase, bookcase, wall. Thus spake the Lawgivers, and
the giving of the law was good, right, just, and proper. Rooms, sadly, have a
flaw. Pesky things called doors.
There’s no way around doors, but there is a
way through them. Wall, bookcase, bookcase, space for door. The bookcase shuttered
in? Is fine. But the one with an unsupported side will bow out over the passing
of the centuries as dust the size of books gathers on top of books the size of
books.
If the individual shelves are screwed in,
that’s easier to take. But if floating shelves sit on pins and the shelves bow
down with weight as the side panels bow out…thump.
A shelf lands on the books below, deep into the night, years after you added
that storage to the room.
When you walk past in the cold light of day
– supplemented by light from bonus lamps – you must take a closer look at the
disaster-in-the-making. Then you see the side panels are at the limit. Beyond
saving, if it’s one of those units that you can’t disassemble without
destroying them.
And so, after years of service under heavy
loads, a shaky bookcase had to go. Yes, a unit I foolishly assembled in the
room for so-called convenience.
Somehow, I managed to use my meagre mountaineering skills to manoeuvre this
colossus out from behind the door and through the doorway to a very cramped
landing which was now home to three bookcases that weren’t there before. I’d
strewn the path with thorns of my own making.
Made it to the stairs.
If the whole construction slides out from
under me going downstairs, I don’t care. The technique is always the same. I am
more important than the rubbish I am removing from the building. If the unit
collapses at the bottom of the stairs on being dropped…that is better than my own
collapse under the unit at the bottom of the stairs.
I’ve never surfed a piece of furniture to
the lower landing, and I am not about to surf now.
Making space is good. But after several
years of furniture purchasing, the space is so limiting that you must first
make space to make more space. Right now I have more space behind that door,
right? The shaky bookcase is gone. I’m awaiting the arrival of two units to
fill that space.
But I filled that space with loads of things
that came off the bookcase. Those are on other shelves, on the floor, piled on
boxes and crates, you name it. I have to clear the space to put units in there
and then fill those units. It’s going to be close.
Meanwhile, waiting, I am making that easier
by employing ruthlessness. What, in that room, can I remove? I created a
cardboard mountain by ditching this box here and that box there. Easy.
I turned a bookcase sideways, giving me
less-easy access. But that allowed me to reposition the weighty drawer unit
with the weightier laser printer atop it. When the new units come in, I’ll have
the same storage space but more room to get by.
Yes, I reached that point. I can only add a
bookcase if I take a bookcase away. Dying units are sent to a Swiss Clinic.
What else goes? Charity items. Physical media changes. With the advent of 4K
movies and TV shows, the bulkiness goes away.
Simply moving from a DVD set of The Sopranos to Blu-ray saved me an
entire shelf. If someone in a charity shop is happy with their purchase, I am
happy to ease the space constrictions on my movie storage shelves.
Physical media is still a thing. If I want
to watch the first Doctor Who story, An Unearthly Child, I can pop the disc
in. Hell, I can even watch the unaired pilot as a special feature. There’s a
dispute over the rights to the episode.
Yes, the BBC has many episodes available to
watch. Not the first one, though. Internet remedies to this problem are
unsatisfactory. My best bet is to rely on physical media and pop the disc in. Far
better quality than going online. For separate legal reasons, an episode can
vanish from the BBC so that it is updated. In light of a scandal, say.
Streaming comes with these complications. What
if your favourite show is only your
favourite show and the streaming company makes room for something else? That’s
just too bad. Your show went away. Still, you’ll always have
The 4K collections move in. And my trips to
the charity shops become part of the massive clearout. Recycling plays a large
part in this. A cardboard mountain may be a dreadful thing, but it is a recyclable thing.
Polystyrene, on the other hand, is purely
the Devil’s Work. Woe unto ye who doth truck with the idolatry of amassing a
mountain of polystyrene, for this will not go well with ye. It’s the worst.
The main plan is to gather it in one place,
instead of having isolated pockets of the menace. I fear if it resides in the
one spot for too long that the behemoth will form arms and legs and march upon
a major city. This would get it out of the house, but it’s hardly ideal.
I am missing a whole bunch of books. They
didn’t come off the shaky bookcase. I went looking for them, and they’d moved.
Knowing me, I preserved each shelf somewhere else. On another bookcase. Rooms
are in tatters on the floor, and I can’t get to some places without going on an
expedition.
The good news is that once it’s all back on
shelves, the whole place will have more space in it. Alchemy. Sorcery. Call
that act what you will. I endure chaos in the pursuit of less chaos. Not the
pursuit of order. I’m not deranged. Just slightly mad. About books. Ah, yes,
that’s it.
So far, I haven’t injured myself in getting
rid of stuff. A miracle. The heavy-duty boots go on for furniture removal.
Gloves prevent cardboard cuts when breaking up hefty boxes. Coffee soothes the
troubled brow between stints of hefting and heaving large objects through tiny
doors.
What used to be stored for eternity is now
up for renegotiation. What is that, there? Why do I have it? How did it get
here? Why would I keep it? How do I move it to the bins? Must I use specialised
disposal methods?
Nostalgia has its place. And that place is
now in the recycling bins. I keep an old computer in case this computer dies.
Yes, I have an emergency laptop. That could die, too. The most levels of
computer fuckery I’ve had to deal with? Two machines, dying one after the other
in quick succession. So, yes, the spare died and I was very nearly out of
commission.
Since then, I’ve made sure I can temporarily
rely on past machines. They are stored out of the way. As their operating
systems cease being supported, they are killed off. There’s emergency
provision, up to a point. I don’t get nostalgic about old computers.
Cables. Why the fuck do I have so many
cables? How many can I ditch? Loads, as it turns out. I still have loads of
active cables, despite owning wireless machines. There is no nostalgia for the
cables of yesteryear. And no space for them.
Desks? My desk is a fixture. No wiggle room.
It is solid, and needn’t be replaced. If I had to replace it, I’d require very
precise measurements. The office shredder is under there, and it is the largest
shredder I’ve ever owned. As long as the desk holds together, I see no problem.
Which is why I periodically check furniture for signs of impending collapse.
I’m looking around at curious things. You never know when you are going to need…and
you realise, during the next clearout, that you never used that thing that you
never know...and so it goes in a puff of flame, or leaves in a cardboard box,
or it just flops into a bin almost by itself. But was it pushed off the cliff?
Yes, yes, it was.
Occasionally I contemplate removing a door
from a room. This is a fire-risk, though, and I come to my senses. What would a
door do for me if it became an empty doorway? Let me calculate…
I’d get a tall bookcase in here, obstructing
more light. In my library, a lack of door would do nothing, based on its
positioning. There’s a room where I’d sneak in a small bookcase. Not much use.
Better to have barriers impeding the advance of smoke in an emergency.
Am I not ditching books? A few went to
recycling. Hell, I never throw digital books out. I’m not THAT pressed for
space, just yet.
Saturday, 1 February 2025
NEW COMPUTER…SAME ARCHIVE: A REPORT FROM A FUGITIVE.
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.
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.