Only one of the following countries is not using Covid passports. Can you spot it? 🧐 pic.twitter.com/HX22yTspA2
— Dr. Eli David (@DrEliDavid) November 12, 2021
Wednesday, November 24, 2021
Friday, November 19, 2021
Sexy Sailors
This famous photograph of two sailors kissing was originally taken in San Diego, California in 1942. It's currently owned by the notorious Kinsey* Institute.
This cropped version was used by Gran Fury's ACT UP “Read My Lips” campaign.
There is of course a perfectly sensible reason why the two young gentlemen are normally only shown from the waist up. Suffice it to say that are very much "for real" and they're very much enjoying both themselves and each other.
*Yes, it's the same Kinsey who collected that "interesting" data about prepubescent boys having multiple orgasms.
Wednesday, November 17, 2021
Grosse Pointe Cool
Between punk and the millennium, between T-2 and The Matrix, between the golden age of action movies and the post-9/11 rebirth of high fantasy... there was an oddly sleepy sort of time called the 1990s. Action comedy Grosse Pointe Blank very much represents the better end of that particular market. (Please don't ask what was at the other end.)
John Cusack is there. He's still pretty much got it. In fact he's as good as he ever was. And as a leftover 1980s teen heartthrob par excellence (albeit better known to "my" generation as that guy from The Grifters and Wesley Crusher's dead older brother in Stand by Me), he fits his role perfectly. He's now doing the quintessentially cool amoral 1990s thing - which is of course contract killing. (Hey! After the '80s even Bond was little more than a hitman - witness Dalton and Brosnan in Living Daylights and World is Not Enough!) And indeed 1980s top funny man Dan Ackroyd is there too, also great as ever (and even getting a throwaway Ghostbusters-type line about astral projection and telepathy).
So if you ever wondered what happened to John Hughes' kids, well, they got hip, they got cynical, they got cool... and they warmed up for Fight Club ("I don't think what a guy does for a living reflects who he really is", "You can never go home again, but you can shop there.") and (of course, "killing a lot of people"!) American Psycho. (Did mini-marts even in the '90s have Blistex and Trojan condoms on the front counter? Funny how it's always the most recent past feels the most alien!)
So Cusack plays a hitman called Martin. He wears black. His surname is 'Blank'. Get it? He's not a real person. He's a Man in Black. (This was the era of classic X-Files, remember, and before Men in Black the movie! In fact his secretary - played gloriously by Cusack's own sister - even has Scully's outfit and hairdo.) But is he also firing blanks - metaphorically in as much as he wants to quit the cool job that he's now too cool for? (I do really like Blank's office though. In those days even "old school" could still be cool!)
The actual gags though are also fired off thick and fast, and a surprising number are palpable hits. An assassin who sees a shrink was way ahead of Analyse This (and a much gentler but more incisive dig at the post-'80s "kinder, gentler" 1990s craze for counselling and "caring"*). And the one-liners are smart and daring. Greatest disappearing act since white flight? (WTF? Couldn't get away with that nowadays!) Live and Let Die on the soundtrack? Cheeky! The Story of a Mediocre Genesis? Nice!
And that Kipling quote is way, way deep!
*In reality it was little more than the boomers' moving on from their '80s physical exercise loopiness to trying to fill the spiritual void a decade later with neo-Freudian, New-Age bullshit.
J. Allen Hynek presents... (?)
How many "serious" sci-fi movies and TV-series about space aliens are there really?
My list goes something like this:
- The Outer Limits: 'The Bellero Shield' (1964) à Betty and Barney Hill abduction à The UFO Incident (1975) à Travis Walton abduction à Fire in the Sky (1993)
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
- E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
- Starman (1984)
- Flight of the Navigator (1986)
- UFO Abduction (1989)
- Communion (1989)
- Fire in the Sky (1993)
- The X-Files (1993-)
- Roswell (1994)
- Dark Skies (1996-7)
- The Outer Limits: 'Beyond the Veil' (1997)
- The Shadow Men (1997)
- Taken (2002)
- The Outer Limits: 'Dark Child' (2002)
- Alien Abduction (2005)
- The Fourth Kind (2009)
- Race to Witch Mountain (2009)
- Dark Skies (2013)
- Alien Abduction (2014)
- Extraterrestrial (2014)
Monday, August 23, 2021
Monday, August 16, 2021
Tuesday, June 29, 2021
On this day in 1944, an experimental Nazi V-2 rocket reaches an altitude of 176 km, becoming the first man-made object to reach outer space. The German rocket technology would be crucial for the post-war Soviet and American space program. Crucial for the Cold War as well. pic.twitter.com/KFsg6LleyI
— Klaas Meijer (@klaasm67) June 20, 2021