Aug. 13th, 2007

modernwizard: (Default)

I've died and gone to Heaven. Over at Sur La Lune, Heidi Heiner has annotated a translation of Andersen's The Little Mermaid with hypertext footnotes and explications in a fine exploitation of the online form. I'm drawn to Andersen over and over again, for his creepy sadism, self-abnegating protagonists and thoroughly gloomy view of life, so it's always a treat to find illuminations of his stories.

P.S. For lovers of fairy tales, Sur La Lune provides interviews with fantasists, discussion boards, analyses of stories and other fascinating avenues to explore.

modernwizard: (Default)

I've died and gone to Heaven. Over at Sur La Lune, Heidi Heiner has annotated a translation of Andersen's The Little Mermaid with hypertext footnotes and explications in a fine exploitation of the online form. I'm drawn to Andersen over and over again, for his creepy sadism, self-abnegating protagonists and thoroughly gloomy view of life, so it's always a treat to find illuminations of his stories.

P.S. For lovers of fairy tales, Sur La Lune provides interviews with fantasists, discussion boards, analyses of stories and other fascinating avenues to explore.

modernwizard: (Default)

As much as I like a good polymorphously perverse pirate [lookin' at YOU, Captain Jack Sparrow!], the appearance of such a character type in Stardust worries me exceedingly. I wanted to go see this high fantasy fairy tale...until I heard about Robert DeNiro playing the sky pirate as a cross-dressing ham. Well, okay, the presence of a cross-dressing ham doesn't scare me away so much as does this quote, from a New York Times interview by Charles McGrath (New York Times, August 5th, 2007) with the perpetrators of Stardust:

//...Tristran grows up, falls in love and has a hair and wardrobe makeover under the care of a pirate captain (De Niro) who if he's not gay nevertheless enjoys dressing up in a tutu in the privacy of his cabin.

"I don't know where that came from," Goldman said in a telephone interview. "It was just one of those magic moments. Matthew and I were thinking it might be interesting if the captain was in some ways wrestling with identity issues the way Tristran is."//

The offending comment, the one that got me anxious, is in bold. Basically Goldman's statement can be translated as the following: "I have no idea why the sky pirate is a prissy poofter. Someone just got a silly brain fart one day and, since we were all drunk and/or hopped up on drugs, we laughed uprorariously and decided to incorporate this bit of throwaway, sophomoric stereotyping into our film because we're self-indulgent wankers. Captain Shakespeare's sartorial interests really have nothing to do with anything, but, since I'm being asked about it, I'll pull an answer about its relevance out of my butt to give the illusion that we actually really planned it." 

I'm not amused.
modernwizard: (Default)

As much as I like a good polymorphously perverse pirate [lookin' at YOU, Captain Jack Sparrow!], the appearance of such a character type in Stardust worries me exceedingly. I wanted to go see this high fantasy fairy tale...until I heard about Robert DeNiro playing the sky pirate as a cross-dressing ham. Well, okay, the presence of a cross-dressing ham doesn't scare me away so much as does this quote, from a New York Times interview by Charles McGrath (New York Times, August 5th, 2007) with the perpetrators of Stardust:

//...Tristran grows up, falls in love and has a hair and wardrobe makeover under the care of a pirate captain (De Niro) who if he's not gay nevertheless enjoys dressing up in a tutu in the privacy of his cabin.

"I don't know where that came from," Goldman said in a telephone interview. "It was just one of those magic moments. Matthew and I were thinking it might be interesting if the captain was in some ways wrestling with identity issues the way Tristran is."//

The offending comment, the one that got me anxious, is in bold. Basically Goldman's statement can be translated as the following: "I have no idea why the sky pirate is a prissy poofter. Someone just got a silly brain fart one day and, since we were all drunk and/or hopped up on drugs, we laughed uprorariously and decided to incorporate this bit of throwaway, sophomoric stereotyping into our film because we're self-indulgent wankers. Captain Shakespeare's sartorial interests really have nothing to do with anything, but, since I'm being asked about it, I'll pull an answer about its relevance out of my butt to give the illusion that we actually really planned it." 

I'm not amused.
modernwizard: (Default)
Frank's in pieces all over my desk and bed right now because finally, after a wait of over a year, I finally have a bulkier, larger set of double-jointed arms, more in proportion with his body, than the defaults than came with the Doll More Model Doll girl body. Yes, the TwigLimbs arms have arrived, and I'm pleased with them.[profile] twigling has balanced an intimate knowledge of musculature and solidity with a pleasingly realistic style. Pictures below.

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