Sunday, November 29, 2009

Down on the Farm

Oh I just love farms don't you?  Today I went out to the Perry's farm near Harrowsmith for a story about turkeys - birds that define the phrase "so ugly they're cute."  

I just try not to think about the fact that they'll all be dead in less than a month!





Saturday, November 28, 2009

I Love Sydenham!

Today I ventured out to Sydenham to take some photos of the Santa Clause parade.  Some of the floats were quite amusing - and I mean that in the best possible way!  Here are some highlights, for your viewing pleasure.

Ok there's nothing funny about this first picture - I just thought this kid was adorable.








Thursday, November 26, 2009

Confused Plant

I took this photo today, on November 26th.  In Kingston.  I cannot for the life of me decide whether this is a good thing or a bad thing.  The good thing is, the fact that this kind of plant can still survive means that I can still comfortably spend an extended length of time outside.  And the bad thing....well....global warming and such.  I know that in the big picture this is overall a negative development.  But I HATE winter!!  Always have, always will.  So I choose to be happy about this poor, confused little thing.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

If you can't beat em...


I've done it folks - I've finally jumped on the Twilight bandwagon.  I sincerely hope that doesn't diminish your opinion of me.  You see, somewhere inside me still lurks the awkward, bookish, fourteen-year-old girl I once was, and she's a little resentful that these novels didn't come out twelve years ago.  I've managed to suppress her for years now, but alas she has teamed up with the side of me that has of late been craving something unashamedly escapist.  As a result, I finally caved tonight and bought the first book in the series.  I hope to finish it before seeing New Moon tomorrow with my dear friend Liz.  Judging by how addictive the first 300 pages have been, I don't think that'll be much of a problem...

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Smile

Wow - I can't believe it's been over a week since I last posted!!!  I've been so busy - either working or in Toronto sans computer.  I also can't believe it's almost the holiday season - and also almost winter!   (Boooo...).

I've felt like crap lately, to be perfectly honest.  Being this busy inevitably means eating badly and virtually no yoga.  I'm hoping to turn things around tomorrow, despite the mountains of work I need to conquer before Monday.  In the mean time, this photo (from here) cheered me up some.  It reminds me of the trip to Jamaica I have coming up in the relatively near future.  I've always wanted to travel somewhere south in the middle of winter, and now I'll finally have a chance to do so!

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Review: Her Fearful Symmetry


Even though I wasn't totally blown away by The Time Traveler's Wife, I was for some reason extremely eager to read Audrey Niffenegger's new book, Her Fearful Symmetry.  I enjoyed The Time Traveler's Wife for its creativity and imagination; it reminded me of how it felt to read a book as a child - to become entirely engrossed in a fictional world that on the surface is very similar to ours, yet contains certain intriguing yet ultimately unsettling impossibilities.  Her Fearful Symmetry is similarly engrossing, and kept me reading into the wee small hours of the morning.

The novel tells of two sets of twins:  Edie and Elspeth, who are estranged, and Edie's daughters Julia and Valentina.  At the beginning of the book, Elspeth dies of cancer and leaves her nieces all she has, including her flat in London which features a breathtaking view of Highgate cemetery.  The plot thickens when Julia and Valentina arrive in London and become acquainted with the other residents of the building: Elspeth's lover Robert; Martin, a highly intelligent obsessive compulsive disorder sufferer who refuses to leave his apartment; and Elspeth's ghost, who haunts her her old apartment.  Her Fearful Symmetry is a novel about being trapped, and the many different ways in which a person can be held back and subsequently set free.  In many respects it is truly mesmerizing, and has the potential to be a profound, insightful story.  Up until about three quarters of the way through, I was literally bursting with excitement anticipating what was going to come next.

That said, the I found the ending of this novel a little disappointing.  The last 100 pages are full of contrived twists that would have been predictable had they not been so utterly convenient (for the author) and unlikely, even within the supernatural world of the book.  Maybe I was being overly optimistic, but I wanted MORE from this novel.  I'm in the mood lately to be awestruck by something, and was hoping to find it here.  Sigh...on to the next...

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Review: Where The Wild Things Are


Last weekend I FINALLY got around to seeing Where the Wild Things Are - a movie I had been anticipating for many, many months.  Ever since I saw the stills for it last March, I knew this movie was a must see, and in the eye candy department it certainly did not disappoint.  Everything is beautifully crystal clear, and it's a pleasure to lose yourself in Spike Jonze's mythical world of wild things.  

Over the past few weeks I've read a lot of reviews of this movie, I suppose in an attempt to live vicariously through those who had seen it to make up for the fact that I had not.  Many reviewers seem to insinuate that it's somehow wrong to turn a 20-page picture book with very little text into a 90 minute movie.  Personally, I don't see anything wrong with it at all.  Every idea has to start somewhere, and the book itself is at least as much about the illustrations as it is about the written story.  Thus with its largely visual focus, you can hardly say the movie misrepresents the book.  Where the Wild Things Are is a story about imagination, and the ability of humans, particularly children, to recreate dream worlds when they feel out of place in the real one - to escape to an alternate reality that caters to their every whim.

Which brings me to the thing that really annoyed me about this movie: the main character, Max, is a terrible child with whom I found it very difficult to sympathize.  I could deal with him being a little self-absorbed (hey, what kid isn't?) but to throw a tantrum and bite his poor mother when she has her boyfriend over for dinner after an awful day at work?  And trash his sister's room just because she wants to hang out with her friends instead of him?  Max looks to be about ten years old, certainly old enough to know better than to misbehave in such immature ways.  A re-reading of the book reminded me that Max is similarly awful in the original version (duh - he's a "wild thing"), but I still found it to be a bit excessive.  Then he goes to the land of the wild things, is crowned king, and is allowed to do whatever he wants.  Even though he proves to be an ineffective king, the wild things still love him and are upset when he leaves.  THEN to top it all off, when he returns home his mother is so relieved he's back that she gives him an enormous piece of chocolate cake for dinner, forgoing the vegetables Max was complaining about having to eat earlier.  The last scene features Max scarfing down the cake at the kitchen table while his mother sits next to him, head in hands, looking thoroughly exhausted and defeated.  

Is it wrong that I wanted to physically harm this child?  Maybe so, because I could not find a single review that mentioned this aspect of the film.  I realize that the whole point of the movie is for Max to be self-indulgent, and that such self-indulgence is part of the magic of childhood.  Yet as visually beautiful as this film is, my main feeling upon leaving the theatre was dread at the thought of ever having children!

Rushing the Season (Yet Again)

I realize it's way too early to be talking about Christmas, but rushing seasons seems to be the theme of Magic Lantern lately so I figured I'd continue with it.  Personally I love the aesthetic, if not the stress of the holiday season.  These photos by Jo Tyler exemplify exactly how I would decorate my house for Christmas, if time, money, and space were not factors.

P.S.  I have sooooo much I want to write about - don't be surprised if I bombard the blog with excessive posting these next few days.






Friday, November 6, 2009

Counting Down The Days...


Too early to start talking about the Oscars?  I think not!   

I just heard that Steve Martin and Alec Baldwin will co-host the ceremony this year.  This should make for a hilarious show!  It'll be nice to see something a little different. (At least I don't think a two-host show has ever been done before).  

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Detained By Illness

Ugghh...I have been sick these past few days, and have not been able to do much of anything.  I'm feeling a bit better today, and hope I'm on the mend.  Isn't this bed lovely though?  I love the window too.