Entry tags:
stuff read and watched
1) I just finished volume 11 of Ellen Datlow's Best Horror of the Year anthology, which covers stuff published in 2018. These kinds of anthologies are always a bit of a mixed bag, but as usual I found most of Datlow's choices pretty good. Interestingly, the story that most truly horrified me is the one further away from genre horror, Joe Hill's "You Are Released." It's set pretty much now, and is about a bunch of passengers on a plane that's in midair when the world political situation starts to take a very, very bad, and very plausible, turn. It's scary 'cause it's true. (NB the story has a thread of "can't we all be civil to one another across political divides?" that I don't like at all, because no, we can't be civil to homophobes and transphobes and white supremacists. But it's powerful enough that I liked it despite that.)
No idea what I'm going to read next. I keep getting stalled on A Memory Called Empire, but I've got a bunch of other unread books.
What I really want to read is John Le Carré's newest, but even as an ebook it's $14.99. *sigh* And my library probably hasn't even ordered it yet.
2) I've been feeding my new obsession with Julian Firth by watching the episode of Jeeves and Wooster he was in (it's 3x02, and he's charming and pretty) and the 2015 short film Somewhere in Macedonia, which is adapted from letters by two gay soldiers during the First World War. It's not really all that good, but Firth is as good in it as he has time to be, and of course it would have been relevant to my interests even without him.
ETA: And here is the trailer for Devon Gothic, another short film with Julian Firth by the same director, Alice Evans. I find it a bit "everything I don't like about avant-garde short films, condensed," but YMMV.
3) I've also been rewatching Cadfael, by which I mean skipping all the plot stuff and only watch the bits with Brother Jerome and/or Prior Robert on screen. Because reasons.
No idea what I'm going to read next. I keep getting stalled on A Memory Called Empire, but I've got a bunch of other unread books.
What I really want to read is John Le Carré's newest, but even as an ebook it's $14.99. *sigh* And my library probably hasn't even ordered it yet.
2) I've been feeding my new obsession with Julian Firth by watching the episode of Jeeves and Wooster he was in (it's 3x02, and he's charming and pretty) and the 2015 short film Somewhere in Macedonia, which is adapted from letters by two gay soldiers during the First World War. It's not really all that good, but Firth is as good in it as he has time to be, and of course it would have been relevant to my interests even without him.
ETA: And here is the trailer for Devon Gothic, another short film with Julian Firth by the same director, Alice Evans. I find it a bit "everything I don't like about avant-garde short films, condensed," but YMMV.
3) I've also been rewatching Cadfael, by which I mean skipping all the plot stuff and only watch the bits with Brother Jerome and/or Prior Robert on screen. Because reasons.
no subject
his hair is long and fluffy
And particularly charming when he's in a state of casual dishevelment, as in his first scene. He does the 1920s/30s style well. Actually he does costume drama well; he also looks great in the late 18th C costume he wears in "Chartered Streets," which
It occurred to me recently that he would have been amazing as Bunny Manders from Raffles. Alas, he was still a teenager when the Raffles series with Anthony Valentine was made.