Archive for June, 2008

What the hell’s been happening?

The G4 Powerbook which has served me so faithfully since the year of ‘03 is on its last legs - the backlight doesn’t work, and it periodically fails to connect to the internet, wired, wirelessly, regardless. The OS, which I should have upgraded years ago is now incompatible with the latest range of Apple products. It’s sad to see one who was once so proud reduced to this.

On the other hand, it provided me with the excuse I needed to purchase this bad boy:

My God, it's full of stars

Mmmm. Macintosh.

Other stuff:

  • On Tuesday I went to the O2 arena and saw, err, Neil Diamond. Whilst this probably wouldn’t have been my first choice for a good night out, it was a lot more enjoyable than the last time I was at the O2, which was with work, who quite literally subjected me to torture.
  • Last night, I saw Tom’s band again at the Metro Club in Oxford Street. They’re really not bad at all.
  • I set up a photo gallery for Lauren Laverne this week. This might well be the highlight of my career.
  • Tomorrow, I head off to Cathar country, Carcassone in Southern France, for a week. I’ll report all Grail/Knights Templar related hi-jinx just as soon as I get back.

Over and out.

Year in film 20: Iron Man

Iron Man is pretty decent although probably not as tightly plotted or well-paced as the Hulk film. Nevertheless, it’s a perfectly adequate story, and more importantly it has Robert Downey Jr, possibly one of the finest living actors in American cinema, and his charismatic performance as Tony Stark not only elevates the film from enjoyably diverting to compulsively watchable, but is also the most definitive portrayal of a superhero on screen since Christopher Reeve donned the blue tights and red underpants. Good stuff.

I can read books again

In the foreword to his book The Court of the Caliphs, Professor Hugh Kennedy observes that the scribes of medieval Baghdad could be sometimes rather bawdy in their reportage of contemporary events, something more modern scholars have often tried to skirt around. Kennedy justifies his decision to remain true to the original accounts with the following quote from the 9th Century scholar Jahiz:

“Some people who affect asceticism and self denial are uneasy and embarrassed when cunt, cock and fucking are mentioned but most men you find like that are without knowledge, honour, nobility or dignity.”

Sentiments we can all get behind, i think.

The Guns of Avalon

So I’ve been really enjoying Paul Cornell and Leonard Kirk’s new series Captain Britain and MI-13. I’m unreasonably fond of Captain Britain as a character, mainly because the idea of a British superhero seemed so utterly mind blowing back when I was a wee nipper. Superheroes belonged in America, which occupied the same fantastic geography as Narnia and Never-Never Land at that age. (It helped of course that no matter how convoluted and ill-considered the character’s origins were originally, the Captain Britain I was most familiar with was written by Alan Moore and drawn by Alan Davis, in a series that holds up remarkably well even today. Moore and Davis make everything better).

So it’s good to see him headlining his own title again, and to see it written by someone who clearly has both an affection for the character and good ideas about what to do with him*. I’m not quite so into the idea that Captain Britain should “represent like Steve Rogers did” - I always thought Britons would have at best a much more ambivalent and questioning attitude towards someone claiming to be their national icon, and Brian Braddock was intelligent enough to realise that - but the tension between the ideal and the reality of modern Britain formed at least a part of Cornell’s recent Wisdom series, and I expect it won’t go unacknowledged in at least some form here. I read Cornell’s science fiction novel British Summertime not so long ago, which features an idealised parallel universe British society which is essentially a post-war, austerity-era Britain extended into the future, embodied by a Dan Dare-esque spaceship pilot with a brave heart and a square chin. It occurs to me that this wouldn’t be a bad take on the Brian Braddock Captain Britain too. One of the complaints about Braddock has always been that he’s a bit of a posho - he does after all, live in a manor house, and is hardly a British everyman. However I think it’s important to note the Braddocks are not landed aristocracy - the father arrived here in the 1950s from an alternate reality for God’s sake (see what I mean about convoluted origins), and made his money developing weapons technology for the British Government. He’s (extra-dimensional origins aside) the classic British boffin - solidly middle class made good during the twilight years of empire. Brian himself is a scientist rather than a soldier as well, and whilst he’s been shown to be a little old-fashioned at times, he’s certainly no establishment man, nor knee-jerk reactionary. It’s easy to see him as someone steeped in the more admirable traditions of 20th Century Britishness, nostalgic less for the days of a mostly pink atlas than for the post-war consensus and the culture of experts (although I am hoping for a bit of good old-fashioned class conflict with the solidly proletariat Union Jack, who is slated to turn up soonishly).

Captain Britain and MI-13 has also launched off the back of the big Marvel crossover event of the Summer, Secret Invasion, in which the shape-shifting alien race the Skrulls attempt to take over the Earth and enslave the populace - the hook being they’ve been infiltrating and replacing the planet’s key superheroes for years, throwing several major storylines over this period into a whole new light. As well as being generally a lot better than the rather underwhelming main title, it’s also perfectly clear that Cornell has the best Super Skrulls (for the uninitiated, the original Super Skrull was capable of reproducing the powers of each member of the Fantastic Four, as opposed to just being able mimic their physical appearance). In the main Secret Invasion title Brian Michael Bendis has introduced X-men Super Skrulls and Avengers Super Skrulls, but Cornell has taken things to the next level, inducing a kind of geek Nirvana by introducing a Legion of Monsters Super Skrull, a Super Skrull which emulates the powers of all the different versions of Deathlok, and in the final pages of #2 a magic based Super Skrull that incorporates bits of Dr Strange, Son of Satan, Zom and stuff so obscure even I don’t recognise it.

So yes, this series certainly gets the majorarcana.org seal of approval. There’s a nice introduction to the series’ cast of characters over at the Marvel UK obsessive It Came From Darkmoor (the mystery character joining in #5 has been confirmed as Blade, BTW).

* Of course, all this may be moot as - SPOILERS - Braddock is blown to bits at the end of #1. I’m assuming he’ll be back somehow (there’s a clue in the comic’s title), although there’s also the possibility he’ll be replaced - something I wouldn’t be so keen on given the lack of eligible candidates thus far introduced. We shall see.

Year in film 19: The Incredible Hulk

Which surprisingly, isn’t all that bad. I had fairly low expectations going into this (from the director of The Transporter 2!), but it’s actually really rather enjoyable. Decent acting, a simplistic but tight storyline, plenty of action, loads of geek references. The CGI still looks like CGI, but managed to get across at least some of the Hulk’s physicality, and the fight scene at the end was really quite visceral.

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