Posts Tagged ‘1960s’

11
May

The Tooth Fairy

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Image of The Tooth FairyAuthor: Graham Joyce
ISBN: 1857983424 DDC: 823.914
Read for the Once Upon A Time Challenge
See also: LibraryThing ; Author’s Site ; Scooter Chronicles ; SF site ; Tier 3000

Clive was on the far side of the green pond, torturing a king-crested newt.

I’ve read a few Graham Joyce books at this stage; this one by him won the British fantasy award so I was hoping for good things. It tells the story of Sam, a young boy growing up in 1960s England, who one night is visited by the tooth fairy, an entity that is not the insect sized woman with wings that you might expect. Instead he or she changes depending on circumstances. Sometimes male, sometimes female, sometimes an androgynous figure, but always unsettling and unwelcome in Sam’s life.

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Tags: 1960s, 5 Stars, 823.914, Britain - 1960s, British fantasy award winner, coming of age, England, folklore, Graham Joyce, meh, Once Upon A Time Challenge, sff, The Tooth fairy

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23
Jul

The Limits of Enchantment

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Author: Graham Joyce
ISBN: 0575072318 DDC: 823.914
See also: LibraryThing ; Agony column ; Joyce discusses his book ;

If I could tell you this in a single sitting then you might believe all of it, even the strangest part.

Image of The Limits of EnchantmentI’m quite a fan of Graham Joyce and his writing. He really knows how to suck you into the worlds he creates. His are novels that tend to straddle the “genre” divide. You could as easily class them under general fiction as under fantasy. And I’m sure some genre snobs would never think of him as a fantasy writer. Me, I see the teeniest bit of magic and it is going under sff. This novel, The Limits of Enchantment, is set in rural England in the 1960’s, when modern medical practices are taking over the role traditionally held by women like Mammy Cullen.

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Tags: 1960s, 8 Stars, 823.914, abortion, community, countryside, Graham Joyce, magic realism, outsiders, role of women, rural Britain, rural life, sff, The Limits of Enchantment, World Fantasy award nominee

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31
Jan

Bobby

   Posted by: Fence   in Moving Pictures

Writ & Dir: Emilio Estevez

  • Harry Belafonte - Nelson
  • Nick Cannon - Dwayne
  • Emilio Estevez - Tim Fallon
  • Laurence Fishburne - Edward Robinson
  • Heather Graham - Angela
  • Anthony Hopkins - John Casey
  • Helen Hunt - Samantha
  • Joshua Jackson - Wade
  • Ashton Kutcher - Fisher
  • William H. Macy - Paul
  • Demi Moore - Virginia Fallon
  • Freddy Rodríguez - José
  • Martin Sheen - Jack
  • Christian Slater - Timmons
  • Sharon Stone - Miriam
  • Jacob Vargas - Miguel
  • Elijah Wood - William
  • David Krumholtz - Phil

Image Hosted by ImageShack.usAs you can see from that impressive cast list, this is a bit of an ensemble film, which means it runs the risk of the audience not caring about the characters. And I’m afraid it failed. I just didn’t care about any of them.

And the story itself was a whole heap of nothingness. I mean, I’m sure that it may have an impact on people who lived through the time, or for those who are big fans of Bobby Kennedy, but as a film it just didn’t work. It tried far too hard to push through some big message, but ended up coming over as heavy-handed, irrelevant and, to be blunt, crap. The various stories of the different characters are un-engaging. The acting is all fine, but the characters themselves are pointless. Pointless and boring. I kept hoping for it to end.

What did work was the insertion of clips of RFK, but to be honest, while I liked watching them I found it impossible to actually listen to anything that Bobby was saying. Maybe it was because I was so bored with the film, I don’t know.

Maybe it is because I don’t know anything about Bobby Kennedy, but this film did nothing but make me yawn. Then again, the film isn’t really about Bobby, it is about the people of the time and the affect he had on them. Everyone seemed to love him, or at least everyone in the film did, considering the fact that he got assassinated I’m sure someone must have disliked him. The film is a snapshot of one day in these various people’s lives, but that is it, there is nothing to focus on, or think about, or engage with. I just didn’t care about anything that happened.

Sure the ending works, but not because you care about any of the characters, but simply because it is people getting shot and panicking in a realistic manner. And of course because you know that this is all based on the truth.

Final verdict? Don’t bother with it. It’s crap.

IMDb | Cinematical | Edward Copeland on Film | Black Sheep Reviews

Tags: 1960s, 2 Stars, Anthony Hopkins, Ashton Kutcher, assassin, Bobby, Bobby Kennedy, Bored Now!, Christian Slater, David Krumholtz, Demi Moore, Elijah Wood, Emilio Estevez, ensemble cast, Freddy Rodríguez, Harry Belafonte, Heather Graham, Helen Hunt, Jacob Vargas, Joshua Jackson, Laurence Fishbourne, Martin Sheen, Nick Cannon, politics, Sharon Stone, William H. Macy

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