Posts Tagged ‘character driven’

14
Feb

Juno

   Posted by: Fence   in Moving Pictures

Dir: Jason Reitman
Writ: Diablo Cody

  • Ellen Page … Juno MacGuff
  • Michael Cera … Paulie Bleeker
  • Jennifer Garner … Vanessa Loring
  • Jason Bateman … Mark Loring
  • Allison Janney … Bren MacGuff
  • J.K. Simmons … Mac MacGuff
  • Olivia Thirlby … Leah

Juno is 16. And pregnant. At first she thinks she’ll have an abortion, but changes her mind, she’ll continue to be pregnant but she isn’t interested in being a Mommy. She’ll give the baby up for adoption. So she takes a look in the PennySaver, which I’m guessing is similar to our Buy & Sell, and finds a couple she thinks will make good parents.

Don’t you just hate plot summaries? Rarely do they make a film/book sound good. But don’t let that put you off, go see this film.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: 8 Stars, Allison Janny, character driven, comedy, Diablo Cody, Ellen Page, J.K. Simmons, Jason Bateman, Jason Reitman, Jennifer Garner, Juno, Michael Cara, offbeat, Olivia Thirlby, pregnancy, R15A, teenagers

Related posts

Writ & Dir: Andrew Dominik ; based on the book by Ron Hansen

  • Brad Pitt … Jesse James
  • Mary-Louise Parker … Zee James
  • Casey Affleck … Robert Ford
  • Sam Rockwell … Charley Ford
  • Jeremy Renner … Wood Hite
  • Sam Shepard … Frank James
  • Garret Dillahunt … Ed Miller
  • Paul Schneider … Dick Liddil

I loved this film.

I loved everything about it. The acting was brilliant. The way the story unfolded. The narration. The casting. The scenery. The cinematography. The soundtrack. Everything was just great. Best film I’ve seen this year. Which’d be a higher compliment if this wasn’t the first film I’ve been to see so far this year. But I’m guessing it’ll be up on the top ten list by the end of 2008.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: 10 Stars, 1860-1890, Andrew Dominik, based on book, betrayal, biopic, Brad Pitt, C19th, Casey Affleck, character driven, Garret Dilahunt, Jeremy Renner, Jesse James, Mary-Louise Parker, murder, Paul Schneider, R15A, Ron Hansen, Sam Rockwell, Sam Shepard, The Assassination of Jesse James by the coward Robert F, USA - western

Related posts

20
Jan

The Liveship Traders

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Author: Robin Hobb

    Books in series:

  1. Ship of Magic
  2. The Mad Ship
  3. Ship of Destiny

DDC: 813.54
reread with ffseries

She wondered what it would have been like to be perfect.

Image of Ship of MagicI really love Hobb’s writing. And while I slightly prefer her Fitz books I do love this Liveship trilogy too.

I can’t say too much about the plot as I don’t want to spoil any of the three books, but essentially it revolves around the Vestrit family. They are one of the Old Trader families in Bingtown, a settlement under the control of the Satrap, but not an integral part of the Empire. In recent years an influx of “New Traders” has been upsetting the balance of power in the town, especially as many have brought their slaves and the slave trade to Bingtown. Althea, the younger daughter of the Vestrits had always thought that she would inherit their ship when her father passed on, but she had never thought it would be so soon. And when the ship instead goes to her older sister and husband Althea is outraged, and promises to herself that she will do whatever it takes to get her ship back. For the Vivacia is not a normal ship, made of wizardwood it quickens after three generations of a family have died aboard and becomes a Liveship, capable of talking, thinking and acting for herself. Althea’s father is the third generation to die on Vivacia’s deck. This is another reason Althea objects to the plans to turn her into a slaver in order to try and make money.

Image of The Mad ShipAnd then there is the pirate Kennit, he has recently started to hunt down slaveships, killing the crews and freeing the slaves, earning himself quite a reputation and a following. He has always wanted a Liveship, and Vivacia looks ideal for his purposes.

The third strand of this storyline is that of the sea serpents. For countless years they have roamed the sea, but now something has changed.

And I haven’t even started discussing Malta, Althea’s neice, or the Wild Rain Traders.

Image of Ship of DestinyThe blurb on the back compares these books to the Aubrey and Maturin series, if they were fantasy novels, and I suppose as two well written adventure series about ships and sailors they have a certain amount in common. I prefer the Liveships though. Mainly because of the characters. You might not always like Hobb’s characters, in fact I’d have doubts over anyone who actually liked Kennit as a person, but there is no doubt that he is an intriguing character. All of the main characters have faults and failings, none are the all conquering hero, and the story is all the better for this sort of reality.

Just be prepared, Hobb never lets her characters have an easy life.

Tags: 813.54, 9 Stars, character driven, magic, ocean, Robin Hobb, sailors, series, sff, Ship of Destiny, Ship of Magic, Six Duchies 'verse, The Liveship Traders, The Mad Ship

Related posts

10
Jan

The Three Evangelists

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Author: Fred Vargas trans. Sian Reynolds
ISBN: 978099469551
DDC: 843.914
See also: Library Thing ; Winner of the Duncan Lawrie International Dagger ; Guardian Review ; Michael’s Musings ; My tragic right hip

‘Pierre, something’s wrong with the garden,’ said Sophia.
She opened the window and examined the patch of ground. She knew it by heart, every blade of grass. What she saw sent a shiver down her spine.

Image of The Three EvangelistsThe first Vargas book I read was Seeking Whom He May Devour, which I loved, and the reason I picked it up was because I liked the cover, well, this one doesn’t have quite such a gripping cover, but it really did grow on me. It is quite simple, just a tree picked out by a shaft of light in a garden, everything else is half hidden in the darkness. It really suits the story.

As I’ve mentioned before characters are what make, or break, a book for me. And this book has great, if slightly odd, stars. Eccentric is probably the polite term.

Sophia, the first character we meet used to be an opera singer. Not among the top-notch singers, but a lot better than halfway decent. She lives in Paris with her husband, Pierre, when one morning she wakes to find a tree planted in her back garden. She is intrigued, puzzled and a little scared by this. Who would have done such a thing? And why. Pierre isn’t too bothered by this sudden arrival of a plant, thinking perhaps it is a present from an old fan.

Pierre despised the fans who had come before him and the ones who had come after him, in other words, all of them.

Sophia doesn’t think this likely and can’t stop thinking about the tree and what possible reason someone could have for planting it in the middle of the night in her garden. When she sees a young man viewing the tumbledown disgrace of a house next door she asks him if he can identify it. It is a beech tree. What possible meaning could a beech tree have?

This young man, Marc, is a down on his luck historian. And because he has little money and few job prospects as a Medieval historian he agrees to rent the house next to Sophia’s. It is cheap, because of the state it is in, but even so, Marc cannot afford the rent by himself. And so, against his better judgment he asks in two fellow historians, but these other historians are not really to Marc’s taste. Neither is interested in the Middle Ages. One, Mathias, Marc liked a lot but the problem is that he is a specialist on prehistoric man.

As far as Marc was concerned, once you’d said that, you’d said it all.

The other, Lucien, works on the Great War, a contemporary historian.

Despite this gulf in interests the three get on quite well, and together with Vandoosler, an ex-cop and Marc’s godfather they move into the ‘disgrace’ and so meet Sophia. She calls around, still worried about the tree, and although they have never met, almost at once they begin to understand her fear; perhaps there is a body hidden under the beech tree.

I won’t bother describing anymore of the plot details, because I don’t want to give away too much of the mystery, but also, because while it is an enjoyable and entertaining story it was the characters that kept me reading. The characters and the writing. Vargas has a great, easy to read, style that is full of humour. It keeps you turning pages, not necessarily to find out what will happen, but to find out more about her quirky (in a good) way characters.

Obviously in a translated work I can’t be too sure of the original but translator Sian Reynolds has a great turn of phrase, and there are plenty of wonderful passages to enjoy.

His thoughts were in a whirl, clashing or diverging. Like the plates that move along on top of the hot heaving magma underneath, the molten mantle of the earth. It’s a scary thought, those plates sliding in all directions over the earth, unable to stay put. Tectonic plates, they’re called. Well, he was having tectonic thoughts. The thoughts were sliding about inside his head and sometimes, inevitably, the clashed. With the usual sodding consequences.

As for the reason for the title, well Vandoosler takes to calling his house mates after the three evangelists; St. Matthew, St. Mark and St. Luke.

Tags: 843.914, character driven, detective, Fred Vargas, French, historians, murder, mystery, police, series, Sian Reynolds, The Three Evangelists, translated

Related posts

15
Dec

Twilight

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Author: Stephenie Meyer
ISBN: 1904233805
DDC: 813.6
See also: LibraryThing ; Official Site

My mother drove me to the airport with the windows rolled down. It was seventy-five degrees in Phoenix, the sky a perfect, cloudless blue. I was wearing my favorite shirt -sleeveless, white eyelet lace; I was wearing it as a farewell gesture. My carry-on item was a Parka.

Image of TwilightI picked this up in Chapters because the title and author sounded vaguely familiar, I wasn’t sure from where, and I don’t like that cover, but it was only €4, so I figured what the hell. Turned out I’d seen it mentioned over at Heather’s and I think that Andi enjoyed it too.

The American cover is a lot nicer, but the novel itself is the thing that is important, right?

At first I was a bit meh, the opening preface and the blurb at the back had me thinking this was your predictable teen vampire book. But once I got reading it I just couldn’t stop. Sure, it is a little predictable, and if you are a plot fan then you may not get a lot out of this book. Me, I like characters, and this has an excellent first person narrator in Isabella Swan, or Bella as she prefers to be called.

It isn’t a deep and serious literary work, but it is exactly what it sets out to be, a highly enjoyable and readable vampire romance. It is a real page turner, and I know I’ll want to read the sequel.

The basic plot revolves around Bella. She has left her home in Phoenix to live with the father in the sleepy, cloudy town of Forks, Washington State. Her mother has a new love interest and Bella wants her to have the space to be happy, so she has sacrificed her love of the sun for the rain of her father’s place. Once in Forks she finds herself the centre of attention, not always wanted, mainly for being the new girl. But she also begins to notice the Cullens, a family of outsiders that no one seems to talk to. And one of them in particular gets her attention.

Go on and read it if you have the chance, it is a lovely read.

Tags: 813.6, 9 Stars, character driven, first person narrator, great characters, horror, romance, series, sff, Stephanie Meyer, teen love, Twilight, vampires

Related posts

15
Jul

Shaman’s Crossing

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Author: Robin Hobb
Book #1 The Soldier Son
ISBN: 0007196148
DDC: 813.54
See also: LibraryThing; RobinHobb.com

I remember well the first time I saw the magic of the plainspeople


I’m a big fan of Hobb’s Fittz books, so I was looking forward to this coming out in paperback. And despite hearing some bad reviews I think it was a very enjoyable read. Not as good as the Farseer books, but still engaging and interesting.

Nevare Burvelle is the main character; the second son of a lord it is his destiny to become a soldier, an officer, and to fight, as all second sons must, for king and country. This is a duty and responsibility he looks forward to. The Writ of the good god lays out the life choices of nobility and Nevare has no problems with his path. He wants to be a good officer, to make his father proud, to bring honour to his family and his name.

This is very much a Hobb book, and by that I mean that character development is more important than plot, and I like that. But I would have to say that the story itself isn’t all that fascinating. Somewhat interesting, yes, but not as gripping as it could have been. If I’m totally honest it feels like an introduction to the life of Nevare rather than a book in its own right. Still, the story does end, so if don’t want to read on in the series, then you don’t have to.

Tags: 7 Stars, character driven, plauge, Robin Hobb, series, sff, Shaman's Crossing, soldier, Soldier Son, solid read

Related posts

3
Feb

Sideways

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Dir: Alexander Payne

* Paul Giamatti - Miles
* Thomas Haden Church - Jack

Thank God, a good film. A great film even, and seeing as the films I saw before this were stinkers, what a relief.

Jack and Miles are best friends, Miles is Jack’s best man for his upcoming wedding. So they head off for a least week of freedom. So far, it could be any buddy film, with all the horrors that might entail. But don’t worry, this is no gross-out film, instead it is a character driven comedy.

Its hard to try and summarise the plot of this film, because this film is so involved in the characters rather than the plot. Miles, an unpublished author is hiding a drink problem behind his “wine-tasting”, while Jack just wants to sleep with anything that moves.

It may take a little while to get into, we have to be introduced to the characters afterall but don’t be put off by that. This is a fantastic comedy that, while full of subtlety and small moments, also has some great laugh out loud moments. All I’ll say is lovely bobble hat. If you see the film you’ll understand

Tags: 8 Stars, Alexander Payne, buddy movie, character driven, comedy, Paul Giamatti, Sideways, Thomas Haden Church, wine

Related posts