Aug 10 2006

Miami Vice

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

Dir: Michael Mann
Writ: Michael Mann & TV show by Anthony Yerkovich

  • Colin Farrell - ‘Sonny’ Crockett
  • Jamie Foxx - Ricardo Tubbs
  • Li Gong - Isabella
  • Naomie Harris - Trudy Joplin
  • Ciarán Hinds - FBI Agent Fujima

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If I’m honest there isn’t much to say about this film. Overall it is a huge amount of meh. Nothing more, nothing less.

Maybe I should at the very least try?
Basic blot outline, Sonny and Ricardo are undercover agents, and after one an interagency force gets discovered, they go undercover in order to find out what agency is responsible for the leak, and how the drug dealers discovered this. So off they travel, to some poor drug-ridden, crime-infested South American country. And get the gig, now they are in with the baddies. But not quite trusted.

And then Sonny starts to fall for the main badguys’ girl, who is also a very efficent “business woman”

But I just didn’t care. Scenes and scenes of talk, talk, and wait for it, yes, a little more talk. Interspersed there are some very pretty shots. But scenery and talking doesn’t make for an entertaining film… actually I was entertained by Cave of the Yellow Dog which was very much scenery and dialogue, so I guess you can. But not here. It is all just so pointless. There’s no tension or drama. And while the action scenes do look great, they don’t feel great.

My final verdict? I’ll paraphrase the woman who left the cinema just after me “In all fairness now, that was fucking woeful.”

IMDb | The House Next Door | The Sobering Conclusion | Darm Matters

Tags: 5 Stars, action, Anthony Yerkovich, based on a TV show, Ciarán Hinds, Colin Farrell, crime, drugs, explosions, Jamie Foxx, Li Gong, meh, Miami Vice, Michael Mann, Naomie Harris, police, undercover cops

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Jul 27 2006

I will make a cup of dark, mysterious, uncharted tea

Published by Fence under Family

Not too long ago, a certain someone left a comment asking about why my various brothers should never, ever be left with anything vaguely resembling explosives.

My quick answer would be, have you met my brothers, but then just as quickly you all would say No. No we haven’t[1]

I’m not sure how the conversation began, I was in the pub teaching de gasur[2] all about the flashy lights of pub quiz games. But when I came out B#2 was reminiscing about the time he gotten a tube of some pipe or other, and filled it with the heads of thousands of matches, as well as some other form of explosive. To which [tag]B#1[/tag] commented, “That’s a pipe-bomb.” B#2 nodded, as though it is the most natural thing in the world.

And of course once the stories of explosives began they had to continue. B#1 has gotten some sort of souvenir from an uncle. He had served in the Lebannon[3] and had brought back some presents. As you do, you know the sort of thing I’m talking about. Amour-piercing shells[4] and the like. It’s still around, although at one stage B#1 was going to take it apart. For once sense seems to have intervened and he didn’t.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usThen there were the stories about the potassium. And how easy it was to remove from chemistry class, and how he wondered exactly what’d happen if he threw it in a puddle. And how a first year came out just as the water began to fizz, and jumped over the puddle just in time. Not to mention the neat trick of getting repeating banger type things[5] and sticking them in someone’s schoolbag to watch them hop about as they tried to escape.

And those bangers prompted B#4 to recall the time he and the cronies had rolled up 100[6] of these repeaters and stuck ‘em in a tube to see what would happen[7]

Remember Homer Simpson and the hose incident “Hmm, it doesn’t seem to be working. I’ll just raise the pipe to my eye -” Yup. That is exactly what the ever so smart B#4 did. Luckily enough it was after he had taken a glance and then left the pipe down again that the last of the bangers exploded.

Such a surprise, as he was never a pyro as a kid, and never ever used to light almost every match in the box just because. Or have fun putting his finger through the flame, or messing with aerosols and flame[8] And then of course he had the story of how, when setting off some fireworks, decided to light one in his hand. All was going well. Fuse lit, he was looking away so it wouldn’t blind him, and he let go. Only then he heard something funny. The firework had gotten caught in his sleeve and was still hanging there, by his hand.

How on earth he still has his hand I don’t quite know.

So B#1 comes back with his story is sitting in the back of class one day, scraping the gunpowder out of a shell[9] So, the busy little bee is using a metal something-or-other[10] to scrape out the [tag]gunpowder[/tag]. Has almost all of it out when oops, scraped a litte too hard and bang! Cloud of smoke over his head.

B#5 had no stories to share. A point that B#4 was keen to point out. Saying that the younger generation of locals[11] are too into their sport to drink and mess about.

My brothers, suspended? Never. All as good as gold they were.

Linknotes:
  1. apart from NM
  2. the nephew
  3. 20 years ago-ish
  4. as Anne pointed out, this is a typo, although such a great one I can’t fix it
  5. I must have missed out of this part of my teenage life
  6. maybe more, maybe less, but a substantial number
  7. another case of as you would I think
  8. I’m guessing you all understand that by never I actually mean quite often right?
  9. I’m not sure exactly what it was the gunpowder was coming out of. Only, it was metal.
  10. to give it its official title
  11. there is all of 3 years, maybe, age difference
Tags: B#1, B#2, B#4, de brothers, de gasúr, explosions, Lebannon

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