Oct 14 2007

Black Sheep

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.usDir & Writ: Jonathan King

  • Nathan Meister … Henry Oldfield
  • Danielle Mason … Experience
  • Peter Feeney … Angus Oldfield
  • Tammy Davis … Tucker
  • Glenis Levestam … Mrs. Mac

This is the story of Henry Oldfield, son of a prominent sheep farmer in New Zealand, who, following a tragic incident in his childhood, suffers from a fear of sheep. He returns to the farm to sell his share of the family property to his older brother Angus. But while there is discovers the terrible secret… Angus has been experimenting in order to create a new breed of sheep, The Oldfield, but things go a little wrong and before you know it the mutant killer sheep are terrorising the land.

Continue Reading »

Tags: 7 Stars, Black Sheep, comedy, Danielle Mason, fun, Glenis Levestam, horror, horror-com, Jonathan King, Nathan Meister, New Zealand, Peter Feeney, sheep, Tammy Davis

Related posts

No responses yet

Apr 22 2006

Seeking Whom He May Devour

Published by Fence under Books

ISBN: 0098461560
Author: Fred Vargas Trans from the French: David Bellos
DDC: 843.914

On Tuesday, four sheep were killed at Ventebrune in the French Alps. On Thursday, nine were lost at Pierrefort. “It’s the wolves,” a local said. “They’re coming down to eat us all up.”
The other man drained his glass, then raised his hand. “A wolf, Pierrot, my lad. It’s a wolf. A beast such as you have never clapped eyes on before. Coming down, as you say, to eat us all up.”


Yes again a cover influenced purchase, so I am glad to report that a good cover can lead to a good read too. I really enjoyed this book. The language, characters and descriptions are fantastic, so I suppose a lot of praise must also go to the translater as well.

The book opens with the character of Lawrence Donald Johnstone, a Canadian in France to film wolves. He’s been away from his true love, grizzly bears, for far too long, and is rooting in in Mercantour. Not only for the skinny European wolves, although he has come to love them, but also because there’s a woman, Camille, in his life.

But when dead sheep, always ewes are found the locals begin to look at the “foreign Italian wolves” with suspicion and hate. They organise local hunts. Coming to believe that it is all the work of one, huge, extraordinary animal.

Camille has her own ideas, especially after a friend Suzanne is found killed just like a sheep. She begins to suspect that a local is responsible. She doesn’t buy into Suzanne’s theory of a werewolf, but she sets out along with Watchee the shepard and Soliman, Suzanne’s adopted son to track down the killer. Things, however, do not turn out to be quite as straight forward as she’d hoped, and she is forced to ask an old friend for help. This old flame is Commissaire Adamsberg. And he is quite a character.

That is how Adamsberg used his brain, like an ocean that you trust entirely to feed you well, but wich you’ve long ago given up trying to tame.

I loved Adamsberg. He is so very different from the logical reasoning detective in the Sherlock Holmes mode. Instead he is an interesting, fascinating character, with his own, highly personal way of getting things done.

‘Dunno’ was among the frequent of Adamsber’g utterances. He fell back on it neither from laziness nor from lack of wits, but bcause he really did not know the answer and was ready to admit it. The commissaire’s passive ignorance bemused and maddened his deputy, who could not conceive of the possibility of taking any apropriate steps in full ignorance of the facts. Wavering was Adamsberg’s most natural element, however, and his most productive by far.

Or maybe it just that I see parts of myself with my wavering in him.

The whole book is full of wonderful turns of phrases, and great characters. The actual plot itself is not so important, and you’ll probably have worked out the ending before the characters. But that isn’t really a negative point, in my opinion, I was content to just read and enjoy this book.

Splitting a guy in two goes beyond the legal limits of violence between neighbours

I enjoyed it so much, that had I not been the final stop on the train I may actually have missed it, I was so engrossed in the book.

Camille shrugged. “Sometimes things just click for all sorts of lousy reasons, but loads of good reasons just cant unclick them ever again.”

Tags: 10 Stars, 843.914, Adamsberg, brilliant characters, crime, David Bellos, detective, Fred Vargas, French, murder, police, Seeking Whom He May Devour, sheep, translated, wolves, wonderful writing

Related posts

2 responses so far

Apr 12 2006

The Dark

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

Image Hosted by ImageShack.usDir. John Fawcett
Written. Stephen Massicotte based on the novel Sheep by Simon Maginn

  • Maria Bello - Adele
  • Sean Bean - James
  • Sophie Stuckey - Sarah
  • Aibigal Stone - Ebril

With atmospheric camera work over waves the opening credits of this film make way for Adele and her daughter Sarah as they drive through a remote part of Wales, looking for Sarah’s father’s house. They arrived early, and are now quite lost. Even forced to spending the night in the car when night falls and the car gets stuck in the mood. Cue a dream sequence where Adele dreams of being pushed off the nearby cliff. She wakes, face to face with a herd of sheep staring through the window. Enough to make anyone jump.

Eventually they make it to James’ house, he is an artist and has plans to turn the abbatoir attached to the house into a studio. As if the big old ramshackle house isn’t creppy enough, we have to have an abbatoir?

Anyways, I found a lot to like in this film. Bello and Bean are believable as concerned, possibly divorced, parents. I was a bit doubtful about Sean Bean’s haircut, but he is very adorable as the doting daddy :) if under used. But Bello is slightly off at times, which may, or may not be intended. And the girl who plays the mysterious Ebill is very good. So no complaints on the acting side of things. There is a nice little atmosphere built up throughout the first half of the film. It isn’t really jump out of your skin terror, but just a vague unease. And let me tell you, sheep are evil. But I’m sure it was some feat of animal handling to get those skittish sheep to act in such a strange manner.

But overall the film doesn’t really do its job. Its a bit too open as to what is going on. And things that I’m sure would have worked in a book aren’t translated too well on the screen. Still the ending is worth waiting for, and I enjoyed the 95 minutes or so that I spent watching it. And I wouldn’t object to watching it again.

If you go looking for scares you won’t enjoy it, and there is too much time spent trying to be all “Japanese horror” about it, so my enjoyment may not be shared by all.

IMDb | SFX | IndieLondon | steverogerson | Samizdisandat

Tags: 7 Stars, Aibigal Stone, based on book, horror, John Fawcett, Maria Bello, Sean Bean, sheep, Simon Maginn, Sophie Stuckey, Stephen Massicotte, The Dark, Wales

Related posts

One response so far

Dec 12 2005

“Stop throwing the Constitution in my face… It’s just a goddamned piece of paper!â€?

Published by Fence under Moving Pictures

This film about Marie Antionette looks interesting, although with Sofia Coppola involved I’m hoping it’ll be better than the oh-so-boring Lost in Translation (found via bookish)

And I think everyone should at least raise an eyebrow at Bush’s alleged remarks about the US Constitution. First off, if the story is false it should be denied at once, and if it is true, well that’s a whole bigger problem isn’t it?

“I don’t give a goddamn,� Bush retorted. “I’m the President and the Commander-in-Chief. Do it my way.� (via TCAL.net

There is a very interesting post on the lack of farming blogs over at realitycheck(dot)ie, and while my immediate family didn’t farm, I do have memories of rounding up my uncle’s sheep[1] and of summer on my grandparents farm down in Tip, and collecting turf with the Donegal cousins. As well as chickens living in cars. Can’t forget those

And don’t you just love Firefox extensions. I accidently closed down the browser without posting, but because I have that session saver thingy my post was safe. Huzzah! Huzzah for extensions.

Linknotes:
  1. please note, all sheep are evil. EVIL!
Tags: Bored Now!, Lost In Translation, Marie Antionette, nostalgia, sheep, Sofia Coppola

Related posts

13 responses so far

Jan 28 2005

To counteract

Published by Fence under Pointless

those long posts, go play the sheep dash game. I’m a bobbing bobcat.

Tags: games, sheep

Related posts

No responses yet