Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Shutter Island Directed by Martin Scorcese

I guess this blog should be called "The Watching Experience" also but I saw this movie last night and had to comment on it and warn everyone, Do Not See This Movie. It started out very good. It had kind of a noir feel with Leo Di'Caprio in a fedora. It was directed with a heavy hand in the first twenty minutes and when you get to the end you realize why it started out the way it did but it's not worth the wait to get there. The "twist" ending was something out of M. Night Shamalan (I don't know how to spell that sorry) and I don't mean the Sixth Sense ending, I mean like The Village ending. Very, very disappointing. If anyone has seen this and liked it, please let me know.

Libra by Don Delillo and Case Closed by Gerald Posner

I recommend reading these two books together. I read Libra first and then Case Closed. Libra is Delillo's interpretation of the Kennedy assassination. It is written in an impressionistic fashion, good writing but in a 400 page novel dealing with Lee Harvey Oswald and intrigue about mobsters it does get a little wearying at times. It's amazing how many details Delillo uses from the actual incidents in Oswald's life to create a layered personality and he takes the loose ends surrounding Oswald to create a very loose "conspiracy." It's a good way to see Oswald as an actual person and not the cipher that most conspiracy books paint him to be.
Case Closed by Posner is the most detailed account that I've seen to depict Oswald's actions as being consistent with someone who would be capable of killing a president by himself. The only book I've ever read about the assassination of Kennedy was Crossfire by Jim Marrs which the movie JFK was loosely based on. Crossfire read by itself is convincing that Oswald was involved in some sort of conspiracy if only by the evidence that most of his actions the year before the assassination make little sense. But the case that Posner lays out in Case Closed puts all of his actions into context. The context is that Oswald was a delusional and unhappy person who thought it was impossible for him to be happy as long as corrupt governments, whether it be in America or the Soviet Union, existed to oppress him and others like him.
The trouble most people have in accepting the lone gunman theory is that it seems so hard to comprehend that one crazy person can change the course of history in such a large way. But Posner states the facts so clearly and the almost incredible chain of coincidences that lead to JFK's assassination, it's hard to argue with him. For better or worse most of who we are and what are lives consist of (where we work, who we love and the very fact that we exist) exist from chance and being in the right (or wrong) place at the right (or wrong) time. It's difficult to think that world history can change by circumstance and blind chance, but it did.

Bag of Bones: Conclusion

Bag of Bones Conclusion:

I stopped posting updates because the plot of this book became so convoluted, while not impossible to post a synopsis of every development it became ponderous to do so. The ending of this book was something only a King lover could appreciate, ridiculous. I still like this book and I also think that the beginning of the novel showed that King could write a very nice “mainstream” work if he ever took the trouble to. His collection of mainstream novellas containing, The Body, Apt Pupil and Shawshank Redemption prove this. I wish he would do more in that kind of vain.
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I also read Under The Dome a thousand pager King recently released. It’s kind of a small scale version of The Stand only dealing with the destruction of small town instead of the entire world. The “villain” in the piece while evil was not a supernatural evil just a very “evil” man but of a human sort of evil not a demon like in The Stand. The ending was worthy of a sub-par Twilight Zone and the two main male characters were so interchangeable that they may as well have been the same person. If you could wade through the mountains of poor dialogue you got a halfway decent story. Slight praise I know, but for a 1,000 page novel it was slight.