Creative COW SIGN IN :: SPONSORS :: ABOUT US :: CONTACT US
BLOGS: My COW BlogMacWorldEditingTechnologyAfter EffectsFinal CutEntertainment

family

For your Netflix Delectation

One of my favorite Netflix features is that you can stream movies in your queue. Add this one to your queue so that you can start streaming it to your computer right now: Henry Poole Is Here. The trailer's vibe makes it seem wacky...but it's not. The music is all wrong, NOTHING like the music in the movie. But it might still give you some idea: it's slow, quiet, lyrical, a little sad, and very sweet, about what you might find at the end of your rope.





And you can start streaming it now.

I gotta tell you. We've really gotten into the two of us, watching movies gathered close around the laptop in bed. You can't do it ALL the time, but it's very intimate. This is the perfect movie for that.

While it's not streaming, this next one is a picture with a similar slow, sweet vibe. Again, the music is all wrong - the score is by Michael Penn, and gorgeous. So are the shots - gorgeous frame after gorgeous frame, which the trailer gives absolutely no sense of. But again, hopefully, a little sense that this reaches way past cliches, way past the pain, into building something new and real.





We watched this one on the big screen (REALLY big - a 100-inch front projection system), but still a very, very intimate picture.

(The big screen ain't just about me, btw. Every time we've moved, my wife wouldn't even consider a house that doesn't enough throw-room for a projector. She bought one of those laser measuring thingies to make it easier to figure out.)


That streaming Netflix thing really is off the hook. As you might guess from other of my entries, I'm not buying the Blu-ray hype...but the built-in Netflix streaming in many newer models is tempting enough that my wife said it's time for us to start looking around at our player options. (Ah, that's my girl!)

So anyway, two movies that will reaffirm your faith in life, in love, and in moviemaking.

Posted by: Tim Wilson on Aug 30, 2009 at 8:54:51 am Comments (0) movies, entertainment, family, netflix, bluray, tv

Please tell me you're reading Harry Potter

It's impossible to overstate the impact of Harry Potter on the past ten years of world bookselling. As a bookseller in the mid-80s, I never imagined numbers like this could even be possible: 8.3 million copies of "Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows" in the first 24 hours of US sales, with another 2.7 million in the UK. In the first hour, my former peeps at Barnes & Noble alone sold 156 copies per second! Here in the world of media, we know better than anyone that there's no connection whatsoever between popularity and quality (insert snarky pop-culture reference here). But here's the thing: I think it's almost impossible to overstate how good this series is, the latest installment in particular.

Not that everyone agrees. The American Library Association noted during their Banned Books week last September that the books in Harry Potter series are the most frequently challenged in the 21st century.

They've also been subject to the largest bookburnings in American history, with one particular conflagration of 1.5 million copies all by itself. (Feel free to find your own link. None from me, though.) Of course, these geniuses included as part of their grounds that our boy Harry killed his parents with a butcher knife. Harry didn't kill them, there's no knife involved in their deaths. In fact, not a single butcher knife anywhere in the thousands of pages in the series.

Grrrrrrr.....

Okay, with THAT out of the way, I'm still astounded by how much I enjoyed this series. I'm a pokey reader, and have the attention span of a gnat. Yet the 756 pages flew by, a literal page-turner. Like the best so-called children's novels, their appeal is hardly limited to children. As entertaining as they are, they can also be dark and violent, playing out themes of war motivated by racial intolerance, class conflicts, political intrigue, a malicious press, the horrors (okay, and the rewards) of school, deep personal loss, and the power of friends and family connection to transcend them all.

Oh yeah, and a sense of fantasy, magic, wit, and childlike wonder. 

And as with many of the great children's novels, they're not anywhere near appropriate for all ages. The author, J. K. Rowling, recommends that kids not even be exposed to them before 6, and read only WITH kids until 9 or 10, which is what she did with her own kids.

I'm far from alone among well-read adults who feel that this series already stands alongside King Arthur, The Lord of the Rings, The Chronicles of Narnia and other heroic epics. 

That link, above, to Metacritic? One of the sites I check a couple of times a week. It's also rotated in and out of my home page. Here are some of the quotes that jumped out at me: 

Los Angeles Times: What Rowling has achieved in this book and the series can be described only as astonishing.

Chicago Tribune: This is a deeply engaging book, filled with love and loss, with crackling action and almost unbearable heartbreak.

Washington Post: I cried at the end of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. It's that rare thing, an instant classic that earns its catharsis honestly, not through hype or sentiment but through the author's vision and hard work.

And really, how often do you see a review fessing up that they cried?

Anyway, enough yammering from me. Follow the link to Metacritic and read the reviews yourself. Better still (you knew this was coming, right? The traditional closer) read these books yourself. And if you've read the others, hold on for the last installment. My heart's racing again just talking about it. 

As soon as we get the next issue of The COW Magazine out, I'm going to re-read all 7 of the books.

 

PS. Unlike Lord of the Rings, where I thought the movies were better (sorry), other than #3, the Harry Potter movies are just okay. Don't let them influence your feelings about the books.


Posted by: Tim Wilson on Jul 31, 2007 at 6:21:27 am Comments (3) entertainment, politics, family, books, creative cow magazine

Tim Wilson

Tim Wilson


Ah, to have an attention span...
Blog FeedRSS


Tags:

entertainment (29)
apple (19)
technology (16)
music (15)
movies (14)
macworld (11)
blogs (9)
television (8)
iphone (7)
bluray (7)
computers (7)
itunes (6)
ipod (6)
creative cow magazine (6)
politics (5)
hd dvd (5)
websites (4)
web (4)
drm (4)
google (4)
adobe (4)
hd (4)
creative cow (4)
commercials (4)
stereoscopic 3d (4)
apple tv (3)
microsoft (3)
indie film (3)
photoshop (3)
business (3)
beatles (3)
3d (3)
games (3)
dvd (3)
music videos (2)
tron (2)
joseph kosinski (2)
storage (2)
mac os (2)
family (2)
mark romanek (2)
tv (2)
food (2)
documentaries (2)
gaming (2)
windows os (1)
workflow (1)
robert zemeckis (1)
super bowl (1)
flash (1)
books (1)
sports (1)
cameras (1)
podcasting (1)
travel (1)
premiere pro (1)
health care (1)
nine inch nails (1)
editing (1)
cheap trick (1)
economy (1)
sgt pepper (1)
trent reznor (1)
yellow submarine (1)
digital photography (1)
4k (1)
reald (1)
home theater (1)
muppets (1)
south park (1)
sesame st (1)
sony (1)
3d filmmaking (1)
sony f35 (1)
david fincher (1)
fotokem (1)
willie nelson (1)
dreamworks (1)
stereoscopic (1)
video games (1)
blackmagic design (1)
effects (1)
netflix (1)
the future (1)
ces (1)
nikon (1)
canon (1)
compositing (1)
oscars (1)
motion capture (1)
internet (1)
itouch (1)
app store (1)
directv (1)
creativity (1)


Archives:

September 2009 (2)
August 2009 (3)
June 2009 (1)
April 2009 (4)
March 2009 (7)
January 2009 (3)
December 2008 (1)
November 2008 (2)
October 2008 (2)
April 2008 (3)
March 2008 (7)
February 2008 (3)
January 2008 (13)
November 2007 (1)
October 2007 (1)
September 2007 (6)
August 2007 (2)
July 2007 (2)
June 2007 (4)
May 2007 (3)
April 2007 (4)
March 2007 (9)
February 2007 (1)


FORUMSTUTORIALSMAGAZINETRAININGVIDEOS - REELSPODCASTSEVENTSSERVICESNEWSLETTERNEWSBLOGS

© CreativeCOW.net All rights are reserved.

[Top]