"Black Rabbit of Inlé" by Ken Whytock CC BY-NC 2.0 |
TV Quote of the Week: “I didn’t believe I’d ever see my racist Aunt Ida licking up gasoline at the Arco station on Saticoy with her Filipino nurse from the Jewish Home for the aging, but it happened. Anything is possible now.” —Principal Burr in Daybreak s1e06
What I’m Reading
King Solomon by Kristian Zahrtmann |
What I’m Watching
Onward (2020) (trailer). This beautiful new story from Disney Pixar more or less skipped theaters because of the pandemic lockdown. It’s now included on Disney+ and available to rent on other platforms. Be prepared to reallocate some of your precious tissues to mop up tears of joy. As usual for Disney features, the voice cast is top shelf. Lead female roles bring together comedy legend Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Oscar winner Octavia Spencer. Lead male voices are two Peters of Avengers fame, Quill (Star-Lord) and Parker (Spider-Man), that is, Chris Pratt and Tom Holland.
Motherless Brooklyn (2019) (trailer). I thoroughly enjoyed this book by Jonathan Lethem (Amazon), and I'm a big fan of Ed Norton, who was born in Boston and grew up in Maryland, so I eagerly awaited this theatrical release—though not as earnestly as Ed Norton awaited it, the film adaptation being his 20-year passion project. It did not disappoint. Norton himself played the protagonist with a performance reminiscent of his genius alongside Brando and De Niro in The Score. Michael Kenneth Williams, The Wire’s Omar, gets to be a mostly good guy for a change, the enigmatic “trumpet man.” There are small but significant roles, too, for Robert Wisdom, another Wire alum (“Bunny”), and Fisher Stevens, who seems to be in everything, but whom I’ll always identify favorably with Early Edition.
Star Wars: The Clone Wars (2008) (trailer). What do you really know about Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi? The Star Wars movies show us only dramatic highlights of their lives. At some point, Skywalker and Kenobi, together with Master Yoda, waged war, and their bond was forged in that fire. Such is the story of The Clone Wars, set between live-action episodes II (Attack of the Clones (2002)) and III (Revenge of the Sith (2005)). Friends have told me for years to embrace this animated saga, and now I’m sucked in. Best part? Seven seasons of televised series (2008-14, 2020) followed this 2008 film, Disney+ having revived the show for a finale season this year. So I’m going to need a clone to watch all of that. I’m giving a miss to the earlier three-season animation (no “The” in the subtitle) that ran from 2003 to 2005; it was pre-CGI.
Watership Down (2018) (BBC trailer). The animation is superb in this BBC-Netflix co-production. With James McAvoy as Hazel, this four-installment adaptation is not the first to adapt to screen the Richard Adams’s 1972 classic (N.Y. Times Mag.). A 1978 British animated film won a Saturn Award; Art Garfunkel sang “Bright Eyes” for it. A British-Canadian animated series ran for three seasons, from 1999 to 2001, but never aired in the United States. Two years ago, we postponed watching this Netflix incarnation because, for an animation about bunnies, it’s heavy emotional lifting. As James Parker wrote of the novel for The Atlantic, “An unprecedented mash-up of eco-anxiety, homely bottom-of-the-garden anthropomorphism, real violence, and febrile mythmaking, Watership Down struck a nerve.” That’s only more true of this miniseries in our present era of climate change, pandemic, and xenophobia.
The Night Of (2016) (HBO). I’m not usually one for what is essentially a criminal procedural, even if well crafted. But this 2016 production came recommended by a reliable source, and I couldn't resist John Turturro as a scruffy, docks-trolling criminal defense lawyer who’s smarter than anyone gives him credit for. The show is one part Oz and one part The Practice, spiced with a pinch of The Verdict. Michael Kenneth Williams is in this one, too, as a scary prison gang leader, and so is Fisher Stevens, who has some darkly funny scenes as pharmacist to Turturro’s eczema-afflicted attorney.
Tales from the Loop (2020) (Amazon). We’ve just started this new release from Amazon Prime, and I’m all in. I do not fully understand how a crowd-funded book of surreal science-fiction art by Swedish artist Simon Stålenhag in 2015 got turned into first a role-playing game (2017) and then this TV show. I think it best not to ask too many questions. Critics have knocked the show for being slow, and ordinarily, slow plays poorly with me. But Legion alum Nathaniel Halpern wrote these odd and beautiful stories, and, at just e03 of 8, I’m spellbound with anticipation of more. Halpern mixes the classical wonder of Amazing Stories Magazine with the playful ingenuity of Stranger Things to serve up a premise irresistible to those of us reared on dandelion wine.
Give it a miss: I’ve liked Ed Helms since he worked for Jon Stewart, but, save a line here and there, Netflix's Coffee & Kareem (2020) was unwatchably unfunny.
Also out now: We just discovered that Apple TV+ has made some of its top original content free during lockdown, so check it out.
What I’m Eating
Our Easter feast was simple but delicious: ham, potatoes, peas, and homemade bread. My wife made my late aunt’s annual springtime-classic peach pie for dessert: brilliant, even though we could find only canned peaches.
My gifted wife also this week made chicken garam masala on basmati rice, a favorite in our house. In the past, she has made the garam masala herself, from its component spices, but products such as McCormick’s, used here, are a satisfying convenience.
Image by BlackRiv from Pixabay |
I picked up cactus-fruit jelly in North Africa, and it’s been chilling in the fridge. Faced with an abundance of fresh bread this week, we cracked it open. Not bad. Tastes like … I don’t know, cactus fruit.
What I’m Drinking
Alto Grande. “The coffee of Popes and Kings,” this premium bean, grown in “ideal soil and climate conditions” in Puerto Rico’s mountainous interior, makes a brew too bold for the coffee novice. We’re indebted to a family friend (Twitter) for our supply line.
Rhody Coyote Hard Apple Cider. Celebrating Easter, we opened this harvest holdover from nearby Newport Vineyards. When things get back to normal, there's a tasting room.
Chicory Root Vodka. The flavored liquors of Philadelphia’s Art in the Age distillery never disappoint. The New Hampshire-drawn maple syrup eclipses the chicory in this vodka, but the balance is delectably sippable. Also a tasting room in better times.
Scapegrace Gin. How often does a gin teach you a new word? “Scapegrace” originated in the 18th century to mean a rogue or rascal: one who escapes God’s grace. Unironically, the name attached to this gin when New Zealand maker Rogue Society Distilling went international and confronted Oregon-based Rogue Ales in a European trademark tangle. Thus this small-batch brand means to make its mark with a rough-and-tumble reputation in a dark bottle that pays homage to gin’s progenitor genever. A suite of botanicals is led by juniper. Different accounts locate distillation in Auckland or Christchurch; either way, Scapegrace boasts water from New Zealand’s Southern Alps. But be warned: the gold variety, which we have, packs a navy-strength punch: at 57% ABV, it’ll make you forget all the new words you just learned. The classic silver weighs in at 42.2% ABV. I am keen to get my paws on some of “the world’s first naturally black gin,” Scapegrace Black, 41.6% ABV.
Whom I’m Wearing
Chartwell Wealth Management. Contact my friend Dan Harrington (LinkedIn) for financial advice in Rhode Island/South Coast. Dan wrote the ProJo op-ed on quarantine that I cited here on the blog a couple of weeks ago, with art by Dan’s talented daughter, Grace. This fashion choice puts me in good company: Dan’s and my friend Komlan N. Aloysh sported a Chartwell T to launch his new YouTube channel, on which he interviews “African changemakers both on the continent and in the diaspora.”
Happy birthday to my dear wife, and happy Earth Day!
Eating, Drinking, and Wearing images except oranges are mine, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.
[*UPDATE, April 19: To give credit to the author where due: I've since finished the book, and, in an afterword, Johnston wrote that "while Campusland is written as satire, it doesn't stretch the truth by much, and sometimes not at all. Title IX, as depicted, is true to life. If you want some good nonfiction on the subject, I suggest Laura Kipnis's excellent (and horrifying) book Unwanted Advances [(2017) (Amazon)]."]