January 22, 2011

Green Hornet Deserves Some Buzz





I have to admit when I went to into the theatre and while watching the coming attractions, I was preparing myself for a for a bad comic-book moving. I'd avoided reading the reviews, but it's hard to keep from hearing the negative buzz about the movie.


I'm happy to say that Seth Rogen did a good job updating the Green Hornet franchise for the 21st Century. Much of the two-hour running time is spent hammering out the inter-dynamics between Britt, Kato and Lenore, Britt's secretary. Rogen really needed to address this in the screen play since the dated dynamic of intelligent publisher and dependent man servant and secretary established from the 30s radio series doesn't hold up, especially when the publisher is played as a boob that brings little to the table.


However, Rogen manages to include a few hat tips to old 60s television series with Van Williams.


Overall it's a fun flick with a surprisingly high body count for a superhero movie.

September 10, 2010

Japan Loses Centenarians by the Truckload

Over the past couple of years a number of long-held beliefs have been taking hits. Now it's time to cross another one off the list. As long as I can remember experts have been extolling the benefits of the Japanese diet as a path to longevity. However, according to recent research from the government of Japan, it's a total sham. Turns out that the high percentage of centenarians living in Japan is just a massive bookkeeping error and pension fraud committed by the senior citizens' children.  Oh well.

August 14, 2010

The Expendables






Just came back from seeing The Expendables. It's a nice way to disengage your brain for close to two hours and  get in touch with your inner 14-year boy. There's a lot of high-speed action -chases, fights and explosions- to keep you from thinking about the plot holes too much. I'm curious if most people will realize that they're witnessing waterboarding in action during one point n the movie.

August 1, 2010

Samurais, Cars and the Sixties

If you have some free time this summer, you should spend some time up at the northern end of Manhattan’s Museum Mile and visit the Museum of the City of New York located on 103rd St. and Fifth Ave. It’s a small museum compared to the Metropolitan Museum or the Guggenheim, both located about 20 block south. However, it puts on some great exhibits.

I originally went there to view the exhibit on the first Japanese Embassy to visit the United States in 1860. The exhibit takes up the second floor main corridor and is really limited on the number of artifacts on display and focuses on the most popular member of the Embassy - teen heartthrob and junior translator Tateish “Tommy” Onojiro.

The second exhibit-Cars, Culture and the City- is much larger and a must for any auto enthusiast. Not only does it describe how city planners needed to incorporate the explosive growth automobiles in Manhattan and the outer boroughs during the first half of the 20th Century , but covers the number of early automakers based in the city.

The final, and in my opinion the best exhibit is on the two terms of Mayor John V. Lindsey. While the first two exhibits felt a bit on the light on content, the Lindsey exhibit was a great snapshot of what New York City faced in the Sixties - crippling deficits, crime, labor strife and social upheaval. Although you can easily cover the Japanese and car exhibits in about 30 minutes, give yourself and hour or two for Lindsey.

July 26, 2010

The Happy Isles of Oceania



I came across Paul Theroux’s The Happy Isles of Oceania purely by chance, but I’m glad I did. So far, I’m about the a third of the way through the the book and the miserable  Theroux has paddled his collapsible kayak through Meganesia and Melanesia on his way to Polynesia while giving the reader a detailed, although usually less-than-flattering, portrait of the inhabitants of these islands. It’s a fun and fast read and I recommend it to anyone.