Mostly book reviews, plus whatever else I feel like posting. I welcome comments and conversation. Comments are moderated, so it may take a day or two for your comment to appear. Or send a mail to wolfmac@sympatico.ca If you quote, please also link to this blog. If you like this blog, please follow it. Highest review rating is four stars ****
03 May 2021
Dr. no? Yes, it's the first 007 movie
Dr. No (1962) [D: Terence Young. Sean Connery, Ursula Andress, Joseph Wiseman, Jack Lord] Well, I’ve finally watched this historically significant curio, almost 50 years after it was made. The very first James Bond film.
It’s tedious, badly acted, poorly scripted, with uneven photography and far too much ominous music. It begins with three blind men wandering into the parking lot of a posh Jamaican hotel, where they murder an MI6 operative. The same crew then murder an MI6 radio operator. Bond is enjoying baccarat at a casino (what is it with casinos, that they’re supposed to signal sophistication and world-weary elegance?) when the call comes to report for a new mission, which ends with the death of Dr. No when his island retreat blows up.
The production values are merely average, nowhere near the carefully imagined and designed sets we associate with 007. But then, nobody thought this movie would launch one of the longest running super-hero franchises ever. For James Bond is a super-hero, even if he bleeds occasionally. Connery is especially bad, I suspect the director didn’t think it worth the bother of providing actual direction.
I can’t recall how many of the series I’ve seen. The first one was To Russia, With Love, and then Goldfinger. Looking at the Wiki list, I ecognise Thunderball, and Moonraker. Maybe I saw Casino Royale. In any case, Connery became a much better actor, well aware of his limited range, and collaborating with his directors in exploiting it expertly. I think Indiana Jones’ father was his best role. I think Roger Moore was the best of the other Bonds, none of whom I think measured up to what Connery eventually made of the role.
You can find out all you want to know, and more, on Wikipedia. If you’ve never seen Dr. No, I think it’s worth a look merely because it’s such an awful introduction to the franchise. By the way, I tried to read one of Fleming’s novels once, couldn’t get past the first dozen pages or so. On that evidence, even this movie is better than anything Fleming produced. *½
26 April 2021
Aftermath all over again: Robinson's Friend of the Devil
Peter Robinson. Friend of the Devil (2007) Some years after the serial killings related in Aftermath, the murder of a disabled woman reopens that case. The aftermath continues. Annie Cabbot has been seconded to the neighbouring police district, so it’s her case. Meanwhile, a gruesome rape and murder in Eastvale occupies Banks. The two cases converge (of course), and end successfully, if revelation of the perpetrators can be considered a success. The costs of that success are, as usual with Robinson, appalling.
I read this book over about a week, which tells you that either Robinson’s page-turning plotting isn’t working as well, or that I’ve become jaded. Or both. This book was adapted for one of the TV series episodes, so it felt vaguely familiar, but I watched the video too long ago to compare it to the book. For Robinson fans, another satisfying read, for other crime fiction fans not the best introduction. **½
21 April 2021
Academic Exercises: Short stories
Glimmer Train #47 (2003) A journal of short stories founded Linda Swanson-Davies and her sister, Susan Burmeister-Brown, appearing from 1990 to 2011. I can’t recall how I came by this copy. I didn’t read all the stories, though I sampled every one. The author bios almost all mention a BFA or similar academic qualifications, which makes it a sample of what University writing programs produce. My take: Interesting, but by and large too self-consciously “engaged” with whatever theses the authors could derive from their tales. Carefully constructed, they attempt to give meaning to the lives of ordinary people caught in the web of ordinary life.
But too often, you see the cogs being carefully assembled into a gear-train, and the crank beginning to churn the contraption. Too often, I didn’t want to know more about the characters than the first few paragraphs told me. Too often, the near total avoidance of plot (ie, of the intersection between a character’s decisions and the random events that make up reality) meant I didn’t want to know what happened next, let alone how the characters coped with it. For even if life is a tale told by an idiot, the sound and fury do signify.
The first story The Accident, or the Embrace is one of two stories that took me into their world. Beginning with an accident in which a boy loses his leg, it ends with a discreet menage a trois (so discreet, it’s unclear if the husband knows he’s part of it). Midnight Bowling is told by a girl who manages to escape her mother’s plans for a religious life with her new man (married, hence adulterous, but a self-proclaimed Christian). She hides her intentions from her mother, and hides a good deal of what she know or suspects from the reader, who must tease together the few bits of the puzzle that suggest what’s missing from explicit telling.
The collection’s interesting as much for what it reveals about the esthetic and craft standards of academic writing programs as for the tales themselves. I felt the writers knew what they wanted to achieve, but didn’t know why it might be worth achieving. Entertainment? Demonstration of narrative skill? Revelation of some overlooked aspect of being human? I can’t tell. They wrote good stories, but not memorable ones. **
Deceptions: Christie'sTaken At The Flood
20 April 2021
Sam Elliot, bashful cowboy: Conagher (1991)
Conagher (1991) [D: Reynaldo Villalobos. Sam Elliot, Katherine Ross, Barry Corbin.] Based on the novel by Louis L’Amour. Rustlers, a cattle baron, a homesteader who dies in an accident on his way to town, a bashful lonesome cowboy, a lonesome widow and her two lonesome kids, questions of loyalty and integrity, a stage line establishing its route through the district, and of course the laconic dialogue that marks the Western as a man’s man type of movie. But this is really High Romance. Elliot plays the knight in tarnished armour, Ross is the Lady in need of rescue, and it all plays out with a minimum of gore and a maximum of historical realism. Good movie. Available on YouTube. ***
18 April 2021
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Flatmates, lies, and murder: Christie's Third Girl
Agatha Christie. Third Girl. (1966) A girl shows up at Poirot’s flat asking for help. She believes she has committed a murder. But she rejects his help when she sees him, exclaiming that he’s too old. Thus begins an extremely tangled web of deceit, misinformation, misremembrances, disguises, dead ends, and a dysfunctional family’s history. A couple of lucky discoveries enable Poirot to fit the pieces together into a pattern that makes sense, and all’s well that ends well. The girl even gets a very suitable young man. The plot almost slips away from Christie this time, but she manages to pull off a convincing denouement. Her skill at writing dialogue has improved enormously compared to her first books, in which it is often difficult to keep track of the speakers.
This novel was made into a video in 2008 (season 11 of the Poirot TV series). The movie is much simplified, with fewer characters and a less tangled plot. The essential deceptions still operate, and the girl also gets a most suitable young man. But having reread the novel, I think it’s a more satisfying mystery than the video. Not to say that the video is a failure. The video will no doubt please those who know Poirot with David Suchet playing the role as only he can. It pleased me, for taken on its own terms, it’s an average Poirot movie, which means it’s pretty good.
Book ***, video **½
Dick Whittington - What Really Happened (Sitwell, 1945)
Osbert Sitwell. The True Story of Dick Whittington (1946) My great-aunt Dolly gave me this book in 1949. I wonder whether she read it firs...
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John Cunningham. The Tin Star (Collier’s, December 4, 1947) The short story adapted for High Noon . As often happens, the movie retains v...
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I heard the phrase recently. Can’t recall exactly when. It was uttered on a radio program, but I can’t recall what the program was about. Pr...
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Today we remember those whom we sent into war on our behalf, and who gave everything they had. They gave their lives. I want to think a...






