I've been busy lately, driving trains. Train Sim 5 is pretty cool and lots of fun. My runs for Southeastern and Thameslink between Dartford and Gillingham, Faversham and Rainham now run pretty much on time. I'm providing "good service" now, as they say. I'm still trying to get the hang of the high speed run between St. Pancras and Ashford International. Once they are going those trains are hard to stop. So far my top speed has been about 205 kph. Different viewpoints are allowed during the journey, and I can even watch my train zoom past from any location. So if I haven't blogged too much lately, it's because I have such a busy timetable to keep. Deb and I had once built a small HO layout with a desert setting, and I would run trains there. But this is much more realistic. In fact it's quite scary how realistic it all is. There is a very slow speed limit in and around Rochester station, especially crossing the rail bridge over the River Medway. But in the background once can see Rochester Castle and the cathedral. Great fun!
A personal blog that discusses music, art, craft beer, travel, literature, and astronomy.
Sunday, 25 May 2025
Once Upon A Time That Never Was
In film news, Deb has just released her latest short film. It's a music video called "The Once Upon a Time that Never Was", and it has just received its first (of many, no doubt) film festival acceptances. The singer is from Argentina, and has an incredible voice. The film features Deb's usual assortment of stunning and very original visuals.
In film watching news, there are several to report. Beginning with the earliest viewings, Deb chose two films from Criterion. One of my choices was also from Criterion. The Cry of Granuile had a promising premise, but the film ended up just getting muddied, muddled, and muffled. From 2022 Irish director Donal Foreman, the film attempts to link an Irish-American woman filmmaker researching an Irish legend for a possible film, with the local scenery and folk that she encounters. However, things just go astray, and the film ends up being about nothing, really. Any truths behind the legend of Granuile (a 16th C. pirate queen) are unreachable, and the female filmmaker ends up using completely fictional stories about her from modern times. The main reason to watch the film is for some very fine landscape photography.
Demon Pond is a Japanese fantasy film from 1979, and can be called the Japanese version of The Last Wave. A village stricken by drought is fed up with a local custom of ringing a ceremonial bell 3x daily so that the village never floods. Legends say that a nearby pond contains a demon that is pacified by the bell, and that if the bell is not rung the demon will escape the pond and flood the land. With some usual bad choices made, the pond eventually does flood, and a catastrophe ensues. A second plot concerns a man on holiday out exploring the countryside. He encounters a long lost friend who had up and disappeared one day many years ago. He is the current bell ringer, along with his enchanted female companion. Her part is played by Tamasaburo Bando, a male Kabuki actor known for his female roles. A very odd film and no doubt rarely shown until now, this is certainly one to look out for. It is showing on Criterion.
Dario Argento's Deep Red is from 1975, and is almost a very good film. David Hemmings plays a jazz pianist who witnesses a murder and then becomes involved in solving it. The first half of the film is a masterpiece of composition, setting, and atmosphere. The second half is filled with animal torture and more graphic violence than probably any other film from the 1970s. While this kind of violence usually works fine in a manga, on the screen it becomes a bit much, even laughable at times. And it quickly becomes apparent that the murderer (not revealed until near the end) would have been incapable of getting to most of the places where he/she does the killings. And then getting in quietly and in perfect position to commit the murders, one time with a three foot robot! How did they get behind that curtain? How did they get to the mansion, and the school? Anyway, the first half of the film is great, and likely, if the director had not been so warped, could have been a decent and perhaps masterpiece murder-mystery. But then he would have only been half as famous. Leaving Criterion May 31st.
David Hemmings makes all the usual horror movie mistakes, and the director puts in all of the expected horror movie tropes.
The weather so far in 2025 has been mostly uncooperative towards amateur astronomers. Tonight looks hopeful; so have many other nights, until the time actually arrives, as do the clouds. But I am eternally hopeful!
Mapman Mike.
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