Random thoughts on music, cinema, books, cuisine, art, politics, ecology, ecomony and astronomy from Dallas, TX

Friday, November 30, 2007

Evel Knievel Dead at 69


Evel Knievel made the news two times in the past two days...unfortunately the last time was news regarding his death. The man the Snake River Canyon couldn't kill was finally felled by a pernicious cocktail of diabetes, pulmonary fibrosis and hepatitis C today (11/30). He was 69. Joel Muskovich has created a suitably tasteful salute to the '70s icon, whose mere name still hits a nerve with us kids who grew up during his reign as "America's Legendary Daredevil."

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Apology

The new web setup has necessitated a purge of sorts, for yours truly. I had a backlog of "stuff" to shove out onto the site...and then I was basically barred from my domain due to technical issues...

But anyway, I just wanted to apologize to my readers about the sloppiness in the last couple of entrys...I was just happy to get them up at all!

So enjoy and send me an email if you catch any fantastic bloopers or mistakes.


Warmest regards,

Erich Scholz

New Sounds

I've been having a hell of a time with this website. The hosting site,
1 & 1, moved their servers to Kansas City and I was unable to post for the past week...I finally figured out what was going on and patched the problems up...

So I'm cleaning house here and discovered some interesting audio bits that I really want to share with my friends...

Found this recording I made with Minnie Driver. Yeah, that Minnie Driver. She's got a great set of pipes. No really. And this song is a corker in my moleskin.

Woah, that last sentence sounds obscene.

Check it out...Minnie Driver, "Everything I Got in My Pocket"

Minnie Driver - Everything I Got in My Pocket (Live in NYC).mp3

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Golden Turkey

It's Thanksgiving. People are traveling long distances to be together. Most are thinking about dinner. Turkey dinner seems to be pretty much the most traditional type of dinner. Nothing wrong with that, I suppose. It just got me thinking about a different kind of Turkey.

Recently, I was the winning bidder in an eBay auction for a vinyl copy of The Golden Turkey Album -- a collection of songs from trashy '50s and '60s low budget exploitation films. The album came with a copy of the book that inspired it, The Golden Turkey Awards (1980) along with its sequel, Son of Golden Turkey Awards (1986). It was interesting to go through them again, however briefly. Basically, these books and Psychotronic were the resources that sparked a curiosity inside my young mind concerning crude exploitation "shockers" such as Blackenstein, Plan 9 From Outer Space, Norman Mailer's Wild 90 and the career of Sonny Tufts. I thought it was funny to read author Michael Medved tear those schlock movie producers another one in page after illustrated page of ripping prose.

Funny, cause after all these years, The Golden Turkey Awards seems a bit too authoritarian for my tastes . The vein of humor that the Medveds frequently mine, unfairly slings mudballs at the few radical pioneers the medium has coughed up. The Medveds tear apart dreamers such as Ed Wood Jr., H.G. Lewis and lamely decry non-narrative film structures, such as Last Year at Marienbad (1963), as an example of the height of social decadence. Indeed Michael Medved's current reputation these days lies, not in his knowledge of Hollywood's sordid history, but as a right wing spokesman and champion of conservative social mores derived from that same history.

If you believe the tone of Golden Turkey Awards, for Michael Medved, a low budget dreamer with a movie camera and friends willing to act out a fantasy to make that dream come true is a toad. An effete, America-hater, who might as well be making plans with his politburo butt boys AT THIS VERY MOMENT to teach about the joys of homosexuality in public schools. For Michael Medved, Phil Tucker's Robot Monster is a sign that the art terrorists have won. Michael Medved says that it's Hollywood vs. America -- and make no mistake, he might be right about that...but the point is that he sure ain't right about Plan 9 from Outer Space, or Robot Monster or Ray Dennis Steckler. These films and filmmakers are so far out of the mainstream that kicking them is like kicking a man when he's down...or hitting a guy with glasses. It's in poor taste and is just plain un-American.

Monday, November 05, 2007

Stanley Kubrick Remastered


Ouch! I can't believe I haven't written about the new Stanley Kubrick remastered DVDs which came out a couple of weeks ago. I opted out of buying the set, picking up the two-disc versions of The Shining and A Clockwork Orange instead -- both in new ANAMORPHIC DVD transfers! And after all this time we'd been hearing that Kubrick's estate would never allow his films to be released in anything but full frame. Well, after viewing both, I would say that A Clockwork Orange is an essential purchase for anyone interested in fantastical, iconic cinema. After doing an A-B test with my earlier DVD version, there is simply no comparison. The enhanced-for-widescreen TV image is enough reason alone to pick it up, but the new transfer also brings out details in the film that I had never seen before. Make-up designs on the droogs' faces appear where I had never seen make-up before. One can actually read the print on newspapers in the film -- and thusly pick up an interesting continuity error. When young Alex is incarcerated, he gives his surname as DeLarge. But the newspapers of the days, report his last name as Burgess! The commentary by Malcolm McDowell is entertaining and enlightening and while I could probably do without the second disc, it does feature an hour long documentary on McDowell's career which is chock full of film clips and hilarious interviews with the man himself. Interestingly, the same doc is also featured on Warner's new two-disc O Lucky Man! DVD which came out the same day as the new Kubrick set.

The Shining, one of my favorite movies of all time and probably one movie that gets increasingly better with repeated viewings, actually suffers a bit in it's new DVD treatment. The anamorphic image manages to cut off a good bit of information on the top and bottom and the color tone and sharpness are not up to par with the previous digitally remastered version offered by Warners a few years back. The second disc is probably even more superfluous than that of ACO and the commentary track by Garrett Brown and John Baxter is fine but inessential. The new presentation made me rethink my purchase of the two-disc 2001: A Space Odyssey set mainly due to my satisfaction with the previous remastered Warner's version (and I also owned the original letterboxed DVD which looks about as bad as the original ACO).

My biggest disappointment is the fact that Warners decided to include Full Metal Jacket and Eyes Wide Shut (unavailable currently as separate DVDs) in the remastered, enhanced set, yet left Barry Lyndon -- IMHO, one of Kubrick's more interesting films -- in the cold, opting to re-release the current DVD in a new keepsake DVD case (as opposed to the previous cardboard flip-lock case). Come on, Warners! If any film would benefit from an enhanced, anamorphic DVD it's this one...and how about Lolita while you're at it...

For more info, check out DVDBeaver.com's comparison of the DVDs.

Diving Weekend: November 3, 2007

It's been almost three months to the day since my last scuba dive on the wreck of the Oriskany off the coast of Pensacola, Florida. Cobbled together my gear for a dip into Austin's Lake Travis this past weekend. My rusty skills and the salt water damage done to my equipment was further burdened by my lack of a complete set of contact lenses. Mike Gibson and I spent nearly three hours driving around Austin looking for an optometrist with my prescription in stock to no avail. I ended up hitting the water wearing only one lens! It worked surprisingly well.

Ultimately it probably didn't matter as the visibility in Lake Travis is close to zero. It took three tries before Mike and I cornered a good, long dive. Didn't make it much deeper than 90 feet but it was a great refresher course for me. Sunday at Mansfield Dam drew two aborted dives thanks to even worse visibility that had me and Gibson losing each other underwater in a record three minutes. Yeah it was that bad. It's not really that much fun to me to dive in zero feet of visibility. All I could see were the silt and algae particles floating in front my mask. Still, the weekend's weather was awesome and it was great to get out of Big D for a while at least.

Oh yeah, I found a honey of a bargain over at Scuba World in Austin. I finally bought my own steel tank. It's a 112 cubic foot steel Faber with an H valve, newly hydroed for...$150! A really great deal even though the tank weighs a ton! I'm ready for my advanced classes...