« Posts tagged movies

State of the Blog: 8-17-10

So, yeah, that was a bit of a snafu wasn’t it?

For one reason or another the database locked in a loop and tried to add about 5000 of the weekly Twitter Roundups. I’m not entirely sure why as of yet, but it may have to do with the plugins we are using and Twitter’s new authentication system.  Again, I apologize to everyone that saw those post come down their feed.

In other news:

  • Brotherhood of the Hand will be late this week as there is still a lot of fixing that needs to be done to the site
  • Principle photography has wrapped on the Brotherhood of the Hand movie! We’ll drop some pics into the feed here at some point.
  • We’re still looking for folks to contribute to bkI, be it reviews, fiction, poetry, art, music, comics, interesting uses of duct tape, etc.  If you’d like to contribute, drop us a line at slushpile@badkarmaink.com

Again, apologies and thanks for putting up with the problems over the weekend.

Quick Review: Brick

I’m gonna say this right off the bat: Unless you really like arty, indie films or are a scholar of old pulp noir, you will NOT like Brick.

Brick is an exercise in genre and genre bending. The story is pure pulp crime, complete with lingo so dense that, even when they stopped to define a few things, it was still confusing. The plot itself is simple, a girl ask’s a guy for help then disappears and his personal sense of honor won’t let him walk away. There is drugs, violence, gangs, snitches, all the shit that fills your hard boiled detective story.

Catch is, it’s set partially in a high school with teenagers, giving the whole film this weird Romeo and Juliet (the diCaprio one) vibe that makes it hard for even me to follow.

That being said, it’s acted and directed really well, and had all the makings for a great cult film and an excellent example of pulp crime/noir storytelling.

Provided it had subtitles.

This Day in (Harmonic) History, Feb 10th

Try this out once.

Go to Wikipedia.org (or any other reference search engine) and type in a date.  Any date.  It could be your birthday.  It could be your anniversary.  Hell, it even could be the day you got your favorite pet Ringo the one-eyed ferret back from the vet with a clean bill of health.  It doesn’t matter, just as long as you leave the year off.  Just type it in and hit enter.  It is amazing what all special events may have happened on any one particular day.

What does this have to do with today’s musical meanderings?   Well, it just so happens that I did that very thing for today’s date, February 10th, within Wikipedia and I found some very important facts.

»Read More

2010: The Year We Make Trouble

Woot!  It’s our month-aversery, and I think we’re doing pretty well for ourselves. We have regular readers, a small but growing Twitter and Facebook following, and thirty some-odd posts, so we are averaging on a day. When you consider we normally don’t post on the weekends and had 2 weeks in holidays, I’d say that’s a good job.

This beg’s the question: What’s next?

Well, here is the plan:

Columns

Mondays: Benjamin Kenneally’s Broadcast Domain – a techie’s take on storytelling.

Tuesdays: Pat’s Rants – There is always something pissing him off, and he’s going to tell you why.

Wednesdays: Tony Smith’s Harmonic Vicissitude – Band nerds get revenge with Tony in charge of our music column.

Daily Themes

Mondays: Tech – Good tech, crap tech, useful tech, story tech.

Tuesdays: Film and TV – bkI is taking on Hollywood, baby!!!

Wednesdays: Music – Get your soundtrack on.

Thursday: Wildcard – We’ll burn that bridge when we come to it.

Fridays: Fiction – Original fiction and where to find the best free fiction on the net.

Coming Soon…

More Original Fiction – More fiction from our group of irregulars and some folks you haven’t heard from, yet.

More Reviews – Movies, music, books, you name it, we’ll review it.

Serials – Continuing stories, some written specially for bkI, not to mention the fact that we are unleashing Texas Noir on the world with the serialization of The Brotherhood of the Hand by Pat Humphreys and Chris Helton.

2010 is going to be a good year, boy’s and girls. Be sure to stick around.

Visual Autophony

When you listen to music, what runs through your mind?  When listening to “Night on Bald Mountain” by Modest Mussorgsky, do you envision Disney’s Fantasia, with the giant demon Chernabog raising ghosts and monsters to resurrect as demons for his personal enjoyment?  Does the chorus for the Flock of Seagulls’ song “I Ran (So Far Away)” send you on a visual odyssey of spinning mirrors, aluminum foil and men with rather unique haircuts?

Yeah, me too.  And that is the problem.

In an age where the visual medium is the dominant form of entertainment, music has taken a backseat.  It is swiftly becoming the accompaniment for videos and movies, rather than standing on its own as a vibrant and personal form of communication.

Think about it for a moment.   For the ‘mainstream’ pop and rock radio stations, which songs become hits?  The songs with the eye-catching music videos, of course.  How do we determine who is to be our next musical idol?  The artist’s appearance seems to come first, and then we worry about the musical talent.  An artist like Susan Boyle could stun the world with her musical artistry, if given the chance.  However, with a homely appearance, how often would that artist get the opportunity?

Whatever happened to just listening to a song and forming your own story?  Music has the advantage of being a storytelling medium where each person could have a different viewpoint each time a song is heard.  The listener is able to interject his or her own emotion into the music, allowing the simple arraignment of chords and harmonies to become a reflection of one’s own self, a reflection that is dynamic because we ourselves are ever changing.  Once a video representation is set to music, that reflection becomes static.  It will never be as personally significant as what it could be again.

A music video is forcing the viewer to accept an outside view.  Essentially, a video is saying “Never mind what you might think you feel.  This is how you should feel.”  It removes the intimate emotional reaction the audience may have to the music and replaces it with a manufactured response purposely designed by a third party.  This may be good for mostly visual mediums such as films, but for music as a stand-alone art form, it stunts the audience’s imagination.

As the world becomes more visual, there will be no escaping from the music video…and that is fine.  I just prefer to take my music straight as it is, without any preconceived notions to color my perceptions.

Rant: Looks Like Tuesday is Horror-ble at bkI

Adventures into Darkness, horror stories
Image via Wikipedia

«BEGIN RANT»

I realized the other day that a big chunk of my contribution to bkI content has been “horror”: I have 2 articles about vampires and our tag cloud contains HP Lovecraft, horror, vampires, Robert E. Howard, and Pseudopod.  The first thing that crossed my mind after that was “I bet these people think I’m one of those weird horror guys,” which was quickly followed by “Do I care?”

For the record, I both am, and am not, one of those guys.

See, when people ask me what I write, I say I’m a non-genre specific genre writer. In English, that means I jump genres for fun.  I try to write stories I want to read, and I want to read Horror.

…and Sci-Fi.

….and Urban Fantasy, and Crime Stories, and Noir Mysteries, and-

Well, you get the idea.

I’m just on a horror kick is all, writing-wise, mostly because of my Twilight rants. However, I watched the director’s cut of Payback the other night followed by Monsters vs. Aliens, and I’m worried I’m getting behind on my Deadpool comics.

I don’t understand people that limit themselves to a genre. There is too much stuff out there, good stuff, and your genre prejudices are going to get in the way of that.  One of the best Sci-Fi stories I ever read was written by a Horror writer. My Favorite fantasy stories were written by Sci-Fi writers.  One of the best Comic Book movies was directed by a guy that broke out thanks to Horror, and the next movie I want to see is a theater is Steampunk directed by a Crime guy.

Life is too short not to leave your comfort zone. You wouldn’t want to die without ever leaving your home town, not even for a vacation, would you?  I sure as shit don’t, so I moved 1200 miles away from home.  Yeah, it’s a little drastic, but even just a trip to the zoo in the city is a good enough change of pace for most folks.

Variety is the spice of life folks. I dare you to try something different today, be it a different hat, trying sushi, or just having one non-diet Dr. Pepper just to remind yourself what you are missing. At the very least, it’ll just make you appreciate life just a little more.

«END RANT»

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Better Than Twilight – Part 1

The Vampire
Image via Wikipedia

I’m tired, really fucking tired of hearing about Twilight. I mean, I know it’s kind of a Young Adult thing, so I can forgive the shitty writing, etc, but there are somethings that I cannot forgive. Now, I’m not going to give into my instincts and just say “you’re a fucking idiot for being an adult and reading religious propaganda drivel meant for fucking children”.

No, I’m going to take the high road.

As an adult, you really should realize why Twilight is a shitty little story for teenage girls, but, as I’ve learned over the years, folks need to be shown the alternatives. As such, I’m going to tell you about vampire tales that are better than Twilight, and I’m going to give you some background on the vampire, both the old legends and the modern myth, and why, even though these stories are better than Twilight, they are responsible for the environment that allows bullshit like it to be published. »Read More

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