I’m a sucker for Iris DeMent.
This tune gets me everytime.
I’m a sucker for Iris DeMent.
This tune gets me everytime.
Have you heard Craig Ventresco and Meredith Axelrod perform? They make wonderful music together!
Time for some Roma wedding music. Here’s Ivo Papasov and his Wedding Band…
Not only is this music super-exciting and complex and fun but there is singing too (not to mention the bass player’s spectacular trousers).
Upstairs, in the great room – the tv on, playing an old episode of Homicide: Life on the Street (a great show in my books). Tuffy P made coffee. George wanted to play but I was ignoring him. It had been a long day and I was trying not to be grumpy. For Homicide: Life on the Street fans, the episode was Nearer my God to Thee, the episode in which we first meet Lt Megan Russert, the one in which a Samaritan of the Year figure is murdered, left in a pair of white gloves.
George was determined I play with him. He brought me several different toys, offering to play tug or perhaps chase the toy. I ignored him steadfastly, and took a sip of coffee. Let me say at this point that George has paws like canned hams. They’re big and they’re powerful. He looked at me with the look that could only be saying, “we could be having fun now and you know it”.
Without warning, George brought up his left paw and whacked my half full mug, spilling coffee all over me, soaking my shirt. Fortunately I’m a slow coffee drinker and my beverage had already cooled considerably. I thought I detected a tiny smirk from George, but maybe I’m projecting. I believe I may have shouted some words you can’t say on television before storming out of the room to get changed. When I returned to the sofa and Life on the Street, George remained downstairs, sulking.
“Hey Georgie, bring me your toy….” He came running, toy in mouth and we played tug and we played throw the squeaky toy and we wrassled, and I scratched his ears and I forgot why I was grumpy.
While everybody else watches football today, let’s you and I go back in time together to 1966 and listen to Buck Owens and Don Rich and the rest of the Buckaroos performing My Heart Skips a Beat. Turn up the twang, friends and listen to some Country & Western.
Yesterday we watched the 1989 Jon Dahl film, Kill Me Again. We’ve both seen it before. I may have actually seen it twice but it has been quite a number of years. I wanted to see how well it holds up 25 years after its release.
This movie is very much like an old time “noir” film. Watching it now, it seems almost as if Mr. Dahl was learning his chops by working through the noir genre. This film was touted as “neo-noir” when it was released, but in the fullness of time, I think we can dispense with the neo.
For those who haven’t seen it, Kill Me Again features Val Kilmer as a loser small-time Reno detective. He get hired by (you guessed it) a femme fatale, who has ripped off stolen mob money from her boy friend. She wants Jack, the Kilmer character, to fake her death. Naturally, bad things happen and both the boyfriend and the mob get involved.
For me the film holds up as a well-crafted if highly derivative B-movie. Other noir-type films by this director include The Last Seduction (with a great performance by Linda Fiorentino) and Red Rock West (punctuated by Dennis Hopper’s appearance). I wonder how well they would hold up to another viewing today?