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Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Reading/Watching Log #81

I made August period drama month, though there are a few things that will spill into September (I still haven’t gotten to Love & Friendship, and though I watched North and South this month, I ran out of time to write about it). I also finally got through two library books that I’ve been renewing since early last year, two more Babysitters Club books, the latest from Philip Pullman, and the fantastic Prey, which I definitely recommend.

Today is the first day of spring, which feels miraculous. It’s been a horrendous winter, with illness and flooding and anti-vaxx nutjobs and hideous weather, and I’m so profoundly glad it’s over. It really has felt like the longest winter of my life, and I almost wept yesterday when it was warm enough to wear a skirt.

There’s still a lot of crap going on, but it feels like we’ve turned a corner, albeit a very small one. And... I’m now working fulltime. One of my colleagues made the move to another library, I interviewed for her position, and now it’s official. I guess this means I’m a proper adult now.

Saturday, August 27, 2022

Legend of the Seeker: Resurrection

We're about one-third of the way through his season, so the filler episodes have been put aside in order to get into the grist of the overarching story. We open smackdab in the middle of a fight scene, and have I gushed over the glorious absurdity of Kahlan’s fighting technique lately? She essentially spins around really fast, her hair and long sleeves flying, with two long knives in each hand, and just sort of aggressively rotates her enemies to death.

It doesn’t make the slightest bit of sense, but looks so awesome and is so intrinsic to her character that I wouldn’t cut a single swirl.  

Anyway, the fight draws to a close and she manages to confess one of the D’Haran soldiers, who promptly tells her they’re trying to kill the Seeker due to other claimants vying for Lord Rahl’s throne. 

The one this garrison serves (or served) is General Grix who is then promptly introduced plotting to kill all his rivals’ families just let us know how bad he is.

Also, Grix? I spent the entire episode thinking his name was “Bricks”.

In any case, an attractive woman arrives at his encampment with a message, and promptly drops her robe to reveal writing across her naked body. Someone has been reading up on Cleopatra’s methods, and though we don’t find out until a bit later, she’s just delivered an invitation to a local brothel, run by a familiar face...

Monday, August 8, 2022

Links and Updates

I know I say this every time I do one of these posts, but DAMN THERE’S A LOT OF STUFF HAPPENING. It almost feels like they’ve left everything I have a specific interest in till the second half of the year, and I still have to get to The Umbrella Academy, Westworld and Russian Doll. And the latest seasons of Star Trek Discovery, Nancy Drew and Evil, plus the last four of The Handmaid’s Tale (I have a co-worker who loves it and is constantly telling me to catch up; ironic since I’m the one that introduced her to it).

And so much of what’s coming is fantasy/horror/sci-fi. The Midnight ClubThe SandmanWillowThe Dragon PrinceInterview with the VampireWednesday (I wasn’t that interested, then I read a synopsis, and suddenly it has my attention). The Big Three are back, with She-HulkHouse of the Dragon and Andor ticking off the MCU, Game of Thrones and Star Wars boxes, plus The Rings of Power for The Lord of the Rings fans (that latest trailer has got me back on board).

You guys, there is so much stuff.

I’ve decided to make August a period piece month, so I’m going to watch the second Downton Abbey movie, Mr Malcolm’s List and (brace yourself) Netflix’s Persuasion. Also, I’ve got Kate Beckinsale’s Love and Friendship stashed away somewhere, and the second season of the miraculously-resurrected Sanditon as well. I’ve also had the recent urge to rewatch North and South with Richard Armitage, and maybe I can squeeze in a season of Larkrise to Candleford as well, which I’ve never actually seen.

And when is Miss Scarlet and the Duke back on? And the next season of The Crown?? And Enola Holmes 2??? I thought in that last case we would at least get an airdate after Stranger Things wrapped up.

Friday, August 5, 2022

Legend of the Seeker: Fury

My original plan to write up one review per week isn’t exactly working out for me, but I’ll continue to press on whenever I get the opportunity. Rest assured, I’m still enjoying this season and I’m going to see this little project through.

If last week’s episode was important filler, then this one is just plain filler, wrapped up in a Very Special Message about the cycle of violence. This is going to be a quick one.

Monday, August 1, 2022

Woman of the Month: Kiki

Kiki from Kiki’s Delivery Service

You can always rely on Hayao Miyazaki for creating wonderful female protagonists. Nausicaä, Sheeta, Ponyo, Sophie, Chihiro, San, Satsuki and Mei – they’re all so different in design and personality, yet similar in one crucial way: they’re all fully-dimensional characters, and allowed to exist at the centre of their own narratives.

I recall an interview with Miyazaki somewhere or other in which he stated his deliberate intent to avoid the Distressed Damsel trope, as well as frequently steering away from overt romanticism between male and female characters. For a man with (what appears to be) unfettered creative control over his own projects, this is pretty remarkable, and I like to think that many of the complex female characters we enjoy today were in some way inspired by Miyazaki’s contributions to the zeitgeist.

Kiki is one of my favourite Miyazaki heroines, precisely because she’s so ordinary. This might be a strange thing to say about a witch who can fly and who leaves home at thirteen in order to set up her own business, but – in terms of the narrative – her magical abilities and early independence are almost a secondary consideration to her very grounded coming-of-age story.

In Kiki’s world, witches are required to leave their family home and find a new community to serve once they turn thirteen. Hoping to settle in a seaside town, Kiki leaves behind her parents and community and flies away on her broomstick with only Jiji the cat for companionship. She eventually ends up in the spare room of a friendly baker called Osono, tumbling to the idea of utilizing her flying abilities in order to start a delivery service.

It was around the late eighties/early nineties that a lot of child protagonists in film were characterized as miniature adults: precocious little brats who always had a snappy rejoinder (think Kevin from Home Alone or Susan from Miracle on 34th Street). Kiki existed in stark contrast to this smartarse approach – she’s polite, modest, responsible, hard-working, surprisingly humble, and shy.

She’s not without flaws, as the aforementioned shyness sometimes manifests as rudeness and immaturity. Like any gifted child, she’s more comfortable around adults than peers, so when Tombo first shows up, she has no idea how to react. Reverting to standoffishness, her verbal rebuffs are clearly down to the fact she simply doesn’t know how to respond to his attention.

Perhaps my favourite scene is when Kiki emerges on her first morning at the bakery, and sees Osono’s husband stretching in the backyard. He’s not doing anything overtly intimidating, but such is her self-consciousness that she hides until he leaves the area. It’s adorable, and a great setup for her impulsive hug when he later makes her a sign for her delivery service.

Kiki’s story is one of growing maturity and learning how to take care of herself (to quote Matilda: “something most people learn in their early thirties”) with a crisis period thrown in when her magical abilities unexpectedly begin to wane. Like someone struggling with writer’s block, Kiki has to take some time out and reconnect with who she is and what she wants before she can recover her innate power – a pretty unusual arc for a children’s film.

In fact, in the original Japanese dub she never regains her ability to communicate with Jiji, giving their relationship a “putting away childish things” turn when she finally grows out of her need for an animal companion.

Kiki’s Delivery Service is truly one of my favourite movies, and Kiki is a big part of the reason for that. Having read Eiko Kadono’s original book last month, I was able to better appreciate Miyazaki’s fidelity to the character as she was first conceived, while adding his own touches to how her story unfolds. Whenever I need a pick-me-up, or just a relaxing Saturday afternoon watch, I turn to Kiki.