Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Movie Review: The Help



I waited a bit before writing this review because of my emotional reaction to it. I have not read the book yet. I do that on purpose if I can. Read the book after I’ve seen the movie. That way I can appreciate both, usually. You are forewarned I don’t write reviews to recount the movie. I write my impressions, what I have gained, or not, from seeing the film. That is all. 

“The Help” is a perfect example of a ‘character driven’ movie. Though it is set as a Deep South drama, in theme it could have happened anywhere.
In my family my grandmother had Robert Arthur as her “Help”. He, like the women in this film, basically raised my father, who was an only child. Robert worked for my grandmother until I was around nine or ten. That means he must have worked for her for over twenty something years! He taught my sister and me how to skin squirrels, he told us stories sometimes but mostly wanted us out of his way, I think. He was a big man with an unreadable face, except when he smiled. Then you saw “him.” My father has always spoken highly of Robert and told me years ago he regretted not asking Robert about his family; was really unaware of Robert even having a family of his own until my father had left home and joined the military. Robert had always been there for my father. Robert Arthur was taken for granted.
The humanity of this film is what hit me first; the good, the bad, the ugliness and beauty of us, of our human nature. I sat in a theater almost completely full on a Saturday afternoon and the majority of folks there were of the era the film is set in. Most of them were white. They had been the age of the people in the film in the ‘60’s and they were there in that theater en masse. I live in south Georgia. This was, for me, heartening to see. Folks in that theater reacted to the stark humanity of the story, the best of it; the worst of it. This film is not only blatantly about race and segregation, it is also about humanity and how diverse it is. In the film “Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves” when the little girl asks Morgan Freeman’s character why he is painted he responds “Because God loves diversity.” This film points out that we are all individual, not just a race, not just a color, and how harsh judgment of that sort can be.
We in the audience laughed, ranted and cried out loud. We clapped and cheered. We became involved, were not just spectators there for entertainment. We ran the full range of emotion. We gained too… maybe a little self knowledge? Toward the end I felt discombobulated asking myself, “Was this really written back then and only just now published? I now know the book was published in 2009. But that is how drawn into the story I was. I cried but had to stop myself from really weeping when, at the end of the movie, the song “The Living Proof” started playing. It so fit and served to plunge me deeper into the experience the film had given me.  
I walked out of the theater almost at war with myself. The cynic saying ‘Yeah, right, like that would have happened”; the eternal hopeful saying “Of course it did, somewhere something like that must have happened.”   No one is really all “black” or “white” in this film or in reality. We are all shades of gray, very human. And the gift this film, no, this writer and these actors give us with their words and performances is one we all need to hear and learn from right now. Not just in our country but in our world. This proverb comes to mind… “Do unto others as you would have done unto you.” If we would only think of that more often. My rating: I would pay (again) to see it again.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Hated Typos and Other More Amusing Facts of Life


Okay, so a friend of mine, a very good friend, read Evangeline's Miracle for the second time. She found some typos in it and I almost cried. I tried very hard to make it fairly typo-free, but did not, evidently, succeed. I hope those of you who have read it didn't see them! They are minor, but still should have been caught! So, please, my readers accept my apology and know that the next print run will be cleaner; that the next book will be cleaner. I will learn from this and make sure it is an error I don't repeat, repeat, repeat. LOL

We went to St. Simon's Island this past Sunday. Blue skies, HOT heat. Now I know why we usually go in the spring or autumn, not the summer. We ate at Barbara Jeans for the first time in a while. 

The treat of the visit for me was actually being able to go inside Christ Church. Every time I've been to the island the church has been closed. This time it was open and a nice lady was there to answer questions. I found out where Eugenia Price lived, where the Gould family is buried (From Beloved Invader and Lighthouse) and discovered two other bookstores on the island I didn't know about. Too bad they were ALL closed!!!! We swam at the beach. Two of us got too much sun but loved it. I wrapped up in a towel in spite of the heat. The water was Luke warm (ha ha Elizabeth!), almost cooler out of the water once you were wet. We ended up setting up on the beach right next to a French family, go figure. They had four kids!!! Aggh!

I've been at work at Ellis, Ricket and Associates yesterday and today. 

I so like the folks here. It was nice to be back. I don't work there tomorrow, which is good, because if I need to go to Orlando I'll be able. A dear friend is passing from cancer and if they want/need me to go, I will join her daughters and help as best I can.

I'm ready to do another film review, so, as my niece used to say, "Watch an eye out" for it, coming very soon!

Monday, August 22, 2011

My First Movie Review

My First Movie Review

Why not, I ask myself? If they can make a movie about Cowboys and Aliens, why should it be any stranger for me to write a review about it?
There are some vague spoilers, but I will try to give no descriptive ones, and will warn you if my good intentions are defeated.
Okay, to begin in a one sentence statement about Cowboys and Aliens, it’s a very good old timey western. Now the fact that it has aliens in it doesn’t in the least take away from the basic western structure. Not deep, not "new", just good ole fashioned bang-bang shoot 'em up. With a slight twist. I liked seeing Harrison Ford being "bad" for once. Daniel Craig needs to put on some weight. The women are lovely, one in an "alien-esque" way, which is nice, and the men are hardy, hairy, and rough-riding, which is as it should be. The kid is just cute enough and adds the classical easy-to-relate-to victim. The doc learns to become a "real" man, as he should. Victims abound, bad guys and chases are had, wrongs are perpetuated, and all that happens before the "real" bad guys come into the picture; literally.
I like when time is taken to develop the characters. This wasn’t slapped together on the off chance that folks would come to see it just because of its name. It felt thought out, done with an experienced hand, done with attention to making you care about the people involved in a Hollywood-kind-of-way. A way you can count on.
The special effects weren’t bad either, some things were inventive, some were basically the usual fare these days, but all in all effective. If you like western and/or alien rabble rousing, good guy/bad guy movies just for fun this is the movie for you. My rating is; I'd see it again.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Litchgate Tree and other interesting subjects...


I begin this blog with an excerpt from: The Celtic Storm, because I was reminded of the inspiration I’d found from a tree in New Orleans. Seeing the Litchgate Tree brought this back to me.
PROLOGUE     32 A.D.
     A small girl with brown honey-touched hair slipped with practiced ease through the shadows of ancient trees and thin underbrush. Her swift bare feet skimmed the dead leaves littering the forest floor, but gave no sound. She ran, knowing the farther she was from the stronghold, the more she could explore without discovery.
     The young one halted, hearing a whisper. Had they found her so soon? Nay, it was not a voice she knew. She crept forward, slowly, following the whisper as it grew louder, stronger. Confused, she halted again. The birds still sang, small animals still minded their stomachs, untroubled by her or anyone else. Then she realized the whisper was in her head, not in her ears. What god or spirit teased her thus? She shivered and glanced about. There was no one there.
     Ahead of her the light brightened as the trees thinned, and she entered a huge clearing she had never seen before. The mid-day sun, high in the unusually blue sky, shone bright upon a huge ancient oak standing alone in the clearing. She had never seen one so big. A mass of long thick branches reached toward the sky, creating a large sheltering cover for more branches below. Sprouting from the immense trunk they sloped gracefully to the ground, resting there, as if to give ease to the giant.
     A slight breeze blew through her hair as the little one stared in awe at the Tree. The whisper in her head grew insistent, and loud. Her eyes widened in surprise.
     Cartimandua. Little pony, come to me...”
     How can it know my name, she wondered, knowing in the instant she saw it that it was the Tree calling to her. She stumbled over her own feet as one tried to reach the Tree before the other. She wanted to touch it, but hesitated. She moved closer and saw an altar tightly embraced within the giant twisted, gnarled roots. A sacred Druid’s altar, so sacred, so old, it was almost lost within the Tree’s suffocating clutch of roots.
     She knew then she should return to the stronghold and find Priest Maxen. She should ask him to come back with her. This was a sacred place and she should not be here alone. But she also knew once Priest Maxen learned the tree had spoken to her he would allow her to touch it.
     Her feet propelled her forward. The closer she came to it, the more majestic it seemed. Finally, she reached out a quivering hand and grasped the rough, trenched bark of a sweeping branch.
     The voice was no longer soft, no longer a whisper.
     Come, sit with me,” it said clearly in her mind, “Climb my limbs and lay your head upon my trunk, here, close to my heart...”
     The child scurried up one of the thick sloping branches sweeping the ground and settled into the cradle where it joined the solid trunk. She laid her head upon the moss-covered bark and closed her eyes. The Tree seemed to curl itself around her, hiding her from the eyes and rules of pestering handmaidens and guards. Hiding her from unwanted responsibilities and demanding parents. The little one sighed; a small smile teasing her mouth. The Tree welcomed her home.
     Cartimandua, Chosen One of the tuatha Brigantes, hid within the sacred Tree’s haven, claimed, sheltered and strengthened by it. As stormy portents of war gathered over her island home of Ynys Alcam, the little princess had no forewarning of the gods’ decree, for her, or for her sacred Tree.
 
Here is a photo of a great oak, this “Litchgate Oak” that still exists in Tallahassee, FL and under which my parents were married. I visited this oak two days ago with our lovely French Girl Sandra, and once again was given a feeling of wonder, grace, and desire to hear what this great oak might say, could it speak. What stories would it tell of the things it has seen in its long, long life?  I SO wish I could hear its voice. It is, I believe, over 600 to 800 years old. To have survived this long, to still be standing amongst the city growing around it, one can only imagine… Here is the link to the site.  http://www.lichgate.com  
There are many, thankfully, great oaks in this ‘neck of the woods’ that still stand tall and silent, guardians of time. Near St. Simon’s Island, near Charleston, SC. I know there are many I haven’t seen. But this one and the one in New Orleans touch me deeply, I can FEEL them and I appreciate them sharing their ‘selves’ with me. I hope they will live on long after I am gone. There was one in Valdosta, GA, but it has passed, living on only in a carved statue of a Viking, for the Lowndes County High School Vikings sports teams. At least we still have that.
Also I posted (on FB) and tweeted a link to a heart story for any of us who have children. I don’t know about you, but when mine were growing up one of my greatest fears was someone snatching them away from me. This man’s quick thinking, this man’s sense of right was so great that he did a wonderful deed. He saved a 6 year old girl from a kidnapping. Check it out at this link: http://news.yahoo.com/father-2-becomes-hero-abducted-girls-rescue-073823983.html
I wish the news had more of this and less of the doomsday blah blah.

Tuesday, August 09, 2011

Gluten Free Banana Bread

Look what I did this morning! Gluten free Banana Bread!!
It was quick and simple and hopefully good. Going up to have a taste right after I finish this. Sandra, our lovely French girl, can't do gluten, so I'm learning new ways to cook, and eat, without it. Loving this so far because it's so easy to get gluten free foods now. Thank you for whomever got the steamroller moving on gluten free!

Family and Lace


Well, I start this post with an apology and a new story. I was wrong, yes, it does happen from time to time ha ha, it isn’t “étoile d'araignée, it’s “toile d'araignée” and so here is the new story that must come from the ‘new’ meaning…
Family and Lace
A family is like fine lace or a thick lacy doily, something beautiful made up of knots. It takes time, love and patience to make lace. It takes learning and dexterity and the ability to see what lies beyond the work, the beauty and strength that will eventually come of the toil.
My family is in a state of flux right now, like so many these days, or anytime really. Circumstances can tangle even the straightest threads and it’s up to us as to how we untangle them.  Here are some of those twisted lines that we, as a family, are all trying to manage…
One cousin is in Afghanistan, no need to elaborate there. One cousin is on a road trip to visit her estranged father, my uncle, to make peace with herself about their relationship. My other uncle is fighting to keep a job he’s had for over 20 years because his supervisor is threatened by his success.
My daughter, who went to France to practice French,  to discover what it means to actually live in another country, not just visit, is finding her au pair experience very challenging and not always in a good way. At this moment she has left for vacation since her charges are staying with their grandparents for a few weeks. This will give her time to suss out what she is going to do to change the situation, or leave.
My son is taking on the musical life and all that means to a young single man. He’s still dependent upon us for the necessary stuff, insurance, cell phone, etc. It’s our way of supporting his choice. He’s found a new part-time job, is finishing his degree after a mix up, and is recording a demo! He’s working hand in hand with another one of my cousins, who himself is trying to make a go of his self employment. 
My sister is in the middle of a huge mess that was not of her making, or choice, in her work. She saw it coming, and even before getting blown out of the water, was looking elsewhere to see what she could do next. Stress is high in her and her family’s life right now, higher than it’s ever been and they are dealing with it as best they can. All the rest of the family can do is support them, be there for them when they can let us in, and hold on for the ride.
My husband is overworked, but happy to have a great job. I’m working on selling, writing, marketing, and keeping stress from taking over my little slice of the world.
So these are some of our family knots. The multitude and diversity of threads with which this family is made are strong. Our lace is colorful and difficult at times but held together by the master weaving of those that came before. We all have this lace in our lives and there are always spiders haunting that web, keeping us on our toes. Yes, “toile d'araignée” means Spider’s lace, really, in French. My husband thought it cute I mistook “étoile” for “toile”, Star for Lace. They are both beautiful. They are both signs of strength, beauty and utility. I’m glad I made the error I did so that I could then share this story with you, too.
Our family is in the midst of many challenges, many opportunities for growth and learning. Sometimes it’s hard to see the beauty of the lace that holds us together, that makes dealing with these sometimes confounding, sometimes amazing, issues possible. We are family. Together and apart we have woven a beautiful lace of life that will hold; that will endure. And we will continue to weave it together just like the spider who, when the web is torn, repairs it tirelessly, over and over again.
I must leave you with a little humor, take a gander at my sister and her daughter a few years ago... talk about bug eyes!!! I know we'll see these smiles again soon. Love, Light and Peace to you all in your own family laces...

Monday, August 08, 2011

Second Post Playing Catch-Up From the Weekend

Second post for today, to play catch up from the weekend spent recharging my energies. Which I spent mostly in the yard working on my ‘mound’ of a flower bed… Doesn't look great yet, but think of it in six months or a year!


Way too hot to be doing what I did but I did it anyway. I needed for it to be done, to look out my windows and see the work done, the plants in and the sprinkler giving its gift of life to them. I had such great experiences, in quiet ways, in getting this project done. I’ve been collecting plants for it for over a year. I have some from my sister’s garden in North Carolina, from walks taken in Florida and elsewhere, some I bought from nurseries, some were given to me, and others I bought from a neighbor who has a small nursery in his back yard. I have two plants from him that I don’t know the name of and neither does he! Photos are called for in case one of you recognizes these and can tell me what they are…
 This one the leaves came up after the flowers did. The leaves get big and almost banana tree looking. Beautiful.

On this one the flowers are a beautiful purple and about an inch and a half across…
So, anyway,  I succeeded in my goal of getting the earth prepared, getting all the plants in, and seeing the sprinkler doing its job at the end of the day. I did two hours in the morning, stopped because of the heat, then about three hours in the late afternoon when the sky turned gray with heavy clouds and ‘spit’ a bit before moving on. It was so much easier working under cloud cover. The sun about did me in.
This weekend we also ‘dog-sat’ some friends schnauzers, two of them, Frank and Ruben and they were wonderful. It was fun to have them at our house, but we spent both nights at their house because we felt it’d be easier on them. While there I started reading “Beloved Invader” by Eugenia Price. My first novel of hers. I am not ready to take my leave of her and so I started with this one. The friend with the dogs is letting me borrow it. To top off the good weekend, my talented husband also made good progress on the ‘entertainment unit’ he’s building for our ‘media room’!

Astronomy and Spiders

So much to talk about here after a full weekend where I purposely didn’t get online! Two days free of the computer. It was needed I think, to get my batteries recharged, one could say.  And so; First, I’d mentioned in an earlier post that I had a little story to tell. In my writers group we decided to try something different. We chose a ‘prompt’, ‘theme’ or whatever you’d like to call it and we were to write whatever came to us about that ‘prompt’. We’ve done this before but this time was a bit different. We chose “Astronomy”. This is what came to me to write about.
Astronomy is a natural science that deals with the study of celestial objects (such as stars, planets, comets, nebulae, star clusters and galaxies). It is concerned with the evolution, physics, chemistry, meteorology, and motion of celestial objects, as well as the formation and development of the universe.
So, a few mornings ago while talking to my son on the phone, I’m outside trimming rose bushes and some of the plants I bought yesterday for the ‘mound’ flower bed I’m installing in front of my house.  What does this have to do with the stars? Well, while clipping one of the plants I’d bought the day before, I found a spider web, then a spider with a VERY bright red hourglass on its belly. Now this was a brown spider, a light brown, not black, like a Black Widow. So I didn’t know if it was poisonous or not. I told my son about it, we were still talking, and he said he thought that there were actually Brown Widows too. I didn’t want to kill it, not knowing, but he said better to be safe since I was going to be working on the mound later. I didn’t want it hanging around, literally. So, I killed it L.
Later, inside, I looked it up on the internet and sure enough, it WAS a Brown Widow! So actually I did do the right thing, and my son is reaffirmed as being a very smart guy.
Now, I know you are wondering what this has to do with the study of the stars. In French the way one says ‘spider web’ is ‘étoile d'araignée’ which means “star of the spider”! The spider’s web is what alerted me to the spider being there in the first place, and then I saw the red. So this was MY connection to the meaning of astronomy that day, how a ‘star’ alerted me to danger in my universe.
I feel much better knowing I won’t have to deal with ‘her’ while out taking care of my garden nebulae. Just like a meteorite that has already fallen, there are others that haven’t. But at least there is one less to worry about, and it was so cool to have my son ‘take care’ of his mom, as the atmosphere does with its ‘mother earth’!
So maybe it’s a reach on the subject heading, but it was fun to write…