Supposedly, there’s a new Sherlock Holmes film in the works (link here). Normally, I’d be happy about this, except that in this case, the writer and producers are hacks, and, worst of all, they’ve decided to set it in modern London, with a descendant of Holmes “living the life of a modern playboy until the strikingly beautiful Dr. Jane Watson manages to involve him in a complicated plot of murder and intrigue.”

Jesus wept.

In other movie news, I saw a few this weekend on video:

Road to Perdition–Tom Hanks was alright, but nothing special. Paul Newman’s performance, also nothing special, pretty much convinced me that his Oscar nomination is just another “you’ve put in a lot of good work over the years, so we owe you” nod. The film was ponderously slow, and predicatable as well. Ah well.

Deuces Wild–1958 Brooklyn street gang melodrama. Seemingly designed to be an excuse to show guys wearing leather jackets and engineer boots, smoking Lucky’s and brooding while late-50s doo-wop blares on the soundtrack. Not really a crime drama, not really a slice of life, not really a coming-of-age film…just sort of sits there.

Queen of the Damned–Not nearly as bad as I had been led to believe. I do concede that it was essentially the Cliffs Notes version of the novels The Vampire Lestat and Queen of the Damned, and if you hadn’t read those, you’d be pretty much lost, as it condenses two 500+ page novels into 1 hour and 40 minutes of film. A fun bit of fluff, though.

The Four Feathers— Victorian action in the Sudan, as the British Army fights the forces of the Mahdi, and snivelling coward Heath Ledger has to redeem himself after resigning his commission and deserting his fellows. Gorgeous film–pretty people, pretty costumes, pretty scenery, pretty battles.

GMS

A new theory about the End of the Universe posits the whole shebang being literally torn apart by some “phantom energy”. Readers can check out the theory in this Yahoo news story, and be as surprised as I am that the theory wasn’t put forth by Crawford Tillinghast.

Nothing to worry about, as long as we’ve got Bernard Quatermass on the job.

In far less apocalyptic news, Green Ronin has posted the cover of Skull & Bones, the pirates-n-voodoo D20 supplement that Ian Sturrock, T.S. Luikart and myself (with tons of assistance from Laura Hanson) started writing after a visit to Las Vegas’ Treasure Island pirate show during the GAMA trade show in March of 2001. The product has gone through two game systems, three companies (SCS, Adamant, and now Green Ronin) and two years, and now it’s almost here…and it’s something that I’m quite proud about.

So, this weekend’s writing project is to spend 100% of my time working on the novel. I decided that to get into a different mind-space from the gaming work that has been my primary focus for the past decade or so, I’m going to be working on this by hand. Pen to paper–not worrying about typing it up until much later on. I’m hoping that the different feel of working direct from head to hand to paper will be enough of a change from my usual hunt-and-peck that it’ll make finding that elusive “zone” a little bit easier.

We’ll see, I suppose.

GMS

For some reason, it took a day to propagate, but the template changes finally showed up.

Anyway– It’s Strange Link Day!

From the “even though I studied Japanese language and culture in College, I still don’t get their pop-culture” file, Ganguro girls. Tsugoi, desu ne?

GMS