Wednesday, March 18, 2009

See, this is kind of regular.

Alright, so another quarter draws to a close. What have I learned? This: the internet is a hydra. Each head is trying to find another way to devour my time, health, and sanity. If I don't get my act together, I will end up writing a webcomic about Christian theology for the rest of my life. Awesome as that could be, it's not exactly the direction I was planning to go with said life. Besides which, I can't draw.

In music this week, I review albums that are thirty-seven and forty-two years old, respectively, because they are good albums and you should listen to them. First, David Bowie's The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (Ziggy Stardust if you want to be able to end the sentence before running out of breath): this is a concept album about, well, I'm not really sure. There's a rock star who may be an alien from outer space (though my interpretation is that this is just part of his act) who is trying to spread a message of love and peace while the rock'n'roll lifestyle drags him downward. Also the world has run out of resources or something and will end in five years. But that's not important. The songs are all superbly crafted and flow from one to the next, not just musically but emotionally as well. There is a coherent story here, though Bowie's fragmented, sometimes ludicrous lyrics ("I'm an alligator/ I'm a mama-papa coming for you/ I'm a space invader/ I'll be a rock'n'rolling bitch for you" and "The kids was just crass/ He was the nazz/ With god-given ass" - WHAT.) make it difficult to follow. It's fascinating how Bowie manages to communicate so much while making no sense whatsoever. Texturally, songs are simple driving guitar chords or else simple driving piano chords with very minimalist guitar riffs, accompanied by Bowie's somewhat nasal yet emotionally effective voice. More or less.

The opening song is "Five Years", about the despair gradually settling on the world in the face of not a bang but a whimper; Bowie's repeated cries of "five years!" recalls Roger Water's hoarse shouting on The Wall (yeah, The Wall postdates Ziggy Stardust by seven years, whatever.) "Moonage Daydream" has simultaneously some of the best and worst lyrics on the entire album (the first fragment above is the first stanza of this song, which also includes the awesome lines "Keep your electric eyes on me babe/ Put your ray gun to my throat".) The album generally and this song specifically also win the award for "Best Prominent Use of Strings In A Manner Neither Cheesy Nor Pretentious". There's "It Ain't Easy", which chorus has the force of a gospel choir. "Hang On To Yourself" marks the rising action, the beginning of the final chapter of Ziggy Stardust's meteoric career. "Suffragette City" basically just rocks, and "Rock 'n' Roll Suicide" marks a final redemption for the burned-out rock star. Superb pop album to the point where I will perhaps adopt the "Ziggy" as a unit of pop goodness. (Ziggy Stardust ranks 5 Z, as do Abbey Road and Sgt. Pepper; Björk's Debut rates 4 Z, and Tori Amos' Little Earthquakes as well as U2's Joshua Tree, while their Achtung Baby rates 3 Z along with Coldplay's Viva La Vida and The New Pornographer's Challengers.)

Other album: Cream's Disraeli Gears. While it clocks in at only 33 minutes, it is 33 minutes of alternating very good bluesrock ("Sunshine of Your Love" and "Swlabr") and excellent hazy psychedelia ("Tales of Brave Ulysses" and "We're Going Wrong"). The vocal harmonies are smooth ("creamy" is actually the best term for it), Clapton's guitar is excellent and bluesy, and this is the album that marks the point where blues met rock and had the best one-night stand ever which resulted in the birth of beautiful things like Led Zeppelin. Note that I can't rank it in terms of Ziggys, since it is, broadly, "rock" and not "pop", as somewhat arbitrarily defined by me.

Well, I was looking around the internet the other day, and I noticed that not one person on the internet has an opinion on Watchmen the movie. Naturally, it falls to me to correct this situation. [Spoiler alert] The movie is a lot of fun if you've read the book. Some things are delightful to see on screen (Rorschach's prison stint, Archie, the Comedian, Manhattan's Mars clockpalace), and the opening montage was quite enjoyable. I believe Rorschach, Manhattan and Ozymandias all put in solid acting performances (not everyone did), and I understand why they cut minor characters and removed the exploding squid psybomb - okay, but the way they handled the ending was, frankly, terrible: a) they decided to blow up not just New York BUT ALSO Paris, Beijing, Moscow, Tokyo, etc. - but they don't show any of those other explosions, just computer displays indicating that Paris, Beijing, Moscow, Tokyo, etc. are all blowing up and incidentally have identical buildings in identical places at their respective ground zeroes. (I'm pretty sure that's what I saw, anyway. Could have been wrong.) So we really are only emotionally invested in New York (except not so much even there, since we don't really know any of the minor characters whose deaths lend gravitas and pathos to the scene in the book). It came off as a cheap attempt to up the ante, and was unnecessary. b) Nite Owl is present when Manhattan kills Rorschach. This is completely unnecessary and only serves to have him fall to his knees screaming "NOOOOOOOO", which is bad, and then rush back inside and c) punch an unresisting Ozymandias multiple times. Alright, so this is pretty serious: the nuance of the heroes' reactions to Ozymandias in the book are key: there is so much ambiguity as to who is in the right, if anyone, and that is pretty much excised in the movie: Nite Owl's stance is that he won't reveal the plot, but he thinks Ozymandias is scum. This is a far cry from the book: 
"How...how can humans make decisions like this? We're damned if we stay quiet, Earth's damned if we don't. We...okay. Okay, count me in. We say nothing."
Why, exactly, is it necessary to change that? All of which is nothing compared to d) The last scene between Manhattan and Ozymandias is completely removed. You remember that one?
"I did the right thing, didn't I? It all worked out in the end."
"'In the end'? Nothing ends, Adrian. Nothing ever ends."
Yeah, the one that defined the entire tone of the ending and thus the entire story. They replaced that with Silk Spectre saying, "If Jon were here, he'd say, 'Nothing ever ends.'" Need I explain how awful this is?

Also, some of the soundtrack was kind of jerky. My biggest problem was the abrupt "Sound of Silence" for the Comedian's funeral. Don't get me wrong - I love Simon and Garfunkel, but it felt forced.

Like I said, the movie was fun, primarily, I think, for people who have read the book. It can't compare to the original, is likely to be incomprehensible and boring to those who haven't read the book, and contains some remarkably poor scriptwriting choices, but it's a fun movie. Dark Knight was a better comic book movie, but was also not perfect (there were parts that didn't involve Heath Ledger, for instance). Lord of the Rings had to bear the albatross of its inability to live up to the source material as well, and thus also contains many disappointing moments (Mordor was quite poorly done, for instance; Sauron should never have been a physical eye); I guess the thing to do in these cases is enjoy the movie, have fun discussing utilitarian v. deontological ethics in terms of Rorschach v. Ozymandias, and reread the book. So do that.

Utilitarianism is loathsome, incidentally.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Each head is trying to find another way to devour my time, health, and sanity. If I don't get my act together, I will end up writing a webcomic about Christian theology for the rest of my life. Awesome as that could be, it's not exactly the direction I was planning to go with said life."
This is hilarious, as is the fact that although said is usually used to refer to something in a shorter, easier way, said life is actually a more, not a less, effort-consuming way to vary the wording my life.

"It's fascinating how Bowie manages to communicate so much while making no sense whatsoever."
More than I can say for the authors criticized in Fashionable Nonsense, which I'm currently reading, and which is excellent.

"(yeah, The Wall postdates Ziggy Stardust by seven years, whatever.)"
Nice, hahaha.

" 'Best Prominent Use of Strings In A Manner Neither Cheesy Nor Pretentious' "
I like the fact that the modifier Neither Cheesy Nor Pretentious is postpositive. The wording has the elegance and concision of a relative clause where that is has been ellipted (which is what I think it is). This and the moderately literary words in the award's name (Prominent, Manner, Neither...Nor, Pretentious) clashes funnily with the slangy Cheesy.

"There's 'It Ain't Easy', which chorus has the force of a gospel choir."
I've always liked relative clauses where the noun follows the relative pronoun (which chorus), and you produce a lot of them. (Last Tuesday, I wrote, "So when I said that the reasoning above 'predicted' that the 'grammatical' form would occur and the 'ungrammatical' one wouldn't [which prediction we easily disproved], ..." [italics new].)

The Ziggy (Z) ftw. Viva linguistic innovation.

"Note that I can't rank it in terms of Ziggys, since it is, broadly, 'rock' and not 'pop', as somewhat arbitrarily defined by me."
Funny (the claim itself as well as somewhat arbitrarily), and I like the awkward passive coda (really, I do. It's funny). Reminds me of some sentences in my translation of Tartuffe.

I have not read the rest, since I have not yet watched Watchmen.

Unknown said...

So, pretty much the same internet crap here. I'm a political science freak sometimes.

"This is the sort of bloody nonsense up with which I will not put."
I think David Bowie makes perfect sense.

Utilitarianism is awesome - it makes me happy that it's okay to smoke as long as I run afterwards.

I've not yet seen any of the Lord of the Rings movies because I am morally opposed to seeing movies before I have read the book. I have not read the books because I couldn't get through the boring beginning of The Hobbit.

"my translation of Tartuffe."
fkjla;liawheowiarg
you've made a translation of Tartuffe!??!?!?!?
:p

Melelaswe said...

I will greatly agree with the movie LotR failing to live up to my visualizations of LotR. * complains * Rivendell is far more amazing than any depiction I've ever seen. Nazgul are far, far more fell than they are depicted. And elves - I don't believe I'd consider any of the movie elves to be particularly pretty, and elves are supposed to be otherworldly in their beauty.

Hobbit's beginning isn't boring. Besides, why read books serially the first time? Parallelize the task!

(Btw, Priestwarrior, Erik, this is B.... D...... from NVC - happy to be in the e-presence of ya'll's superbnesses again :) )

priestwarrior said...

Answering aeons-old comments!

Erik: I never really have anything to say to your comments, but know that I enjoy them immensely.

Andy: David Bowie would make perfect sense to you. Actually, since reading David Hume, Utilitarianism is not so obviously terrible any more. I read Kant and Hume for class this past quarter, and emerged without a coherent moral theory. So that's good, I guess.

B.D.: Good to see you on the internet, sir. How are you? I agree about the Nazgûl - there's a wonderful creeping paranoia in the book when the Black Riders are first introduced which is not even attempted in the movie. And obviously, since Peter Jackson had a finite amount of money, Rivendell and Lorien can't match up to what's in our heads. Elves can't be all that otherworldly if they're played by human actors. It's a film adaptation, and it can't really measure up to the original, and we have to live with that.