Friday, May 8, 2026

Movie Review: Thrash (2026)

Thrash (2026) written and directed by Tommy Wirkola

A massive hurricane is about to hit the Atlantic coast town of Annieville. Most people evacuate but the story naturally follows those who stay (or are caught) behind. Dakota (Whitney Peak) lost her mom a couple of months ago and is living an agoraphobic life so she doesn't make it out. Her uncle Dr. Dale Edwards (Djimon Hounsou) is a shark expert working north of the storm and sets out to rescue her with the help of a self-serving TV crew that wants to get great footage of the disaster. Lisa (Phoebe Dynevor) is a very pregnant meat company worker who leaves the local plant too late to make it out and gets trapped in her car as the waters rise outside Dakota's house. Meanwhile, three foster kids get trapped in their home when their adoptive parents insist on waiting out the storm until its too late. The big problem is sharks. They've come in with the storm surge, partly drawn by a truck full of meat-packing waste that fills the town waters (even though the foster kids live live much further out of town). The storm and the sharks menace everyone.

Director Wirkola has a track record of high-concept/medium delivery films (Dead Snow, Hansel and Gretel Witch Hunters, Violent Night). He has some interesting ideas here but so many things don't make sense. When the truck of chum breaks open, why does the blood and gore go out to sea when the storm surge is pushing everything inland? Why are the foster parents getting checks from the US Treasury and not a local foster care agency? How does their "snorkel-equipped" pickup truck even work? The execution just is not well thought out. The movie is not exciting enough to cover over the big holes in believability and it takes itself too seriously to laugh off the dumb ideas. 

Not recommended--we need a better shark movie!

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Food on the Spring 2026 NYC Trip

On the way up, we stopped for pizza in the middle of nowhere, Pennsylvania. We drove a little further for dessert at The Shoppes of Premise Maid. We found a geocache, had some ice cream, and bought a treat for our NYC hostess. I had their Shoo Fly Pie ice cream in a pretzel cone. My wife called it the most Pennsylvanian thing I could order.

Entrance to heaven

"Educational" part of the store--how they make stuff

Me and my ice cream

We made it to New York in time for the dinner rush. We got ramen at Ramen Ishida Chelsea, just north of where we were staying. I had a bowl of the Plant Based Shoyu, with broth, bamboo, bok choi, corn, bell pepper, bean sprouts, and other delightful bits. It was delicious.

Fancy bowl at no extra charge!

A happy client

The second day, we had breakfast and lunch at Google NYC, so no pictures there. Then we made pasta for dinner at our home away from home, which was not very photo worthy either. The next day we had bagels for breakfast from a nearby bagel place, Sofia's. They were great. I had a cinnamon raisin bagel.

Sofia's Bagels

We were in the theater district for lunch and had to rush so we had some McDonalds (no pictures of that). For dinner, we tried out a very popular hot bar at Tashkent Market (a supermarket in the Village). I got the Kutabi with Spinach, an Azerbajani flat bread stuffed with spinach and other good things.

The store spells it "kutabi"

For dessert, we went to Salt and Straw, a local ice cream shop with custom flavors (along with classic flavors). I had the Coconut Cherry Pie with Almond Crust ice cream (two desserts in one!). They were making special salted brownie waffle cones, so I couldn't resist getting that. It was amazing. If I lived here, I would go at least once a week, if not more often. Maybe I would get a job there?

Coconut Cherry Pie ice cream

The next day was our final morning in the city, so we got bagels again (had to finish the leftover cream cheese!). If the ice cream shop had been open, I would have gone there again!

Maybe they will open one in our hometown?

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Book Review: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight by J.R.R. Tolkien

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight by J.R.R. Tolkien

Among his other accomplishments, J.R.R. Tolkien translated many ancient and medieval texts into modern English. One project was "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight." The poem survives from the fourteenth century AD and is one of the more famous Arthurian legends. Gawain is a knight of the Round Table and nephew to King Arthur. One Christmastide, the enigmatic Green Knight shows up and makes a challenge to a beheading game. Arthur gets one swing of his axe to behead the Green Knight, then in a year and a day the Green Knight will get one swing to behead Arthur. Gawain rises to the challenge, takes Arthur's place, and lops off the Green Knight's head in one blow. The Green Knight picks up his head, reminds Sir Gawain of his appointment in a little over a year, and bids him to come to the Green Chapel where payment will be taken.

Gawain then has to travel all over England in search of the Green Chapel, since it is as unknown as the Green Knight. His search takes almost a whole year. He finds a hidden castle. The castle's lord says he knows where the Green Chapel is and will have someone guide Gawain on the appointed day. At this point, the appointment is only a few days away. As Gawain prepares, a lady of the castle tries to seduce him before the encounter. Being a chivalrous knight, he resists, especially as he sees himself about to die and not wanting to commit a grave sin just before. The final confrontation with the Green Knight reveals a lot about what is going on (including the source of his supernatural powers) and brings the story to an interesting conclusion.

Gawain is a classic knight of the Round Table, embodying honor and initiative. He follows through on his promise even when it turns out quite the opposite of what he expected. He searches for the Green Chapel even though getting there has little appeal. He resists the lady even as she comes into his room in the morning to have a tete-a-tete and maybe something more. His nobility makes him an appealing character. 

The poetry has an interesting style. Rhyming isn't as important as alliteration, giving it a rolling rhythm as it runs its race. I enjoyed the creativity. The vocabulary made some vivid visuals and keeps the reader engaged. Here's a sample:
Now New Year draws near and the night passes,
day comes driving the dark, as ordained by God;
but wild weathers of the world awake in the land,
clouds cast keenly the cold upon the earth
with bitter breath from the North biting the naked. [Stanza 80]
The poem is reviewed on A Good Story is Hard to Find Podcast #378. Check it out!

The book has two other poems. "Pearl" is, at the beginning, a poem describing a man who has lost a pearl of immeasurable value. The first few stanzas immediately put a Christian in mind of Jesus's parable of the man who sold everything he had to buy a pearl of inestimable price. That parallel becomes explicit as the poem moves on from the physical jewel to a pure, unblemished woman to the very biblical reference. The praise of purity continues on as the author invokes many biblical images of perfection, finishing with a lot of the imagery from the Apocalypse of John. The poem is interesting and delightful.

The final poem, "Sir Orfeo," describes the life of an early medieval king name Orfeo whose wife is kidnapped by fairies. In sorrow, he puts himself in exile, wandering the earth and slowing growing thinner and hairier as the years go by. A chance encounter with fairy folk lets him into their kingdom where he has the opportunity to discover his love again and return with her to his kingdom that was left in the care of a steward. The story is charming, told in rhyming couplets with vocabulary that puts the reader into bygone era.

Recommended for Tolkien fans, poetry fans, and the like.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

NYC 2026 Trip--Random Odd Things in NYC

Here's a bunch of random bits of NYC that didn't fit in other posts...

We visited the fire station that was the headquarters in the original Ghostbusters movie. They don't let anyone inside but they do have some appropriate decorations. A nice lady (and Ghostbusters fan) took our picture!

Where ya gonna go?

Closeup of us

I found a geocache that was part of a "SATC" series. I didn't realize that meant "Sex and the City" which I have never seen. According to the cache page Samantha moved to this area (the Meatpacking District) in season 3. 

A geocache is a geocache

Gay Street is a short thoroughfare, only a block or two, and also has a geocache. Sheryl Crowe shot a music video here for "A Change Would Do You Good."

Gay Street

Near the theater where we saw Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is Times Square. We walked through looking for lunch options. 

Times Square, just like the building says

K-Pop Demon Hunters at the square

56 Leonard Street looks like it was fun for the architect to design but a nightmare for the engineer to build.

56 Leonard Street

Not sure if I would go out on those balconies

The James Hotel looks like they ran out of money to finish the top. Or maybe there's a rooftop ballroom with an outdoor area?

The James hotel

We saw a lot of parking lots with stacked cars, something we haven't seen anywhere else.

Valet service, I hope

A thirty-foot tall steel tree sculpture adorns a square in the Meatpacking District. It's called Where Angels Live and was crafted by Charlotte Colbert.

Tree=Heaven?

I was amazed to see a row of houses that resisted the modernization pressures of the big city.

From the good old days

The Goodnight Moon house was moved to Greenwich Village in 1967 to avoid demolition. It was owned at one point by Margaret Wise Brown (author of Goodnight Moon). It's still a private residence and defies all the high rises around it. 

Little house on the corner

The Church of Saint Mary the Virgin sits just outside Times Square, nestled in among regular buildings.

Church of Saint Mary

Another geocaching discovery is Jefferson Market Library. Originally it was the local courthouse. It was converted to a library in 1967. It's definitely fancier than any libraries in my area.

Jefferson Market Library

Library wall decor inside

The geocache

The city has a lot of other library-centered geocaches, so I can't wait to get back and explore more.

On the way home we saw a thirty-foot statue of Our Lady, Queen of Peace, in Newcastle, Delaware. We saw a companion statue by the same artist in California here. The artist is local to Newcastle and the residents wanted their own statue when they saw how great the California one came out.

Our Lady, Queen of Peace

Monday, May 4, 2026

Book Review: Usagi Yojimbo Vol. 28 by Stan Sakai

Usagi Yojimbo Volume 28: Red Scorpion by Stan Sakai

More adventures from the rabbit ronin!

Taiko--A drum-maker is desperate to make a drum worthy of petitioning the gods. His village has had drought after drought--another year without rain would mean the end. If that wasn't bad enough, the Red Scorpion Gang is extorting the town for protection money. Usagi happens to run into the drum-maker and they become friends, drawing him into the effort to build the drum and keep the gang at bay. The story is surprisingly moving. Usagi is a bit cynical about the drum-project at the beginning but loyalty is loyalty, leading to an emotional finale.

Toad Oil--Usagi arrives in a town to find Kitsune trying to sell toad oil to the locals. People think it's a scam, especially when she "cuts" herself and magically cures it with the toad oil. One of the locals is ready to stick her with his sword to see if she can cure that wound. Usagi is about to intervene when Kitsune's sidekick Kiyoko warns him off. A local magistrate intervenes instead and somebody gets stabbed. Kitsune uses the oil and creates a miracle cure, cementing the sales of the toad oil. Later, Usagi is hanging out with Kitsune when her accomplices (including the "local" and the "magistrate") show up to get paid. A little argument breaks out because the accomplices want more money but Usagi warns them off. But that is not the end of the story, which finishes in a winsome way.

The Return of the Lord of Owls--Usagi travels the mountain passes with an older man who works as a guide. He tells Usagi the story of a young samurai who was out drinking one night with his friends. They ran out of money and had to leave the tavern. As they walked the streets they invited a wayfarer to join them for drinks, his treat. Unfortunately, the wayfarer was the Lord of Owls and he killed all of them except the youngest, who threw away his sword and groveled to be saved. The Lord of Owls predicted that he will be much more miserable than his comrades. Usagi is moved by the story and they continue their journey where they run into their own trouble. Though the ending is easy to guess, it still hits the spot.

Those Who Tread on Scorpion's Tail--Usagi is invited by his master's former student to visit the student's sword-fighting dojo. Usagi spars with the senior students, besting them all. The master challenges Usagi to a friendly match. Usagi throws the match to protect the honor of the master. Meanwhile, the local magistrate's son is kidnapped by the Red Scorpion Gang, demanding a huge ransom. The magistrate shuts down all the roads leaving the area and enlists the dojo's students to help search. The story plays out from there with plenty of surprise reveals. It was a very interesting story with a downer of an ending.

Recommended--highly for Usagi fans.



Friday, May 1, 2026

Movie Reviews: More Vincent Price Films

I guess I just can't resist a good Vincent Price film, or even a mediocre one! I watched these through a combination of library DVD loans and streaming services like Kanopy and Hoopla

House of Wax (1953) directed by Andre de Toth

The great sculptor Henry Jarrod (Vincent Price) is a bit of a prima donna. He creates beautiful, historical works. They are truly exquisite but they do not draw crowds like neighboring waxworks displays in New York City that focus on the lurid and shocking. Jarrod's financial partner Matthew Burke (Roy Roberts) is very unhappy with the trickle of money coming in and wants things to change. Jarrod has invited a wealthy art critic to visit his displays. The critic is interested in investing but has to travel to Egypt for an archeological dig before he can commit. He'll be gone for three months. Burke is upset with the delay since he has other investment prospects. Burke offers a different plan--they can burn down the building and split the twenty-five thousand dollars in insurance money. Jarrod is horrified because he loves his works and refuses to harm them. Burke insists, starting the fire and a brawl with Jarrod. Jarrod is knocked out and Burke leaves the flaming building. In the aftermath, everyone assumes Jarrod died. Burke winds up not having to split the money.

Not long after, a series of bodies disappear from the streets of New York. A cloaked figure stalks the streets and the morgues. It's a scarred Jarrod, who is planning both for revenge on Burke and to open a new house of wax. To speed up the production process, he uses a new and gruesome method for producing the figures.

The movie is legendary, one of the big 3D movies that came out as a gimmick to compete with the television. Some of the scenes are blatantly 3D. The two most notable are the paddleball performer who shoots his ball out over the audience and the can-can dancers who kick their legs out into the audience. Both scenes are mostly gratuitous and are less impressive at home on a 2D television. They are a bit cheesy, but so are some other elements that add comedy to balance out the horror. The spirit of entertainment is woven throughout the film. Price is his usual smooth and effective self, transitioning from the metaphorically-tortured artist who loves his work more than anything into the physically-tortured and deformed man who now has more sinister motives. The rest of the cast is good but do not shine as much as Price. The plot moves at a good pace and the lavish sets and technicolor set the right mood for the film.

Recommended--this is classic Price horror entertainment, with lots of silly theatricality.

The Fly (1958) directed by Kurt Neumann

A young woman, Helene (Patricia Owens), flees a factory where she has just killed a man. The man is her husband Andre (David Al Hedison), an obsessed scientist. She calls her brother-in-law Francois (Vincent Price) to have him call the police and come over to her home. Francois comes and finds her acting like a mad woman. Francois takes her son Phillipe (Charles Herbert) home with him as the investigation into the murder commences. The police cannot get anything out of Helene at first. She admits she did the deed but claims it was the wishes of her husband. Eventually she breaks down and tells the story to the inspector (Herbert Marshall) and Francois of what happened. Her husband was working on a teleportation device, somewhat obsessively, and a horrible accident made the situation extremely stressful.

In case you haven't seen the film or known the twist about what happened, I won't spoil it here. I saw this as a kid and watching it now is a much different experience. The movie is much more dramatic and serious than I remember. The feeling of dread pervades the film with no real relief, comic or otherwise, as the story moves forward. The ending is famous and not always taken seriously but it sure looks like the filmmakers were playing it straight. I found it more effecting and less silly than I did as a kid. The movie does a great job telling the story with restraint except for the occasional shock moments and has the typical 1950s bit of moralizing at the end.

Recommended, though this has not aged as well as other films.

Why not follow The Fly with...

The Web (1947) directed by Michael Gordon

Lawyer Bob Regan (Edmund O'Brien) is hired by industrialist Andrew Colby (Vincent Price) as a bodyguard to protect him from a partner who just got out of a five-year prison stint for embezzling their company. Colby is paranoid and Regan is desperate. Both are enamored of Colby's secretary, Noel Faraday (Ella Raines), who seems to be deep in Colby's pockets. Regan is just as interested in her as in protecting Colby. The ex-con shows up the next night and Regan shoots him when he discovers Colby and the ex-con wrestling over a gun. What seems like an open-and-shut case of self defense gets spun out into a more intriguing situation by Lieutenant Damico (William Bendix), who doesn't quite buy into what Colby and company are selling.

This has all the characters of a typical noir--the femme fatale, the sucker, the criminal mastermind, the relentless cop. Raines's character is a bit ambiguous. Is she scheming with Colby or is she really interested in Regan? The performances are good, especially Bendix, giving the proceedings an edge. The plot has some nice complications and an extremely tough situation that Regan has fallen into. Viewers are kept guessing how things will turn out.

Recommended--a solid film noir I hadn't heard of before.

The Tomb of Ligeia (1964) directed by Roger Corman

A late entry into the Corman/Price Edgar Allan Poe cycle. Price is Verden Fell, recently widowed. He buries his wife Ligeia (Elizabeth Shepherd) in the ruins of an abbey next to his mansion. The local minister objects as they are digging the grave, claiming she was a very evil woman, but Verden will have nothing of it. After that's done, the story skips a few years ahead. Verden has become a recluse. A local fox hunt brings Lady Rowena (also Elizabeth Shepherd) onto the grounds where she is thrown from her horse. The horse was spooked by a black cat hanging out on Ligeia's tombstone. Verden comes out, brings Rowena into the house, and tends to her sprained ankle. They fall in love but that cat keeps showing up and causing problems for Rowena. And Verden is not as forthcoming as he could be about how he spends his nights.

The story has a great set-up but the energy flags in the middle. The show goes through the motions, often with style, but it does not hit the viewers like earlier works in the Poe cycle. On the plus side, there's a lot of outdoor scenes that look great, including the fox hunt. It's good enough but average by comparison to other outings.

Mildly recommended.

Leave Her to Heaven (1945) directed by John Stahl

Writer Richard Harland (Cornell Wilde) meets Ellen Berent (Gene Tierney) on a train ride. She's reading his latest book and they have a little flirty conversation. They are both going to her parents' home though they had never met before. She's there to scatter the ashes of her beloved father. He's just visiting the parents. He instantly falls for her and she plays along. She's so interested that she jilts her fiance, District Attorney Russ Quinton (Vincent Price). He flies across the country to confront her but she remains firm, claiming she's already engaged to Harland. After Quinton leaves, she proposes to Harland. They are happy for a bit, though she gets frustrated with the extended family on both sides. Harland has a crippled brother Danny (Darryl Hickman) who they take care of, but most of the care falls on her shoulders. She wants to be the ideal wife, cooking and cleaning herself. The situation gets worse when the trio moves to Harland's remote fishing cabin where another guy, the caretaker, provides another fifth wheel to their marriage. And her mom and sister show up for a visit, increasing the tension for Ellen, and thereby everyone around them. Terrible things happen from there.

The movie at first seems like a romantic melodrama with its lush Technicolor and the sweeping vistas. But it quickly shifts into film noir as Ellen gets more manipulative and does horrible things to people. Rather than an urban crime drama, this noir is more upper class and isolated from the larger world. Tierney gives a great performance, never over-performing or getting melodramatic. Her control is amazing and horrifying to see. Price has a relatively minor role, showing up for one short scene at the beginning and then for an extended court scene at the end. He does a great job with the little he has. The rest of the cast is good and the story is riveting. 

Recommended.

Thursday, April 30, 2026

NYC 2026 Trip--Google NYC

We visited the Manhattan Google office in the former Port Authority Building. Like a lot of Google buildings, some whimsy is added to make the Googlers' work lives more happy. The outside does not exhibit that whimsy.

Google NYC

While we were waiting for our guest badges to print off, my kids found mechanical flowers hanging from the ceiling that open up when you approach them

What is that not growing up there?

Wandering around, we found a small museum of old technology. My children were fascinated by discs that were almost disk shaped and the great variety of keyboards. They even have an abacus on display!

Home for abandoned tech

Counting the old fashioned way

The building also has a game room which features pingpong, pool tables, foosball, board games, and video games including a DDR-style game. We tried out the later but only my wife was any good at it. She had plenty of practice back in the day. 

So much to play!

The classic

Another hallway has a display of Lego creations by Googlers, including a QR code that was a joke. A nearby table has more Lego for people to make new creations and add them to the shelves.

What would you build?

The roof is accessible in good weather, allowing views of Manhattan.

Empire State Building in the distance

More skyscrapers

View to New Jersey

View south to the World Trade Center

A church nestled in among the buildings!

Kooky and expensive hotel across the street

We visited several of the mini-kitchens to get snacks, along with having lunch at the cafeteria. The company takes care of its employees and their guests! It was a fun visit.