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[personal profile] calimac
Closing just about every program that my computer is running seems to have done the trick for getting the CD burner to work. I'd thought there was interference there somewhere. What do I need all these automatically-installed programs for, anyway? The computer seems to run perfectly fine without Systray or Taskmon or Point32 or Gwhotkey or Starter or a whole bunch of other things in my startup file that are clearly not rogue programs but whose functions I can't identify.

We're not as far as I thought we were from the CP/M days when I knew the nature and purpose of every program my computer had to run.

Anyway, that seems to have worked. [livejournal.com profile] anderyn, look to your mailbox.

Anybody who thinks there's anything new about the American involvement in Iraq should read about the American involvement in Mexico in the 1910s. Embarrassingly, I'd known little about this except that it happened and that it culminated in a military incursion, but I found a good account of it in the 1954 book Woodrow Wilson and the Progressive Era by Wilson scholar Arthur S. Link. It's positively hair-raising. Previous administrations had tried to avoid getting entangled in Mexico, but the Wilsonites couldn't wait to get their hands wet. They barged in to Mexican affairs, ordering government policies around to their satisfaction, and alienating everybody. By the time the Americans fastened their seal of approval on that charming rogue Ahmad Chalabi Pancho Villa, any chance of getting out with dignity was over. Anyone who is less than pleased with current events should be seething after reading about this nearly century-old mess. It had a happy ending, though, as Wilson finally realized he was about to plunge the U.S. into an outright war with Mexico, swallowed his pride, and pulled back.

[livejournal.com profile] sturgeonslawyer went to Tahoe and ate at a Fusion Mongolian BBQ. I wound up a place like that in downtown Ann Arbor when I was on my own for lunch there on my recent trip. My conclusion was that Fusion is to Mongolian BBQ as Paul Whiteman is to jazz. Maybe this was a better one, or maybe tastes just vary.

I was slightly astonished that nobody replying to my post about Whale Rider liked the film, not that there were many replies. But I'd thought it was universally beloved and that B. and I were going to be accused of being wilfully obtuse for disliking it.

All right, how about The Triplets of Belleville? I rented that, and after twelve minutes found it so tedious, meandering, and generally foul and repellent that I could take no more. I know people I'm sure would like this, but I'm not one of them. I turned it off and watched Shrek again instead.

Date: 2004-08-12 03:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com
The snips of Triplets on Oscar night were so repellent (almost as repellent as Mystic River) I decides later for that one.

Date: 2004-08-12 05:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sturgeonslawyer.livejournal.com
I'm not surprised that the Iraqi situation resembles the situation in Mexico in the teens (that was where Pershing made his chop, right?)- BushCo is incapable of learning from history, largely becuase they're ignorant of it.

I'm one of the people who liked Triplets, though my Beloved Spousal Overunit was not - it made her brain hurt.

The key here is that it isn't meandering - it's setting up a bunch of stuff that takes time to make sense. Everything does come together, and even make sense, eventually, and almost everything is necessary to make the climax of the plot hang together (the only thing I can think of that isn't is the dog's obsession with trains).

Date: 2004-08-12 02:35 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com
Yes, the Mexican expedition was Pershing's. The book I'm reading has a photo of him in Mexico surrounded by his adjutants. One of them, the only one wearing a tie, is a Lt. Patton. Yes, him.

Re Triplets, it may all come together, but it meanders on the way there. Not until reading a review afterwards did I realize that the little boy in one scene is the same person as the grown man in the next scene: they don't look alike and there's no spoken dialogue to clarify it. This film's visual language is clearly one that I don't intuitively grasp.

Date: 2004-08-12 08:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] milwaukeesfs.livejournal.com
Must have missed your post about "Whale Rider." Georgie and I thought it was a very fine movie and would have been happy to see the leading actress have the Oscar for it (even though she hadn't a hope considering the competition--). Even though the story's turning point is pretty unlikely, most of it is a very affecting story about struggling to preserve and respect tradition while adapting to the modern world.

I also thought "Triplets of Belleville" was great, but probably not everyone's cup of tea. It has a decidedly "underground" comic aesthetic, and if you thought the first few minutes were 'repellent' you absolutely will not enjoy the beginnings of Madame Souza's sojourn in "New York", especially her dinner with the sisters--.

I think its wonderfully weird and a heartwarming story of a grandmother's devotion to her grandson (Crones rule! Especially crones with hand grenades--)--but you've got to be up for it.

Date: 2004-08-13 05:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com
Devotion? It looked like she was torturing him on that bicycle ride.

Date: 2004-08-13 05:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com
It wasn't that the turning point in Rider was unlikely, it's that it was so likely it should've happened two hours earlier: the only question was how long it would take for the old man to see what everybody else saw. It could've been an affecting story if it hadn't been so firmly and utterly cliched.

Date: 2004-08-15 05:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] olivia777.livejournal.com
Hello from NYC. I just got caught up with your posts. I see we have certain interests in common so I "friended" you. Feel free to browse my posts.
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