Beached Whale Day


This post is a juxtaposition of a couple of themes, but it is basically about movie reviews. Let me back way up and try to explain. “Beached Whale Day” is an aphorism that refers to the resultant human population after an occasion of much over indulgence. Picture your family on the couch, watching football, after Thanksgiving dinner. Closer to the thread of this story would be New Years Day. Picture the morning after, where the huddled masses from last night’s New Year Eve Party gather around the Wide-screen HD hearth and watch movie after movie. This has been Dan’s New Year’s welcoming ceremony for several years now. I am now co-opting at least his party’s title.

Now I don’t have any photos of whales, beached or  otherwise to provide graphics for such a post, but I do have this rather land bound Elephant seal from Año Nuevo. It will have to do. For this inaugural segment, I’ve also thrown in a couple of other photos. So, without further ado, let’s get on with the movies.

Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter – I’ve seen Spielberg’s Lincoln and that is an excellent movie. Vampire Hunter by comparison is not too bad. Heck, I’ll even go out on a limb and even give it a not bad. I watched this movie because of some comment repartee with Karen. She liked the book.

A schlocky movie with good book is way ahead of any movie without a well written foundation, like Prometheus, which I also saw on the same night. Marquee talent and something just shy of NASA’s budget, when it comes to special effects couldn’t redeem this film’s bad writing. People, don’t stick your nose into any bubbling vessels of alien goo, we learned years ago, but I digress.

Vampire Hunter has an axe wielding hero reminiscent of the real life Lincoln and not just the fabled rail splitting frontiersmen, who was so iconic that he was born in the log cabin that he built himself. In real life, Lincoln dissuaded a challenging duelist by his vigorous application of a cavalry sword “of the largest size” against an unsuspecting willow tree. I especially liked the morphing of young Lincoln’s campaign against vampirism to his historical campaign against slavery. When you equate the two, like the movie does, it makes it so much easier to demonize your political foes, both then and now.

The Lincoln Lawyer – Keeping with the Lincoln theme this Matthew McConaughey vehicle [I am just way too cute] is a trial procedural. Set in modern LA, the film gets its name, because McConaughey motors around town in the backseat of a Lincoln Continental. He hooks, but doesn’t quite know how to land his rainmaker client, who eventually turns shades of Double Indemnity. His quirky, most prosecutors would say illegal, application of justice, jells well with the street justice that he deals out daily.

Tucker and Dale vs. Evil – Returning to the axe wielding themes of the first movie in this trifecta, I offer up this deliciously dark chocolate of a comedy. Poor Tucker and Dale are the victims in this movie. The rustic West Virginian backwoodsmen that they are, they find themselves ill-equipped at dealing with the visitations of their more gentrified college brethren. This comic horror film turns Deliverance stereotypes on their heads, but there is never a good story to tell the county sheriff, when he shows up and sees you dragging the half-body that you’ve just pulled out of your wood-chipper.

None of these movies are in the least bit award contenders, but what is the sense of me recommending to you a movie that we both know is good.  You could call these three B-movies that would be fair. If you only see a couple of movies a month, then none of these are for you, but if you watch as many movies as I do, then there are not enough acknowledged A-list films to go around. I prefer to look at this process not as a lowering of standards, but rather a broadening of horizons.

Ellie Pooh’s Poo Paper

Mr. Ellie Pooh's Elephant Dung Paper

Mr. Ellie Pooh’s Elephant Dung Paper

Anne received a box of Mr. Ellie Pooh’s elephant dung paper for Christmas. It was a gift from Joanie. The box lid is pictured above. The box holds a stack of multicolored 3″ square slips of paper, suitable for grocery lists and the like. The product description says that the Ellie Pooh’s paper is handmade with a mixture of elephant dung and post consumer paper. They are pulped to perfection by the elephants of Sri Lanka. This product is the winner of the Green America’s 2008 Green Business Award and is the BBC World Challenge 2006 Winner. The following graphic shows the paper’s product development cycle: eat, poop, boil & sanitize, pulp, resulting in clean, odorless, eco-friendly acid free paper.

Ellie Pooh's Paper Product Development Cycle

Ellie Pooh’s Paper Product Development Cycle

Mr. Ellie Pooh’s mission is to reduce the ongoing Human and Elephant conflict. They’ve opened handmade paper facilities in rural areas, trained local villagers to make paper and hired artisans to embellish their goods. They hope that such an initiative will self educate the villagers into living, working and respecting the elephant, instead of killing them. Have them look at the elephants more as an asset instead of as a threat. Mr. Ellie Pooh’s paper products are 100% recycled. They are made up of 50% fiber from elephant dung and 50% post consumer paper. There are no toxic chemicals used in the paper making process. Natural vegetative binding agents, along with water-soluble salt dyes for coloring are used. Ellie Pooh’s paper is handmade, acid free and as organic as it gets.