Tuesday, September 27, 2022

MOVIE REVIEW: Dredd

 


In a futuristic metropolis, an elite group of law enforcement officers called Judges are engaged to be judge, jury, and executioner to the criminals they are sent to apprehend. The best of them, named Dredd, is assigned a rookie, who also happens to be an extremely powerful psychic, on her first day. The two end up locked inside the largest housing building in the city, targets of the most dangerous and vicious drug dealer in business, a former prostitute called Ma-ma. Can they use their mixture of abilities and experience to survive?

This is a 2012 production based on a comic strip, starring Karl Urban (Lord of the Rings and Star Trek) as the main character. Though you never get to see his face (he wears an armored helmet), and he delivers his lines in a rough, grating tone of voice, the performance is stellar. Olivia Thirby (The Darkest Hour) plays the rookie, Anderson, who uses her mental gifts to confuse and control the small army sent to kill her and her partner. Full of action and suspense, this is a great effort by all concerned. Due to intense violence, including some involving children, and a great deal of strong language, this is not recommended for young viewers. 


Tuesday, September 20, 2022

BOOK REVIEW: Where the Lost Wander by Amy Harmon

 


This is a story of the immigrant west, when the wagon trains were bringing white settlers by the thousands to join the gold miners in California and what would become the adjacent western states. One family of immigrants is the May family, which includes Naomi, their only and recently widowed daughter. One of the travelers in the same wagon train they have joined is John Lowry, a half-breed Pawnee driving a pack of mules to be sold to one of the forts along the way. Coming from very different backgrounds, these two find love in each other, only to have that love tested in unimaginable ways by the rigors and dangers of the journey they are on.

A product of love and research by its author, this book tells in real detail how hard life really was on the romanticized trek west for the people looking for a new life in the unconquered lands there. It also tells a little about the Native Americans that originally held the land, and their various responses to the influx of unwelcome strangers into their home. Told from the points of view of both Naomi and John, it is a tale of strength in the face of grief, resilience in adversity, and how love can provide both. Exceptional read.


Tuesday, September 13, 2022

MOVIE REVIEW: All the Old Knives

 


A CIA officer, Henry Pelham, is given the assignment of reopening the investigation of an eight-year-old case that involved a hijacked airliner that ended tragically when all the passengers and terrorists were killed. The mastermind of this act has been apprehended, and has indicated that the terrorists were being fed information from inside the CIA itself. So, Pelham finds himself forced to reunite with his old cronies from his station in Vienna, including the woman agent that he fell in love with. Who was the leak, and can Pelham trust himself to do what is right, even if it breaks his heart?

This is told in a series of flashbacks to the time of the hijacking and the sequence of events surrounding it. A thriller with many twists and turns, it is relentlessly intriguing and extremely entertaining. It keeps the interest with an almost hypnotic intensity, and should definitely be on the short list of all spy movie enthusiasts. Stars Chris Pine and Thandiwe Newton.


Tuesday, September 6, 2022

BOOK REVIEW: Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt

 


On a hot week in August, young Winnie Foster decides to run away from her rigid, sheltered life in the small town of Treegap. On the same day, a woman named Mae Tuck sets out to meet her sons, and a stranger comes to town. All seem very innocuous, but they are all intrinsically linked by a wood next to the Foster home, and the mysterious spring in the center of it. The meeting of these people will have effects that will reverberate through time, and maybe even decide the destiny of everyone on Earth.

This is a book for young adults that takes place in the 19th century. The Tucks are one of the most unique families ever to grace the pages of literature. They and their experiences will be remembered as long as books exist, and perhaps even longer. For they are the first ones that truly asked, What would it be like to live forever? And they are perhaps the first ones that truly come up with an answer.