Cinematic Advent Calendar #02 – When Harry met Sally…

Last year I did a musical advent calendar that I posted to Google+ and a final summary on this blog. This year on a similar theme I will be posting a cinematic advent calendar of twenty four films. It is in no particular order and I make no apologies for the films that I am posting. These are films that I really like and have enjoyed at the cinema. Some have been sheer enjoyment and others have had more of an impact.

Cinematic Advent Calendar #02 - When Harry met Sally...

My second choice for the calendar is When Harry met Sally… Can men ever be friends with women? This very funny film explores that very question with Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan. Set over a fair few years from when they first met on a road trip to New York through chance encounters, this take of two friends is both amusing and sentimental. It is also quite funny. It is one of the few films I probably watch every year and enjoy it every time. There are also strong performances from Carrie Fisher and Bruno Kirby as friends of Harry and Sally.

I have considered going to New York based on this film alone, but of course the New York now is very different to that one back in 1989. The film certainly doesn’t show the hustle and bustle of the New York that you see in many films, there is a calmer and more hip version of New York. Reminds me of Clifton in Bristol when I watch.

If you like romantic comedies then you probably have seen this, made in an era of similar films, this was a little sharper and tougher than the types we have seen in the last ten years.

I nearly put City Slickers into this list of films, but recalled it was When Harry met Sally which introduced me to Billy Crystal, so if you do watch When Harry met Sally and enjoy it, take a look at City Slickers too.

Download When Harry met Sally… from iTunes.

Get When Harry met Sally… at Amazon.

Cinematic Advent Calendar #01 – Full Metal Jacket

Last year I did a musical advent calendar that I posted to Google+ and a final summary on this blog. This year on a similar theme I will be posting a cinematic advent calendar of twenty four films. It is in no particular order and I make no apologies for the films that I am posting. These are films that I really like and have enjoyed at the cinema. Some have been sheer enjoyment and others have had more of an impact.

Back in the 1980s there was a plethora of films about the Vietnam War, from the intriguing Apocalypse Now, the brutal Platoon and the lightweight Good Morning Vietnam, the one Vietnam War film I remember more than the others was Full Metal Jacket.

Full Metal Jacket

From the brutality of the Marine training camp to the pointlessness of the horror of Vietnam, this film for me covers the awfulness of war and the impact it has on the men and women who take part and the unfortunate civilians who get caught up in it all. The harshness of basic training reminds us that it is the very young that get sent to fight the wars, often they have no idea of what they are doing or why they are doing it. Joker’s helmet with the CND peace symbol and “born to kill” is a dichotomy that is often explored in the film. The futility of the fighting is demonstrated again and again with the subsequent waste of life on both sides. A film that shows off many of the horrors of modern warfare and the violence that one would see, there is within the film a lot of dark humour and you can feel guilty smiling or even laughing at the humour.

Beautifully filmed and very cinematic, from a technical perspective when you realise that most of the movie was filmed in the UK you can really appreciate the film makers art. The Norfolk Broads was where the paddy fields of Vietnam were filmed, whilst the ruined building scenes with the sniper were made in the London docklands!

Full Metal Jacket

As war films go this one is probably one of the best, it is a powerful, unsentimental assault on the senses and leaves one reeling. I don’t think I had the same feelings until I saw the opening sequences of Saving Private Ryan. Though it is nearly fifty years since the Vietnam War, it is still for many people one of the turning points in history, where popular opinion turned against the government policy of the day and ended an unpopular war. The films of the Vietnam war in the 1980s reminded a new generation of the horror of that war, sometimes we need reminding.

Download Full Metal Jacket from iTunes.

Get Full Metal Jacket at Amazon on DVD, Blu Ray or Amazon Video.

Travelling stories

I recounted earlier this week the problems affecting my travels to work caused by the weather.

It actually hasn’t got much better.

On Wednesday I checked to see the trains were running and they seemed to be running fine. After changing trains at Bristol Temple Meads I arrived in Gloucester a few minutes late, but nothing too untoward. There were problems on the rest of the network, but it seemed to be restricted to Devon and a few other parts of the UK.

As it got to the time to leave work, I did check the departure board from my phone and it seemed that there were a few alterations, but nothing that would impact on me too much (I hoped).

I arrived at Gloucester station, checked the departure board, saw I had a 30 minute wait for my train, got an espresso from the Pumpkin Cafe and sat down with my laptop and the free wifi. After a minite or so and just as I was checking the e-mail, a CrossCountry Voyager came into the station, this was a bit strange as they generally avoid Gloucester these days. The station announcer came on and said “arriving platform two, an extra train to Bristol Temple Meads” well that was an unexpected opportunity. So I grabbed the coffee, my laptop and bag and got on the (quite) crowded train. Found the last remaining seat in Coach C and sat down.

One of the reasons that CrossCountry trains don’t call at Gloucester is that it isn’t on the main line from the South West to Birmingham. As you come down from Birmingham you swing right into Gloucester. To continue down to Bristol you reverse direction and swing back onto the main line. I recall catching trains from Weston to York and they would call at Gloucester, they would then detach the engine from the front of the train loop the carriages and couple it to the other end. With High Speed Trains (with a cab at each end) the driver needed to switch cabs. This of course would all take time, sometimes enough time to grab a coffee from the cafe – though I did sometimes worry about been left behind.

HST at Gloucester Station

Today though you need to change trains at Cheltenham Spa or Bristol Parkway to get to Gloucester as the mainline trains don’t call there anymore, hence my surprise at the CrossCountry Voyager. So I was expecting the train to leave Gloucester from the same direction it had arrived… it didn’t! It left in the opposite direction to the way it had arrived at Gloucester. That wasn’t the way to Bristol, that took you to Lydney, Chepstow and Wales. I really did think for a while as the train travelled further into Gloucestershire, into Forest of Dean country that I had taken the wrong train, would have to pay a penalty fare and end up in Cardiff!

Eventually the train manager came on the tannoy and said there had been a landslip in Westerleigh. As a result the southbound mainline was closed. The train was going to go around the problem, through Lydney and Chepstow, under the River Severn and arrive in Bristol Temple Meads.

We eventually arrived in Bristol, five minutes later I made the connection home. What was slightly weird was I actually got home thirty minutes earlier than I normally would.

As a result today I decided to drive. This morning the motorway was a lot busier than normal and I suspect the railway problems contributed to that. However checking my National Rail app on the iPhone it was apparent that lots of trains had been cancelled, so train hadn’t been an option even if I wanted to try the train.

This evening though, sadly there was a six vehicle accident on the M5 which closed all three lanes for a time, so it took me over two hours to drive home, twice as long as it should take. There are lots of accidents on the M5, which is one of the reasons I recently swapped to taking the train.

Tomorrow?



Well tomorrow is another day.

Travel Nightmare

Worle Station

What with the bad weather and all that I wasn’t expecting travel to work today to be smooth and easy.

I have recently been catching the train to work, it takes twice as long as driving, but with current fuel costs it is slightly more economical and I can do a lot more work on the train than in the car!

I got into the car to travel to my local station (not got a bike sorted out yet) and my usual trip was disrupted due to excessive flooding on Summer Lane Bridge. It was closed and as a result I got turned around by the police. By the way the bridge, which is a railway bridge, was not flooded, but the approach road was. Getting to the station was a little more difficult, but luckily it was early.

I had checked the trains before I left home, some had been cancelled, but not my usual train, so went straight to the ticket machine and got my train ticket. It was literally seconds after that I found out my train was cancelled. At that point I needed to make a decision. Did I get back in the car and drive to work or wait until the next train. According to the disembodied voice on the platform the next train was an hour later. I wasn’t entirely confident at that point, if I could get a refund if I didn’t use my train ticket. So deciding to wait for the next train, I went to get some coffee. Alas not much choice near Worle station, my first choice, Sainsbury’s wasn’t open, so I went into McDonalds! Not really where I wanted to go, but I got a coffee and they did have free wifi, so got on with some work.

After about forty minutes I ventured back to the station to catch the train. Disappointed to find that this one was marked as delayed with only a few minutes to go. I did wait, but in the end with the train been delayed by about twenty minutes from departing from it’s starting station and the result would mean I would miss the connection at Bristol Temple Meads and so would be even later into work, I decided to give up and work from home. Even then due to traffic chaos (caused by not one by two bridge closures) it still took me nearly thirty minutes to drive the two miles home!

With all the weather we’ve been having, I was also concerned about not just getting to work, but getting home again. It wasn’t really a nightmare, not like some of the stories I have been reading about, in the main as I decided that in the end it was going to be better not to travel.

Tomorrow, it’s a bit more challenging as I will be going to the Forest of Dean, driving as it’s impossible to get there by train. Wish me luck.

Doctor Who at Christmas

At Christmas we will have Doctor Who and he will be in Victorian London. Here is the prequel.

I’ve always thought that a spin off series based on Madam Vastra (she’s the Silurian (lizard person)) would be very interesting. A period drama with sic-fi overtones, almost steampunk. Certainly not something you see much of on television now.

Here is the trailer for the Christmas episode.

Not sure about the monsters…

Doctor Who: The Snowmen – Doctor Who

The Bat Cave in Lego

My children love playing with Lego and last weekend we spent a day at STEAM looking at Lego models. I will upload photographs from that day out later, but in the meantime I discovered through @IaninSheffield this incredible Lego model of the Bat Cave.

The Bat Cave in Lego

The Bat Cave in Lego

Some one had a lot of time (and a lot of Lego). While we’re at it, why do Americans (particularly, but not exclusively) call many pieces of Lego, Legos? The plural of Lego is Lego. You wouldn’t say Legos brick would you in a similar vein to Courts Martial? Also many sheep are called sheep and not sheeps. Getting off my trivial soapbox now…

See the full Flickr set of photographs and videos.