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Merissa (12051 KP) created a post

Sep 27, 2022  
"A hauntingly good laugh."

Only Ghouls and Horses by Dan Harris - @Archaeolibrary, @Bethb19861, #UrbanFantasy, 4 out of 5 (very good)

https://archaeolibrarian.wixsite.com/website/post/only-ghouls-and-horses-by-dan-harris
     
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Merissa (12051 KP) created a post

Nov 29, 2022  
"Just prepare yourself for the ending!!"

Just a Wild Ghost Chase (Unit 13 Book 2) by Dan Harris - @bethr1986, #UrbanFantasy, 5 out of 5 (exceptional)

https://archaeolibrarian.wixsite.com/website/post/just-a-wild-ghost-chase-unit-13-book-2-by-dan-harris
     
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Jennifer Daniell (108 KP) created a post in Bookworms

Apr 10, 2018  
What's next on your TBR list? I am starting 10% Happier by Dan Harris today, as well as Lake Silence by Anne Bishop.
  
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Jennifer Daniell (108 KP) May 9, 2018

We alternate genres somewhat, but most of the ladies in the group prefer romance. When I joined (several years back now) it was way more diverse but a lot of members left/quit participating so it isn't exactly what it used to be.

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b.Young (97 KP) May 9, 2018

Well, that's a bummer, Jennifer. I think that if we didn't have the assigned genres we would be reading mostly romance novels as well, lol.
I think the purpose of a book club is to utilize the opportunity to read books outside of your "comfort zone" and possibly discover that you like something you didn't think you would.
I'm not too picky on the genres I read, although I go through spells where I read one in particular. I find that participating in my book club helps me to break the monotony and opens me back up to genres I forgot I enjoyed.

"‘Nightline' anchor Dan Harris has a full breakdown on national television which propels him to explore the worlds of spirituality. It’s light, honest, funny and relevant."

Source
  

"Who can't benefit from a little more happiness? Dan Harris shares his journey to mindfulness in a way that will resonate with so many and inspires readers to get happy."

Source
  
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Dianne Robbins (1738 KP) created a post in Movie Fun and Trivia

Dec 30, 2018 (Updated Dec 30, 2018)  
What movie contains these songs in its excellent soundtrack?

"Big Rock Candy Mountain" Harry McClintock
"You Are My Sunshine" Alan O'Bryant
"Down to the River to Pray" Alison Krauss
"I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow" Dan Tyminski
"Keep On the Sunny Side" The Whites
"I'll Fly Away" The Kossoy Sisters with Erik Darling
"Didn't Leave Nobody but the Baby" Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss, Gillian Welch
"In the Highways" The Peasall Sisters
"O Death" Ralph Stanley
"In the Jailhouse Now" Tim Blake Nelson and Pat Enright
"Lonesome Valley" The Fairfield Four
  
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Dianne Robbins (1738 KP) Dec 30, 2018

Yes! Fantastic movie and soundtrack.

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Dianne Robbins (1738 KP) Dec 30, 2018

The opening scene is iconic. Excellent soundtrack if you like disco. It really made the Bee Gees famous

Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021)
Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021)
2021 | Action, Horror, Sci-Fi
Lots of hens… but turkeys would be more appropriate.
I was not a great fan of the original Venom, although I did find aspects of it to like. Unfortunately, for me, the sequel – “Venom: Let There Be Carnage” – delivered even less. And I found aspects of it positively distasteful.

Plot Summary:
Eddie Brock (Tom Hardy) is living uncomfortably in San Francisco with his symbiotic friend Venom. Anne (Michelle Williams), his ex-girlfriend, and her new fiancee Dan (Reid Scott) are keeping his secret.

With Venom’s help, Eddie gets the evidence needed to send the psychopathic mass murderer Cletus Kasady (Woody Harrelson) to the electric chair. But with a lost love, Frances (Naomie Harris), to rescue and a burning desire for revenge against Brock and Detective Mulligan (Stephen Graham) who captured him, Kasady is not going to go quietly into the night.

Certification:
US: PG-13. UK: 15.

Talent:
Starring: Tom Hardy, Michelle Williams, Woody Harrelson, Naomie Harris, Reid Scott, Stephen Graham.

Directed by: Andy Serkis.

Written by: Kelly Marcel and Tom Hardy.

“Venom: Let There Be Carnage” Review: Positives:
While most of the cast seem to be doing sequel-paint-by-numbers, I thought Naomie Harris was superb as the shrieking ‘X-woman-style’ villain. (I’m embarrassed to say that it took me until the end titles to realise she WAS Naomie Harris!)
Some of the comedy lines between Brock and Venom made me chuckle.

Negatives:
My main beef was with the script and that came down to two primary issues:
Firstly, virtually nothing happens. It’s not too much of an understatement to say that the whole plot can be summarized as a) a villain is introduced; b) the villain teams with another villain and c) Venom defeats them. It’s just all so bland and linear, without any sort of discernable story arc.
For a movie pitched more at the comedy end of the Marvel spectrum, the script is unpleasantly violent. (And, yes, before Marvel fan-boys attack me with comments, I know that this Sony/Marvel offering is NOT part of the official universe). There are numerous points at which I thought “Ugh!” and a nasty taste entered my mouth: the butchering of a ‘Family man’ prison guard, pleading for his life; the brains of a very polite young grocery store boy being senselessly smashed in; and the massacre of a priest in his own cathedral. (Actually, I have no idea what happened with the priest during the “power-up” scene – – a cut by the censors perhaps?) My issue is that, tonally speaking, there is a horrible mismatch between these unnecessarily violent scenes and the lighthearted and flippant nature of the rest. It’s like putting a vicious gang-bang rape in the middle of “Ant Man“.
Sorry. I know he has a lot of fans, but I’m not a great fan of Tom Hardy’s acting style here. “Legend” proved what class he could deliver. But this performance seems to be streets away from that. An acting colleague last week commented that he was looking forward to the interactions between Hardy and Harrelson. But I found both to be underwhelming.
I found the visual effects for the emerged Venom to be utterly unconvincing. There were times when it looked like nothing more than a puppet on strings.
I’m normally a fan of Marco Beltrami‘s scores. But I found the music in here to be intrusive and distracting. And that’s before some (to my ears) pretty awful rap-based tracks over the closing titles.


Summary Thoughts on “Venom: Let There Be Carnage”
You’ll already judge from my balance of comments that this one just didn’t work for me. Even as a “park your brain at the door” action movie, I thought it felt lazy and lacklustre.

My advice? Save your money and go and watch “The Last Duel” instead.
  
Fantastic Beasts: Crimes of Grindelwald (2018)
Fantastic Beasts: Crimes of Grindelwald (2018)
2018 | Adventure, Family, Fantasy, Mystery
For the "true" Potter fan
It is a misnomer to call FANTASTIC BEASTS: THE CRIMES OF GRINDELWALD a "Harry Potter" movie. True, it is a film that takes place in the "Harry Potter-verse", but it should, more accurately, be called an "Albus Dumbledore" movie.

"Crimes of Grindelwald" (or COG as I will call it from now on) has a tone more in keeping with the later films in the Harry Potter original grouping of films. Gone is the "fun" and "whimsey" of building a world based on magic. In is a dark, grainy and grey film that focuses on relationship building that will pay off down the road. Keep in mind that this is the 2nd film of a proposed 5 film series, so there's quite a bit of "set-up" and very little payoff here.

Because of all of this, the younger members of the audience in the theater I saw COGS in were antsey in their seats (as were the "casual" Harry Potter viewers who were just there to see "Magic Battles").

But...and this is a BIG but...those of us (including me) who are "into" the world that J.K. Rowling has built were rewarded with a rich, complex tapestry of backstory and legend building, bringing in characters that were merely mentioned in the original books (and films) and filling out parts of this universe to make it much, much richer, indeed.

And that's the problem with this film - and the problem that this film is going to have in finding an audience. I have heard criticisms such as "it's too dense", "it moves too slow" and there are "too many characters". And that is justified, if you're a casual fan. If you're "into it", then those criticisms don't hold water.

I've also heard that Eddie Redmayne as Newt Scamander, the "hero" of the Fantastic Beasts franchise is too bland to hold the center of these films. I couldn't disagree more. I found that Redmayne's characterization of the magizooligist to be interesting and quirky. True, his characterization is subtle, maybe too subtle for some, but it was intriguing and interesting for me.

Returning from the first film are Katherine Waterson, Dan Fogler and Alison Sudol as comrades of Scamandars. They were "serviceable" in the first film and they are "serviceable" in the 2nd film.

It is the newcomers to this series that were of most interest to me starting with Jude Law as a young Albus Dumbledore. I liked his interpretation of this character - he has the same "mysterious" atmosphere about him that Richard Harris (and later) Michael Gambon brought to the character. Johnny Depp is also well cast as the titular bad guy, Grindelwald. Finally, Zoe Kravitz gives a strong performance as a conflicted wizard constantly battling her compulsion to be "good" and "bad".

David Yates returns to helm his 6th "Potter" film and he shows that he knows what he's doing. The world is rich (if grainy) and the action moves along as fast as the script allows. He does have a tendency to become enamored with the CGI aspects of the world he is building, but that is part of the charm of these films.

Remember, this is the 2nd of 5 films, so don't expect loose ends to be tied up. Expect cliff-hangers.

Letter Grade A- (B- if you are a casual fan)

8 (out of 10) stars (6 stars if you are a casual fan) and you can take that to the Bank(ofMarquis)