Archive for the ‘vegetarians’ Category

Normal is Overrated, but Abnormal is Cliche

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

Went with a friend to see Kick Ass yesterday. . .

It. Was. AWESOME.

Wanna know how good it is? After we got out of the movie, we bought a ticket for the next showing. Oh, yeah. The guy at the window didn’t even glance at my ID the second time we bought tickets. I guess he remembered us. :)

Ehh, let me make that paragraph a little more clear: Saw the movie at four, loved it, bought tickets for the seven o’clock show, went to eat at McAlister’s (BEST VEGGIE SANDWICH EVAR), went back to the theater to catch the movie. Four hours of moviethon made my contacts burn my eyes, but the pain was well worth it.

So what made this movie so freakin’ sick? The acting, the stunts, the wit, and the bad A action! The dialogue is well-timed and the soundtrack could not have been better. The beginning is a little droll and much eye rolling ensured, but about ten minutes in everything took a turn for amazing. It’s so good that the viewer doesn’t have to be a nerd to enjoy it (but it oh so helps).

I want to see it again and take another spin on the KICK ASS roller coaster.

I didn’t plug last entry, so here ya guys go for the past two posts:
Fiona, Holly, Simply Precious

We All Have Our Sides

Saturday, December 19th, 2009

THE DISNEY NUT
I’m a Disney nut. More specifically, I’m a Disney 2D animation nut.

So I went to see the Princess and the Frog yesterday. . . I went in with little to no expectations. I went in not knowing that it was based off of a book that I had read several years ago. All I knew was that it was an old-school Disney movie, centered around a place that is very near and dear to me. Because I held no standards, I came out extremely pleased.

It easily competes with Ponyo for best animated movie that I’ve seen this year. The flip side is that it is, at best, cute, and there are some cultural inaccuracies (which anyone will find with any Disney movie–nearly any movie, period, at that). I will be one of the first to admit this. But it’s full of beautiful scenery, smooth animation, a rip-roaring plot, and a fantastic soundtrack.

What saddens me is that some–no, most–people will not feel that same connection. Most viewers will not understand the movie from the point of view of a Southerner, especially those living in and near New Orleans. I think almost the entire theater laughed at the Shreeveport joke. What especially will go misunderstood is the voodoo. Yes, it really was practiced (and still is, to a degree). Yes, it involves making contracts with the devil, blood sacrifices, and all that fun stuff. I was surprised that Disney went into as much detail as the movie did, despite most it being only implied. But, rather than being tasteless, it shows that at least a little bit of research was done for the movie.

On the supposed racism controversy: Bullcrap. Disney stuck as truthfully as they could to the era without being offensive. Just because a white, Asian, or African-American from flippin’ Ohio got upset over what was portrayed does not mean anything. “Ethnic” does not stop at skin color–it’s freaking regional. So to those trying to sling crap–get a clue, it’s a kids’ movie!

I’ve got a lot more to say on this movie, but I’m gonna end the ranting here.

THE VEGETARIAN
Before going to the movie, we (me and those I was with) ate at Newk’s. For a place that serves soups, salads, sandwiches, and pizzas, it’s surprisingly lacking in vegetarian options. But I’m not even talking vegan–there were barely any meatless options to satisfy a lacto ovo vegetarian such as myself. Out of the sandwiches, there is only one meatless option (and it has “grilled portabella mushrooms, roasted red and yellow bell peppers, pesto and goat cheese”). As for as the soups offered yesterday, there were no options. Salads–two, maybe three. The pizzas had the most options: four, I think, but that’s no good if you’re watching calories. But, the good thing about this situation was that I was forced to try new, healthier foods–like, say, a cucumber in the “Simply” salad. :)

THE BOOK NERD
For festivity’s sake, I was rereading The Hogfather a couple of days ago and was struck by this quote: “Besides, it was nice to hear the voices of little children at play, provided you took care to be far enough away not to hear what they were actually saying.” Not being around young children very often, I laughed it off as satirical exaggeration.

Man, when I’m wrong, I’m wrong. >.>

I was browsing through the fiction at Barnes&Noble’s when I heard a toddler say this about her doll:
“Imma cut her hair!”
“Oh, does she need a hair cut?” This was a grown woman. Her mother, perhaps?
“Imma. . . Imma cut her head off!!”
“And why would you do that?” Laughter came from the woman.
“Imma cut her body from her head!! Imma cut her head off!”
More laughter from the woman.

Mr. Pratchett, I doubt your observational skills not.

PLUGS: Simply Precious, Daniella, Olivia, Smartee, Julie