Showing posts with label Laura-Lee's Favorites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laura-Lee's Favorites. Show all posts

Saturday, June 22, 2013

"CROSSROAD" and Coincidences (Movie Review)






Here's a movie gem I just found if you're looking for something good to watch for the week end with the whole family. It's called, "Crossroad" , was released in December 2012 and directed and written by Shervin Youssefian.

 SHERVIN YOUSSEFIAN
 
 
"How many coincidences does it take before something ceases to be a coincidence?"

This is a question I have asked many people when debating if God exists and if he intervenes in our everyday lives. So I was pleased when I was watching a movie trailer that asked that exact same question.

"Crossroad" tells the true story of what happened to a group of people who randomly met one morning at a small dinner thinking they were each there for their own different reasons and personal purposes. However, when the dinner is suddenly held up by two gunmen they rapidly begin to discover that their lives are undeniably and amazingly intertwined and they actually have very much in common.
 
 As coincidence is added to coincidence and the links in their lives proves to be remarkably intricate, even the most hardened skeptic has difficulty denying there is more going on than first meets the eye. As each person makes individual choices, it only reveals deeper links between them and they each must personally decide if they believe the events are random coincidences or the hand of God and make life or death decisions based on their conclusions.
  
This film is well acted, fast paced and most of all suspenseful in a gripping way. It reminded me in atmosphere and intensity of the Audrey Hepburn thriller, "Wait Until Dark", except the events in "Crossroad" are real  (as hard as that is to believe). It catches you quickly from the beginning and the events are so amazing, it is impossible to guess or anticipate what will happen next. But whatever you believe, you definitely will wish to stay to the end to find out what will happen next.

 It has some violence in it, but ultimately is appropriate for viewing by all except the very youngest and most sensitive members of the family. Whether you watch this movie merely for it's entertainment value or you wish to experience an amazing, remarkable and inspiring true story, you won't want to miss this one. (Even if you believe finding this review was just a coincidence).

 ~ Laura-Lee


"CROSSROAD" page at IMDB (Internet Movie Data Base)


"CROSSROAD" Official Movie Trailer (HD)
 

Sunday, March 10, 2013

GUBLER-LAND


Gublerland Main


I very, very rarely give a critique or review of a website. Especially a personal website. But I came across one, quite by chance (which is I suppose the point of ‘surfing the net’ ) and I thought I would describe it to you.
It’s , uh …. well, it’s kinda like a … No. It’s actually much more like a …
Ok. Ok. Just give me a second.
I suppose if I had to put it in just one word, this website I’m talking about is completely …, uh.
 
Hmmm. This may be a bit harder than I anticipated. Let me start by telling you what you WILL find in it, instead of trying to sum it up.
There’s some … [pause] …, uh, some noises that sound like a person with bad digestion, the themes from the “Golden Girls” and “Cheers” (with most of the words just hummed), …  [pause] … a pink hat made of 80% cotton and 20% Lycra which causes allergies, a photo of a cute, little white dog, a floating top hat, (yes. I said “floating”),  doodles everywhere, … [pause] … some sort of Godzilla monster, a Ferris wheel, … Um. What else.




Gublerland mainpage

 







For all the years I’ve been writing and all the words I know, I don’t suppose I’m sounding very clever. But I’ll keep trying to describe it.
There are some sections with familiar titles that I recognize,  like “Radio”, and “Movies” and “Links”. And when one clicks on them you will be taken to … ?
ALRIGHT ! Let me try to start again from the beginning  …
I very, very rarely give a critique or review …
Oh. Never mind !
If you care to enter the bizarre, the unique, the complex, the humorous and one-of-a-kind mind of Matthew Gray Gubler, it is definitely worth your while to click your way over.
But DO NOT expect the usual, the average or the mundane, because you will be disappointed.


 
Matthew Gray Gubler plays DR. Spencer Reid on the TV show, “Criminal Minds”. That part I’m sure about. But the rest of it, …



Matthew Gray Gubler 2

It’s not the typical website of a Hollywood actor. He is not there to promote his acting career. You will not find 8x10 Glossy Photographs, or him bragging about the fact he has directed some of the Criminal Mind episodes, or what he does in his free time, or whom he dates, Etc..
But in a world  where people are always trying to “be like” and “out do” all the other people, I can’t help but admire Matthew for “marching to a different drummer”. Or in his case, probably a entire “different band”!
Matthew Gray Gubler: A breath of fresh air in an Internet filled with the “same ol, same ol” stagnant banality.



Gublerland
“Thank you God for people who ‘dare to be different.  What a boring world this would be without them.”
Oh. If you don’t hear from me for a while. It’s because I’ve backed my bag and headed for an extended holiday to Gubler Land.

“Having a great time. Wish you were here.
Love Laura-Lee xxoo”




Gubler nation 2

Matthew Gray Gubler Main Webpage

GublerNation Tumblr

GUBLERNATION on TWITTER


NOTE: Drawings done by Matthew Gray Gubler



Friday, January 11, 2013

"Elementary" for Grown Ups



If you have not seen the new show on CBS called, "Elementary", you are definitely missing out. It is a modern reworking of the Arthur Conan Doyle stories feature super "consulting" detective, Sherlock Holmes. A character first made popular during the turn of the century. (the 1900's, that is)

Jonny Lee Miller & Lucy Liu


In this updated TV version, we meet Sherlock Holmes on his first day out of a Rehab center and the "Sobriety Specialist" hired by his father to ease Sherlock back into into the everyday, working world is Dr. JOAN Watson, a former surgeon who lost a patient and decided to leave her surgical gloves behind. (or has she?)

Sherlock Holmes is played by Jonny Lee Miller , who is originally known to North American audiences for his movie, "Hackers", in which a teenage Miller played next to a teenage Angelina Jolie ... and then married her in real life.

Dr. Watson is played by Lucy Liu, best known for her stints in the Charlie's Angels movies. (back in the "olden days" Watson was Dr. JOHN Watson ). Together, these two actors bring a new and interesting chemistry to the most famous "buddy stories" in Literary history.
 Rounding out the cast is the always interesting and talented Aidan Quinn. You add writers of an extraordinary caliber, and you have a recipe for special television viewing.

Now, even though I can't believe I'm about to say this, "Elementary" is probably the most complex TV Show I have ever seen. It is brimming with layers upon layers in all  the elements it presents.



The Mysteries that drive the episode's plots have subtle clues, but don't worry because,  (like a cross town bus) they are in abundance. So if you don't catch one, another clue will come along in another minute, so you still have a good chance of getting to the destination of solving the puzzle.

 The vocabulary is surprisingly both fresh and old. I read a LOT and have a rather large vocabulary, but in every episode of  "Elementary" there are words I don't know or, at least, haven't heard for a long time and definitely do NOT expect to hear on a TV show. But even though they don't define every "big" word for you, the meaning can usually be gleaned from it's context.

As we pass the nuts and bolts of the mysteries in "Elementary", we enter into the even better parts that make it an entertainment feast. I am referring to the people: Whether it be Holmes, Watson, Captain Gregson, the suspects or the dead person. The writers of this series are able to capture the amazing uniqueness of what it means to be a human being. It is not the unknown perpetrators of crimes that are the greatest mystery in Elementary, it the complexities within the people that is the ultimate puzzle. Not just who killed whom, but why did they do it, who will endure the consequences and how the tragedies of life effect and change us. And it is all done is a manner that does not condescend to the viewers. We are not treated like imbeciles that must have everything spelled out or explained to us with pie charts and finger puppets. But by not serving us the answers on a silver platter, they imply it's perfectly okay not to have all the answers. After all, how many events in our lives are wrapped up in less than an hour?

But as cerebral as "Elementary" can be, it is not afraid to stop for a moment to wink at us, tickle our funny bone and expose it's heart. But it is just for a few seconds. Then we are back on the chase. Thus teaching us to pay attention to everything, because the most important things in life can be extremely fleeting.

I went to a reunion once and after it was over, I ran into someone who had not been unable to attend. He asked me how it had gone. What had happened? Who was there?
I told him that we had great food and there was lots of it. The people shared where they had been, how they had been living and what they had learned. There was a lot of hugging and kissing going on. But generally speaking, a good time was had by all who attended. I think that is a pretty accurate description of watching "Elementary".

 
If you want to continue watching TV shows that say the same thing  over and over, that are filled with banality and pap. Shows which give you an escape for an hour but leave nothing behind for you? They require nothing of you but that you sit in a vegetative state ... then this is NOT the show for you. 




But if you want a feast for mind and soul, to learn something useful, to feel that an hour was not stolen from you but given to you, ... then it's about time you watched "Elemental".  It's more than just a TV show. It's a creation that is greater than the sum of it's parts. It's story telling at it's classic best. 
   
So move over MTV, The Kardashians and American Idol. It's time for the grown ups to take over the remote control again. It's Thursday night and I want to watch "my show". Because "Elementary" is 'fundamentally' the best show on Television.

And to those who create "Elementary" ... you had some big shoes to fill but you didn't just fill them, you crafted them into your own.

I think Sir Arthur would be proud, because the game is definitely afoot.