Saturday, May 30, 2015

Notice of a Moderately Brief Service Interruption



The Daily Wreck is on hiatus for the next week and a half or so!

In the meantime, don't forget to enjoy the made-for-serendipitous-discoveries index and the oh-so-browsable sister site The Daily Wreck Collection.

See you in a bit!




[You can check out more gorgeous Hitchcock screenshots like the one above at "1,000 Frames of Hitchcock"]

Friday, May 29, 2015

Friday Flashback: Rec. #232: The Daytrippers

I decided to start doing Friday Flashbacks in case you missed some early posts the first time around. You're busy; I understand.


What: Eliza, her parents, her sister, and her sister's fiancĂ© take an impromptu drive into the city to track down Eliza's probably-cheating husband. The cast of dreams includes Hope Davis, Parker Posey, Liev Schreiber, Anne Meara, Stanley Tucci, Marcia Gay Harden, and Campbell Scott.

Comparable to: Ah, the indie movies of the mid-'90s. Remember them? This is one.

Representative quote:
"Maybe she's desperately in love with him."
"Don't be ridiculous. Nobody's desperately in love."

You might not like it if: Carl-the-fiance's description of his novel* flashes you back so hard to your undergrad English lit classmates that you hit your head.

Connections to previous Wreckage: Parker Posey, Queen of '90s Indie, starred in Party Girl (Rec. #141) the year before The Daytrippers came out. Two years later, we got Hope Davis in Next Stop, Wonderland (Rec. #253).


*About a man with a dog's head and no hands --- a Pointer that can't point. Ahem.



[Originally posted 4/30/12.]


R.I.P. Anna Meara. You were swell.

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Quote from a Fictional Character #68



"I hope we're still friends after I taser you."

--- Veronica Mars,
Veronica Mars, 2004

Friday, May 22, 2015

Friday Flashback: Rec. #204 (abbrev.): Uncle Dynamite

I decided to start doing Friday Flashbacks in case you missed some early posts the first time around. You're busy; I understand.

What: P.G. Wodehouse novel, the idle rich, 1948, articulate farce, England, financing a manor house, Earl of Ickenham, delicate domestic situations, Pongo, housemaids, impostors, baby-judging contests, Mugsy, constables, going incognito, Uncle Fred, nocturnal marauders, tea

Representative quote: "Bill, who had been staring dully at the beetle, transferred his gaze to his companion. It was a wide-eyed, gaping gaze, speaking eloquently of a mind imperfectly adjusted to the intellectual pressure of the conversation."

Also: Cocktail Time (Rec. #24), Jill the Reckless (Rec. #136), Much Obliged, Jeeves (Rec. #153)




[Originally posted 10/31/11.]

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Streaming Suggestion of the Week #13: The Brothers Bloom


Stream what: Two swindlers, an heiress, and the aptly named Bang Bang.

Stream why: It's a highly stylized caper(!) with dry swaths of humor strategically placed throughout wide fields of drama and plot twists and intense emotion.

Stream where: Hulu


Read more: Rec. #304

And also: List #28

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Rec. #376: The Sound of Broken Glass


What: Deborah Crombie continues to follow detective inspectors Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James through their lives.

As is usual with Crombie's novels, the crimes, lurid as they may be (in this case, a barrister is found dead in a bed in a downmarket hotel --- tied up, face-down, and strangled), are somewhat beside the point.

The focus is really on
  • Expanding the universe of her characters (in both breadth and depth)
  • Doing a neighborhood deep-dive (this time it's the Crystal Palace area of South London)

She accomplishes both with a lot of narrative jumping from character to character, with flashbacks and primary source quotes interspersed throughout. Don't get dizzy.


You might not like it if: The title bothers you. It really should be The Sound of Breaking Glass, right?

How to get it: Buyable, borrowable, Kindle-able

Connections to previous Wreckage: Other Kincaid/James books include Dreaming of the Bones (Rec. #55) and In a Dark House (Rec. #358, FSoM #9).


Friday, May 15, 2015

Friday Flashback: Rec. #161 (abbrev.): Northern Exposure, season 2

I decided to start doing Friday Flashbacks in case you missed some early posts the first time around. You're busy; I understand.


What: It's Alaska, it's the '90s, it's a critically-adored dramedy --- indentured NYC doctor, various eccentrics, once-a-year kleptomania, doc dumped by fiancee, visiting Russians, love, unexplained nightmares, lots of parkas, American Indian spirit guide, death by falling satellite.

Representative quote: "It's 'Love Is Pain' day on KBHR. Music to soothe the shattered heart. Dedicated to you, Dr. Joel."

Bonus representative quote: "Well, spring sprang. We've had our state of grace and our little gift of sanctioned madness, courtesy of Mother Nature. Thanks, Gaia. Much obliged."

[both from Chris Stevens, host of "Chris in the Morning" and voice of Cicely, Alaska]

Also: Northern Exposure, season one (Rec. #35)


[Originally posted 7/20/11.]


Thursday, May 14, 2015

Quote from a Fictional Character #67


"The truth is rarely pure and never simple."

--- Algernon Moncrieff,
The Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde, 1895

(See also: Rec. #148 and Rec. #336)

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Streaming Suggestion of the Week #12: Beginners


Stream what: Christopher Plummer, Ewan McGregor, and Melanie Laurent are all going through stuff. Well, Christopher and Melanie more so than Ewan, really. He's mainly coping with their stuff and thinking a lot.

Also, there's a dog.

Stream why: The plot involves Big Life Issues, but the story isn't trite. The dialogue includes an old man discovering house music, but the humor isn't goofy. The whole movie is pretty beautiful, actually.

Also, the dog does not die.

Stream where: Netflix


For more info: Rec. #249

For a couple of quotes, see: List #23 and QfFC #58

Saturday, May 9, 2015

List #52: Happy Birthday, Alan Bennett

Portrait by Tom Wood

Who: I've recently referred to playwright/screenwriter/actor/author Alan Bennett as a "Modern British Treasure," and a critic once described him as "England's cultural teddy bear." The important takeaway, though, really, is that he is good at writing things.



The Lady in the Van, 1989



The Clothes They Stood Up In, 2001



The Complete Talking Heads, (2003)



The History Boys [film], 2006



The Uncommon Reader, 2007


Friday, May 8, 2015

Friday Flashback: Rec. #151: Here Beneath Low-Flying Planes

I decided to start doing Friday Flashbacks in case you missed some early posts the first time around. You're busy; I understand.


What: Merrill Feitell's collection of stories won the Iowa Short Fiction Award. The slim volume contains eight perfect little glimpses into different lives, including realizations made during a bike-a-thon through New York, an impromptu dumpling party, and a sudden storm in Texas.

Comparable to: Less bitter than Erika Krouse, more melancholy than Elizabeth Crane.

Representative quote: "It is Thanksgiving , the great day of dinner, of Dockers and dress shirts and marshmallow-sweetened squash. This year we are forgoing our standard slow graze on the home front to spend the day with my sister and her boyfriend's family, meeting them for the first time --- on this, a National Holiday."

You might not like it if: The 123 pages go too quickly.

How to get it: It's in print and also Kindle-able.

Connections to previous Wreckage:

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Rec. #375: Dead Like Me, season 1


What: George Lass is a dead girl. Her death was kind of embarrassing (a toilet seat falls from space station Mir), and so far she's not so fond of her after-life work as a reaper, either. It doesn't even pay the bills.

Creator Bryan Fuller --- serial purveyor of the jaunty macabre --- adds snark and heartbreak into the mix, and, hey, Jasmine Guy (Whitley!) and Mandy Patinkin are there, too.

Representative quote: "What's the point in keeping your head down if it's already been blown off?"

How to get it: Available to stream on Hulu and Amazon Prime.

Connections to previous Wreckage: More Bryan Fuller!

Rec. #2: Wonderfalls
Rec. #233: Pushing Daisies
List #29: So You Love the Cast of Hannibal, but Wish Watching the Show Itself Weren't So Psychologically Damaging


Friday, May 1, 2015

Friday Flashback: Rec. #266: All About Emily

I decided to start doing Friday Flashbacks in case you missed some early posts the first time around. You're busy; I understand.


What: In this fast romp of a novella, Connie Willis demonstrates, once again, her adeptness at taking samples from every depth of pop culture (from All About Eve and Isaac Asimov to the Rockettes), submerging those fragments in thought exercises on free will and identity, and then sprinkling them with snow and sending them on their merry way.

Comparable to: All About Emily fits nicely alongside Willis's other celebrated short(er) fiction, like "The Last of the Winnebagos" and "Inside Job."

Opening lines: "All right, so you're probably wondering how I, Claire Havilland --- three-time Tony winner, Broadway legend, and star of Only Human --- ended up here, standing outside Radio City Music Hall in a freezing rain two days before Christmas, soaked to the skin and on the verge of pneumonia, accosting harmless passersby."

You might not like it if: You are familiar enough with Willis's work to know that she writes both comedies and tragedies and you can't always tell which is which until someone dies, and you can't bring yourself to take that risk right now. 

(Hint of Reassurance: This is a comedy ... mainly.)

How to get it: Your best bets are getting it from your library or downloading it to your Kindle.

Connections to previous Wreckage: Enjoy more Connie Willis with To Say Nothing of the Dog (Rec. #100), Blackout/All Clear (Gift Idea #1, Rec. #355), Bellwether (Rec. #218), and Lincoln's Dreams (Rec. #248). 

Heads up --- not all of them are comedies.




[Originally posted 10/22/12.]