Thursday, 15 November 2012

the iron bridge at catterick has been done up















Wow!  I'm amazed!  The old Iron Bridge across the River Swale at Catterick Bridge has been renovated so that it can once again be used to cross the river. It looks like the council (I assume)  might even be making some cycle paths around the area, including over the bridge   It has been closed up for years, and l fully expected it would be pulled down one of these days, but maybe it has been classed as a historic monument, as the old iron parts are still visible on the outside.  It used to take the old Catterick Camp railway line many moons ago, and when l used to work in the Catterick Bridge area, l used to run across it every morning and evening to and from work, but made sure l was very careful as l did so, as there were plenty of gaps in the floor at the time.

toodle pip

straw dogs 1971 and 2011







Both of these versions of Straw Dogs have pretty much the same story.  The wife returns to her childhood home with her new intellectual husband, who tries to fit in with the locals, one of whom is a past love interest of the wife.  She starts feeling some dissatisfaction towards her husband due to him not paying her enough attention while he is trying to work, not standing up for himself, and being 'manly' enough.  She also flirts with the locals who are hired to do some building work,  with disastrous results.  There's a sub plot involving a 'village idiot' type who accidentally kills a young girl (lifted from John Steinbeck's 'Of Mice to Men'), who the husband then decides to protect from the mob, who try to storm the family home.  This gives the placid intellectual no choice.  He has to man up or die.  There's violence a plenty once the action starts, and you could argue about who is to blame, how it all escalates, the consequences of keeping secrets, responsibility for actions, at what point decisiveness is required, and how and when the law should become involved.  Both films have the backdrop of the countries at war, and the intellectuals opposing it (Vietnam in the 1971 filmAfghanistan / Iraq in the 2011 one), while the common folk are lauded for their fighting ability and dedication to the cause (and in a roundabout way, their own territory.  I thought the original film was head and shoulders above the remake, as Dustin Hoffman and Susan George made it all so much more believable.  The Americans also always have to make slight tweaks which annoy me, such as the husband becoming better looking and a war expert, (rather than a mathematician), and the thugs become ex football stars, (rather than everyday builders).  The first film also looks grittier and darker, whereas l find the American version brighter but more clichéd.  I'm sure if l was Born in the USA (like Bruce Springsteen) and hadn't seen the first film, l would have enjoyed it a lot more, but l can't remove the images and memories that are already engraved in my head.  So l didn't.

toodle pip

the urine powered generator




Are they taking the piss or what?
These four girls, Duro-Aina Adebola (14), Akindele Abiola (14), Faleke Oluwatoyin (14) and Bello Eniola (15), have produced a generator that can run on urine (One litre of urine gives six hours of electricity) which was demonstrated at the Lagos Maker Faire Africa.   Ingenious stuff, so they are either going to make a fortune, be ripped off, or be killed.   More information about it is here.

toodle pip

chris fornley smiths book covers






These spoof penguin book covers featuring the words from songs by The Smiths have been created by Chris Fornley, and they look immediately iconic.  I like The Smiths, but have never been a devoted fan or anything like that, but l can see why people were so attracted to them at the time.  For me, they're a bit like The Manics (or Manic Street Preachers as l used to call them), as l like their attitude, looks, statements and politics, but find their musical output lacking somewhat.  My loss, l'm sure.

toodle pip

Wednesday, 14 November 2012

roy from the it crowd's t shirts





Roy (Chris ODowd) from The IT Crowd (a brilliant series) wears a different t shirt in every episode, which are geeky, stupid, or just plain nonsense (unless you are a geek).  What you need to decipher (or buy them) is a site dedicated to them,  but that would involve levels of geekdom l can only aspire to.
Luckily, there are plenty of people who have reached that level, and there are sites here and here devoted to the very thing.
Enjoy!

toodle pip

colour footage of boris karloff as frankenstein's monster



Here's something you don't get to see every day.  It's colour footage of Boris Karloff's portrayal of the monster for the Son of Frankenstein 1939 film. The green make up is so it shoots better in black and white (I think).  Good to see Boris horsing around in the outfit.

walking around jervaulx abbey























I haven't seen the model of Jervaulx Abbey, even though l have parked next to the Tea Rooms where it is kept  (I might go and see it next week).  I did however, walk all around the abbey itself last week, as these photographs will testify.  As you can see, it was quiet - very quiet. I didn't see anyone else at all while l was wandering around.
The things you do when there is spare time from work to kill.

toodle pip

we - yevgeny zamyatin


I'm finding this book hard going at the moment (We - Yevgeny Zamyatin).  It's not difficult to read or anything (a state controlled organised future), it's just that l have only been reading it at work just before falling asleep, so l haven't taken stuff in properly, and then forget what has been happening the next time l pick it up.  I might make a concerted effort at the weekend.

toodle pip

persepolis - marjane satrapi












The Persepolis film is based on the graphic novel by Marjane Satrapi, and tells the story of her coming of age in Rasht (Iran) and Vienna, incorporating revolutions, punk rock, changing attitudes and identity.  Interesting, and highlighting a different kind of cartooning style, it certainly made a change from the usual super hero graphic novels. Recommended.

toodle pip

jervaulx abbey model









Derek Shaw spent two and a half years making a 1:72 scale model of Jervaulx Abbey, by East Witton, not far from Masham, North Yorkshire, as it would have looked in about 1530.  I certainly wouldn't want to undertake such a task myself, but l'll be the first to agree that he has made a pretty good fist of it.  The official site is here, and the model is in the back of the tea rooms.