Archive for March 2nd, 2008

The Return of Eric’s Anime Pick

If I were to select one Anime title to show someone as an introduction to Japanese animation as it’s done today, it would not be something by Hayao Miyazaki. It would be Makoto Shinkai’s The Place Promised in Our Early Days. I consider this film to be an exemplary work of the highest quality and artistry, exploring elements of science fiction, fantasy, technology, politics, romance, and friendship, with deftness and subtlety. I blogged about it many months ago, but the pre-Flash video embedding no longer works, so I’ll have to do a fresh transfer of a choice scene.

Shinkai’s follow-up to Place Promised is 5 Centimeters Per Second: a chain of short stories about their distance. Eric has wanted me to blog something from it for a while, and now that the DVD is about to be released in America, I will. The final part of the movie includes this musical montage of flashbacks. Seeing it shouldn’t spoil your enjoyment of the movie. I transferred this video from the Japanese DVD.

Add comment March 2nd, 2008

Sibley Declares Pet ‘Dame-in-Waiting’

I would like to direct your attention over to Brian Sibley’s blog, where, at this link, he has written a lovely piece promoting the Dame Petula Clark PET-ition. Being an Englishman born and bred, his input should pack a bit more welly than my Boston-based entreaties. Thank you, Brian. (Just reading his stuff compels me to write with more style than my usual pedestrian prose!)

Add comment March 2nd, 2008

The Dubuque View of ‘Schulz and Peanuts’

Progress! Schulz and Peanuts by David Michaelis has been read in Dubuque, IA. The Telegraph Herald has a review. Now that the book has received attention in Dubuque, perhaps this means we’re getting closer to the end of its lifespan. The reviewer questions nothing in the book, and in fact he concludes that the book had a positive effect on his view of Schulz.

I gained an even greater appreciation of the man who drew each and every one of the 17,897 “Peanuts” comic strips. He was a genius, yet filled with anxieties and insecurities. As one of my personal heroes, there’s something reaffirming to know that even people like Charles Schulz are only human.

He also says,

Perhaps the biography’s greatest controversy comes through a revelation that Schulz had an affair near the end of his first marriage.

A little more online research would have led him to realize that Schulz’s affair is actually one of the less controversial aspects of the story, because it was on the table for inclusion from the outset. I would have added a comment to the review, but it required an online account, and I have enough online accounts.

3 comments March 2nd, 2008


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