Mountain-Grown Silver Halide Crystals, or, The best part of waking up is developer in your cup.

So it turns out you can make your own B&W film developer using coffee, sodium carbonate (soda ash or washing soda), and water. I don't know that I'm up for trying this out just yet, but it sure seems like a good idea in a pinch, and would likely work out much cheaper than a packet of Dektol.

There's even a group on Flickr dedicated to homemade film chemistry with enough solid results to make this look viable.

Useless Pop Quiz #1

Quick! You're building your dream house. Gambrel roof or Mansard?

Ode to Beaker

If this doesn't make you smile I don't want to know what does:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xpcUxwpOQ_A&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&feature=player_embedded&fs=1&w=580&h=470]

Shine a Light

I just finished skimming through the first 50 minutes of Martin Scorsese's Shine a Light and had to turn it off. Netflix delivered this DVD to my place nearly three months ago and I'm finally sending it back tomorrow morning, incompletely viewed.

Don't get me wrong - the direction was great, the camera work was what I expected, and the interstitial footage was fantastic. But this film is about 80% concert documentary, and I underestimated just how much I'd have to be a Stones fan to actually enjoy footage of the performances. I've never really been a Stones fan, and I remain thus after my partial viewing.

There was one serious problem I had with the concert footage though, too. As a musician and an appreciator of music I was put off by the boosted audio level of any instrument/musician on whom the camera focused. If the Charlie Watts was the main subject of a shot, for example, his drum levels were pumped up in the mix. For my taste this would have ruined the balance of music I love, let alone music I was merely tolerating for the sake of its filming.

Sorry Marty, but this one gets a 2/5 from me.

On a roll...

I would have written a more interesting blog post today, but blah blah blah...good annual review...blah blah blah...busy...blah blah blah...amazing rare-breed pork chop for dinner with the best mashed potatoes I've ever made...blah blah blah...

But really, I've been preoccupied playing Rolando.

The Care and Handling of Butter

The New York Times has a great article that fusses a little obsessively and in great detail over that most magical of ingredients, butter. There's a great mix of low-level science and advice tucked into what is ostensibly a discussion of Christmas cookies.

Movie Listage

The A.V. Club is one of very few movie review sites which I read, so while I'm sure it's contentious, I'm pleased to see their list of the best films of 2008. There are movies on this list of which I've never heard but, with their (as usual) solid commentary, I may just have to investigate a few of these further.

Time Around

clock cylinder

This clock over at the MoMA Store has me drooling...

Handmade Holiday Craft Show

Tomorrow from 10 - 5 is the Handmade Holiday Craft Show at the Visual Arts Center (where I took my photography course), and my buddy Phil is hawking is mighty wares. I plan to check it out, and if you're in or near Richmond tomorrow, you should, too. If you're participating in the mass consumerism around Christmas, you should at least consider supporting local artists and craftspeople.

Check out some fine examples of Phil's work on his Flickr account.

Ain't No Rudolph

fake reindeer made of christmas lights

This past Saturday I was able to get at least one decent shot of the James Center lawn decorations...

Go Jingle Something Else

We hated the snow and we needed the snow—what were we going to dash through once springtime arrived?


Jon Mehtven brings a little Christmas and economic levity with his Christmas Carols, Revised for the Recession.

Graffiti

graffiti on a loading dock door

Clarity

clear water with a stick

Ain't No Prison

Ladies and gentlemen, the real Hanoi Hilton.
(with no disrespect to any past guest of the more notorious lodging)

AMAZING New Pizza Joint in Richmond

I was at Cupertino's yesterday with Valerie, and after I enjoyed one of the finest meatball parm subs in my life (with everything but the cheese made on premises) I had a chance to chat with the owner. He told me he'd been in Virginia now for about a year and a half, so I asked him where he liked to eat a good pizza. He'd eaten pizza from JoJo's downtown, but his recommendation was for this newish place in the middle-West End: Capriccio's.

Situated in the old Jersey Mike's slot (I think there have been a few other places since Jersey Mike's left) in the T.J. Maxx shopping center off Broad/Tuckernuck, Capriccio's pizza may be a true rival to any pizza I've yet tasted in the R-I-C, and could hold its own among the great pizza of the Northeastern US. Naturally, further research is required (lots of research), but everything about their true Neapolitan-style pie is done right. The sauce, the cheese, the crust, the balance of everything...oh my, it's delicious. The crust, particularly, the literal and figurative foundation of any good pizza, was second only to my experience in Napoli. It was as crisp as it needed to be, chewy the rest of the way through, and tasty enough to eat on its own. This place is close enough to my office that I may become a frequent lunch patron...

This is probably a good time to make another statement, though. I tried Tarrantino's a while back (I could have sworn I wrote about it, but I can't find the post...) when it was starting to receive heavy buzz around town, and I was flabbergasted by how good it was. I talked to the young tattooed fella in the kitchen and he claimed to make the sauce and pizza dough himself. It was truly amazing. So I revisited a few times, but I never saw this guy there again, and each time the pizza got progressively worse. It wasn't bad, per se, but it just wasn't good. I fault the fact that it was part of
Tarrant's Cafe (which is decent on its own, but it's not a pizzeria) and was really just an add-on in the first place.

Capriccio's, on the other hand, is a stand-alone Italian food joint that seems mostly to be a pizza parlor. The owners know what's what, and seem to be involved in the food more intimately. Let's hope it sticks around for much longer than the six weeks they've put in already. I certainly plan to support them with my money and stomach :-)

Jeopardy

Question: What is $352,800?

Answer: The highest possible score on a single day of Jeopardy.

Assumptions:
1. I'm using the current value of each square as of the date of this post, where they start at $200 in the first round.
2. A player would have to answer correctly for every single square, Daily Double, and Final Jeopardy.
3. The Daily Double in the first round would have to be the last square in the first round, and the last two in Double Jeopardy.
4. All three Daily Double squares would have to be the lowest denomination for each round ($200 in the first round, and $400 in Double Jeopardy).
5. The player would have to risk everything on each Daily Double square and in Final Jeopardy.

I totally think this should be a Final Jeopardy puzzle :-)

SoundUnwound

Amazon and IMDB have collaborated on a music website called SoundUnwound - and it even has some wiki-like elements allowing users to submit page edits (I've already submitted corrections for Steve Taylor's page). It's not the prettiest website around, but it does have sound clips from AmazonMP3, YouTube clips, and plenty of room for growth.

With its strong backers and potential, this site may surpass the Allmusic Guide as my primary music research tool.

Low and Slow

mugs in an alley

I have two shots up on Flickr from my first roll of Efke 25 - a super low ISO black and white film from Croatia. It's interesting so far, but I think I need to try the second one in more appropriate shooting situations or with a tripod.

The Way of the Edsel

David Friedman delivers the funny.

Pirates!

Slate is carrying an interesting piece from Kelly McEvers about her trip to Indonesia in search of real modern pirates. Three parts, so far, have been published, and I don't know how much remains. I can, however, tell you that it's all fascinating, and I don't know whether to call McEvers brave or stupid. I think this about sums it up:

At the hotel I think about how bipolar this has been. One minute I'm dying of boredom; the next I'm totally high. Right now, I can just picture it all unfolding. The conflict between the pirate and his uncle. The scene at the seedy disco, planning the next attack while prostitutes serve us beer. The moonless night out at sea.


Either way, I can't help but anticipate the conclusion. I suppose that's what some documentary involves - journalists take risks so we don't have to (or where we'd never think to).

City Screens

Continuing my unintentional string of movie-related posts, I have some more details by way of Richmond BizSense about the eventually-to-open Movieland theater on Boulevard...

What I'm most interested/concerned about is the notion that they're looking to create an "upscale" movie experience with beer, wine, and no pre-movie ads. That lack of ads spell higher ticket prices in my mind (we'll see), and should help determine whether movie-goers prefer low prices over ad-free cinema.

Elementary

Holycrapontoast...

Guy Ritchie, film maker behind Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch (two of my faves!), is filming Sherlock Holmes starring Robert Downey Jr. as Holmes and Jude Law as Watson!

It should release sometime vaguely in 2009, so I have another flick to toss on what's becoming a long list of theater trips.

December In the Theater

The following is a list, in order of release date, of films which I'd like to see in a theater this month:

The Day the Earth Stood Still
This remake of the 1951 sci-fi classic looks intense and stars Keanu Reeves, Jennifer Connelly, and Jon Hamm. It's out on Friday, December 12th.

The Wrestler
Darren Aronofsky, the director of Requiem For a Dream and The Fountain, has managed to make me interested in a story about a washed-up professional wrestler. I get a Raging Bull vibe from this, but with more redemption. December 17th.

The Spirit
Frank Miller's latest hyper-stylized graphic-novel-on-screen doesn't look as visually fresh as Sin City, but I'm a sucker for that spilled-bottle-of-India-ink asthetic. This almost certainly gory flick opens on Christmas Day.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
This also opens on Christmas Day. Two words: David Fincher.

Revolutionary Road
I think this film appeals to my struggle between cynicism toward and desire for the American dream. It hits the big screen on Boxing Day.

Valkyrie
Does this movie have a chance of saving Tom Cruise's career? I dunno, but a WWII-era suspense flick involving high-explosives and slightly desaturated cinematography sounds right up my alley. December 26th.

Play on, sisters.

I read an interesting profile of nearly all-girl hard rock band today. The AccoLade isn't all that interesting, musically - the lyrics are a touch cheesy and the music isn't my taste, but the New York Times wouldn't write up any average rock group. This band, you see, is from Jidda, Saudi Arabia. While Jidda is apparently one of the more "moderate" cities in that desert its citizens still risk getting dragged downtown for a head shaving from the religious police. The fact, then, that these young girls play loud Western music, sing in English, and hang around with their robes open to reveal jeans and t-shirts is really quite extraordinary and brave.

Here's the line that really got to me:

“The upcoming generation is different from the one before,” said Dina, the Accolade’s 21-year-old guitarist and founder. “Everything is changing. Maybe in 10 years it’s going to be O.K. to have a band with live performances.”


Rock on girls.

Official Monty Python YouTube Channel

Monty Python have* their own YouTube channel, and they intend to add loads of high quality video as time wears on.

HOLY SHLAMEEL THIS RULES.

Here's a fine example:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ZlBUglE6Hc&hl=en&fs=1&rel=0&color1=0x3a3a3a&color2=0x999999&ap=%2526fmt%3D18%20&w=580&h=470]

*I felt the British pluralization was appropriate given the subject matter.