Saturday, December 18, 2010

Space Odyssey

I hadn't seen 2001: A Space Odyssey in 25 years, which is kind of mind-boggling. The first time was at the University Theatre, the mindless destruction of which still irks me. It was a beautiful theatre with 70mm capability, and I remember being blown away by the spaceship rotating to The Blue Danube and the crazy psychedelic rush of the trip to god knows where. I also remember being horrified by people watching it on TV a few years later. That is just wrong.
This time I went to the TIFF Lightbox, which is showing a 70mm print of 2001 in its almost frighteningly soundproof theatre. And it's still amazing. What I loved the most: the art direction—the prescient snappy retro-futuristic look of the space station, the freaky modern-classical house where Keir Dullea clinks his cutlery and ages, the rolling Escher-like spaceship, the little bars that have to be keyed one by one to shut down HAL—the music, both Strausses; HAL, of course; and yes, that intensely colourful hallucinogenic trip. I also love how I still have no idea what it all REALLY MEANS. But virtually every sci fi movie owes it a huge debt.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Legislative behaviour

My name was read out in the Ontario Legislature on Monday, though hardly anyone was paying attention. My grandfather, Wilfrid Heighington, was an MPP from 1929 to 1937, as well as a writer and lawyer, and he was being honoured by the Legislature with a brief mention of his life and work. My cousin arranged it as a birthday treat for her father, and a bunch of us got to sit in a special gallery and watch. It was pretty interesting to be there, but the overall impression was one of petty boorishness. None of the MPPs listened to anything anyone else was saying, even the members of their own party. They sat there, chatting and laughing—when they weren't yelling like a bunch of bratty teens. You've got to wonder why they take schoolkids there to watch; what a lesson they get in debating. Heckle, yell, laugh, yell louder, repeat. But yay Wilfrid, wish I'd known you. Afterward, I touched the letters of his name, which are carved in the hallway along with every other MPP's.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

singalong Shakespeare

So ’90s week started with Chris Dignan reanimating the shimmering ghost of Suckerpunch at Lula Lounge, continued with my discovery of No Joy, a band from Montreal who sound like shoegazers (and are really good) and wrapped up with the Lowest of the Low playing Shakespeare My Butt start to finish in a packed-beyond-belief Lee's Palace. I had to move around the club a couple of times, first because a bunch of yahoos muscled into our sweet side-of-the-stage spot (there is an inordinate number of large men among Low fans), then because another fan was screaming every lyric in my right ear, then because I got stuck behind another member of the solidly built fan base. It was worth it, though. They were great, and everyone looked as though they were having fun up there. Jim Bryson and John K. Samson were so good together that they almost stole the show. And then today I was going through old CDs and got washed over with more ’90s nostalgia. The Feelies! Buffalo Tom! Slow Loris! Rusty! Hardship Post! Sianspheric! I've still got way too many CDs but at least I can walk into the closet now.