Halfmoon's journal

Where are you and where are you going?
Dragline
Posts: 4436
Joined: Wed Aug 24, 2011 1:50 am

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by Dragline »

It's strikingly similar in some ways to Herzog's "Aguirre, The Wrath of God", which he made about 10 years earlier with a lower budget, and also starring Klaus Kinski. He was seemingly obsessed with the jungles of South America and the follies of adventurers.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ojwxrzmAkdA

And a mini-documentary about it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvrTIjVB0CM

halfmoon
Posts: 697
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by halfmoon »

@Dragline, I don't usually click on YouTube links due to data constraints, but I gave in this time. It reminded me that I'm clearly missing the Art Film gene. The last German film I saw (The Marriage of Maria Braun) was 38 years ago, and it was similarly depressing.

I also disliked Apocalypse Now (covers head and ducks).

Dragline
Posts: 4436
Joined: Wed Aug 24, 2011 1:50 am

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by Dragline »

AN was highly derivative, despite the good acting. If you are going to watch Brando, I'd go with "On the Waterfront" any day over the later stuff. "I coulda been a contenda"

And the madness leader genre is best represented by Conrad's original book, Heart of Darkness.

Sometimes I think "Office Space" and "Agueire" are actually the same movie, though.

halfmoon
Posts: 697
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by halfmoon »

I actually enjoyed "On the Waterfront", for what it's worth. Never heard of "Office Space", which made perfect sense when Wikipedia told me it was released in 1999. That was part of The Lost Years (re pop culture) when we lived in the mountains.

Some of my disdain for "Apocalypse Now" probably stems from watching it on a fuzzy B&W 12" TV.

Jason

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by Jason »

The best Brando appeared on the stage. The closest we have to that on film is Street Car Named Desire. Brando was a genius but thoroughly dissolute and that's why his film career is wildly inconsistent (any time wikipedia has the children category as "at least 16" you know there were issues). Recent stories about "Last Tango In Paris" essentially depict him as a rapist.

"Heart Of Darkness", not the book, but the documentary on AN, is a good watch. Copolla seems to have a nervous break-down which is always fun to watch.

For anyone interested in this topic, as well as bookending their library with Extreme Early Retirement on one end and its antithesis on the other, I recommend the following:

https://www.amazon.com/Final-Cut-Making ... 1557043744

halfmoon
Posts: 697
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by halfmoon »

THE EPIC TOWER STORY, part 4:

*Heads up, @George-too: here’s your The Gods Must be Crazy incident. 8-)


Once the two tower sides were secure, we went on to our standard fall projects: bring in the remaining firewood, clean the chimney, check the battery bank and vehicles, winterize everything. We could pretty much count on snow cover by Halloween, which lent a sense of urgency to the crisp autumn days. Then it was finally time for that lovely winter hibernation.

DH took this photo from the tower platform.

Image

Early the following summer, we started again on the tower. DH ascended a corner post with ropes, hooked up pulleys, and I raised logs for him to secure as cross-bracing on the two empty sides. Because cordless drills were unknown at the time (at least to us), he also carried up an extension cord plugged into a generator on the ground. This would be used to drill holes for the threaded rods that held the logs together.

In order to easily ascend, descend and hang in a chosen spot to work on the tower, DH fastened a pulley to the base of the platform at the top. A cable ran through the pulley with one end attached to him and one to the tractor. The plan was for me to drive the tractor slowly forward and back as needed to pull DH up and let him back down, suspending him like (tractor-assisted) Spiderman at any desired point.

That was the plan. It’s good to have a plan.

As previously mentioned, the driveway below the tower was on a downward slope. Our tractor was an old Massey Ferguson 2WD with lousy brakes......get where I’m going with this?

DH hooked up the cable, and I began to drive downhill. As the tractor and I descended, DH ascended. The tractor gained momentum, and so did DH’s rise. Not good. :shock: I panicked and slammed on the brakes, but because I fail under pressure, I hit the clutch at the same time. The tractor's downward trajectory didn't falter. DH hurtled up the tower, smashing into logs on the way, wrapping around the cross-braces and then tearing loose to hit yet another log. I finally took my foot off the clutch, stood on the the brake with both feet and managed to stop the tractor just before DH hit the pulley at the top and started flying.

When the tractor stopped moving, I leaped off and ran back uphill to the tower, completely terrified. DH was hanging near the top, unnaturally still. I called frantically up to him: “OH, SH*T! ARE YOU OKAY? WHAT SHOULD I DO??” A faint voice (DH’s lungs were compressed) floated back: “Let. Me. Down.”

When I managed to back up the tractor and let DH descend, he fell onto the ground and just lay there. I thought I’d permanently injured him at the least and possibly killed him. He finally stirred, dragged himself to his feet and limped into the house. He obviously needed to see a doctor, but of course that was a battle. We finally agreed that he would go, but he was going to drive.

Our doctor was a cheerful young woman who was amazed and somewhat entertained at the story of how DH had sustained his injuries. She poked him in various places and asked if they hurt. He replied that everything hurt. “And yet,” I complained, “He wouldn’t even let me drive him here.” The doctor began to laugh, apologized, laughed some more, then said, “Can you blame him??”

After DH was somewhat healed, he devised a different plan for working on the tower. Strangely enough, it didn’t include me. ;) He pulled himself up and down from the pulley on top, which was a lot more effort but less exciting. He finally nailed steps onto one of the tower legs and used those to climb up.

Image

Image

Image

Image


That incident was the beginning of much hilarity on the part of our friends that lasts to this day. They never tire of accusing me of Black Widow tendencies and reminding me of the day that DH fell up the tower.

Riggerjack
Posts: 3182
Joined: Thu Jul 14, 2011 3:09 am

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by Riggerjack »

I laughed when I read this, but then I handed my phone to DW, and laughed harder at her reactions while reading it! She's a former long haul trucker and worked on a a line crew for a while. She summed it up with "and that's why I make Marge (Simpson) noises when you get adventurous!"

Though, it does remind me I need to fix the hand brake on my backhoe...

bryan
Posts: 1061
Joined: Sat Nov 29, 2014 2:01 am
Location: mostly Bay Area

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by bryan »

ooph. Gives me flashbacks to my car when I was 16 and too dumb to repair the brakes (emergency cable and master cylinder) or tell my parents that they don't work so good. A few times the car would roll away while parked (manual) and one time I came within an inch of a serious accident as I came to the bottom of a hill going about 45 without any brake pedal pressure..

Epic tower story indeed!

halfmoon
Posts: 697
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by halfmoon »

Riggerjack wrote:
Thu Jun 08, 2017 9:52 pm
She summed it up with "and that's why I make Marge (Simpson) noises when you get adventurous!"
I don't know what noises Marge Simpson makes, but I'm guessing some sort of squeal? While DH is being adventurous/crazy, I generally (in truth) mentally review my emergency response plan, which needs to be tailored to the possible outcome of the particular activity. Falling from a height, cutting off an arm or leg, rolling under the tractor, being pulled up a tower...all different.

Your DW sounds pretty remarkable. Former long-haul trucker and lineman? Don't make her mad.

And fix your backhoe brake. Now. :P

Riggerjack
Posts: 3182
Joined: Thu Jul 14, 2011 3:09 am

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by Riggerjack »

Marge noises (very quick video):
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=vRDrXF1vZJA

Short for general tones of disapproval.

Jason

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by Jason »

Speaking of towers and movies, I just watched this one:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_(2016_film)

George the original one
Posts: 5404
Joined: Wed Jul 28, 2010 3:28 am
Location: Wettest corner of Orygun

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by George the original one »

“Can you blame him??”

LOL! At least the things I do, I do to myself rather than spouse!

halfmoon
Posts: 697
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by halfmoon »

bryan wrote:
Fri Jun 09, 2017 12:56 am
ooph. Gives me flashbacks to my car when I was 16 and too dumb to repair the brakes (emergency cable and master cylinder) or tell my parents that they don't work so good. A few times the car would roll away while parked (manual) and one time I came within an inch of a serious accident as I came to the bottom of a hill going about 45 without any brake pedal pressure...
I guess we're all lucky that natural selection doesn't really work with humans. :lol:

I don't get why the car would roll away while parked, though. Didn't you have it in gear? Does this have something to do with the master cylinder (about which I know nothing)? Maybe you were in Seattle, where the steep hills require gravity-defying measures?

I once drove our car 37 miles from Seattle to our home with the parking brake on. Needless to say, it could no longer be defined as a brake. I was planning to keep that tidbit of info to myself, but DH noticed the next time he drove it that the parking brake was useless. I folded under interrogation. :oops:

halfmoon
Posts: 697
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by halfmoon »

Riggerjack, I watched the Marge Simpson video; she sounds remarkably like me....not that nagging actually influences the outcome. As DH says: "A man's gotta do what a man's gotta do." As I say: "And a woman's gotta clean up the doo-doo."

I only watched The Simpsons once, and I couldn't stand the show (I've got the duck and cover maneuver down by now, so do your worst). It's odd, because I loved Groening's Life in Hell series (especially Akbar & Jeff) for years before the Simpsons ever came to TV. A friend of ours says I'm the only person on earth who refers to Matt Groening as 'the creator of Akbar & Jeff'.

halfmoon
Posts: 697
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by halfmoon »

Jason wrote:
Fri Jun 09, 2017 12:58 pm
Speaking of towers and movies, I just watched this one:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_(2016_film)
This doesn't sound like a fun movie (Marge Simpson noises of disapproval). Also: rotoscopic animation?
Footage was mostly shot in Maitland's backyard and then animated by production company Minnow Mountain who was aided by pictures Maitland had shot around campus.
I feel so old and reality-dependent.

George the original one
Posts: 5404
Joined: Wed Jul 28, 2010 3:28 am
Location: Wettest corner of Orygun

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by George the original one »

We need to get you up to speed on making movies...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotoscoping

Jason

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by Jason »

If someone comes up to me and says "Jason, let's go to this place, I heard it has a tower", unless he/she's referring specifically to the leaning one in Italy, I'm going to slowly close the door on that person. It's not that I'm thoroughly anti-tower, but from my standpoint, the presence of a tower does not usually signify a place I want to be around i.e. prisons, internment camps, sites of religious/linguistic divisions, a potential meeting with our current President.

Even light towers possess an ominousness I can do without. And to be quite honest, if I saw that picture of your man climbing that tower in another context I'd think "Oh, a separatist in the woods fortifying his camp against Federal government intrusion." Nothing personal mind you.

That being said, if you are talking about this tower, then I'm reaching for my funky shoes and helping you load the car:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_of_Power

Farm_or
Posts: 412
Joined: Thu Nov 10, 2016 8:57 am
Contact:

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by Farm_or »

Great story.

Funny fact: my Massey Ferguson has fishy brakes too. The first thing I fixed was the emergency brake. The second thing I fixed was the emergency brake warning light.

Reminds me of my DW trying to help me with the stuck swather last year. I had her put the pickup into low lock four wheel drive. I thought she was aware of the four seconds delay that it takes the solenoid to shift, but no.

She was pedal down, throwing rooster tails on me, spinning and digging ruts in the field, truck going sideways! She had the windows up and stereo going. I was waving, shouting, dodging slinging mud! Finally got her attention. Once the four wheel drive locked in, it was slow and easy, no drama resolution.

halfmoon
Posts: 697
Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by halfmoon »

George the original one wrote:
Fri Jun 09, 2017 7:39 pm
“Can you blame him??”

LOL! At least the things I do, I do to myself rather than spouse!
Well, I also do plenty of things to myself. I'm an equal-opportunity disaster, but it's really not surprising that our friends accuse me of trying to off my husband. Another example:

One day, DH was installing a light over our bathroom sink. He stood on the sink edge to reach it, and I stood safely on the floor to hand him things.

Image

While pulling on a wire, DH leaned a little too far back and lost his balance. He would have just turned the fall into a jump and landed on his feet, but of course I panicked and tried to "help" by grabbing his ankles. :? With his feet secured, he tipped backward and hit the floor head first. Let's just say he was unappreciative of my assistance.

bryan
Posts: 1061
Joined: Sat Nov 29, 2014 2:01 am
Location: mostly Bay Area

Re: Halfmoon's journal

Post by bryan »

> Didn't you have it in gear?

The alternative is it being in neutral w/ no emergency break :D I guess sometimes it would slip out of gear while parked or something? Really no idea.. Only happened a couple times (once I walked back to my parking spot and my car was missing.. oh, there it is across the street against the guard rail..).

Post Reply