Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Blair Done Good...


Not just because of the 2 blondes, but because Blair Daly from Opelousas, Louisiana, who was the lead singer of my high school rock band - Livewire, has written the current #1 song in the good old USA: Rascal Flatt's "Stand".

I wonder if he still knows the guitar solo to "In and Out of Love"?

BTW: Blair's the guy in the blue t-shirt.

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Happy Father's Day...

A Father's Day Film - The Dad Family

Flashback's to my childhood. Happy Father's Day!

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

The Sunday Night Paradox...


You are laying in bed, wide awake at 1130p on Sunday night. The new work week starts in just 8 short hours. You took 2 beautiful days off, slept late until 9a, enjoyed the late summer evenings, grilled burgers, cold beers, and didn't think about work one small bit. Then it hits you - staring you in the face is the week of hell: long meetings, looming deadline, customer expectations not to mention family time, doctor's appointments, and other social commitments. You know that the quicker you can get to sleep, the quicker you can deal with it all, but you can't sleep because you keep thinking of more things that you need to deal with...

...And, that, my friends, is the dreaded "Sunday Night Paradox"!

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Swimming Pools, Movie Stars...

Because you asked for it... In 2005, I made my acting debut in two movies: Memory and All The King's Men. Both films are now on DVD. If you decide to follow the links and pick up a copy, all profits will go to Autism Research.

Review of Memory (a film by Bennett Davlin) from IF Magazine: "Okay, noting that MEMORY is better than PREMONITION is arguably not saying much, but in fact, this little genre thriller is better than a lot of similar flicks that have come before.

Part of the charm of MEMORY, directed by Bennett Devlin and written by Devlin & Anthony Badalucco from Devlin’s novel, is that it has a sense of real independence. For one thing, it’s doubtful that a major studio would go along with the mystery that our hero winds up investigating – a string of child abductions/murders perpetrated by someone whose memories are leaking into the hero’s mind.

Billy Zane plays Dr. Taylor Briggs, a medical researcher who, in an odd accident at a none-too-tidy hospital, winds up with a strange substance introduced to his bloodstream. Taylor, rational fellow that he is, at first thinks he’s hallucinating when he begins without warning to jump into experiences that are not his. Gradually, little clues pile up to indicate that Taylor is in fact having flashes of someone else’s memory – but whose? And how can Taylor find the person, who seems likely to keep killing?

There’s a pleasing air of freedom here. It’s rare in this sort of genre film to have character moments that are real character moments instead of having everything add up as clues – the filmmakers clearly enjoy creating all aspects of Taylor’s world, some of which tie into the main plot thread and some of which are just there to supply color. It’s a nice change from movies where, if we’re told anything, we can safely assume we’re meant to instantly add it to our store of knowledge (which often results in the audience figuring things out far sooner than the filmmakers intend). There are some good plot twists here and, even for those who can see the last one coming far in advance, everything seems consistent within the film’s mythology.

Zane is appealingly rueful and understandably apprehensive as Taylor, who goes through a visible personality transition throughout the course of the story.
Tricia Helfer (Number Six on BATTLEATAR GALACTICA) makes a likable, distinctive romantic and eventually investigative partner and Ann-Margret and Dennis Hopper (the latter underplaying urbanely) contribute good supporting performances.

MEMORY is the kind of funky, mildly trippy psychic thriller that used to turn up far more regularly in theatres in the days before
DVDs. It doesn’t remotely reinvent the wheel, but it’s got its own identity, the filmmakers actually care about their storytelling and it is ultimately both sincerely creepy and reasonably enjoyable."

Update: Swimming pool planned for next summer.