two cats

two cats are sleeping.
one stirs and rustles a bit,
the other lies still

thinking about loss

sepiafleur I haven’t posted in a while. Par for the course. I’ve been thinking about loss a lot lately.

This is a post about losing loved ones. In the past year, I’ve had (too many) losses and seen family and friends through even more losses.

In March, I lost the other half of my best buds/roomies, my sweet cat Jesse. We lost his brother Toby nine months prior, almost to the day, in June, 2008. While Jesse was still around, it was easier to handle Toby being gone, partly because I had to keep taking care of Jesse; both cats were ill before they went, and of course, because I still had Jesse to keep me company and share my homelife. As an adult, Toby had been the attention grabber and a bit of the leader between the two. When we lost him, I had more time to dote on Jesse and that was good for both of us. When he died, I felt the loss doubly hard. By that time, there was a new cat at home, Juliet, who has blossomed now as a solo cat. I took Juliet in hoping she’d be company for Jesse, but they never really clicked. Still, Juliet badly needed a home and I’m glad to have her with me. She’s affectionate to me, but my loss is still very deep. Jesse had been with me almost 16 years and I will always miss him and Toby. They were truly my soulmate cats.

I also lost two aunts this year, one my uncle’s companion and later my mom’s kid sister. Both were dynamic, smart, and interesting women. Both were elderly and I know we all expect the losses, but it still hurts when it comes.

Then recently came a huge loss. One month ago today, my mom passed on. She was one of the most important people ever in my life, not just because she gave me life. We lived on opposite coasts, but her presence was significant every day; it still is. I spoke to her twice a week usually, sometimes more, and as much as I disagreed with her about a lot of things, I value all her knowledge, common sense, advice, opinions, and ideas. I knew I would lose my mom someday, she would have been 93 less than a month after she died. But it’s made harder due to her suffering, lingering on with complications and in pain after what should have been an easy surgery (though no surgery is easy at 92). Mom spent the last 3 months of her life in the hospital with a couple of week stays in a rehab care facility. She had severe pain for much of that time. She begged for death some of the time. It was hard to see but I know it was harder to endure. Mom was a loving woman, with strong feelings about family and a lot of love for us all. It was a bad ending to a great life.

Anyway, there’s no point to this post. It’s just venting, I guess. Not a celebration (maybe that will be next), not a lesson, not really even an observation. I guess it’s a lot like death: it just is.

Shadow of a Doubt

Saw Alfred Hitchcock’s Shadow of a Doubt a couple of weeks ago. This is a very highly rated film;it’s on the IMDB top 250 and has been there as long for at least several years. While I didn’t dislike the film, I don’t understand this high a rating. It has a lot of good points but it wasn’t really suspenseful for me,(which is what I expect from a Hitchcock film, and the characters didn’t capture my sympathies all that much.
There are a lot of good things in the film. The acting is good. I thought Macdonald Carey was especially good. Some of his lines were very corny if you think about them but he delivered them in a way to avoid seeming so.
I think I should see this again because I can’t really come up with anything wrong about it. I just didn’t come away feeling like I’d seen a great film.

The Dark Knight

Finally saw The Dark Knight last night. My one word review: WOW. All the rave reviews I read and heard were right. I’m a big fan of this film’s predecessor, Batman Begins,but right now I agree with those who say this sequel topped it.

The performances were top notch, including, but not limited to, Heath Ledger’s final role as the Joker. Ledger was excellent, totally insane and brutal and very disturbing, really quite a marvel to see. Watching him as the Joker evoked the thrill and awe of reading Frank Miller’s graphic novel The Dark Knight when it was first published (note: this movie does not portray that storyline, though some of the influences might come from it). I was also impressed with Aaron Eckart’s performance as Harvey Dent and Maggie Gyllenhaal as Rachel Dawes. Gyllenhaal was very natural, like she wasn’t acting at all, which is hard to convey in a larger than life story like this one.

This is a long film, but it doesn’t feel long. It’s dark and deep and exciting. It’s a disturbing ride but an entertaining one. I’m looking forward to more sequels.

a feel for my taste in movies

I’m going to post occasional and probably brief movie reviews here. To start off, I thought it might be a good thing to give readers a feel for my taste in films.

I like a lot of movies and at least something in almost any genre there is. The genres I tend to like more are (in no particular order): comedy, film noir, drama, romance, science fiction, musicals, and classics (which I don’t really think of as a genre myself but a lot of movie sites seem to split them out). The genres I like least are slasher films and horror. I’m not into bloody gorey films much and I’m also easily terrified by supernatural horror, so I avoid all that. The other genres (war, western, historical, silents, animated and anime, etc.) fall in the middle. I like a lot of foreign films that I’ve seen, but I don’t really think of that as a genre. Oh, and I’m not adverse to watching children’s movies at all.

I have a couple of mini-collections of films on dvd and vhs: comics based movies and baseball themed movies. The former is because I also have a large comics collections (though I stopped adding to it a few years ago). The latter just came about. Maybe there are just a lot of great baseball movies.