The Rundown DVD











Reasons I recommend The Rundown:

Released in 2003.

1. The Rock. He fits perfectly into this light-hearted action movie.

2. Christopher Walken has a great time doing a parody of himself throughout the movie. He's hilarious as he does his Walken-esque soliloquies for everyone except the people that might actually have gotten a clue from his ramblings and figured out that this backwoods bad guy has more than one screw loose.

3. The movie is funny. Lots of good lines and situations to go around.

4. The fight scenes - they are stylized and absolutely unrealistic but artfully done.
The DVD includes deleted scenes - but does not tell the viewer why they were deleted. I always find that to be most interesting, especially when the scene looks to me like it should have stayed in.

The extra interviews are pretty interesting as well.

I rate this movie 4 stars out of 5.

This movie can be found on Amazon.com here: The Rundown.

Reviewed in 2004.

Snatch (Special Edition) DVD


Entertaining and oddball - loved the Brad Pitt character


Released in 2000.

To make it short, I'll mention what I liked:

-I liked the use of commentary by Turkish and Tommy during the movie - they serve as the de facto narrators.

-I liked the rapid-cut intro and the way the director used the security cameras to show us the progress of the diamond thieves during the opening credits.

-I really liked the Brad Pitt character. Take full advantage of your DVD's ability to make subtitles because you'll need it with all of the accents - especially Brad Pitt's.

-the dog was fun (and hungry).

Dennis Farina
-I liked the way all of the characters were sleazy and yet markedly different from one another.

-I like the fact that the DVD includes deleted scenes with commentary. I did not like the fact that the commentary usually did not tell me why the scene was deleted.

I rate this movie 4 stars out of 5.

This DVD can be found on Amazon.com here: Snatch (Special Edition) DVD.

Reviewed in 2004.

Do Not Go Gently (Starletta Duvall Mysteries) by Judith Smith-Levin


Likable characters, goofy ending, everyone's oversexed


Published in 1996.

First the positives:

-likeable characters.

-Do Not Go Gently is well-written, in that it was easy to follow and the characters stayed true all of the way through.

Now, the negatives:

-the ending has such a plot twist that you might as well have had Darth Vader or Charles Manson committing all of the murders - there were as many clues pointing to them as there were to the killer. Really, this comes so far out of left field that no one will see it coming - and I felt like I was the victim of some bad practical joke.

-The killer's motive is so bizarre and he has gone to such lengths to follow through with his plan that one would think that he would have actually ended up in an asylum long before he is sprung upon the reader as the Surprise! real killer.

-EVERY character is constantly thinking about sex - it seems that it's all they talk about and all they think about. It's a wonder the murder got solved.

I understand that this is the first of a series - I will not be reading the rest. My copy of this book will quickly be finding its way to a used book store.

I rate this book 2 stars out of 5.

This book can be found on Amazon.com here: Do Not Go Gently


Reviewed August 28 2004.

Carnival Undercover by Bret Witter







Fascinating book - lots of fun to read. Thoroughly enjoyable.

Published in 2003 by Plume.

"Who doesn't love a carnival, fair or amusement park? They have everything you could ask for: Fried food, dangerous-looking rides, macho games, freak shows, meat-on-a-stick, champion milking cows, and teenagers dressed up as giant stuffed animals...If that's not America, what is?"

The Marion County Fair - Indianapolis.
That's the opening quote of Carnival Undercover that tells you all the ins and outs of the carnival business - everything from the economics involved in owning a booth to how to become a carnie to ride safety to the freak shows. It also tells you how to win at certain games, the inside skinny on some of the major theme parks (did you know that Disney World has an underground vacuum powered garbage removal - much like the system at your bank's drive through window - so that you don't have to see any garbage being hauled through the park?) and which food booths to avoid at your local fair (chicken and fish due to easy spoilage and the booths that sell more than 2 or 3 items - the specialists are just better).

I rate this book 5 stars out of 5.

This book can be found on Amazon.com here: Carnival Undercover.


Reviewed in 2003.

The Red Heart by James Alexander Thom









This is one great book.

Originally published in 1997.

The Red Heart is based on the true story of Francis Slocum, a 4 year old Quaker girl who was kidnapped by Delaware Indians in the 1770s on the Pennsylvania frontier near Wilkes-Barre. (There are recreation areas named for her in both Pennsylvania and Indiana)

A painting of Francis Slocum
that is part of the collection
at the Indiana State Museum
It is also the story of her family's 60 year search for her across the Midwest and even into Canada.

It is also the story of the relentless westward movement of the Americans and how the Indians dealt with it.

The reader also gets a fantastic lesson on daily life among the Delaware and Miami Indians.

If you're a Star Trek: The Next Generation fan you'll remember the episode entitled "Inner Light" in which Picard is "attacked" by the alien probe from the long-dead world that makes him live an entire lifetime among their people in his mind in just a few seconds so that their way of life will never be forgotten. (It's the one where he learns to play the little flute-type instrument). Well, this book reminds me of that - you are drawn into this woman's life and initiated into Indian culture as she is. You learn along with her. You grow up with her, feel her disappointments and joys and her confusions as she learns that her white family is searching for her (should she seek them? should she run? Would it be best to take advantage of her white skin and abandon her Indian family as the times get harder and harder?)

I have a few quibbles with the book but those are dwarfed by Thom's overall accomplishment. Honestly, at the end of the book, when Francis Slocum dies, I felt as though a longtime friend who'd lived a wonderful and fulfilling life had died - and that is the greatest compliment I think I can give it.

Bravo!

This book can be found on Amazon.com here: The Red Heart.

Reviewed in 2004.

I rate this book 5 stars out of 5 stars.

Don't Speak to Strangers by Marion Rosen


A roller coaster of good and bad writing

Published in 1993.

Don't Speak to Strangers is like riding a roller coaster - not because of its thrills, but because sometimes it is very poorly written and sometimes it is really quite good.

The author does a pretty good job of making you wonder why this boy is singled out by the kidnapper - but when I found out why I didn't really buy it. His attempts at escape are interesting but the FBI agents are pretty lame (the female agent is hyper-concerned at being treated as an equal but is always having heart palpitations when her cute boss stands near her).

So, it is a choppy read.

I rate this book 3 stars out of 5.

Reviewed in 2004.

This book can be found on Amazon.com here: Don't Speak to Strangers by Marion Rosen

The Warrior Generals: Combat Leadership in the Civil War by Thomas Buell


Good, thought provoking

Published in 1997 by Crown.

In The Warrior Generals: Combat Leadership in the Civil War, Buell analyzes three Confederate and three Union generals with six very different leadership styles.

Buell gives a title to each of the six different men and they are:

The Yeoman: Ulysses S. Grant
The Aristocrat: Robert E. Lee
The Knight-Errant: John Bell Hood
The Roman: George H. Thomas
The Cavalier: John B . Gordon
The Puritan: Francis C. Barlow


Buell researched this book heavily, including delving into the National Archives to the point that he actually found boxes of papers from the Civil War that had not even been opened since they were packaged and delivered after the war, a fact that I find amazing given the vast number of books written on the war every year.

Buell is quite clear in his book that Robert E. Lee was vastly overrated and quite possibly incompetent (he never says it outright but he infers it). I agree that Lee has been overrated by some, but his incompetence is refuted, in my mind, by his track record against a much larger, better equipped army over the course of the war. To his credit, Buell does not lay the blame for the vast number of casualties in the Seven Days Battles in the Peninsular Campaign on Lee - which I consider fair considering that he was forced to take charge during the battles due to the wounding of Confederate General Joseph Johnston. Lee can't really take the blame for a situation he did not create.

Buell also is extremely critical of Grant, sometimes in a contradictory manner. At the beginning of the book he is critical of Grant's strategy as unimaginative at the end of the war (press Lee constantly, despite the constant casualties since Lee could not replace his casualties and Grant could easily replace his own - it quickly became a numbers game and denied Lee his famed mobility) and then, towards the end of the book he praises it.

General George H. Thomas
"The Rock of Chickamauga"
Buell's favorite is obviously Thomas, a brilliant organizer who built the army that literally simultaneously destroyed the Confederate Army of Tennessee (under Thomas) and was the core of Sherman's famous March to the Sea through Georgia. However, he was ultimately relieved of command by Grant for being too deliberate - a conclusion that I share with Grant. Buell, however, believes that it was an unjust firing. Grant believed that action was often more important than preparation - sometimes true, sometimes not, but Thomas never seemed to be prepared enough...

Although I disagreed with many of his conclusions, I did enjoy Buell's book. It was informative and well-written.

Reviewed in 2004.

I rate this book 5 stars out of 5.

This book can be found on Amazon.com here: The Warrior Generals: Combat Leadership in the Civil War by Thomas Buell.

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