Word of the day : intersperse
: to place something at intervals in or among
: to insert at intervals among other things
Well, two days until David gets here... Lotta stuff to do around the house between now and then. Today, we have a parent-teacher conference regarding Gabriel's progress around school. Then, of course, we're going to go take him to get some frozen yogurt. Savannah and Beaufort this weekend, too! Woo-hoo, Christmas!
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5 Things I Liked About the First Season of BBC's Luther (which I just finished):
1. Idris Elba. I've always been a fan of the actor, ever since his sinuous, memorable work on the first three seasons of The Wire. Here, as intense, hard-charging London DCI John Luther, Elba just about sets the screen on fire. He's magnetic as hell and you can't take your eyes off him.
2. Ruth Foster. As a killer who murders her parents, Foster is gleeful and chilling... and damn it if you don't like her. The twisted, kindred-souls, vaguely erotic relationship she forms over the first season with Luther is... interesting, for lack of a better word.
3. The bad guys are really creepy. From a kidnapper who cuts out a hostage's tongue to a cabbie who collects young women to an occult weirdo, the villains here are diabolical and lethal.
4. Every episode is intense. I was on edge almost every episode. Everything seems up for grabs, and there never - for the better - seems to be a proper sense of closure; killers get away and a fog of moral rot looms even as the credits roll.
5. The final two episodes - wow!
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5 Things I Liked About the film Hope Springs (2012
1. The details. Vanessa Taylor's script is often pinpoint in the observation of the routines and behavior that define everyday living in a marriage.
2. Tommy Lee Jones. The actor's portrait of a man so settled into his routine that he's unaware of his emotional nullity is really something to see; the body language he displays - particularly in the counseling sessions - is worth a look.
3 and 4. The casting. Outside of Jones, there's Meryl Streep. Oh yeah, she's top-notch too, equal to Jones' as his restless, deeply unsatisfied wife who doesn't know how to get the fire going again; it's not a showy performance, but it's characteristically very well-observed.
Steve Carell is cast against type as the marriage counselor and if you expect him to be funny or Michael Scott-y, you might be in for a letdown. He plays it absolutely straight.
5. The rhythms and payoff. It's not a great film, but it's breezy, full of uncomfortable truths, and has a good ending. The characters feel like real people, and though it's more of a drama than a romantic comedy, the film has some tender, touching moments and some humor too.
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