The last few days

On Saturday night, I watched The Conjuring. It has its moments — if you’ve seen the original trailer, you’ve seen the best of them — but it also falls into a lot of the same traps as Insidious before it. That’s not surprising, in that it’s by the same director, but while James Wan gets a lot of things right, and he crafts some genuinely well-executed scares, the movie ultimately just grows a little tedious, and it’s bogged down in half-sketched mythology. Explaining a ghost almost always makes it less frightening. Like Insidious, this movie is both very smart and very dumb about what’s scary.

Part of the problem is that it’s framed somewhat as a biopic, of “paranormal investigators” Ed and Lorraine Warren. They’re well cast — I don’t think any movie with Vera Farmiga in it can be totally bad — but as characters they’re a distraction more than anything else. Just once, I want a horror movie that says up front, “The following is based on total bullshit,” rather than, unconvincingly, “based on a real story.*” Not least of all because any story with the Warrens at the center would be immediately suspect even if I believed in ghosts. There’s a throw-away joke at the very end of the movie where Lorraine says, “There’s a case out on Long Island he wants us to check out” — a knowing wink to their most famous case, the one on which they built their reputation, the Amityville Horror house. What the film doesn’t hint at, of course, is how thoroughly that case has been debunked (despite the books and bad movies), and the reputation along with it. If anything, the Warrens are depicted in The Conjuring as saintly and selfless, with evidence so incredibly compelling and freely shared it’s amazing that anyone could possibly not believe what they say is true.

My real problem, though, was it just wasn’t scary.

After that, I spent a few hours capping, probably the closest I’ll come this year to a Halloween party.

On Sunday, I wrote this:

The subject was bound to the chair, had been for the past hour, unmoving and unresponsive. Had it been anyone else, Markov would have assumed the subject was dead, had expired sometime during the last battery of tests, and that the slow arrythmic blip blip blip that monitored its breathing and heart-rate were nothing except echoes, either of his own faulty hearing or of faulty, misreporting machines. But he knew this subject too well, had been warned about its behavior too many times to think this was anything but playing possum. It could control its reflexes, but not perfectly, could slow its pulse and breathing, but not stop them entirely. Markov knew that, if anything, the subject was just biding its time, hoping that he, Markov, would make a mistake, get too close, assume the possum had passed on, and not for the first time he was grateful for the force field that circled the chair and the subject both.

“You can’t trust anything they say,” Andrew had said. “Some of them, they’ve learned our language, adaptive behaviors. They even look human.” This was only a month before one of them had escaped, briefly, from its cell, had taken Andrew and a fellow researcher hostage and, in the final shoot-out, skinned both of the two men alive. That, even more than Andrew’s words of warning, had convinced Markov that simply looking human didn’t make them human; they were beasts, angry and violent and dangerous. Lying still for half an hour certainly didn’t change that.

Sometimes he wondered if death wasn’t too good for these mutants.

But there was so much to learn from their behavior, their anatomy, the strange tricks that nature had played to enable them to live, unassisted, on this backwater planet. It was an impossible jungle out there, deadly in ways that Markov and his team had not even begun to count, and yet they lived, these mutants; they thrived. Once they had been human — even Andrew, even Markov, would have admitted to that. The evidence was too great, the branches of their shared family tree too well laid out, even if the history, the actual events that had split those branches in such different directions, remained elusive and unclear. But that made the work they were doing here more important; it did not make the mutants any less expendable.

The subject began to stir, perhaps accepting, finally, that Markov was not going to lower the force field, that the scientist would offer it no means of escape. Markov smiled and returned to his work.

Then on Monday, I worked, moved a dresser across the room, and wrote this. That’s about it, really.

* My favorite recent example of this is the trailer for Nothing Left to Fear, which claims to be “Inspired by the legend of Stull, Kansas.” As near as I can tell, the movie isn’t actually about any of those urban legends, so the trailer could just as easily have said, “We read about a spooky thing and wrote a movie that’s spooky too.” Actually, I think more movies — non horror movies — should come with disclaimers or title cards that announce their loose basis: “Based on the author’s vague memories of a TV show she used to watch.” “Inspired by a pleasant walk the director took with his dog.”

That said, a friend has tried to convince me that Nothing Left to Fear is actually pretty good. And it has Clancy Brown in it, who we all know can do no wrong.

Random 10 10-25-13

Last week. This week:

  1. “Sweet Talkin’ Woman” by ELO, guessed by Clayton
    I was waitin’ for the operator on the line
  2. “Guess Who?” by Dusty Springfield
    Tried to be much too cool yesterday
  3. “I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine” by John Doe (orig. Bob Dylan)
    “Arise, arise,” he cried so loud
  4. “The Girl from Yesterday” by the Eagles
    He took a plane across the sea to some foreign land
  5. “The Man Who Played God” by Sparklehorse (feat. Nina Persson)
    Hammer it until it breaks
  6. “White Room” by Cream, guessed by Clayton
    Platform ticket, restless diesels, goodbye windows
  7. “Behind Blue Eyes” by the Chieftans (orig. the Who), guessed by Clayton
    When I smile, tell me some bad news
  8. “You’ll Remember” by Patty Griffin
    All unhappy ends will be behind us then
  9. “Tales of Brave Ulysses” by Cream, guessed by Kim
    Her name is Aphrodite and she rides a crimson shell
  10. “Ulysses” by Franz Ferdinand
    You’re never going home

As always, good luck!

Tuesday

Today didn’t start very auspiciously.

I bought an iced tea before work, like I often do, only the bottle top didn’t pop when I opened it. So, rather than risk any possible contamination — have I mentioned that I’ve been taking this online course? — I poured it out in the pantry sink.

As I was leaving the place where I bought the iced tea, I snagged my headphones on the door and they broke. These were the ear-bud variety, which is what I prefer — I hope I combat potential hearing loss by, you know, not listening to my iPod at a ridiculously loud volume — so it doesn’t take much of a break to make them totally useless. I tossed them in the trash on my way into the office.

Is it weird that I was almost hoping the yogurt I also bought would be expired or moldy or something, thus completing some kind of bizarre trifecta or hat trick of lousiness and setting the stage perfectly for the day? I mean, obviously I didn’t want or expect that, and was glad when it turned out not to be the case. I paid good money for that peach yogurt and enjoyed eating it for breakfast. But I have to admit, I probably would have taken some kind of satisfaction from its being spoiled along with the tea and the headphones, felt strangely justified in feeling grumpy and tired, the way the first morning commute of the week can sometimes make you feel. Well of course, I’d think, like all these little annoyances added up to something, proved something. It’s maybe a smug of kind of cynicism, and I’m not exactly proud of it, but… Well, I mean, if the universe is out to get you, at least it means the universe is taking an active interest, right?

Which is way beyond what I thought this morning when I opened my yogurt, and almost certainly way over-thinking it now.

Because, anyway, the rest of the day went pretty well — surprisingly well, in fact. I had three phone calls lined up for the afternoon, at least one of which I didn’t have any expectation of going especially well at all. But each of them turned out to be pretty decent conversations. Sometimes, when you ask instructors to talk about their courses, they actually surprise you by being willing to do so.

I don’t know if it makes up for the lost iced tea or headphones, but it’ll do.

Oh, and I also finished reading Isaac Asimov’s The Caves of Steel, which I think is actually the first Asimov I’ve ever read, with the possible exception of a short story here or there. It was okay, I guess. I think I enjoyed it more that I did Rendezvous With Rama, another classic science fiction novel I read earlier this year, but I also found this one a bit disappointing.