The one who knocks (because he couldn’t call)

At about one o’clock this morning, the doorbell rang. I’m not completely I heard it, but I definitely heard our dog barking from downstairs shortly after the fact. I peeked out the window, which thankfully I don’t have to get out of bed in order to do, only to see what looked like a police car, parked in front of our driveway, in the pouring rain.

Turns out — and I learned this later, after the fact, from my father, who answered the door, and in more detail this evening — the police had received a 911 call from our home phone number. Which would be no mean feat, since, as usual, the phone line went out entirely when the rain started. We had nothing but a busy signal and static, and nobody here had called in an emergency. (The dog’s the only one who, in all likelihood, was even awake.)

I hope whoever did make that call, whose signals somehow got crossed with ours, got the help they needed. Or that it was nothing but crossed signals. Apparently, the 911 operator had been disconnected mid-call and tried to call the number back only to get a busy signal. So I can’t blame the cop for driving out here and waking us up.

Verizon, who’s in charge of maintaining the phone line, on the other hand…

It’s almost funny. The phone had also gone out earlier in yesterday, briefly, during an even lighter rainfall in the afternoon. And this, ironically, was just a few short minutes after two Verizon employees came to the door to follow up on the last time the phone went out. I swear, the techs I spoke to then seemed nice enough, but the only Verizon employees who actually seem to give a damn are in public relations. Need to put in a repair request? That could take weeks. Expect the repair tech to show up on time with maps of the area he’s actually in? That’s expecting too much. But oh man, post a couple of times on Twitter, and you’ll get responses there, over the phone to follow up, and, apparently, in person a week or two later.

Granted, the two who showed up yesterday really just wanted to up-sell us to FIOS, which my parents aren’t especially interested in — not least of all because they get their cable and Internet service elsewhere. The two Verizon reps wanted to tell me about the horror that is double-billing — getting (gasp!) services from two companies when you could be getting it from one — and remind me that Verizon owns all the land lines on Long Island. Which, I have to say, sounded vaguely ominous, almost threatening. Why tell me that, unless it’s to say, “Don’t go thinking you can get phone service from someone else too!” Honestly, I don’t even know if that’s true, and they quickly lost interest in me when it was clear I wasn’t the one making the financial decisions about any of these services.

Anyway, that was the very start of my Wednesday. The rest of it, after I managed to get back to sleep, then wake up and get to work, was pretty average. I spent a whole lot of it working on collating review responses. Which sounds about exciting as it is.

Rainy (work) day

I’m not going to lie to you: working from home on Tuesdays lends kind of a strange shape to the rest of the week. But I like being able to sleep in and still get to work on time, and I like not having to worry about the commute, especially on a rainy day like this one. I spent it working on a review report and on an online survey I hope to send out soon. (Do you teach memory and cognition? Did you agree to review a sports psychology book for me and then drop off the face of the Earth? Then this might be of some small interest to you.)

A pretty average Tuesday, all things being equal.

Monday

I couldn’t find my MetroCard this morning, so I made the decision to leave the house without it. It’s not a monthly ticket or anything, and the money on it won’t expire, so I figured I would just quickly buy a new one at one of the ticket machines at the Hunterspoint subway station.

Except the Hunterspoint subway station has been under construction for several months, and this morning the spot with the ticket machines was blocked by several workmen and yellow caution tape. So I got in line at the ticket/information booth, and waited behind several people, probably missing a train or two in the process, only to be told something completely unintelligible by the guy inside the booth and refused a new MetroCard there as well.

I really have no idea what he said to me, if he waved me through and I missed it, or if he just told me go away. (Though, really, MTA, if you’re going to block a station’s only ticket machines, you’re going to have to make other options available.) Thankfully, a very nice woman swiped her own card twice, an extra $2.25, so that I could get through the turnstiles and get to work.

So to her, that woman whose name I didn’t even catch, I say again, thanks. And to the MTA employee inside the booth, I say, thanks a lot, pal.

Unless, of course, I misread the situation entirely. Maybe he did wave me through or tell me something other than mumble mumble mumble. Really, though, a tired Monday morning is not the best time for an upset and confusion in your routine.

The rest of the day, and certainly everything post-lunch, was pretty much just a typical day. But I’m so happy to be working from home tomorrow, not so much out of fear of another MetroCard debacle — I got another card at Grand Central at lunch — but just because I want those commuting hours for sleep.

Facehugger-mugger

Today was a pretty regular Sunday. I woke up, did the crossword puzzle, watched some more Would I Lie to You?, and went to the local Home Depot to get a new propane tank. I had to clean off an old empty one, which had been sitting alongside the garage for the better part of a year, which upset to no end the worms and crawly things that had made a home for themselves in the dirt that had caked to the underside of the empty tank.

Speaking of worms and crawly things — which might be a spoiler, although I think a relatively small one — I also saw Prometheus today. And while I hate saying this about a movie that looks this good, that has so many genuinely good moments and touches, and that offers some potentially interesting questions…but I was really quite disappointed in it overall. My thoughts are largely the same as MaryAnn Johanson, who writes:

It had me at hello, Prometheus did, and for a fair while, and I’m still in awe of it visually, for moments like this one: Scott draws out the sequence in which the ship Prometheus approaches the planet it has been aiming at in a way that’s like cinematic lovemaking, one that lets our eyes and our minds luxuriate in the notion that this is a whole ’nother planet, the ship deorbiting unhurriedly from the huge emptiness of black space into a brand new sky and descending into a new world that is so totally amazing in and of itself, just by its sheer existence and the fact that we’re there, that it barely matters what else might be found there.

And then Prometheus lost me quickly after that, and never won me back again. Even if we had no thought that this might be connected to Alien, it ends up feeling like an Alien retread, as if it feels it must hit the same general notes…

I’ll leave out what those notes are, since that’s venturing much more deeply into spoiler territory. But do understand this: if you go in expecting an Alien prequel, you are going to be disappointed, and yet the film is so very much an Alien prequel, in spirit if not deed, that it almost can’t help but disappoint. The DNA of Ridley Scott’s earlier film (and a fair bit of James Cameron’s follow-up) is all over every frame of this new movie. Some of it just feels reminiscent of Alien, but a whole lot of the movie feels like Scott actively stealing from his younger self, and to considerably lesser effect. If I had somehow wandered into the theater, knowing nothing about the production, or about how the story for Prometheus had developed — if I hadn’t even known that Ridley Scott was directing — my one thought, at the end of the movie, would have been: “Wow, what a gorgeous but empty rip-off of Alien.”

Oh, it’s also kind of disgusting and shockingly violent in places. That’s not necessarily a bad thing — quite the opposite if done well — and heaven knows I managed to find some redeeming value even in The Human Centipede of all things. But there was a stretch of Prometheus that felt like Solaris directed by early David Cronenberg, and I’m not sure it was used to much better effect than making the audience squirm.

All that said, the movie does look incredible, and I think it had me completely, the same way it had Johanson, until at least halfway through. A lot of the actors are underused, but they’re quite good in their limited scenes, particularly Michael Fassbender, Idris Elba, and Charlize Theron. (I’m not really sold on Noomi Rapace, though, to be honest.) It’s the fact that there is so much, at least initially, to recommend Prometheus that ultimately makes it so disappointing.

Right before the movie, as part of my weekly free-writing group — the same friends I saw the movie with — I wrote this:

Jack isn’t dead, not exactly, but he might as well be for all the good he’s done us lately. He just sits in the corner of the room, almost never says anything, just stares off into space. I swear sometimes it’s like you can see right through him, like he’s just floating there, half-invisible, or like we’re all the way invisible to him. Tara says we shouldn’t blame him — Jack’s been through a lot lately, more than any of the rest of us — but Tara’s been saying a lot ever since the accident, won’t shut up really, and it’s all too tempting just to tune her out most of the time. Kendall just grumbles a lot, says something about there being no honor among thieves, which I guess is his way of suggesting we should maybe leave Jack behind — every man for himself, or something like that. But I think each of us remember what happened too well to do anything like that. We’re too scared to split up, even if that’s what we would have done if the accident had never happened, and even if deep down we’re just as equally scared of each other. We don’t owe each other anything. But we were all there when those control room doors slammed shut, and the lights went out, and we heard that thing that called itself the Master of Puppets snake its voice into our heads and tell us that we had been chosen to serve it or face death.

Maybe that’s Jack’s problem: maybe he couldn’t decide, and he stared too deep into death before staggering back.

Tara says we shouldn’t have come here, and yeah, sure, but what good is that kind of hindsight going to do us now? When the lights first shot back on, she was convinced it was a joke, some bad-taste prank Kendall or I had decided to play on her. Like it hadn’t been Tara who suggested we break into the old abandoned missile silo in the first place. Like it hadn’t been Tara who’d showed up at Kendall’s dorm complete with maps of the area she’d swiped from her Air Force commander father. Like it hadn’t been Tara who insisted we all get high before hiking out. It’s all well and good to regret all of that now, but regret isn’t going to get us out of the bargain we all struck just to stay alive.

Because, sure, it’s tempting to think it’s some kind of prank, or the drugs, or some kind of shared delusion. I get that, believe me, I do.

But nobody who actually heard that evil son of a bitch talk to them would ever imagine it was anything except powerful and dangerous and infinite.

I’m not really satisfied with all of it. Elements like the “Master of Puppets” and abandoned missile silo are owed to the writing prompts, and I’d probably excise them completely or rework them considerably in any rewrite. But there’s something here, in my head if not on the page, that I think I’d like to revisit.

The same way I’ll probably revisit Prometheus when it comes out on DVD. I think a director and/or screenwriter commentary could be really quite interesting in this case.

Saturday

I read some Kaleidotrope submissions today, watched a little bit of Would I Lie to You? on YouTube, and then this evening, I suppose inspired by yesterdy’s Song of the Day, I watched The Harder They Come. It’s not bad, although the soundtrack is probably what it’s best remembered for. (The soundtrack, including the title song, is pretty terrific, and I’m not even usually a huge fan of reggae.)

Anyway, that, more or less, was Saturday.

Right now, the neighbors are having a very loud party across the street. So there’s that.