Watch The Ramparts Perform “Fairytale of New York”

The Pogues’ “Fairytale of New York” is one of my favorite songs. It is the perfect Christmas song. I love that it is slightly irreverent, and funny. And sad. It makes me cry every time I listen to it (and I listen to it a lot this time of year.) I love that it is a song for everyone, not just the churchgoing folk. I love its structure and its lyrics. Like I said, it is one of my favorite Christmas songs.

I just discovered this a cappella version of it from an Irish group called The Ramparts. It is quite lovely, and now I’m sharing it with you.

Scars of Dracula (1970)

scars of dracula

Regular readers will know I’m a big fan of Hammer Studios horror films. The truth is I don’t necessarily think all their films are all that good, but there is something about them that I love anyway. They are like Classic Doctor Who in that manner.

Scars of Dracula isn’t a great film by any real measurement, but I thoroughly enjoyed myself with it anyway. I truly can’t get enough of Christophe Lee enjoying himself as Dracula.

You can read my review of this film in all of its 4K UHD glory right here.

Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure is the Pick of the Week

pee wees big adventure

Pee-wee is in the Criterion Collection! I love Pee-Wee Herman and his Big Adventure is one of my favorite things. I love that it is getting the royal treatment in UHD.

It is a good week for other releases including something from David Byrne, Hammer Horror, PT Anderson, Hong Kong cinema and more. You can read all about it here.

Now Watching: Wake Up Dead Man (2025)

image host

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (2025)
Directed by Rian Johnson
Starring: Daniel Craig, Josh O’Connor, Glenn Close, Josh Brolin, Jeremy Renner, Mila Kunis, Kerry Washington, Andrew Scott, Cailee Spaeny, Daryl McCormack, Thomas Haden Church, and Jeffrey Wright

Synopsis: A young priest is sent to help a charismatic older priest in a small church. A seemingly impossible murder brings in Detective Benoit Blanc to solve the case. Every parishioner is a suspect.

Rating: 8/10

Released on Thanksgiving in 2019, Knives Out felt like a breath of fresh air. This was just before Covid kept us all home and right in the middle of Trump’s first term in office. It was a cozy little blanket that kept us warm from all the trouble brewing in the air. It was a lovely little Agatha Christie-esque mystery with an incredible cast and a terrifically twisty plot. I loved it.  I still love it, as I watched it last week and found it to be just as delightful as ever.

Its sequel, Glass Onion, wasn’t quite as good. It felt a little too modern and a little less cozy, but it featured another great cast, and Daniel Craig had slipped perfectly back into his brilliant detective’s slippers.

I’ve been excitedly waiting for the third film ever since. Sadly, because Wake Up Dead Man is a Netflix film, it only got a limited theatrical release. The only theater anywhere near me that was showing it was an old, broken-down theater half an hour away. I really wanted to see this on a great big screen with an audience, but that didn’t happen.

Still, it was worth the wait. We get another great cast and a mostly great, twisty mystery. Josh O’Connor is terrific as a young priest with a dark past but a passion for compassion who comes up against a firebrand more interested in calling out the sinners than loving his flock. There are some interesting reflections on faith and the importance of finding your own calling.

At 142 minutes, it runs a little long, and not everything worked for me. The original is still my favorite, but I hope they keep making these movies for years and years to come.

The Friday Night Horror Movie: The Strangers: Chapter 1 (2024)

image host

This film has been popping up in my feeds and the like for a while now. A brief preview of some of my friends’ Letterboxd reviews noted it to be pretty dumb but enjoyable; also, there is a sequel in theaters now, and I’m trying to watch as many movies from 2025 as i can this month, so I pressed “play.” 

I should have taken a nap.  Or rewatched one of the Halloween movies for the umpteenth time. Or smashed my thumb with a hammer.  Any of those would have been more enjoyable than this movie.

Maya (Madelaine Petsch) and her boyfriend Ryan (Froy Gutierrez) are in the midst of a cross-country drive that will end in Portland, where Maya has a job interview. Because nothing makes you more refreshed and ready for an all-important interview like being stuck in a car for days on end.

Ryan says he’s hungry, and Maya looks at the map on her phone, spies a little diner, and tells him to exit now. I submit it is possible that there are people in this world who, while in the midst of a multi-day drive across the country, simply whip out their phones when they are hungry and choose the very first restaurant they see without looking at a menu or reading reviews on Yelp, but that was my first red flag that this movie was playing it fast and loose with plot details.

The cafe is in a tiny little town in Oregon. It is far enough off the highway that they lose their cell phone signal, but big enough, apparently, to have a good signal inside of town. Except, they actually note how big the town is, and it only has, like, 350 people. Like an old-fashioned movie, everybody in the surprisingly full cafe stops what they are doing and stares at the newcomers. 

They are all shocked – shocked I tell you – that she wants a vegetarian plate. They are even more shocked when they realize our heroes are celebrating their five year anniversary – but not of marriage, just dating. Apparently the citizens of this small town are very conservative. Not that any of this seems to matter to the actual plot, it’s just a chance for the film to add a little atmosphere.

Lunch over, they head to their car and find that it doesn’t start. A creepy mechanic appears out of nowhere (the film will do this a lot – hide somebody skulking around from the audience’s point of view and pretend  the characters somehow wouldn’t notice a person walking right up to them and staring.) He says they’ll have to order some parts, and our heroes will have to spend the night. Luckily, there is a really nice cabin in the woods that gets “rented on the internet.”

At the cabin they sit outide and they enjoy the quiet of the woods. Then they start a little sexy time. Ryan lifts her up and takes her to…not the bedroom, but the kitchen. Because where else do you go for a little sexy time in a stranger’s house but their kitchen counters?

The doorbell interrupts their fun, and some creepy girl stands outside awkwardly. Everyone stares at each other for some ridiculously long beats, and then she asks if someone or the other is home. Ryan gives her a harsh “no” while Maya indicates she must have the wrong house. Then they stare at each other in silence for a while. It s so awkward and weird this scene. Any normal person would assume that maybe the guy who owns the place has a daughter who plays with this young girl.  Any normal person would explain that they are renting the place for the night. 

Girl leaves, and our heroes get their sexy time (on the couch, not the bed, because there will be a “spooky” reveal in the bedroom later). And then, oops, our heroes realize they accidentally left his asthma inhaler in the car. Because what normal people would definitely do when they are leaving their car for the night in an old auto shop miles away from where they will be spending the night with no modes of transportation is not make sure they have a life saving medical device. And it wasn’t knocked under the seat. It was sitting right there in the console.

So Ryan gets on a motorcycle that is for some reason left on the property with the keys and rides back to town. He gets the inhaler and then some food (ordering her a cheeseburger without the met – so just bread and cheese, I guess).  While he’s gone, she drinks three small bottles of hard liquor and a bottle of beer. 

She also calls the owner of the place because the refrigerator is out and essentially demands that he send someone that night to fix it. Despite the fact that the only thing they have to keep cool is a six pack of beer, they will be leaving in the morning. The fridge will not come into play for the rest of the movie.  Not even when the evildoers start showing up and knocking on the door. It would have been an easy jump scare for our heroes to think the person at the door was a refrigerator repairman only to find out it was someone with nefarious intent. But whatever.

The creepy girl knocks on the door again while Ryan is out. Maya doesn’t open the door but is pretty freaked out by it. So what does she do in this frightened state inside a strange cabin in the woods while her boyfriend is away? She smokes a blunt, then takes a shower. That’s what everybody would do, right?

The thing is, while Maya has been alone in the cabin, we have seen the creeps staring at her from inside and outside the house. Maya plays some music on a piano, and one of them sits on a chair behind her. When she takes a shower, someone comes inside the bathroom and watches. They would surely make some noise moving around like that.  Unless she’s completely oblivious, she would surely see them.

Whatever, horror movie tropes and all that. Eventually, Ryan comes home, and the creeps attack for good. More stupid decisions are made, including never calling the cops and not just high-tailing it out of there. At one point Ryan has a shotgun and the killers only have blades, but he still tells Maya to go run through the woods while he stays there. And doesn’t shoot them.

I’ve rattled on for too long. I just couldn’t believe how dumb this film was.  I expect characters to make stupid decisions in horror films because otherwise the film would be over in ten minutes, but the characters in this film never make even one sensible decision.

It ends with a “To Be Continued” and while I hated this film, I kind of want to see the sequel (there will be a third one, too). Also, apparently, this is an attempt to reboot a Strangers franchise. The original The Strangers was made in 2005 and a sequel came out in 2018. I might have to watch them all as punishment for my sins.

I Know Where I’m Going (1945)

i know where i'm going

Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger are known for their large scale, brilliantly shot in technicolor productions such as The Red Shoes and Black Narcissus, but they also made much smaller production such as this film. I’d honestly never heard of it until I got a copy of it on Blu-ray from the Criterion Collection, but I found it to be just lovely.

It is about a woman who goes to a small village in Scotland to meet her fiancee and get married but instead she falls in love with the local villagers and meets another man. That’s sound like every other romantic comedy out there, but in the hands of masters like Powell and Presssburger it is wonderful. You can read my full review here.

Five Cool Things and Ready or Not 2: Here I Come

train dreams

While I did forget to write a Pick of the Week this week I absolutely remembered to write my Five Cool Things. This week the focus was on some movies that came out in 2025 including Train Dreams, A House of Dynamite, She Rides Shotgun, and The Man in My Basement, plus a David Byrne concert and a trailer for an upcoming horror movie.

You can read all about it over at Cinema Sentries.

A Tale of Three Computers

Last Christmas we bought my daughter a cheap(ish) laptop. At the time she was playing casual games like Minecraft, and she didn’t need much processing power. Lately she’s been getting into more intensive games through Steam. They need more power than her computer can really handle. I bought her one a few months ago, and while she was able to play it, the playing speed was super slow and the graphics were terrible.

Steam had a big Black Friday sale, and I bought her a couple of games. But since I bought them through the website that she plays her games on, she automatically knew I had purchased them. Christmas came early for her, or so we thought.

Her little laptop wasn’t able to handle them at all. They wouldn’t play in the least little bit.

That really sucked, as while the games were on sale, they weren’t cheap. They were going to be her big ticket Christmas items. She’ll get a few other small things, but that’s it.  And now she can’t even play them.

I promised her we’d look into buying her a desktop that could handle these games, but not now. Maybe for her birthday or something (if her grandparents chipped in.) The thing is, I’m a Mac guy. I’ve been using Apple products for a good 15 years now. Macs are great for many things, but games aren’t one of them. Macs also don’t like you to tinker with them. They are designed to plug in and just work.  I’m perfectly happy with that. While I used to be someone who knew a little something about computers, I am no longer that guy.  I have no idea what the latest processors are, how much RAM you need, etc.

That made looking online to determine what kind of a computer she needed extremely difficult. Luckily my brother’s boy is a hardcore gamer, and I figured he could help me with the specs. At first he sent me a bunch of information that went over my head. Then he sent me some links to computers he thought were reasonably priced.  His version of reasonable and my version are very different things. I was not prepared to spend $1,000 so my daughter could play some video games. I told him that we needed to go a little cheaper, and he said he’d look into it.

I mentioned all this to my brother, just in casual conversation; I wasn’t expecting him to do anything about it. But then he mentioned that his son had given him a very nice computer a couple of years ago. My brother used to be really into World of Warcraft, but he hasn’t played in a long while and doesn’t plan to return to it, so, he said, she could have that one. He needed to run that by his son as it was a gift, but he didn’t think that would be a problem.

It wasn’t, and yesterday he delivered us a nice computer. Then the bomb dropped.  It didn’t have Wi-Fi. My brother always connected via an Ethernet cord and didn’t need Wi-Fi.  Our router is downstairs in my wife’s sewing room. Daughter wanted to use her computer upstairs. That would mean dragging over 100 feet of Ethernet cable across the house, up the stairs, and then back across the house. That just wasn’t going to work. 

I chatted with my nephew’s girlfriend, who is a bit of a computer nerd. She knew there were little devices you could buy and plug in to give it Wi-Fi, but she’d not had good luck with them. She suggested I just upgrade the motherboard and get one with Wi-Fi capabilities.  Then she said she was thinking of upgrading her motherboard, and she could give us her old one.

That was a little over my head, but she seemed to think it would work.  Then she called back a little later.  She’d decided she was going to buy her boyfriend a brand-new computer, and we could have his old one.  It had Wi-Fi, and it was better than my brother’s old one.

She brought it over tonight.  I had to move some desks around and spend way too much time trying to get it all set up, but it plays her games beautifully.  She’s one happy camper. 

And so am I.

Batman: Killing Time

batman killing time

Batman is probably my favorite comic book character (I go back and forth between him and the X-Men – which I know is a group of characters, but you’ll just have to deal with that.) I love that he doesn’t have any true superpowers, I love that he’s often more detective than superhero, and he has a great Rogue’s Gallery of villains.

I realize I don’t talk about comics all that much in these pages, but I like the idea of writing more small reviews and telling personal stories. I want to make this old blog more of a blog.  Maybe. Tomorrow I’ll probably change my mind, but for now I’m talking about Batman.

Batman: Killing Time is a limited series written by Tom King and illustrated by David Marquez. It begins with three villains – The Penguin, The Riddler, and Catwoman, who pull off the heist of the century. But then they immediately begin double crossing one another. It is up to Batman to put the clues together and pick up the pieces.

King tells the story with an off-kilter timeline. He does this thing where he’ll start a page with the date and a specific time, and then on the next page he’ll tell us it is exactly 1 hour and fifteen minutes later or whatever. Back and forth, back and forth, each pages, sometimes multiple times a page the time changes.  Sometimes he’ll go back hundreds, thousands of years to tell us a little mythology. This mostly ties together in an interesting way by the conclusion, but it is also a little confusing. 

At some point a new villain, The Help, is introduced. He’s kind of like Alfred from the Pennyworth TV series (which I quite liked and recommend) in that he’s got an English butler vibe but with loads of combat training).  He’s an interesting character, but then he just kind of disappears.  That’s about the time a foul mouthed US agent shows up who’s ready to wipe everybody out if the secret, possibly magical MacGuffin gets into the wrong hands.  

The story is fine. It isn’t anything special, but it worked well enough for me. The mastermind of the whole thing is apparently some obscure villain that hasn’t been seen in the comics for a long time. I didn’t know him, but the character makes sense within the context of the story and I liked him. But I’d be hard pressed to give you the details of what happened now that I’ve finished it.

The artwork is excellent. One of the things I love about Batman comics is that the artwork often has a noir feel to it and that’s implemented here to great effect. 

Overall, a quite good comic. Not Batman’s best, but well worth the read.