Tiki Tour

summer in Canterbury - from my sight-seeing tour with Eroica, November 2005 I was poking around in my Photo Library trying to find the photo I took of the kangaroos (sheep) in Australia and found this photo from my Trip to Christchurch late last year. I don't really know where this is - maybe some Cantabrians can help me out. It was after a winding drive up up the hills on a wonderfully windy day. The two people in blue there were hiking up the path, stopping for a well deserved rest and admire this gorgeous view.

Long Time No Linkage: Rosie sent me a wonderful link this week to some neat storyboard stories. I stumbled over this scrumptious content packed blog the other day. If you want to look at beautiful things, take a click at Design*Sponge. I [heart] the nested tables! and look at that groovy wallpaper!
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Fun and Games at DSE

I guess Dick Smith Electronics is the Foodtown of electrical and computer equipment. It's all seems too convenient, a bit overpriced and bulkbuy - but it does the trick when I can't be arsed shopping around for absolutely everything in my life. A few weeks (months?) ago, my beautiful big 21" Trinitron computer monitor spazzed out and although I'm sure it's just a $4 fuse, i've not done much in the way of getting it fixed. All it takes is a call to the 0800 number and they come and get it and fix it then bring it back again in a few days. Last time this happened they even gave me a loan monitor which was so nice of them. But, I've not phoned the 0800 number - in stead, I got a cheap blurry old screen from an internet cafe and have been squinting and hating my online experience instead. I'm not a smart man, Janny. And on Sunday I had had enough. Enough, I say. So I DSE.co.nz'd the monitor section and saw a 17" for only $138 dollars and decided that was way easier than squinting a moment longer. I know I know but sometimes throwing money at a problem is less effort than fixing it properly. This scenario is not unusual in my life. Anyway. After the Warriors game* I dropped into the Dick Smith store and asked after their monitors**. They had one left in stock so I said I'd have it. He said it was in the stock room which was upstairs. I said I'd wait and away he went to source it. After some time, he came back: somewhat out of breath. "Don't tell me you don't have one afterall" I warned him. He told me the monitor was in stock but wasn't a new one. Turns out it was a "product return" and he could give me a discount but he wasn't sure if I still wanted it. I asked a few questions and enquired after the discount and, being DSE it wasn't much of a discount but it was better than a poke in the eye with the burry monitor that was sitting at home so I said OK, that was fine. He sighed and said he needed to go *back* to the storeroom to get it and it might be a while because the lifts were out and he had to leg it up the many flights of stairs. I wished him luck and wondered why he didn't bring it downstairs the first time. He took much longer to come back, lugging the box with my secondhand monitor. He was puffing a bit and perspiration was beading down his face from his hairline. I couldn't resist. Though I didn't try *that* hard to resist. As he straightened and tried to catch his breath I said "I've changed my mind, I don't want it anymore." *Priceless* facial expression. I laughed and said "i'm just messin' wit cha" and he grr'd and I laughed. So now I have a temporary, probably end up being permanent, 17" monitor (16.2" viewable) until I get my beautiful 21" monitor to the shop and a funny little story to blog about. Well I thought it was funny. * Warriors lost to the BullDogs (we hate the bulldogs) on a beautiful sunny day where I got sunburnt and it rained so I got wet too - go Auckland weather. But by Jesus it pisses me off when Warriors fans leave the stadium before the end of the match. Sure, we weren't going to win and sure, that Bulldogs try 5 minutes before full time was a pain in the neck but having 5000 fans stand and leave can't do much for our Team. Damn Fair Weathered Supporters - shame on the lot of you. ** I hate LCD monitors. The End.
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One New Zealand Cinema: Two Australian Movies

Somersault and Look Both Ways are debut feature films for their directors - Cate Shortland (short film maker) and Sara Watt (animator) respectively. Both set in extreme weather conditions - Somersault in the bleak cold change of season near a ski resort; No Way Out set over a scorching hot weekend in Adelaide. Two Australian movies that are similar in many ways but each leaving me feeling completely different afterwards. Somersault follows 16 year old Heidi as she makes that subtle shift between child and adult. Her life lacks the intimacy she craves as she confuses sex with love with the exquisite bad judgement of youth. She leaves her home after one such incident, and takes the bus to a ski resort arriving at the wrong end of the ski season believing a past encounters promise of contact if she's ever in the area. Of course, he doesn't remember her let alone want to hear from her, so she looks for a place to sleep by letting a tourist take her back to his accommodation. This is her method of operation - sexual encounters for warmth and attention and shelter. She is intensely alone. It's all she seems to know, and we know how self destructive that road will be if she continues down it. Then she meets Joe, the son of a local farmer. He seems to be as closed off and confused as Heidi appears naive and fragile. She is childlike, and he is confused. She finds a job, makes friends, meets people - tentative, fragile, but a semblance of a "normal" life seems to fill the space she occupies, though her transluscent innocence never leaves her. "I'm fucking the girl from the servo." "she's not like a close friend or anything, we're sleeping together." "you know when you were a kid, did your mum ever used to spray perfume in the air then sort of walk through it? ... yeh, well she's like that. you see, when you leave, you can still feel her on your skin." Things catch up with Heidi though, her self destructive tendencies resurface when she realises Joe is uncomfortable with her meeting his friends and begins to pull away from her again. This is the catalyst for her to make that subtle move to stop playing at grownups. She reaches out, finally, and finds a little help goes a long way. She left me feeling like it's not going to be easy but I could see the woman in the girl and am slightly hopeful. Slightly. I spent the whole movie worried about Heidi. She was bloody lucky not to fall into any real danger, or have any of those situations turn really bad. In fact, a lot of women could probably say that about the same time in our lives. There's a very fine line between being safe and not safe in sexually charged situations. The woman next to me in the theatre expected more trouble for Heidi in her situations, if the frights and gasps she annoyed me with were anything to go by. Somersault left me feeling low. Although it had a dreamlike quality, like old photographs or memories - it's reality hit home. Sadness and worry are the feelings I've been left with. Look Both Ways is one of the best films I've ever seen. It is familiar, and beautiful - I loved it right from the beginning with the flashes of illustrative imaginings and I want to go see it again right now. Time spent in this movie is joyful. Insanely ordinary and familiar. We meet, and spend a weekend with Nick, and those whose lives intersect his. Lives change this hot weekend. "What are you talking about death for? it's not like the good old days when you just ignored the whole concept of it." The characters were all so familiar. Slivers of people I recognised and situations I felt familiarity with. I noticed the way Nick was uncomfortable and didn't know where to place himself that whole weekend after being told he had cancer on Friday, when his work previous to his diagnosis showed him to be a self-assured and confident photo journalist. The way Nick's news changes his Editors outlook on life and we see that shift of priority in the love on his face as he watches his wife and daughter blow out birthday candles. Just a couple of the many fantastic performances from the cast in this movie. The word "familiar" echoes again and again. Even in the furnishings - stains on the wall paper, black and white photos from the 50s on the walls, oak dressing tables, low quality 40s style sofas worn on the arm rests, old crownlynn teacups - just like every home somewhere. It doesn't feel staged or prepared - Meryl's room, for instance, looked like she'd lived in it for years - layers of images pinned to the walls, traces of her everywhere she even had colour on the telephone from picking it up with wet paint on her hands from a hundred previous phone calls. The soft, casual - not hilarious, this is no Murial's Wedding or The Castle - funny parts of ordinary people living ordinary lives and having extraordinary everyday things happen to them. Meryl's friend, upon seeing Nick's photo of the train victim's wife on the front page of the paper noting first, how sad that was then "She's got really nice hair." so typical of friend conversations. "How was home? Did you meet any nice men?" "It was my dad's funeral." It's a movie about beginnings. endings. meetings, finishings, picking ups, dumpings, losings, gainings - all the things that happen to us all the time. Everything never changes. This is life. "You're giving me the flick, aren't you?... I met you on friday, we slept together on Saturday, you took me to meet your mother on Sunday and then you can't start anything. That's the tightest little relationship I've ever had." I wanted to scoop the movie up carefully in my own two hands and keep it for myself. There're things that could be written about the slice of generations in Look Both Ways and the train metaphor and the convergence of people and the continuence of spirit and of life and of community and of connectivity but the movie did it all so brilliantly that I say, go see for yourself. I came away from this movie full of joy, and hope, and glee and warmth.
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