Friday 23 June 2006

You mardy bum!

Yeah, I'm bein' a right mardy-arse today. Feel like stamping on everyone's feet ont MTR and pushing through all them fuckers that lurch across your path while walking at half everyone else's speed, before simply stoppin fer NO REASON right in front of you. Guess I'm just a mardy bum.

Speakin' o which, would love to explain to this nice girlie over HERE that "mardy" means grumpy / upset / moody / pissed off, but can't find a way to leave her a comment. Hope she finds this link and reads this, eh. If anyone knows a way to link it back, gizza shout, eh.

And, yes, sad but true, have been sucked inta doin' them video things and uploading em to YouTube. This is my pathetic effort:



Sad but oddly amusing.

Saying goodbye to Vic and Bob int going to help me mood either ~ two students I've taught fert last two years now. (Just to clarify: o course their real names are NOT Vic and Bob, they just act like 'em and to be honest, it's more fun.) Thursdays just won't be Thursdays wi'owt those two... No more "spnoons" and "jlelly"s...

On a brighter note, it'll be July soon, an I can buy meself that shiny new DVD recorder I've been promisin' meself fer... ooooh, a week now. And Sean Bean's new film, "The Dark" (about eeee-vil Welsh sheep) opened here in HK yesterday, so we've decided to go Thursday night. Sean Bean all dripping wet, angry n desperate? The burning green eyes, the bedraggled blond hair... It's licensed "Sean Porn", I tell you. I'm taking a towel. And it ent fer me head.

Soopytwist. Oh, and peach and lube.
Lots and lots of lube.

Tags:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Monday 19 June 2006

Fab new choons

As I posted on me LiveJournal thing just this lunchtime, I'm gettin' right fucked off wi me reeeeeeeeeaally boring life. So I took a piece of advice and did summat about it. Well, made a start, anyway. I got meself some new music. Milburn, Dirty Pretty Things, The Kooks, Robbie Williams, The Zutons and, thanks to Four Dinners, some Sandi Thom stuff too [aye thank yow]. Have to say, it's brightened up me iPod Shuffle no end. It's also done summat to alleviate the fuckin' bum-numbingly boring MTR journey into work. 25 mins of staring at inside o 't train carriage every mornin' an' evenin', and learnin' I have to wait another week fer me next Bernard Cornwell novel ("Sharpe's Rifles") do not help my slip-sliding into 't another bout of manic depression. Brought on by 't usual: best mates havin' a love-life while I get to beat freaks of wi sticks and continue to spit bitterness at anyone who offers the ubiquitous "your time will come, you'll find someone…"

If one more well-meaning cunt tells me that, I'll fuckin' brain 'em and shove their body through 't gap that we're suppose to mind getting ont train. It didn't cut it ten years ago, and sure ent doin' owt now.

But anyway, the music:

Milburn are kinda growin' on me, have to say. At the moment I'm made-up wi "Send In The Boys" an' "Let Me Go" ~ surely me favourite choon o' theirs so far. Also found some new Arctic Monkeys shite too, including "Despair in the Departure Lounge", which is over the hills an' far away the best I've heard in ages. From anyone. "No Buses" is just fuckin' excellent ~ the lyrics are pure genius, that familiar voice and the George Formby-esque background riff. It's just all fuckin' fab, simple, direct and bloody marvellous.

Not sounding so depressed now, eh. Pity there's not new Arctic Monkeys' stuff every day of 't week. Or just loadsa Ewan pictures, praps.

YouTube. Yeah, been there an' all this weekend, cheerin' meself up watchin' shite like THIS, which had me in stitches, I'm ashamed to say. If you type in "Dead Ringers" you'll get all the other ones they've done, including the hilarious James Blunt parody "It's Bloody Cold" ("… and Morrissey keeps telling me 'James Blunt' is rhyming slang…"), and of course, the "House" stories they've done. Class.

Best go, eh. Quit while yer ahead, an' all that. Me DVD player still ent workin' so I can't watch any o' me favourite shows, so praps I'd best just go to bed and sleep it all off. Never know, might work.

Peach and lube.
Or soopytwist. Yeah, that still makes me laff after all these years. Just makes me think o' them tinkling and ~ what do you call it when people make accurate trumpet noises through their mouths? Wi'owt a real trumpet? Whatever, that noise. Fry an' Laurie are comic gods.

Tags:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Monday 12 June 2006

Granville Is Dead: Long Live Granville!

No, I'm not talking about Open All Hours, but the wee pinkish gecko that until last year lived in me kitchen. About three inches long and a champion ant-eater, he sadly got ont wrong side of a slippery kitchen sink and that, as they say, were that. After he were gone, the place just weren't the same. There were a damned sight more fucking ants, fer a start. No reassuring scuttling sounds to remind me he were on picquet duty against any an all insect insurgents. No flashes of pinkness as he raced to't safety of ceiling every time I turned ont kitchen light. I miss him.

But I bided me time, left me windows open int rain, refused to buy chemicals to staunch the wee battalions of ants fallin' in and settin' up camp around me kitchen sink. And yesterday I were rewarded wi a familiar scrabbling noise and a flash o pink as I turned ont kitchen light.

I stood looking at 'im, hoping he'd stay and make a meal of all em ants he'd obviously been eyeing up. I think he might an all; he were less than disturbed by me cooking dinner underneath him. In fact, he were a four-inch example of allied reconnaissance. He must have a fair idea of how to make pork and squid fried rice with "sang choi" and oyster sauce, seeing as how he were payin' strict attention the whole time. Maybe it smelt good to 'im too. Who knows? I notice he were grinning though ~ do all geckos have mouths like that? The last one did an always. So I decided he would be called Granville The Second, in memory of Granville who perished so ignobly while fighting the good fight just a year before. It also reminded me of a good Winston Churchill quote: "I like a man who grins when he fights." Must have been thinking o Sharpe, eh.

Speaking o Sharpe, I were unlucky enough to catch the end o "Bridget Jones" on HBO last night. What a complete steaming pile of bat guano that was. Except I happened to flick over the channel just as this drenched Bridget bird were trying to get into some important office thing to tell Colin Firth she'd give 'im one. Or some such bollocks. As I'm about to change channels to save me brain from reacting to all this "woe is me" chick-flick shite, I spot a familiar face parked next to that of Colin Firth. And then the familiar face speaks.

The accent, the face, it's all exactly the same ~ it's Comandante Teresa's Spanish partisan friend, the Major Blas Vivar (of "Sharpe's Rifles") in the flesh. And Colin Firth went, "This is Mr Santiago". Almost dropped me remote control. I know names can be descendent in Spain, but just struck me as a coincidence, and I couldn't help but wonder if he still had "a rag in a bag" somewhere on his person.

And talkin' o being on his person, found an excellent site for what shall from now on be referred to on this site as "Sean Porn" (arf arf). Yeah, does what it says ont tin, so make sure you're at least old enough to study A-Levels before you CLICK this link. Those easily offended or who prefer not to read such graphic pieces of writing, do not read. But everyone else: jump in wi two feet, wey-fuckin'-hey!
In fact:

Beanie babies of the world unite, and start tagging yer relevant posts wi the tag "SeanPorn", heheheheheheee.

You never know, we might start summat.

While we're talking about links to others' very good sites, if you don't already frequent Infinite Muppets then yer missin' out. I have to admit, I'm a long-time lurker but a very infrequent commenter. That said, it's as necessary a read as Four Dinners (DILLIGAF?), The Emerald Bile and o course The Bean Daily. Suffice to say, they're all funny as fuck and excellent therapy for speaking all proper-like and posh all day.

I was about to go off on one about my piece o shite DVD player, but I don't think I'll bother just now. Right now I'm in a happy place, and I dunt want to talk meself into't bad mood.

Soopytwist.

Tags:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Sunday 11 June 2006

England v Paraguay: bollocks!

Went out ont town, watched England v Paraguay int pub. Shouldn'ta bothered, eh. England didn't even score 'emselves, had to have the Paraguay captain Gamarra head it in fer 'em. Hell's bells and buckets o blood, what a complete bloody shambles. Have to say, if this is how "we" play, we're going to get fucking creamed.

And what were all that Peter Crouch is tall, so let's fucking 'ave 'im fer every possible type of foul we can bollocks? Leave the bloke alone ~ just cos you lot are short-arses, dunt mean you can have a crack at him and claim he fouled someone.

And Mr Nelson Valdez: you are a bastard, sir. I've seen Oscar-winners put less effort into their performances than you. Here's a tip for you: football is about kicking the ball and getting it int net, not sliding the opposing team's players' legs out from under 'em. Think about it.


Riveros and Gerrard. At least Gerrard 'ad a go.


Now I've slept off me hangover, I'll get ready fert next match. Doubt I'll be making the trip to't pub though, dunt seem worth it. I've seen better quality footie via YouTube from Bury's ground. Talkin 'bout the big guns, Sheffield Utd going up to't Premiership will be summat to see next season. Talkin 'bout wee'uns, FC Utd of Manchester going up to't Northwest Counties Division 1 will be summat to see. And winning Division 1 this time next year. They'll do it an all. Just you wait an see.

Soopytwist.

Tags:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Thursday 8 June 2006

Essex Boys

All pics fer this post courtesy of http://fanzone50.com/SeanBean/

Seven days wi'owt cigarettes makes me smug.
Seven days wi'owt talking to Granny Weatherwax makes me want to smack the next fucker who gets in me way int street.
Seven days wi no e-mail from me sisters makes me wonder if England's been cut off from t'internet.
Seven days wi'owt beer makes me re-arrange me fridge and rediscover long-lost bottles of oyster sauce.
Seven days wi no new Sharpe book to read makes me watch old Seanie Beanie DVDs.

Speakin' of which, sat and watched "Essex Boys" fert first time t' other night. Fuck me, talk about a real sockdolager of a tale! Three words that sum up this film:
1. Brit-flick.
2. Underrated.
3. Cunt.

Brit-flick:
As much as Snatch or The Full Monty, this film shows two very British bowman's fingers to Hollywood, in that it's something they could never emulate. It's extremely regional and could never be translated. And it's ours. What it lacks in glossy cinematography it more 'n makes up fer in characters an story. And yet it's not wi'owt some great cinematography ~ right from't shot o't mudflats at the beginning to indicate isolation in more ways than one. Somewhere to take a grass to give 'im a good kicking, or a reflection of the protagonist's own isolation? Or just a bloody great wide-angle shot?

Underrated:
Why in the past perfect hell has this not become a DVD classic? The "before they were famous" faces, the subject matter, the fact that it's a strong English situational drama? Bearing in mind we've 'ad some right bollocks made recently, from Lottery money that could have been better spent on restoring Ealing comedies praps, this should get some promotion as a sleeper hit.

Cunt:
This word is here for two reasons – the character Jason Locke, and the man who plays 'im.
First off, the character is a complete cunt, and I definitely AM NOT using that word in an "awreight y'cunt, how's yirself?" genial Scottish greeting kinda way. Absolutely not. He rapes club girls, beats grasses, chucks acid over people, slaps his wife around and fucks over his mates. He's an ugly, ugly person who shoulda been put down like the rabid bestial lowlife that he were. But what goes around comes around.

Sean Bean, then, who plays this Jason Locke. He's also a cunt, but this time I DO mean it in a "awreight y'cunt, and how's yir good self?" warm Scottish greeting kinda way. To put it bluntly, he upstages everyone in this film, including the usually scene-stealing Tom Wilkinson and the formidable Alex Kingston. Bean's a bloody jammy sod, insertin' imself in people's subconscious by creating a character so vile he remains memorable long after the film's story has faded from recollection. And he does it so well. He has about three looks for "I'm coming over there":
1 ~ "and you're going to fuckin' regret it, pal"
2 ~ "and you've got two minutes to live" and
3 ~ "and you're going to wish you ONLY had two minutes to live".
He's a right scary fucker when he gets his threatening face on. Bloody unsettling, is that. And yet strangely compelling. Like a car-crash, you can't look away even though you're repulsed by the horror unfolding.

There were moments where his carefully-crafted accent slipped just a tad. It was a complete shock int beginning though – seeing as his character dunt speak for his first few scenes – to hear 'im come out with the whole "fargin-ell" darn sarff accent. "Shit!" I'm thinking, "he's a cockney git!" Which shoulda been obvious, seeing as how the film is set in an round Southend an Essex! But somehow it dunt seem like him at all. Again, score one for the jammy fucker, he's managed to appear far-removed from how most o the public sees him. Most people (English, that is) probably regard 'im as a meat-n-potatoes kinda softly-spoken Yorkshireman, a man whose quiet voice is hard to hear on a radio interview, a man who seems uncomfortable during TV interviews, who says only as much as he needs to, flashes that hyowj grin and then disappears back to the pub whence he came. So this larger-than-life, loud-mouth vessel of rage and hatred were more than a little unexpected. Fer anyone who's watched an episode o "Sharpe", the fact that he were such an 'ard bastard were no surprise, nor his ferocity, just his complete disregard for honour among thieves and wives.

Maybe that's what it comes down to ~ you can be as mean and despicable a man as you like, but if you still have a sense of honour then you're not evil, merely bad and salvageable. Yet this Jason Locke had none of this and deserved all he got ~ a completely irredeemable bastard. Given the chance, he wouldn't comprehend why he should be attempting redemption anyway.

The film's not wi'owt its flaws, but it ably overcomes these and I were left feeling like I'd witnessed something momentous. All-in-all, a great story (though convoluted at times) and for once, a strong, useful and in fact pivotal ["Pivotal, Sharpe, Pivotal!" ~ Prince William] female character that I actually liked and rooted for.

Wow, that were a review and a half! I know most people would disagree wi me, but I'm thinking maybe this could be one of, if not the, finest performance from Sir Sean of Bean. Of what I've seen, that is. But because of this, I will be looking up a few other of his films I've not seen yet.

p.s., in me neck o the woods, "bastard", "fucker" and "cunt" can be terms of affection. Otherwise why would I apply them to 'im?

Soopytwist.

Tags:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Sunday 4 June 2006

"You spanner!"

Word of 't week: "spanner". During a potentially pants-liberatingly boring vocabulary lesson, a certain student needed clarification of garage tools. His task had been to match words wi the relevant pictures. He pointed to 't picture of the grease monkey lying under a car, asking why he were still working when 't clock int picture showed 9pm. "Is he the spanner?" he added.
"Yes," says I, after I've recovered from laffing fit to burst, "he is Thee spanner if he's still working at 9pm." Hilarity ensued as I attempted to clarify when and where you could legitimately call someone a "spanner".

Almost as amusing was the "splatter" incident. A student appeared late one lesson, asking if he could have a splatter. Fearing what he actually meant, I asked if he needed 't toilet.
"Well maybe to clean it," he said, only adding to 't confusion. Then he lifted his finger so as I could see it were bleeding from a wee paper cut. "Can I please get a splatter? I'll be quick," he added.
Realization dawned.
"Oh, a plaster," I corrected. He looked confused, but then all became clear when I let him get himself a plaster from the First Aid box. Kids, eh.

The younger they are, the more they make me feel nervous and in need of copious amounts of valium. Exhibit A: poor Jack. I would say, "poor wee Jack", but under the circumstances that would seem cruel.
Jack is three. He comes to kindergarten and every time does his best to repeat what I say, use all 't new words, and pick up a pencil int right fingers and not grab it wi a fist. He has a lovely, sparkling personality and bears a striking resemblance to Short Round ~ which is probably why I let im get away wi more than I should.
Anyway, yesterday morning he arrives in a more ebullient mood than usual, but he were being a good boy. We were covering names of zoo animals, and he suggested two good ones (I were suitably impressed ~ how many three year olds do you know who can name zoo animals in a foreign language?). When it came to 't pictures and the big M for "monkey", he suddenly pointed at another classmate and shouted "cheeky monkey!", seeing as I called him it every lesson wi'owt fail. Now that he realized what a monkey was, and the fact that I'd been saying it at the other wee lad for about six weeks already, he burst into fits o giggles, as did I. And every one of the students. We were all overtaken by belly-laffs, but Jack was roaring like a child possessed; he peed himself.
Literally. That is the first time (and hopefully, the last) I've ever seen anyone really, actually pee themselves laffing. Poor wee bugger. He didn't even notice until I guided him out of the room and toward the toilet, while he still laffed his socks off. His mam were waiting outside so it were no trouble, and after a shot delay he were back in the lesson ~ but I made sure we were rather more restrained wi the jokes.

Aai-ya, eh.


Anyway, sat and watched Equilibrium t' other night. Verdict? I can't decide if it's the most pretentious (yet beautifully shot) pile of steaming camel poo I've ever seen, or perfect escapism. I were only watching it fer two things (them being Sir Sean of Bean and Christian Bale, in that order), but I were quite surprised by the whole experience. It's growing on me, and I can't decide if it were just edging into cult status in me head before the ending made me squeal wi satisfaction. Hmm.
The first thing I noticed, that kept me mind on a single (well, parallel to 't most important one, that is) track, were Sean Pertwee. Well, not him, exactly (although dunt he have the most amazing voice-over voice?), but his accent. Distinctly southern England, and proud of it. Hmm, I thought, this could be interesting. And then it were Sean Bean, smoothing his mellifluous Yorkshire mouth round a more RP-sounding delivery. Then to add to this bevy of comfortable sounds, enter Angus MacFadyen (lovely Glasgow lad who, strangely enough, came over a little Welsh fer some reason…). So we're set ~ we've got two Englishmen and a Scotsman.
So enter the Welshman ~ Christian Bale. Now then, what do we have here? Another Englisher, this time Emily Watson. What do these last two have in common? They traded their natural accents fer American ones. Not a bad thing, especially not in a film funded by American dollars, but upon further inspection it raises more questions. In fact, the only member of the cast actually hailing from the US is Taye Diggs ~ everyone else is either from somewhere that is still counted as British or Germany (and one from Quebec, sorry).
So what's all that about? We're already coping very easily wi two Englishmen and a Scot, and then this Welsh boyo turns up speaking all Yank-like. Bizarre.

Still, the film boasted absolutely knock-out moments ~ Mr Bale emptying two handguns into the pitch around him, producing the strobe-effect needed to give it all a comic-book feel in a way that those two Wachowski brothers could only wet themselves dreaming about. Fuck the Matrix, these coppers have something called the Gun Kata, which is basically the science of moving so you hit all your targets while avoiding return fire. Fucking excellent, is what it translates to.
It certainly is an odd little film ~ it unwinds slowly, almost ponderously, but all the time is punctuated with eye-catching confrontations and cliffhangers that make you go "hmm". Wi'owt giving anything away, I believe I had me heart in me mouth as Sean Bean was reading "He Wished For The Cloths of Heaven" by Yeats. Although certain characters were sacrificed and other were rather cleverly seen to be tucking into 't background, it couldn't have been any other way. The ultimate price ~ paid gladly, remember ~ by a certain character served as a catalyst for all that needed to follow. This was perhaps the most worthy of the film sacrifices I've ever seen. Balls to your Armageddon, this were proper Jedi-quality self-sacrifice, bowing to a higher wisdom that no-one else could yet appreciate. The truth certainly did out, and how. It may have been a long time coming, and some of it a little contrived, but the ending were fab (take that, you arrogant fucker! See how it funny it really isn't with my foot up yer arse!).

I will have to watch it again (if just because I need to see it int fresh light), and when I do I'll be reminded of how it pisses all over the Matrix like a twenty-four pound gun over a Baker rifle. I resented the "in the style of the Matrix!" banner written in Chinese on the cover. This was nothing like the Matrix, and aren't we glad.

Anyway, ont the bad news ~ I can't get time off to go the short hop to Japan to see the Arctic Monkeys play the Summersonic concerts. Talk about gutted! I've only ever seen footage of em play, never the real thing, and Japan's only four hours' flight from here. I guess I'll have to wait, fingers crossed, in the vain hope that they'll come here to HK one day. My mate said it were hilarious in its irony ~ and were rewarded wi a look that could have frozen over a good many number of circles of hell ~ a look of which I'm right proud, by the way.

But this has already turned into summat a million years long, so I'll add that Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not ranked number 89 in the top 100 Best Albums Ever Recorded, and leave it there.

Peach and lube.

Tags:
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~