레이블이 Sherlock Holmes인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Sherlock Holmes인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 11월 27일 수요일

About 'sherlock holmes clothing'|... confronting him in these. Star Wears Own Clothes In Movie reads a blurb in the Pillow Of Death pressbook, and if that’s to be...







About 'sherlock holmes clothing'|... confronting him in these. Star Wears Own Clothes In Movie reads a blurb in the Pillow Of Death pressbook, and if that’s to be...








Doctor               Who               has               returned               to               both               British               and               American               television               screens.

As               of               this               writing,               oddly               enough               we               are               talking               about               two               different               actors,               but               American               will               catch               up               next               year.

Never               a               Doctor               Who               fan               growing               up,               I               only               watched               the               show               because               my               wife               was               a               fanatic.

But               that's               all               I'm               going               to               reveal               about               that.
               My               favorite               episode               was               The               Talons               of               Weng               Chiang.

This               Doctor               Who               episode               plays               out               like               a               Sherlock               Holmes               mystery,               set               in               England               during               roughly               the               same               period.

The               Doctor's               companion               is               Leela,               the               wild               native               girl               who               wears               more               clothing               in               this               episode               than               most               others.

As               a               present               for               my               wife,               I               bought               the               deluxe               two               disc               DVD               version               and               I               must               say               it               was               worth               the               price.
               For               those               who               are               completely               ignorant               of               Doctor               Who,               he               is               a               Time               Lord               who               travels               willy-nilly               through               space               and               time.

The               show               was               the               longest-running               series               in               British               history.

That               sounds               pretty               impressive,               but               you               must               remember               that               the               second               longest               running               series               only               has               six               episodes.

(A               Simpsons               joke,               yes,               but               almost               accurate).

Over               the               course               of               the               decades               during               which               this               show               aired,               several               different               actors               played               the               doctor,               none               of               them               bearing               any               resemblance               to               one               another.

This               is               because               Time               Lords               must               periodically               regenerate,               transforming               their               looks               and               personalities.
               The               most               popular               of               the               actors               to               play               the               Doctor               was               Tom               Baker,               who               also               played               him               for               the               longest               time,               during               the               height               of               the               show's               popularity               in               the               70s.

The               Talons               of               Weng               Chiang               is               one               of               those               episodes;               indeed,               it               was               voted               the               best               Doctor               Who               story               ever               in               honor               of               the               40th               anniversary               of               the               show.

It's               easy               to               see               why.

It               features               fascinating               characters,               a               Jack               the               Ripper               type               plot,               and               a               giant               sewer               rat.

In               addition,               there               is               also               an               early               appearance               by               the               diminutive               actor               Deep               Roy,               who               recent               gained               fame               playing               the               Oompa               Loompas               in               Charlie               and               the               Chocolate               Factory.

Here               he               plays               a               ventriloquist               dummy               who               is               also               an               assassin.
               The               story               is               chock               full               of               memorable               moments.

My               favorite               involves               a               magic               act               in               which               the               Doctor               disappears               and               the               Chinese               magician               exclaims:               "The               bird               has               flown.

One               of               us               is               yellow."               Racist?

Yeah,               maybe               slightly,               but               not               in               any               mean               way               and,               besides,               it's               funny.

My               wife               really               enjoys               the               "diversion"               created               during               the               climax               with               the               giant               dragon               and               Deep               Roy's               ray               gun.

This               diversion               is               guaranteed               to               capture               the               attention               of               someone               trying               to               kill               you;               try               it               yourself.
               Equally               entertaining               are               the               scenes               in               the               sewer               with               the               enormous               rat.

It               is               this               kind               of               special               effect               that               earned               the               show               it's               heartfelt               appreciation               by               fans.

And               as               cheesy               as               it               may               be,               it's               still               more               believable               than               the               dinosaurs               in               the               recent               King               Kong               remake.

The               scene               where               Leela               makes               her               escape               through               the               window               is               another               high               point.
               Originally               aired               as               half               hour               episodes,               there               is               a               cliffhanger               ending               very               twenty-five               minutes               or               so.

The               best               way               to               watch               this               is               by               re-enacting               how               it               was               originally               presented.

Watch               an               episode               and               then               come               back               to               it               the               next               night.

Of               course,               you               can               watch               it               straight               through               but               you               don't               get               the               chance               to               build               up               the               suspense               by               doing               that.
               Getting               back               to               the               concerns               about               racism:               John               Bennett,               an               Englishman,               plays               the               magician               Li               H'sen               Chang               under               heavy               Chinese               makeup.

Would               it               have               been               better               to               have               cast               an               actual               Chinese               actor?

Perhaps,               but               Bennett               is               so               incredibly               good,               I               can't               imagine               anyone               doing               better,               Chinese               or               not.

His               Chang               is               by               turns               frightening,               funny,               and               pathetic.

Equally               terrific               are               the               comedic               relief               provided               by               Trevor               Baxter               and               Christopher               Benjamin.

Playing,               respectively,               the               manager               of               the               theater               where               Chang               performs               his               magic               act               and               a               professor               who               get               involved               in               helping               out               the               Doctor               as               he               uncovers               the               real               evil               behind               Chang.

Baxter               and               Benjamin               were               so               good               together,               despite               not               actually               appearing               onscreen               together               until               the               story               was               well               over               half               over,               that               there               was               some               talk               of               spinning               them               off               into               their               own               series.

It's               unfortunate               this               never               came               to               fruition,               though               as               Fonzie               and               Urkel               proved,               sometimes               leaving               the               audience               wanting               more               is               the               wiser               path.
               As               for               the               plot               itself,               it               is               far               too               complicated               and               open               to               spoilers               to               get               into               here.

It               is               a               very               long               adventure,               taking               up               six               episodes.

In               addition               to               Sherlock               Holmes               and               Jack               the               Ripper,               the               story               also               pays               homage               to               Phantom               of               the               Opera,               Fu               Manchu               and               Pygmalion.

(My               Fair               Lady               without               the               songs).

The               show               also               gives               an               uneasy               indication               of               the               influence               of               the               Chinese               mafia               know               as               the               Tong               that               gained               a               foothold               in               the               London               underworld               as               a               result               of               the               popularity               of               opium               dens               in               the               city               in               the               1800s.
               Tom               Baker               is,               for               most               fans,               the               quintessential               Doctor               Who.

He               was               the               first               to               play               up               the               humor               of               the               character,               something               that               subsequent               actors               have               all               capitalized               on               to               some               degree.

His               goofy               smile,               wild               hair               and               crazed               eyes               all               contribute               to               defining               the               character               of               Doctor               Who               that               no               successors               have               quite               been               able               to               top.

Playing               the               Doctor               as               half               Sherlock               Holmes               in               this               episode,               he               simply               has               a               field               day,               which               is               good               since               the               supporting               cast               is               all               top               notch               as               well.

My               wife               prefers               the               Doctor's               previous               companion,               Sarah,               but               I               enjoy               the               amoral               savagery               of               Leela.

She               has               trouble               comprehending               why               she               can't               resort               to               murder               whenever               the               need               arises;               fortunately,               the               Doctor               is               slightly               more               pacific               in               nature,               though               hardly               another               Gandhi               himself.
               This               DVD,               as               well               as               all               the               best               Doctor               Who               adventures,               is               proof               positive               that               a               great               story               beats               expensive               special               effects               every               time.

Yes,               the               effect               of               Chang's               eyes               glowing               with               hypnotic               power               is               barely               more               impressive               than               something               you               can               do               on               with               a               $90               video               editing               software               program               today,               but               I'd               rather               watch               The               Talons               of               Weng               Chiang               ten               times               in               a               row               than               have               to               sit               through               the               Lord               of               the               Rings               trilogy               or               the               first               hour               and               a               half               of               Jackson's               King               Kong.
               So               much               for               the               show,               what               about               the               special               features?

Leading               the               way               is               a               documentary               called               Whose               Doctor               Who               that               is               almost               an               hour               long               and               features               interesting               snippets               of               Doctor               Who               episodes               featuring               the               actors               who               preceded               Tom               Baker,               including               a               scene               from               the               very               first               Doctor               adventure               ever,               in               glorious               black               and               white.

Extensive               sections               of               the               documentary               features               behind               the               scenes               footage               of               the               making               of               Weng               Chiang.

It               s               really               interesting               to               see               the               magnificent               dragon               that               is               the               centerpiece               of               the               climax               of               the               story               in               its               unpainted,               barely               sculpted               form.

The               infamous               giant               rat,               the               subject               of               much               mockery,               also               gets               a               great               deal               of               screen               time               showing               its               development.

The               image               of               the               human               rehearsing               in               a               rat               costume               is               priceless.

Of               special               interest               is               a               scene               showing               Deep               Roy               trying               on               his               mask.
               There               are               some               very               funny               interviews,               circa               mid-70s               it               would               seem,               with               British               children-VERY               British               children-discussing               the               frightening               aspects               of               the               show;               these               interviews               are               punctuated               by               interviews               with               psychologists               and               educationalists-and               maybe               some               day               someone               will               tell               me               just               the               hell               an               educationalist               is-providing               insight               into               the               deeper               meanings               of               the               impact               of               scary               images               on               children.
               Another               feature               Who               fans               might               find               very               cool               shows               how               to               make               a               puppet               theater               specifically               for               recreating               a               Doctor               Who               story.

There's               also               an               interesting               interview               with               Philip               Hinchcliffe,               the               producer.

The               commentary               unfortunately               doesn't               include               Baker,               but               does               get               provide               some               interesting               information               from               the               actress               who               plays               Leela,               Louise               Jameson,               as               well               as               Hinchcliffe,               Bennett               and               Benjamin.

One               of               the               hallmarks               of               the               Doctor               Who               DVDS               are               production               notes,               a               kind               of               pop-up               video               type               thing               that               provides               further               background               information               as               you               watch               the               show.

In               addition               to               being               interesting,               they               are               also               quite               cleverly               written.
               The               Talons               of               Weng               Chiang               is               a               must-have               DVD               for               any               fan               of               Doctor               Who,               but               is               also               worth               taking               a               look               even               if               you               know               nothing               about               this               show.

Not               just               for               science               fiction               fans,               it's               a               terrific               adventure               that               produces               laughs               and               chills.






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    7. lilmaryanne.blogspot.com/   04/21/2006
      ...the person wearing the piece of clothing, or read about them specifically...well done. The director of a new Sherlock Holmes film is killed, and...
    8. greenbriarpictureshows.blogspot.com/   01/07/2007
      ...the period --- Battle Of Britain had 9,885 dates and The Private Life Of Sherlock Holmes , another flop, 3,307). A pity so few (stateside) people saw a movie for which Chaplin ...
    9. thefineartdiner.blogspot.com/   12/23/2011
      ...clip below emphasizes: In Sherlock Holmes , he was drinking medicine...in the soot staining Holmes' clothes and face; Mycroft changing his...
    10. paperclipbitch.livejournal.com/   01/09/2010
      ...silence. “I suppose I should say thank you,” Holmes says at last, hair plastered..., smoke rising from his clothes. He looks ridiculous and in a moment...



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    2013년 11월 23일 토요일

    About 'house sherlock holmes'|Book, movie, television note: Nick Carter, House, Sherlock Holmes







    About 'house sherlock holmes'|Book, movie, television note: Nick Carter, House, Sherlock Holmes








    The               season               premiere               of               House               M.D.

    (more               commonly               referred               to               as               House),               is               set               for               January               29.

    House               is               an               American               medical               drama.

    The               title               character               is               Dr.

    Gregory               House               (played               by               British               actor               Huge               Laurie).

    He               is               a               medical               genius               and               he               is               the               head               of               a               team               of               young               diagnosticians.
                   The               show's               setting               is               the               fictional               Princeton-Plainsboro               Teaching               Hospital.
                   Usually               a               show               will               start               with               a               scene               outside               the               hospital.

    It               will               seem               like               some               normal               situation,               but               then               one               of               the               people               will               have               some               type               of               trouble               and               end               up               being               brought               into               the               hospital.

    Two               examples               are               a               teacher               teaching               her               kindergarten               class               and               then               only               being               able               to               speak               gibberish               and               a               teen               working               as               a               mascot               at               a               pizza               place               and               suddenly               vomiting               and               fainting.
                   The               young               diagnosticians               will               offer               their               theories               of               what               illness,               virus,               or               infection               caused               the               problem.

    House               will               then               challenge               them               by               pointing               out               other               details.

    The               team               and               Dr.

    House               will               go               on               like               this               many               times               until               a               solution               is               reached.
                   Because               Dr.

    House's               observations               are               often               unconventional,               he               often               has               problems               getting               permission               from               his               boss,               Dr.

    Lisa               Cuddy,               to               go               ahead               with               his               treatment.
                   House               is               also               supposed               to               work               in               the               walk-in               clinic.

    He               does               not               like               doing               this,               but               begrudgingly               does               his               job               because               he               would               not               have               a               job               if               he               did               not               do               this.
                   House               and               Cuddy               have               a               strained               relationship.

    It               does               not               help               that               House               does               like               Cuddy               in               a               romantic               way.

    It               once               came               close               to               them               sleeping               together,               but               nothing               has               ever               happened.
                   Dr.

    House               is               also               addicted               to               and               abuses               Vicodin.

    He               self-medicates.

    The               reason               for               the               Vicodin               (and               sometimes               other               drugs)               is               that               House               needs               to               manage               pain               from               an               infarction               in               his               quadriceps               muscle.

    He               also               walks               with               a               cane,               but               he               does               not               tend               to               use               it               correctly.
                   The               limp               and               walking               with               a               cane               add               to               his               persona               and               other               character               traits.
                   Another               plot               in               many               episodes               is               entering               a               patient's               house               or               some               other               area               where               the               patient               spends               time               without               permission.

    The               doctors               never               get               in               trouble               for               these               things,               even               though               they               could               easily               get               into               trouble.
                   Some               have               said               that               House               is               much               like               a               medical               CSI.

    Some               have               said               that               Dr.

    House               is               like               a               medical               Sherlock               Holmes.
                   If               you               are               interested               in               this               type               of               television               show,               check               local               listings               for               the               season               premiere               of               House               on               Fox               on               January               29.






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    4. shylockholmes.blogspot.com/   07/28/2011
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    10. thiefystuff.blogspot.com/   01/18/2012
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    About 'sherlock holmes mysteries'|Peeling the Onion: The Continuing Mystery of Sherlock Holmes, H.P. Lovecraft, and Twin Peaks







    About 'sherlock holmes mysteries'|Peeling the Onion: The Continuing Mystery of Sherlock Holmes, H.P. Lovecraft, and Twin Peaks








    Robert               Carver               himself               admitted               to               being               heavily               influenced               by               Ernest               Hemingway's               approach               to               writing               in               which               what               isn't               said               is               perhaps               even               more               important               that               what               is               said.

    Hemingway               referred               to               this               style               as               an               "iceberg"               approach               because               the               reader               is               only               getting               a               small               portion               of               a               much               bigger               picture.

    (Of               course,               another               way               to               look               at               it               is               from               the               perspective               of               being               too               lazy               or               uncreative               to               write               a               whole               story               so               you               pawn               responsibility               off               on               your               readers,               but               that's               just               my               take               on               the               chore               that               it               is               reading               Ernest               Hemingway.)               Regardless,               it               is,               of               course,               a               dangerous               aesthetic               on               which               to               hang               understanding               of               your               literary               endeavor,               assuming               as               it               does               that               an               audience               will               be               capable               of               connecting               points               that               are               not               explicitly               laid               out,               though               that               danger               may               have               been               less               pronounced               when               Hemingway               and               Carver               were               actually               writing               than               it               is               today               with               the               average               reader               raised               on               the               television               aesthetic               of               having               everything               carefully               explained               to               them.
                   The               frustration               level               for               many               readers               who               pick               up               a               story               by               Carver               or               Hemingway               is               ironic               in               that               the               language               is               often               far               more               accessible               than               that               of               other               writers.

    The               frustration               therefore               comes               not               from               the               heightened               level               of               language,               but               from               the               fact               that               so               little               information               seems               to               be               given.

    The               minimalist               approach               can               best               be               characterized               as               a               style               that               devoutly               subscribes               to               the               concept               that               less               is               more.

    That               is               a               phrase               that               is               casually               tossed               around               when               speaking               on               a               variety               of               media,               from               stage               productions               to               television               commercials.

    But               what               does               "less               is               more"               really               mean               when               applied               to               literature?

    Certainly,               one               can               make               a               case               that               one               of               the               appeals               the               great               Russian               novelists               or               Charles               Dickens               is               that               they               provide               such               a               wealth               of               dense               information               that               they               essentially               paint               a               picture               in               the               mind               not               unlike               a               movie.

    When               most               19th               century               writers               describe               a               room,               the               average               person               can               probably               imagine               it               almost               as               fully               as               any               set               designer               in               Hollywood.

    The               image               that               most               people               have               of               Victorian               London               can               be               traced               back               to               the               lush               descriptions               of               Dickens               and               Arthur               Conan               Doyle's               Sherlock               Holmes               mysteries.

    One               may               well               question,               then,               the               point               of               minimalist               technique.
                   Beyond               the               familiar               phrase               "less               is               more",               of               course,               minimalist               technique               can               be               characterized               by               a               desire               for               economy               in               word               choice               where               brevity               is               the               greatest               accomplishment               and               verbosity               must               be               avoided               at               all               cost.

    The               idea               is               really               to               provide               just               as               much               information               to               the               reader               as               is               necessary               and               then               to               invite               him               to               become               an               active               partner               in               the               comprehending               what               is               really               happening.

    Ernest               Hemingway               is               typically               granted               the               status               as               progenitor               of               this               approach,               and               if               he               wasn't               the               first               then               he               was               certainly               the               most               famous.

    But               just               as               form               followed               function               for               Dickens               and               Doyle               who               had               to               pad               out               their               stories               as               a               result               of               their               being               serialized               in               magazines               over               a               period               of               time,               so               was               Hemingway's               adoption               of               his               iceberg               technique               related               to               his               formative               career               as               a               journalist.

    A               newspaper               writer               has               little               choice               but               to               find               a               terse               way               of               writing               and               Hemingway               adopted               and               transmitted               this               style               into               his               fiction.

    Also               figuring               prominently               in               his               adoption               of               this               technique               was               invention               of               the               movie               camera.

    With               the               ability               to               film               things               that               most               people               had               never               seen               before,               there               was               no               longer               the               need               to               describe               in               the               great               detail               of               the               19th               century               novelists.

    By               the               time               Ernest               Hemingway               began               writing,               a               massive               shift               in               the               aesthetic               sensibilities               of               readers               had               already               taken               place.

    He               could               write               a               story               that               took               place               in               Africa               or               Europe               secure               in               the               knowledge               that               readers               were               no               longer               dependent               upon               excessive               descriptions               to               form               a               mental               image.
                   By               the               time               Hemingway               wrote               "Hills               Like               White               Elephants"               he               had               jettisoned               any               journalistic               reasons               for               writing               in               a               minimalist               style               and               had               fully               adopted               it               for               literary               reasons.

    This               story               is               the               ultimate               testimony               to               the               trust               that               writers               of               minimalist               fiction               give               to               their               readers;               almost               nothing               that               is               truly               important               to               the               story               is               actually               said.

    Hemingway's               approach               to               minimalist               fiction               is               here               cemented               in               his               insistence               to               avoid               explanations.

    And               that               technique               of               avoidance               finds               voice               in               the               character               of               Jig               who               is               as               stubborn               in               her               refusal               to               discuss               the               issue               of               the               abortion               as               is               Hemingway's               refusal               to               be               more               explicit.

    The               subject               of               the               story               also               lends               itself               to               the               iceberg               technique               as               a               story               about               an               unmarried               woman               having               an               abortion               probably               could               not               have               been               successfully               published               unless               it               was               elliptically               done.

    That,               in               fact,               is               one               of               the               stark               differences               between               Hemingway               and               Robert               Carver.

    Robert               Carver's               minimalist               technique               was               entirely               by               choice;               Hemingway               to               a               certain               extent               had               it               thrust               upon               him.
                   In               addition               to               certain               impositions               of               censorship               to               which               Ernest               Hemingway's               minimalist               technique               owes               a               great               deal,               another               key               element               that               shaped               his               writing               were               the               themes               inherent               in               the               Modernist               movement.

    The               ideas               of               disillusionment,               alienation               and               the               confusion               of               a               rapidly               changing               world               are               expressed               in               "Hills               Like               White               Elephants"               in               the               inability               of               the               man               and               woman               to               effectively               communicate               or               fully               understand               their               predicament.

    The               pregnancy               that               forever               changes               the               relationship               between               the               man               and               the               woman               reflects               the               modernity               of               20th               century               society               in               which               events               unfold               at               a               faster               pace               and               disaster               can               always               be               waiting               around               the               corner.

    Hemingway's               prose               is               stark,               reflecting               the               inability               of               modern               man               to               fully               comprehend               the               changes               taking               place               around               him.

    And               the               devastation               of               the               relationship               based               on               the               surprise               pregnancy               and               the               characters'               confusion               over               how               to               deal               with               is               reflected               in               the               terse               narration               that               almost               seems               to               be               more               an               effect               of               not               knowing               how               to               write               about               it               than               a               literary               choice.
                   Raymond               Carver               did               not               come               out               of               the               Modernist               movement               and               the               alienation               he               writes               about               is               not               one               of               geographic               expatriation               in               a               futile               attempt               to               connect,               but               instead               reflects               the               feeling               of               America               following               a               second               World               War.

    Unlike               Hemingway's               characters               who               are               mostly               emigrants               from               America,               Carver's               characters               are               situated               in               a               society               that               has               discovered               itself               to               be               suddenly               the               most               important               country               in               the               world.

    Robert               Carver's               characters               relate               to               America               in               an               entirely               different               way               than               Hemingway's;               no               longer               bound               by               censorship,               their               foibles               and               failings               can               be               expressed               on               the               surface.

    However,               just               because               his               characters               may               be               able               to               talk               about               such               things               as               abortions,               that               doesn't               necessarily               mean               that               they               will.

    If               Ernest               Hemingway               chose               not               to               specifically               address               specific               issues               in               his               stories               partially               out               of               societal               conventions,               when               Raymond               Carver's               characters               dance               around               an               issue               it               is               wholly               because               he               wants               it               that               way.

    An               excellent               example               of               the               differences               between               Hemingway               and               Carver               can               be               found               in               "What               We               Talk               About               When               We               Talk               About               Love."               Although               alcohol               consumption               certainly               plays               a               significant               part               in               the               development               of               relationships               between               men               and               women               in               Hemingway's               stories,               the               specter               of               alcoholism               never               as               explicitly               delineated               as               in               Carver's               tale.

    The               story               begins               almost               innocently,               with               four               sober               people               discussing               the               meaning               of               love               and               ends               with               four               alcoholics               revealing               an               utter               inability               to               communicate               or               connect               in               any               meaningful               way.

    However,               Carver's               technique               is               quite               similar               to               Hemingway's               in               that               avoids               overwriting               this               conversion               from               sobriety               to               drunkenness.

    That               Carver               has               the               advantage               of               being               able               to               write               openly               about               issues               that               Hemingway               couldn't,               and               that               he               consciously               withheld               himself               from               taking               that               advantage,               can               be               seen               in               the               story               "Viewfinder."               This               story               is               an               excellent               example               of               how               Carver               engages               the               minimalist               approach               not               out               of               necessity               but               purely               for               artistic               reasons;               it               is               indicative               of               his               choice               to               highlight               his               theme               through               dissociative               techniques               that               throw               relief               on               the               psychology               of               characters               by               throwing               them               into               situations               with               other               characters               that               force               them               to               confront               their               own               failings.
                   This               technique               provides               another               contrast               between               Hemingway               and               Carver;               where               Hemingway's               prose               represents               the               struggle               for               communication               that               all               too               often               ends               up               in               miscommunication,               Carver's               bare               bones               approach               represents               the               difficulty               that               language               often               presents               in               allowing               people               to               better               understand               each               other.

    The               minimalist               techniques               employed               by               Ernest               Hemingway               and               Robert               Carver               share               the               similarity               of               taking               the               less               is               more               approach               to               writing.

    But               the               manner               of               execution               is               often               in               stark               contrast.






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