Sunday, January 20, 2019



Before I get to Solo: A Star Wars Story


Speaking of enterprises of great pith and moment (and that's not meant to be a Star Trek reference), I've hit the 60K word mark on the novel in progress. I still haven't decided upon a title that I like for it. Please feel free to send suggestions for the title of a best selling flintlock fantasy novel to be published this year. I could tell you something about it but that would inhibit your imaginative title suggestions.

I've found that writing dialogue is how I discover my characters. The characters ask questions that I had not previously considered. Answering those questions helps develop depth and motivation. Action scenes are fun to write, but conversation is the fertile soil in which the seed of character is best sown.

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Aside from the writing, which went extremely well, the week included a game with these figures from Bronze Age Miniatures and the musketeer figures that I've posted earlier. It was Barsoom meets the musketeers. Once again using the ...And All for One rules mentioned before for a simple game that several boys could quickly learn for a fun evening.

They never got tired of trying to kill each other and take off with the loot.


I alluded to a review of Solo: A Star Wars Story. I'll be brief--or not; I'm just rambling here.


 Color me simply disappointed. I thought it not a bad show, better than Last Jedi. When I see a Star Wars film I'm thinking about rewatchability. I'm always asking myself if I'll want to watch this film again. Of the new films, only The Force Awakens has a measurable rewatchability factor for me. As for Solo, I thought Firefly did the train robbery better. Apart from the characters there were elements that recalled scenes from the original New Hope, Empire, and Jedi trilogy that I appreciated. I was glad that Ron Howard paid homage to the three great movies onto which the rest of the mediocre films of the franchise have been scabbed.

For both people who have not seen this film yet: Beware, spoilers follow.

As for the acting, I found the new actors playing the roles of the old heroes entirely believable; I liked them. The special effects obviously soaked up a lot of the budget. The music only reached memorable heights when it went back to the original theme. The story seemed sloppy and unlikely. If I remember correctly, bad guy Dryden never had a pistol. I think the bad guy should have more than a glorified knife for self defense. I was pleased to see Clint Howard with a cameo. Lando's lover-like remorse at the loss of L-3 struck me as a rather ridiculous, but I hate cat videos and space octupi as well so maybe I'm wrong--but I'm not. The security on Kessel, a planet with mines producing extremely valuable fuel mined by slave labor, reached a nadir even lower than that on Endor for the protection of the death star in Jedi. At least there were no Ewoks. Finally, who was surprised when the big bad Cloud Rider took off the helmet to reveal a woman? No one.

4 comments:

  1. Awwww. Bummer on the bad review -- I sympathize fully. Time helps.

    Oh, and I enjoyed all the Hamlet lines in this ;-)

    I really liked Solo a ton and have seen it 3 or 4 times now. But I love heist movies, and I love Han Solo, and Ehrenreich so fully nailed his performance as Han that I can't help but enjoy it. It's not a great film, but for me, it's a fun one.

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    1. Thanks. I'm glad someone caught the Hamlet lines--I would have been disappointed had you not said something. Maybe that's what the one-star review hated, I did have several Shakespeare quotes in Justice Resurgent.
      Your review of Solo prodded me to watch it--it finally came out on Netflix so I had no excuse not to. It was fun but just not great. Thanks for commenting.
      When's your next book coming out?

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    2. :-D I also liked your Star Trek allusion, because it was Star Trek that made me start reading Shakespeare! I found out that a lot of the episode titles for TOS came from Shakespeare and decided, at a naive-but-determined 16 years old, to read all of Shakespeare so I could find all of them. I read about 6 of his plays over the next couple of years, and would have read more if I hadn't read Hamlet multiple times, heh.

      I toss Shakespeare into my books all the time. There's loads of Hamlet bits in Dancing and Doughnuts especially, just for fun. If your reviewer didn't like those in yours, they wouldn't like mine either.

      I just put a short story out at Christmas, which is free, and I'm HOPING REALLY HARD that I'll have my next book out by the end of the year.

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    3. I saw that you had a free short story. I had been about to get it and got distracted and then forgot about it. I'm hoping to have my next book out before June. It may be sooner if i decided to break up the series differently than I originally envisioned.

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