Saturday, July 23, 2022

Saturday is Horror Day #71 - Umma, The Bunker Game

 Umma


Amanda (Sandra Oh) left Korea some sixteen years ago. She now lives quietly on a rural American farm, along with her daughter Chris (Fivel Stewart) who is sixteen and has no real knowledge of her heritage, not speaking any Korean either. Amanda is a beekeeper and makes a living selling her honey, which is in great demand, through a local shop owner, Danny (Dermot Mulroney).  It's an isolated life, made even more so because Amanda can't be around electricity - it makes her sick.






The unexpected arrival of Amanda's uncle changes everything. He brings word of her mother's death... and has brought the deceased to Amanda in a suitcase. He chides Amanda for her lack of respect for her mother, and for the way she has raised her daughter in ignorance of her heritage. Amanda hides the suitcase away, determined to have nothing to do with it, and she lives to Chris that anything has happened. But then she begins to see her mother, who calls her by her birth name, Soo Hyun, and Amanda begins to worry that she is becoming her mother.


I read some criticism of this film as not being much of a horror story, but I disagree. You have to look at 


it on more than one level, though, to gain a better understanding of what it's about. There's an element of horror, yes, but it's also about family and heritage, as well as mothers and daughters, and growing up and letting go. I watch a lot of horror films, obviously, but I'll admit straight out that I jumped a couple of times during this. Sam Raimi was a producer on this film, and he has a pretty good idea of horror movies, I think. I give this film 4.5 Stars.


The Bunker Game


A group of LARPers roleplay an alternate history in an actual underground bunker, playing Nazis. When the game is unexpectedly interrupted, the guests leave and the staff are left to deal with the aftermath. Things begin to go horribly wrong, and they find themselves trapped in the bunker, along with what might possibly be a ghostly entity. One that seems intent on killing them off.






I'm not going into the plot in much depth because frankly I was lost most of the time, trying to sort out the characters they were playing from their own personalities. The drama really starts when the mastermind behind the game, Greg, disappears, after learning that a girl he's involved with is pregnant. Really pregnant, unlike the fake pregnancies exhibited in the game as a form of eugenics. (Nazis, remember that). The staff is torn between concern for his safety and being convinced he's pulling something over on them.


There seems to be a ghost involved, one that seems to share consciousnesses with one of the women, who ends up in the actual time when the bunker was occupied, as the ghost.  Another aspect that is confusing is why a black man or a non-binary person would choose to role play as Nazis. I finished the film, but I had to read an explanation of what I just watched. Never a good sign. Still not sure what happened. I'll give this film a shaky 2 Stars. Personally, I think you're better off watching something else.

Thursday, July 21, 2022

Book Review: Blue Exorcist, Vol 27 by Kazue Kato

 

Blue Exorcist, Vol 27     


Author: Kazue Kato

Publisher: Viz Media

American release date: May 3, 2022

Format/Genre/Length: Paperback/manga/paranormal/218 pages

Overall Personal Rating: ★★★★★

 

The fight continues between Rin and Yukio, although now on the ground, having jumped off the airship which was about to crash. Rin has his sword back, and his hair has turned back to black. Maybe that’s a good sign of things to come? Rin is appalled to discover that Yukio has attempted suicide…many times! He is also furious that his brother has never said anything to him about anything! Yukio claims to be weak, says that Rin was the strong one, to which Rin replies, “If I’m strong, it’s because I had you!”

The other exorcists have begun to gather. First order of business is to find Lucifer and Dragelescu. Shima is there too. Trouble with Shima is you can never be sure which side he’s playing for at any given time. When Light finds Dragulescu, the madman dares Light to open the storage unit. Light has a feeling that would not be a good thing.

Yukio reports to Light, prepared to face his punishment for running off to the Illuminati, but none is forthcoming. When Light tells Rin they are searching the crash site for Satan, Yukio protests that he should not be there then. You know, that whole Satan is in my eye thing. The next day, Rin and Yukio make up and all is well. But hey, there seems to be someone inside the storage unit. What?  Light thinks it’s probably a replicant from the laboratory in Romania. Why don’t we look and see? To their shock, it’s Father Fujimoto! Well, a newer younger version of him.  Yukio immediately claps his hand over his possessed eye.

Don’t look, Yukio, don’t look!

And now, enter Lucifer and his cohorts! And Lucifer is looking mighty fine, if I do say so.They are determined to force Yukio to look at the new Fujimoto so that Satan can enter his new vessel.

Don’t look, Yukio, don’t look!

Damn, that didn’t go well.

Meanwhile, Shiemi becomes aware of what has transpired. It’s all about to get real. But wait, another player has just entered the game…

Remember how I wished things would move along a little faster? They sure are now. Satan is back in play, looking like Father Fujimoto. Can he be contained? Is this the beginning of the end? How will Yukio handle the knowledge that he contributed to this fiasco by looking when he shouldn’t have? Can Sir Pheles save the day?

Can’t wait for the next volume (but I’ll have to). Please, not too long, okay?

Virtual Book Tour: Finding Persephone by P.J.Braley

 Good morning everyone! Please welcome author P.J. Braley to Full Moon Dreaming today! She is here to tell us about her new release, Finding Persephone. PJ will be awarding a $25 Amazon/BN GC to one randomly drawn commenter via Rafflecopter during the tour. The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. To find the other stops on her tour, go here. Don't forget to look for the Rafflecopter at the end of this post!



 

Finding Persephone

by P.J. Braley

 


~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

GENRE: Science Fiction, Romance

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

BLURB:

 

Caroline Taylor is very good at pretending.

 

The polished surface of her life appears perfect until the morning a smitten grad student brings the cracks in her illusions into sharp focus. No longer willing to live a lie, Caroline’s journey of transformation sets her on a collision course with Dr. Grant Gates. Blinded by his quiet power, good looks, and impressive credentials, Caroline fails to see that Grant is also very good at pretending.

 

Created from flesh and fire, Grant has a past he would like to forget, an assignment he cannot reveal, and a forbidden obsession with his newest client whose beautiful eyes miss nothing. As the enforcer of an underground brotherhood, he must protect their secrets at any cost, but Grant is determined that Caroline will not become his latest victim. Striking a devil’s bargain to keep the woman he has been searching for safe from his brothers’ plans, Grant struggles to hide who–and what–he is until he becomes her only hope of escape...but will he let her go?

 

There’s not a chance in Hell.

 

A contemporary retelling of the Greek myth of Hades and Persephone, Finding Persephone is a compelling tale of an alien assassin's search for absolution and the human woman who becomes the catalyst and heart of his redemption.

 

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

EXCERPT:

 


“Grant, will you do me a favor?”

           

“If I can.”

           

“Tell me when it’s okay to love you,” she said softly, “I don’t want to miss one moment of you.”

           

He pulled away a bit and looked into her eyes. “Caroline, you love me?”

           

“Oh, yes.”

           

“And our child,” he said hesitantly, “do you…could you ever…love him, too?”

           

Grant grew very still; so much depended on her next words.

           

“I’ve loved him since the beginning. Even before I knew he existed, he was part of the dream of you.”

           

As if she were a bubble that if pressed too hard would burst, his hands began to tremble.

           

Speaking barely above a whisper, he asked humbly, “Caroline…may I touch you?”

           

She stood up and locked the door.

           

“Yes, Grant.”

           

After she left, he held the quilt to his face.

           

She loved him.

           

Not as a Lyostian loves from necessity and gratitude, but as a human loves: freely from desire and choice. His analytical side felt vindicated; the experiment worked and now she would obey him—but everything that was human in him rejoiced. For the first time in twenty–eight years, a small sliver of light entered a dark and dusty room that Grant thought was closed to him forever.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~


 

AUTHOR Bio and Links:

 

Deciding that copyediting other writers’ manuscripts was not enough, PJ decided to do something about it. Purchasing a new laptop because new beginnings require new tools, she began transitioning from copy editor to author. Her debut novel, The Fire Slayers, blended science fiction with love, friendship, and horror. Her newest book, Finding Persephone, takes all those genres a step further when an alien assassin charged with keeping the secrets of their underground brotherhood at all costs risks everything when he falls in love.

 

When PJ isn’t writing novels about aliens saving the planet, you can find her sitting on the sun deck with her husband, Jim, and their rescue corgi, Nymeria. She will be the one with a book in one hand and a glass of sangria in the other. More of her work can be found at http://pjbraley.com/.

 

Social Media Links

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/pjbraley/ -and- https://www.facebook.com/ItsAllAboutTheWords

Goodreads:  https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/20873208.P_J_Braley

Twitter: https://twitter.com/PJBraley

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pjbraley/

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pjbraley/

All Author: https://allauthor.com/author/pjbraley/

Book Video:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVfDPWZ5E00

 

https://btwnthelines.com/product/findingpersephone/

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/finding-persephone-pj-braley/1141577982

https://www.amazon.com/Finding-Persephone-PJ-Braley-ebook/dp/B0B28CP3MZ

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 


1) You’re marooned on a small island with one person and one item of your choice—who is that person and what item do you have?

            Well, I would like to be marooned on an island with someone who is unbelievably resourceful with fantastic survival (and cooking) skills like Daniel Boone (I could eat a bear if I had to) or someone funny and smart like Tom Hanks who can talk about anything and, besides still being alive, he was marooned on a small island in “Cast Away” and would have picked up some survival skills from the movie.

            For the item, it would depend on the possibility of internet service. If it had access to Wi-Fi, then, of course, a computer or cell phone with a fully charged battery. If there was no internet service, then a large cooler filled with food and drink, leaving just enough room for a blanket and one of those big Swiss Army knives – the one with all the mini tools – so we would have a fighting chance to still be alive when someone finds us.

            


3) Take these three words and give me a 100 word or less scene using them: hammer, saucer, traffic lights

            The crash rattled the windows.

Miss Lindy carefully set her teacup and saucer on the table and called from the parlor, “Ellie, what’s all that racket?”

            White-aproned, Ellie walked in, shaking her head with dismay. “They’re tearing down the Pritchard place,” she said, “going at it with hammer and tongs blazin’! Why, they’ve knocked out half the traffic lights from here to the courthouse.”

Visibly shaken, Miss Lindy asked, “They’re tearing down Agnes Pritchard’s house?”

            “Why, yes’m. It was in the paper.”

            Taking her handkerchief from her pocket, Miss Lindy sat back down on the Victorian settee and cried.

99 words


4) What is your idea of how to spend romantic time with your significant other?

            In my new novel, Finding Persephone, Caroline describes to Grant her fondness for “dreaming time.”

“Early evening, it’s my favorite time of the day…I call it dreaming time. The day hasn’t quite surrendered the light; the night hasn’t quite conquered the day. It’s best in summer, when it lasts for hours, lots of dreaming time.”

            While I do not personify Caroline, we do occasionally share similar characteristics and this time of day is also my favorite. This is how I would describe my quintessential dreaming time:

It’s always early summer, late afternoon between 6 and 8 when the breeze starts to pick up, and the sun begins to set. We sit in an open courtyard near the shore where the soft thunder of waves cascading over the sand mingles with the gentle chords of the Spanish guitar from the young musician sitting in the corner, an open guitar case at his feet.

            Ice cold sangria fills our oversized wine glasses where oranges settle at the bottom and specks of cinnamon float on top. An untouched basket of cheese, crackers, and olives sits on the table between us. We sit next to each other, saying everything without saying anything as we gaze at the sea. Our hands touch, time drifts, the sharp cries of seagulls punctuate the sounds of the music and waves swirling around us. Perfectly timed with the setting of the sun, our empty glasses reflect the fading light. Standing, he takes my hand, and we walk toward the beach. Passing the musician, he pauses in front of the almost empty guitar case.

            “See you here again tomorrow?”

I smile at his words; he always asks the same question as he tosses a folded bill into the case.

            “Of course,” the young man answers.

            He pulls my hand to his lips and looks down at me, “Well, then, I guess we will have to come back tomorrow.”

            And wherever the sun changes from gold to amethyst, the sea thunders, and the music lifts and swirls, we will return to dream again.

 


5) When you start a new story, do you begin with a character, or a plot?

Given the choice of beginning with either character or plot, I begin with the plot. Still, as a speculative fiction writer, I usually start with a series of “what if” questions that lead to a storyline that leads to characters to support my answers. For instance, the plot of my new book, Finding Persephone, began about ten years ago with a news report about the discovery of the body of a young woman by two police detectives in a park. Now, as a plot, that isn’t much to go on, but I start asking myself questions…Who is she? Why is she there? How did she die? Did the detectives have anything to do with her death? Trying to answer these questions as imaginatively as possible, I prewrite the narrative in my mind. Then formulate the plot within the context of all the answers, adding characters as needed. Sometimes, however, I find myself in a blind alley and have to back up and change direction. When I finally have a general outline of what will happen, I sit down and start writing the story…but it rarely stays on track.

For instance, the plot of Finding Persephone was all set until a character – whose only reason for being created was to introduce Caroline to the health facility – suddenly becomes much more critical to the narrative because of their reaction to each other when the first meet. It caught me completely by surprise. My carefully planned plot went into the trash, and the story suddenly became character driven. Once I turned the narrative over to my characters, everything started coming together. There were times when I could not type fast enough. This tangle of plot and characters is subtly described when Carolina says to Grant:

“We knew it wasn’t going to be perfect when we started. That we found perfection along the way just meant we were going in the right direction.”

So, in my experience, it doesn’t matter whether you start with plot or character; they are interwoven and inseparable. What matters is that you write.


6) If they were to make the story of your life into a movie, who should play you?

            I would be honored if it was Kate Winslet. She is intelligent, creative, and also a Libra (so she understands what motivates me). She seems naturally kind and vulnerable on the outside, but under all that sweetness and light is a woman who knows what she wants and is willing to work hard to get it.

 


8) Do you have an historical crush and if so, who is it?

            Oh, my yes. When I was in college a few years ago, I took a class about the Renaissance. While learning about art, philosophy, astronomy, and politics, we also studied religion, especially Luther and the protestant reformation. Somewhere between DaVinci, Michelangelo, Chaucer, and Shakespeare, I became enamored of Desiderius Erasmus. At the height of his influence, Desiderius Erasmus, an Augustinian monk, was known as the heart, soul, and pen of the intellectual renaissance that swept through Europe in the early 16th century. One of the greatest humanists of his time, sought after in his capacity as a teacher, writer of satire, and political persuasion, he also translated original biblical scriptures into the first New Testament written in Greek in the hopes of making it more accessible for translation into common languages so that everyone could understand it.

            Why the crush? In the 1500s, Europe was a conglomeration of warring states (not countries like today) under the control of the Holy Roman Empire. But Erasmus wanted something different. Centuries ahead of the European Union, he envisioned a pan-European entity with a common language, government, and religion. He lobbied for education for all and, as a linguist, wrote eloquently and long to bring about the changes he believed would benefit all the peoples of Europe.

            Born just 25 years after the invention of the printing press, Erasmus used the only thing he had to bring about change in Europe – his words.

So, is it a real crush? Well, he has his own page on my website, and I have written two essays, a play, a poem, and two short stories about his life and accomplishments. So yes, I am a fan.

“When I get a little money, I buy books; and if any is left, I buy food and clothes.” – Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536)


9) Is there a story that you’d like to tell but you think the world isn’t ready to receive it?

            I always say that I write for myself, but I edit for my readers; there are just some thoughts you  believe you cannot share openly without your own naked anxieties becoming too obvious.

In the subtext of Finding Persephone, the aliens represent any of the 6.5 million known species on our planet who may also be concerned that their survival is at risk in the midst of climate change and nuclear war. Despite the human belief that we are the only species capable of this awareness or fixing what may soon become unfixable, it is always possible that another species - possibly hiding in plain sight - or the planet itself, may destroy us in self-defense.  

            As I mentioned earlier, I am a speculative fiction writer, and if we are going down the rabbit hole of “what ifs” then what if there is something captured in the melting ice that will be much more catastrophic than a virus? What if there is an unknown but deliberate failsafe point when the Earth will defend itself and say, “Enough.”

            This is the point where the genre of speculative/science fiction becomes horror.

            Why do I think the world is not ready to receive this story? Because it has been ignoring far more important voices than mine. Also, I am not sure I am brave enough to write it. I am reasonably confident that the frustration arising from trying to formulate a narrative sufficient to change the world would be the last book I would ever write.

            After all, I’m a writer, not an immortal.

            Kurt Vonnegut, an immortal of sorts, wrote a poem called “Requiem” that describes the kind of sloughing off of humans by the Earth that may become far too real.

Requiem by Kurt Vonnegut

The crucified planet Earth,
should it find a voice
and a sense of irony,
might now well say
of our abuse of it,
“Forgive them, Father,
They know not what they do.”

The irony would be
that we know what
we are doing.

When the last living thing
has died on account of us,
how poetical it would be
if Earth could say,
in a voice floating up
perhaps
from the floor
of the Grand Canyon,
“It is done.”
People did not like it here.

 

###

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Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Wednesday Briefs: Bad Karma and the Family Plan #31 (6.6)

Good morning and Happy Hump Day! If it's Wednesday, then it must be time for more flash fiction from the Wednesday Briefers! We're a group of authors who bring you our finest flash fiction every week, 500 to 1000 words, inspired by one of our prompts.

Caught with four slashed tires and little to do, Vinnie and Ethan et al go to a nearby museum. See what's happening in this week's chapter of Bad Karma and the Family Plan. Don't forget to visit the other Briefers and see what's up with them. Their links follow my tale! Enjoy!

Bad Karma and the Family Plan #31 (6.6)

It wasn’t long before our most excellent Uber driver dropped us off at the Visitors Center for the Museum.

“You’re gonna have fun,” she assured us in her soft Virginia drawl.

“Can we request you when we’re ready to go back?” Sarah asked, a notion we all seconded.

The driver gave us a rueful grin with a shake of her head. “Sorry, no, unfortunately. But I’ll keep an eye out for y’all when you put in your request and if I’m free, I’ll be happy to come back to getcha.”

That had to be adequate, what else could we do?

Once inside the Visitor’s Center, we paid our admission fees to a friendly young lady behind the desk and began to look around. At the moment, we were the only visitors there, so we had the entire place to ourselves, other than the aforementioned employee.

“I’m afraid there isn’t a lot going on today,” she apologized. “One of our slow days, so no one is around, including the volunteers. But feel free to look around as much as you like.” She was engaged in some kind of needlecraft, which she held inside a hoop on her lap, swiftly plying her nimble needle. “Don’t hesitate to ask for help.” She pointed out a rack containing a multitude of brochures that sat against one wall. We thanked her kindly.

Gotta love Southern hospitality.

Once we’d thoroughly examined the various displays in the Visitors Center, we wandered outside to see the rest of the buildings. There were no organized tours, as such, everyone being free to wander about to their heart’s content, go at their own pace. According to a sign near the barn, at times there were wagon rides, but that was apparently not an option today. Nor were any of the re-enactments available. We might have to make time to come back someday.

Benny offered to carry little Alex, but it soon became clear that he wanted none of that, being full of energy and ready to use it. He set the child on his own two feet and took one hand while Sarah took the other, conveniently sandwiching Alex in between. He seemed satisfied with that arrangement, while Ethan and I walked side by side, bringing up the rear.

I felt a little more relaxed now. There had been no other vehicles in the parking lot, other than the one no doubt belonging to the girl behind the counter. If someone were stalking us, they’d have to do it on foot, and it was very unlikely that was happening.

According to what we read, the restored farmhouse and its nine outbuildings had been preserved rather than reconstructed, dating back to 1897, while the school was from 1894. We learned about the Scotch-Irish and the German settlers who once lived there. I found it very interesting, and I know Ethan did too. Sarah was clearly in her element, as she told Alex stories about what we were looking at. He seemed quite mesmerized himself.

Despite this respite, I noticed Ethan kept an eagle eye on our surroundings at all times. I moved closer to him and dropped my voice, although I was sure the others were too engrossed in checking out the school house to notice. “Do you think we were followed?”

He bit at his lower lip thoughtfully for just a second before he took my hand in his. “I don’t really think so, but I don’t want to be taken unawares either, you know?”

I understood what he meant. Better safe than sorry.

“We’ll have to come back here sometime,” Ethan said. “It’s too bad we missed the wagon ride. Could be romantic.”

I wasn’t sure how romantic riding in the back of a wooden cart on wheels might be, especially if one had to share the pleasure with other people… but I was certainly willing to find out. Hell, I’d do anything that meant spending time with Ethan.

“You and me, always,” he said. Such a mind reader he was. I felt my cheeks warm just before he kissed me, but before we could get carried away, his phone rang. Such an annoying sound.

It was the tire store. Interlude over, back to reality. Ethan thanked the caller than opened up the Uber app and requested a ride. Time to get back on the road.

 to be continued

Now see what the other Briefers are up to!

Cia Nordwell

 


Monday, July 18, 2022

Virtual Book Tour: The Widow's Christmas Surprise by Jenna Jaxon

 Good morning everyone! Please welcome author Jenna Jaxon to Full Moon Dreaming! She is here to tell us about her new release, The Widow's Christmas Surprise. Jenna will be awarding a $20 Amazon/BN GC o a randomly drawn commenter via Rafflecopter during the tour. The more you comment, the better your chances of winning. To find the other stops on her tour, go here. Don't forget to look for the Rafflecopter at the end of this post!


 


The Widow's Christmas Surprise

by Jenna Jaxon

 


~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

GENRE: Historical Romance

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

BLURB:

 

The death of her husband has thrown Lady Maria Kersey’s future into doubt—and her heart into the arms of a man she cannot have. But Christmas with the Widows’ Club will bring choices—and surprises--that may change all her holidays to come . . .

 

Maria just gave birth to her first child, a beautiful daughter—but the event is shrouded in sorrow.  A month earlier, Maria’s husband, Lord Kersey, was killed in a duel under compromising circumstances. Worse, Maria’s failure to provide a male heir has stripped her of any hope of an inheritance. Scorned by the ton, one of her few allies is her late husband’s steward, Hugh Granger. Hugh is everything her husband was not—warm, charming—and penniless. . . .

 

Hugh has fallen desperately in love with Maria, but has little to offer but comfort. As their attraction becomes impossible to resist, Maria flees to London to spend Christmas with her dearest friends, a group of widows who lost their own husbands in the Battle of Waterloo. Little does she know the holidays will reveal a twist of fate she never expected—proving that the greatest Christmas gift is the magic of true love . . .

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

NOTE: The book is on sale for $0.99.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

EXCERPT:

 


 

“Would you and Lady John come to tea with me and my sister tomorrow afternoon at Wingate?”

 

“I would be delighted to meet Miss Granger. I shall ask my cousin, but I am certain she will wish to make the acquaintance as well.” Her eyes sparkled with true joy, making Hugh almost giddy with relief.

 

“Thank you, my lady.” She was so close, so temptingly close. Her face tilted up to him brought her mouth only inches from his lips. If he swayed slightly toward her—

 

She rose up and brushed her lips against his in a fleeting kiss that seemed to last far longer than the few seconds it surely took. Still, he savored the warmth of her mouth, the sweetness of her breath, the closeness of her face next to his. Not a sensual kiss, but one so comforting he could forget the worries for his family completely for those few blissful moments. Heaven in several different ways.

 

Then she was gone, slipped out the door with only the swish of her purple skirts lingering on the air.

 

Hugh gazed about the room, not entirely certain what had just happened had been real. And if it had been—and he hoped like the devil it had been—then he must figure out what Lady Kersey had meant by kissing him, and how they could go on from here.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 


AUTHOR Bio and Links:

 

Jenna Jaxon is a best-selling author of historical romance, writing in a variety of time periods because she believes that passion is timeless. She has been reading and writing historical romance since she was a teenager. A romantic herself, Jenna has always loved a dark side to the genre, a twist, suspense, a surprise. She tries to incorporate all of these elements into her own stories.

 

She lives in Virginia with her family and a small menagerie of pets--including two vocal cats, one almost silent cat, two curious bunnies, and a Shar-pei mix named Frenchie.

 

Blog:  www.jennajaxon.wordpress.com

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/jenna.jaxon

Twitter:  https://twitter.com/Jenna_Jaxon

Instagram: passionistimeless

TicTok: @jennajaxon1

 

BUY LINK: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0B2B8KLB3

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 



FULL MOON DREAMING INTERVIEW

1.     You’re marooned on a small island with one person and one item of your choice—who is that person and what item do you have?

The person I would want to be marooned with on a small island would be Sting and the item would be his guitar.


2.  Which musical would you say best exemplifies your life – and which character in that musical

     are you?

     The musical that best exemplifies my life is The Music Man and I am Marion Paroo. I’m not a   

     librarian (but a teacher), but my husband is a Music Man (a real musician) and I was

     languishing in my small hometown until I met and married him.

3.  When you start a new story, do you begin with a character, or a plot?

     I always start with a plot. I can’t begin to write until I have the entire story plotted out in detail

    (usually in a 10-12 page outline). And I can’t skip around. I start at the top of chapter one and

     write straight through until I type THE END.

 


4.  If they were to make the story of your life into a movie, who should play you?

     If they made a movie of the story of my life, I would like for Jennifer Lawrence to play the

     younger me and Emma Thompson to play the older me.

 


5.  Who’s your favorite horror villain and why?

     If we are talking horror villains in books, it would have to be Pennywise the Clown from

     Stephen King’s It (my favorite book by him too). Pennywise is so diabolical and evil and

     downright scary, he’s the perfect villain. But if it’s horror villains in movies, it has to be

     the plant, Audrey II, in Little Shop of Horrors (one of my all-time favorite movies) because the

     plant has sooo much personality you just have to love it.


6.  Do you have an historical crush and if so, who is it?

     I hate to say it, but I have always been fascinated by King Henry VIII of England. He was the

     perfect Renaissance man and was so influential in his life, both for good and for bad,

     unfortunately. I was first turned on to him through a BBC mini-series released in 1970, The Six

     Wives of Henry VIII. I find him fascinating, although I sympathize much more with his wives,

     especially Anne Boleyn. I recently saw the musical Six in London, about the six wives and

     loved it.


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Saturday, July 16, 2022

Saturday is Horror Day #70 - The Housemaid (2010), Hobo With a Shotgun

 The Housemaid (2010)


Eun-yi Li (Jeon Do-yeon) is dissatisfied with her life and her job in a restaurant and longs for more. After witnessing an unknown woman jump to her death, Eun-yi is approached by an older woman, Byung-sik (Youn Yuh-jung) with an offer of employment in a wealthy household. She is to be nanny to the couple's young daughter Nami. The wife, Hae-ra (Woo Seo) is also pregnant with twins and close to giving birth. Her husband Hoon Goh (Lee Jung-Jae) is a handsome and successful businessman who is away when Eun-yi arrives.






Eun-yi settles into her new chores. She quickly becomes fond of Nami, and feels well treated by Hae-raa and Byung-sik. When the husband does arrive, though, complications begin. He comes to her room in the middle of the night, armed with wine, and she admits him to her bed, beginning a torrid affair.  Not surprisingly, she becomes pregnant and keeps it a secret, but her secret is soon revealed to Hae-ra and her mother (Ji-Young Park), as well as Byung-sik. Enraged by her husband's betrayal, the wife vows vengeance while the housemaid is determined to have her baby. 


This version of the Housemaid is not to be confused with the 2021 film, which looks like a Spanish remake, but it is a remake of the 1960 film. I haven't seen that one, but I intend to. There is also a 2016 film called The Housemaid which is completely unrelated and takes place in 1953 French Indochina, which I have seen.

The Housemaid is psychological but also a look at the classes, the rich and the poor. Hoon is a selfish man who thinks only of his own pleasure when he turns to the housemaid as his wife, who is expecting twins and is pretty large at this point, isn't meeting his needs as a man. He never takes Eun-yi's feelings into consideration, as though she has none. The wife and her mother are every bit as callous, maybe worse, with some of the things that they do. 


I have to confess that a large part of my interest in this film lies with Lee Jung-Jae, who is very sexy if somewhat entitled. He is a very versatile actor and very sexy. The film is well done and is visually very stunning. I give this film a solid 4 Stars.

Hobo With a Shotgun


A hobo (Rutger Hauer) who is riding the rails gets off at a town that proves to be less than an ideal place to live. The town is under the tyrannical rule of a madman named Drake (Brian Downey), and his two good-for-nothing vicious sons, Slick (Gregory Smith) and Ivan (Nick Bateman). Cruelty and pain are the order of the day, to be inflicted in any and every way possible. Hobo stays to himself, even though he doesn't like what he sees. Spotting a lawn mower for sale in the pawn shop window, he dreams of owning it, of starting his own business and making his own way. But the $49.95 asking price is beyond his means. 







If Abby (Molly Dunsworth) ever had dreams of doing something with her life, she has discarded them 


and given up to selling herself on the streets. She does what she has to do to survive, and she is treated terribly as a result. When Hobo stands up for her and gets hurt, she takes him home and cares for him. He believes in her, thinks of her as a teacher, and wants better for her. 


While Hobo is in the pawn shop, admiring the lawn mower he can't afford, two bullies enter and begin to terrorize the customers and the shop owner. Reaching his breaking point, Hobo reaches for a shotgun hanging on the wall and begins to enact his own form of revenge.




Be warned that this dystopian story is filled with assorted acts of cruelty and a great deal of violence and callous indifference. You gotta love Rutger Hauer as the Hobo, standing up for people that no one else will stand up for, including themselves. I love a good underdog movie. The main villain Drake is appropriately sleazy and disgusting. It's hard not to root for his demise, as well as both of his demon spawn.  I give this film 3.5 Stars.