2005-06-27

telophase: (Mello - inferiority)
2005-06-27 09:40 am

(no subject)

I was reading my page of "monitored" LJs - the users and communities I don't really read often, but occasionally (if you comment on my LJ you're not in the 'monitored' filter; that's mostly for those who I've friended to read every so often but don't consider them acquaintances).

Today, the author/artist of Peach Fuzz posted a mini-review of the Howl's Moving Castle movie (no spoilers) where she noted that she didn't have high expectations going in because she heard that the movie's heroine was an old woman. Quoted:
When I originally found out that much of the movie was about a girl in the form of a 90-year old woman, I had my doubts that she would make for a very likable or appropriate lead character. You generally expect your main character to be vibrant or youthful or energetic (not that the lack of dissuaded me from seeing it, obviously.)

I have to say that I don't think we have the same conception of what makes for a good lead character. Which probably explains why I don't like her manga and can't stand any of the characters.* What I look for in a lead character is depth. I like it when aspects of their personality or history are hidden, so you have to poke at them and peel them away to reveal what makes them tick and who they are. I like it when they have contradictions and paradoxes which turn out to make perfect sense once you dig deep enough. I actually loathe most genki-type characters, and they have to have deeper, more serious sides to them revealed early enough on to get me to like them.

Goku, Tohru Honda, and Naruto are characters that I wouldn't normally like if they didn't have their serious sides revealed early enough -- Naruto starts off in a cranky, prankster mood, and it's revealed that he usually shoves his doubts under a confident facade. Goku was played off of three not-genki characters before we started learning his tragic backstory, and he does show very deep currents of fear for what he's capable of doing. Tohru Honda is shown as very deliberately placing her negative emotions underneath her surface because she's got such an inferiority complex that she thinks she doesn't deserve any sort of happiness, and you get hit with that the moment the book starts, when she's living in a tent instead of imposing on anyone. If we'd met her before her mother died, I wouldn't have liked her as much, I think, because I think that her insecurites all stem back to that one issues.

There's supposed to be a meeting at work now - will come back if I think of anything, or a better way to say something. [ edit ] Cancelled, it seems. At least nobody's showing up to it. Not that I have anything else to say.





* I don't hold that against her, though, I am just emphatically Not Her Audience, and I enjoy reading her posts about learning how to be a professional mangaka. Caveat posted to head off any "If you don't like her, why do you read her LJ?" cries, although I think most of my regular readers are sensible enough to understand where I'm coming from without me having to spell it out.
telophase: (Default)
2005-06-27 02:42 pm

(no subject)

Linkage time, since I'm up at the Ref desk now and nobody needs ref.


Via Bookslut:

Article on authors offering free ebooks.

"People always seem shocked that musicians would have sex," Tindall said. "I mean, where do little musicians come from?" Sordid, steamy kiss-and-tell about someone who pretty much slept ehr way through the classical music world. I am a bad person; I want to read it. XD

Via growabrain

Penguins!
telophase: (goku - chewing)
2005-06-27 11:18 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

I no longer have my itty-bitty baby crockpot because water got into it when I was trying to clean off some stuff that had spilled over and cooked on, and even though it was probably perfectly fine, it only cost $10 and wasn't worth the worry of wondering if I could leave it alone all day. I mentioned to my mother that I was thinking of getting a bigger one anyway, since I could then have more than just the Low heat setting and lo and behold, when I was home for the weekend, we went out and purchased many many things, among them a 4-quart crockpot for myself.

All this is to say that I am christening it tonight with a made-up recipe which should be good anyway since it's not especially fancy. I had two packages of boneless pork rib meat that I bought on sale (Albertsons does good meat sales, doesn't it?) in the freezer, some baby carrots that I also bought on sale at a 10-for-$1 for baby carrot packages (I only bought 2 - I don't eat *that* many carrots :D), one potato (thought I had 2, but oh well), most of a large onion, and two *enormous* garlic cloves - Not kdding, easily the size of 3 normal cloves each salvaged from a head of garlic that was slowly going south. Dumped them all in, veg on bottom, meat on top - if I'd had the inclination I could have browned it and I'm sure it would taste better, but that would mean even more dirty dishes cluttering up my kitchen - poured a bottle of hard cider over it, and sprinkled with pink peppercorns ground up in a mortar and pestle (heh - the frist time I've ever owned one, so I went a bit crazy grinding things the other day) and a bit of smoked salt. Plug in, turn to low, will unplug and taste tomorrow morning, in about 8 hours.

If I'm not running late, I'll attempt to actually bring some for lunch, but somehow I don't see that happening, so I think it'll be dinner tomorrow. I ought to let it cook all day instead of all night, but if I prepared it tonight and stuck in in the fridge I'd forget to put it in the crockpot and start it tomorrow.

[ edit ]

And in other news, just moved one of my Journalfen icons over here, because perpetually-chewing Goku is just so appropriate for a journal entry on food.