Showing posts with label Robert Downey Jr.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert Downey Jr.. Show all posts

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Movie Review: Sherlock Holmes II, A Game is Afoot in Europe


They say you can never underestimate your opponents. That they may be as clever, as detailed, as meticulous in preparation for the end intrigue they have prepared for you, for all. The Game of Shadows makes a good go of bringing you to a precursor of the European long game of 1914 via the dastardly Professor Moriarty. Holmes, his antithesis, takes up the chess match to a near flawless duel of equals of the mind, if not of heart. For Moriarty (Jared Harris) has not one.


In referencing the great works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, director Guy Richie has blended those stories with a few inventions of his own. Now, this reviewer is not a master Holmesian purveyor. I enjoyed a few of the shorts in my earlier days, “The Red-headed League”, “The Adventure of the Speckled Band”, and several others some twenty to twenty-five years prior when boys find their heroes more and more in pages of literary works. Doyle’s masterful detective genius was good fun –always kept one’s sharp attention.

So, I understand the poetic license Richie has to take to make it work in today’s environs. Action, action, and funny quips, for which, the modern Holmes (Robert Downey, Jr.) has made quite palatable for all ages. Jude Law’s depiction of Dr. Watson is a banquet of a different sort from Doyle’s feast. Mainly, Watson has a truly redoubtable courage, the joie de vivre of a 1980s rock star, but is much more skeptical (with equal parts reasoning) of the escapading Holmes. Nonetheless, Watson will give his life for Holmes, but also will give him a tongue lashing all the way to the damnable end of his partner's, “elementary, my dear Watson, puzzle solved; but now we're bloody well sacked" destruction. (Not that he ever said any of that.)

Ah yes, the movie. It clocks two hours of 1890s fun. The two opposing forces setting their boards up for a duel of strategies, tactics, and pieces moved to block, to sacrifice, in order to win the sparking-towards-battle of Europe. Much like the real Europe, and real war, attacks, counteroffensives, forced retreats, feint attacks and retreats, and seeming stalemates occur. Neither side is desperate – but only more enlivened to fight on.

But the strategists take different routes to fulfill their quest. Moriarty controls and sacrifices all his pieces to win; and plays on the dark forces inside men. Holmes, the supreme practitioner of Pragmatism, the keen adventurer, moral and just in his own unique light, thinks of counters to win this dark game; but with honor, and the sacrifices made by others due solely to free will. The Game of Shadows titling is apropos.

One can scarcely think a better Holmes movie can be made. It is hopeful that such an epic finale will be made. 

I wonder, is a game afoot to fund such a smashing endeavor?

One can only dream.

Basic Sherlock Holmes's Pragmatism
1. Pragmatism is based on the premise that the human capability to theorize is necessary for intelligent practice.
2. Pragmatism instead tries to explain, psychologically and biologically, how the relation between knower and known 'works' in the world.
3. From the outset, pragmatists wanted to reform philosophy and bring it more in line with the scientific method as they understood it.
4. There is no power of intuition in the sense of a cognition unconditioned by inference, and no power of introspection, intuitive or otherwise, and that awareness of an internal world is by hypothetical inference from external facts. 
5. There is no absolutely first cognition in a cognitive process; such a process has its beginning but can always be analyzed into finer cognitive stages. That which we call introspection does not give privileged access to knowledge about the mind - the self is a concept that is derived from our interaction with the external world and not the other way around.

Note: Pragmatism came into being towards the late 19th century - circa Doyle's heyday.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Music, Change and The Crisis: The Politics of Dancing in the Land of Confusion

The Politics of Dancing song (below) takes me back to the Big 80's when Reaganomics ruled, Wall Street had a 5-year cocaine and credit-inspired boom and Less Than Zero was considered a pretty cool take on addiction, unless you were Robert Downey Jr. (Bret Easton Ellis wrote the Less Than Zero book, and also, American Psycho and Rules of Attraction.)



The Rules of Politics, if there were such a creature lurking somewhere off the shores of Kennebunkport, might be to trash everything your opponent ever voted for. Chastised his acquisition of wealth, power and clout at all human costs. Put a spin on their take so violent that a world class figure skater or gymnast could not fathom the rotations involved. Maybe most important, never tell anyone how you really intend to solve any problem, because, someone, somewhere is going to be hurt by your plan. (You can never please everyone all the time. Or even some of the time. So it might as well be none of the time, in my opinion.)

The Politics of Dancing: Not as hard as the Politics of Politics




But as we all have come to know well, no matter how hard you think this time will be different and groundbreaking, there is always doubt. (Like, for example, the Cubs winning a World Series.) We want to change the world from the ground up. The grass roots are the places where things can really get done, if, and only if, we could part ways with the concepts drilled into us by the society at large.

Some of which are never seen as harmful or undermining, like religion, but often truly are too dogmatic and confrontational individually to be espoused as the framework or bedrock on which we could change the real big picture.

The Politics of Changing America is a art I can rarely see working. There are too many factions. Too many old, tired and worn out reasons for behaviors and circumstances. Too many people with hands in the pockets of poor folk. Too many blind eyes staring into the abyss of what is a faltering America. Too many excuses. Too many deadly sins.

Land of Confusion: Too many people making too many problems




But it has to be apart of us to fix something. I had the misfortune of screwing up my life in ways most who read anything I have written can't even truly understand where I am at until they read between the lines.

My mother and aunt will either complete a bankruptcy or lose their house, possibly both. My latest post at my other personal blog explores that to reaches you won't want to go, I suppose.

America is also likely heading for a catastrophe the likes of which hasn't been seen in 80 years. I see it. People are selling off cars, personal items and anything else they can in NW Indiana. 50% of the mortgages in America are in 2 failing entities: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Banks are tight. Too tight. Afraid of the next shoe that will drop. It is coming...I feel it. (But why listen to me?)

My personal maliase intercepts this politics of dancing around the issues. Not exploring solutions, just lying to you, to me and anyone else with a brain and time to research. This has been in the making for nearly 30 years...much like my own predicament.

Anyways, if you politick enough, you might believe it is "all ok" and the world is "not confused or lost," just dancing while a little bit tipsy. God bless ignorance and bliss.