England’s Medieval Festival at Herstmonceux Castle

We spent the weekend visiting Fi and Mars, they’d invited us along to see England’s Medieval Festival at Herstmonceux Castle. The drive down was frustrating, the M25 showed it’s true colours (as usual) and we were stop/start all the way around. The weather on Saturday (as we drove down) was truly gorgeous and we had high hopes for Sunday (yeh, we’re dumb). Saturday night was fun and relaxing and we set off at around 10am on Sunday, in the rain, to get to the castle.

I’ve never been before and the grounds are pretty impressive, the castle itself is quite grand although it’s a reasonably modern castle. The day was really good, half way through the sun came out and we dried out which improved things. Food was hugely over-priced (but what do you expect), but the event itself was fun and the Falconry at the end was pretty impressive despite the wind.

I took a whole bunch of photo’s (except for the major pitched battle in front of the castle, because the rain was coming down too hard during that bit) which you can see over here.

Really enjoyed the weekend, excellent company, and the festival was really enjoyable.

Quick update

We’re back from Fi’s place after an excellent Saturday and Sunday (although the drive down was pretty frustrating), I just wanted to write a quick post as I’m winding down for bed, because I just found out that the two towers near the M1 in Sheffield have been demolished.

From http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/south_yorkshire/7578266.stm

Two iconic concrete cooling towers in South Yorkshire have been demolished in a controlled explosion.

Millions of drivers passed the 250ft (76m) towers by the Tinsley viaduct on the M1 at Sheffield over the decades.

At 0300 BST the blast to reduce the “salt and pepper pots” to rubble left part of the north tower still standing but it has since collapsed.

The M1 reopened to traffic shortly before 1800 BST after safety tests were completed on the motorway supports.

Those towers were a part of my life for a good few years while I was living in Sheffield, traveling north and south along the M1, and working in Rotherham. Wish I could have been there.

Cheque!

Stockon on Tees council were good on their word and their £360 cheque arrived this morning – which is good timing because we’d been a bit strapped since the Brighton blowout, and being on holiday and visiting friends this month. We also got a cheque from the insurance covering 2/3rds of the costs for Bubbles’ ‘incident’ which is about what we expected and is also well timed.

Roleplaying stuff

I’m thinking of selling my roleplaying books. They’re not doing us any good taking up three shelves in the bedroom, much of it is entirely obsolete (D&D, 2nd Edition AD&D, old rules for other games, etc.) If we did ever happen to start tabletop roleplaying again we could pick up any rules we needed at the time, but I can’t imagine ever needing over three quarters of the stuff that’s there. But there’s that little doubt, that maybe it’ll only get more valuable over time and that if I took good care of some of it, it might be worth holding onto.

I wonder if there’s anywhere on the web that values roleplaying stuff, I seem to recall something ages back, maybe I’ll have a look on ebay for a while and see how much some of it might be worth before making a decision.

Hobbit update

Major contracts have been signed (Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, Guillermo del Toro).

From http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117990816.html?categoryid=13&cs=1

Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens have officially signed on to collaborate on “The Hobbit” and its sequel with director Guillermo del Toro.

The announcement, from exec producers Jackson and Walsh and New Line president Toby Emmerich, came four months after del Toro confirmed he had signed on to direct both pics.

Jackson, Walsh and Boyens teamed on penning the three screenplay adaptations of J.R.R. Tolkein’s “The Lord of the Rings.” The third pic, “The Return of the King,” won an Oscar for adapted screenplay.

Hellboy II: The Golden Army

Hellboy II: The Golden Army is the second del Toro Hellboy film, and it assumes you’ve seen the first one. There’s no setup, hardly any introduction (there’s a little bit) and it gets straight into the action. I like that, if you wanted character intro’s for the lesser characters you had the chance to watch the first one before you went to the cinema.

HB2TGA (can’t spend the entire review writing Hellboy II: The Golden Army) is visually amazing. I believe; I believe this stuff exists somewhere and del Toro just took a camera along. The special effects make this film work, they make you truly believe. The pace is good although the overall film felt a little shorter than I would have liked. The script is snappy and isn’t going to impress your literature teacher, but if you went in to this movie expecting anything deep, you weren’t watching the same trailers as me in advance. Character interplay is solid enough, however I think the Liz Sherman character was underused. There’s a shot towards the end of the movie with her and Abe standing around looking useless while Hellboy and another character do their thing, and I wondered if it wouldn’t have been possible to use her a bit more.

Speaking of ‘another character’, there’s a new addition to the team in this outing and he’s entertaining and interesting, but I do wonder if it detracted from the original team of three a little – I always get edgy when movies have too many main players.

The action scenes are excellent overall, and we get to see Hellboy showing more than just ‘crush ’em’ type combat skills, which was nice. Despite several good goes there still wasn’t much of a sense of threat to Hellboy or the major players though; but there were some subtle references to his destiny and Liz having to make some choices that may affect it.

There are two particularly good comic sequences (more than two in the movie, but two stand out) which had most of the cinema laughing out loud.

The bad guy is multi-faceted and well played, there is certainly no caricature of evil here, but a complex individual with specific morals and the drive to obtain his desire at the expense of the human race. I had read a review or two complaining about the ‘echo-warrior’ bandwagon, which is basically complete tosh. The sentiment expressed by the Elven Prince is a long-standing theme in celtic fantasy and celtic real-world crossover fantasy in particular. The elven princess is equally well played in my view and entrancing.

I came home after seeing it, determined to write a blog post about people releasing trailers containing footage not in the final movie and how it annoys me. There was, I believed, a shot in one of the trailers I’d seen of the Prince in a room full of other elves and mythical beings calling for war and being given a good reception. It implied the Prince had a lot of backing and support, and that was missing from the film (you’ll see). So I got in, and watched all three trailers – and of course the scene isn’t there. I can see why I got that impression, and I recognised all the bits they had put together. I don’t know if they intentionally decided to give that view, when it’s not there in the film, but I guess I can’t complain about entire scenes that were missing when they never existed in the first place. It does say something interesting about how trailers and moving images can leave vivid impressions about something that never existed.

Anyway, this is a high quality movie with stunning visuals, a more than average complexity villain and some real laugh out loud moments interspersed with exciting action. If you can only go and see one movie this year, go and see The Dark Knight, but if you can see two, make this one a choice high up on the list.