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Thursday, December 30, 2010

KAMPAI SUSHI RESTAURANT - TUCSON, AZ

Finally went out for my 64th birthday dinner to our favorite Japanese restaurant. The atmosphere is very relaxed and its decorated in a spare Zen motif with lots of wood. Its also never crowded which always worries me as I don't want it to close now that i've found my source of vegetable tempura and chicken teriyaki.

Which is what i had. I have all the chicken and rice with vegetables (and extra teriyaki sauce) for lunch today as i filled up on the tempura, edamame beans, miso soup, salad and 3 egg rolls. I wouldn't order the egg rolls again; too chinese-y including the bright jewel colored red-orange sweet and sour sauce.

Bill had salmon teriyaki and said it tied for first place out of all the salmon he's ever eaten. quite a compliment.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

CLAIM JUMPER RESTAURANT - TUCSON, AZ

The only reason we went here was because I had a birthday coupon for $18 off an entree. It was crowded and we waited about 25 minutes for a table; in fact, the whole event took a little over 2 hours and since we went here after a hike, we were eager to get home and shower so both of us got impatient.

This chain is a poster child for obese overfed glutton 'more is better' America. And i fell into it totally. I ordered the porkloin dinner which was a fatal last second switch from a curry chicken salad sandwich with spicy Thai coleslaw (oh, how i wish i had stuck to my original order.) The food here is good but its not real in a way; its plastic-y and corporate.

The salad with citrus viniagrette was tasty. I, once again, thought porkloin meant those tender medallions of pork tenderloin so I was disappointed. The portions are Andre the Giant sized so Bill will have a great lunch as I could only chew on 3 bites of the meat. There were roasted vegetables in an apple sauce which were good and a buttermilk biscuit which i slathered with a Claim Jumper volume of butter. And the pork was laid on slag heap mounds of a combo of mashed potatoes and stuffing mix which i think swelled up (like cellulose) in my belly because i got so bloated later on; my belly skin was as taut as African drums. This wierd combo of starches was the consistency of food one might serve a person with no teeth.

bill ordered beef ribs - His plate looked like King Henry the 8th had placed the order. He gave me one of his ribs to gnaw on (lady-like of course) and it was much much better than the pork; the marinade on the meat was delicious; spicy and smoky. He also got the same vegetables and just plain mashed potatoes. Bill also has another leftover lunch from his dinner.

I got a red velvet cupcake with a fancy chocolate drizzle design on the plate and a lit candle for my birthday. It was dry and without flavor but that didn't stop me from eating the top with the too sweet creamcheese frosting because by this time I was a Claim Jumper food whore.

Happy Birthday to me.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

EL INDIO - TUCSON, AZ

We love this restaurant. The food is fantastic, the atmosphere brilliantly festive with lots of colors and plants and posters and pictures and vases, the service is friendly and efficient and the prices are reasonable.

This time around Bill had a beef enchilada and chicken taco combo and I had a beef tamale (wonderfully seasoned and meat packed inside the masa from end to end) and 2 beef and potato tacos with lots of lettuce and cheese.

The taco chips are good too - salty and you get salsa and a bean dip. And i got to pick out a calendar for free (calendars are a huge weakness of mine; in fact, we don't have to walk farther than 3 feet in our house to be reminded of what day it is; will come in handy when our dementia worsens.). Since i couldn't make up my mind, she gave me both of them: a beautifully painted adobe house and garden scene and Aztec gods and goddesses cavorting in the temple.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

EUROPEAN MARKET AND DELI - TUCSON, AZ

We pass this market all the time since its so close to our house and it was just a couple of days ago that i thought to find out if they have a place inside where you can eat. They do!! They have great food; ukrainian, russian and a smattering of greek - all with great prices.

The market is jam packed to the rafters with food items and teas and coffees and clothes and dvd's and books and beer and wine and a sausage display and dishes and jewelry and Russian vodka; just about everything for the European immigrant.

The restaurant part is set off from the market and the decorations on the wall (rugs and posters and beautiful handmade tablecloths) all give it a feeling of eating at a cafe. Its a super colorful and bright place.

We shared cabbage rolls and a gyros appetizer plate and our water was served in those tall Pilsen (from Czechoslovakia) beer glasses. The food was tremendous. There were 2 huge cabbage rolls in this slightly sweet tomato sauce with a side of Russian sour cream (very thick). When i eat this dish i usually pick out the insides because the cabbage is too tough or stringy but i ate the entire roll.

The appetizer plate included a yoghurt sauce, tomatoes, cucumbers, pita bread, onions, gyros meat, kalamata olives and lots of feta cheese.

We were both very very happily content. They were closing early for Christmas Eve so we ate lunch here but when we go back we'll eat dinner. They are open till 8pm.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

BLACK SWAN

What a fantastic, mysterious, physically disturbing, hallucinatory, intense motion picture this was. Basically, a story of Nina, played beyond perfection by Natalie Portman, a ballerina who is so tightly controlled and restrained and restricted and self-regimented (also helped by her bizarre 'stage mother' acted brilliantly by Barbara Hershey) that every scene reverberates with tension and the palpable sense of explosions waiting to happen.

Nina strives to be perfect and is picked to dance the part of the Black and White Swan in the ballet season's opening show. The movie follows her attempt to "let herself go" into the roles instead of trying to do every position technically perfect. This buildup to the final show is marked by paranoid feelings that her alternate is plotting against her and violent outbursts towards herself and others (or is this really happening?)

The ending is absolutely how all endings of movies should be. everything that happened before is explained by a single movement and all previous scenes came together in one big pas de deux and jete.

There are a lot of scenes showing the rigor of ballet dancing and the preparation for warm-ups and the practices and of course, great dancing.

Bill initially had great reservations about this film because it was not a pleasant experience for him; he just cringed, for instance, at the pictures of the dancers' feet and the contortions the ballerinas put their bodies through and the injuries and torn bleeding blisters and cut fingers. but after an hour or so he started really appreciating the entire movie and it rose up in his ratings to an 8. i give it a 10.

and once again, i've got to say that Natalie Portman was illuminously painful to watch.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

METROPOLITAN GRILL - TUCSON, AZ

Chris and i ate lunch here per my suggestion because i had read that they remodeled making the restaurant more young people friendly and hip and cool and also that they had expanded their menu and lowered prices.

well, neither was true. There certainly were some physical changes in the restaurant; the addition of a red, white and blue front door (yuck!!), some yellow and blue framed art work, the removal of the fountain in the lobby and a toilet that had a dual flush - up for poops and down for urine.

But the place remained a haven for the church lady crowd, the elderly matrons post-quilting gathering, the Daughters of the Revolution, and anyone wearing a sweater set with a pearl stickpin.

And the food prices were not lowered. Chris ordered fish and chips with coleslaw for $11. She said the fish was delicious and i sampled her coleslaw which was quite good. I ordered a BLT with fries for $8. The fries were OK and the sandwich was ok. I never saw a sandwich with so much lettuce on it; i bet there were 6 separate leaves folded up. No pickle. and i wasn't offered ketchup for the fries.

So a generic disappointment in the culinary and ambience department. Though the company was exquisitely stimulating as always. (this is just in case Chris reads the blog!)

Thursday, December 16, 2010

JACK'S BARBEQUE - TUCSON, AZ

We ate at this restaurant during Tucson #1 and never went back. They are not bad yet not really good. Plus our favorite bbq joint at the time was only about 4 blocks away from jack's. but now that we are here for Tucson #2 and our fav bbq restaurant is out of business, we decided to try Jack's after a hike.

And it hasn't changed!! its not bad but not really good. I had a beef and pork sandwich with sweet potato fries. The pork was tender (its not pulled but slices) but the brisket was chewy. and the fries looked and tasted like orange wooden sticks. Bill had a brisket sandwich (his take on the meat was the same as mine) plus coleslaw and beans. The bbq sauce had a nice kick to it and the coleslaw and chili-like beans were good.

But not enough to come back. Unless there is a Tucson #3.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

YOU DON'T KNOW JACK

This movie (an HBO production released earlier this year) is about Jack Kevorkian. From the beginning of his euthanasia practice until he was imprisoned for 8 and 1/2 years. He was released at the age of 79 in 2007.

He eventually lost a court battle because he was determined to get this issue of the right of people to choose their death before the Supreme Court. So HE injected the drugs into the willing patient instead of having the patient 'pull the switch'. He lost his medical license years before so he had been forced to use carbon monoxide but he wanted to make sure this death got the attention of the courts so he could have a forum. Besides the crime of murder he also was charged with use of controlled substances.

Jack also was his own attorney which meant he had a fool for a client.

The acting was superb and the movie was perfect. I have absolutely no criticism or comment on how things could have been done differently. (surprise; surprise). Al Pacino played Jack and he was totally subsumed by his character. In contrast to all other films i've seen with pacino in which I always know the part is being played by him, he WAS Jack Kevorkian. The other roles were also played excellently; Susan Sarandon as a friend from the Hemlock Society, John Goodman, Brenda Vaccaro as his sister Margo and Danny Huston as his lawyer.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS

You either like these fantasy wizard/witch magical happenings movies or you don't. I do like them but with each subsequent Harry Potter film the magic and special effects and fantastical creatures and clever objects that metamorphose into other clever objects has decreased.

There was still enough present for me to thoroughly enjoy this film; in spite of its over 2 and 1/2 hour running time but there were lags in the action. Too many talking scenes and running from the bad guys chases. I have to confess I've never been able to keep the characters straight. I don't know the moogles from the dumbledores from the hogwatts from the fuzzlemuzzles. It doesn't seem to make a difference.

I also was aware in this film (because it wasn't as transporting and other-worldly) that the 3 main actors really are not good actors. They are all sort of wooden. I think the best one is probably Ron.

However, we will see Part 2 next year because there is still enough wonder and joy and mystery. Plus i love all the buildings; they are crooked and full of nooks and crannies and hidden corners and twisty staircases that go nowhere.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

THE SANTALAND DIARIES

This play put on by Live Theatre Workshop in Tucson was the best community based local acting I have seen. both the Diaries and the other one - SEASON'S GREETINGS TO OUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY - were adapted from David Sedaris's writings. That's the reason why i wanted to see it because when we moved from Redding to Tucson I listened to a book by Sedaris and it was so entertaining and witty and sarcastic and interesting that i was disappointed when the driving ended.

The Diaries is a recounting of Sedaris's experiences moving to New York to be an actor in a soap opera and running out of money while waiting for a job. So he applies at Macy's to be a Christmas elf. It is absolutely hilarious and accurately portrays all the different characters and personalities of the people who play elves and also the various Santa's. He also does an excellent job of showing the absolute insane rush and pressure of the holiday season. The actor, Christopher Johnson, was superb and he didn't just narrate but became each person he was talking about.

The Season's Greetings play was much darker. Kristi Loera plays a perfect Martha-Stewart lady who is composing her yearly Christmas letter and she remains upbeat and perky (while slugging down wine and whiskey) and all smiles and grins while relating the happenings of the year. But the events include finding out her husband had a child when he was in the Vietnam war, her druggie daughter becoming pregnant, accusations of murder, court dates. The contrast between the underlying tragedies and violence and her chirpy exterior was bittersweetly funny.

The theater was small so every seat was good. Because of the bright lights on the stage and the heat it caused (we could see the sheen of sweat on both the actors' faces) they don't heat the theater so i'm glad i was warned of this because i brought adequate jackets and scarves to stay comfortable. Plus laughing a lot helped too.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

WASSON PEAK - TUCSON, AZ

We wanted to do the loop we had done last time which was going up the road from the parking area, getting on the Esperanza trail and heading to Wasson Peak but not going to the peak and instead heading down the King's Canyon Trail when we got to the cutoff to the peak. This loop is about 8 miles and 1600 feet elevation.

we started off a little differently by walking up the Gould Mine Trail which connected us with the Esperanza Trail within feet of the old stone building and the mine. (every time i pass one of these old mines i am morbidly fascinated by its unseen depths and imagine falling in and/or wondering what sorts of creatures live at the bottom.)

But another thing we did differently on this hike was not starting out in time to leisurely with ample break time make the loop. (i'm blaming this on bill.) The King's Canyon Trail is steep in places and very rocky throughout its entire length so not a fast jog down.

so we stopped about 200 feet below the ridge and the spur trail to the peak and had a lovely lunch and headed down the same way we came. Watched the sunset too. It was really hot in the sun with hardly any breeze and even when the sun went down i was comfortable in shorts and a sleeveless top.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

MY BIG FAT GREEK RESTAURANT

This was the restaurant at Broadway and Kolb which we hadn't eaten at before. I had a coupon celebrating their one year anniversary. We went there after a hike on a friday and were prepared to walk over to In n' out Burger if they were jammed with weekend party-ers. but we got a lovely table off in the corner and the service by Tovah was excellent and the food was delivered fast.

We ordered a spinach salad with candied walnuts, feta cheese and cranberries with raspberry viniagrette. It was a rabbit's paradise; sky high greens. excellent taste except there was too much dressing so by the time we got to the bottom of the salad - the viniagrette (which had a lovely spicy aftertaste - cayenne pepper?) was way too much; made me pucker.

And then we also shared stuffed bell peppers. We got 2 of them and they were overflowing with the meat/rice combo. They were topped with a bechamel sauce and were accompanied by roasted potatoes and vegetables. That dish was perfectly prepared and seasoned.

The restaurant is not very big and a lot of the tables are right in the middle of the room and close together; only a few booths. It seemed whenever someone ordered a flaming appetizer or a dessert or it was a special occasion (so we're talking about every 10 minutes) all the servers would dance around the tables in a line and there was lots of hand clapping and shooting flames and god help me if i heard it one more time - shouts of OPA!

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

127 HOURS

This movie is a claustrophobic immersion into a slot canyon where we watch James Franco with his forearm pinned by a boulder spend 5 days before he cut through his arm and rappel'd down canyon walls and walked the desert floor till he was rescued by hikers.

It is an amazing feat of endurance and fortitude to overcome the natural instinct to avoid ANY kind of pain; physical or psychological. That he was desperate enough and was determined enough to not give up and die of exposure and dehydration is heroic. This is a true story and the climber is now married and has a son. There were no pictures of him canyoneering post-amputation but there was of him skiing and climbing mts.

He also made a vow that he would always tell someone where he was going in the future.

The scenery was fantastic and the movie showed in exuberant but spare detail the self-confidence (cockiness?) and sense of adventurous risk that he has through scenes of him getting prepared to go on this trip into Blue John canyon in Utah and also his encounter with 2 other climbers before they left and he became trapped by a falling boulder.

Franco was just as good as Tom Hanks in the Castaway movie. When i saw that one I couldn't believe i could stay so interested for an hour or so watching one person interact with himself on an island. And it was the same way with this 127 Hours movie.

the only criticism i have is some of the hallucinating episodes that he experienced went on too long. And also the sentences at the end of the movie which told you follow-up info were in white and were superimposed (partly or wholly) on light backgrounds so i could barely read them. Poor editing job.

Oh and the music was horrid. way too loud; it tended to be competitive with the film's actions.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

B J'S

Because the restaurant we (me and Jean) wanted to eat at for lunch was closed we ended up at this corporate steel maven of cuisine; very claim-jumperish. I ate at a BJ's when one first opened way back in Portland and it was like entering a world of artifice and phoniness and overpriced cutesy named food. and they haven't changed in the ensuing years.

The place was ice cold. I swear they had the air conditioner on. The only people who were not wearing coats were the waitresses and the young testosterone-laden adolescents. There were lots of empty tables yet the gal at the front pulpit took our name and said we should wait by the sign (about 2 feet away) and then she immediately came over to us and said that our table was ready.!! huh???

fortunately the food was quite tasty. Jean and i shared avocado egg rolls; rich and filling (though just like Chinese i was hungry again within minutes) with an excellent spicy clear dipping sauce. and we also shared chicken potstickers which were served with another great sauce which i could have drunk since it was room temperature which was 15 degrees warmer than the restaurant.

Jean also ordered an oatmeal cookie which I - with great forbearance and self-pity and fortitude did not share with her - (i'm still trying to lose the weight i gained during our summer vacation.). It was baked in a mini-pie tin and was more like a small cobbler.

So this lunch will be my last foray into BJ's because in spite of the good tasting food, the place is not physically comfortable, the atmosphere is plastic and the prices are inflated. I can't think of anything else those initials could stand for except ------- you got it!

Sunday, November 28, 2010

CHINA-THAI

This is our favorite Thai restaurant. I'm not sure why they also serve Chinese food. There are enough Chinese restaurants in town where you can order insipid beige toned bland dishes of squirmy noodles; In contrast to the fiery exuberance and colorful Thai dishes.

The service has always been prompt, efficient and friendly. The bathroom is just ok; it certainly is big enough and there is always lots of towels and soap and toilet paper but it could be decorated a bit. The restaurant itself is subdued-looking but with some nice pictures and wall hangings.

We shared a chicken curry dish and a chicken entree with lots of ginger and vegetables. I was feeling flu-like during the evening so wanted to load my system up with the healing warmth of ginger. Their chicken is plentiful and always tender and only white meat. Each dish came with lots of rice and was $9.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

THE NEXT 3 DAYS

I rated this movie a 2 and Bill gave it a 7. Can this marriage be saved?

Russell Crowe is convinced of his wife's innocence in the murder of her boss and because all legal avenues have been exhausted, he hatches this plan to escape her from jail. Many nonsensical and totally unbelievable things then ensue - acted at a high school musical production level.

There is never any explanation of the murder or the motive. Elizabeth Banks who plays the murderess is so put - together even after 3 years in prison and when she is visited in jail (oh, sometimes they are allowed passionate embraces and french kissing and other times the guards growl fiercely when they go to touch hands across the table.) she is always curled and made-up and sunny.

Crowe performs some murders on his own in order to get money for the life they will lead on the run. The cops are complete idiots and rival the Keystone Kops for sheer bungle-idity. and yet at the end of the movie, a detective crouches down in the parking lot where the murder took place and finds the evidence that the wife had been talking about ever since her arrest. Being a true crime aficionado and a realist, the police and lawyers and judges do NOT investigate crimes on their own in order to prove their own prior stupidity and legal error.

Brian Dennehy is Crowe's dad and I thought he was supposed to have had a stroke because his face never moved and he had 4 words of dialogue. The music was obtrusive and non-musical.

Crowe's idea to get her out of the prison building was to steal into a medlab van and change her lab values in her medical file. (she just happens to be a diabetic on insulin.) And he put her into ketoacidosis; a medical emergency. However, as the prison people are putting her on a stretcher and putting her in an ambulance she has never looked so good!! Makeup intact, rosy cheeks, coherent, dry skin, hair fluffed, not vomiting; looked like she was on her way to a garden party. but the lab values were so bad - she should have been unconscious and in dire physical straits.

I think the title of the movie more accurately illustrates the length of time i felt i spent in the theater watching this loser of a movie.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

GLASS ONION CAFE

The theme of this restaurant is hippie-dippie - early Beatles but post- Buddy Holly - potheads rule. As Michelle and I were waiting going on 30 minutes for my breakfast omelet and marble rye toast, we suddenly looked down at our tablecloth and wondered if that was the reason why the service was so slow. It was painted with a huge marijuana leaf.

The food was quite good though my omelet was a baked egg affair in a discus type shape. Michelle had a salad with cheese and turkey and lemon pepper vinaigrette that she really enjoyed. And because they have my favorite sandwich of all time - turkey, cream cheese, cranberry sauce and herb stuffing - I will be back. This time not near the lunch hour and not on a saturday because i don't think the waitresses were stoned; they were just overwhelmed with the influx of orders.

They have lots of coffee drinks and a few other breakfasty egg entrees but mostly their menu is composed of salads and sandwiches. The decor is a primary color extravaganza with a corner devoted to items for sale; beaded earrings and - what else? but tie-dyed shirts. Peace, brother.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

SHERLOCK HOLMES

This movie consisted of sharply phrased witticisms and supernatural Counts and murders and sexual innuendoes filling up the time between the "still-in-the-closet" homosexual rompings of Sherlock and Watson.

It was too cute and slap-happy for me plus there were endless moments when i couldn't understand what they were saying due to the British marble-mumbling. We didn't even watch the ending.

I gave it a 4 and Bill a 6 (though before i made my displeasure publicly and loudly known, i think Bill would have given it a 7.5)

Thursday, November 18, 2010

ROSA'S MEXICAN FOOD


We ate here once during Tucson #1 and the food was ok but didn't create an impression worthy of a second visit. We ate here again ( 5 years later) because i had a 50% off second entree coupon and vast improvements have occurred.

The food was delicious and the atmosphere festive and so colorful. I guess i didn't notice all the decorations because it was crowded when we first ate here but the place is a blaze of hues and shades and neon colors; blues, greens, purples, yellows and lots of pictures and vases and several walls that were painted with murals of mexican history scenes and aztec gods spiriting away nubile maidens clutching chile rellenos.

I had a combo plate of a beef taco, beef tamale and cheese enchilada. (oh, the tortilla chips were excellent; warm and very thin) The cheese they use is not queso fresca but cheddar so that was a disappointment but the only one. The tamale and taco were wonderful and loads of meat. I didn't have to burrow through inches of corn masa to get at the scanty meat portion in the middle of the tamale; it was packed end to end. The sauce was just the right heat.

Bill had 2 beef tacos and a beef tamale and liked the food as much as i did. Rice and beans came with the entrees but i didn't eat the beans as they were covered with the cheddar cheese.

Next time i want try their green corn tamale and avocado enchilada.

Rosa rules!

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

MOTHER HUBBARD'S


A good find for a reasonably priced meal. The restaurant is in a sad-looking depressed strip mall on Grant and Stone but inside it is cheery with lots of tables. Hardly anyone was in there for either breakfast (which Chris and I had) or lunch (since we talked into the lunch hour).

I had the ultimate scramble for $7; a big platter of scrambled eggs, hashed browns, onions, mushrooms and spinach. It was delicious though I couldn't figure out why it had a vague Chinese taste. I think it was because it resembled broken apart egg foo young. And with the scramble I got a perfectly toasted English muffin.

Chris was not very happy with her original order which was 4 tiny silver dollar pancakes and biscuits and gravy (though i tasted this and really liked it; spicy). She hit the mark with her second order: sausage patty, pc. of toast and 1 over-medium egg.

We will be back.


Sunday, November 14, 2010

LEAVES OF GRASS


Terribly silly and pointless and annoying movie. It starred Edward Norton; he played 2 twin brothers; one was a straitlaced rigid professor and the other was an Oklahoman-accented pot grower who was friends with Tim Blake Nelson.

Brady the pot-head 'faked' his death precipitating the arrival of the "good" brother to Oklahoma for his funeral. But all Brady wanted was his brother to impersonate him to give him an alibi for some sort of (here it gets vague) drug deal. And then there was Keri Russell presenting some hillbilly love interest (she gutted a carp prior to their first kiss) and Susan Sarandon who was the mother of the twins and who was living in a nursing home (don't ask!) and Richard Dreyfuss as a rabbi and random killings and unexpected violence and sappy corn-fed philosophical asides to give the movie, i think, some kind of merit ????

I've got to stop now and eat a bowl of grit and collard greens and greasy pig skins.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

DENNY'S


I had such a fabulous breakfast/dinner last night. I ordered just the right thing which i often do not do especially when the menu has too many choices and i get overwhelmed.

I got an ultimate skillet with 2 scrambled eggs. It had fried potatoes, roasted red peppers, sausage, spinach, onion, mushrooms and grape tomatoes. Absolutely delicious.

and then i saw their autumn specials and naturally everything is either ginger infused or peppermint-laced. I like the taste of ginger but not in sweet stuff. Anyway, i got 2 cranberry-orange pancakes which were totally awesome and defined the phrase 'comfort food'. The waitress brought me extra butter and they always warm the syrup at Denny's so i was in gustatory paradise.

Because we have an AARP card, that meal (including bill's entree) was only $12!!!!!!!! and i have leftovers (not pancakes; those were speedily consumed) for lunch.

Oh, happy day.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

CONVICTION


Good movie and great story and wonderful acting. Hilary Swank was, once again, excellent including her Boston accent which remained consistent and authentic sounding throughout the entire movie. but Sam Rockwell was illustrious!

They are 2 of 7 siblings brought up in squalor and neglect by a mother who had an assembly line of men. The film did a great job of showing their home life and their bond as children and the shared trouble they would get into. So i had a clear idea and understanding of the tight emotional connection between them.

Kenny grew up to be an adult troublemaker and quick to fight. He was very charming and popular but also quite a frequent visitor of the police station. There was a great scene in a bar with him and his girlfriend and young daughter and his sister and her fiance that expertly showed his charisma and deep caring and compassion but also his rage.

So he gets arrested for the extremely bloody and heinous murder of an elderly lady in town and he is found guilty and sentenced to life without parole. and his sister (Swank) literally turns her life over to jumping through all the educational hoops so she can become a lawyer and investigate his case and prove his innocence.

It is an exciting and suspenseful movie with superb acting. Just like in other films i've seen - at the very end, you get to see a picture of the real people. (oh, did i say that this movie is based on a true story?); Swank looked similar to her true counterpart but it was a shock to see Kenny. I had gotten used to Rockwell's rugged handsomeness.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Thursday, January 14, 2010

WILDHORSE TRAIL + - SAGUARO PARK


We did a new trail and off trail hike. Started on the usual main trail but wound our way to the Wildhorse trail which took us to a real remote feeling and isolated part of the park; it also took us to canyon areas and closer to the Tanque Verde Ridge.

After the main trail ends there is a well trodden and easy to follow use trail that we took over and through and around a canyon that got progressively narrower and rockier. We stopped at a bend in the wash in a large sandy/gravelly area for our lunch and nap. Loads and loads of pools; lots of them with stagnant water. and in the summer i can imagine swimming in several of them.

So Bill had planned a loop back and we were leisurely ambling to different trails and i think we ended up on the Bajada Wash or Vista trail. Stopped for our 3rd break and to soak up the sun and suddenly realized that we were a lot farther from the truck than we thought.

So the energy boosters got turned on. We never got to the trail we were headed for and as it got darker and darker, even though we weren't lost, we decided to go cross country. Bill's GPS showed us that we were really really close to our truck and we were! However, that destination was only reached by getting all scratched up from thorn bushes, acacia trees, mesquite branches and stumbling over rocks. We saw the canopy roof of the truck finally but still couldn't get to it cuz there was a barbed wire fence surrounding the parking area.

Quite an adventure that's for sure. The end of this hike reminded me how fast the desert can turn from a warm huggable blanket of benevolence to a chilly bone cold icy slap in the face.

BEV'S JAN. 2010 VISIT