Author: Linton

  • Not Jake

    Not Jake

    By Linton Bowers

    Jake placed his hand against the push bar and stopped. Opening that door and going in would erase all he’d worked for these long hard months . The tip of a glass and one small sip would send him back to day zero.

    “What are you doing, Jay?” Jake asked himself.

    Jake stepped away from the door.

    “Am I really going to do this?”

    Deep in the dark corners of his mind dwelled something that used to be a part of Jake. He was at one time whole. A normal man going about life doing normal things. Then those damned terrorist dicks decided to crash some planes.

    Jake was among the first in his town to sign his life over to good ol’ Uncle Sam. He became a hard-assed, ground-pounding, stone-cold Marine. Like so many others, he was changed by the things he witnessed. What came home wasn’t what left.

    The darkness he runs from answered his questions.

    Would you like to get a good night’s sleep?

    Passing out in my own piss and puke is not sleep,” Jake replied.

    It’s better than crying like a bitch til the sun comes up.

    How could he respond to that? The truth, as painful as it might be, is still the truth.

    “I’ve come too far. Worked too hard.”

    And for what? To spend all your time reliving what you did? When is someone going to come up with a thirteenth step to make all the nightmares go away, Jake? When are you going to catch a break from me?

    “It’s a process, it takes time. One small baby step at a time.”

    That’s a load of horseshit and you know it. How many times did your dick get hard when you put a 5.56 into some dude’s brain housing group? How many times did you almost cum in your tight whites while you watched the pink mist drift away in the breeze? Huh? There is no fixing you, Jake. You’re too far gone, man. The kid you used to be fractured and fell to pieces on the hot desert sands. We need a break, Jake. We need to forget for just a little while. Please, Jake.

    Jake fell to his knees. The pain of the collision with the unwavering pavement a minor inconvenience compared to agony he felt inside.

    “I don’t know how much longer I can take this shit,” Jake whimpered.

    Then get the fuck up and go inside. The respite we need is just inside that door and it comes in any flavor we want. Come on, man, we need this and you know it!

    Jake let out a sob. He was done fighting, tired of it. He climbed back up to his feet, the sins of the past pressed down on him. He went to the door, placed his hand against the push bar and paused.

    Don’t puss out on us now, Jake.

    Jake pushed the door open and went inside.

    The bar was dark.

  • The Hollywood Equation

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    The Hollywood Equation

     

    Are we getting what we asked for?

     

    There was an episode of the Geeks Guide to the Galaxy podcast recently that discussed sci-fi movies. More specifically the asked if we should support crappy sci-fi, or big budget spectacle sci-fi films so Hollywood will continue to produce them in the hopes that they will get better over time.

     

    My first reaction was to say hell yes we should support them.  Then I started to give the issue some serious thought.

     

    I thought about the movies I had seen and supported recently; Jupiter Ascending, Edge of Tomorrow, Automata, Oblivion, to name a few.

     

    Some of the movies listed above I enjoyed immensely while others were barely good enough to entertain me, and I’m fairly easy to entertain. Each and every one of these films left me feeling a little disappointed. It wasn’t hard to see that the plots could have better, stronger. Some had decision made to play it safe and appeal to all of us watching that are too stupid to get the deep philosophical stuff (fuck you for thinking that Hollywood!).

     

    I started to wonder what the movie landscape would be if we held Hollywood to higher standards. While i did love the fuck out of all the transformers movies, what could they have been if the plot and characters were just as important as the 3D renderings of Optimus Prime?

     

    Should I really sacrifice quality for quantity?

     

    The answer is no.

     

    If we stop supporting big budget halfway decent or shitty movies then they stop being made, or so I hope. Which leaves us, possibly, in a world full of those guilt riddled, over acted, pretentious, I studied at Cambridge so go fuck your own face Oscar bait movies. I can’t tell you how much I hate those movies. Not that they are all bad, but just on principle alone. Put that same level of quality into all of your movies or just stop making movies all together.

     

    There is one way we can send a message about what we want to see, two really.

     

    First, stop spending money to see these movies. We could, and the maker forgive me for suggesting this, pay more attention to what the critics say before seeing a movie. Not the over blown loud mouths that are mean and nasty for no good reason, but those that do a good job of analyzing a film and giving good honest reviews. They are out there, I promise.

     

    Second, we support the people that really I’ve the genres we do and make good films. For the most part this means indie films. There are a lot of really good indie films that don’t receive the attention they deserve. If they did, and those movies pulled in a good chunk of cash, then we would most likely get more films like them, possibly with bigger budgets.

     

    It’s going to be hard to not go and see a big budget, explosion riddled, colorful and prety blockbuster, but I think I’ll manage. Will you?