February 28, 2009

Laughable loves

I brought this book by Milan Kundera to Barcelona called Risibles amours. It can be translated as "laughable loves". I had already read the book before, and it is a pleasure to reread it. There are seven short stories in it. In the first one, there's a great moment where a couple comes into a factory of some sort in order to find a woman. (I'm sparing you the details.) The wife asks her husband to describe the woman to her, but the only thing he can remember is that she was beautiful. He is then pressured into giving out more details about the woman, and so he says she was blond and tall. But the woman, who is terrified to be found, is neither blond nor tall. The man had simply been so impressed by his beauty and so, to him, she was certainly blond and tall.

In another story, there's a great passage I will be attempting to translate:

"It was a situation that was never to be repeated in his life: he had confronted the unimaginable. He had just lived this brief period of his life (this heavenly period) when imagination is not yet saturated by experience, (...) when you know very few things, so that the unimaginable still exists; and if the unimaginable is about to become a reality (...), you start to panic. And he really did panic when, after a few more meetings where he remained irresolute, she started to interrogate him in great detail about his student room, almost begging him to invite her."

Besides that, today my taximan seemed like he was about to cough his lungs out. And the weather is not that great today in Barcelona, but I still hope to get some sun at one point!

February 27, 2009

This is for Alex (the first few sentences :P)

Yes, I am going to Brazil this summer. For a month. For a research project. I don't know which one yet, I have merely given out my choices, and they are the ones who have my fate in their hands. :) So, Alex, have you got any travel plans for the summer? If anyone else want to share their summer plans, feel free to do so :)

On a side note, I am going to Barcelona for spring break tomorrow... actually today. This will be the first time that my complete family (my parents, my sister, my brother and I) will be in Europe together. Usually, my parents bring only one of us to Europe each summer. Yes, I am a spoiled brat. I will mostly be studying in Barcelona, though, as lame as that sounds. I have exams coming on when I come back, and I do hope to get some studying done while I am in Barcelona. I have already been to Barcelona once, and in my mind, there is not that much to see in Barcelona, so I let it stay that way, so that I am not too tortured while I am over there. I mostly consider it as a gastronomic trip. Tapas every day, yum.

I don't know if I will be able to pursue this blog while I am in Barcelona. Perhaps not every day, as I have been doing, that is almost certain. I might just be telling you about the places I go, since it is so useful to you, since you are all always going to Barcelona... ;)

I have to pack my suitcase now, and I really don't feel like it, as I have just returned from a semi-goodbye party, where there was lots of wine and this Beauty and the Beast movie... I have to, though, all in all, I have five hours to pack my suitcase. Gaah.

February 24, 2009

Portugese food

For my friend's birthday, we went to a Portugese restaurant in St-Hubert, on Chemin Chambly. (Really random place.) It is called Viana-Sol. It was a great little place. Loads of good hot soup and olives. After that, I had tons of mussels, with really good fries, and there was a great chocolate mousse for dessert. I don't know why, but Portugese restaurants always seem to give out huge portions. I hope that this is what I can expect from my trip to Brazil this summer (I knooooow). I look forward to coming back to this place.

February 23, 2009

So...

I don't have that many comments, except for the fact that Sean Penn proved my Canadian papers wrong. They were all rooting for Mickey Rourke. Yeah, well...

IMDB's daily poll asked us to choose our favorite Oscars moment. I obviously couldn't vote, but I got to know which were the key moments of the night and checked some of them out on YouTube later on. There was the Jimmy Kimmel spot with Tom Cruise, which was kind of cool. There was also the Pineapple Express skit, which was OK. Just watching James Franco being funny is great. :) The best part is when he just stares happily at himself kissing Sean Penn. Good times.

I love this scene 8

"You're studying, I'm prying into your personal life."
"Oh, oh, Guns of Brixton!"
"You've tried to explain to me how on earth Coldplay could be considered an alternative band..."

February 21, 2009

The Rules of Attraction

My list of books I still have to read is a bit traumatizing to me. It seems like I have never read any book at all. To reassure myself, I'll start reflecting from time to time on books I have read recently... even though "recently" covers a rather large span of time.

I found The Rules of Attraction by Bret Easton Ellis in a bookstore the last time I went to the United States. I was very happy to have found it, because it seems as if there are always the same Bret Easton Ellis books in Canadian bookstores: American Psycho, Glamorama, etc. I had seen the movie adaptation of The Rules of Attraction a while ago, but I didn't remember it much, and so I was curious about the book.

After I had finished reading it, I was very perplexed. Apparently, in American liberal arts colleges, all they ever do is fuck, drink, party, intoxicate themselves and sleep. And, from time to time, they go to class for three hours. After reading the book, I looked for scenes from the movie on YouTube. The movie made the story look a lot more... colorful than when I had read it. The book had seemed so bleak to me. I then realized that I had read it as a drama, when I should have in fact expected a comedy. I now have to reread it as a comedy, when I will be done with the other 50 books I have to read, I guess. 

One thing I've learnt from the book: Nobody likes the right person.

February 19, 2009

In my honest opinion

The best Oscars ceremony I have had the chance to see in my short life was the 75th one. Big anniversary. There were a lot of my favourite movies: Gangs of New York, Chicago, The Pianist, Catch Me If You Can, About a Boy. Yeah, well, movies meant for a large public, I know. There was that kiss from Adrien Brody to Halle Berry, and there was that speech he did which was tearjerker material. Eminem won Best Song with "Lose Yourself", which was kind of rad. Too bad he wasn't there, though.

Shitty idea the Oscars once had: rejuvenating the ceremony by having Beyoncé sing most of the songs. Urgh, I can't stand Beyoncé. Having her sing the song from Les Choristes? Bad, bad idea.

I won't be able to watch the Oscars this year because I have an exam on Monday. Blargh, student life. Hugh Jackman as the host, that could have been interesting. I will probably comment on the winners, though...

February 18, 2009

I love this scene 7

"Yeah, I'm not into astrology, okay?"

I love James Franco's smile :)

February 17, 2009

Natalie Portman

Doesn't it sometimes seem to you like we live in an era where everybody likes Natalie Portman? I swear, every hipster (yes, I'm categorizing) wants to do Natalie Portman. Seriously, what the heck is up with that? There's a group called Natalie Portman's Shaved Head, for God's sake. (They're okay. Some non-descript dancy act.)

There's been a trend with these little independent movies making it to awards ceremonies. Slumdog Millionaire, JunoLittle Miss Sunshine, Sideways, Garden State. I haven't watched Slumdog Millionaire yet. By the time Juno came out, I was already sick of this particular trend. Little Miss Sunshine seemed okay, but I never got through it. Sideways was incredibly painful. Anglophone wine snobs doing French word-dropping is a no-no. And finally, Garden State, with the ever so present Natalie Portman. The classic hipster movie. I didn't like it that much. I can think of two funny moments. One is when they are running like madmen to avoid a rocket or something. The second one is when we realize that Zach Braff's character can't swim.

To finish up, here's a gushy moment for you: Milo Ventimiglia is now single!! NOW I can marry him. No problem.

February 16, 2009

Last week-end

New topic! I like to eat out a lot, so for the Montrealers reading me, you might get a few ideas from this blog from now on. (Shifting from pop culture to lifestyle...) I'm putting this post under "Places": it will mostly be places to eat, but other places might come up too.

I tried the new vietnamese restaurant that opened in my little suburb. It is part of a big Asian complex, since my suburb is basically Montreal's South Shore's Chinatown. The place is called Sao Sao: no idea what it means, and it doesn't really sound vietnamese. The restaurant filled up in no time. Unfortunately, it seemed as if there wasn't enough staff in the kitchen to keep up with all the clients. We waited a really long time for our meal. Okay, the place is new, but my father kept saying it wasn't an excuse. The staff on floor seemed completely overwhelmed. Perhaps they hadn't ever expected to receive so many people in their restaurant?... Anyway, aside from this point, the food was okay. There was a really good mango and shrimp salad (very fresh mango) and I ordered rice and grilled pork, a vietnamese classic. My meal wasn't particularly warm, but it didn't really matter. According to my mom, the soup was good, and that's pretty important, since it's a big classic also. All in all, I would come back to this place, but not anytime soon. I would wait for them to get used to the rhythm, or I would go at a random hour, so that there are no other clients in the restaurant. And I would definitely order the mango and shrimp salad again. 

Saturday night, I went to a fancy restaurant with my parents. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I have no life. But I had completely forgotten about Valentine's Day and I had the choice between studying my head off or getting free food. Besides, I love dining with my parents. They always bring me to fancy places, and it's not as if they're a totally lovey-dovey couple.

The restaurant was called La Porte (The Door, for anglophones) and it's on St-Laurent street or, as we call it, the Main. A very animated street, great ambiance. We had a fixed menu that night. It was pretty expensive, but usually it's not that bad a price. We tasted a lot of different things, all in pretty small portions, but all incredibly delicious. Lots of interesting mixes, and nothing too weird.

We began with a "petite patience", or a "little patience", meaning something to make us wait. It was a small shooter of "brandade de morue": sort of a cod purée. There were also dried tomatoes. I am used to having my brandade warmer than that, but it was still really good.

Next we had two apetizers. The first one was duck liver with piglet truffles confit (not my translation...), along with a potato shooter. When I first read the menu, I was really weirded out by this idea of a potato shooter, but it turned out to be really good. (I'm giving up on finding synonyms for "delicious" and "really good".) It was warm and very tasty. The duck liver was to be spread on a special little warm bread. The bread was a bit sweet, and it was the definite star of the course, along with the potato shooter.

The next apetizer was a tartar of oysters and truffles in a hot cream of parsnip. On the menu it said we were supposed to get scallops as well, but when the meal was described to us when we received it, there was no mention of scallops. I didn't feel any, either. I had never eaten raw oysters and had always been disgusted by it, but this time it slided down really well. The meal was a great mix of hot and cold. Man I have a thing with temperature.

Our first main course was a piece of monkfish crusted with chorizo resting on ink risotto along with a piece of bok choy with a lobster foam on it. The bok choy tasted great with the lobster foam on it. As for the fish, it was simply delicious. It didn't really taste like fish, but it had a really great texture. 

Second main course. This was a Gaspor's piglet roasted with grilled hay in a cast iron pot. Aside of it was a spinach nem (which is actually a vietnamese roll, when it does not have spinach in it) and a little polenta bun with reduce. All of these were great. The piglet was very well roasted, and the polenta had a nice corn taste to it. You know what was great about the polenta? It was warm. :)

The cheese! Really interesting mix. We had a small slice of gorgonzola with pear crumble and gingerbread on the top. Gorgonzola is a pretty strong cheese, and the sweetness of the pear crumble and the gingerbread counteracted that. Delicious.

Finally, the desert. It was pretty simple, compared to the rest. It appeared as an ordinary chocolate cake to me. Okay, you know, it was Forêt Noire, but that doesn't mean much to me. It was very tasty though, I'll have to admit that. What I liked most about it was the sherbet on top, which was a sherbet of some kind of red fruit. Raspberry, cranberry, I don't know. Maybe I just liked it because it was cold. I like things that have a definite temperature.

To finish up, there were also sweets! First off, a little chocolate sausage (don't ask, just know there was no pork involved, and that it was delicious); second, a little lemon cake; and finally, a delicious lavender and red fruits macaroon. Perfect.

My favorite elements of the meal were the potato shooter, the fish, the piglet and the polenta. :) I just really rediscovered polenta. 

The place was full, and my parents complained that the meal took a little bit too long, but perhaps my parents are just difficult. I think it's fine if you want to take your time. The place itself is really beautiful, too.

Okay, maybe it's not somewhere you would go for an average night out, but you know, if you have your job and you are well established in your life... Anyway, I certainly hope this place will still be around in a few years.

CONGRATULATIONS, YOU'RE AT THE END OF THE POST!!!

February 14, 2009

Movies I still have to watch

In alphabetical order of director. 

 1) Manhattan - Woody Allen
 2) The Big Lebowski - Joel Coen
 3) The Outsiders - Francis Ford Coppola 
 4) Almost Famous - Cameron Crowe
 5) Se7en - David Fincher
 6) Stay - Marc Forster
 7) I'm Not There - Todd Haynes
 8) Easy Rider - Dennis Hopper
 9) Mulholland Drive - David Lynch
10) Proof - John Madden
11) Girl, Interrupted - James Mangold
12) The English Patient - Anthony Minghella
13) To Kill a Mockingbird - Robert Mulligan
14) Gattaca - Andrew Niccol
15) Sin City - Robert Rodriguez
16) Phone Booth - Joel Schumacher
17) Taxi Driver - Martin Scorsese
18) The Village - M. Night Shyamalan
19) The Ring - Gore Verbinski
20) The Fountainhead - King Vidor

February 13, 2009

I am in love with Henry James

I have an optional class in American literature, which is a field completely opposite to the one I am studying in. I have given up trying to explain to my fellow students why I took this class. I really love it, that's all, and it is the class I am having the least difficulty with. For the course, I am currently reading Henry James' Washington Square, and I love it. It is funny because in this class I got to read The Scarlet Letter, which I had wanted to read for a while, and later I will be reading Death of a Salesman, which is in my to-read list. I had a Henry James on this list, Daisy Miller, and when I first learnt that we would be reading a different Henry James, I was a bit disappointed. I was thinking: "Man, I could have gotten so much stuff out of my to-read list!" However, I now think I would have been contented with any Henry James. Washington Square itself is not particularly captivating, until now; however, Henry James is such a fine writer, and I find him really funny. It's subtle humor, but I love it. It is as if he writes about these really boring characters and makes fun of them with us. I have not had the class on Henry James yet and so I cannot tell you anything else in particular about him, but anyway... he rocks.

February 12, 2009

February 11, 2009

CDs I still have to buy

In alphabetical order of artist.

1) Talkie Walkie - Air
2) The Three E.P.'s - The Beta Band
3) Medulla - Björk
4) Teenager of the Year - Frank Black
5) Melody of Certain Damaged Lemons - Blonde Redhead
6) I'm Wide Awake, It's Morning - Bright Eyes
7) Paris 1919 - John Cale
8) Murder Ballads - Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds
9) The Dandy Warhols Come Down - The Dandy Warhols
10) Odditorium or Warlords from Mars - The Dandy Warhols
11) Welcome to the Monkey House - The Dandy Warhols
12) Green Mind - Dinosaur Jr.
13) Before and After Science - Brian Eno
14) The Singles - Feeder
15) Here, My Dear - Marvin Gaye
16) Dry - PJ Harvey
17) Is This Desire? - PJ Harvey
18) Uh Huh Her - PJ Harvey
19) Celebrity Skin - Hole
20) Live Through This - Hole
21) Pretty on the Inside - Hole
22) Fun House - Iggy & the Stooges
23) Raw Power - Iggy & the Stooges
24) The Stooges - Iggy & the Stooges
25) Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin
26) Loveless - My Bloody Valentine
27) Substance - New Order
28) School of Rock - Original Soundtrack
29) Westing (By Musket and Sextant) - Pavement
30) Wish You Were Here - Pink Floyd
31) Doolittle - Pixies
32) Surfer Rosa - Pixies
33) Trompe le Monde - Pixies
34) Black Market Music - Placebo
35) Placebo - Placebo
36) Sleeping With Ghosts - Placebo
37) Without You I'm Nothing - Placebo
38) Third - Portishead
39) Berlin - Lou Reed
40) Transformer - Lou Reed
41) Bad Moon Rising - Sonic Youth
42) Daydream Nation - Sonic Youth
43) Goo - Sonic Youth
44) Horses - Patti Smith
45) Love. Angel. Music. Baby. - Gwen Stefani
46) If It Was You - Tegan and Sara
47) So Jealous - Tegan and Sara
48) This Business of Art - Tegan and Sara
49) Desperate Youth, Blood Thirsty Babes - TV on the Radio
50) I Know You're Married But I've Got Feelings Too - Martha Wainwright

February 10, 2009

Cheap sex galore!!!

There was this poker event with my class last Friday, and so a lot of people kept talking about "Pokerface" and kept doing the same pose as on the video on photos. I decided to check out the videoclip, and it is ONE OF THE MOST AWFUL THINGS I HAVE EVER SEEN.

Here is Lady Gaga's message to you: "I do it for the money."

February 08, 2009

I love this scene 4

Best ending ever.

"Be cool!"

February 07, 2009

Books I still have to read

In alphabetical order of author.

 1) Tuesdays with Morrie - Mitch Albom
 2) Mansfield Park - Jane Austen
 3) Persuasion - Jane Austen
 4) The Second Sex - Simone de Beauvoir
 5) La peste - Albert Camus
 6) It Takes a Village - Hillary Rodham Clinton
 7) Living History - Hillary Rodham Clinton
 8) Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad
 9) David Copperfield - Charles Dickens
10) Great Expectations - Charles Dickens
11) A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius - Dave Eggers
12) Middlemarch - George Eliot
13) Absalom! Absalom! - William Faulkner
14) As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
15) The Sound and The Fury - William Faulkner
16) Everything Is Illuminated - Jonathan Safran Foer
17) Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close - Jonathan Safran Foer
18) Reality Sandwiches - Allen Ginsberg
19) Dead Souls - Gogol
20) Catch-22 - Joseph Heller
21) About a Boy - Nick Hornby
22) High Fidelity - Nick Hornby
23) The Polysyllabic Spree - Nick Hornby
24) Songbook - Nick Hornby
25) The Kite Runner - Khaled Hosseini
26) Daisy Miller - Henry James
27) Big Sur - Jack Kerouac
28) The Dharma Bums - Jack Kerouac
29) The Subterraneans - Jack Kerouac
30) Into the Wild - Jon Krakauer
31) The Fortress of Solitude - Jonathan Lethem
32) The Holy Barbarians - Lawrence Lipton
33) Nouvelles - Guy de Maupassant
34) The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter - Carson McCullers
35) Atonement - Ian McEwan
36) Moby Dick - Herman Melville
37) How to Breathe Underwater - Julie Orringer
38) Champagne - Monique Proulx
39) Du côté de chez Swann - Marcel Proust
40) Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand
41) Huis clos - Jean-Paul Sartre
42) The Jungle - Upton Sinclair
43) We Owe You Nothing, Punk Planet - Daniel Sinker
44) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde - Robert Louis Stevenson
45) The Song Reader - Lisa Tucker
46) Mrs. Dalloway - Virginia Woolf
47) Orlando - Virginia Woolf
48) A Room of One's Own - Virginia Woolf
49) To the Lighthouse - Virginia Woolf
50) L'ombre du vent - Carlos Ruiz Zafon

February 05, 2009

Girly post

Hotness.

1) Jakob Dylan. Bob's son. Old. Married. Looks like Trent from "Daria". I love his music :)

2) James Franco. Thirtyish. At first I only knew him as Harry Osborn. (Spiderman? What Spiderman?) Who knew that he was such a comedian and that he was a part of the Judd Apatow crew? (OMG I LOVE "FREAKS AND GEEKS".) Watch his Funnyordie series here. Also, he is going to play Allen Ginsberg in a movie about Howl's trial. How hot is that?

3) Milo Ventimiglia. Also thirtyish. Short. I like him particularly as Jess in "Gilmore Girls".

Do I like James Dean types? I think I do. Do I like James Dean himself? Not so much, actually. He acts like a madman in East of Eden. TERRIFIC MOVIE, though.

February 04, 2009

I love this scene 3

"Hot date?"
"Raincheck?"

February 03, 2009

explaining the domain name

The Edukators is a German movie about three kids wanting to change the world. Foreign movie = love love love. After I saw this movie, I went on its website and the only thing I remember about it is this one sentence: "Edukate Yourself".

Edukate yourself. Know the world you live in, and know what it is you are fighting against.

My best friend's favorite quote also comes from this movie, so The Edukators holds a special place in my heart. :)

February 02, 2009

what I'm listening to at the moment

1) PJ Harvey's Stories from the City, Stories from the Sea. I love the song "Good Fortune".

2) Yeah Yeah Yeahs' Fever to Tell and Show Your Bones. I'm more familiar with Fever to Tell, though. My favorite song is "Cold Light" and listening to "Tick" in class makes me want to get up and dance away.

3) The Clash's "Straight to Hell". M.I.A. got her opening riff for "Paper Planes" from this song.

Man I don't listen to current music.

On a side note, the guy who created Playmobil is dead!! Noooooooooo. And apparently, the Super Bowl was cut off by an X-rated movie in Arizona.

February 01, 2009

I love this scene 2

I love Rory's definition of great writing, and I love the confrontation with Dean.

"It's seven o'clock."
"I promise I'll speak slowly."
"Personally I could care less if she eats."