Arts & Life

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – More than 15 local musicians will be performing and leading songs at the “Peace Meal & Hootenanny” on Saturday, Aug. 18, at Lakeside Park (also known as the County Park) off Soda Bay Road near Kelseyville.

This free event, part of the Lake County Summer of Peace, begins with a potluck picnic at 5 p.m., followed by a folk music sing-along that continues until about 9 p.m.

People are encouraged to bring lawn chairs or blankets to sit on.

Musicians participating in the hootenanny include Carl Stewart and other members of the Blue Collar band, Jim Williams, Don Coffin, Three Deep, Bill Barrows, Not Two, Dennis Purcell, Cactus & the Rose, Kathi Williamson and Michael Richeson, Carter Klippel, Emma Stewart, Raylana Aragon and Linda Guebert.

The hootenanny program features folk standards like “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?” “Blowin’ in the Wind,” and “This Land Is Your Land,” but also includes less well-known songs and original material.

“It’s really exciting to have so many talented people coming together in the cause of peace,” said Guebert, who is coordinating the event as well as performing. “I think it will be an uplifting experience for everyone who attends.”

The “Peace Meal & Hootenanny” is sponsored by the Unitarian Universalist Community of Lake County.

For more information, call 707-279-4272.

tedkooserchair

I am very fond of poems that don’t use more words than they have to. They’re easier to carry around in your memory.

There are Chinese poems written 1,300 years ago that have survived intact at least in part because they’re models of succinctness.

Here’s a contemporary version by Jo McDougall, who lives not in China but in Kansas.

Telling Time

My son and I walk away
from his sister’s day-old grave.
Our backs to the sun,
the forward pitch of our shadows
tells us the time.
By sweetest accident
he inclines
his shadow,
touching mine.

American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation ( www.poetryfoundation.org ), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2001 by Autumn House Press. Jo McDougall’s most recent book of poems is Satisfied with Havoc, Autumn House Poetry, 2004. Poem reprinted from The Autumn House Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry, 2nd ed., 2011, by permission of Jo McDougall and Autumn House Press. Introduction copyright © 2012 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction's author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006. They do not accept unsolicited manuscripts.

TOTAL RECALL (Rated PG-13)

If you remember, “Total Recall” starred Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sharon Stone in a science-fiction thriller, based on a Philip K. Dick story, about a man with erased memories that come back and trigger all sorts of mayhem.

The new “Total Recall,” to be sure, is a remake of the 1990 film, but there a lot of differences, which I will not dwell on because my memory has pretty much failed me and, well, it is time to move on.

What is new is the setting of Earth, in the not-so-distant future, where chemical warfare has rendered most of the planet uninhabitable, with the exception of Australia and the United Kingdom.

Australia is called the Colony because it is a suburb for migrant workers, while the British islands are now called the United Federation of Britain (UFB), the upscale city center, home to the elite and government leaders.

Colin Farrell’s Douglas Quaid works in a factory that assembles the robotic police force known as Synthetics, droids that look like cheap imitation Imperial storm troopers on loan from “Star Wars.”

Living in the Colony, Douglas commutes to his job in an elevator-like chamber that rockets through the Earth’s core in mere minutes. It’s a nifty contraption that might be used as a selling point for high-speed rail, though we don’t know about the cost overruns.

The landscape in the squalid Colony is reminiscent of the bleak world of “Blade Runner,” but here the drab architecture is so gray that it recalls the Stalinist era of unappealing public housing.

In science-fiction movies, life in the future hardly ever looks very promising. I guess if it really looked like a utopian dream, it wouldn’t seem all that intriguing or result in a compelling story.

Unfortunately, familiarity with the theme of “Total Recall” does not make for an entirely persuasive account of one man’s struggle against the governmental leviathan. But it’s still fun to see a dogged guy take on the villains.

But for recurring nightmares, Douglas would probably remain comfortable coming home at the end of the day to his attractive bride Lori (Kate Beckinsale).

Yet, something nags at his conscience, and he pays a visit to Rekall, a company that offers to create pleasant memories with the help of a chemical implant.

The session goes horribly wrong when the Rekall process triggers Douglas’ repressed memories of his past life as a secret agent.  

Alarm bells go off and the UFB security forces descend on the laboratory. When the dust settles, Douglas has killed about two dozen federal agents in a big shootout.

Forced to go on the run, Douglas quickly learns that there are very few people he can trust, least of all his wife, who turns out to be a highly-trained UFB operative skilled in martial arts and all sorts of weaponry.

That Douglas is considered a person of interest to the government controlled by Chancellor Cohaagen (Bryan Cranston) is something of a puzzle, because we are not entirely sure for what side Douglas was once a spy.

Because the government run by Cohaagen is so autocratic and ruthless, there is the inevitable resistance movement that the chancellor’s minions are relentlessly seeking to destroy.

The rebel leader is identified as Mathias (Bill Nighy), who is so well-hidden that not even his own operatives know the actual location of his hideaway.

Once on the lam, Douglas is aided in a getaway in a thrilling high-speed levitated auto chase by rebel commander Melina (Jessica Biel).

Apparently, Douglas and Melina had a previous history together, but the chases and confrontations with the opposite forces leave little room or time to rekindle the old romantic flames.

“Total Recall” is heavy on action and great special effects, leaving insufficient time for existential reflection on the troubling implications of the dystopian universe in which the oppressed are trapped under the thumb of the evil Cohaagen.

Fear not, this film is, above all, filled with graphic action and brutal violence, and Douglas Quaid becomes an effective action hero, albeit one without any special or unusual powers.

Visual effects, large and small, represent remarkable feats in “Total Recall,” from the complex moving parts of the elevator systems to the simple glowing cell phone implanted in Douglas’s right hand.

It matters not at all that logic is sometimes missing, because the end game, sought by director Len Wiseman, is to deliver the action goods.  

Well, the director succeeds, even though few of us may recall his movie to any great degree mere weeks from now.

DVD RELEASE UPDATE

Tom Selleck delivers some of his best work as small-town police chief Jesse Stone, in a series of eponymous TV movies that have aired for years on the CBS Network.

I recently became hooked on the “Jesse Stone” TV movies, most of which I found readily available at my local supermarket at bargain rates.

“Jesse Stone: Benefit of the Doubt,” apparently the eighth installment, is being released on DVD, without the benefit of any special features.

But never mind the extras.  The “Jesse Stone” franchise is riveting entertainment, in which Selleck’s effective crime fighter is a conflicted character with a troubled past.

It would help immensely to catch up on the previous films, mainly so that you are familiar with the great cast of characters on both sides of the law.

Even so, “Jesse Stone: Benefit of the Doubt” stands quite well on its own. Just know that Selleck’s police chief, who had been forced into retirement, is called back to duty in this installment.

Returning to his job, Selleck’s Jesse Stone does not disappoint with his uncanny ability to use his intuition to sort through a maze of misleading clues.

Tim Riley writes film and television reviews for Lake County News.

NORTH COAST, Calif. – Janie Rezner, host of ‘Women’s Voices’ on KZYX, will feature certified nurse-midwife and author Patricia Harman on the Monday, Aug. 20, show.

The show will begin at 7 p.m.

Harman will discuss her newest book, “The Midwife of Hope River.”

Harman, who has written two acclaimed memoirs – “The Blue Cotton Gown” and “Arms Wide Open” – has written a brilliant novel that is partially inspired by her own experiences as a lay midwife in the 1960s and 1970s living in rural communes in Virginia.  

With her stunning fiction debut, Harman creates an uplifting novel that celebrates the  miracle of life, and the world of women giving birth in their own beds, without hospitals or doctors.

It sweeps readers away to another time and place, one of the most tumultuous times in American history, with the challenges that the Depression, prohibition and the West Virginia Coal Wars brought to an already struggling Appalachia, yet the honesty and humanity of the characters make it feel utterly close and real.
 
The show can be heard live at www.kzyx.org . It will be archived at www.radio4all.net under Janie Rezner. There will be time for call-ins.

LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Golden Follies will return to Lakeport for two performances this month.

The shows will take place at 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 11, and 2 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 12, at the Soper-Reese Community Theatre, 275 S. Main St. in Lakeport.

These high kicking senior performers, ages 60 to 86, will be certain to dazzle you with their high energy and professional performance in this brand new show as a benefit for the Lake County Arts Council.

Back by popular demand, this exciting troupe of 50 talented women from the Bay Area and Sacramento wowed theater goers in their two previous visits to Lake County.
 
Producer, choreographer, costume designers and dance instructors Diane Tembey-Stawicki and her sister Susan Bostwick, offer instructions at their studio in Hayward.

Tembey-Stawicki and Bostwick have performed all over the United States, on cruise ships and the Continent.

Their Golden Follies perform at venues throughout the Bay Area and have performed with the Oakland East Bay Symphony at the Paramount.
 
All seating is $20 and tickets are available at the Soper-Reese Box Office, located at 275 S. Main St. in Lakeport on Fridays or at www.soperreesetheatre.com and at 707-263-0577.

Tickets also are available at the Main Street Gallery, 325 N. Main St. in Lakeport, 707-263-6658; and at the Travel Center, 1265 S. Main St. in Lakeport, 707-263-3095.

For additional information, please contact the Main Street Gallery at 707-263-6658.

COBB, Calif. – Cobb Mountain Artists member Gregg Lindsley of Earth and Fire Pottery is offering classes.

Classes are held in Kelseyville on Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. and on Saturdays from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.

In Upper Lake, classes are Saturdays from 9 a.m. to noon.

For more information call Lindsley at 707-490-7168 or visit him online at www.earthandfirepottery.net .

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