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Friday, December 19, 2008

Friday Movie Review - Love Actually

Today I am reviewing another holiday movie that is a wonderful mix of drama, romance, and comedy. It is one of my very favorites: Love Actually.



"Love Actually" follows the storylines of several characters, and their search for romance over the holiday season. One lonely young man wants to leave England and spend the season in America, where he is sure he can seduce beautiful women with his accent. A writer visits Portugal and falls in love with his Portuguese maid, who speaks no English. A widowed father watches his son strive to attract the attention of the girl he likes (my mommy's favorite storyline!). These stories and several more (including the new Prime Minister's unexpected romance) are all included in this movie.


Now, this movie is too mature for young kitties, pups, and beans. There are several instances of language and adult situations.

But the stories are funny and heartwarming . . . and sometimes heartbreaking as well. And in what other movie can you see Colin Firth, Hugh Grant, and Liam Neeson all in one place? Not to mention Alan Rickman and Mr. Bean himself, Rowan Atkinson.

And of course, one of the best scenes of all . . . the Christmas play at the local school, with a wonderful performance of "All I Want For Christmas Is You."



If your bean is a true romantic at heart, and has a taste for naughty british humor, then you should both snuggle up on the couch this holiday season and give "Love Actually" a try! I give it two paws up and a rumbly purr!

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Thankful Thursday - Secret Paws!

This week my sisters and I got our SECRET PAWS!!!!

We were so excited!

We were even MORE excited when we found out who our Secret Paws was . . . TESLA!!!!!

Tesla, you did a super PAWSOME job shopping for us! Jingly balls and catnip and even a super cool stocking! We love everything!

Here is how the Secret Paws went down . . .

All three of us had to sniff the box and get excited, and then snoopervise mommy while she opened it for us.


And then we read who it was from and got even more excited!


And OH MY PAWS AND WHISKERS! Is that a whole tub of nip?! And jingly balls?!


I can't wait to keep mommy up all night whapping these!


What a totally pawsome stocking! No, mommy, you can't steal it for your own. It is OURS.


And . . . the pièce de resistance . . . . TUB O' NIP!


It's sooooooooooo wonderful . . .


Even Holly lost her cool and rolled and drooled on the lid.

Thanks so much, Tesla!!!!!

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Wordless Wednesday - Toboe and Riku

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Tuesday with Toboe

Here he is. Our new little brother.
The little brother Sandy Paws brought us.
I'm going to have a few words with Sandy Paws.


His name is Toboe, pronounced TOE-BOE-WAY. It is Japanese for howl. Which is something he does a lot of. His brother, Riku, is Uncle Sean's baby. It's fine if Sandy Paws wants to bring a puppy to Uncle Sean, but I'm sure a puppy wasn't on my Christmas list.

I'm still working on how to get him back to the North Pole.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Mancat Monday - WHAT THE PAW?!

I'm very disappointed in Sandy Paws.

Does anykitty know how to send a Sandy Paws present back?

* * *
Also, don't forget that today is the first showing of the new CCSI! Maybe my first job as an actor will help me recover from my disappointment in Sandy Paws.


Visit Sassy's blog to watch!

Friday, December 12, 2008

Friday Movie Review: The Golden Compass


This week I am reviewing a wonderful film that is based on a book that my mommy loves, Philip Pullman's "The Golden Compass," which is the first book in his trilogy "His Dark Materials." This is a good holiday movie because it has a lot of adventuring in snow with talking polar bears!

The Golden Compass (2007)
Directed By: Chris Weitz
Written By: Chris Weitz (Screenplay)
Philip Pullman (Novel)

In "The Golden Compass," we meet Lyra Belacqua, a little girl who is being raised by the scholars of Jordan College, at the request of her uncle, Lord Asriel. Lyra refuses to become a proper and educated lady, instead preferring to run wild with her best friend Roger who works in the kitchens, and the Gypsies who travel up and down the river outside the college. After a bet she places with the gypsy children, Lyra finds herself in the dressing room of the college . . . and sees someone put poison in her Uncle Asriel's wine. After coming out of her hiding place and warning him, her uncle tells her to hide again . . . and to keep her eyes open and her mouth shut. Hiding in the wardrobe again, Lyra watches her uncle's presentation to the scholars, and first hears about the thing that will change her life forever: dust.

Lyra's world is a world parallel to the one we beans and furries live in now. The major difference between our worlds is that in Lyra's world, bean's souls walk beside them in the form of animals. These soul animals are known as daemons. Lyra's daemon's name is Pantalaimon, or Pan for short, and since Lyra is still a child Pan can change shape depending on his mood . . . but once a bean grows up, their daemon chooses one form and never changes again. For example, Uncle Asriel's daemon is a beautiful and dangerous snow leopard named Stelmaria.

And it appears that, according to what Lyra learns from her uncle's presentation, that daemons settling into one shape, and other parts of maturing and becoming an adult, all have to do with the mysterious particles known as "dust" that filter into her world from ours and a million other worlds . . . and which can be seen in the far north, in the northern lights.

Soon after Lyra makes this discovery, a strange and beautiful woman, Mrs. Coulter, comes to the college to take Lyra away with her on an expedition to the far north. Before she leaves, Lyra is entrusted with a golden compass by the scholars of Jordan College, but is warned that Mrs. Coulter must never know that she has it. Who is Mrs. Coulter, what does she want with Lyra, and can Lyra trust her?


Lyra has many adventures, all of them thrilling and dangerous, and she makes many brave and wonderful friends along the way, including Iorek Byrnison, one of the armored bears of Svalgard in the far north, and Serafina Pekkala, a witch of the far north.

While the books have been classified as young adult, and the movie itself marketed for an even younger crowd, it has to be said that in truth both are more adult in terms of the concepts that are introduced. While young beans will enjoy the talking animals, grown beans will be intrigued by the story itself. "The Golden Compass" takes on physics, religion, philosophy, and spirituality and questions them all. While this is done more so in the books, it is definitely touched upon in the movie. "The Golden Compass" is a visually stunning and thought-provoking movie, all presented in the guise of a children's fantasy. I give "The Golden Compass" two paws up and a whisker spread. I also suggest that if you love to read well-written fantasy, and have not yet read the "His Dark Materials" trilogy, then you should definitely give it a try. Philip Pullman is a totally pawsome author!

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Will It Fit In Mommy's Stocking?

Mommy says this is what she wants for Christmas.

Does anykitty know where I can get one for her?