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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: technot, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. Miss Potter - a short film review

miss potter.jpg I'd wanted to see the film Miss Potter when it was first released but somehow never made it to the cinema. Anyway I have finally got round to watching it on DVD and I really enjoyed it. The chance to find out about authors' lives doesn't come about very often especially on the big screen and often the emphasis is on the writer's personal life - like in 'Becoming Jane.' But happily although Miss Potter also centres on the romantic part of her life there is a good dose of biographical detail about her career too. I didn't know anything about Beatrix Potter other than she wrote some of the most successful childrens' books ever including Peter Rabbit, Mrs Tiggywinkle and Jemima Puddleduck but the film has left me keen to find out more. The film tells how she first came up with the characters and stories as a young girl often while holidaying in the Lake District. Beatrix (played in the film by Renée Zellweger) came from a well off family but was very reluctant to marry as her mother wanted prefering a career. Her parents feature heavily in the film, her mother is not impressed by her books while her father thinks she's a really talented illustrator and writer. Her books were turned down by a number of publishers until Frederick Warne & Co agreed to print her 'little book.' The film explains how they agreed so they could give their younger brother Norman (played in the film by Ewan MacGregor) a project but one they expected him to fail at. The relationship between Beatrix and Norman moves from professional to romantic but there is trouble ahead (keep a box of tissues handy) ... Miss Potter is beautifully filmed (lovely scenery) , very well acted and includes a really nice touch when Beatrix's illustrations become animated when she talks to them - something non-writers probably wouldn't understand. The movie is also another fabulous example of a writer being rejected time and time again before going on to have amazing success - a story I never tire of!

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2. Miss Potter - a short film review

miss potter.jpg I'd wanted to see the film Miss Potter when it was first released but somehow never made it to the cinema. Anyway I have finally got round to watching it on DVD and I really enjoyed it. The chance to find out about authors' lives doesn't come about very often especially on the big screen and often the emphasis is on the writer's personal life - like in 'Becoming Jane.' But happily although Miss Potter also centres on the romantic part of her life there is a good dose of biographical detail about her career too. I didn't know anything about Beatrix Potter other than she wrote some of the most successful childrens' books ever including Peter Rabbit, Mrs Tiggywinkle and Jemima Puddleduck but the film has left me keen to find out more. The film tells how she first came up with the characters and stories as a young girl often while holidaying in the Lake District. Beatrix (played in the film by Ren??e Zellweger) came from a well off family but was very reluctant to marry as her mother wanted prefering a career. Her parents feature heavily in the film, her mother is not impressed by her books while her father thinks she's a really talented illustrator and writer. Her books were turned down by a number of publishers until Frederick Warne & Co agreed to print her 'little book.' The film explains how they agreed so they could give their younger brother Norman (played in the film by Ewan MacGregor) a project but one they expected him to fail at. The relationship between Beatrix and Norman moves from professional to romantic but there is trouble ahead (keep a box of tissues handy) ... Miss Potter is beautifully filmed (lovely scenery) , very well acted and includes a really nice touch when Beatrix's illustrations become animated when she talks to them - something non-writers probably wouldn't understand. The movie is also another fabulous example of a writer being rejected time and time again before going on to have amazing success - a story I never tire of!

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3. My tech-NOs

After Rochelle and Jenna and Laura. Some of these are by choice and some are just… weird broken parts of my brain but it hardly matters which now, does it?

  • I can’t set the time on the clock in my car and it’s set to some crazy time [i.e. not like an hour or two off]. I’d like to, but this time of year if I’m not driving the car it’s too cold to be in it. Erica?
  • My bank is in Washington state. While I do a lot of e-banking with them, I generally mail my paychecks to my bank to deposit them. This isn’t strictly technological in nature, but it’s definitely an old-fashionedness that looks like a tech-not.
  • I can barely use my cell phone. I can take a picture. I can make and receive phone calls. I can text, but I still try to answer it when someone is text messaging me. I like to think I’d be a better study if the thing worked in my house.
  • I have very little e-book curiosity. My interest in e-books is purely professional.
  • I have an iPod I rarely listen to. I have an iPhone I don’t use much (both were gifts). I like to have them, but I usually just listen to the radio in my car and iTunes on my laptop at home.
  • I have created more podcasts than I have listened to.
  • I don’t play online games much. I play Scrabulous (come find me on facebook!) and that’s pretty much it. When you have a job that’s online, spending more time there just doesn’t seem as appealing.
  • I use my TV to watch movies only, and even then pretty rarely. I was a Nielsen family earlier in the month and I sent the whole book back blank.
  • I don’t have voice mail, just an answering machine. No caller ID, so please tell me who you are when you call.
  • When I have to set the alarm to wake up, which happens rarely, I’m as likely to set it for PM as for AM. This is more of an absentminded professor thing than a tech-NO, but I’ve sortof never gotten the hang of setting an alarm on something without hands
  • And lastly, because I grew up in the country, I pretty much don’t understand locks. I have a heck of a time with any door that locks, remembering which direction to turn the key, or rememebring my keys period.

I can do pretty much anything with any sort of computer, but that doesn’t mean I know everything or do everything with technology. How about you?

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