Can anyone explain this to me? Maybe I just missed something, though I don't think so.
I previously blogged about seeing The Curious Case of Benjamin Button - I think I actually saw it on the day it opened. Anyway.....
One scene in the movie just really bugged me, and I still can't figure it out, and I'm wondering if anyone else is scratching their heads over this, or they just write it off to "movie magic", or "poetic license", or just what exactly did I miss...
So, after taking the briefest of glances at the Baby Benjamin's face, Benjamin's father grabs him up when the infant is only a few minutes old, wraps him up and never looks at the kid again, and dumps him on a doorstep.
Then, sixteen or however many years later, this bio-dad spots much older, and extremely physically altered Benjamin, NOWHERE NEAR the place where he dumped the infant, and yet he instantly recognizes him as his son? The now grown man who in NO WAY resembles that infant the father last saw, for all of 3 seconds, years and years earlier?
No way.
Someone please explain this to me, or agree that I am right to be bugged by this.
Not that this was the only thing about this movie that bugged me - but this was my major issue.
Thanks.
Showing posts with label good grief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label good grief. Show all posts
Thursday, January 22, 2009
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
The Blizzard of Aught-9
So, as I said yesterday, there was a 60% chance of snow overnight,
and I planned to get up early, as these events tend to not stick around too long in this area.
And I actually DID manage to get up a little earlier - around 7:30, and I headed outside in my bathrobe with Bailey, and look what I saw:
The snowflakes were as big as Bailey's soccer ball!
OMG!
Be afraid, people - be very afraid!
Well, OK - this is what I really saw: a light, extremely light, dusting of snow, and some scattered flurries blowing around.
The sun had just come up, and while this truly is an usual sight for this area, there was so little accumulation that Bailey didn't even notice it.
But our crack emergency preparedness teams did - and they actually cancelled school for the day, and many other scheduled activities. Good grief.
There was less than 1/8 inch accumulation on the ground, by my estimation, and absolutely no accumulation on roadways.
And it wasn't snowing even anymore.
And by the time I left for work at 9:15, what little bit HAD accumulated, was gone.
What a freakin' fantastic snow day those kids must have had!
But my super-cool camera has this really neat feature - let me show you!

It has one setting where if you press the shutter button once, it will take 2 consecutive, almost simultaneous shots - one in natural light, and then one with flash.
So this is the first shot I took of my deck -- natural light.....

And this is the shot immediately afterward, with flash -
It makes it look like nighttime - and look how those snowflakes pop!

This is a picture of a tree that blew down in my yard about 6 weeks ago, that I am too broke to have hauled away....

And this is the same shot a nanosecond later -
I just think this camera feature is the coolest thing ever.
Of course, I don't get out much, either.

So this picture shows the massive snow accumulation in Aiken that led to school closings and public panic.
And believe it or not, the local TV station I am watching right now is running promos for their lead story @ 11PM: "How Your Friends and Neighbors Handled the Snow, Tonight at 11".
Seriously.
Seriously?
What snow - there was ZERO accumulation in Augusta, less than 1/8" here in Aiken, and it was all gone by 9 AM, other than some off-and-on flurries up until about 2 PM. Flurries, people - that is not snow, nor is it something that needs to be "handled".
And yes, WJBF, I am talking to you.
And yes, this is my fourth blog post in four days - surely this must be one of the signs of the Apocalypse.

And I actually DID manage to get up a little earlier - around 7:30, and I headed outside in my bathrobe with Bailey, and look what I saw:
The snowflakes were as big as Bailey's soccer ball!
OMG!
Be afraid, people - be very afraid!

The sun had just come up, and while this truly is an usual sight for this area, there was so little accumulation that Bailey didn't even notice it.
But our crack emergency preparedness teams did - and they actually cancelled school for the day, and many other scheduled activities. Good grief.
There was less than 1/8 inch accumulation on the ground, by my estimation, and absolutely no accumulation on roadways.
And it wasn't snowing even anymore.
And by the time I left for work at 9:15, what little bit HAD accumulated, was gone.
What a freakin' fantastic snow day those kids must have had!
But my super-cool camera has this really neat feature - let me show you!

It has one setting where if you press the shutter button once, it will take 2 consecutive, almost simultaneous shots - one in natural light, and then one with flash.
So this is the first shot I took of my deck -- natural light.....

And this is the shot immediately afterward, with flash -
It makes it look like nighttime - and look how those snowflakes pop!

This is a picture of a tree that blew down in my yard about 6 weeks ago, that I am too broke to have hauled away....

And this is the same shot a nanosecond later -
I just think this camera feature is the coolest thing ever.
Of course, I don't get out much, either.

So this picture shows the massive snow accumulation in Aiken that led to school closings and public panic.
And believe it or not, the local TV station I am watching right now is running promos for their lead story @ 11PM: "How Your Friends and Neighbors Handled the Snow, Tonight at 11".
Seriously.
Seriously?
What snow - there was ZERO accumulation in Augusta, less than 1/8" here in Aiken, and it was all gone by 9 AM, other than some off-and-on flurries up until about 2 PM. Flurries, people - that is not snow, nor is it something that needs to be "handled".
And yes, WJBF, I am talking to you.
And yes, this is my fourth blog post in four days - surely this must be one of the signs of the Apocalypse.
Labels:
Aiken,
Augusta,
Bailey,
blizzard,
good grief,
snow,
snowflake,
soccer ball,
WJBF
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