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Early Risers.


Mr.S.corn78
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1 hour ago, DaveF said:

Many thanks for the thoughts on what I can do with the various pictures etc in my loft. I am going to have a good think and first make sure I don't want to swap any of the pictures round I have on my walls of which there are a lot - pictures not walls that is.

 

Talking of pictures....

 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c07nm512l3do

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16 hours ago, iL Dottore said:

Awake at 03:08 🙁 but at least I got a snap of the permanent way people at work.

IMG_4944.jpeg.f922da28c370acd3c65cd7c84101b902.jpeg

Not the greatest photograph coming being taken with an iPhone on zoom.

 

Thinking about it, I don’t think that the various Japanese railway companies do much in the way of closing entire sections of track to traffic for days at a time. They even shifted an entire platform and track at Shibuya station overnight.

 

 

 

14 hours ago, Winslow Boy said:

That can't be Grizz can it! He'd have mentioned it if he was going to be on an away day.


 

はい、それは私でした。私は架線マストに一番近い、白い帽子をかぶったオレンジ色の服を着た男です。

 

Hai, sore wa watashideshita. Watashi wa kasen masuto ni ichiban chikai, shiroi bōshi o kabutta orenji-iro no fuku o kita otokodesu.


I should add that, what with all this long distance commuting, I am exhausted. 🥱 

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12 hours ago, BoD said:


I have visited both and enjoyed both.

I’m not sure why people seem to have such a ‘downer’ on them.

 

 

3 hours ago, polybear said:

 

I suspect it's the knowledge of what they once were, as well as "what they could be"; the Science Museum in London in London is a prime example of that (the different between what it was in 1992 and what it is now almost reduced a hard-as-nails Poly to tears.....).

I am definitely with The Bear on this one! And I remember even further back to when the Science Museum in London, the Natural History Museum in London, the Maritime Museum in Greenwich were state of the art and highly respected museums (so mid 60s). The Science Museum is but a shadow of its former self and the great Hall on the ground floor, once home to an impressive collection of beam engines and other Victorian and Edwardian steam contraptions has now been turned over to flogging cheap and nasty souvenirs in the "museum shop". Maybe I am old-fashioned, but I think it's much more fun to watch 100 tons of beam engine work at the press of a button then to buy a Batman shaped pencil sharpener made from the cheapest materials possible in the PRC.

 

What's happened to the Maritime Museum is nothing but a national disgrace: once it had many galleries full of beautiful ship models; models made by apprentices, models made by prisoners of war and models made by skilled enthusiasts, these have all been swept away and replaced by offices for the "administration" (funnily enough I don't remember such a large "administration" needing so much office space back when there were many many more exhibits on display than there are nowadays)

 

Add to add a rather unpleasant icing to this particular cake, in addition to dumbing things down (to try to attract the sort of visitor that would have absolutely no interest in coming to a museum no matter what)., there is also the pushing of various agendas, such as DEI, into various periods of history that were anything else but diverse, equal or inclusive. Periods of history where the Empire was considered mostly a good thing and slavery was something bad that the British had taken the lead in abolishing.

 

And let's be very blunt here: back then White Western European Males were not considered the evil bogeyman as they are today (don't you know that for many in the museum, arts and media worlds no matter what it is, it's always the white man's fault!)

 

Fewer exhibits, trying to make everything fit or push an agenda of one kind or another and dumbing down.... So yes, they are a shadow of what they once were and nowhere near what they could be, especially when stacked up against the best American, Japanese and European museums.

 

 

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The seasonal end of Friday night AFL left me at a loose end after 24 weeks of having something to watch.

 

However, wandering the backblocks of Amazon I discovered they have a secret stash of Australian movies of the late 70's and early 80's. 

 

Now I am going to put on my Australian cultural attache hat at this point, to give you a quick rundown on the Australian movie oeuvre.  

 

Basically we had a bloke called Gough Whitlam who became PM in 1973 or so who wanted to improve us culturally, so he offered generous tax concessions to those who invested in the arts.

 

Which was meant to cover ballet and writing thick books and so on but ended up mainly  going to anyone who wanted to make a movie because anyone with a camera could do that. So as a result there's a whole genre of movies called "ozploitation  movies" that were produced.  Most of these stumbled along  the fine line between   splatter movies and soft porn, but there were a few gems among them. The highpoints of this period were Mad Max and Road Games, the lowpoints were Turkey Shoot, Alvin Rides Again, Pacific Banana  and Howling 3 - The Marsupials.

 

Most of these movies were pretty dire  because they were made for the tax incentives rather than the story but one huge  fan was a young  Quentin Tarantino, who credits these Australian movies as the reason for him getting into film making -  so thank us for Kill Bill, Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs etc.

 

One controversial feature of these movies was that low-level nudity was allowed for 5 seconds - any   more than that and the office of film classification poked their nose in and the producers had to put up an argument that it was necessary on artistic grounds, but the film makers made the most of the time by expecting every leading lady to have a topless shot  whether it helped the plot or not. 

 

Happily for the film makers we had a thriving drive-in culture so distribution wasn't an issue because the drive-ins sucked in everything that could be distributed.  The screens were meant to be angled away from casual viewing but in the suburbs this was pretty hard to do so it was not uncommon to be driving past Bass Hill Drive-in or the one at Narellan and see a huge b00by appear in your peripheral vision which was somewhat distracting, but probably harder for those with young kiddies in the car who were curious about what they were seeing while sitting there  waiting for the lights to go green.

 

Anyway this is a long introduction to saying that  I watched  "The Money Movers",  which was a Bruce Beresford heist movie from 1978 which did use the 5 second allowance to advantage.

 

 

But I did not totally waste my time, because while watching it I simultaneously finished off  the CAD of another 3D model destined for the printer, a small shop with interesting details from Richmond in Melbourne.

 

 

Screenshot(710).png.1097d41190358639c3d59942cca762db.png

 

 

Now I just need to print it and paint it!

 

Screenshot(712).png.a3827614577d4827bad06a3e30509f78.png

Edited by monkeysarefun
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