hudebnik: (Default)
hudebnik ([personal profile] hudebnik) wrote2012-03-25 09:29 am

Pop culture

With "The Hunger Games" coming out in theaters this weekend, [livejournal.com profile] shalmestere and I got a copy of the book and read it. It's a good read, with characters one cares about, and it looks as though it would lend itself reasonably well to movie treatment (handling the internal monologue with a combination of voice-over narration and flashbacks).

[VERY MINOR SPOILERS FOLLOW]

But I have to wonder: has author Suzanne Collins ever shot an arrow from a bow? Significant parts of the plot involve the protagonist's acquisition and use of a bow and arrows. I don't object to the shooting -- everything Katniss does in that realm could be done by a very good archer, which she is. There is no mention of ever stringing or un-stringing the bow, but that may not be a problem: I've never hunted with a bow, and I don't know how long it's practical to carry a strung bow before the constant tension starts damaging the bow. What bothered me was the references to putting down and picking up a "loaded bow". First, that's strange terminology... but more importantly, in my experience, if you put down a "loaded bow", the arrow falls off the string and it is no longer a "loaded bow". As [livejournal.com profile] shalmestere points out, those passages might make sense if it were a cross bow, but a crossbow would be more complicated to build in the wilds (as Katniss's father has evidently done a number of times, and as it is suggested early on that Katniss might need to do).

The wilderness-survival parts are no "My Side of the Mountain", but (as a not-particularly-experienced wilderness-survival type myself) I didn't see any howlers.

Anyway, I think it'll probably be a decent movie.


Then last night, wandering around the satellite-dish menu at random, we decided on a lark to watch "The Big Bang Theory", which several people we know have raved about. I don't know: maybe this was a particularly bad episode, but neither of us felt any need to ever see it again.

[identity profile] hrj.livejournal.com 2012-03-25 05:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I've come to the conclusion that BBT is one of those weird cultural shibboleth things. The "like" and "dislike" groups appear to be significantly polarized and yet have no other clearly identifiable group characteristics. Which is to say: lots of people with whom I otherwise share pop-culture tastes assure me I should love it. And yet, I hate it. (I have a fair amount of passive exposure to the show because my tv always boots up to that channel and the show is on at the time I normally turn it on.)