Alex Remington blogs about pop culture at Remingtonstein, writes about baseball at Yahoo Sports Big League Stew, and blogs about the Atlanta Braves at Chop-N-Change.

Blog Entries by Alex Remington

Southern Tier Iniquity Black: Abandon All Other Dark Beers, Ye Who Enter Here

Posted January 6, 2010 | 01:48 AM (EST)


The sweeter, darker and heavier a food or drink, the likelier it is to be described as sinful. With dessert, the terminology of transgression is so overused that it's become nearly synonomous with sugar. With beer, the same often applies to high-alcohol dark beers, like Weyerbacher's magnificent imperial stouts...

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Sherlock Holmes: Decent Movie, But Couldn't They Do Better Than This?

20 Comments | Posted January 4, 2010 | 01:47 AM (EST)


Guy Ritchie has been on a nearly decade-long losing streak, with three flops in three tries after 2001's Snatch. But he managed to convince Joel Silver to give him $90 million to make a blockbuster all the same. It's also his first theatrical film for which he didn't write the...

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The Gashouse Gang: A Decent Book About the Most Memorable St. Louis Cardinals Team

2 Comments | Posted January 2, 2010 | 11:51 PM (EST)


John Heidenry's "The Gashouse Gang" is a nice homage to a team and era, but it's caught between genres. Heidenry, a St. Louis native and longtime Cardinals fan, clearly has a personal connection to the 1934 championship team, but he removes himself from the narrative. On the other hand, he's...

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Secret of Monkey Island and Monkey Island 2: Two Games Full of Pirate Jokes. What's Not to Love?

Posted January 2, 2010 | 05:29 PM (EST)


With all of the notoriety of the Pirates of the Caribbean movies (ratings: 80, 58, and 62), it's easy to forget some of the other pop culture buccaneers who kept the lights of booty and plunder alive during the modern era. Frankly, few did it better than Guybrush Threepwood, protagonist...

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Almost Human: Robots Aren't About to Kill Us, Because They're Less Reliable Than Windows 95

11 Comments | Posted January 2, 2010 | 05:08 PM (EST)


Lee Gutkind's 2007 book Almost Human: Making Robots Think offers an optimistic view of the world of robotics: no, robots will not revolt against their human masters any time soon, mostly because nothing in the field of robotics ever seems to work the way it's supposed to, if at all,...

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Thirst: A Terrific Debut Short Story Collection by a Peripatetic Quadrogenarian

Posted December 30, 2009 | 01:03 AM (EST)


Ken Kalfus published his first book, 1998's Thirst, at age 44, after years as a professional writer, occasionally publishing stories in various publications, and following his journalist wife to Ireland, Yugoslavia, and Russia, among other places. Most debuts tend to be semi-autobiographical, but this is a collection of short stories,...

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Up in the Air: George Clooney Learns the Meaning of Adulthood

5 Comments | Posted December 26, 2009 | 10:48 AM (EST)


Jason Reitman's new movie Up in the Air is a movie that's hard to dislike, though it may be hard to adore. It's glossy and slick, with a smooth but unsatisfied George Clooney (like so many others he's played, from Michael Clayton, rating: 77, to Out of Sight, rating: 95)...

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The Warriors: One of the Best Pure Action Movies Ever

6 Comments | Posted December 24, 2009 | 03:57 AM (EST)


"Nobody is wasting nobody. That is a miracle. And miracles is the way things ought to be." --Cyrus, "The Warriors"

Walter Hill's 1979 film The Warriors is a cult classic, a veteran of innumerable late-night cable showings and movie nights at your older brother's friend's house. It came out in...

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Allen Barra on Yogi Berra: One of My Favorite Sports Biographies Ever

Posted December 23, 2009 | 12:58 AM (EST)


There's no question that Allen Barra is one of the best long-form sports journalists working today. (One I'd put near him is L. Jon Wertheim, whose Running the Table, rating: 90, and Blood in the Cage, rating: 79, are among the best books ever written about billiards and mixed martial...

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Avatar: Crazy, Ridiculous, and Irresistible

7 Comments | Posted December 22, 2009 | 03:03 AM (EST)


"I'd say that you were the perfect combination of imperfections. I'd say that your nose was just a little too short, your mouth just a little too wide. But yours was a face that a man could see in his dreams for the whole of his life."
-- Louis Mazzini...
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Fantastic Mr. Fox: This Roald Dahl Adaptation Gets It Somewhat Right

2 Comments | Posted December 18, 2009 | 01:28 AM (EST)


This fall, we've seen two very different takes on beloved children's books: Spike Jonze's polarizing take on Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are ( rating: 40), and now Wes Anderson's predictably quirky version of Roald Dahl's Fantastic Mr. Fox. It's quite possible that the movies would have...

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Radiant Days, Haunted Nights: Yiddish Folktales Are Like the Brothers Grimm With Rabbis

1 Comments | Posted December 17, 2009 | 02:54 AM (EST)


Joachim Neugroschel is a very busy man. Born in Vienna as the son of a Yiddish poet (and a mother forbade the use of Yiddish in the home), he's one of the premier living translators of German into English, and probably the premier living translator of Yiddish literature. Among his...

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Land of the Dead: Why Can't More People Make Movies This Good for $15 Million?

1 Comments | Posted December 14, 2009 | 06:26 PM (EST)


Just about everyone knows about zombie master George A. Romero, the director who effectively created the standard pop culture image of zombies. I haven't seen much of his stuff: I watched a really poor public domain version of Night of the Living Dead a couple weeks ago, and it didn't...

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Bangkok 8: A Fun Summer Read, Even in the Fall

1 Comments | Posted December 10, 2009 | 08:09 PM (EST)


There's a long tradition of Western murder mysteries set in exotic Eastern countries: Martin Cruz Smith's Arkady Renko novels (set in the Soviet Union, Russia, and Ukraine), James Church's Inspector O novels (set in North Korea), Michael Walters's Nergui novels (set in Mongolia), and John Burdett's Sonchai Jitpleecheep novels (set...

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The Men Who Stare At Goats: Would You Believe the Book Is Better Than the Movie?

4 Comments | Posted December 7, 2009 | 06:18 PM (EST)


A few weeks ago, I reviewed Grant Heslov's movie adaptation of Jon Ronson's 2004 nonfiction book The Men Who Stare at Goats, a darkly comic look at some of the U.S. Army's paranormal investigations. I saw the movie before reading the book, and was unimpressed: the filmmakers often treated...

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Loom: A Curiously Beautiful Game from Lucasarts

1 Comments | Posted December 6, 2009 | 02:41 PM (EST)


George Lucas's genius has always been diversification: back when he was a gifted filmmaker, he was a pioneer of merchandizing, and founded what would become industry-standard effects and sound houses with Industrial Light & Magic and Skywalker Sound. Lucasfilms' computer animation division later became Pixar. And then, some time...

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Boiling Point: A Slightly Enjoyable Cop Drama from Wesley Snipes and Dennis Hopper

1 Comments | Posted December 4, 2009 | 11:54 PM (EST)


Not many people remember the 1993 cop movie Boiling Point any more, and it's not too hard to see why. (Tagline: "He's a cop who's reached the... Boiling Point.") It's only 16 years old, but it looks like it was made in the '80s, and its two stars -- Wesley...

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Romy and Michele's High School Reunion: Yes, It IS One of the Best Comedies of the '90s

4 Comments | Posted December 3, 2009 | 01:23 AM (EST)


Last night, I told a friend of mine that I love Romy and Michele's High School Reunion, and she reacted with surprise: "So you like chick flicks?" I was taken aback, because I love it so much that I don't even think of it that way, but then I realized:...

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Interview with Harry Gottlieb, Founder & CEO of Jellyvision, Makers of You Don't Know Jack

Posted December 1, 2009 | 12:38 PM (EST)


Harry Gottlieb founded Jellyvision in 1989, and his company burst onto the cultural map with YOU DON'T KNOW JACK, a popular 1995 trivia party game. Now his company's trying to solve your problems, including health care. I asked him a few questions by email.

Jellyvision's still best known...

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Red Cliff: The Movie John Woo Was Born to Make

5 Comments | Posted November 30, 2009 | 05:52 PM (EST)


John Woo is a fine director with an extraordinarily uneven filmography. His success seems to have a lot to do with the quality of his leading man. He came from Hong Kong to international prominence with Chow Yun-Fat as his muse (the Better Tomorrow trilogy; Hard-Boiled, rating: 77; The...

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