Dinner and a Movie
From a Maze to Amazed
From a Maze to Amazed
By
Steve Herte
I've
decided to break the bonds of conformity in my garden to include more
color. Yes, I love white and yellow flowers but after a while it does
become the same old, same old. My new irises arrived in time for
planting this weekend. Next year, instead of the uniform purple there
will be white, black, blue, yellow and rust irises. When my tulips
come they will expand my color palette from yellow and white with
shocking pink, orange, purple and bi-color tulips. The Hyacinths will
no loner just be blue and white. I'm looking forward to that.
In other news I've finally finished the baby blanket I'm crocheting for my god-daughter's next child (due September 29th). The whole family have a pool going to guess the sex, weight, length and possible name for the child. There are some very interesting submissions.
This week was a partial reconstruction of the 100-foot journey. First introducing my friend Betty to Indian food on Tuesday and dining French on Friday. Between her month long detail to Atlanta and visiting her family in Ecuador I find I have to fit in time for Monica when I can and Friday was the perfect opportunity, knowing how she enjoyed the French restaurant in Atlanta. It was really coincidental that the movie was about an inescapable maze and one of the categories on the menu was French for inescapable. Enjoy!
In other news I've finally finished the baby blanket I'm crocheting for my god-daughter's next child (due September 29th). The whole family have a pool going to guess the sex, weight, length and possible name for the child. There are some very interesting submissions.
This week was a partial reconstruction of the 100-foot journey. First introducing my friend Betty to Indian food on Tuesday and dining French on Friday. Between her month long detail to Atlanta and visiting her family in Ecuador I find I have to fit in time for Monica when I can and Friday was the perfect opportunity, knowing how she enjoyed the French restaurant in Atlanta. It was really coincidental that the movie was about an inescapable maze and one of the categories on the menu was French for inescapable. Enjoy!
The
Maze Runner (20th Century Fox, 2014) – Director:
Wes Ball. Writers: Noah Oppenheim, Grant Pierce Myers, T.S. Nowlin
(s/p), James Dashner (book). Cast: Dylan O'Brien, Aml Ameen, Ki Hong
Lee, Blake Cooper, Thomas Brodie-Sangster, Will Poulter, Dexter
Darden, Kaya Scodelario, Chris Sheffield, Joe Adler, Alexander
Flores, Jacob Latimore, Randall D. Cunningham, & Patricia
Clarkson. Color, 113 minutes.
When
viewing the trailers for The Maze Runner I was
thinking Lord of the Flies meets Labyrinth but
thankfully the film proved to be much more. In fact, looking back at
the previews I appreciate the masterful planning that went into
attracting an audience without giving away too much. The colossal
scope of the stage sets, the bone-jarring sound effects and the hint
(only a hint) of what dangerous creatures lurked in the winding
corridors surrounding The Glade at the center all worked together to
lure me to the theater. It was worth it.
For
three years, teenage boys have been one at a time thrust up a supply
elevator into the center of this impossibly high circular maze with
no memory of their past (except their name) and with the unspoken
challenge to escape it. Although the maze has four entrances from The
Glade, only one opens temporarily each day and closes before night.
Those designated as “runners” are exactly that, the fastest ones
who can see as much of the maze and remember it – hopefully to map
it and discover a way out – zip out and return before the gate
thunders closed. There’s one problem though, the maze changes its
configuration each day. Walls swivel, rise and fall on a ponderous
daily schedule.
Alby
(Ameen) is the leader of the “colony” (if you will) of boys as he
was the first to arrive and spend a whole month alone there. With the
help of Gally (Poulter) he has set up a civilization with rules and
job assignments for each new boy who arrives. They built their own
shelters, grow their own food and explore the maze. That is
until Thomas (O’Brien) arrives. Thomas is different. He’s curious
and wants to know why the boys are there, who put them there and how
to get out. He questions everything. When he hears this
blood-curdling sound from beyond the gate he’s told it’s a
“Griever” and that he doesn’t want to meet one. This curiosity
puts him constantly at odds with Gally until one day Alby and Minho
(Lee) are the runners and they do not make it back in time to cross
the gate threshold. Thomas runs to help them and is trapped with them
in the maze after dark. Alby has been “stung” by a Griever and
cannot run with them. They decide to make a rope out of the many
vines creeping up the sides of the maze walls (but none to the top)
to hoist Alby up and out of danger. A Griever attacks and Minho runs.
Thomas hides in the vines still holding the “rope” as the huge
bionic scorpion stomps menacingly by.
Fortunately
the two are reunited and go exploring (Why not? They can’t go back
to The Glade.) and, in the process they are chased by a Griever and
manage to trick it into entering a gap of two closing walls and it is
crushed. The remaining boys in The Glade are overjoyed and agog that
they are the first to survive a night in the maze.
Thomas’
curiosity is not sated and the next day he and a group of runners
investigate the slain Griever. A flashing red light inside the gap
inspires Thomas to get to boys to drag the creature’s leg out and
they retrieve a metal cylinder with a red digital number 7 on it.
They bring it back to The Glade. With Minho’s help Thomas discovers
that this device is a key to escaping the maze.
Things
get worse instead of better. The elevator rises with its final cargo,
a young girl Teresa (Scodelario), two syringes of blue liquid and a
note saying “She will be the last.” One syringe cures Alby of his
sting but at night, the stone gate doesn’t close. In fact the three
other gates rumble open and The Glade is over-run by Grievers.
For
some reason the Grievers break off the attack and leave a handful of
boys. Alby is taken and Gally blames Thomas for all the destruction
and pain. Thomas has been having dreams of past events and Teresa
appears in them. He realizes that he was among the people who put the
boys there in a cruel (but necessary) experiment to train “survivors”
who could live on the sun-scorched earth after a pandemic.
The
Maze Runner is an engaging movie with a new twist on the
doomsday story. I had no trouble believing any of the characters as
they were all well-acted. Though fantastic in scale I never once
wondered how the maze was built. I just accepted it. The Grievers
were well created and the special effects were clever enough to never
slow down the action and thus debunk them. They never looked phony.
Though there were battle scenes the gore was not played up, nor was
the “gross-out” factor. The script was clean and free of
unnecessary vulgarity. Everyone spoke and acted their age without it.
The hour and 53 minutes passed without my noticing any dead spaces to
cut out.
There’s
plenty of action and suspense and fairly loud noises (especially if
you’re viewing it with RPS) so, know your child’s reactions to
these before taking them. I enjoyed the film and stayed through the
credits. It looks pretty certain that they are planning a sequel.
Rating:
4½ out of 5 Martini glasses.
O
Cabanon
245
West 29th Street (between 7th and
8th Avenues), New York
According
to its website; a “cabanon” is a French word to define a
little hut in a garden. In the South of France it is more than that;
it’s a small place where you can cook, eat, talk, and have a little
nap…
From
the street there is no evidence of a garden but the restaurant is
completely open to the street with peopled tables almost forming a
sidewalk café. The bordering on garish red neon and white twinkle
lights on the yellow umbrella announce “O C” with the full name
etched onto the glass of the open doors. I strolled in and passed the
good-sized bar on the left to the Captain’s Station just past the
bar.
The
young lady staffing the reception told me I had a choice of rooms.
She walked me through the cozy brick-walled room lit by several
strings of white twinkle lights. I could sit there, or, she turned
the corner to the left, in this spacious room dominated by a
formidable wine rack. She noted that a party of 10 had canceled and I
had a choice of seats. I loved the room with its twin optical art
paintings on the far wall and the table at a slight angle beckoning
me. It was well-lit by a chandelier resembling a minor supernova with
light bulbs flaring out from the center at various distances.
I
was charmed. Roxanne, my server arrived, took my water preference and
presented the wine and drinks menu card and the even smaller food
menu. I chose a cocktail called “Just Like Heaven” – gin, egg
white, apricot liqueur or peach schnapps, Drambuie, lemon juice and
simple syrup – amazing and powerful. I decided not to have a
second, delicious but too dangerous.
The
food menu was divided down the middle into two categories;
Charcuterie (Delicatessen) Terre Et Mer (Land and Sea) and Les
Incontournables (Inescapable). I soon learned that Roxanne did not
speak a word of French when I had to point to the dishes after
pronouncing them. Later she told me she spoke three languages, two of
them Tagalog and Japanese, but none of them French. Together we came
up with a three-course meal. I suggested a wine from the Burgundy
region of France and she went to put in the order.
The
first dish arrived with a big “Yummy!” comment from Roxanne and
was Escargots – baked in parsley, garlic, brandy, pernod liqueur
and butter – served with crusty fresh bread. The enticing garlic
aroma combined with the other ingredients almost set me on a feeding
frenzy. I near forgot to photograph the dish. But with the wonderful
bread the seven (I got a bonus) gastropods disappeared in record time
with no evidence that the plate had been occupied.
The
wine steward apologized that she was out of the wine I chose and
suggested two others; either the 2011 Pinot Noir from Genevrieres,
Bourgogne or the 2013 Saint Pourçain, Loire Valley. She brought a
taste of both to help me to decide. The Saint Pourçain was a lovely
semi-sweet red dinner wine but the Pinot Noir had an undeniable edgy
character that made it exciting.
Next
to come to the table with an even more enthusiastic comment by
Roxanne was the Brie a la Truffe Noir – Brie Cheese refined (and
stuffed) with black truffle served with herbal loose greens salad on
a cutting board. The cheese was delightful all by itself but the
apple slices forming a crown on top added another dimension to its
flavor. Again, another disappearing dish.
My
main course was Les Pâtes Farcies (stuffed pasta) – jumbo shell
pasta filled with beef stew façon “coq au vin” garnished with
watercress. The dish looked very appetizing but was the only one that
was slightly off. The pasta shells were baked to almost crispness (I
would have preferred them tender) and the “stew” stuffing was on
the dry side. The first bite was a strong jolt of rosemary but that
tapered off. It was tasty but not what I expected. Pasta should not
require a knife to cut it.
Roxanne
suggested a dessert but I had a craving (and the appetite left) for
the Saucisson Chocolat – a sliced chocolate log with mixed nuts and
marshmallow. On a cutting board it truly resembled the sausage it was
named after. But the dark chocolate was heavenly. After four slices
my appetite waned and I had the remainder packed away. I probably
would have been able to finish it had not Roxanne been so sweet as to
serve me a Crème Brulée – Madagascar vanilla custard topped with
a layer of hard caramel and a dish of Macaroons beforehand. Loved the
first, sent back the second. “Don’t tell anyone!” cautioned
Roxanne. I didn’t.
The
double espresso finished the meal nicely. I would definitely return
to O Cabanon to sample different dishes such as the eggplant dish Les
Souliers Vernis (Varnished Shoes) or even their lobster bisque.
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