A to Z Challenge 2025
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Tuesday, April 4, 2023
Hall & Oates Chariots of Fire Parody SCTV
C is For Chariots of Fire
A Month At The Movies

Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other a to z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
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I believe God made me for a purpose, for China,but he |
Monday, April 3, 2023
B is for Breaking Away
A to Z Challenge
A Month At The Movies
Hello and welcome back to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other a to z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to.
I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 24 more times this month.
Film: Breaking Away (1979)
Director: Peter Yates
By www.impawards.com, Fair use, Link
Breaking Away is a coming-of-age sports movie about four friends from Bloomington, Indiana. The movie features Dennis Christopher, Daniel Stern, Dennis Quaid, and Jackie Earle Hailey. Dennis Quaid and Daniel Stern are probably the most famous of the 4 now, but at the time I only recognized Jackie Earle Hailey from the Bad News Bears films.
The movie takes place in the late '70s in Bloomington, Indiana, a college town in the midwest. Christopher plays the main character Dave Stoller. The movie takes place in the year after Stoller and his 3 friends graduate from high school and are spending their gap year hanging around together when Stoller isn't cycling around Indiana or tormenting his father by cosplaying an Italian cyclist.
The movie does a great job of confronting the divides between social classes and generations. It has humor, introspection, romance, and intrigue while being true to its David vs. Goliath roots. The American Film Institute (AFI) has placed on two of its lists of top 100 films. In 2006 it was named #8 on the list of most inspirational movies. In 2008 The AFI named it 8th on their list of sports moves.
( Left To Right ) Christopher, Hailey, Stern, Quaid
(Photo by John Springer Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)
Positive Tomato: I seriously can't imagine anyone not liking it. Gene Siskel - Chicago Tribune
Negative Tomato: This timeworn material probably should work, but it doesn't really since, most of the film's angst and conflict seem calculated. Jeremy Heilman - MovieMartyr.com
The movie was filmed entirely in Bloomington, Indiana. If you are interested this video goes back and shows some of the main places where it was filmed.
Resiliency: Resiliency is sometimes pre-meditated as near the end of the movie when Dave and his friends tape Dave's feet to the bike pedals so as the commentators observe they can no longer switch riders for the duration of the race. That scene is a visual reminder to me of the end of Hebrews 12:1 , "And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us."
Top 100: When I last made my top 100 list, I wasn't really sure what to do with Breaking Away. I loved it when it first came out but when I saw it last 20 years ago or so I remember thinking it hadn't aged well. I watched it again earlier this year and it really resonated with me again. It would definitely make my top 100 this time out and wouldn't be surprised at all if it broke into the top 50.
For more A to Z challenge click here
Next Time: C is for Champion
Sunday, April 2, 2023
Last 5 Next 10
How do I spend my off day on the a to z challenge? By releasing 2 non a-z related posts. It is time for the first official last 4 next 10 of the year.
LAST FIVE
The Annotated Pride & Prejudice
Jane Austen
Annotated and Edited by David M. Shapard
Borrowed from libray.
Read to myself
.
Read myself borrowed from library.
The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club
Dorothy L. Sayers
Borrowed from Hoopla read from Ipad.
Steve Martin
Borrowed from Hoopls listened to on phone
Dorothy L. Sayers
Borrowed from Hoopla listened to on phone
An Old Fashioned Girl
Louisa May Alcott
Family Owned
Read to myself
NEXT TEN
The Last Juror- John Grisham
The Last Sweet Mile - Allen Levi
Write Better - Andrew T. Le Peau
Gentle and Lowly - Dane Ortlund
Luke - The Gospel of Amazement - Michael Card
What To Do on Thursday - Jay E. Adams.
75 Readings - An Anthology
Heroes of the Faith - Gene Fedele
The Five Red Herrings - Dorothy L. Sayers
Alone - Megan E. Freeman
Concise Theology - J.I. Packer
On The 40th day of the year I had read 8 books. 52 days later I have finished 5 more. So with 1/4 of the year finished I have finished 13 books. In 52 days I have gone from a projected 74 books at years end to a projected 51.57. With the Challenge this month I may not finish a lot of books and my projections may continue to plummet, but hopefully I'll get back into the swing after the challenge.
March Stats
I am taking a scheduled rest from posting on the A to Z challenge today. I have been posting my monthly stats the first day of the new month, but since yesterday was the first day of the challenge. and I knew I'd have a respite today, I decided to wait until today for the stats post. I posted on my blog 8 times last month. I had posted 9 each in January and February, so my average for the year has been pretty much the same. At this rate I should have 104 posts by the end of the year.
My average posts per month for the past quarter have been 8.63 rounding up to 9. Over the past 18 months I have posted 167 times for an average of 9.28 posts per month. If you take away my most prolific month (April 2022 - 28 posts) and my most abysmal (November 2021 - 1 post) my average goes fown to 8.63 post per month which is nearly identical to my output this quarter.
With my A to Z post yesterday this is the 30th month in a row that I have posted at least once on this blog.
I should be back later today with a second post regarding my last 5 books read since I was up past midnight finishing An Old Fashioned Girl. I have some work to do on the challenge as well today and make sure my next few posts are ready for publication.
Saturday, April 1, 2023
A is for Arsenic
A to Z Challenge 2023
A Month At The Movies
Hello and welcome to A Month at the Movies, my contribution to the A to Z challenge for 2023.
This year I am copying from a myriad of other a to z challengers by reprinting the same synopsis about my theme with every letter. You can skip over this part if you want to. I love movies and have decided to share with you a movie each day that I have enjoyed to one degree or another. With each entry, I'll give a brief synopsis of the film, share a positive and negative review from Rotten Tomatoes ( a website, I didn't use much at all until preparing for the challenge), discuss its resiliency (the theme of the A to Z challenge this year), and other tidbits like whether the film may appear in my top 100 film list, which I have been revamping this year. I think that's enough in the way of introduction, considering you'll be reading it (hopefully) 25 more times this month.
Film: Arsenic and Old Lace (1944)
Director: Frank Capra
Cary Grant stars in this dark comedy/ screwball comedy that was the first Frank Capra film I ever watched. The basic gist of the film is that Mortimer Brewster (played by Grant) is a theatre critic and avowed bachelor who at the beginning of the film marries the girl next door to his boyhood home in Brooklyn.
"The Fun" begins when Grant discovers his beloved salt of the earth aunts are actually serial murderers and is then also reunited with a few other of his sanity-challenged relatives.
Positive Tomato: It's not mere hyperbole to state that Frank Capra's Arsenic and Old Lace ranks as one of the funniest films ever made. Matt Brunson - Film Frenzy
Negative Tomato: Not one of Capra's best. Grant is too hammy and out of control, and without Boris Karloff as Jonathan Brewster, the joke is lost. Bob Bloom - Journal and Courier (Lafayette, Indiana)
I really enjoyed this movie watching it on T.V. as a kid. In recent viewing, I found it a little long and a little uneven but still enjoyed it and would probably watch it again, especially with folks who have not seen it before.
Resiliency: Mortimer Brewster shows a lot of resiliency throughout the film trying to figure out how to best deal with his family situation since he literally knows where the bodies are buried.
Top 100: I don't think this will make my top 100 list. I'm a Big Frank Capra fan and while it's not one of my favorite Capra films, I do think that maybe it would make its way onto the bottom 100 of my top 200 film list.
For more A to Z Challenge click here.
Next Time: B is for Bike Movie
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