Friday, February 13, 2004

“The Other Brother 2: Dinner Time!”

Well most of my readers who are mainly people I see offline were quite surprised to hear that I had a half brother named Rick walking around out there. To be honest I totally forgot myself and recently after years of a falling out with my Father (his father too obviously) he decided he wanted to burry the hatchet. Of course I can’t fault him for that. However leading up to the dinner I was still void of any emotion or nervousness. We all set down for a Hughes Family Dinner.

The dinner went well he showed up with his wife and her child from a pervious marriage who they call “Binky” who thankfully doesn’t have any resemblance to the clown from Garfield and Friends. He is I guess eleven years old and I don’t actually recall his real name. He apparently has a sister and can’t figure out if I am actually related to either of them.

Lets see Rick is my half-brother and Binky and this random girl are his step-sons and a daughter So I guess that makes them my half step-niece and nephew. Carry the one, subtracted by the square root of 16. Um. So if this girl is really my half step-niece her half step-uncle type guy is a few years older than her cause I think I was told she was 21 or something.

We all had dinner together and I spoke more to Rick than Bill (my full brother) and could not get over that fact that he looks exactly like my father. It really bugged me out. If anyone sees Liza with her digital camera be sure to ask to see the picture, because its uncanny. Thankfully Rick who is in his late 30’s (odd for me to have such a gap) has a full thick head of hair which puts me at ease. That would also

I have seen him once again since the dinner and although I don’t see us entering the three legged race anytime soon I certainly see another family at the dinner table for holidays and such.

"Tucker at the Movies: Miracle"

The film Miracle tells the true story of the 1980 US Olympic hockey team that pulled off the impossible and ousted the USSR team on route to winning the gold medal. The game was much more than a simple hockey game it came during the peak of the cold war. The event came at a time when Americans were down on their luck, the king was dead, gasoline was in limited supply and overpriced, Russia had invaded Afghanistan, Americans had been taken hostage, and Americans were shocked by the Nixon debacle.

This was in a time when the hockey team wasn’t made up of a bunch of spoiled millionaires who were given free vacation to a far off location to pretend they care about the gold medal. The team played together for almost a year together before they went to the winter games. The team was a collection of college and junior hockey league players. An actual team.

The movie produced by Disney resulted in taming the language that likely spewed out of the young team and potty mouthed coach, but that sacrifice aside the writers tell true to the actual events. Of course the story itself of the underdog no one believed in doing the impossible seemed like a Hollywood fabrication so not much tinkering had to be done. However that is the beauty watching this film and knowing almost the entire events in the films narrative actually happened, and HBO’s documentary “Do You Believe in Miracles?” has the footage and interviews to prove it. In fact Miracle is just almost a motion picture remake of the documentary that I perhaps I should have hold off on letting Liza see till after our trip to the Cinemark.

Anyway the addition fleshing of the story lies in the life of the colorful coach Herb Brookes brilliantly played by Kurt Russell. Trust me I don’t throw around the term brilliantly when it comes to movies. However Russell manages to dissolve every ounce of his persona into the legendary hockey coach. He even nails the stature and you will forget almost entirely that it is Russell playing make believe. The film takes us occasionally into the home life of Brooks revealing that he had two true loves the game of hockey and his actual wife. Brooks was old school and never minced words and theorized that a system played by hard working well conditioned athletes could be an All-star team that relies on individual talent (are you listening Glen Slather?) . The story line is clearly more interested in studying Herb Brooks life than marketing the fresh faced actors playing the hockey team to young horny high school girls which could have made for a Freddie Prinz Jr. like flick.


As far as hockey movies go this the best hockey film ever made by far. Of course that is not saying a lot (to be fair I haven’t gotten around to seeing D3 or the one that the Duke starred in) but making a hockey film is extremely hard since you can’t fake the sport like baseball for football. First the casting department must find hockey players and turn them into actors or actors that can actually skate. However you don’t need to be a hockey fan to enjoy this film just like you didn’t need to be a horse racing fan to enjoy last year’s depression piece Seabiscuit. The acting is surprisingly solid for the mostly rookie cast, and Russell’s role is to anchor the inexperienced cast. Although a first viewing it might be hard to distinguish one fresh faced long haired hockey player from another especially if you don’t most know the story. Most notably Eddie Cahill, who plays goalie Jim Craig will is not only talented but stunningly handsome (Liza says he looks eerily like me) stands out in a few intense scenes with his windower father and Brooks.


Russell deserves an Oscar nomination for his performance but of course he won’t get it with the timing of the films release. However the release couldn’t come at a better time, the condition of the country’s morale easily rivals that of 1980 with the country divided over policies, evaluated terror alerts, war, and truck loads of corrupt politicians and political lies.

As for the hockey fan in me I am glad to see they didn’t make the movie too vanilla and gave us references to the IHL, Joey Mullen, and Pelle Lindberg that will likely zip over the heads of most movie goers like Mike Eruzione’s shot over a falling Commie goalie’s shoulder.



Wednesday, February 11, 2004

"Does Size Matter?"

The AHL always the place for the NHL to experiment with no rules increased the size of the neutral zone for 8 games this past month. The red line and two blue lines were widened from one foot to three feet. This was the brain child of former NHLer Bobby Smith who propsed it in the hockey news.

The idea behind the experiment is to see if a wider neutral zone will actually prevent the trap. The NHL really wants scoring up in the league and Gary Bettman wants the puck in the net more. Attempts this year like goalie equipment crack downs and the posting the list of "divers" in lockerrooms hoping to get more powerplays have done nothing. Scoring is actually down AGAIN this year.

The line changes down in the AHL for a few games didn't do much either. Although there is still potential in the idea of having longer passes that won't be considered two line passes the rule is confusing. The player with the puck has to actually clear the larger blueline before his teammates make it into the zone. This caused much confusion and coaches claimed the rule wasn't caught as many as 3 times during one of the games.

Former NHL players making their way in the AHL chimed in.

Karl Dykhuis claimed it gives you a chance to make longer passes, however that things become trickier at the blueline.

Aaron Gavey a former Dallas Star said didn't even notice a difference.


Coming up:

Bid for the Whitehouse stuff

and

a follow up to the Echelon Mall Story, Dinner with my Half Brother.