

Second snow of the year, before Halloween! Seems winter’s on its way…


Second snow of the year, before Halloween! Seems winter’s on its way…
Whoever has no house now, will never have one.
Whoever is alone will stay alone,
will sit, read, write long letters through the evening,
and wander along the boulevards, up and down,
restlessly, while the dry leaves are blowing.The last stanza of “Autumn Day” by Rainer Maria Rilke*
— translated by Stephen Mitchell
I watched Charlie Kaufman’s Synecdoche, New York last night (the last stanza of “Autumn Day” is read during the opening scene). I’ve been a big fan of Kaufman, but I wasn’t sure I’d like Synecdoche, New York based on early reviews. It sounded heavy, dark, obtuse, plodding. And it actually was heavy, dark, obtuse, and plodding, but in a good way. I like Peter Bradshaw’s review in The Guardian, “The film is either a masterpiece or a massively dysfunctional act of self-indulgence and self-laceration.” I’d say it was both. Roger Ebert says, “I watched it the first time and knew it was a great film and that I had not mastered it.” I agree. I’d like to watch it again a few weeks/months from now.
There were several funny scenes, hints of Adaptation and Being John Malkovich, but all in all, it’s a sprawling, melancholy film. But if you, like me, have been a bit hesitant to take on Kaufman’s latest, give it a try, it’s worth it.
* Read the whole of “Autumn Day” here.
Yesterday, la esposa guapa and I took Ski Santa Fe’s Fall scenic chairlift from the base at 10,400′ up to 11,200′, then hiked ~3.5 miles (round trip) to the 12,400′ peak above Nambe Lake. We ate a picnic lunch just below the peak, and generally had a nice time of it.

“UFO” cloud (that’s what we call them):

The view:

Up on top — cold and windy — with smoke from a small forest fire (we think it was probably a prescribed burn):

A touch of snow:

—
Yours truly, in my red-and-yellow “Ronald McDonald” outerwear, sporting my much-loved Mountainsmith lumbar day-pack and Canon EOS 400D:



There’s a fully-yellow cottonwood out on the highway and one of our cottonwoods has begun turning yellow…in mid-August? Isn’t that a little early?
But I must admit I’m enjoying this autumnal August.