dr_phil_physics: (kw-office)
Getting Better

So we're recovering from our bout of intestinal bug. Makes it a bit creepy to go to this particular movie after being sick. Almost a shame there wasn't a hacking cough... (evil-grin)


Contagion [PG-13]
Holland 7, #2, 4:20pm, 2×$5.75

There are plenty of killer plague movies out there, including Outbreak and The Andromeda Strain. But rather than the military being a villain, here there are other demons, including the virus itself. And the cast is extraordinary -- Lawrence Fishburne, Kate Winslet, Matt Damon, Gwyneth Paltrow, Elliot Gould, Jude Law. But the real star may be the CDC. We want the CDC to be calm, confident, professional and successful in real life.

Contagion does a good job of laying out the timeline of the epidemic, the search for a cure, dealing with the crisis and tracking down Patient Zero. Also the mechanism of the spread and the international travel connections. And the breakdown of civil society. If anything, the delivery might turn off viewers who want their action movies to be loud, noisy, devoid of thought on the screen or any hint of science literacy on the part of the viewer. Certainly the older couple sitting behind us had to talk a lot to piece together some of the plot.

Jude Law plays a special kind of anti-science blogger trying to cash in on the crisis at any cost. I think they could've developed the black market false cures further, even with fake ID wristbands, if those are required to move around. On the plus side they've done some very nice things of internationalizing the crisis and spreading the hot spots around.

There's not a lot of description to go along with the good looking technical scenes. I know enough about BSL4 labs to know why they seal and inflate the empty suits to look for leaks. And others at the CDC should have told Kate Winslet how to pack her go bag for Minneapolis in the winter.

Although we get the whole Internet subplot, I can't help but wonder if this was filmed or written just long enough ago to fail to take into account the social networking as witnessed in the Arab Spring revolutions. One reference to Facebook and some teen texting makes this look dated, unfortunately.

And many of our characters end up with failures of character at some point, though to be sure they aren't unexpected.

My one big question remains, though -- why the hell is this also available in IMAX? I'm not sure I want to see rioters in IMAX, and there are a lot of beautifully filmed scenes with either wide vistas like empty airport terminals or close-ups on faces. And even the geek in me didn't see enough detail in the Bio Safety Level 4 labs for techy geek porn IMAXized. Also, opening on the 9/11 weekend?

Still, it is beautifully filmed, the final scenes give us some resolution to some hanging plot bits, and there are some outstanding performances as the victims -- in particular Gwyneth Paltrow gets to chew up some scenes. And I love forensic plague movies which are smart and literate.

Recommended

Dr. Phil

Fire Two!

Saturday, 5 December 2009 02:39
dr_phil_physics: (upsidedown-winslet)
A Day Of Running Errands

That's what Wednesday was supposed to be. I had quite a number of things planned out. But that was tossed in the rubbish bin when I got an email from Mrs. Dr. Phil before noon that the Grand Valley Family Clinic in downtown G.R. was going to have H1N1 vaccines, both shots and nasal mists, for employees, dependents and family. 3:30 to 6:30pm. Okay, so rather than run around, I could go down and get first in line. Then after lunch, I got a call from Mrs. Dr. Phil wondering if I could just pick her up after work and we'd both go down and see if they had any vaccines left.

We got our regular annual flu shots way back on 18 September, earlier than usual. But as my PHYS-1060 Stars and Galaxies students have succumbed to the evils of the H1N1 virus, I've wondered when or if we'd be able to get vaccinated. On the one hand, we're both over fifty, so there's some evidence that exposure to the bad flues of the '60s and '70s might provide some immunity. On the other hand, with reports of perhaps 20% or more of WMU students getting H1N1, and several of my students even being stowed in the quarantine dorms, I'm clearly working in a cesspool of swine flu infection. (grin)

We got down there and there was nobody in line. They'd had a lot of customers early on, but there was no one waiting as we filled out the forms. I'd been concerned that they'd only have the nasal mist vaccine left, and since I'm still taking some steroids for my sinuses, I didn't know if that was a clever idea. Not to worry, old fogies like us over-fifty types aren't supposed to get the nasal mist -- as I thought I'd heard a while back, it's way less effective for us.

So that was Wednesday and this is Friday night now. And other than a little bit of upper arm soreness, we've not had any problems. It takes some time to be fully effective, but if I can keep from getting sick between now and the start of classes in January, I hope I can make it through the double-flu season of 2009-10 without getting sick from that crud.

Yay, vaccines! Boo, viruses!

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (Default)
Re That Public Option Thing

My friend [livejournal.com profile] therinth Erin from WOTF XXIV is a burn nurse in Real Life. She has a comment today about TV medicine and how far that is from Real Life -- and in particular, how such things may color the health care debate for some people.

My comment on her LJ entry: "Just as I can "enjoy" SF movies where the science-y part derails two minutes into the story, I can enjoy medical and legal shows -- even when I know damned well that it doesn't work that way.

"Having said that, I am so going to link this to Facebook and my LJ. I'm only sorry that my few readers mostly agree with us about the health care options. One does tire preaching to the choir...

"Well said, Erin!"

I cannot think of anything else to say at the moment.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (rolling-stone-boat-2)
Fire One!

Yesterday Mrs. Dr. Phil realized that her university was doing free flu shots today (Friday) from about ten to noon. Usually this is complicated for me -- as a spouse I can get them free, too -- because my teaching schedule in Kalamazoo doesn't always mesh. But this was easy, with me at WMU only Tuesday and Thursdays this semester.

So there I was at 9:46am feeding quarters into a meter in front of the Kirchhoff Center, then head inside where (a) I saw Mrs. Dr. Phil right ahead in line and (b) the table filled with clipboards and data sheets and pens. I picked up a clipboard, started filling it out, and by the time I was done -- there was a line of faculty and staff waiting for clipboards. Ha! Got in line next to Mrs. Dr. Phil and a few minutes later we stuck with very thin needles.

This is the Ordinary Flu Shot, same as we've been getting for fifteen years or more. Gotta be about the earliest I've got a flu shot in years. The Piggy Flu Shots? Expected the end of October, but the county health department will be regulating who are the highest risk. I'd think a college professor would be a high at risk person. (grin)

Autumn Arrived

Sure, it's the week before the autumnal equinox, but by Thursday this week Fall seems to have come it. Lows in the 40s and Thursday it barely made 70. Of course it got up to about 83°F in Allendale today, but we're turning some of the corner here. Tuesday the drive home was made more painful by hitting the westward driving segments just when the sun was straight ahead. That and the massively fast repaving of M-45 west of Allendale.

Bouncing Prices

Meanwhile, since Labor Day, gasoline has been playing ping-pong between about $2.42.9 to $2.59.9, with the price shifting up or down by a dime or more for no apparent reason.

Actually, there is almost NEVER a real reason for gas price fluctuations, not ones which make too much economic sense. Or decency.

For Your Amusement

Might as well do something to make this post worth reading. So here's a link to my online friend Jim Wright's Stonekettle Station blog with some hilarious postings about cats. PLEASE, put down the food and drink before you click on this. Jim is a gifted writer and when he gets really going, his manly tour of his many workshop or how his cats are trying to kill him, he is funny. I read the series out loud to Mrs. Dr. Phil and I dare you to read this aloud without breaking up and becoming incoherent.

Seriously.

You're welcome.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (lifesavers-winslet)
Sounds Like A Science Fiction Plot

Twelve years ago a man gets a heart transplant. Two years ago he goes and visits the donor. She passed away last year.

Brr-up!!!! (Skips track)

Uh, say what? Run that math by me again?

But It's True

Richard DeVos, 83, was interviewed in The Grand Rapids Press yesterday. The multi-billionaire is one of the two founders of Amway, celebrating its fiftieth birthday and hence the article.

The donor, a woman in England, received a heart-lung transplant. Presumably she needed lungs, her heart was okay, and DeVos had the money to fly to England and make the transplant happen.

Huh. Neat in a weird way.

Just thought you'd be interested.

Dr. Phil

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