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Light Up Your Summer Nights With Some Great Gaslight Fantasies: The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec and The Eterna Files

22 Aug

The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec

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The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec is a French film based on the graphic novels of the same name by Jacques Tardi.  Adèle Blanc-Sec is an adventurous Victorian-era Parisian reporter who seems a fusion of Nellie Bly and Indiana Jones.  She is played by Louise Bourgoin who manages to seem proper and intelligent even in the film’s more comedic moments.  Adèle goes to Egypt hoping to find Ramses II’s physician who she believes when revived will be able to heal her sister who is currently in a comatose state due to a tragic hatpin related accident.  But upon returning home she finds that the professor she had counted on to bring back the mummy is on death row since he was practicing his telepathic technique by hatching a pterodactyl egg; the pterodactyl is now soaring around Paris causing mayhem.  There is also a romantic subplot and lots of humor in this fun French Action Adventure from Luc Besson, the man behind The Fifth Element.  If you are a steampunk fan you should love this film as much as I did.  You can borrow the DVD of the film and the first volume of the graphic novels it is based on from BCCLS Libraries.

The Eterna Files by Leanna Renee Hieber

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The Eterna Files is the first novel I had read by Hieber, but I had enjoyed her story, Charged, in the short collection Queen Victoria’s Book of Spells: A Collection of Gaslamp Fantasy I wrote about in a previous post.  I had the opportunity to see Hieber read at the Steampunk’s World’s Fair and with her background as a trained actress, she truly brought the characters to life.  You can see her reading samples of her work on her YouTube channel and for those in the area come see her do a special presentation about the Ghosts of New York right in time for Halloween on October 29.  The Eterna Files focuses on two teams of scientists and mystics, one in the United States attempting to create immortality and the other in England investigating supernatural events and attempting to stop the Americans from creating an eternal leader.  The Eterna Files is set during the Victorian period and the clothes and locations are vividly described.  There are a lot of characters to keep of track of but I enjoyed the interweaving of the two teams’ narratives.  A few characters are also featured in her other works and I’m interested to check them out as well, but did not feel that I was at a disadvantage having not read them before The Eterna Files.  The Eterna Files and several of Hieber’s other novels are available from BCCLS libraries.

Bonus Book:
Insider’s Guide to Steampunk Fashion by Hannah Rothstein

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For those inspired by these titles and wanting to get in to some Neovictorian fun, check out Hanna Rothstein’s Insider’s Guide to Steampunk Fashion available to Hoboken and other BCCLS card holders through Hoopla.  This short nonfiction work will give you a brief overview of steampunk’s inspiration and the different types of outfits that Steampunk cosplayers (fans that dress up in costume) wear to conventions and meetups.  Included are full color photographs and hyperlinks to resources for further information.  Some of her prose is a bit on the florid side with concoctions of mixed metaphors, but due to the nature of the topic that seems apt.  The publisher Hyperink specializes in creating ebooks based on popular online blogs.  Rothstein has a background in fashion studies and art and has written copy for popular hipster retro fashion site Modcloth.

-Written by Aimee Harris, Head of Reference

Film versus Broadway, Birthday Edition: Mamma Mia!, Kinky Boots, and The King and I

19 Aug

Back in February I wrote about Broadway shows that I have recently seen and their film and music companions. I decided to write another installment to talk about two shows I’ve recently seen because the tickets to these shows were birthday presents for my mother and a friend, respectively. Also, my own birthday is coming and I wanted to write about which show I would like to receive tickets for as a gift. 🙂

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Mamma Mia!

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Mamma Mia!, a jukebox musical featuring selections from ABBA’s catalog, follows Sophie as she tries to learn who her father is before her wedding without her mother Donna finding out. Tickets to this show were my birthday gift to my mother. While we missed the opening songs of the show, on account of traffic from President Obama’s motorcade in Times Square traveling to see Hamilton that day, we still a fun time. Audience members are invited to dance at the end of the show!

Mamma Mia! ends its Broadway run on September 12, 2015 and will be the eighth longest running show. If you can’t make it to the live show, you can borrow the film adaptation from 2008 that stars Meryl Streep and Pierce Brosnan. For a time that was my niece’s favorite movie when she was six years old, which proves that ABBA’s music appeals to new generations! My favorite numbers are “Waterloo” (because how many love songs name-check the Emperor Napoleon?) and “Lay All Your Love On Me.” Mom’s favorite song is “Voulez-Vous”, and my niece loved “Mamma Mia!”

Hoopla Digital has the soundtracks to both the film and the musical to stream. The DVD and CDs of the film and Original Cast Recording soundtracks are available to borrow from BCCLS libraries as well. If you need more of an ABBA fix, their greatest hits album Gold is available to borrow and to stream in Hoopla. There is also Muriel’s Wedding, a 1994 Australian film where ABBA’s music is prominently featured.

Kinky Boots

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Seeing Kinky Boots was a birthday present for a friend, and thankfully our arrival was not delayed by the President’s motorcade. This Tony Award-winning show, which was brought to Broadway by Harvey Fierstein with music and lyrics written by Cyndi Lauper, is about how Charlie Price tries to save his family’s failing men’s shoes business by teaming up with a drag queen named Lola to produce quality “kinky boots” for drag performers.

Acceptance and tolerance, plus friendship, family, and loyalty, are major themes of the show. And of course, sexy shoes are featured. There is even a song called “Sex Is In the Heel”.

The source material is a 2005 British movie of the same name, which I found to be darker than the musical. Cyndi Lauper’s music definitely brings levity to the story. If you love Cyndi Lauper as much as I do (She’s So Unusual was the first cassette tape I owned!) then you will adore this show, as her style shines through in the music. The closing song, “Raise You Up”, will do just that.

The original film is available to borrow from BCCLS libraries, and the film’s soundtrack can be streamed on Hoopla. The Broadway Cast soundtrack is available to borrow as well. My favorite Cyndi Lauper album She’s So Unusual can be borrowed too.

The King and I

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Ok, I haven’t seen this Tony Award-winning revival that stars Kelli O’Hara and Ken Watanabe. Yet.

The King and I is based on the book, Anna and the King of Siam, tells the story of Anna, a British woman who travels with her young son to Siam (now known as Thailand) to teach the children of the King, and her life in the King’s court in a culture that vastly differs from hers.

The King and I is one Rodgers and Hammerstein’s classic musicals. I’ve seen Oklahoma! at the Paper Mill Playhouse and South Pacific in a recent Broadway revival that starred Kelli O’Hara, but The King and I holds a special place in my heart. As a kid I participated in a production of this show, and remember every single song. “Shall We Dance” and “Whistle A Happy Tune” are the perhaps the best known, but I always liked the show-within-the-show of Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe that had a Buddhist twist.

You can borrow the 1956 film adaptation, which stars Deborah Kerr and Yul Brynner, at BCCLS libraries; the film soundtrack is Hoopla. The Broadway soundtracks (original cast and current cast) can be streamed on Hoopla Digital.

As mentioned in the first paragraph, my birthday is approaching … so here’s my appeal:

Dear friends and family,

Should you be reading this post, which I will share on my personal social media networks for you to see, a ticket to The King and I would be a very welcome birthday present*!

-Written by Kerry Weinstein, Reference Librarian

*Tickets to Hamilton are welcome, too. President Obama has good cultural taste, based upon his summer reading choices and Spotify playlist, so I trust his theater picks.