Tuesday, April 15, 2025

A Realm Awards Finalist? Me?!?


I can barely believe I get to say this:  my book A Noble Companion is a finalist for this year's Realm Awards!!!  

::cue all the squees::

This little Ugly Duckling retelling was such a challenge to write.  First of all, it's the first time I have been part of a multi-author project.  Second, I really had never written fantasy before, and I struggled with that aspect of the book a lot.  Third, every book in this series focuses on a side character of the fairy tale being retold, not the usual main character, and... there aren't really any other named characters in The Ugly Duckling.  

I'm not a fantasy writer, I'm a historical fiction writer, so I did a lot of praying that God would help my imagination and writing skills grow and change to suit this new project.  And I did find ways to make it truly a fantasy book, but one resting solidly on a foundation of historical research for the setting.  But I never really expected that it could compete against more obvious fantasy books for the Realm Awards, which are for Christian fantasy and sci-fi.  The fact that it made the long list last month felt like a really amazing honor, and I really didn't even hope that it would go farther.  But it did!  It's a finalist now!  Wow.

If you want to see who all the finalists are, you can find the official list here.  If you want to know more about A Noble Companion, check out my page about it.

Monday, April 14, 2025

Announcing the Back to 1985 Blogathon

Sour Patch Kids.  Cherry Coke.  Microsoft Windows.  Pictionary.  Chex Mix.  The year 1985 was a whiz-bang year for launching new products... and new movies.  This summer, my friend and frequent co-conspirator co-host Jim/Quiggy of The Midnite Drive-in and I are celebrating the movies released in1985.  We invite you to join us!


The weekend of June 7 and 8, let's all get in our own imaginary time machines and revisit the cinemascape of forty years ago.  So many amazing and often iconic movies were released that year, and we want you to help us celebrate as many of them as we can.


We do have a few rules:

1. You can write about any movie, TV show, or specific TV episode that was released in the calendar year of 1985. We will make an exception to include films that came out in December of 1984, since they most likely would still be in theaters in 1985, but we draw the line at Dec. 1, 1984. And nothing that was released after Dec. 31, 1985, will be admissible.  Sign up by leaving a comment on this post, or on Quiggy's post.


2. Only new entries please. No fair reposting something you've already written.  Post your review sometime during the blogathon. 

3. Grab one of the banners here and use it in your post to promote the blogathon.  We'd also love it if you added one to your blog beforehand to spread the word!


4. Let one of us know when your post goes live, with a comment on one of our launch posts so we can include it in the official list. 

5. As always, have fun!  It's not necessarily a bad thing to be preoccupied with 1985, after all...


Sign-up List:

+ The Midnite Drive-In: Science Class 1985 (an overview of Weird Science, Real Genius and My Science Project)

+ Hamlette's Soliloquy: Clue and The Young Sherlock Holmes

+ Whimsically Classic: Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind and Rainbow Brite and the Star Stealer

+ Dubsism: Brewster's Millions

+ Taking up Room: Jewel of the Nile

+ RealWeegieMidget Reviews: Letter to Brezhnev

+ Thoughts All Sorts: The Goonies

+ Any Merry Little Thought: Back to the Future

+ Angelman's Place: Private Resort

+ 18 Cinema Lane: The Bride and Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome

+ You!

Friday, April 11, 2025

My Ten Favorite Val Kilmer Movies

My heart is still heavy over Val Kilmer's death.  I've been rewatching some of my favorites of his movies, and today, I'm sharing the list of my top ten favorites with you.  


1. Tombstone (1993)

A free-wheeling recreation of that one time Doc Holliday (Val Kilmer) and his friend Wyatt Earp (Kurt Russell), plus Wyatt's brothers (Sam Elliott and Bill Paxton), had a showdown with Ike Clanton and his pals, and Tombstone, Arizona never got over it.  This movie is a wildly good time, particularly every scene Val Kilmer is in.  And the score by Bruce Broughton is one of my all-time favorites.

2. Willow (1988)

A small farmer (Warwick Davis) reluctantly teams up with a big braggart (Val Kilmer) to save a baby princess from a wicked queen (Jean Marsh).  Along the way, the braggart falls in love with the queen's daughter (Joanne Whalley) onscreen and off.  It was one of the first fantasy movies I ever saw, and it's still a dear favorite.

3. Spartan (2004)

When the daughter of an important American government official is kidnapped, an impressively capable agent (Val Kilmer) is sent to retrieve her before she's sold into slavery overseas.  It's a tense thriller that makes plain the all-too-real ease with which human trafficking occurs here in the U.S., and the difficulty in rescuing someone from it.  And it's cool seeing Clark Gregg work with Val Kilmer.

4. Real Genius (1985)

A teen genius (Gabe Jarrett) enters a school for the scientifically gifted, where he and his offbeat roommate (Val Kilmer) try to stay sane while also solving a mystery surrounding just what their scientific discoveries and creations are being used for.  My college roommates and I were obsessed with this movie for a while, and we used to wear these funny headbands around campus (even to classes) as a nod to Val Kilmer's character in this movie.


5. Batman Forever (1995)

Bruce Wayne/Batman (Val Kilmer) tries to stop Harvey Dent/Two-Face (Tommy Lee Jones) and Edward Nygma/The Riddler (Jim Carrey) from taking over Gotham, while also mentoring an orphan (Chris O'Donnell) and romancing a psychiatrist (Nicole Kidman).  Is this movie a dayglo comic book extravaganza?  Yes.  Does it also have a compelling storyline and some really good character development?  Also, yes.  I just rewatched it this week for the first time in a while, and was excited to find I still really love it.

6. The Saint (1997)

Simon Templar (Val Kilmer) is a professional thief who gets involved with Russian spies and a beautiful scientist (Elizabeth Shue) while just trying to do his job: stealing some nuclear macguffin or other.  The real treat here is all the disguises Templar uses, which lets Kilmer transform himself again and again in ridiculously fun ways.

7. Thunderheart (1992)

An FBI agent (Val Kilmer) with Native American heritage is assigned to solve a murder on a Sioux reservation, despite the efforts of others to either cover up the truth or use the crime to pursue their own agendas.  The fact that Val Kilmer had Native heritage himself (he was 1/8 Cherokee) is a total bonus for how perfect he is in this role.  The story is based on true incidents.

8. The Ghost and the Darkness (1996)

A professional hunter (Michael Douglas) teams up with a British engineer (Val Kilmer) to take down two man-killing lions that have been attacking workers trying to build a bridge in Africa.  It often feels like a throwback to the adventure movies of the '50s and '60s, but with more realistic violence.  Maybe that's because the screenplay is by William Goldman, who wrote The Princess Bride (book and screenplay both), as well as screenplays for movies like Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) and Maverick (1994).

9. Prince of Egypt (1998)

Animated take on the life of Moses (Val Kilmer), growing up in Pharaoh's household and being tasked by God with leading the Jewish nation out of slavery in Egypt into the Promised Land.  Excellent take on the historical account from the Bible, and the songs are really cool, too.

10. Top Gun: Maverick (2022)

An Air Force pilot (Tom Cruise) has to train the wild son (Miles Teller) of his fallen wingman for a dangerous mission.  Val Kilmer gets a small scene as Tom Cruise's former rival and current superior officer, and it's a moving one.


Please note that Tombstone, Spartan, Thunderheart, and The Ghost and the Darkness are all rated R, so you may want to investigate their content levels further before watching them if that is of concern to you.

Wednesday, April 02, 2025

Good Night, Sweet Prince

We have lost Val Kilmer.  I'm so broken up over this.


Val Kilmer was my first modern Hollywood crush, thanks to Batman Forever (1995).  I was fifteen when that came out, and I fell for him immediately, and then watched both it and Willow (1988) repeatedly throughout my teens, followed by a deep obsession with Tombstone (1993).  Over the years, I have loved so many of Val's movies.  I also really enjoyed his memoir, I'm Your Huckleberry.  

I'll be posting a list of my top ten favorites sometime soon.  For now, I'm just really sad.