News

Fantasy & horror

Concord Monitor Living - Thu, 08/16/2012 - 00:00
Review Stop-motion animation keeps moving with 'ParaNorman' Embed multimedia (photos, galleries, audio, map):  ParaNormanmonster paran

The labor necessary to create a stop-motion film like ParaNorman is colossal. Tens of thousands of facial expressions were drawn. 3-D printers (a new advancement in stop motion pioneered here) ran through 3.8 metric tons of printer powder. One scene alone took a year to shoot.

So it's tempting to applaud the 3-D ParaNorman politely, sympathetically simply because of the admirable work. No one wants to tell 60 puppet makers that their months of toil were ill spent.

But though ParaNorman is impressively crafted, the frequently wondrous and whimsical visuals far surpass the story of an 11-year-old boy named Norman (voiced by Kodi Smit-McPhee) who can see and speak to the dead.

Categories: Concord News

'Crimes' scene looks rosy

Concord Monitor Living - Thu, 08/16/2012 - 00:00
TV COLUMN TNT scores big hit with drama spinoff

One night after NBC wrapped its broadcast of the most-watched event in TV history - and maybe the most new-show promo-laden event, too - a new summer show debuted to whopping big ratings.

Unfortunately for NBC, that show was TNT's Major Crimes - the spinoff of TNT's The Closer. Major Crimes, an "all-new drama" (TNT's words) that puts Mary McDonnell in charge of "television's favorite squad of detectives" (read: cast of The Closer), clocked 7.2 million viewers.

NBC also premiered a series Monday night. Stars Earn Stripes logged 5.149 million viewers.

Major Crimes received a lot of help from its lead-in: the series finale of The Closer, which was ending its seven-season run. The finale had an average audience of more than 9 million, which will likely wind up being the crime drama's most-watched episode, when viewing of the episode over the next seven days becomes available. The "Live + 7" stat is the one that Nielsen now puts in the record books.

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Cool eats

Concord Monitor Living - Wed, 08/15/2012 - 00:00
You don't have to heat up the kitchen to put a delicious meal on the table Embed multimedia (photos, galleries, audio, map):  NOCOOK82 NOCOOK81 NOCOOK86

It's meteorologically impossible to pinpoint the exact temperature at which the idea of cooking - that is, using some form of heat to prepare a meal - becomes completely unpalatable. By this point in the season, though, it's clear that summer's cumulative sizzle can zap the enthusiasm for the kitchen. Dinner may need making each night, but it's nice when it doesn't bring on a deep sweat.

The goal is to develop noncooking preparations that are at once attractive, inspiring and satisfying. The inspiring part demands some thought. Anybody can toss together a PB&J, but a meal should be more than just bread and condiments. Create a play on Sunday lox by pairing smoked salmon with caper ricotta and peppery quick pickles. Or stack an Italian panino with thinly sliced salami and a marinated fennel salad.

Categories: Concord News

Try something new on the grill

Concord Monitor Living - Wed, 08/15/2012 - 00:00

Summer makes us long for the grill. But by the end of the season, even our favorite burgers and dogs can feel a bit tired.

So to keep your grilling interesting, we came up with a speedy grilled tuna dish that packs tons of big, bold flavors. For our recipe, we used tuna steaks, which are thick, meaty pieces cut from the fish in the opposite direction than a fillet. You also could use salmon steaks, which often include the bone (which helps the flesh hold together on the grill). Swordfish also would work in this recipe.

We kept the prep simple with just a light coating of oil and a bit of salt and pepper. We wanted to let the flavor of the tuna shine. But to ensure we also could taste the fresh flavors of summer, we top the tuna with a cross between a fruit salsa and an herby chimichurri. It goes together in about 2 minutes with the help of a food processor.

GRILLED TUNA STEAKS WITH MANGO HERB SALSA

Categories: Concord News

'Cosmopolis' falls flat

Concord Monitor Living - Wed, 08/15/2012 - 00:00
Movie Review Film has plenty of shortcomings

Lifeless, stagey and lacking a palpable subversive pulse despite the ready opportunities offered by the material, Cosmopolis is a stillborn adaptation of Don DeLillo's novel that will initially attract some Robert Pattinson fans but will be widely met with audience indifference.

DeLillo's short, chilly 2003 book adopted a Ulysses-like format of a man's journey across a city in a single day in a white stretch limo to presciently foresee the anarchic "Occupy" mentality rising up to protest the financial shenanigans of the ultra-rich.

The film, from director David Cronenberg, is remarkably prosaic, confined through long stretches to the dark and narrow interior of the car, only to be concluded by a static half-hour final scene that feels like a two-character, off-Broadway play.

Categories: Concord News

Keeping an eye on your kitchen's bottom line

Concord Monitor Living - Wed, 08/15/2012 - 00:00
Just a few simple steps can save you big bucks on food

Melissa d'Arabian is a home economist for a new era. Actually, she's more CFO than home ec.

That's because the Food Network host is as adept at balancing ledger sheets as she is at getting dinner on the table.

It's a handy skill that comes with being a trained financial strategist, and turned out to be an unlikely backbone for her culinary career. Her basic message to thrifty home cooks? Stretch your food dollars by treating your kitchen in terms of profit and loss.

"As the manager of a household you're actually running a fairly complicated business," she says. "There are simple lessons we can take from the business world and apply to our own homes."

Before hosting Food Network's Ten Dollar Dinners, d'Arabian was a financial services consultant, then a high-powered financial executive for The Walt Disney Co.

Categories: Concord News

'Odd Life' a mixed bag

Concord Monitor Living - Tue, 08/14/2012 - 00:00
Movie Review Pretty movie lost to flat, sappy tale

You'll either be inspired or nauseated by The Odd Life of Timothy Green. This is a member of the nauseated camp speaking.

The movie from novelist and filmmaker Peter Hedges, author of What's Eating Gilbert Grape and creator of Katie Holmes's lovely independent feature Pieces of April, strains to Disney-ize the family dysfunction territory he explored so well in those works.

In Timothy Green, it's all gone flat, mushy and hollow. Adapting a short story by Ahmet Zappa (son of Frank), writer-director Hedges tries for old-fashioned wholesomeness only to flounder amid a well-intended but sappy tale of a childless couple mystically granted a test run at parenthood.

Hedges assembled an impressive cast, led by Jennifer Garner and Joel Edgerton as the parents, and the actors buy into the story's conceits wholeheartedly. The characters are simplistic and artificial, though, behaving in ways that often are insultingly naive and sometimes just plain stupid.

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From 'Runway' to Penneys

Concord Monitor Living - Sun, 08/12/2012 - 00:00
Q and A Nina Garcia knows what's in and out

As a judge on Lifetime's Project Runway, the fashion director of Marie Claire and the author of four books on dressing your best, Nina Garcia is no stranger to voicing her opinions on what's in and what's out. That's why she'll fit right in as the new style voice and fashion collector/curator for J.C. Penney. If you haven't hit up the 99-year-old retailer since grade school, you could be pleasantly surprised to see the ways in which Garcia is lending it her finely tuned sartorial eye.

Q: What exactly does your new role entail?

A: I'll work closely with the merchandising and design teams, offering them insight into what they might need and what they might want to add that season. I'll give advice and share the experience I've learned after 15-odd years in fashion.

Q: Any particular trends you're looking forward to this fall?

Categories: Concord News

suburban oasis

Concord Monitor Living - Sun, 08/12/2012 - 00:00
Pembroke couple proves you don't need a lot of land for a great garden

People often complain that they'd love to have a garden but don't even attempt it because their lot is too small or too shady. One couple in Pembroke has tackled both these problems, and the resulting gardens around their suburban home are not only breathtakingly beautiful but full of surprises.

Vinny and Erika Flewelling have lived on a small corner lot for 37 years. Over time, they've lost some large, older trees and planted some new ones. They kept the stumps of a tall blue spruce and a roadside maple and turned them into supports for collections of bird houses, wind chimes and other garden art, along with hanging baskets and flowering vines. The newer trees - maples and ash - have grown up to cast their shade on the many varieties of hosta, as well as caladiums and other shade-loving plants.

Categories: Concord News

Massage does a body good

Concord Monitor Living - Sun, 08/12/2012 - 00:00

I used to consider the occasional massage a blissful, self-indulgent luxury. But as I've gotten older, I've become more and more convinced that regular rubdowns are an important prescription for physical and mental well-being.

In fact, there is a growing body of research confirming that massage can be good medicine.

"We now know that massage therapy is not just for pleasure, but has significant psychological, physiological and biochemical effects that enhance health," says Tiffany Field, director of the Touch Research Institute at the University of Miami Medical School, which has conducted more than 100 studies showing that massage's benefits can include positive effects on depression and anxiety, sleep, stress hormones, immunity and pain relief.

Categories: Concord News

Being there for ailing friend isn't easy

Concord Monitor Living - Sun, 08/12/2012 - 00:00
Baggage Check

Q: My closest friend just got a devastating cancer diagnosis. There's a chance she will beat this and if anyone can fight it, she can.

But I'm so thrown and stressed and saddened by this I don't think I'm being a good friend. I keep thinking about her young children and her husband and my own potential loss of her. I'm finding it difficult to be there for her when I'm so sad.

A: Be honest with her about not knowing what to say and how it's affecting you - "I sometimes don't want to show you how sad I am about this." But it's simply not fair right now for you to burden her with your pain.

You deserve your own support, whether it's from your family, other friends or through counseling.

Categories: Concord News

Safety first, bicycle riders

Concord Monitor Living - Sun, 08/12/2012 - 00:00
Monitor board of contributors Don't let bad choices derail exercise

As a physical therapist, I often recommend bicycling as an excellent form of aerobic exercise. It helps reduce the risk of developing cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and chronic pain and to mitigate these problems. It is also an economical means to stay healthy and offers an alternative to car transportation, which allows people to be green while getting lean. So what's the problem?

The problem with my recommendation is that I don't typically follow it up with these suggestions:

1. Wear a helmet.

2. Don't smoke a cigarette while riding.

3. Obey the rules of the road.

4. Avoid riding in the dark.

By not discussing these four seemingly obvious rules, I expose my patients to potential injury that would far outweigh the health benefits of cycling.

Categories: Concord News

DNC host city drama

Concord Monitor Living - Sun, 08/12/2012 - 00:00
North Carolina Perhaps fitting that controversy surrounds convention in Charlotte

When all is said and done, perhaps it was destiny that Charlotte host the Democratic National Convention - and that its choice be controversial.

After all, the city and surrounding county of Mecklenburg are the main players in one of North Carolina's great historic controversies: whether a document known as the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence was signed here more than a year before that other Declaration of Independence (the one drafted by Thomas Jefferson) showed up in 1776.

The Mecklenburg declaration wasn't published until 1819, but the date of its supposed signing, May 20, 1775, is printed on the North Carolina state flag, even though most historians no longer believe the document ever existed.

Categories: Concord News

Bible:

Concord Monitor Living - Sat, 08/11/2012 - 00:00
the screenplay

A new Bible translation tackles the challenge of turning ancient Greek and Hebrew texts into modern American English and then adds a twist: It's written like a screenplay.

Take the passage from Genesis in which God gets angry at Adam for eating the forbidden fruit from the tree of knowledge of good and evil:

"Adam (pointing at the woman): It was she! The woman You gave me as a companion put the fruit in my hands, and I ate it.

"God (to the woman): What have you done?

"Eve: It was the serpent! He tricked me, and I ate."

Later, Eve bears her first son, Cain.

"Eve (excited): Look, I have created a new human, a male child, with the help of the Eternal."

Even people who have never read the Bible could probably guess that other translations don't say Adam pointed his finger at Eve when he blamed her for his disobedience. Neither do other Bibles describe Eve as "excited" about her newborn son.

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NEW TRADITION

Concord Monitor Living - Thu, 08/09/2012 - 00:00
Warner Contemporary gallery opens at Indian Museum

What are medicine bags decorated with space-age beads doing in the Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum?

Displayed alongside traditional creations, they are part of the current exhibit in the museum's new Contemporary Art Gallery, "Like Breathing: Native American Quill and Beadwork," which runs through Oct. 31.

What the pieces have in common is that they are all new.

The gallery grew out of a request by basket-maker Bill Gould and craftsman Darryl Peasley, who asked if the museum could provide a space for high quality, locally produced art. Gould- makers from Warner, are the first Native American juried members of the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen.

Executive Director Lynn Clark and Curator Nancy Jo Chabot liked the idea. The gallery would not only benefit the artists but also inform visitors that native culture is alive and flourishing.

Categories: Concord News

Fourth 'Bourne' a cerebral ride

Concord Monitor Living - Thu, 08/09/2012 - 00:00
Film review

The fourth film in the Bourne franchise, The Bourne Legacy, may seem heady and intentionally disorienting and hard to follow at first - until you realize it's really about drug addiction, and the lengths to which a junkie will go to get his fix.

Structurally, yes, it's loaded with all the lies, schemes and high-tech trickery that are staples of the espionage genre. But a deeper, more individualistic source of tension propels the film along. Think of it as Drugstore Cowboy with an international scope and more explosions. That may help as you compare it with the first three films in the series that starred Matt Damon as Jason Bourne, the amnesiac CIA assassin of Robert Ludlum's novels, and established Damon as the rare action star who can actually act.

Categories: Concord News

Fresh from the market

Concord Monitor Living - Wed, 08/08/2012 - 00:00
Check out these fabulous dishes made using summer's bounty of local foods Embed multimedia (photos, galleries, audio, map):  Home plate Home plate Home plate

Last week, thanks to a grant from the Capital Area Wellness Coalition, I spent a few days rounding up local food from people who sell every Wednesday at the Canterbury Community Farmers Market. Pork and goat cheese mozzarella from Our Place Farm in Loudon. Bicolor corn and tomatoes from Warner River Organics. Tomina's Lemon balm cookie dough made in Laconia. A tangy fresh cow milk cheese called quark from Brookford farm in Canterbury, along with just-spun cream and beets and, best of all, bread flour made from wheat they grow themselves. Maple syrup and cucumbers from North Family Farm (which happens to be owned by my brother- and sister-in-law).

Categories: Concord News

Quick and tasty

Concord Monitor Living - Wed, 08/08/2012 - 00:00

Salty olives and capers and a good-quality chicken sausage make all the difference in this Paleo Diet-friendly main course. To reduce prep time further, shop at a salad bar for cut vegetables. Feel free to add red bell peppers, eggplant or tomatoes, and adjust the cooking time accordingly. The recipe was tested using an organic apple chicken sausage.

Chicken Sausage With Squash and Fresh Herbs

1 medium red onion

12 ounces cooked chicken sausage (in links)

2 tablespoons olive oil, plus more as needed

1½ pounds mixed summer squash and zucchini

½ cup mixed fresh flat-leaf parsley, basil and/or thyme leaves

½ cup pitted kalamata olives (about 25)

¼ teaspoon salt, more to taste

¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, more to taste

¼ cup capers, drained

half a lemon

Cut the onion into very thin slices. Cut the sausage crosswise into 2-inch chunks.

Categories: Concord News

Inspired "creamed" corn

Concord Monitor Living - Wed, 08/08/2012 - 00:00
Soup sparked the idea for this dish

There are few foods as simple, delicious and complete as fresh seasonal corn on the cob. When it's really fresh, I'll even eat it raw. No boiling, no butter, no salt. It's perfectly sweet and tender right off the stalk.

Still, even perfection can get boring, and I recently began wondering what else I could do with fresh corn. I thought back to my days as the host of the Food Network's Cooking Live, when one of my guest chefs whipped up some corn soup and thickened it with pureed corn.

Of course, I'd known that any pureed vegetable will thicken a stew or soup. But corn has a secret ingredient - Duh! - cornstarch. I was astonished by the creaminess and thickness of my guest's soup.

This recipe was inspired by that soup. Creamed corn is thus named because it usually depends on cream for its creaminess. That's a problem for me for a couple of reasons. The cream not only makes the dish too rich, it also tends to mask the flavor of the corn.

Categories: Concord News

'Hope Springs' has real punch

Concord Monitor Living - Tue, 08/07/2012 - 00:00
Streep, Jones play stuck-in-rut couple

Here's how surprisingly effective Hope Springs is: It will make you want to go home and have sex with your spouse afterward. Or at least share a longer hug or a more passionate kiss.

You don't have to be married for 31 years like the stuck-in-a-rut couple Meryl Streep and Tommy Lee Jones play to feel inspired by the film's message about the importance of keeping your relationship alive. It sounds like a cliche because it is a cliche, and more: It's a cottage industry, one that's launched countless afternoon talk show episodes and shelf after shelf of self-help books.

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