Food, Phone, Rain, DVD
Posted by SpikeJul 22
Finally figured out how to have a halfway decent lunch at Cyberport. Leave.
Yep, a friend and I jumped on the number 58 minibus, HK$5 and 10 minutes later we were in Kennedy Town, walking around and found a place called The Clay Oven, Indian place with a $45 set lunch that was not bad at all. I’ll be going back to K-Town often to try some of the other places there.
A couple of doors down was this place named Al Basrah Cow Pampa. As in “Middle Eastern Cuisine – Argentinean Grill Steak.” I suppose that’s as fusion as one can get. A sign there proclaims that they have the best steaks in “twon.” I got a photo but I’m unable to sync my iPhone at the moment.
Which is really weird. iPad syncs fine. iPod syncs fine. Then I plug in the iPhone – nothing, nada, zilch, the phone doesn’t register that it’s plugged in or charging, let alone start to sync. So one might think that the problem is the sync cable or the dock connector on the phone, except if I take that exact same cable and plug it into a charger, the phone starts to charge right away. (I’ve tried two different USB hubs; have not tried the USB ports directly on the computer because it’s a pain to get back there and anyway, as I said, everything else is syncing normally.) Anyone have any thoughts?
Around 5:35 PM, the Black Rain signal went up with just 10 minutes advance notice. Yeah, one is supposed to stay indoors when this happens, but I took this as a cue to get out of the office and try to maybe beat some traffic home. As if. Actually, things were quite okay on the HK side, but once I came out of the Western Tunnel, the rain was coming down as heavily as I’ve ever seen it. And this being Hong Kong, people were continuing to drive as poorly as ever – lights not turned on, not signaling lane changes, speeding, etc.
So I get to the place near Shatin where Route 8 merges into Route 9 – 4 lanes going down into 1 and even with the rain, a bunch of brainiacs decide to create a 5th lane to cut through traffic more, further backing things up – and then at the bottom of the hill a huge flood. Then a mile or two down the road, where I get off the highway, there must have been an accident, traffic on the cross street wasn’t moving and had all but completely blocked the intersection. I sat there waiting for the light to change while another group of brainiacs figured it was a good time to run through the red light and try to squeeze through the small opening in that intersection – I kid you not. Sai Sha Road had a spot that was flooded completely across. And then at the traffic circle in Sai Kung town, a taxi driver who didn’t seem to care that there were other cars (including me) already in that circle, he was a TAXI! and he demanded his right of way. Ah well, just another day on Hong Kong’s roads.
Anyway, before I head to sleep, let me just alert you that Barnes & Nobles is having a 50% off sale on ALL Criterion DVDs – including boxed sets and blu-rays. Criterion is the “gold standard” for this stuff – great films, lots of time and care spent on the digital transfers, amazing bonus features. I’d like to own everything they put out but it’s beyond my budget. So this sale gave me a chance to get caught up on some of the stuff on my want list. I counted about 30 things I wanted and then cut the list down to these:
- 3 Films by Louis Malle – boxed set featuring Murmur of the Heart, Lacombe Lucien and Au Revoir Les Enfants – each one a classic
- Burden of Dreams – Les Blank’s documentary shot while Werner Herzog shot the astonishing Fitzcarraldo
- Complete Monterey Pop Festival – one of my favorite festival films, finally getting the blu-ray
- Fanny and Alexander boxed set – featuring the over-5-hour version of Bergman’s final film
- Eric Rohmer’s 6 Moral Tales – My Night at Maud’s, Claire’s Knee, Chloe in the Afternoon and more, more goodness in one box than I can stand!
- Night on Earth – hard to realize I didn’t already have this splendid Jim Jarmusch compendium
- Yi Yi – I love this Taiwanese family drama, again stunned that I didn’t already have it
So 50% off each of the above and I picked the “slow boat to China” shipping option which was just US$20 – after saving around $200 on the above stuff. The sale runs for another 10 days so you have plenty of time to check it out and I have time to go back and order a few more – Burmese Harp, Berlin Alexanderplatz and the Olivier’s Shakespeare boxed set are looking very tempting.


3 comments
Comment by Joyce Lau on July 23, 2010 at 1:09 am
One of the smaller tunnels in West Kowloon (outside Olympic) was said to have been flooded and closed for part of today.
Comment by Jarrett on July 23, 2010 at 9:14 pm
Many thanks for this B&N Criterion tip! I am looking forward to the Criterion editions of Crumb and Paths of Glory.
Also nice to see Robert Christgau has a column on the B&N site too; I miss his Village Voice columns.
Comment by Spike on July 24, 2010 at 12:37 am
Did you know that Christgau continued his Consumer column over on MSN for several years after he stopped doing it at the Voice? He just “retired” from it earlier this year but I think he carried it on there for roughly 4 years or so.
I’m definitely eagerly awaiting Crumb and Paths too.