Quote of the Day

Kira Nerys: Don’t forget, this… is still your fault.

Julian Bashir: My fault?

Kira Nerys: You performed the transfer from Keiko to me.

Julian Bashir: After you volunteered.

Kira Nerys: After you put the idea in my head.

Julian Bashir: After you flew the runabout into an asteroid field.

Kira Nerys: After you insisted we check on those anomalous bio-scans.

Julian Bashir: That was Keiko!

Kira Nerys: Well, that’s right, it was, but I’d rather blame you.

Julian Bashir: Whatever makes you happy.

Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Season 5: Episode 1 – “Apocalypse Rising”

Review: The Monuments Men

The Monuments Men had a bit of a rocky road to the theaters.  The film, produced, written and directed by George Clooney and featuring an all-star cast, was set for release at the height of Oscar-bait season in mid-December, and audiences had begun to expect big things from it.  Then, news broke that it was being pushed back to a February release, due to difficulty finding the right balance of tone in the editing room (or, depending on who you ask, because they needed more time for the visual effects).  Making a PG-13 World War II movie that focuses not on the war directly but on countless works of art that most audiences have never heard of was always a dicey prospect, and from that perspective The Monuments Men is definitely a success, if perhaps not as much as might have been hoped.

In 1943, as the Allies advance into Europe and the Germans retreat it becomes clear to Frank Stokes (George Clooney) that the cost of the war will be greater than the loss of millions of lives.  Continue reading