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I know it hasn't been well reviewed but I liked it.
I didn't find the love story part of it particularly jarring, and Trillian is a million times better than the Trillian in the TV series (though admittedly Ford Prefect wasn't as good).

The thing that surprised me was that all the reviews were saying '70's story and characters - has dated badly' and I can't see that at all.  The story is the same one, but it's also very much a product of Douglas Adams' later years - it very much fits after 'last chance to see'.  The original was about travelling, seeing new places in a state of fuddled bewilderment -  the earth is kind of boring and full of bad parties and places like Taunton and Guildford (though the fjords are good).

Whereas the film has been given a message, and the message is that the earth is a really, really incredible planet.  I am clearly a hippy, because I don't think that this message dates. (It is a bit sickly sentimental, but I'm not sure it's possible to be really sickly about your love for an entire planet.  It's too big.  I am reminded of Captain Vimes 'city is a woman.  Never said it was a small woman'... )  Hmm, this para seems to have run on and there is really no good way to end it other than sheer violence.  Here we go.


My squash and pumpkin seedlings are just starting to show their leaves.  They've taken so long I was sorely tempted to pop them in the heated propagator, but I have this theory that if I let them germinate at their own rate in the (unheated) greenhouse, they will be tougher and should be ready to plant out at the right time, rather than too early and be weakened by the shock of going outside too soon.  I notice that the automatic window opener in the greenhouse did its thing for the first time yesterday.

There are 25 young green figs on the fig tree, and they all look healthy!  Could it be that this year I have got the timing right?  Figtrees tend to produce figs whenever we get a warm spell -  they don't ripen properly if they get frosted, but they do sit on the tree for ages stopping it from producing another batch.  Last year I pulled all the visible figs off in November, I think, and it started making new ones early this spring.


Figs

Date: 2005-05-10 07:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-marquis.livejournal.com
We have a fig tree in our garden at present, it also has many sprouting figlets. My bro-in-law, a tree surgeon, has said that figs generally take two years to ripen off. SO they'll appear one year and its the next that you can get them off to eat. Is that the case with yours?

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