Saturday, March 01, 2025

Oscar-Nominated Shorts 2025

Live action 

I saw this section at the Guild Theater in Albuquerque on Feb. 19, 2025.
- - -

The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent: A 13-minute film from Croatia, Bulgaria, France, and Slovenia 

Anuja: A 22-minute film from India and the USA 

I'm Not a Robot: A 22-minute film from Belgium and the Netherlands 

A Lien: A 15-minute film from the USA 

The Last Ranger: A 28-minute film from South Africa 

- - -

All these short films were excellent.  If I had to list these films in descending order, from best to worst, I'd write:

A Lien: A 15-minute film from the USA 
The Last Ranger: A 28-minute film from South Africa 
I'm Not a Robot: A 22-minute film from Belgium and the Netherlands 
Anuja: A 22-minute film from India and the USA 
The Man Who Could Not Remain Silent: A 13-minute film from Croatia, Bulgaria, France, and Slovenia 
- - -

I saw this section at the Tower Theater in Sacramento on March 1, 2025.
- - -

Animated 

Magic Candies: A 21-minute film from Japan 

In the Shadow of the Cypress: A 20-minute film from Iran 

Yuck!: A 13-minute film from France 

Wander to Wonder: A 13-minute film from the Netherlands, Belgium, and France 

Beautiful Men: An 18-minute film from Belgium, France, and the Netherlands 
- - -

By and large, I didn't like these animated shorts. Probably the best one was:
Magic Candies: A 21-minute film from Japan 
- - -

I have yet to see these films (below).
- - -

Documentary

Incident: A 30-minute film from the USA 

I Am Ready, Warden: A 37-minute film from the USA 

The Only Girl in the Orchestra: A 35-minute film from the USA

Jasper, Socializing

On Monday, February 24th, I took Jasper to the vet, and then took him for his first visit to the dog park at 19th and Q Streets. He's so cute when he's socializing:

The Chaco Meridian as Commemorated at the Sunport Parking Structure

Upon multiple rewatches, I see more and more “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul” patterns, particularly if they involve Puebloan history in the American Southwest. Starting especially with “Breaking Bad” episode “Breakage,” there are many Hopi references in the shows, and many Puebloan references in general. 

On Feb. 18th, on my most-recent visit to Albuquerque, I noticed that the four filming locations for both television series in the four-story Sunport parking garage (Locations A-D on the accompanying diagram) adhere very closely to the north-south axis of a narrow rectangular space within the parking garage, capped by a skylight. I don’t know about the dimensions of the space, but the skylight dimensions are quite narrow, about 280 ft x 20 ft, for an aspect ratio of 14:1. This north-south axis is notable, because the parking garage itself is laid out on an east-west axis (880 ft x 380 feet), tracking the runways at the Sunport. The rectangular space is visible in the background when Walter urges Jesse to come cook. 

Outside the parking garage, curbside at the airport terminal (Location E), there is a filming location. This location lies off the north-south axis, but the camera angle captures the southern end of the axis, where the elevator housing is clearly visible. Years later, Kim Wexler arrives curbside at the exact same curbside spot where Walter White once faked an airplane flight, on a grim mission to reveal all she knows. 

Now, why would a north-south axis be important? Puebloan religion venerates the north-south axis. Many significant pueblos and pueblo ruins lie along a north-south axis. Indeed, Aztec ruins, Pueblo Bonito ruins in Chaco Canyon, and Paquimé ruins at Casas Grandes in northern Chihuahua, Mexico, all lie within a couple miles of a direct north-south axis, even though Aztec and Paquimé ruins are 450 miles apart. In the 1990s, archaeologist Stephen Lekson, James Jacobs, and others dubbed this axis the Chaco Meridian, which also appears to include Mt. Wilson in Colorado and the Big Horn Medicine Wheel in Wyoming (107°57'25")

I think Vince Gilligan and company sought to commemorate the Chaco Meridian in their TV shows, using the airport parking structure as their canvas. It took fifteen years to fully-execute their vision of the Chaco Meridian (2008-2022). Their discipline and foresight is pretty remarkable! 

Here is a key to the filming locations, and their distances off the north-south axis [in brackets]: 

A – "Sitting around, smoking marijuana, eating Cheetos and [censored] do not constitute 'plans.'" – Walter White (BrBa 209, “4 Days Out”). [About 3 feet] 
B – View of Sunport terminal (BrBa 209, “4 Days Out”; BCS 612, “Waterworks”). [Zero feet] 
C – Gus and Mike discuss the relationship between Walter and Jesse (BrBa 304, “Green Light”). [75 feet] 
D – Mike Ehrmantraut retrieves his car keys and ‘Go’ bag (BrBa 507, “Say My Name”). [62 feet] 
E – Walter White fakes a plane-trip departure and arrival, and Jesse Pinkman thoughtfully brings a meth lab to the airport (BrBa 209, “4 Days Out”); Kim Wexler arrives back in Albuquerque from Florida at the exact same place (BCS 612, “Waterworks”). [300 feet]

The Chaco Meridian, and some Native-American sites on or near its axis.


Plan view of that portion the Sunport parking structure where the narrow rectangular space capped by a skylight is present.

Below are screen captures from the TV shows.


A – "Sitting around, smoking marijuana, eating Cheetos and [censored] do not constitute 'plans.'" – Walter White (BrBa 209, “4 Days Out”). [About 3 feet] 


B - View of Sunport terminal (BrBa 209, “4 Days Out”). [Zero feet]


B - View of Sunport terminal (BCS 612, “Waterworks”). [Zero feet]


C – Gus and Mike discuss the relationship between Walter and Jesse (BrBa 304, “Green Light”). [75 feet]


D – Mike Ehrmantraut retrieves his car keys and ‘Go’ bag (BrBa 507, “Say My Name”). [62 feet] 


E – Walter White fakes a plane-trip departure and arrival, and Jesse Pinkman thoughtfully brings a meth lab to the airport (BrBa 209, “4 Days Out”).  The elevator structure of the parking structure, at the south end of rectangular space, is clearly visible behind Skyler.


E – Walter White fakes a plane-trip departure and arrival, and Jesse Pinkman thoughtfully brings a meth lab to the airport (BrBa 209, “4 Days Out”) [300 feet]


E – Kim Wexler arrives back in Albuquerque from Florida at the exact same place (BCS 612, “Waterworks”). [300 feet]

Below are some of my own [most-recent] pictures of these places.

A – "Sitting around, smoking marijuana, eating Cheetos and [censored] do not constitute 'plans.'" – Walter White (BrBa 209, “4 Days Out”). [About 3 feet] 

In rectangular space, looking up and northwards.

In rectangular space, looking up and northwards


Looking northwards from terminal sidewalk towards southern end of parking garage axis and the elevator housings.

In rectangular space, looking up and northwards

In rectangular space, looking down and southwards


C – Gus and Mike discuss the relationship between Walter and Jesse (BrBa 304, “Green Light”). [75 feet]


C – Gus and Mike discuss the relationship between Walter and Jesse (BrBa 304, “Green Light”). [75 feet]

D – Mike Ehrmantraut retrieves his car keys and ‘Go’ bag (BrBa 507, “Say My Name”). [62 feet]

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

The Hopi Inspiration in “Better Call Saul”

The first talk I presented at the Southwest Popular/American Culture Association (SWPACA) annual meeting on February 22, 2025.  There weren't that many people in the audience, but I'm proud of the reaction I received from the people who were there.  I think they were fairly dazzled!

The Hopi Inspiration in “Better Call Saul”

   

I also produced a second video, which I include below:

The Hopi Ceremonial Calendar in “Breaking Bad” and “Better Call Saul”

 

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

February 2025 Visit to Albuquerque

Tuesday, Feb. 18th  

The trip to Las Vegas, and then the second trip to Albuquerque was uneventful.  There was a little incident in the Las Vegas airport, though.  There was some unattended luggage next to where I was sitting in the terminal.  Security came and asked if it was my luggage.  I said no (but now I wish I had said yes).  Security moved the luggage (apparently just a short distance away, but I didn't realize it at the time).  A few minutes later, the luggage owner returned.  I told him security had taken his luggage, so he went off to find security.  A minute later I saw the security guard again and she said the luggage was a short distance away.  I kept looking for the luggage owner but he didn't return in time before I boarded the Albuquerque flight.

Don't leave your bags unattended!

 
Airport parking garage

I was going to be in Albuquerque for 4.125 days, but since I didn’t want to pay for 5 days of car rental. I needed to spend 0.125 days just hanging around the airport. 

I spent time in the airport parking garage. The garage is laid out east-west, but there is a notable north-south slot, or trench, that reaches the sky and has a skylight over it. 

There are three “Breaking Bad” filming locations on or near the top level of the garage, plus one “Better Call Saul” filming location. All locations are near the axis of the north-south slot. The BCS Waterworks location is EXACTLY on the north-south axis! 

Previously, I’ve thought there might be a Surrealist reference in the architecture here, but now I’m thinking there’s a Puebloan reference too. These four filming locations are arrayed along the north-south axis of the slot, similar to how the Native-American ruins of Aztec, Chaco Canyon, and Paquime in Mexico are arranged. I’m thinking this arrangement isn’t a coincidence. 

Archaeologists (particularly Steve Lekson) noticed back in the 90s that these 3 huge Pueblos are less than a thousand feet off a north-south axis, even though they are located hundreds of miles apart. Mesa Verde isn’t that far off the axis either. It’s absolutely deliberate - it can’t be a coincidence. It’s the Pueblo religion in practice. And I think they tried to duplicate that arrangement in the airport parking garage. 

I’m so far down the rabbit hole I think I’m the only lay person who’s noticed this. Such a long time for a payoff - more than a decade from first to last - but it’s there! It’s magical to reproduce features of the Southwest using the airport parking structure as a canvas. 

Somebody thought of this, and executed it.


Motel 

I arrived at the Downtown Days Inn Motel where I've been staying on my visits for the last ten years or so.  The parking lot worried me, since there was only one car there, and the people clunking around seemed scary - hairy guy muttering to himself; another fellow with face tattoos.  Talking with the landlady I learned there was a possibility we were related.  She's from Las Vegas, NM; my father's family came from tecolote, south of Las Vegas.  The scary people?  They are all familia.  So, I played fetch with the motel dog in the parking lot and made myself at home.

Eat at Frontier Visit Nob Hill - no bars open - Got some OLO Yogurt 


Wednesday, Feb. 19th


Visited downtown, particularly First National Bank Galleria. 

Wow, there are huge office spaces in the FNB Galleria building!
















Tried to visit ABQ Convention Center, Former B of A building 

Lunch with Karl and Karen at Cocina Azul 

Quick drive to Coronado Historic Site, west of Bernalillo  

Rebuilt kiva at Coronado Historic Site

View of the Sandias from the Coronado Historic Site
















Cheered on Tesla protesters 

Drove from Highway 550 along Unser Blvd. 

Tried to visit Wycaro site - turned back because it looked like it was guarded. 


Thursday, Feb. 20th

Morning in Four Hills 

Lunch at Viet Taste on Menaul with Bruce Warren 

I’ve been scouting some Albuquerque-area filming locations from “The Man Who Fell To Earth,” starring David Bowie, filmed in 1975, in anticipation of a more detailed trip later this year. Visited Galloping Horse site (very likely a filming location) and Isleta Chevron (probably not a filming location).


Galloping Horse site.

Isleta Chevron.


Here is the railroad crossing at Desert Rd. and Second Street SW, in the South Valley, where, in the movie, Mary Lou reminisces to Bowie’s Newton about the trains of her childhood. The commuter-train Railrunner stands in for the passenger train (presumably Amtrak) in the film.

 

Second visit to Nob Hill - some places open - Went to OLO Yogurt again


Friday, Feb. 21st

Lunch with my sisters at Cheesecake Factory in Coronado Center 


This photo of the mall entrance got me in trouble with mall security.

I arrived at Coronado Mall early to meet my sisters for lunch at the Cheesecake Factory, but discovered the mall doesn’t open until 11. Really? Wow! Times sure have changed since the 80s. What do the morning mall walkers do? Are they now extinct? 










Then, to add to the fresh dystopian hell sense of the place, when I went to sit on a bus bench, I was informed by security that it is against policy to take pictures of the mall. I mean, the place is huge. How do you avoid taking pictures of the place? At least they didn’t wrestle me to the ground and take the camera. But what if shoppers want to take selfies? I dunno…. 


But apparently it’s not against mall policy to go out into the parking lot and take pictures of this thing. THIS is where Heisenberg sets up his meth lab!













Attended two sessions at SWPACA 2025 

Went to the Guild Theater and saw Oscar-nominated Shorts: Part 3 - Action films 


Saturday, February 22nd

Checked out from motel

Presentation at SWPACA 2025 

Visited my sister Marra and she showed me her gold-panning equipment and her back yard 

Flew home

Monday, February 24, 2025

Karl Schindwolf Retires


This was published last year, but I missed it then. Karl is an excellent college friend, who I knew at UNM (1977-1980), and with whom I ate lunch at Cocina Azul, along with his wife Karen:






 

“During my time with SMPC I have found meaningful satisfaction in my career by working on challenging projects with a talented group of colleagues. As principal, my goal has always been to achieve fairness, compassion and equity as an organization, and to mentor emerging professionals to an exciting and fulfilling career in architecture. The importance of those ideals, shared with all my fellow principals at SMPC, has led to what I consider to be one of the best architectural offices to work. I consider my career a success if I have managed to perpetuate those ideals for the firm moving forward. I look back at the time I have spent at SMPC and humbly thank many people for the success I have had in my career. It has been a memorable and highly significant part of my life.”

Sunday, February 23, 2025

Two Nighttime Flights From Albuquerque to Sacramento - February 22, 2025


Albuquerque, looking north, from approximately the Sunport.

Albuquerque, looking north, showing 2nd and 4th Streets (long linear paths, left of center), Downtown, Broadway Blvd. (long linear path about center), and I-25 (winding path right of center).

Albuquerque, looking north, showing the dark, sinuous void of the Rio Grande and its adjacent bosques, and the dark circle of the Albuquerque Country Club golf course.  The Central Ave. bridge (foreground left) and the I-40 bridge (left of center) are visible.

Albuquerque, looking north along the west side of the city, where the lights of the various subdivisions wash up against the West Mesa volcanic escarpment.

Gallup, New Mexico, looking north.

Perhaps the vicinity of Lake Las Vegas, near Henderson, NV.

Near New Silverbowl Park, Las Vegas, NV.

Along Highway 11.

Las Vegas, NV.

The allure of the Las Vegas Strip.

View east, along the runway, with planes approaching.

Las Vegas Strip in the distance. Dagnabit, I'm on the right side of the airliner, which is the wrong side for the best pictures.

Stratosphere Tower (left), and Westgate.

Looking northeast along the Las Vegas Strip, with Stratosphere Tower and Fontainebleau.

I-15 and Stratosphere Tower (right).

Thinking the intersection of W. Charleston and S. Rainbow?

Las Vegas washes against the dark void of the Big Spring Mountains.

Looking east, back towards Las Vegas in the distance, with the surprisingly-bright Pahrump Valley in the foreground.
I took more pictures in California, but they are confusing, and I didn't understand them.