Home at the movies, etc.

Recently I read an article featuring a well-known actor/director/filmmaker because I’ve always loved not only watching movies, but learning about the creative and business aspects of making them. This particular article wasn’t about this person’s celebrity but was more focused on how independent film  processes, particularly marketing and distribution, have changed from last century to this one. The way I use this kind of information fictionally has included many facets of filmmaking, especially in the Neverending Saga in all its iterations through the decades. Sometimes my writing spills over into fictional television and live theatre. But primarily, the Saga includes two independent filmmakers woven into many of my other characters’ plotlines.

Including August 10, the day I decided to spend the rest of summer watching RomComs (mostly on my own DVDs, but at least two streaming), until September 22, when I declared RomCom Summer at an end (44 days?), I watched fifty-nine movies. It turned out not all of them were romantic comedies, and some were sadder than I remembered. Two of them I’d never watch again; that reflects no judgment as to their merit. Odds are all movies can’t appeal to me, and both these movies were first-time views for me.

In normal times, I wouldn’t dream of watching that much of anything–movies, television, videos, or even listening to podcasts (I rarely do podcasts; I’m not sure why). However, these weren’t normal months, and rather than constantly berate myself for the reasons why I couldn’t/wouldn’t write, I scheduled those movies around appointments, errands, dog care, household and family responsibilities, and a few hours-long phone calls with a couple of friends.


During this time, I’d also picked up two word puzzle books. Though I flipped through them and picked puzzles at random, over time, I realized I was defaulting to movie-related puzzles. Between the two puzzle books, there are many more movie-related puzzles remaining, as well as tons of other subjects, that I haven’t done, and this at least was slightly less passive entertainment. While I did film-related puzzles, I was also thinking of future writing for my Saga characters.

In fact, to deal with my frustration over daily news stories, I actually created my own puzzle. It took a few hours over three days, and I won’t share it in a public forum, but behind a cut, I will share the movie and theatre puzzles I completed from these books. You’ll likely see future completed puzzles if I relate them to photos I have or activities around Houndstooth Hall.

From Volume 9:


This one drove me nearly mad, because I ended up finding three different instances of “set” (two within other words) and no “theater.” There are copies of solutions in the back of each book, so I finally checked, and they didn’t show theater in this puzzle, either.

From Volume 10:

ETA on 10/1/24:

7 thoughts on “Home at the movies, etc.”

  1. Actually, I saw “Theater” on a few of those. Couldn’t you see them? They’re right there at the top in big bold print. =)

    (Sorry, I couldn’t resist. This is why I dislike word puzzles, although Apples to Apples is fun with the right crowd.)

    1. I’m always conflicted about which way I want to spell it… But I always pronounce it terribly–very Southern accent on that one, but if I try to correct myself, it makes me feel like I sound pretentious, or as we say in the South, like I’m “gettin’ above my raising.”

        1. Even though here the spelling is “theater,” in my brain, “theater” means a place to see movies, and “theatre” is the place to watch plays.

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