Happy National Lego Day!

National Lego Day, wow. In our storage locker lies a stack of tubs filled with a ton of assembled Lego City, Star Wars Lego, Marvel and DC Lego, Space Lego, Harry Potter Lego kits and two racks of minifigures. The latter being my special minifigs collected at various comic cons and specialty shops. My son has entire tub of minifigs all to his own. I always said taking him to a comic con needed its own budget and time allotment for Lego only.

It all started years ago when my son was interested in building Lego and his mother was terrific at it. I never cared for Lego in my own childhood since it was a far different animal than today. However, I just couldn’t take my kid’s anguish and beleaguering self-defeat. I picked up one of his hardest kits back then, his Joker Steam Roller set. I took that thing and built it from start-to-finish before his eyes, my first time ever building Lego.

I invited him to join in and handed him pieces, telling him where they went, and he did in spurts. Mostly he was is in awe of what I was doing. I struggled a couple times, figured it out, and viola! I had it done, hours later. I told my son, “If an old man like me can put one of these together on the first try, there’s no way you can’t do it as well.”

Thus began our infatuation with Lego. At one point, we started to build our own Lego world, grabbing kit after kit with our gift cards and gift money, thinking on “zones” we wanted to do together. I grew addicted to Lego building as a way of relaxing and checking down. Even better when the boyo and I did it together.

He grew older and less interested as teenagers will. I grew busier and life changed dramatically. I miss building with him, even to the point my last kit gifted to me, a Lego Grogu “Baby Yoda” kit was a personal quest to escape from everything. I took the day off to just build, watch baseball casually and toss a few beers, the ultimate “me” party. Still, it felt off without the kid.

I have some pictures buried deep in my archives of us building together, but the Batman ’66 kit you see here was gifted me by the kid. That Macy’s Parade Lego display was something he and I geeked over in NYC last summer.

Moreover, I smiled last week to find my son not only reverting a little by playing Lego-themed video games but pooling through his bin of minifigs in reminiscence. Lego truly affected our lives. Maybe one day we might resurrect the Lego world we meticulously planned in a future basement. Maybe. If not, so be it, but after this long diatribe, if you’re a Lego fan, go build something, or just snap a few bricks today, ‘cuz everything is awesome!

–Ray Van Horn, Jr.

My Book Signing Today at Protean Books and Records, Baltimore, MD

Big shout of thanks to Matt and the Steves for having me (and TJ, of course) down at Protean Books & Records in the Federal Hill district of Baltimore for a fun time signing books!

Nice turnout and happy to see my friend, Shanna, who joined us for a long overdue trip to MaGerk’s for true Philly style steaks and the glorious Eagle Wings for a righteous celebration of a successful day.

Special thank you to Briana and Kevin, who dashed down in the nick of time to grab Revolution Calling and Coming of Rage. You two are super sweet!

Jake, great chatting with you about vintage typewriters, man. Protean, you guys have a neat store. See ya again soon.

The famous Eagle Wing at MaGerk’s, Baltimore. Hot sauce, BBQ sauce, Old Bay and cheese whiz.

That’s a horns-up combination!

–Ray Van Horn, Jr.

Godzilla Minus One Minus Color

The G.O.A.T. of all Godzilla films, Minus One, is such a worldwide phenomenon, Toho Studios re-released it in monochrome black and white. This in full homage to the original black and white and by explanation from Toho:

“The original 1954 Godzilla is, of course, in black and white. But that in and of itself made us interested in what a Godzilla film would look like created with modern technology in black-and-white. But simply removing the color alone wouldn’t evoke the same type of emotion we were trying to instill in audiences, which is why we went back to the colorist and we actually masked different portions of each shot and adjust the contrast by hand, as opposed to simply hitting the remove color button. [This process makes it look] like it was composed by a professional still photographer.

For us, removing the color in some way increases the reality, feeling almost like a documentary and making audiences feel that Godzilla actually exists. [This version of the film is] way scarier than Godzilla Minus One with color, even the team members working on it, we’d get goosebumps. Because, in many ways, it does feel like a different film.”

For a week long engagement in the U.S., Godzilla Minus One Minus Color runs rampant!

Let’s do this! I’ll be back for my third go with this kaiju masterpiece.

Ray Van Horn, Jr.

More Kind Words for “Revolution Calling,” by Ray Van Horn, Jr.

The book has been out a month and I’m pleased by the reviews and reception for Revolution Calling. This time, an unexpected but welcome comparison from Rough Edge.com writer and Editor, R. Scott Bolton:

Revolution Calling, by entertainment writer Ray Van Horn Jr, is the story of two high school-aged metalheads, circa 1988, and their journey through bullying, love and growth. The story is semi-autobiographical and that much is evident in the depth of character that Van Horn brings to every person in the book, especially his main duo, Jason and Rob. Their heavy metal-fueled relationship feels real, and natural, and their band-name-dropping banter is a highlight.

The story itself may seem familiar to many. It’s like the classic movie, Dazed and Confused. Everyone who’s seen that movie recognizes people from their past, no matter what their era. Seems like all high schools have the same cast of characters, just with different labels. As it did in Dazed and Confused, however, the story works well here. An engaging coming of age story with a heavy rock ’n roll theme, Revolution Calling will entertain and enrich readers, especially if their life paths are similar to Van Horn’s (as was my own). 

Thank you, Scott!

–Ray Van Horn, Jr.

Nature Prevails Again

Not sure what location this is, but I found this stark image at another blog, and it gave me pause to see an entire town, an entire mountainside civilization, engulfed, assimilated, merged and ultimately forgotten.

The power lines indicate someone remains amid this foliage-caust, but doubtful much is serviceable here, if at all. 

I actually shuddered at this scene. Mother Gaia has her way as she will.

–Ray Van Horn, Jr.