But this is too awesome not to mention. Worldwide Internet laughingstock Pajamas Media has highlighted my Munich review, sarcastically, in their brief column on the movie. I think they are attacking my view of the film, but if so, I don't really understand the complaint.
Crushed by Inertia noted, without a trace of irony, that "Munich is Spielberg's second film of 2005 dealing with a clash of civilizations. The first was this summer's more effects-heavy but equally contemplative War of the Worlds", the difference being that Munich is "a war film in which war is unwinnable, a revenge film in which the vengeance sought by the heroes is grisly and horrific and unsatisfying and incomplete".
Well, personally, I think everything I write has at least a trace of irony. But more importantly, why should I be ironic about that statement. War of the Worlds is, in fact, about a clash of civilizations. The fact that one civilization is fictional doesn't really matter within the context of the film. To speak of it as a film, in terms of theme or genre, it's still a war film, even though its war never really happened. And that film, though it has its problems, is very thoughtful about the ramifications of living in a nation under attack.
I guess they're just upset that I view the murdering of Palestinians to be grisly, horrific and unsatisfying. (There can be no argument that the plan in Munich remains incomplete. 2 of the Palestinian targets remain alive to this day.)
There's a good new logline for the website:
Pajama's Media: Where The Pre-Meditated Murder of Palestinians Is Charming, Fun and Entirely Satisfying!
UPDATE:
Okay, near as I can figure, the post at Pajamas Media linking to the blog here has been up since about 9 a.m. this morning, possibly earlier. That would make it 9 hours since they have been linking to CBI. So far, I have seen an extremely slight increase in traffic. For the entire day yesterday, I received 90 unique hits. Today, as of 6:30 p.m., I've received 96. Granted, that's arleady 6 more, and there's 5.5 hours yet to go, so the number4 will likely be 15-25 hits higher than yesterday.
But, I mean, I'm the seecond link from an article posted on the blog's front page. (It's the fourth article under TOP STORIES). How many hits are they getting a day over there, with their millions of dollars invested and famous names? When I was linked on Gorilla Mask, I received 10,000 hits in a single day, and probably still get 20 hits a day from their archives page. When even a single online Washington Post story links to my blog via Technorati, I get 30-50 extra hits.
Personally, I'm not terribly concerned. I don't really expect this page to ever attract more than few hundred people a day. But this just makes PM/OSM look really bad. They clearly aren't generating much traffic or readership or even remote interest in their material.
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