This was said twice in the movie Wasabi. I believe it is a French saying, like "time heals all wounds", but not as annoying.
Is it true?
I was all over the place today, Queen Ann, the U district,Baltimore Wallingford. We had dinner at Wallingford Pizza House, and can I say YUM! Girls, we have to go there and all flirt with the Italian waiter; he hasn't been here long, he's going to the U, and it's our duty to make him feel welcome in Seattle. There was a mix-up, so we tried two kinds of pizza, one of which was in their signature "bowl". Individual sized, it is baked upside-down in a ceramic bowl and dis-embowled at the table. So cute.
There are places all over my life that have sad ghosts. Most of those places have been trod over afterward often enough to make the ghosts fade. I rarely go to the U District, so fresh blood was drawn a few times this afternoon when I met up with my own echo. We call this feeling bittersweet, but to me it has always tasted distincly of iron.
It's not important. They are not bad memories, they are good ones.
Going back to Wasabi... it's a very smart movie & I thought the action scenes kicked. It's a French movie about being in Japan, a very different perspective from Hollywood. (Can I just say that I HATED Lost in Translation?) The movie uses the country's scenery -- temples, an arcade, everything -- not as merely a pretty backdrop, but to move the plot forward.
One more thing before my battery sleeps: saw Matador today. You'll enjoy it if you liked Grosse Point Blank (which I did). Pierce Brosnan does sleazy very well.
Is it true?
I was all over the place today, Queen Ann, the U district,
There are places all over my life that have sad ghosts. Most of those places have been trod over afterward often enough to make the ghosts fade. I rarely go to the U District, so fresh blood was drawn a few times this afternoon when I met up with my own echo. We call this feeling bittersweet, but to me it has always tasted distincly of iron.
It's not important. They are not bad memories, they are good ones.
Going back to Wasabi... it's a very smart movie & I thought the action scenes kicked. It's a French movie about being in Japan, a very different perspective from Hollywood. (Can I just say that I HATED Lost in Translation?) The movie uses the country's scenery -- temples, an arcade, everything -- not as merely a pretty backdrop, but to move the plot forward.
One more thing before my battery sleeps: saw Matador today. You'll enjoy it if you liked Grosse Point Blank (which I did). Pierce Brosnan does sleazy very well.