Off topic: Open Up and Spend the Night in Parkdale

I’m moving.

This blog isn’t about my personal life, and I don’t wish to discuss the circumstances leading up to this move, but suffice it to say it’s a sideways upgrade at best, and I’m not entirely happy with the situation.

Homes in ParkdaleThis isn’t just a changing of apartments, either. I’m leaving Toronto entirely and heading for a small hamlet in the country.

The move itself is still a week or two away, but in the meantime, I thought I’d take this moment to reflect on what I’m leaving behind: the neighbourhood I’ve called home for the last seven years.

Tall trees and public enemies:

The part of Toronto I’ve lived in is called Parkdale. Now, it’s not a nice place by any stretch of the imagination. It’s colourfully referred to as “the armpit of Toronto.” It’s still not the worst part of the city; there are other places that have earned the title of Toronto’s… “sphincter.”

We don’t have a huge amount of gang activity or violent crime, but we are hotbed of drugs, prostitution, and general greasiness.

An old wall in ParkdaleAnother name for Parkdale is “the mental asylum with no roof.” This comes surprisingly close to the truth; there’s a mental institution not far from where I live, and most of the halfway houses and support centers for released patients are in this area. So a lot of people in Parkdale are quite literally mental patients.

What kind of place is Parkdale? Once, a few months ago, there was a used mattress lying in the front yard of a local home. Not only that, but it had been graffiti tagged with the phrase, “drunk as fuck.”

However, it was so poorly written that it looked more like, “drunk as pork.”

That’s what Parkdale is like.

Once, a black fellow in a fluffy purple cowboy hat stepped in front of a streetcar outside my building, hurled a box full of shredded newspaper onto the track, and held up traffic by standing in front of the streetcar and screaming at it.

The autumn leaves in ParkdaleMonths later, that same fellow started scrawling political slogans on the sidewalk in chalk, got up on a post box, and began screaming insults about Mayor Rob Ford — a political viewpoint I can only sympathize with.

Another time, a woman in a red dress — most likely a prostitute — spent at least an hour lying on the sidewalk across the street, weeping uncontrollably, and begging for help from invisible people.

Those are the more noteworthy oddballs. Then there are the normal, everyday ones: the people who talk to themselves in languages no one else knows, the hookers, the Sun-Fa drunks, the blind Buddhists, and the screamers.

But not everything in Parkdale is surreal, greasy, or disturbing. It has its positive side as well.

Parkdale is a very old neighbourhood. The parts of it that aren’t filthy and covered in graffiti feature beautiful architecture dating back to the turn of the last century and lots of lovely side-streets canopied by massive trees from the same time period.

A street in ParkdaleIt’s a little known fact that Toronto has so many trees that the city technically qualifies as a forest.

Parkdale is in an odd state of transition. It’s become somewhat trendy in recent times. So in amongst the crack whores and used condoms are chic antique stores, yuppies walking their greyhounds, and fancy restaurants serving local produce.

I’m in a bizarre spot because I literally live directly on the border of a very nice area and a very bad one. Walk north, and it’s nothing but well-tended gardens and affluent young couples taking their kids to the park. Walk south, and it’s nothing cigarette butts and piles of stuff that I’d really rather not think about what it is.

Parkdale is also an interesting cultural melting pot — though that’s really true of all of Toronto. Where I am, I live at the border of Poland, Portugal, and Tibet.

Another interesting fact: Toronto boasts the largest population of Tibetan people outside of Tibet or Nepal. And most of those live in Parkdale.

The graffiti in ParkdaleFascinating people, the Tibetans. One of my regrets is that I never really took the time to get to know any of them, but the ones I’ve met are nothing but pleasant and polite. Quite a humble and decent sort.

Their food is also the most delicious thing in the universe. If there is one thing about Toronto I will miss, it is the Tibetan food.

Into the worst, out of the best:

So Parkdale is a strange place, full of contradictions. The air is a heady melange of curry, cigarette smoke, and human misery.

It’s a place of contradictions for me personally, too. I came here during the worst period of my life, with virtually nothing left following a family cataclysm.

It was a terrible time for me, and I lived in misery for many months. But alongside this was a strange sense of freedom. With everything I’d known gone, it was a chance to start anew. I began to think for myself for the first time in my life, and Parkdale — and Toronto as a whole — represented an exciting new frontier for me.

Halloween in ParkdaleI grew up in the country, and the bright lights and bustle of the city dazzled me. I saw Toronto as a place of limitless potential, and it encouraged me to grow as a person.

Looking back, I didn’t really grow that much. The truth is I’ve barely scratched the surface of the opportunities this city has to offer, and I have no one to blame for that but myself.

I don’t feel the same sense of renewal or potential about this coming move. I feel only a contraction, a narrowing of my future.

I hope to return to Toronto some day. Maybe even to Parkdale. This may be a place ripe with devils, but they’re the devils I know.

But for now, my path is set, and I must leave Parkdale behind.

Parkdale isn’t a nice place, but it’s been my home for seven years. It’s become a part of who I am. And I will miss it.

And the best thing about Parkdale? My favourite band named a song after it.

Finally, it almost seemed authentic

As we headed farther west

Into the worst, out of the best

Warcraft Movie: New Director and Pointless Speculation

New director signed for Warcraft motion picture:

After months of silence, there’s finally been some news on the Warcraft film that’s been in development hell for the better part of a decade now. They have signed Duncan Jones to direct, replacing Sam Raimi after his departure from the project.

A photo of director Duncan JonesDuncan Jones is the son of rock icon David Bowie and the director of the critically acclaimed sci-fi movies Source Code and Moon.

I’m cautiously optimistic about this choice. Source Code had its flaws, but overall, it was quite a good movie. I haven’t seen Moon, but I’ve heard it was brilliant.

Based on his comments thus far, Jones seems to be on the warpath to make this the movie that legitimizes video game films, so hopefully that passion will pay off on-screen.

What I find really interesting about this choice is that Duncan Jones is a director primarily known for cerebral, thought-provoking science fiction. On paper, he’s not the sort you’d expect to be helming a Warcraft movie. Makes me wonder what kind of story they’re planning to tell…

Of course, this news has opened the floodgates of rumor and explanation.

The movie itself:

Official logo for World of WarcraftWe know very little about this movie other than the fact it’s a Warcraft movie. We know it will be live action, which is not a notion that has been well-received by fans.

I personally think an animated movie would make much more sense — be it CGI or a traditional cartoon. But I think technology has progressed to the point where live action could be made to work, even if it’s not my first choice.

Metzen has also gone on record as saying it will be a fairly violent and intense movie and is not necessarily intended to be family-friendly.

According to its WoWPedia page, the plot will be set between Warcraft III and World of Warcraft, will focus on the Alliance, and will star a “kick-ass” human who isn’t Arthas or Varian. Canon may be bent to accommodate the new plot.

Interestingly, concept art of Teldrassil for the movie has been leaked, so the Night Elves might have a prominent role.

I suspect it may be not so much a direct adaption of the game and more a separate and distinct storyline based on the same universe — similar to comic book movies. While I’d obviously prefer a direct adaption, I’d be okay with this as long as it stays true to the general feel of the Warcraft universe.

Casting:

And there’s the issue of casting, where rumors have already begun to fly. While I wouldn’t put much stock in the idea, Johnny Depp has been mentioned as a possible star.

I think this is just a wild rumor, and I suspect nothing will come of it. But with that being said, Johnny Depp would be perfect as Medivh. He’s got exactly the right mix of intensity, gravitas, and quirkiness to pull off the Last Guardian.

Also, he can rock an epic goatee, which is a requirement for the role of Medivh.

It occurs to me that we don’t really know what happened to Medivh after Warcraft III…

The other possibilities I’ve heard are just pure fan speculation, but they’re interesting to think about. Among the better ideas I’ve heard are Michael Fassbender as Arthas Menethil, Anna Paquin as Jaina Proudmoore, and Hugo Weaving as Illidan Stormrage.

And then there also some… not so good suggestions. Among the more egregious offenders are WWE wrestler HHH as Arthas Menethil, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson as Thrall, and Angelina Jolie as Alexstrasza.

Yeah, no.

Then there’s talk of the actors who are known to be Warcraft fans. Might they seek out a role within the film? For example, Vin Diesel is known to be a big World of Warcraft player. I’m no fan of his, but I could see him in a minor role — he’d make a decent Nazgrim, Nazgrel, or Garrosh Hellscream.

Mila Kunis is also known to be a pretty big WoW fan. I could see her as some spunky young Blood Elf girl, perhaps.

Honestly, I’m sure none of this speculation will come to anything. If it does, it’s only because so many possibilities have been speculated about that statistically some are bound to hit the mark.

But it’s fun to imagine what could be.

What do you think the Warcraft movie will be like? Who do you see in its cast?

New article:

My latest WhatMMO article is 6 Most Outrageous Cash Grabs.

I do believe Star Wars: The Old Republic will go down in the annals of free to play history under the category of “This is what you should not do, so let this be a lesson to you.”