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| Image via IMDB |
28 Sonnets Later
This February four* intrepid poets set off on adventure into poetry territory. Twenty-eight* days, twenty-eight* sonnets. Let's go! (*sometimes more)
22 February 2026
#22 - Spirited Away (2001)
21 February 2026
#21 - Shepherd's Pie For Ewe
I am the shepherd – probably the best
you’ve ever seen. Popular with sheep
the sheep, they love me. Last guy, he just messed
up everything. I fixed it: one clean sweep.
You seen the markets? Wool is up a bunch –
we’re looking at a boom that never ends!
Triumphal mutton will be served at lunch
and also lamb (for just my closest friends).
Another savvy deal: dinners, meet diners!
see, this is doing business in the pro’s!
Ignore my bogus critics and maligners:
I am the greatest – everybody knows
the deaths so wrongly charged to my account
were just the black sheep – clearly they don’t count.
20 February 2026
#20 - Long Division
(Russell J Turner)
This year we are using films from the Sight and Sound 2022 list as prompts
Fifth up from me is Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s Fear Eats the Soul (1974 - #52), heavily informed by my own experience of love across an age divide
For you are so much younger yet possessed
with wisdom way beyond my scatterbrain ‒
we meet in bars, we shelter from the rain,
cocooned from animosity and jest.
We build a monument to stand the test
of time and love, to sing an old refrain
which slowly fades into a frosty pain ‒
we feather and then flee our little nest
But this is not some different land or age
or circumstance, we do not face the fear
and ignorance that others must abide ‒
conclusion comes from what I cannot cage,
the darkness that in time may disappear
beneath the waters of some tranquil tide
RJT
19 February 2026
#19 - 22⅘% of 8½
Fay Roberts’s fifth sonnet this year is inspired by Federico Fellini’s metatextual bit of sophistry, the Italian movie, 8½ (1963), written by Federico Fellini, Tullio Pinelli, Ennio Flaiano, and Brunello Rondi, and starring Marcello Mastroianni, Anouk Aimée, and Claudia Cardinale. The first 31:30 made a strong impression…
Of all the tropes that I despise in art
it’s this one that can bore me in a trice:
that every single character, each part’s
despicable, with no redeeming slice
of virtue, humour, sweet humility,
affection for their friends, or even half
an ounce of kindness, unless they’re to be
discarded, punished, nameless, fatted calf.
And worse! Fellini knows he’s got a dud!
He makes the writer tell us to our face!
He hopes to smear his audience with crud,
to make us all complicit in this waste.
I’ve failed my challenge: watch each doled-out reel.
But I won’t play the voyeur for this heel.
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| The precise moment where I tapped out |
If you have access to the BFI (which I won’t shortly because my free trial runs out), you can watch the 2:18 long, multilingual (but mostly Italian) movie here. Content warnings include: misogyny, xenophobia, toxic relationships, suffocation. Let us know what you thought if you’ve seen it! But please don’t try to tell me I’m a philistine for tapping out. That won’t go well.
18 February 2026
#18 - Close Up (1990)
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| Image via Wikipedia |
17 February 2026
#17 - Necessary Coups
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| #50 - les Quatre Cent Coups (1959) |
The art evolves, but slowly – glacial pace.
Divergence rattles, comfort is narcotic;
as careful rehashed bankers win the race,
and torpid lies the culture – dull, sclerotic.
I understand, I get it – writing sonnets
is hardly avant-garde
– my aging mind
just bimbles out in verse whatever’s on it:
new innovations might leave me behind.
I still say evolution needs a shove –
no gentle nudge, but something firm and drastic;
not intervention’s calm, supportive love,
but revolutionary, iconoclastic.
So man the barricades, and raise the flag –
a boy, alone, freeze-frame: la nouvelle vague.
AWB
for the video of this poem and more, visit Andy's Patreon
16 February 2026
#16 - all vessels break and then remake themselves
(Russell J Turner)
This year we are using films from the Sight and Sound 2022 list as prompts
Fourth up from me is Kenji Mizoguchi’s Ugetsu (1953 - #92), through its theme of the treatment of women in warfare, and the metaphor of pottery
From clay they come, by hand or history,
each fashioned for a purpose or by fate ‒
a jug, a bowl, three women annotate
old monuments of joy and misery.
By brothel, drunken spear and jealousy,
two bend under the stratagems of hate.
The third arises from a charred estate ‒
a phoenix of desire, of loyalty
Yet those who walk in darkness walk in light,
each in their own way casting off the past ‒
one reconciles the future with the fight,
one sings beyond the grave, content at last.
Through warfare, rape and death, through love and spells,
all vessels break and then remake themselves
RJT






