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| Image via Wikipedia |
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)
14 February 2026
#14 - Chungking Express (1994)
13 February 2026
# 13 - Andrei by Andrei by Andrei by Andy
Where art is colour, life is monochrome –
regardless of the medium one chooses;
we need bright jesters, spurred by faith and muses
to pierce the waning of a greyscale gloam.
Hominid hands adorned sepulchral homes
to ease the pains of Neolithic bruises;
downtrodden slaves’ graffiti still amuses
amidst the dusty ruins of ancient Rome.
a toddler’s rainbow – light chromatic bridge
to soothe the hunger of a barren fridge
a vibrant tune, kaleidoscopic ditty
to cheer your view across a dismal city
We thirst for Art – the art must never stop;
but still: fuck off with all your AI slop.
AWB
for the video recording and more, visit Andy's Patreon
12 February 2026
#12 - The Pilman Radiant
(Russell J Turner)
This year we are using films from the Sight and Sound 2022 list as prompts
Third up from me is Andrei Tarkovsky’s Stalker (1979 - #43), with a sort of stream-of-consciousness interpretation of its source material, Roadside Picnic by the Strugatsky Brothers
Regrets the mythic monument consoled
Oblivion with fortune in its fold
Advance, retreat where legends come untold
Do Not Pass Go as heat melts into cold
Sing shattered flowers faded by the stone
Intelligence has left you all alone
Down deep by ways imagined and unknown
Exulting onwards, backwards bone-by-bone
Perhaps our reasoning concludes too quick
Incomers from the cosmos, shoot and trick
Chimeric ghosts through deathly candlestick
Now cancer boils beyond the river bed
In colour bleached, in colour left unsaid
Come let your monkey save you from the dead
RJT
11 February 2026
#11 - On Seeking Warmth
Fay Roberts’s third sonnet this year is inspired by Billy Wilder’s screwball/ gangster/ romantic comedy (kinda), USAmerican movie, Some Like It Hot (1959), written by Billy Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond (from stories suggested by R. Thoeren and M. Logan), and starring Marilyn Monroe, Tony Curtis, and Jack Lemmon.
She says she loves the ones who play the sax
and, bitterly, she knows she’s in their thrall.
But now, in sweet escape, she finds that all
her wonder is encompassed in cold facts,
because it’s not the instrument that lacks
it’s her, existing dimly, sipping gall,
anticipating some or other fall,
while hope remains a glimmer in the packs.
If peace is what she’s seeking, heaven knows
she’ll never find it, playing with a band,
and millionaires don’t drop out of the sky.
So she’ll confide, and cross her fingers, grow
in confidence, while all this time a man
is lurking, as a perfect, single spy.
- FAR
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| Still from the movie via the New York Times |
If you have access to MGM+, you can watch the 2:01 long, English language movie here. Content warnings include: gang violence, Prohibition, alcoholism, and misogyny. Let us know what you thought if you’ve seen it!
10 February 2026
#10 - Portrait of a Lady on Fire (2019)
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| Image via Unsplash |
09 February 2026
#9 - Joy In Ashes
Some games are more for playing than for winning
the rules are there to gently guide the fun
to leave the players satisfied and grinning
enjoyment trumping prizing who has won
this take of mine – more sinned against than sinning –
once had monopoly (forgive the pun)
the golden rule, writ large from the beginning
an infant maxim, taught to everyone:
It’s not the winning,
but the taking part!
consoling oft, to mitigate the tears,
as toddlers meet and greet their maiden loss;
and worth repeating to those grumpy farts
whose jealous, urn-ward glances last for years –
it’s much more fun when one don’t give a toss.
08 February 2026
#8 - Door of No Return
(Russell J Turner)
This year we are using films from the Sight and Sound 2022 list as prompts
Second up from me is Djibril Diop Mambéty’s Touki Bouki (1973 - #66), primarily influenced by my own visit to Senegal and Dakar about thirty years ago, particularly Île de Gorée and Maison des Esclaves (plus a small anachronistic nod to the Paris-Dakar)
The road to Paris ploughs through seas and schemes ‒
this motorbike won’t navigate those sands
whose shifting currents hide the whispered lands.
As ships sail out to all the world’s extremes
not far from Gorée’s echoed age-old screams,
where memory and monument still stands
to mark the manacles and fiery brands
that bled to manifest another’s dreams
Within the embassies we wait and yearn
for slips of paper worth their weight in gold,
as dimly then distinctly we discern
hyenas that bamboozle, thieve and burn
foundations of the constructs we’ve been sold ‒
illusions of departure and return
RJT






