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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)
26 February 2026
#26 - Sancho the Bailiff (1954)
25 February 2026
#25 - Our Motto:
I love the smell of
napalm in the morning!
If someone tells me that’s their favourite line,
I’ll likely take that as a useful warning,
and think: This dufus
ain’t no friend of mine!
cuz if you think that Kilgore is your idol,
it’s fair to say you’ve missed the movie’s theme.
which makes me think All
Yanks are homicidal!
with Wagner-flavoured
national fever dreams.
For me, the key is Willard’s opening speech –
imprisoned in a dark he can’t control,
lamenting wasted time and virtues bygone –
as peace and sanity twist out of reach,
he growls a line from out his tortured soul:
Saigon.
Shit. I’m still only in Saigon.
to see the video of this poem and more, check out Andy's Patreon
24 February 2026
#24 - Sikiliza Kwa Wahenga
(Russell J Turner)
This year we are using films from the Sight and Sound 2022 list as prompts
Sixth up from me is Jordan Peele’s Get Out (2017 - #100), a curtal sonnet taking inspiration and its title from a Swahili refrain used in the soundtrack
Listen to the elders as the stories begin,
drinking brews of mesmerism ‒ a sunken place
manifests affected care and narcissism.
Monuments to second chances, trophies of skin ‒
blind are they that seek to use another’s face,
deaf to the tranquil, the wild and quiet rhythm.
Listen to the last songs of deer that lay dying,
dance in disbelief the gods may grant you their grace,
crack the artifice and glamours that imprison.
Listen to the sorrows, to the children crying
“listen, listen, listen…”
RJT
23 February 2026
#23 - Disconnected Intermissions, or: if Kubrick wrote a sonnet, it would be a Chant Royale set to Strauss
Fay Roberts’s penultimate sonnet this year is inspired by Stanley Kubrick’s epic, surreal sci-fi classic, the USAmerican movie, 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), written by Stanley Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke, and starring Keir Dullea, Gary Lockwood, William Sylvester, and Douglas Rain.
In pain, this late, I don’t know if I’ll last;
I tried to read the book when I was wee.
(my television’s not exactly vast)
it’s not the way he wanted us to see…
This fearful symmetry, this awful drone;
intelligence is warfare, death on hand?
And what’s a stylus but a sharpened bit of bone
rotating, waiting for the chance to land?
The choir shrills their harsh, triumphant skirls,
the people decorations, afterthoughts
(the future’s white, and all the servants girls)
a way to highlight scale, the plot for naught…
As splendid isolation is the way
this final human touch calls it a day.
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| Image from Wikipedia |
If you have access to Prime Video, you can watch the 2:29 long, English language movie here. Content warnings include: violence, flashing lights, murder. Let us know what you thought if you’ve seen it! Maybe don’t watch it knackered and in lots of pain, though, unless you enjoy obsessing over tapirs in a sleep-deprived state… And conception metaphors…
22 February 2026
#22 - Spirited Away (2001)
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| Image via IMDB |
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






