I don't mind Seattle winters, but they drive my wife to despair. Even though DARKNESS AT ONE PM would be an exaggeration, I think it's ...
read moreI don't mind Seattle winters, but they drive my wife to despair. Even though DARKNESS AT ONE PM would be an exaggeration, I think it's what my wife perceives. Thank goodness we're SPRINGing FORWARD soon!
I liked Leslie's plays on two familiar figures of speech, FIVE (to SIX) O'CLOCK SHADOW and BURN THE MIDNIGHT (to ONE A.M.) OIL. Clever use of mirror symmetry, too, making possible a theme set of 15 15 15 13 (note that they're all odd in length; that's the critical element).
My lack of familiarity with DARKNESS AT NOON was probably yet another hole in my knowledge base. I asked two highly well-read people, Jim Horne and my wife, if they recognized it. Both of them said something to the effect of "… yeahhh …" Maybe throw in a few more h's. Made me wonder, why not use another colloquial NOON phrase?
Blew my mind that after 30 minutes of searching, the best I could do was HIGH NOON or SHANGHAI NOON. I'm a big fan of the "Rush Hour" pairing of Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker, but him and Owen Wilson ... yeahhhhh.
Some delightful clues. I was stuck in the northwest corner, [Signs of something moving?] befuddling me. Ah, TEARS show that someone's been moved! Crossing that with [Crow native to the Midwest] is diabolical. I ran through all the types of blackbirds I knew (two) and thought it had to be a Native American reference. Ah, SHERYL Crow was born in Missouri!
I should explain two entries. DESI confused me because I'm used to cluing it as DESI Arnaz, but it's also a term for some peoples of the Indian subcontinent. And SINE of pi is zero, when expressed in radians, which is … yeahhh, you don't care.
I found the overall concept too straightFORWARD and easy to figure out, but I enjoyed the apt use of the two colorful base phrases. I might have had a stronger impression if Leslie had gone with HIGH ONE AM (nine letters is also possible in this mirror symmetry layout) and clued it as the phrase (not the movie) to make all three themers more consistent.