So, that church that I pass every night changed its billboard. Unfortunately, they changed it to "If your relgion doesn't take you to church, chances are that it won't take you to heaven." Dude, I don't want to be in a heaven with people who can't even spell the word 'religion' (and, yeah, there isn't a letter missing or anything. And it's been that way for at least a week now. Very depressing.).
Glory.
Second thing:
So, I watched Shallow Grave, which was next on my Quest to See All of Ewan McGregor's Movies.
First off, I was not expecting the movie to be so fucking funny. Seriously, it's hilarious. Ewan, Christopher (the ninth Doctor Who) and Kerry (no clue if she's still acting) have wonderful sexually-laced friendship-type chemistry, and all three of them get to be very funny and then pretty dark.
Ewan's character, Alex Law, is the character that seems to change the least -- he's charmingly amoral at the start and remains so throughout the movie. Oh, but he is intensely charming.
Brief summary of the movie: Alex Law, David, and Juliet are looking for a fourth roommate (and there's serious humor in the finding -- they are decidedly horrid to the people they deem 'not good enough' to live there, but they're so funny about it, and they really seem to care about each other at this point). They find Hugo. After a few days, they find Hugo dead in his room (suicide, possibly accidental) along with a suitcase of money. Alex convinces the others that they should keep the money and dispose of Hugo's body. Anyway, David eventually goes nuts and tries to kill Alex -- Juliet kills David, but leaves Alex pinned to the floor with a knife so that she can take the money.
Unfortunately for Juliet, Alex switched the money out of the suitcase (and put in newspaper clippings about the bodies that they buried -- oh, David killed two men who came after the money post-Hugo's death, which was a big hint about how fucking psycho he'd become) and hid it under the floorboards.
But he's the one person who doesn't have definite intent to betray. He was willing to share the money with the others and he protects Juliet when David goes after her. He doesn't care about turning the money in because he doesn't see the point, but he also doesn't see the point in not sharing the money with his mates. He protects himself (by switching the money out) but gives his two roommates every chance to stop being fucking insane and not betray him. So, in the end, when he ends up alive and with the money, it's a big relief. Honestly, after everything he goes through in the movie, he kinda deserves it (David puts a drill to his forehead. There's blood. I was traumatized. He also gets smashed in the shins with a crowbar, and punched in the face, and, oh yes, pinned to the floor with a huge kitchen knife.).
Wonderful movie. Definitely one that I'll buy one day.
I'm not in a fit state to talk about Katrina. It's... overwhelmingly horrifying right now. My family lived in Louisiana back when I was too young to remember more than fragments -- it's always been right up there with Germany for the places I wanted to see one day as an adult, so that I could remember them properly.