This blog is no longer being updated. I've moved on to The Accidental Weblog. Hope to see you there.

Friday, September 03, 2004

Bad dubbing

Finally watched Rashomon a few days ago. Realized some weeks back my familiarity with such 'classic' filmmakers as Kurosawa, Hitchcock, and Orson Welles is pretty lean (though in my defense, I probably know such contemporary directors as Jodorowsky and Yimou better than many).

Trouble was, the Rashomon I saw had absolutely agonizing dubbed dialogue. Wasn't paying enough attention when I picked up the tape, sadly. And it pretty much wrecked it for me.

Honestly. Voice actors. What the hell? Guy reading the bandit sounded like he shoulda been on Rocky and Bullwinkle or something.

Trying to picture the film past this obstacle, I'm unable to decide what my impression would have been otherwise. Often find myself a bit mystified by works for which others have enormous respect. Sometimes wonder if I'm on my own little planet taste-wise, after such experiences. I can say I really liked The Seventh Seal. But even there, at the end, I had this odd sorta 'is that it?' feeling left.

Perhaps I expect too much from such legends. Then again, perhaps entirely too many critics are given to hyperbole. No question, The Seventh Seal is absorbing, thoughtful, frequently beautiful filmmaking. I loved the protagonist's soliloquy protesting his god's elusiveness, and Death's answer. But frequently I wonder if the real reason Bergman gets such marvellous reviews is merely that his competition, in the day, was rather limp. He was first. In an era in which so much of filmmaking concerned rubbery monsters filmed in poor light and projected on drive-in screens, Bergman was willing to make motion pictures that had the balls to say something interesting about humanity.

Last film that really left me thinking 'Wow' was Deepa Mehta's 1947 Earth. It may just be that I went into it with so few preconceptions as to what it would be. But that, in my mind, is a film. Bloody, sexy, passionate, yet still reflective. There's a brutal honesty in the story, and vital truths that leap out of the chaos on screen--reflections particularly vital to the world we wake up to each morning.

This is a film about what human beings are--fragile, easily confused creatures, in which so much can take root and grow, for good and for ill. The human nervous system can play host to so much love, so much hatred; passions are so easily twisted by alienation, by nationalism; pride, though it has its place, so readily gives way to narrow hatred and jealousy. Though the work does have respected fans, I also read a few nasty, narrow little critics who critiqued it as a 'mawkish romance', and honestly wondered if they'd been watching the same film.

Anyway. Maybe I'll get back to you when I score a subtitled copy of Rashomon.

Never mind

Apparently we are not okay to go.

Oh well.

SHGb02+14a

Well. This is interesting.

And no, they're not kidding. Apparently, SETI has a signal interesting enough to rate publication. Has some suspicious properties, mind you.

But I think imagining our worldview may be about to undergo one hell of a change isn't entirely unwarranted.

Hello there, SHGb02+14a.

Thursday, September 02, 2004

And there was much rejoicing

New Get Your War On yesterday.

Being eleven years old rocks.

Wednesday, September 01, 2004

Bit bashing

Things have been quiet on the blogging front the last few days because I've become necessarily obsessed by work related to my primary paying gig... I'm reverse engineering a protocol--crypto-related stuff involving long, obsessive bouts of staring at hex dumps trying to figure out what people I've never met (and probably never will) are trying to do with those quietly murmuring bits, writing snippets of code that test these guesses... It's the kind of thing I'm not particularly good at letting go of, so it's kinda eating into the blogging hours... and the eating hours, and the sleeping hours, and the bathing hours, and the going to the bathroom hours, and the communicating with the rest of my species hours... You may assume it's mostly cracked when I start posting again with something that looks like regularity.

Sunday, August 29, 2004

Das Boot

(... In which our hero sleeps through portions of one of the best films ever made.)

Wound up watching the movie U-571 a few weeks back--a movie I probably never would have bothered with--long story as to why I did actually see it--and no, I can't say now that I have seen it that I thought it was anything special. In any case, I got to thinking I really should get around to seeing Das Boot--a film I'd often heard cited as one of the best war films--and even just one of the best films of any genre--ever made. I'd never seen it, but then I'm not a big war movie guy.

So I rented it on DVD. But made a bit of a miscalculation. I'd picked up the 'uncut/original' version--and apparently, the original version was a miniseries.

So it's just a few minutes shy of five hours long.

This wouldn't have been such a problem except that I started watching it a little after 10 pm (I have a young daughter; this is pretty much when I get to watch movies, if it's going to be something involving quantities of terror and death deemed inappropriate for three year olds--and in which the terror and death are not periodically interrupted by musical numbers, a la Disney).

Anyway. The parts for which I was actually awake were entirely unforgettable. Great film. I think.