Word…..
October 26, 2005 on 10:43 am | In Rants | 2 Comments“People who are trying to decide whether to create a blog or not go through a thought process much like this:
1. The world sure needs more of ME.
2. Maybe I’ll shout more often so that people nearby can experience the joy of knowing my thoughts.
3. No, wait, shouting looks too crazy.
4. I know ¨C I’ll write down my daily thoughts and badger people to read them.
5. If only there was a description for this process that doesn’t involve the words egomaniac or unnecessary.
6. What? It’s called a blog? I’m there!
The blogger’s philosophy goes something like this:
Everything that I think about is more fascinating than the crap in your head.”
—Scott Adams—
Shadow of the Giant
October 24, 2005 on 10:04 pm | In Books | No CommentsThis is the 8th of Orson Scott Card’s Ender series.
1. Ender’s Game
2. Speaker for the Dead
3. Xenocide
4. Children of the Mind
5. Ender’s Shadow
6. Shadow of the Hegemon
7. Shadow Puppets
8. Shadow of the Giant
The first book catapulted Card into his present career. Warner Bros. has already optioned Ender’s Game and Ender’s Shadow. If only they can make up their mind who to use to write the screenplay. Hopefully the guys who did Troy can deliver on this soon.
Ender’s Game is the story of Ender Wiggin. A child prodigy, separated from his parents, brother and sister. Taken to Battle School, a space station where the brightest children on earth are schooled in military strategies and tactics.
Earth had discovered that they are not alone. It barely survived the first wave of alien assault, and are desperately preparing themselves for the next assault.
The children are driven to compete against each other, endure harsh war games, and learn how to command. Only the very elite graduate to the final wargame, led by Ender, pitted against the war hero of the last invasion.
It’s Harry Potter in space. But without the diapers.
After Ender won the war, he was unable to return to earth. Without a common enemy, the world fractured back into war, and Ender himself is a weapon of war that will be a threat to all nations but the one hosting him.
Victory rewarded with exile. And the next three books tell the story of how Ender travelled through space, and how he atoned for the genocide of an entire species.
I was hooked to Card after reading Ender’s Shadow. This is the story of Bean, a child even younger, and even more brilliant than Ender, who was with Ender in the final battle. It began with the story of how he survived the streets, as a toddler, by changing the rules of the jungle into one that empowered the young and weak, while taking away the advantages of the bullies.
Later Bean played an important support role in Ender’s battles. The book is a re-telling of Ender’s Game through another pair of eyes, one that looked deeper than Ender ever did.
The plot is extremely well thought out, and I’ve been hooked ever since.
I even have a book on fiction writing by Card.
From book six onwards, the stories take place on Earth. Of how Bean and Ender’s elder brother, strove to unite the war-ing nations on earth, many of which are using their Battle School children as military assets to realise their long-held delusions of divine destiny through expansionist campaigns.
In these recent books, Card has become rather vocal about what he thinks of the mess in the Middle East. No doubt coloured by the events of 9/11.
“As long as ordinary Muslims believe it’s their duty to kill any Muslim who tries to quit being a Muslim, as long as they think they have a holy duty to resort to arms to compel unbelievers to obey Islamic law - you can’t liberalize that, you can’t make it a decent system for anybody. Not even for Muslims. Because the cruelest, narrowest, most evil people will always rise to power because they’ll always be the ones most willing to wrap themselves in the crescent flag and murder people in God’s name.”
—from Giant of the Hegemon—
Seriously no holds barred.
But asides from little comments like these where the author vents his opinions to the readers, the rest of the book is without propaganda. The books are a good read. Card’s vision and imagination makes him one of the best sci-fi writers I know.
Bean is one of the most compelling fictitious characters that I’ve read. Standing proudly together with Fitz Chivalry (The Farseer Trilogy, Robin Hobb), and Sam Vimes (Discworld, Terry Pratchett).
But those are stories for another day.
Saruman and Michael Jackson
October 24, 2005 on 7:16 pm | In Movies | 2 Comments…oops… I mean, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
I really liked this movie. What’s not to love about a movie with so many trained squirrels in it?
I just watched the 2005 version. The one with Johnny Depp as Willy Wonka. But you should try to watch the 1971 version first. And perhaps try and get the novelisation of the movie too, here.
Johnny Depp is simply wonderful as Wonka. It’s especially funny how Wonka went with the creepy, bleached-complexion, big dark-glasses look. Inviting children into his ‘fun-land’…. How many times can you say Wackie Jackie?
Anyway, Willy Wonka is just wonderful. Less flambouyant than the ‘71 incarnation, more disturbed, and has more depth. Funnier too. But Gene Wilder had better lines.
The Oompa-Loompas no longer have orange skin, and finally have the African skin as Roald Dahl always intended. The new dance numbers are equally as disturbing as the original one with orange midgets. Seeing an army of identical Oompa Loompas was marvelous, in a weird kind of way. But the songs weren’t as catchy as the ‘71.
I actually remembered watching Willy Wonka and the Chocalate Factory when I was very young. The few images I remembered best were the giant blueberry, the TV chocolate, and the Bubble Room.
They didn’t bring back the Bubble Room for this one. Although curiously, they did spend a lot of effort to do the boat ride through the tunnel. But without the disturbing psychedelic montage of weird images. This is seen only in certain editions of the old movie. Kinda makes you wonder what the director was thinking when he put images of worms and chickens in a kid movie…
There’s no earthly way of knowing,
which direction we are going.
Not a speck of light is showing,
So the danger must be growing,
And they’re certainly not showing
Any signs that they are slowing…
And the bit with the 2001: A Space Odyssey ’s Monolith music was funny. Everyone saw that coming, right? Surely I’m not the only one geek enough to watch the Stanley Kubrik sci-fi?!
Am I?
The ending is more Hollywood now. With a daddy-hug and everything. But by the time the movie has already built up a healthy credit of well-being that I easily forgave it.
Publish this, and gonna watch it for the second time now…. Just fast-forward the first 30min, the movie doesn’t begin until Wonka appears.
Entries and comments feeds.
Valid XHTML and CSS. ^Top^
23 queries. 0.818 seconds.
Powered by WordPress with jd-nebula theme design by John Doe.



