Senin, 29 November 2010

Read These Comics Now!





I reviewed the first half of this book back in February when writer / artist Tommie Kelly released the Electric Ladyland compilation, collecting the early appearances of Jim Soundman and friends from the Road Crew webcomic.

The Complete Road Crew is twice that comic, following our hero where few slacker roadies have ever dared go before... including heaven, hell, outer space, The X-Factor, and... the recording studio. Can Jim produce the debut album of George In India (aka the support band) with little more than a rudimentary 4 track and the ability to shout at drummers? How hard can it really be?

Sex, drugs, rock 'n' roll and plenty of laughs... this comic has it all. And for anyone who ever dreamed about going on the road with their favourite band... just ask Jim Soundman. He'll probably tell you not to bother. It's too much like hard work.

Read more Road Crew and buy the complete collection here.



Martin Eden's gay superheroes comic Spandex reaches its third issue this month, and this really is the best yet. Up till now, Spandex has been loads of fun with its pink ninjas and 50 foot lesbians, but Martin's been playing it mostly for laughs, with the odd splash of drama thrown in to keep us on our toes. Fans of Martin's previous book, The O Men, will know that comedy is just one of his many talents - he's an all round entertainer, which he proves to the full in Spandex #3 with a emotional action horror rollercoaster that deals quite wonderfully with the thorny subject of depression, and how we handle it.

The colourful world of Spandex has been turned grey by an alien monster called Nadir who has taken all the fun out of being alive and forced us all into working 12 hour days, 7 days a week. If you live for the weekend, you might as well call it a day. Fortunately, a small group of heroes survive and resist the influence of Nadir, though one by one they are slowly falling victim to the torpor.

Till now, the characters in Spandex have largely been defined by their sexuality, but three issues in Martin has wisely broadened the book's scope. These aren't gay superheroes any more, they're superheroes who happen to be gay. Anything's possible now... and I'm really looking forward to seeing where he takes these wonderful characters next.

See for yourself by visiting Martin's website where Spandex is available to buy both as print comic and pdf.


Minggu, 28 November 2010

TANGLED 3D (2010)

MyRating: YYYY1/2

Director: Nathan Greno & Byron Howard
Voice: Mandy Moore, Zachary Levi, Donna Murphy, Ron Perlman, M.C. Gainey, Jeffrey Tambor, Brad Garrett, Paul F. Tompkins, Richard Kiel
MPAA: Rated PG for brief mild violence

A charming and delightful 3D animated musical film by Walt Disney, based on the classic German fairy tale Rapunzel, written by the famous Brothers Grimm. This movie also marked the 50th animated feature film in the Walt Disney Animated Classsics series. And this time, Disney did it again! It stunned us with its wonderful and magical fairy tale touch, that brought so much cheers and joys to the movie theatre, and added to another unforgettable movie experience that will stay with us for a long time.

Princess Rapunzel (voice by Mandy Moore) is kidnapped from the palace while she was a baby by a wicked woman, Mother Gothel (Donna Murphy). Since Mother Gothel witnesses how the little princess is healed from her sickness by the healing powers of a magical flower, she knows that the same magical powers are growing within the golden hair of Rapunzel. As she is aspiring to forever stay young, Mother Gothel has to lock Rapunzel in a hidden tower and encourages her not to leave the tower due to the dangerous world outside. Eighteen years later, Rapunzel has grown to become a beautiful teenager, while her hair has grown to a length of 70-feet. But she is also becoming more and more curious of the world outside her tower, until one day, when a handsome bandit and a thief named Flynn Rider (Zachary Levi) breaks into the tower while escaping the Palace guards. And that changes Rapunzel's life forever, as the bandit is the key for her to travel outside, to a world that she could only imagine for the last 18 years. A wonderful wide world that is waiting for her to be set free from her caged tower. But will Mother Gothel let her go?

This is an old school Disney animated film, story taken from one of the famous fairy tales ever written, with the old Disney's formula that has proved again and again, since its first full-length animated feature film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs in 1937, that Disney's fairy tales has never lost its touch. A simple storyline, but sweet and cheerful fairy tale, with a beautiful love story that was very fun to watch, plus some dazzling actions and good humors. The animated graphic was beautiful and colorful, even though not as rich as those of the Pixar's. And the 3D made the movie to become more interesting, as well as giving a slightly different nuance from the conventional 2D Disney animated movies.

Beautiful, funny and lovable characters. Besides the beautiful Rapunzel and the handsome Eugene "Flynn Rider" Fitzherbert, the movie also has the funny non-speaking animal characters, Pascal, Rapunzel's chameleon friend, and Maximus, the horse of the Palace Guard. Even the wicked character of Mother Gothel, that is necessary in every fairy tale, has her own place. Great jobs done by the actors who voiced over the characters, especially Mandy Moore, Zachary Levi and Donna Murphy, who gave a dynamic character and color tone to the voices of the three main characters. Beautiful voice of Mandy Moore while signing the beautiful songs, and interestingly, great voice too from Zachary "Chuck" Levi.

A Disney's movie is not complete without beautiful songs and grand music scores. And Tangled has many to cheer with, including the memorable songs such as When Will My Life Begin (sang by Mandy Moore), Mother Knows Best (by Donna Murphy), I've Got A Dream (ensamble by Brad Garrett, Jeffrey Tambor, Mandy Moore, Zachary Levi & Company) and I See The Light (duet by Mandy Moore & Zachary Levi). All thanks to Alan Menken, an Academy Award-winning American musical theatre and film composer and pianist. He has collaborated and done so many wonderful scores for Walt Disney, that have won him 8 Academy Awards, 4 awards for Best Original Scores for the movies The Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, and Pocahontas, and another 4 awards for Best Original Song for those same four movies, from a total of 18 Academy Awards nominations, including for other Disney's movies The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Hercules, and Enchanted. And Tangled will definitely compete again for these categories in the Academy Awards next year.

This movie made me feel young at heart. It made me want to dream again like I used to be when I was a child, when fairy tales used to amaze me and nothing else mattered. It made me wish that life was as sweet as a fairy tale, even though it's not.

This is a wonderful and heart warming movie that will win the hearts of many people. And it will become a contender for Toy Story 3 and How to Train Your Dragon to compete for the price of Best Animated Feature Film in the Academy Awards next year. It has been an interesting year of many great animated movies this year. (MJ)

Sabtu, 27 November 2010

UNSTOPPABLE (2010)

MyRating: YYY1/2

Director: Tony Scott
Cast: Denzel Washington, Chris Pine, Rosario Dawson, Kevin Dunn, Lew Temple, Ethan Suplee, Jeff Wincott
MPAA: Rated PG-13 for sequences of action and peril, and some language

A runaway train with no crews in it, carrying a cargo of toxic chemicals, lets loose on the Pennsylvania railway tracks in high speed and opposing traffic, and endangers the community across the state. A senior engineer, Frank Barnes (Denzel Washington) and a young inexperienced conductor, Will Colson (Chris Pine), who work together for the first time and happen to be on the railway tracks at the same time in a separate locomotive, are put into a situation to chase the runaway train. Guided from the railway office by a train yardmaster Connie Hooper (Rosario Dawson), they have to race against the time to catch and put the train under control, before it derails and causes a deathly catastrophe into a highly populated town.

This is a good action thriller by Tony Scott, with continuous tension and rush that will put you at the edge of your seat in a high speed ride. After the not so satisfying The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 (2009), also with the similar train theme and the same star Denzel Washington, Tony Scott pulled this one right. Actually this was the 5th collaboration between Mr. Scott and Mr. Washington, the others were Crimson Tide (1995), Man on Fire (2004) and Deja Vu (2006). The action was well paced with gripping story. The film was of Tony Scott's style, with fast camera works and stylish flash jumping scene editing, but it was not overdone as some of his films, that sometimes for me, was becoming a bit annoying and distracting, and looked like MTV videoclips. But this one not. He put all his style in the right proportion in this film.

The casts were great. Denzel Washington was good, as always. And Chris Pine is definitely a hot commodity after the success of Star Trek reboot (2009). Their convincing performances and heroic attempts throughout the film made this movie interesting and fun to watch. Two actor from different generations share actions in one screen. There were some improbable and over the top scenes that were too good to be true for two ordinary citizens like Frank and Will, including jumping from one coach to other coach of a running train and jumping from a car to the locomotive, but they were necessary to spice up the actions and pump up the adrenalines. And all of these were handled nicely by Scott, that made this movie to become an entertaining one.

Next time you ride on a train, don't forget to bring these guys with you. (MJ)


Jumat, 26 November 2010

Friday Flash - At Last, The Sex Scene!


This week's #fridayflash almost didn't happen. It's pure genre hokum, and I almost gave up on it at the last minute. But maybe it's not completely hopeless. I'm sure you'll read it anyway. If only because of the title.


At Last, The Sex Scene!



At last – the sex scene! This was the only reason Simon had taken this stupid part in the first place. It was one of the worst scripts he’d ever read, but the chance of a little bump and grind – even softcore pretend – with Annalisa Beaujolais, that was too good to pass up. Particularly if the rumours were true. While most actors hated taking their clothes off on a freezing soundstage and simulating passion with strips of flesh coloured tape strapped over their modesty and a full crew looking on, picking their noses and scratching their balls, legend had it that Annalisa Beaujolais reacted quite differently. That she became both aroused and frustrated in equal measure, and would often require the scene to re-enacted soon after, in either her trailer or hotel room, without the interference of directors and soundmen. This was exactly why he'd become an actor in the first place - how else would a thick lad from Stockport, even a prettyboy like him, ever get to sleep with someone as gorgeous as Annalisa Beaujolais? This was the best job in the world.

Today Simon was playing Dr. Gregory Chappaquiddick, a criminal profiler brought in by the San Francisco PD to help crack a series of bizarre ritual murders. Paired with tough, no-nonsense homicide detective Kate Connors, the unlikely duo struggled to deny the undeniable magnetism that developed between them and concentrate instead on the case at hand... but passion soon got the better of them. All of which led to the scene they were about to film wherein Det. Kate revealed what policewomen really wore under their plain clothes (nothing plain about it) and Dr. Greg took great pleasure in examining her, in forensic detail.

“So,” said Annalisa with a wink, when she finally emerged from her trailer ten minutes after the call, “you ready for this, Britpop?”

It was her cute little nickname for him. Annalisa Beaujolais had a cute little nickname… for him! Oh, this was going to be so good.

“Right, guys,” said the director, “I don’t think I really need to tell you what to do in this scene.” The truth was, he hadn’t actually told them what to do in any scene thus far. He’d obviously been given clear “don’t forget who the star is” instructions by the studio. Annalisa was calling the shots here. Everyone else just did what they told. Not that Simon had any problem with that.

And so he followed one of Hollywood’s Top Three actresses onto the hotel room set and stood before her in front of a window showing a fake San Francisco skyline. They were actually in a warehouse in Burbank. Where else?

“How do you like it?” Simon said, giving her a look he’d pre-loaded with suggestion.

“Rough,” Annalisa smiled back. “Hard. Nasty.”

“Should I tear?” he asked, tugging her blouse forward to grant himself a brief glimpse of the treats to come.

“Rip. Tear. Bite. Scratch,” she replied, but without the tease. Businesslike. You had to admire that. “The way I see it, these characters... they’re obsessed with their jobs. They don’t do this sort of thing very often. They’re repressed. Pent up. Ready to just… explode. Plus, they’re surrounded by violence in their working lives. That’s got to bleed through into their… I think what we should be going for here is Jack and Jessica in Postman. It’s not full-on Basic Instinct, but... well, you’ve read the script.”

Oh. Yeah, Simon thought. The characters. The script. He knew there was something…

And so the effete director called ‘action’ and Simon did his best to recall the lines that took him where he wanted to be. “I’ve seen too much, Kate… it makes me sick inside… sometimes I just want to feel something… some emotion beyond the horror… the repulsion… I just need to…”

That’s when she kissed him. Just like it said in the script. Hard and clumsy and like a pan of milk boiling over on the stove. The kiss went all the way through him, he shuddered with it, and when he looked into Annalisa's eyes he saw something there, something he’d dreamed about: he saw what she wanted. She was in charge here, not him, certainly not the director, and she didn’t want to wait till later. She wanted to do this now. To create one of those scenes that went down in celluloid history, one of those scenes that got everyone talking. How did they make it look so real? Could it be because they were actually doing it? Like Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie, audiences would be wondering about this scene for years to come, and only the people in this room would ever know for sure. Think what that could do for his career… though it wasn’t his career he was thinking about as he tore off her blouse. And it certainly wasn’t the script. It was just this moment. This moment where one of the most beautiful women in the world was unbuckling his belt. This moment where he was kissing her stunning, only slightly augmented breasts. This moment where the acting stopped and everything became real.



He opened his eyes and the first thing he saw was Annalisa's hair on the pillow beside him. He sat up with a start. Had he really fallen asleep - on set? He looked around, expecting to see the crew laughing or giving him the thumbs up, but no one else was there. They’d taken their gear with them too. And the rest of the soundstage. No. No, they hadn’t taken anything… this wasn’t… he wasn't in Burbank anymore. He was somewhere else entirely. An actual hotel room. The fake backdrop of San Francisco through the hotel window: it wasn’t fake. He could see a plane flying over the bridge, a skywriter, and then a pigeon landed on the windowsill and began pecking at the glass.

“Shit!” He jumped out of the bed. “Shit!” he said again, loud enough to wake Annalisa.

“What is it?” she asked, sitting up with the sheet modestly held over her breasts. The way they did in movies. “Are you OK?”

“We’re in San Francisco!” he said, opening the window as far as it’d go and scaring away the pigeon. He could see cars on the bridge and small boats in the bay. Yachts. He could see yachts.

“Where else would we be?” she said, getting out of bed with the sheet still wrapped round her – just like they did in the movies - and coming over to join him at the window.

“I’ve never been to San Francisco in my life!” he shouted. God, what had happened? What had he taken? The last thing he remembered was the shoot. The sex scene. He didn’t even remember leaving the set. Anything they’d done after that… whatever she’d got him to do, take, experience… it was all gone. Damn it, he’d been away on some insane night of debauchery with Annalisa Beaujolais and he couldn’t remember any of it!

“What are you talking about?” she said, stroking his arm, trying to keep him calm. “You’ve been working here three weeks now. We called you in to help on the Baphomet case – the serial killer – don’t you remember? Greg?”

“Don’t call me…” He stepped away from her and banged his shoulder on the wall-mounted TV. “What is this? Method? I don’t do method, Annalisa. I just turn up and read the lines, then clock off at the end of the shoot. I’m sorry if that’s something you… but can we stop it now? This is freaking me out.”

“Greg, please,” she said, “please try to stay calm.” The worry on her face, he couldn’t deny it, it was a truly great performance. “Just take a deep breath and think. Oh god, I knew something like this would happen. The way you were last night… this case, it's really gotten to you, hasn’t it? And here’s me, taking advantage of that, getting my rocks off while you’re… Oh, Greg, what have I done?”

“Stop calling me Greg!" he screamed, backing away from her again. "I’m not... I'm Simon McQuarrie! I’m just an actor. Like you – OK, not like you, I mean you’re Annalisa Beaujolais, you’re like… like…” He suddenly realised he wasn’t wearing any clothes and grabbed a pair of crumpled pants from the floor, kicking his legs into them while he looked around the room for something, anything to anchor him to the reality he knew.

“I’m Kate, Greg, Kate Connors… We met three weeks ago in the Commissioner’s office, don't you--“

In the back of his pants, Simon could feel the weight of a wallet. His wallet. He grabbed it and pulled it out with a hammy “a-ha!” He was past caring about his reputation as a thespian. “See?” He said, flicking it open and holding it out before her. “Pick a card – pick any card! Check my driver’s license! Check—”

Her eyes said it all. He took back the wallet and saw for himself. Dr. G. W. Chappaquiddick. “Oh come on – come on, what is this? Am I being punk’d or—“

But the expression on her face said not. Annalisa was a pretty good actress… but not that good. She actually looked a little scared… and then he remembered the script. How after sleeping with him, Det. Kate Connors made a disturbing discovery about her new lover. He couldn’t remember the exact details – in truth, he’d only really skimmed the scenes he wasn’t in – but it was something like an old typewriter in the wardrobe or an ice pick in the bedside table or…

Could the man she’d just slept with also be the killer they were hunting?

Over in the corner, on the dressing table, there was his laptop. Dr. Greg Chappaquiddick’s laptop. Just a prop when he’d seen it on the soundstage, but real enough now. It didn't matter. All this could soon be put to rest by the internet.

“What are you doing?” said Kate – Annalisa – behind him. She sounded scared now. Her character – her character sounded scared.

“I’m gonna prove to you this is all bullshit is what I’m… IMDb doesn’t lie, babe.” He typed in his name and hit return. No exact matches. The database made its suggestions.

(Approx Matches)
Simon Curry.
Simon Carriere.
Christina McQuarrie.
Christopher McQuarrie.

“No. No!” Whoever was doing this, they were taking it way too far. But he could still catch them out. He typed in her name now. Annalisa Beaujolais. His fingers stamping on the keyboard. Return.

(Approx Matches)
Roxy Beaujolais.
Annalisa Chamberlain.

“Greg…” said the woman behind him, “please…”

Fathomsby! he thought. The film that brought him here in the first place. Just a small budget Anglo-French production, Channel 4 Films and Studio Canal, but it was the one that got him noticed by Hollywood. Yeah, they might have somehow taken down a couple of the profile pages, but every film he’d ever appeared him? Would they really expect him to check them all?

The woman was putting on her clothes. She’d dropped the sheet onto the bed. For a moment she was naked, but he didn’t even glance her way.

“There!” he cried, finding the entry he’d been looking for. “Fathomsby! See! You’re not as smart as you…”

Colin Farrell.

The lead actor in Fathomsby was listed as Colin Farrell. Colin bastard Farrell – and according to this, he'd won an Oscar for it too! Simon hadn’t even been bloody nominated! No - this couldn't be happening!

"I'm Simon McQuarrie! I'm not - I'm not some crazed serial killer masquerading as a police... investigator... specialist... thingy. I'm Simon fucking McQuarrie! I played Hamlet at the Vic!"

“Greg… Please… I think you need to come with me now." Along with her clothes, Kate had picked up her gun in its holster. Only it wasn't in its holster any more. It was in her hand. In her hand, and pointing at him. "We can talk about this down the station. We can get you the help you need."

Simon wanted to protest but there was nothing left to say. Because the acting had stopped now, and everything was real.


Kamis, 25 November 2010

Top Twenty Train Songs


I know, it's been a while. You've been getting Top Ten withdrawal, haven't you? To make up for it, here's 20 songs about trains. Because there's a new Denzel Washington movie out this week where the train don't stop for nobody... or something. It's got Captain Kirk in it too (no, not The Shat). I might have to go watch that...



20. The Doobie Bros - Long Train Running

Likely to be the first and last time the Doobie Brothers appear in one of my lists, unless I do a What A Fool Believes Top Ten.

19. Whistler - Don't Jump In Front Of My Train

A wistful indie gem from the mid-90s, dedicated to all of you who have been held up on your way home by some selfish suicide...

18. ELO - Last Train To London

Considering my love for all things Electric, Light and Orchestral, this should be higher in the list. Unfortunately it suffered a little overkill in my head between 15 and 20 years ago when "the radio" decided it was one of the best testing oldies ever and subsequently played it three times an hour for about 6 months nonstop.

17. Johnny Cash - Hey Porter

You can't help but think it was a simpler, better world when Johnny Cash began writing songs back in the early 50s. You know, when train companies paid someone to help you with your bags...

See also Rock Island Line, Orange Blossom Special, and a bunch of other Man In Black songs I don't have time to link to.

16. Thea Gilmore - Don't Set Foot Over The Railway Tracks

Sadly, one of Thea Gilmore's greatest songs can't be found anywhere online for me to point you to. It's available on her album Songs From The Gutter though, and well worth tracking down.

Don't set foot
Over the railway track
The Heathens and the spin-doctors
Are waiting round the back
The skies are always sullen and
Rain races to the tarmac
So don't set foot
Over the railway track

Don't set foot
Over the railway track
The grass isn't green its yellow
And the pavement is all cracks
The graveyard's in a coma
The church has got the blues
And Jesus has a nose-ring
And Mary has tattoos

Girls paint their skins like corpses
And have hair of scouring wire
And the men all look like demons
See them dancing round their fires
Every door has leprosy
Every house has got the clap
So don't set foot
Over the railway track

15. The O'Jays - Love Train

A prime slab of Philly cheese.

14. Bruce Springsteen - Downbound Train

You should have realised by now... if these lists don't contain a Morrissey track, they must by law feature The Boss. If you don't like it, you know where the Next Blog button is.

13. Gordon Lightfoot - Canadian Railroad Trilogy

A true story of blood, sweat and tears. Songwriting as history lesson - if my history teacher had sounded like Gordon Lightfoot, I wouldn't have dropped it at the end of the Third Year.

12. Dan Le Sac Vs. Scroobius Pip - Last Train Home

In which the beardy rapper finds himself on the last train home, surrounded by people who are "either stinking of weed or stinking of beer, being loud and obscene or sitting in tears". No wonder he doesn't want to be there.

11. The Monkees - Last Train To Clarksville

I'll meet you at the station... for our last bit of nookie before they ship me off to war.

10. Soul Asylum - Runaway Train

I'll play this one for Tony McGee, the biggest Soul Asylum fan I know.

9. The Cure - Jumping Someone Else's Train

Don't say what you mean
You might spoil your face

8. Spearmint - The Train

Shirley Lee's observational tale will be familiar to most commuters...

Everybody runs down the steps in case the train is coming
They didn't run when they left their houses
Didn't run along the street or down the escalators
Just for this very last bit

As the train arrives they start to walk along the platform
As though it might just go right past
As though today it might be too short

People crowd around the doors, initially letting people get off
But soon pressing forward
Even though there are empty seats they push anxiously
As though the doors may close before they manage to get on

A man insists that people should "move down, please!"
He does this in a haughty and petulant manner
But he's the same man who didn't move down the other day
I see him often

And just as the door is closing, and as the beeper's beeping
A man with a backpack hurls himself in
His rucksack gets trapped between the closing doors
He struggles, the doors re-open, and he stumbles into the carriage
Embarrassed and relieved
People look disapproving
"How selfish," they think
Some look away, but each of them has done the same at some point in the past

Some people are reading newspapers
Many seem transfixed by the newspaper of the person next to them
And are snatching covert glances
Even if they have the same paper themselves

Several people are reading novels
You can tell what the latest bestsellers are
Just by looking down the carriage...

And that's when the story really begins.

7. Gladys Knight & The Pips - Midnight Train To Georgia

I never realised just how sad this song is until I heard the Neil Diamond version.

6. Elvis Presley - Mystery Train

I love the illiterate arguments people have on youtube...

The words to the song is : Train I ride , sixteen coaches long NOT Train arrive ..... At least if you are gonna put up info on the record at least get it right ........

THANQ a lotttt for ur info but this is not my problem, It's the lyric 's web site problem ,and The English not my 1st language ,I just love the King and adore this song u should thank me and say good word .

5. Stephen Duffy & The Lilac Time - The Girl Who Waves At Trains

You're as welcome as a Christmas rose
Like a shotgun in a field of crows
As breathless as my fifth form prose

Stephen, I hate to pick, but how welcome is that shotgun if you're a crow?

4. Elbow - Station Approach

Guy Garvey describes the uplifting emotion of returning to your hometown by train after a long time away...

The streets are full of Goths and Greeks
I haven't seen my mum for weeks
But coming home I feel like I
Designed these buildings I walk by

This song also wins through the typical Garvey compliment, "You little sod, I love your eyes". What an old romantic he is.

3. Paul Simon - Train In The Distance

Everybody loves the sound of a train in the distance
Everybody thinks it's true

One of the best songs Paul Simon ever wrote.

2. Ocean Colour Scene - The Day We Caught The Train

Say what you want about Britpop, say what you want about Ocean Colour Scene... but this is a gorgeous blast of euphoric, picture-painting singalong pop that I'll never grow tired of. Could have been Number One but I bottled it...

1. The Jam - Down In The Tube Station At Midnight

Weller used to be such a great storyteller. Why doesn't he tell stories like this anymore?



So... which train did I miss?


Rabu, 24 November 2010

Mute Witness



I picked this up because it's a while since I've read any US detective fiction. It's a long time since I saw the Steve McQueen movie and all I really remember is the car chase. Imagine my surprise when I discovered that the novel had originally been published under a completely different title - one that satisfies my Morrissey obsessions to boot.

It's not only the title that changed in transition from page to screen. New York became San Francisco and the Irish cop hero Lieutenant Clancy became the far more Hollywood Frank Bullitt, a name so hard it spits nails in your eyes even before you picture Steve McQueen in the role. Actually, the hero of the novel is a little more cerebral. He's not really a tough guy and the only real battles he fights are against the politicians and bureaucrats who seek to make his job far more difficult than it ought to be. (More power to him!) He's a thinker who puzzles his way through a complex cover up despite some tricky red herrings and genuinely surprising plot twists. Mute Witness delivers exactly what you want from a crime novel and at under 200 pages doesn't outstay its welcome either. It's faster than most car chases...



Selasa, 23 November 2010

Thoughtballoons - The 6 Month Anniversary


Hard to believe, but we've been at this Thoughtballoons malarkey six whole months now. Every week we choose a new comics character and write a one page script about them. There are six regular writers so that usually equates to a new script every day. It's been a blast - and we're just getting started.

To celebrate our first half-anniversary, we decided on a little interview meme between the writers. My answers are below... pop over to the site to read what the other guys thought.



Who is your favourite comic character?

Peter Parker, the spectacular, amazing, sensational Spider-Man. I explained why when I chose him as my first Thoughtballoons pick. The only problem is I don't get to pick him again...

What is your favourite comic?

That would have to be Amazing Spider-Man too. I've been a Marvel junkie for over 30 years and have a lot of time for all the classic Lee / Kirby / Ditko creations, when handled correctly. I've dallied with DC - favourites being the Giffen DeMatteis JLI and Grant Morrison's Animal Man and Doom Patrol - though the only DC character I've stuck with through thick and thin is John Constantine, Hellblazer. Favourite comics outside the mainstream have included Cerebus (before Dave Sim went bonkers), Phonogram and anything by Adrian Tomine.

Hey, I'd have just give you a 3 word answer, but that's not everybody else is doing, now is it?

Who is your favourite comic writer?

Grant Morrison, JM DeMatteis, Peter David, Brian K Vaughan, Mark Waid, Ed Brubaker, Roger Stern, Warren Ellis and Peter Milligan have all distinguished themselves in my eyes, among many others. Not forgetting Stan Lee, of course, without whom this world would be a much poorer place.

Who has been the most fun to write so far in 26 weeks of thoughtballoons?

The obvious answer is Spidey, but the pressure was on for that and I ended up feeling a little self-conscious. My other two choices were John Constantine and Ben Grimm, and I had loads of fun with both... though having gotten my Holy Trinity of Comics Characters out of the way, I'm having a devil of a time deciding who to pick next time it's my shout.

Other than those, the most fun were Machine Man, Gamora and Ash. Although I had got Gamora completely mixed up with Nebula. I'm not sure anybody noticed.

Which character do you most dread having to write?

Loath though I am to fall in line with my peers, I have a real problem with Green Lantern too. I'm not good with intergalactic characters and the whole "green ring that can do absolutely anything unless there's yellow involved" has always seemed like one of those dopey concepts that would have been best left in the Silver Age. Plus, despite reading GL for a number of years in my younger days, I never liked Hal Jordan. I could just about squeeze out a Guy Gardener script... or G'Nort. G'Nort would be fun. I bet he's dead now, isn't he?

Which non-comics character would you most like to write?

My favourite fictional character who's not been bitten by a radioactive spider is Detective Andy Sipowicz from NYPD Blue. A complex, multi-layered, extremely tragic hero with any number of achilles heels... who just happens to hate most of the people he meets on a daily basis... but still tries to do well by them. And if Andy was taken, I'd choose Gregory House MD for many of the same reasons.

Which script do you think has been your best so far?

I was pleased to fit an entire locked room mystery into one (admittedly crowded) page in my Blonde Phantom story. Max Allan Collins would have done it better though. And I had loads of fun pitching Mr. Mxyzptlk against Zatanna. But the one I'm most proud of so far would be my John Constantine yarn. It was hard as hell capturing everything I love about that bastard mage on just one page, but I gave it my best shot.

Worst by far was my Daredevil offering, for which I won't even provide a link. Such a great character, and I threw away my chance on a dumb fat bloke gag. What an idiot!

Which script in total do you think has been the best on the site?

Let's see...

Ryan's Mephisto page sticks in my mind as a really clever concept and I'd have loved to see where his Daredevil story went next.

Ben's Spider-Man script really came from the heart and his Rick Grimes tale was a simple idea, perfectly executed.

Matt's John Constantine page was ripe for development and I only just discovered his Thing story (somehow I missed it first time round) and it's bloody marvellous.

Max consistently wins the prize for most inspired story titles. Noir As Heck and Boys Are Stupid, Throw Grappling Hooks At Them are just two that somehow live up to their seemingly impossible promise.

Simon's John Constantine script played like the teaser for a TV series I'd have sold my soul to watch and he writes a mean Damien Wayne too (albeit in Renee Montoya's script).

Brandon hasn't been around half as much as I'd have liked given the quality of his Mephisto page (among others).

And finally, Danial dazzled us so much from the comment box trenches he was an obvious call when a frontline vacancy came up. I look forward to reading more from him, especially if they're as strong as his Casanova Quinn offering.

What - I was only supposed to pick one? Says who?

OK, is that everything? Thank you. Now go read my Rick Grimes (from The Walking Dead) script. You know you want to...



Senin, 22 November 2010

More Than 6?


Both Vicus and Dan tagged me with this one. They both knew it's the kind of meme I couldn't resist. I can tell you before I even start that Vicus scored much higher than me... but then, he is much older...

Have you read more than 6 of these books? The BBC believes most people will have read only 6 of the 100 books listed here.

I can't find the BBC article where they make this claim, so I'm taking that on faith.

Instructions: Bold those books you've read in their entirety, italicize the ones you started but didn't finish or read an excerpt. Tag other book nerds.

Unfortunately, bold doesn't really show up on the blog format I use nowadays, so I highlighted the books I've read with a spurious link. Don't click on the link, nothing of interest there...

Tag yourself!


1 Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen

2 The Lord of the Rings – JRR Tolkien

3 Jane Eyre – Charlotte Bronte

4 Harry Potter series – JK Rowling

5 To Kill a Mockingbird – Harper Lee

6 The Bible

7 Wuthering Heights – Emily Bronte

8 Nineteen Eighty Four – George Orwell

9 His Dark Materials – Philip Pullman

10 Great Expectations – Charles Dickens

11 Little Women – Louisa M Alcott

12 Tess of the D’Urbervilles – Thomas Hardy (Unfortunately. I would have given up had I not had to read it for school. Hardy is bloody depressing!)

13 Catch 22 – Joseph Heller

14 Complete Works of Shakespeare (Yeah, right. Much as I love me some Shaky, who the hell's read The Complete Works?)

15 Rebecca – Daphne Du Maurier

16 The Hobbit – JRR Tolkien

17 Birdsong – Sebastian Faulks

18 Catcher in the Rye – JD Salinger

19 The Time Traveller’s Wife – Audrey Niffenegger

20 Middlemarch – George Eliot (See #12, ditto George Eliot.)

21 Gone With The Wind – Margaret Mitchell

22 The Great Gatsby – F Scott Fitzgerald

23 Bleak House – Charles Dickens (See #12 - ditto Dickens, with my usual complaint about his Roger Hargreaves character names.)

24 War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy

25 The Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy – Douglas Adams

26 Brideshead Revisited – Evelyn Waugh

27 Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoyevsky

28 Grapes of Wrath – John Steinbeck


29 Alice in Wonderland – Lewis Carroll

30 The Wind in the Willows – Kenneth Grahame

31 Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy

32 David Copperfield – Charles Dickens

33 Chronicles of Narnia – CS Lewis I am the product of a misspent youth.

34 Emma – Jane Austen

35 Persuasion – Jane Austen

36 The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe – CS Lewis Didn't we cover this in #33?

37 The Kite Runner – Khaled Hosseini

38 Captain Corelli’s Mandolin – Louis De Berniere

39 Memoirs of a Geisha – Arthur Golden

40 Winnie the Pooh – AA Milne

41 Animal Farm – George Orwell

42 The Da Vinci Code – Dan Brown

43 One Hundred Years of Solitude – Gabriel Garcia Marquez

44 A Prayer for Owen Meany – John Irving

45 The Woman in White – Wilkie Collins (I really should.)

46 Anne of Green Gables – LM Montgomery

47 Far From The Madding Crowd – Thomas Hardy

48 The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood

49 Lord of the Flies – William Golding

50 Atonement – Ian McEwan

51 Life of Pi – Yann Martel

52 Dune – Frank Herbert

53 Cold Comfort Farm – Stella Gibbons

54 Sense and Sensibility – Jane Austen

55 A Suitable Boy – Vikram Seth

56 The Shadow of the Wind – Carlos Ruiz Zafon

57 A Tale Of Two Cities – Charles Dickens

58 Brave New World – Aldous Huxley

59 The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time – Mark Haddon (I didn't like it, but I stuck with it.)

60 Love In The Time Of Cholera – Gabriel Garcia Marquez

61 Of Mice and Men – John Steinbeck

62 Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov

63 The Secret History – Donna Tartt

64 The Lovely Bones – Alice Sebold

65 Count of Monte Cristo – Alexandre Dumas

66 On The Road – Jack Kerouac

67 Jude the Obscure – Thomas Hardy (See #12 and multiply it by infinity.)

68 Bridget Jones’s Diary – Helen Fielding

69 Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie

70 Moby Dick – Herman Melville

71 Oliver Twist – Charles Dickens

72 Dracula – Bram Stoker

73 The Secret Garden – Frances Hodgson Burnett

74 Notes From A Small Island – Bill Bryson

75 Ulysses – James Joyce

76 The Bell Jar – Sylvia Plath

77 Swallows and Amazons – Arthur Ransome

78 Germinal – Emile Zola

79 Vanity Fair – William Makepeace Thackeray

80 Possession – AS Byatt

81 A Christmas Carol – Charles Dickens

82 Cloud Atlas – David Mitchell

83 The Color Purple – Alice Walker

84 The Remains of the Day – Kazuo Ishiguro (It's on the shelf, waiting.)

85 Madame Bovary – Gustave Flaubert

86 A Fine Balance – Rohinton Mistry (Never heard of it.)

87 Charlotte’s Web – EB White

88 The Five People You Meet In Heaven – Mitch Albom

89 Adventures of Sherlock Holmes – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle I've read some but not all of them.

90 The Faraway Tree Collection – Enid Blyton

91 Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad

92 The Little Prince – Antoine De Saint-Exupery

93 The Wasp Factory – Iain Banks

94 Watership Down – Richard Adams

95 A Confederacy of Dunces – John Kennedy Toole

96 A Town Like Alice – Nevil Shute

97 The Three Musketeers – Alexandre Dumas

98 Hamlet – William Shakespeare

99 Charlie and the Chocolate Factory – Roald Dahl (I played Willy Wonka in our school play.)

100 Les Miserables – Victor Hugo

How many's that? 51? Just over half the list. Not bad, I suppose. Better than 6 anyway. Take that, BBC!

It's these small, insignificant victories that keep us away from the gas oven...


Minggu, 21 November 2010

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 1 (2010)

MyRating: YYY1/2

Director: David Yates
Cast: Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Ralph Fiennes, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman, Robbie Coltrane, Bill Nighy, Julie Walters, Bonnie Wright
MPAA: Rated PG-13 for some sequences of intense action violence, frightening images and brief sensuality

The mega franchise of Harry Potter finally comes near the end of its wizarding tale. This phenomenal series based on the hugely successful novels by J.K. Rowling is unarguably the biggest movie franchise in the movie history, as its first sixth installment movies have collected a total of US$ 5.4 Billion worldwide (US$ 1.7 Billion in the U.S.). And the release of its each previous installment has always been surrounded by big hypes, not only created by the hard-core fans of the novels, but also by the fans of the movie series itself, and definitely by the fans of both. Even though if you are not really a fan, most probably you will still be carried over by the hype. It's simply because we have followed the story of Harry Potter, Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, and their Wizarding World since they were kids, therefore, we surely do not want to miss the very end of their fates.

This first film of the two parts from the seventh and final installment of Harry Potter series follows the story of Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe) on his quest to find and destroy the Horcruxes, the secret of Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) to attain immortality. Together with his best friends, Hermione Granger (Emma Watson) and Ron Weasley (Rupert Grint), Harry has to move fast before Voldemort, as his longstanding enemy is getting stronger and stronger, and has gained control over the Ministry of Magic and the School of Hogwarts. They have to defeat Voldemort once and for all, before the Dark Lord gains his full power over their Wizarding World and kills Harry Potter.

This is a good beginning of the end, as the story gets more intense, before rounding up to the finale next Summer, when Part 2 is to be released in July 2011. Harry, Ron and Hermione have to take their adventure out of Hogwarts now, into the woods and wilderness in order to find the Horcruxes, and running and fighting the Death Eaters. And this time, they were alone. It was interesting to see their adventure with the settings outside Hogwarts. The cinematography was excellent. Actually the movie itself in overall looked very beautiful due to its wonderful settings, solid and colorful visuals, and cool special effects. The movie was packed with more actions than before, and the story was getting darker. The story did not always move fast, as it took its time to develop (no need to rush as they have two movies to execute everything). The result is one enjoyable Harry Potter movie and one of the best in the series.

There were also enough character developments with more emotions involved. The trio Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint showed good performances, with interesting friendship and love attractions between the three. And they have grown up into young adults. This movie was also the most matured one from the series. There was one provocative scene, which was the nude kissing scene between Daniel and Emma, with their bodies covered by fog. Of course it was CGI made up, but this sensual scene at the same time, once again, proclaimed that our heroes have grown up. It was an unimaginable scene when we first watched them in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone around 9 years ago. It's amazing to see how they've grown in this 10 years time period.

This movie will surely satisfy the fans. For non fans, you will most probably still feel entertained as this was a good one, unless if you are a Harry Potter hater. It will be interesting to see how it all ends next year. (MJ)

Jumat, 19 November 2010

Friday Flash - You Can Say Anything You Want On The Internet


Although I didn't exactly plan it that way, this week's #fridayflash story works as a reaction to the whole IAmSpartactus scandal on twitter. Coincidentally, I also owe the massed hivemind of twitter a debt of gratitude for helping me write this. You'd be amazed how many tweets you get back when you ask for a little advice on kidnapping...



You Can Say Anything You Want On The Internet


You can say anything you want on the internet. That’s why Lydia loved it so much. She could say how her boss was a lazy bitch who always parked in the handicapped space because that meant less distance to carry her donuts, which she never shared with anyone else in the office, and which made her backside look increasingly like two hippos wrestling in a tent. Lydia could say this without compunction or any fear of redress because not only could you say anything you wanted on the internet – you could be anyone you wanted too.

Online, she was a completely different woman. She wasn’t meek, mild-mannered Lydia Charles, she was TheLady72: blogger, tweeter and social networker extraordinaire. With more than 4000 followers and over a hundred comments every time she posted, TheLady was witty, insightful and far more gregarious than her alter ego. Her opinions were sought and valued on a wide range of topics – from the perils of working for a tyrannical she-whale with moustache issues... to how to deal with a lazy slob of a husband who never emptied the dishwasher and thought clitoris was an island off the Greek mainland. She wished she could be TheLady all the time, in the real world as well as the virtual, but the consequences were far too grave to consider. Unemployment, divorce, children who hated her even more than her own kids did right now. She wasn’t sure she could do this without a safety net secret identity.

Recently though, she’d been spending more time online than ever before. She’d become a feedback junkie, only truly happy when replying to comments or savouring her retweets. She saw how her hits increased in direct correlation to controversy, and so became ever more outspoken, not just on her personal life (Barry wanted her to dress up as slave girl Leia every Saturday night; The Whale had hit the menopause – hot flushes and moodswings all over the sales office; Tess had been grounded after simulating fellatio with a giant Smarties tube during her best friend’s Sweet 16th) but also on the world outside her window. The government were condemning future generations to a student debt they could never repay… anyone who condoned torture ought to get water-boarded themselves and see how they liked it… who gave a toss about the Royal Wedding?

The more forthright she became, the more she rose up the google rankings, the more her addiction grew. She craved that attention now, it was all she thought about – at work, at home, in bed… whenever she was away from her computer, she hungered to get back online and indulge herself in the world of TheLady…

And then came the abduction. She was leaving the house when they grabbed her, late for work as always. Barry had already gone, taking Tess and Adam to the bus stop on his way. Tigger had coughed up a furball on the kitchen floor and Lydia had been tempted to just leave it, but she knew the kids would trample through it when they came in tonight, and it’d still be waiting when she got home herself. She hadn’t even wanted a cat. TheLady was much more a red setter kind of gal, she reckoned.

They came at her from behind, taking an arm each and pushing her forwards so her cheek grazed the garage wall. She heard the tearing of the tape and tried to scream as they slapped it over her mouth. They bound her wrists behind her back with cable ties. She tried to turn to see their faces but then the sack pulled over her head and she was dragged backwards, down the drive to the road. Where were all the neighbours, why did nobody help? How very typical of our look-the-other-way society – nobody wanted to get involved! She'd have something to say about that. A hand pushed down on the back of her head and she was bundled into a vehicle, some kind of enormous four wheel drive vehicle, she guessed. Suddenly she remembered the post she’d written about how all 4x4 drivers were selfish, planet-raping road hogs. This couldn’t have anything to do with that… could it?

“Mmm-mmm—mmm!?” she screamed through the masking tape. Who are you? “MMm-mm-mmm-mmmmmm-mmm?” Where are you taking me?

“Just shut up and enjoy the ride, lady. You’ll find out soon enough.” It was a man’s voice, from beside her on the back seat. He sounded all gruff and nasty, like Ray Winstone but without the accent. She remembered that post where she’d fantasised over Ray Winstone’s manly hands, concluding she couldn’t let them anywhere near her until he’d some kind of elocution lessons. A bit of rough on the side was one thing – but not if he sounded like a cockney barrow boy! She was a lady, maybe, but not a Chatterly.

Oh. Oh no. "Lady." That’s what he called her. Was it just an expression… or did he actually know? And if he knew… was that what this was about? Was it something she’d blogged? About how the police shouldn’t be allowed to use the sirens on their cars in a residential area unless it was a matter of life or death? How anyone who wore culottes should be hung, drawn and quartered in the street outside Dorothy Perkins? How every parent had a right to know that a sex offender was living anywhere in their town, not just if they moved in on the same street? Or was it something closer to home? Had The Whale been tracking her internet usage at work? Had Barry stumbled across her blog while searching for porn and put two and two together at last? No, no, this couldn’t be personal. Nobody she knew in real life would resort to tactics like these, no matter what she’d written. Her blog was only words… this was serious.

The journey lasted longer than Lydia expected. She could tell by the changing sound of the engine that they were on the motorway now. She didn’t think she’d ever been so frightened, but TheLady kept her from losing it. If I survive this, that voice said, if I come out the other end in one piece… what a story I’ll have to tell! This’ll make the news – the papers, the TV… and they’ll all have to mention my blog. My hits will go through the roof!

So her identity might be compromised in the process... that was OK. She wouldn’t need her stupid old job anymore – she’d be a full time professional blogger! Advertisers would be lining up. And if her family didn’t like it… well, they could either come with her on her bold new adventure or carry on without her. Screw the fear – it wasn’t Lydia Charles bound and gagged in the back of this petrol guzzling monster, it was TheLady72. And TheLady would not be silenced!

At last, the engine slowed and the vehicle pulled to a halt on crunching gravel. Cold air swept into the car and then Lydia was swept out. Her shoes slipped on wet tarmac but the arms held her steady and pushed her forward.

“Mmmmmmmmm!” she screamed through the gag.

“You’re wasting your time now, love,” said gruff Ray. “No one’s gonna help you here.”

A blast of air-conditioned heat came next and then she felt the sack being lifted from her head. She was inside, blinking under artificial lights: the reception of some huge office complex. A thin man with a dark suit and receding hairline stood before her, early 50s, Lydia thought, very official-looking. She turned to see the faces of the men who’d brought her here. The one on the left must be Ray, the other was just a boy. He was a bit of a hunk actually, Ray… though it wasn’t Lydia Charles thinking that. Lydia would have been too busy peeing her pants. The line between real and virtual was blurring more with every passing second.

“Mrs. Charles,” croaked the official, his voice as weedy as his physique, “good to meet you at last.” He waved a hand and Ray reached over to tear off the masking tape. The other man clipped at the cable tie to free her wrists.

“Owwch!” Lydia reached up to touch her smarting lips. Was that blood, or just the last traces of her Clarins Clementine?

“Welcome to HM ID HQ, Saffron Walden branch. I hope you’ll be very happy here.”

“Happy?” said Lydia. “I’ve been kidnapped, manhandled, bound, gagged, denied my civil liberties… and you work for the government?” A plaque on the wall spelled out the initials the man had spoken earlier. Her Majesty’s Internet Division. Knowing this was somehow official made her predicament both better and worse. Better to be up against sinister bureaucracy rather than some unhinged psychotics or terrorist splinter cell. Worse because when your adversary is officialdom, the law is generally on their side… and if it isn’t, what’s to stop them changing it? Still, she was TheLady now. She wasn’t going down without a fight. “I demand to see my solicitor!”

“I’m afraid that won’t be possible just yet, Mrs. Charles," said the G-Man. "Or, perhaps, ever.” He led the way into an office with a huge windowed wall. Beyond lay an enormous, endless office - row after row of computer workstations, as far as the eye could see. The man took a seat and beckoned Lydia to do the same. “In the meantime, we need you to sign some papers regarding the terms of your new employment…”

“New employment?” Lydia was confused but TheLady was incensed. “What are you talking about? I’ve already got a job! Which, I might add, I’m already about two hours late for - thanks to you and your thugs.“

Out of the corner of her eye she caught Ray’s face. He looked almost hurt. She was about to take it back when the official started talking again.

“Don’t you worry about that,” he said, “your previous employer has been made fully aware of your change of circumstances.” He took a folder from his desk and began shuffling contracts.

“Just… just wait a minute,” said Lydia, staring through the window at the open plan office to infinity. Hundreds of heads, possibly even thousands, faces lost below the lines of their pc monitors, each and every one consumed by their work. “Just what are you talking about? What is this job? What am I supposed to…”

“Don’t worry, Mrs. Charles, it’s a job for which you’ve shown yourself to be eminently qualified. I’m sure you won’t have any problem—“

“What – is – it!?”

“Why, you’ll be helping us produce online content, of course. You’ll be blogging, tweeting, Facebooking and tumblring – for a living. Isn’t that what you’ve always wanted?”

“Well,” said Lydia, uncertain whether the flutter in her chest was excitement or terror, "I suppose..."

“The only difference being… from now on you’ll be writing only what we tell you to.”

Lydia felt her jaw drop, but the official had seen it all before. He continued before she had time to protest.

“Mrs. Charles, you seem to have been labouring under a misapprehension, as the public often does, that the world wide web is your own personal speaker’s corner. In fact, that couldn’t be farther from the truth… Here at HM ID HQ, we deal with information... we deal with disinformation... we deal in organised anarchy and carefully fabricated nonconformism. The one thing we don’t deal in… is freedom of speech. You can’t just say anything you want on the internet!”


Rabu, 17 November 2010

30 Songs - Day 19

Day 19 - A Song From Your Favourite Album

No, I haven't forgotten this meme (well, I had a bit), but I have been struggling somewhat with Day 19. My favourite album? My favourite-favourite album? From when, exactly?

I could happily name my favourite album from the 70s...


My favourite album from the 80s...


My favourite album from the 90s...


Even, at a push, my favourite album from the 00s...


But asking me to choose between them for my favourite album of ALL TIME?

No... I can't.

I just... can't.

Oh, go on then.

If I have to...



But I am liable to change my mind tomorrow...


MEGAMIND 3D (2010)

MyRating: YY1/2

Director: Tom McGrath
Voice: Will Ferrell, Brad Pitt, Tina Fey, Jonah Hill, David Cross, Ben Stiller
MPAA: Rated PG for action and some language

Megamind, a big headed blue alien (voice by Will Ferrell) and Metro Man (Brad Pitt) were destined to be enemies since they were babies. Both sent from different planets to the Earth due to the destruction of their own planets, the infant Metro Man landed at a wealthy family's house, while the infant Megamind landed at prison. And both were raised differently, with a different fate. While Metro Man, who has an extraordinary superpower, grew up to become a superhero, the defender of Metro City, at the other hand, Megamind, who has the nature of wickedness and troublemaker inside him, grew up to become a supervillain to rival Metro Man.

When Megamind finally succeeds in overthrowing Metro Man out of the competition, different from what he expects, Megamind quickly becomes bored as there is no one left for him to fight. It is not a fun world without a good-side enemy, since no one is capable to stop his evildoings anymore. So, he creates a new superhero as his enemy, named Titan (Jonah Hill). But instead of helping the world, Titan uses his new power to destroy it. From that moment on, Megamind finds himself in the middle of identity crisis, as he is put in the position to save the helpless world from Titan. And his secret affection for the feisty news reporter, Roxanne Ritchi (Tina Fey), finally makes him realize that to become a good man is not that bad afterall.

This is a typical DreamWorks animated movie, who focuses more on the comedic side, rather than the dramatic side. An animated movie made purely to have fun with, rather than a movie that will challenge you to think, feel or even reflect something out of it. And the characters created should be funny or should look funny, rather than the characters that possess human heart in them. The same as the dialogs that mainly focuses on funny and silly things, that is supposed to force you to laugh, rather than thoughtful dialogs that will make you smile from the bottom of your heart.

What did I expect anyway? It's an animated movie! And an animated movie is supposed to be fun. And I know many people were having great fun with Megamind and will not agree with what I said. But to be honest, I have to say that I didn't have much fun with this movie as what I've expected when entering the theater. The main reason was because what I saw was a movie full of slapstick (and childish) comedy, with less amount of heart that I like from a smart animated movie. The storyline? I didn't enjoyed it that much either. It was just something below satisfactory for me. When I found myself in the theater where many other people (especially children) laughing while watching this movie, while at the same time I could not laugh as I didn't think it was that funny, then I knew that the story and the jokes just didn't fit me. It was almost the same reason why I didn't enjoy Despicable Me. If I have to compare it with How to Train Your Dragon, another DreamWorks' piece earlier this year, then Megamind definitely has less charm, smart, and touching moments that 'Dragon' has offered and made me fall in love with.

The voices behind the characters were quite good. Will Ferrell, Brad Pitt and Tina Fey did give interesting colors to their characters. The 3D? It was just okay, not really outstanding, as I have seen many more outstanding 3D animated movies this year. In overall, Megamind was just another average animated movie for me this year. (MJ)

Selasa, 16 November 2010

Two Books For Frustrated Creators



Sean Azzopardi's excellent graphic novel Twelve Hour Shift tells a tale familiar to many of us. A story of someone with creative drive and ambition forced to take a soul-sucking, dead-end job to make ends meet. In this case, comic artist Steve Jones finds himself working as a concierge and night porter in a block of luxury residential flats, suffering the slings and arrows of a mithering boss and jaded, lazy, alcoholic colleagues. He gets up before dawn, braves the horrors of public transport, spends his day being abused by clients and co-workers alive, while failing to motivate himself to steal many moments of creative expression along the way, then returns home to a lonely cold-water flat with only his cat for company.

And yet... he keeps going, because writing and drawing those comics means that much to him. It's all he wants to do. And even if he achieves nothing else with his life, better that than denying himself that creative outlet at all.

If you can understand where Steve Jones - and Sean Azzopardi - are coming from, you can share their misery by clicking here. It's much better than going to work.


On the surface, Brian James Freeman's novella The Painted Darkness tells the story of an artist haunted by a terrifying event from his childhood who finds himself having to once again face the monsters living in his cellar. It's been compared by some to Stephen King, which I always think is a kind of lazy shorthand for "horror in a real-world setting", but I couldn't see much of King in Freeman's writing. The story is an extended metaphor about why we're driven to flog ourselves at unappreciated creative endeavours (in Freeman's words, "we're painting against the darkness") dressed up as a perfectly enjoyable little monster-in-the-woodshed thriller. Both moving and gripping, it's a read-in-one-sitting affair that stays with you for all the right reasons.



Senin, 15 November 2010

A Walk In The Autumn Woods


You know how when you get a day off it always rains but when you go back to work the sun shines again?

Last week, the law of sod went in the other direction. Tuesday, it hissed it down. Thursday, there was a storm of biblical proprotions. Wednesday, when I was lucky enough to get a day off, the sun shone on the righteous.

So I went out for a walk in the woods and enjoyed the colours of Autumn... which I shall now share with you here, in lieu of anything more interesting to write about on a Monday.








 

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