Sunday, May 25, 2008

Indiana Jones 4, eh.

I went to go see Indiana Jones 4 and was not at all thrilled. If you're going to make Indy decrepit, then don't make him do those things. I'm sure they did their best to make him look young though. Also, all the references to every other movie. Below are spoilers.







The fact that it was an alien thing seemed apparent to me immediately. Whenever you have a movie and you know everything before the protagonist for no dramatic purpose at all, it blows.

Also, lets take a look at the Indiana Jones movies. Two of them, based on biblical events, kicked ass. The worst one hands down had nothing to do with the bible. They should've know better before hand than to do that.

I really don't have an issue with the whole love scene, it is cheap they brought the girl back though.

I think you really need to watch it, because taken alone it's a good movie. Taken as an Indiana Jones movie will make you want to cry.

Friday, May 9, 2008

Bioshock The Movie

Bioshock the movie is in production. Looking forward to seeing it, along with the Watchman movie.

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Ctrl+Alt+Success

I've recently started reading Ctrl+Alt+Del with doubts about its content. After reading over half of the archives in a week, I'm proud to say I erred. Ctrl+Alt+Del features an exciting cast of characters, including a X-Box Bot. If you haven't read it, read it. If you read it, keep it up.

Vaginas @ Penny Arcade

The best Penny Arcade I've read in a while is today's. I could not stop laughing at the vagina jokes.

Monday, May 5, 2008

GMail Hates My Professor

A while ago, my professor sent me an e-mail with a practice test for the class. Apparently, she also knows how to write suspicious e-mails.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Facebook Lexicon

Facebook has released a tool to show word usage on walls overtime. Facebook Lexicon is an interesting tool and you should check out this phenomenon.

Apparently there's a spike in the usage of "vagina" during Valentine's day. Wonder why.
Penis V. Vagina




Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Ghost in the Shell In the Works

I recently found out that DreamWorks is working on a live-action Ghost in the Shell movie. I'm extremely excited for this, just as I am of the info I've heard previous of live-action Neon Genesis Evangelion.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

The Coming of the AI

Apparently, fighting machines have been
disobeying their masters
. I wonder how effective those little things are anyway.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Another Week in TV

New episode of the Office came out. I found it pretty funny, but mainly because I missed the human that the Office has brought me in the past. As always, it's Friday, so a new BSG is playing currently. I'm quite impressed by it so far.

I also want to send people to a great website I found called Piled Higher and Deeper (PhD), a comic about graduate school.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Bo Burnham, Funny As Heck

Ran across this guy who writes really great music. Hopefully we can expect great things in the future.

Bo Burnham's YouTube Site

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Fucking Codebase

After messing around with Google Code Search and being reminded of great things to leave in source code.

Fucking Google Code Search

Bitch Google Code Search

Check it out and enjoy.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Updates! BSG, COD4 and More

As it's been a while since I've posted anything at all, let me say I have a really good excuse...

School has been eating up more and more time lately, and with my little bit of free time I've been addicted to Call of Duty 4, in my opinion best game of 2007. With new map packs released and gone this weekend, and earning double experience the entire time, I thought I should post a few updates.

Of course, with the the Writer's Strike gone and pass, a lot of great TV shows are picking up.

Journeyman was not picked up for next year's shows and I am very disappointed. I am happy that episodes of The Big Bang Theory are being showed. I find some of the episodes towards "geeks" offensive, but I'm leaving room for the existence proof that there are some people out there like that.

Last, and certainly not least is the TV show I'm adamantly watching every Friday at 9PM, Battlestar Galactica. The premier was this last Friday and I feel is getting back on the right track for BSG. I read about the rewrite of the second half of the season, and am looking forward to it. (As a note, I will not talk about anything BSG related this season until everything is over with.)

As a side note, I couldn't get together the people I needed for my ResHall Film Fest project, so it was never created and will possibly die in the annals of my script library.

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

The Strikes Are Down

The writer's strike is over, as of yesterday. Though I haven't been able to ascertain the exact terms of the new contract, I think it's safe to say that AMPTP made a few concessions. Now I can rely on BSG not being delayed and the season completely finishing. Oh, and the Academy Awards will still go on too.

Scientology Rick Rolled by Anonymous

Check the below video at the 4:25 in the video. That's how you know the Internet is Real. The Fresh Prince of Bel Air was a nice touch too.



Edit: In case of YouTube censorship, an alternative link is immediately available here. Thanks to a fellow digger pdoyley.

Edit: You can watch a face to face rick roll of a scientologist in Ottawa here on YouTube.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Harvey Birdman Attorney At Law Wii

The first game I rented from GameFly is the Harvey Birdman game available on a variety of systems. All and all, it's an interactive cartoon. Puzzle over the weird cases to the cartoon animation of the game. Be a lawyer and use common sense. Sometimes not completely intuitive in what you're supposed to do next, but you can stumble around until you find everything. Shallow, yes. Fun, yes. Buy, no.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Writer's Strike Over?

It appear that the Writer's Strike may be over soon. It's been agreed on by the union and it's up for a vote of the Writer's (on the 14th). More at the WGA Site.

Limiting Intellectual Property

DMCA, copyrights, the U.S. Patent Office, encryption - All of these are used to limit access to intellectual property. Rather it be movies, music, software code, they are all locked down. This leads to a clash in the people who consume, modify and recreate knowledge and those trying to gain an economic advantage from the work they've done.

In my opinion, we all are entering the Information Revolution. Just as in the Industrial Revolution, factory owners controlled the means of production and therefore the economy. Because of the issues that occurred, the government set up limits to what the company can do to the workers and what the workers must do for the company. But it wasn't that easy. Before unions were legalized, the U.S. government routinely sent in forces in favor of factory owners, and workers died.

I think that's to the point we're coming to today. The government is allowing the controllers of IP remain unfettered to punish it's consumers and the society we live in. Then the day will come when the people have a voice, and things will get better. You may not have your music for free, but it won't be outrageous and those who did the work will benefit from the reward. Not the person who signs the slip of paper behind the desk.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Giving GameFly A Shot

My roommate from last summer has offered me a free month subscription to the service. I am currently waiting for Harvey Birdman : Attorney At Law (Wii) and Armored Core 4 (XBox 360), which should be here in the next few days. GameFly seems like a decent way to get games that look fun enough to play, but not pay $60.00 to actually own the copy.

Friday, February 8, 2008

Val Kilmer > Will Arnett

I couldn't help but be filled with sadness when I found out two of my favorite actors were vying for the same position as KITT in the movie Knight Rider. Val Kilmer was chosen over Will Arnett for KITTs voice. Read a little more about that at Slash Film.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Careful Editing

Even though writing is a very important part of the movie making process, so is consistent editing. Today I deliver you inaccuracies in the Jurassic Park movie.



Bet you can't believe you didn't see them before. Shows you how well the movie grabs you.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Where In the World Is Osama Bin Laden?

After seeing the trailer for this documentary, I can only hope he is not faking any of this stuff. No. I hope he is. If he didn't fake it, he probably would be killed in a lot of the countries he went to. Not that I'm saying those countries are particularly savage, but heavily armed countries undergoing lots of conflict means there tend to be some civilians and tourists shot.

Anyway, check out the trailer:

Super Tuesday Is Done And I'm Tired

Super Tuesday, and conveniently enough Mardi Gras, has come to a close. As I write this, www.cnn.com hasn't shown all precincts in all states reporting in, but it appears that when the dust finally settles, McCain has a huge lead as the Republican nomination so far (having slightly less than half of the votes necessary). Clinton also appears to be widening the gap between herself and Obama. Though I hate to make a prediction this early, Obama is going to need a good late push to thrust himself past Clinton.

I've also sent in my application of intent to participate in ISU's ResHall Film Fest. Though I haven't done much work lately (I've been involved in quite a few personal projects), I'm going to be assigning roles and working out the logistics of getting the movie down on film, or whatever you want to call the DV tapes we'll be using.

If all goes as planned, I'll be able to get a hold of some HD camcorders the university has and make a decent film, while not hurting grades and getting plenty of sleep.

Speaking of sleep.

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Academy Awards Predictions

After looking at the nomination list, this is what I foresee the Academy Awards turning out to be.

Actor In A Leading Role
George Clooney - Michael Clayton

Actor In A Supporting Role
Javier Bardem - No Country For Old Men

Actress In A Leading Role
Ellen Page - Juno

Actress In A Supporting Role
Tilda Swinton - Michael Clayton

Animated Feature Film
Ratatouille

Art Direction
The Golden Compass

Cinematography
No Country For Old Men

Costume Design
Elizabeth: The Golden Age

Directing
No Country For Old Men

Documentary Feature
No End In Sight

Documentary Short
Freeheld

Film Editing
The Bourne Ultimatum

Foreign Language Film
Katyn

Makeup
Norbit

Music (Score)
The Kite Runner

Music (Song)
Enchanted

Best Picture
Michael Clayton

Short Film (Animated)
Peter & The Wolf

Short Film (Life Action)
Le Mozart Des Pickpockets

Sound Editing
Transformers

Sound Mixing
Transformers

Visual Effects
Transformers

Writing (Adapted Screenplay)
No Country For Old Men

Writing (Original Screenplay)
Juno


Feel free to discuss the selections and perhaps your own choices in the comments.

Monday, February 4, 2008

Super Tuesday 2008

Tomorrow is Super Tuesday -- the big one. It's fairly safe to say after Tuesday, we'll have a good idea who the Democratic and Republican nominees will be...but probably not. Regardless, if you are of voting age and in a state where primaries are held tomorrow, please vote. If you're at a decent polling place, it will take a few minutes. Yes, one vote matters.

Saying one vote doesn't matter is like saying your voice doesn't matter. If that's how you feel, than don't complain. If they raise taxes, go to another war, do something you don't like, then shut up. You get the right to critique if you actually took part. The only other problem is what if you don't agree with the main candidates? Find a side party. You may think you're "throwing your vote away", but Ron Paul as a "Republican" got more electoral votes than the other lesser known Republican candidates. Even if he loses, politicians and the general public sees he at least has a following, which is all it takes.

WGA Strike to Last Much Longer

According to a statement found on the WGA website today:

This is Larry Gelbart. In all my decades as a member of the WGA I’ve learned a few lessons about strikes and negotiations, the most important being that it’s never over ’til it’s over, no matter how much the lady singer might weigh. As fellow and sister members of the Guild, you know how important the issues are for all of our futures, and for those to whom we will one day hand our pens. Over the coming days you will be getting calls asking you to join in to continue with the picketing. I ask you to set aside all the rumors, all the second-guessing, I ask you to set these aside and pick up a picket sign instead. I cannot stress how vital it is for all of us to show our commitment to our leadership during this current round of negotiations. Thank you.

This leads me to believe that talks aren't going as well as planned and/or the the producers think the writer's will eventually cave. Especially since the producers won't feel any big loss in shorter strikes.

I think the beginning is starting to set in, with the Oscars possibly being next to nonexistent and the toll is being taken on the spring lineup of television. With many Fall TV shows being prepared with spring and summer shooting, a strike into May will definitely hurt next year's lineup.

Movie's usually have long development times and an effect on the movie industry will be quite noticeable after a six-month plus long strike.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Super Bowl Showdown

Giants over Patriots, even though according to their records and the I Am Legend screenshot below, Patriots should win.

Saturday, February 2, 2008

Pierre Henry's "Psychic Rock" -- Like Futurama Intro

I found this on Digg a long time ago. This video bears a remarkable resemblance to the Futurama Intro. Enjoy.

CeltX and a Couple of Good Quotes

I remember complaining about in an earlier post that I thought CeltX couldn't put subtext in the middle of character speech. I'm not sure if this was true of the version I had, but the newest version allows you to select text, left-click and give format options, such as parenthetical. You can then copy and paste the parenthetical correctly where you want to in the script. If there's a more intuitive way of doing it, let me know.


Pulled these from the Screenwriting WikiQuote page:

[Screenwriting] is no more complicated than old French torture chambers, I think. It's about as simple as that.
-James L. Brooks


So the writer is the only person who's taking absolutely nothing, and 120 pages of it, and dirtying it up in such a way that it's gonna gross hundreds of millions of dollars and make a lot of people happy.
- Paul Guay

Friday, February 1, 2008

Blogging Tools

Here's a list of the tool's I've been using so far for blogging. If you have any additional ideas or tools that you've used/seen used in blogs, let me know.

1. www.blogger.com
Obviously, I'm using this to host my blog.

2. analytics.google.com
Using this to track individual traffic data per day and seeing where people go on my site.

3. www.feedburner.com
To track RSS feed popularity.

4. www.technorati.com
To track overall relative blog popularity.

Thursday, January 31, 2008

So You Want To Be A Screenwriter?

From what I've read, screenwriter's (both TV and movie) should focus on three things:

1. Persistence
To be a good screenwriter, or a good anything, you need to throw all of your weight into the activity. If it's your full-time job, that means working at least forty hours a week. Whether that's brainstorming, first drafts, editing, storyboarding, put lots of quality time into it.

2. Write
Is one screenplay good enough? Probably not. How about five? Definitely a lot closer. Before thinking about selling a single screenplay, write a library of them. And polish them. Make them perfect. If you go to an agent with one great screenplay, that's a start. If you can go to the same agent and give him five quality screenplays, not only are you five times as likely to making it big, but you've had a lot of practice and you can really showcase your work.

3. Genre
Explore. Pick one. Stick with it.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Oscars With or Without the Strike

According to the Associated Press, the Oscars will be held regardless of the Writer's Strike. Of course, an Oscars with the Writer's strike will probably cost the AMPTP and the industry quite a bit of money, leveraging more weight for the writer's.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Preparing for Battlestar Galactica Season 4

In preparation for the Season 4 of Battlestar Galactica (coming in March), I'm re-watching all of the episodes to freshen up. After watching it over for a second time, the tightness of the storylines, character development, dialogue is all beautifully done.

I'm very impressed by the screenwriting and overall visuals of the series. And of course, the screenwriting is the most important aspect of creating the series. Hopefully the writer's strike didn't push back the deadline for this series. It being the last one, I can't help but guess what will be coming up.

Since I'm not up to snuff on where the series ended, here are the guesses I'[m giving for Season 4:

1) They will find Earth
I know a previous interview (unsourced) stated that they will never find Earth, I think they will eventually come upon it.

2) Cylon Fracture
I believe that some of the Cylons will defect and eventually fight the factioning Cylons and live on Earth together. Or such factioning will weaken the strength of Cylons, leading to their destruction.

I'm not going to say much more without spoiling some of the information given in later seasons.

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Jurassic Park 4 : Dinosarmageddon

Remember how great Jurassic Park 2 and 3 were? No? Well, they milked in enough money to warrant Jurassic Park 4 to be created.

At last check, the synopsis was essentially some Swiss company got a hold of some genetically altered raptors and connected them to military weapons to wage war.

I'm not even joking. Read a little info about it on the Jurassic Park franchise's Wikipedia page.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Repo: The Genetic Opera

Imagine you're in the future. Your organs are failing, but you can afford replacements. Obviously, you need to purchase them from the genetic manufacturer. You missed a few payments. Well, now your organs are repossessed. This is the basis of Repo! The Genetic Opera. I'm really psyched for this horror musical. I suggest you check it out as well.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

The Peculiar Fate of the Ames Strangler

I have named my movie for the Res Hall Film Fest for 2008. All that's left now is for me to get to filming it. I'm a little sad they didn't update the site with last year's entries, but here's the site for the Res Hall Film Fest. If you're in the Ames area, come check it out.

Usually only students go, but I've never seen them turn anyone away. Also, the crowd gets to vote for favorite movie. I'm sure the competition will be pretty fierce this year, as I know a couple of different people are doing pretty good films.

I'll get around to posting up the script later, probably after the movie is shot. This way I don't ruin it for anyone.

The Webs Are Down ... Due to Illness

I apologize, but I won't be updating as often the next few days, if it all. Because of an illness I recently caught, I'm going to try and stay in bed as much as possible, outside of school work and my actual job, which means less time for blogging.

On the other hand, here are a few tips I should've followed to stay healthy:

1. Air out your living space : Crack a window, get some fresh air in there. I know it's unpleasant during the winter, but it'll clear out a lot of the germs too. I was doing this until about 4 inches of snow drifted on my second story apartment window.

2. Multivitamins : When mom always told me to take my vitamins, I should have.

3. Exercise : Physical fitness increases stamina and the immune system, either preventing illness or curbing the effects and length of it.

I'm not a doctor, but I think these can help quite a bit. Ciao.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Free XBox 360 Game

If you own an XBox 360, Microsoft is giving you the arcade game Undertow for free. I guess this is the thanks we get for poor XBox Live performance all of this time.

Really fucking flammable

After watching the 150th episode of Seinfeld, the Pothole, I noticed a very interesting NFPA hazard diamond.



Towards the end of the episode, Kramer is carrying the above barrel. The number in the flammability (red) part of the diamond is completely false. According to NFPA hazard diamond information, the flammability only goes from 0 to 4. With 4, according to Wikipedia meaning:

Will rapidly or completely vaporize at normal atmospheric pressure and temperature, or is readily dispersed in air and will burn readily (e.g., propane). Flash point below 23°C (73°F).

This leads me to believe that Kramer may have found the most flammable substance on the planet, labeled at an 8 on the flammability portion.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

WGA Resumes Talks

The WGA and the AMPTP have went into unofficial talks today to try and settle the strike. The last talks between the studios and the writers was on Dec. 7th, 2007.

Read the full AP Story here.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Five Best Games We've Never Had

Here is a collection of the best games I've seen from TV shows and movies that we should have, yet don't.



5. Don't Whiz on the Electric Fence

A Ren and Stimpy classic, thought I think children would have more fun playing with Log.





4. Unknown from Children of Men



Not exactly sure what the point of this game, but I guess in a future where everyone is depressed as hell, just about anything can entertain you. Even a 5x5x5 cube.



3. Blernsball



Anyone who's seen Futurama knows as much about Blernsball as may be humanly possible.



2. Nukem

Nukem, get them before they get you. A game that teaches you mutually assured destruction in a consequence free environment. I think if more people played this game, we would've been in trouble.





1. Pro Thunderball



Appearing in the final season of the final episode of the Upright Citizen's Brigade, Pro Thunderball is described by the Wikipedia page as:


Rules of Thunderball:
1. Bring the walls in closer to allow for more home runs. Make home runs worth two points.

2. Have a five foot drop off between the infield and outfield. In other words, the outfield is five feet lower than the infield.

3. Instead of one ball, there are three balls, in constant motion.

4. Nine multi-shaped targets with varying point values are placed throughout the infield. A baserunner can attempt to throw his bat at these targets as he rounds the bases.

5. Defenders are allowed to tackle the runners as they round the bases; however, the runner is allowed to keep his bat. [Thunderball players are equipped with full pads and a helmet.]

6. The batter may choose to take six strikes instead of three, but this allows the pitcher one free throw at the batter. A hit by such a throw does not count as a free walk.

7. Honeys and Hounds. Cheerleaders and dogs are allowed to roam the field freely and affect play as they wish. During the seventh inning, however, players are allowed to tackle the Honeys as they please, for bonus strikes.

8. Team mascots will alternate innings driving a Honda Accord anywhere on the field except for the pitcher's mound, the batters box, and the dugout. Players can use this car as part of their offensive or defensive strategies.

9. The Gun Circle - a loaded hand gun is placed within a clearly marked circle to be placed ten yards behind second base. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES IS THE GUN TO BE TOUCHED AT ANY POINT DURING THE GAME.

10. Each team's pitcher is allowed to throw three ceramic baseballs a game when he so chooses.




Any games that you've seen in TV or the movies that you liked, make sure to share them in a post.

Father Ted Festival

Priests aren't infaliable. This is the lesson one of my favorite BBC TV shows Father Ted taught me. To learn more about this TV show, check out the Father Ted Wikipedia page.

I found out that there is a Father Ted Festival, featuring the milk cart from the show. To read more about the festival, check out the BBC news article.

Res Hall Film Fest 2008

Today and last night, I've spent a good amount of time writing the screenplay to a currently untitled movie for the Residence Hall Film Festival at Iowa State University. Making this process easier is proper screenwriting software. A lot of people use Final Draft and the software is, as far as I can tell, an industry standard. I however am a big fan of CeltX.

CeltX is open source screenwriting software compatible with Mac, Win and Linux OS. There are a few things that's hard to do in it (like add speech subtext in the middle of dialogue), but for the most part does a high quality job. Collaboration servers can be set up for use in collaborative writing and I used this software through my screenwriting class. The importer was good enough to pull in plain text versions of poorly formatted Microsoft Word screenplays.

I suggest looking at the CeltX Wikipedia page to get a little more info if you're unsure what software to use. Otherwise, you can download the software at www.celtx.com.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

RIAA Owned For A Change

With all the recent lawsuits sent out by RIAA, I think it's refreshing to see some of the flack going back their way. According to TorrentFreak, the RIAA website has been hacked. As of 12:30 PM CST, it still appears to be down.

This is great news, and combine it with the fact that the EMI is considering pulling out of RIAA. Overly aggressive legal tactics combined with lack of knowledge over the technology can allow fast talkers to get by with almost anything they want.

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Mechatronic Defense Systems Are Go

For the a student film festival last March, I wrote a short screenplay, filmed, and edited the movie. The movie was nominated for Best Soundtrack and Best Movie and won Best Visual Effects. I wrote it with a DV camcorder and edited the video with iMovie HD.

Below is the movie:



I mention this as news because I'm working on the screenplay for the next film festival coming up in two months. I will put up excerpts soon and add the film when it's finally shot.

Screenwriting and Engineering, Closer Than You Think

Becoming recently involved with screenwriting (around a year) and interested in the mechanics and form of the craft, I came across a surprising article in IEEE's Software journal. The article is Screenwriting for Requirements Engineers (Norden, Barbara, "Screenwriting for Requirements Engineers," Software, IEEE , vol.24, no.4, pp.26-27, July-Aug. 2007).

This article draws a remarkably accurate parallel between writing scripts for a screenplay and writing use cases for software requirements.

If you're interested more in screenwriting and want to dive into the craft, I'd suggest getting a copy of Syd Fields Screenplay : The Foundations of Screenwriting.

Another great resource is A Crash Course in Screenwriting (PDF).

Portal Parody

I am a huge fan of the game Portal and found a video containing two of the turret droids, just living another shift in their work-a-day lives. If you haven't played Portal yet and own a XBox 360, I highly recommend purchasing Orange Box.



Friday, January 18, 2008

Super Mario Galaxy : Not the Greatest

I've heard quite a few raves about Super Mario Galaxy, and one I bought the game all my friends were excited to see me play it. However, about thirty minutes into the game I realized that I had a few issues with this platformer.



I was originally happy to have another incarnation of Mario 64, a childhood favorite. A few of the problems I had:

1. Storyline
Though I should say "storyline". I know the Mario platformers have never been strong in the story department, but this seems completely contrived. I feel they started with a physics engine and decided, "Hey, let's do this in space." So Bowser captures Princess Peach and takes her into space. You need to chase Bowser's minions across planetoids, asteroids and galaxies. Collect stars, move on, same Mario 64 concepts included there.

2. Races
You lose a race, you lose a live. Even though the life paradigm for home console games has evolved to a pointless concept, because you can always keep playing, I have a big problem with being penalized for not actually dying.

3. Controls
Because of the camera angles and the ever changing perspective of Mario on various spheres, Mario moves in directions which are unintuitive to what I want to move. This mental hurdle can eventually be overcame, but the conceptual curve varies (hopefully lower for you than me).

4. Black Holes
I do applaud them for their physics engines, though some surfaces provide gravity and grab Mario back and some of them don't and he falls into oblivion.

I think the game is decent over all, but there's nothing fantastic about it and I think there's plenty of great games out there, but for the Wii's limited collection of great titles, this is definitely one of the better ones.

Directors Won't End WGA Strike

Speculation that the Director's Guild of America contract renegotiations could turn into collective bargaining for the Writer's Guild of America doesn't look promising. The director's have tentatively accepted the offer from the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers.
Full story here

Looks like the writer's strike will continue for the time being. Take a look at the cost counters on the AMPTP website. With the boycott of the Golden Globes costing an estimated $60,000,000.00 and with over $212 million of writer's income lost, I can only hope the AMPTA is hurting more than the WGA.

Edit: The DGA strike may have given the writer's some leverage. The WGA may go into unofficial talks with the AMPTP soon.

Full story here

Cloverfield Opening Night

Well, I have to say, it wasn't the best movie I saw and probably not the best movie of 2007. The first fifteen minutes, Hudson (the person controlling the camera) mentions every inane comment that comes to mind. You know that friend of yours you want to choke for talking to much? On top of that there's a monster attack.

A number of visual elements were well composed, and there are some very nice full body shots of the creature. A few of the plot elements seemed forced or contrived, besides the obvious fact of the monster.

The theater was less than a quarter full and it was a decent experience in the end.

When you see the movie, remember the Flood (Halo series).

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Komondor: The Pet For Me

Large and inactive dogs that are loving and intelligent. That's the dog for me.

iPhone Incongruity 1

A while ago, I was watching an episode of Journeyman (imdb) when I noticed an issue with one of the elements of the TV show, the iPhone. The main character has an iPhone and there are many close ups of it throughout the series. This, however, is the first close up of the screen:



The screenshot shows the iPhone upside down (notice the only hard button on the top center). The top bar of the GUI has a battery and signal strength bars. The other issue with this screenshot, is I've never had my iPhone say "No Service..." when I have no service.

As a note, I planned to make a post about this a while ago, but doing a little searching showed me it was also mentioned here. Eventually, I hope to watch the entire series again with the note on why it's an invalid iPhone screenshot.

Aside from the part that I own an iPhone and seeing stuff like this in TV drives me crazy (imagine seeing a computer with a Windows Vista start up screen and then it goes to black and white Linux command line), I really enjoy the show and urge others to check it out.

As a note, the iPhone has to be running at least before 1.1.3.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

My Internet Channel

After watching 4 Zelda games in 48 hours and seeing a slew of other such activities, I've acquired a similar internet video channel for myself, in case we ever do Etan's fly through of Wind Waker.

The channel is ran by Mogulus.com and interfaces directly with my MacBook Pro's built-in iSight.

We're hoping to do our own run through of the games at some point and hope it'd turn out better with one of our roommates who loves Majora's Mask fairly thoroughly.

The only thing better than playing video games, is sitting idly by your computer watching others having fun.

Tying Up Loose Ends

Myself, as have many other people, are guilty of the same crime I've committed -- not finishing the projects we've started. I realized this particularly in video games, I'd be hard into one game and either get to a frustrating point and take a break, never to visit it again, or a newer game floated my way and I needed to play it instead. Sadly, this leaves the number of video games I've left undefeated quite high.

I've decided to do my best to take down a video game each week. They'll range from PS2, Wii, GC, Xbox360 and Gameboy Advance/DS. There are definitely more PS1 games I haven't gone through, but those are far away from college.

The following games are:
Wii
Red Steel
Trauma Center
Super Mario Galaxy
Guitar Hero 3

XBox 360
Call of Duty 4
The Orange Box

PS2 (Get ready)
Robotech Invasion
Shinobi
Oni
Ghost in the Shell : Stand Alone Complex
Disgaea
Skygunner
MS Saga
Katamari Damacy
Kingdom Hearts
Castlevania : Lament of Innocence
Killzone
Wild Arms 4
Wild Arms 3
Medal of Honor Frontline
Ring of Red
Sub Rebellion
Gungrave
.hack//Infection
Mobile Suit Gundam : Journey to Jaburo
Zone of the Enders
Growlanser Generations

GameCube
Zoids : Battle Legends
Auto Modelista (not sure if there's a way to "beat" this per se)

I'll post up DS and Advance games later. My current task however is Pokemon Diamond, which I started last Sunday. 4 badges done, hopefully will finish by Friday.