purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (Default)
Longer ago than I care to think I purchased or was given, I no longer remember which, the Flash Gordon sticker album. In my memory I diligently collected stickers for several years without ever completing the book, but I don't think that can be correct because this kind of tie-in memorabilia has a fairly short shelf life. I got most of the stickers though.

Unfortunately the glue has now failed and the sticker book leaves little forlorn trails of stickers in its path. Most of these I have now put in a Really Useful Box, but I no longer feel the thing has much sentimental value since so much of the contents has flitted away. I'm keeping the box and will put the Sticker Album back on the shelves, but I suspect next time it comes down it will go in the bin.

Pictures of the Album under the cut (Warning: Large) )

This entry was originally posted at http://purplecat.dreamwidth.org/53037.html.
purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (Default)
Longer ago than I care to think I purchased or was given, I no longer remember which, the Flash Gordon sticker album. In my memory I diligently collected stickers for several years without ever completing the book, but I don't think that can be correct because this kind of tie-in memorabilia has a fairly short shelf life. I got most of the stickers though.

Unfortunately the glue has now failed and the sticker book leaves little forlorn trails of stickers in its path. Most of these I have now put in a Really Useful Box, but I no longer feel the thing has much sentimental value since so much of the contents has flitted away. I'm keeping the box and will put the Sticker Album back on the shelves, but I suspect next time it comes down it will go in the bin.

Pictures of the Album under the cut (Warning: Large) )
purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (doctor who)
Having decided to watch a film tonight we started sorting through the miscellaneous items B. has stored on the PVR-alike he has converted the Mac Mini into. V for Vendetta? Too grim. Modern remake of The Time Machine? Not heard good things about that. Masters of the Universe? Sometimes I worry about him, I really do. Doctor Who and the Daleks? Oooh! actually I've never seen that.

Highly Recommended... sort of )
purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (primeval)
So B and I ended up watching this almost entirely forgettable swords-and-sorcery movie last night which rejoiced in the name of Kull the Conqueror. It is, apparently, an adaptation of a Robert E. Howard Conan book but with the hero replaced by Kull, much as the first Conan movie is a reworking of a Kull novel (I hope everyone is still following).

It all proceeded much as you would expect with Kevin Sorbo never knowingly over-dressed* throughout and a truly spectacular array of terrible wigs. Then halfway through the first act up pops Douglas Henshall from Primeval

in a wig )

for good measure, here's his death scene )

Anyway, just to note that I spent a lot of yesterday evening giggling at material which I think was intended to be entirely serious.

* though, it must be said, it wins points, as a movie, for being clearly far more interested in getting the leading man's kit off than the leading lady's.
purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (Default)
I obscurely feel it says something about the quality of a disaster movie if the Statue of Liberty is still standing at the end. In The Day After Tomorrow* it is.

The dog survives as well**.


* courtesy of Amazon DVD rental.

** my all-time favourite moment of pet survival occurs in a meteor-hits Earth made for TV movie which was otherwise instantly forgettable. In that movie there is a bizarre sequence where they try to up the tension with a moment of goldfish peril, but, phew!, the bowl wobbles to the edge of the table but then stops. The goldfish survives. One can't help wondering if the budget wouldn't stretch to a dog.

Bloodspell

Oct. 22nd, 2007 02:59 pm
purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (Default)
Bloodspell is a machina feature film that was released yesterday afternoon. To be honest, if I hadn't met [livejournal.com profile] cairmen, who wrote, directed and produced the film while I was in Edinburgh I doubt I'd have the first clue what Machinma was. In short its the use of computer games' engines to produce animation - this is why [livejournal.com profile] cairmen could make Bloodspell for less than five thousand pounds.

Since B. has rigged our TV up to run through a computer we opted to watch Bloodspell on our widescreen telly, drinking wine and eating popcorn at the same time. I was a little worried that the resolution wouldn't be high enough but actually it was fine, I downloaded the high-res Quicktime version from the Bloodspell website which took about half an hour over our broadband connection, the only problem was the occasional glitch where the picture stopped, this happened about twice in the course of the film and B. blamed it on Quicktime being unable to process the decompression codec fast enough.

Technicalities aside we liked the film. It was billed as a "punk fantasy". I assumed this would either mean it had a punk visual aesthetic or that it had an overt anarchistic/iconoclastic message. Either that or it would be needlessly icky and violent. In the end I don't think it had a particularly punk look or theme: it looks like a fantasy computer game (well obviously) and frankly rebelling against evil authority is such a fantasy staple its hard to view this as a particularly anarchistic message. In fact Bloodspell is rather careful not to bill either the authoritarian church nor the demonic underclass as mindlessly evil*, so in many ways the message was considerably less anarchistic than in less thoughtful films of the fantasy genre (and lets face it this is not a genre over-endowed with thought-provoking films). I think maybe it had a punk sound-track. Now, I wouldn't know a punk sound-track if it danced naked down the street whistling "Anarchy in the UK" but this certainly wasn't a cod-medieval sub-Clannad soundtrack and the juxtaposition of modern music in a fantasy setting worked surprisingly well here (much better than in Ladyhawke, for example) without turning it into a post-modern joke (e.g., The Knights' Tale). If this was a punk soundtrack then maybe I should actually check out some punk music because it was really good.

Aesthetically the film was never going to compete with the sort of animation you get from Pixar - after all they have a limited number of polygons available. Mostly this wasn't a problem and some of the sets, in particular the approach to the Cathedral were extremely pretty. The only place where the limited animation really jarred was during character interactions where the limited facial expression available made the acting appear rather wooden. Possibly this was because the voice actors weren't quite good enough to make this believable (and some of the bit part actors weren't that great although the leads were all good as was [livejournal.com profile] cairman's cameo (which Bill spotted but I didn't)). It seemed more likely that machinima is a sufficiently new technique that the grammar for conveying emotions hasn't properly developed or wasn't well enough understood by us, the viewers. After all Thunderbirds and its like demontrate that puppets can convey emotions and they give you much less to work with than a 3D head with a face mapped on to it. Since the problem appeared to reduce as the film proceeded it might well be that we got more accustomed to the conventions as we watched.

The plot of the film is your basic young man probably does the right thing for all the wrong reasons (or at least motivated entirely by hormones). But then he is portrayed throughout as a talented and good-hearted idiot. Bill says he even had an "idiot accent" which may be true - this is a Scottish film after all. Most of the other characters were competent and engaging although their motivations were occasionally a little obscure. The world was well-realised and the macro plot held together surprisingly well although some of the details along the way didn't bear close scrutiny after the fact. No plot-holes were visible as we watched however. As fantasy films go, it was pretty intelligent, although I might have wished that the women's costumes made a few more nods towards practicality. It was also well-paced and gripping with some stunning set-pieces and it left you wanting to know more about the world and the people within it.

So, if you like fantasy, I would recommend downloading and watching Bloodspell and since the makers are relying fairly heavily on "viral marketing" if you like it, blog about it.

* although, it must be said that the "big bad" did appear to have no redeeming features but we actually learn very little about the big bad and the religious organisation build around it did appear to be serving a useful purpose, if possibly unethically and over-zealously.
purplecat: Hand Drawn picture of a Toy Cat (martial arts)
I find it hard to view the fight scenes in martial arts movies as fights as opposed to dances. I find I watch them admiring the choreography rather than revelling in the violence in any way. This is possibly why I have no problem when they, almost inevitably, take off and fly about across lakes, jumping between tree tops, etc. etc.

This was more than usually obvious in Hero (or Quentin Tarantino Presents: Hero for Western audiences) which is a visually stunning film throughout. I tried to find an icon that would give a feel for the cinematography but largely failed since its something of a full screen experience. The one you've got is nice enough but fails to convey the sense of composition and colour present throughout the film.

The story is a re-telling of the events surrounding the defeat of three assassins (told first in red, then white then blue - with a side story in green). The implication is that each re-telling gets closer to the true sequence of events but sadly it succumbs to suggesting that the final version is the true one rather than leaving further re-interpretation open.

There are, of course, extremely pretty fight scenes throughout not to mention a certain amount of macho nonsense but I think the film suggests that the macho nonsense is a part of the re-telling not the actual events. It is also a thoughtful exploration of the alternative motives that might drive the three central characters through the same observable sequence of events. On first viewing I also thought the film took an unconventional stance on individualism as opposed to the good of society (especially since I lacked any knowledge at all about the Chinese Emporer at the heart of the film). A bit of googling (for pretty pictures for icons) quickly revealed what should have been blindingly obvious considering the film was made in China, that this is, in part at least, a parable about the virtues of authoritarianism. That said, and lacking any wider context in which to judge its stance, it is an intelligent and though-provoking presentation of an authoritarian regime and those who oppose it and seeks neither to vilify nor mindless praise either side.

Well worth a view, even if you don't normally like martial arts movies.

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