Month: April 2007

  • Luckily, I’m secure in my masculinity.

    My day so far can be summed up by one delightful scene at the Starbucks near my place of employment:

    “What can I get started for you, ma’am?”

    C’mon, dude. I’m standing ten feet away at the most. Sure, I’m rocking my totally awesome scarf, but I’m also sporting reasonably short hair and a big black trenchcoat. Do I really look all that feminine?

    Of course the gods decreed that this moment of joy should take place in a store chock full of patrons, for maximum embarrassment value. Spiffy. Can I go home now?

  • Biff and his mashed potatoes

    Added to the list of things I can’t believe that I didn’t know about before now is the webcomic called “The Book of Biff.” It’s entertaining and educational! For instance, I now know of a fantastic way to harvest mashed potatoes.

    If you end up reading the entire comic archive and find yourself gasping for breath with tears of laughter rolling down your cheeks, don’t run crying to me.

    Er, wait…

  • VisualDNA. How… clever.

    I think the journey to get this widget was more interesting than what I get out of it in the end. Still, I went to the trouble so here you go:

    Cute, eh?

  • Let’s Make Believe

    Tell you what.

    I’ll pretend that I filled the last couple of weeks with post after post about how tired and out-of-sorts I’ve been, and you’ll pretend to have read those posts, with or without the requisite rolling of the eyes or the deep sigh of boredom and/or frustration.

    This past weekend we moved a bunch more of Kyla’s stuff from her old home to her new home. We also picked up a new television for her, mainly so there’s something to watch DVDs and play video games on. The highlight of the previous weekend was taking the kids to see “TMNT,” which was a better movie than I expected. (No, seriously. It’s good. While it’s not grand or epic, it’s still a solidly entertaining little film. If it doesn’t do well in DVD sales I’ll be terribly disappointed.)

    I haven’t been completely idle on the writing front, though. Consider how much time I put in over the last two months to get the new anime forum, A.E.I.O.U., up to speed!

    Now let’s see if I can strike a balance so that I’m not letting this poor journal gather dust so often…

  • Curse of the Golden Flower

    We managed to miss seeing it in the theater, so Kyla picked this one up on DVD a while back. Last night we made time to take it in. And oh, there’s so much to take in!

    “Curse of the Golden Flower” is an expensive and beautiful Chinese film portraying an imperial family that, to put it simply, is one hell of a mess. The Emperor, his three sons, his consort, and the family of his key physician are almost the entirety of the cast… if you set aside the small army of servants and large army of… well, soldiers. I’ll try not to spoil much of the plot, but suffice to say that nobody has truly clean hands among the royal family.

    The trailers make this movie look like just another pretty, wire-fu spectacle starring Chow Yun Fat. In fact the martial arts action is quite limited, and appropriately so. What we get instead is a slow-boiling cauldron of familial frustration, plots and counterplots, and a peel-the-layers sense that these people are all quite dreadfully messed up and miserable. As all hell finally breaks loose we’re treated to a series of action set pieces slightly more grounded in reality than one would expect, and it’s all the more effective for the restraint. (“House of Flying Daggers,” by comparison, becomes so completely absurd in this regard that the dramatic, tragic ending is thoroughly weakened because the audience’s suspension of disbelief is trampled beyond repair.)

    In the meantime there’s plenty of good performances and outstanding costumes and sets to gaze upon. Seriously, this is a lavishly gorgeous film that you could run with the sound and subtitles off just for the sake of feasting on the eye candy. Apparently this is the most expensive Chinese feature film to date, and there’s no doubt that every penny of the cost made it to the screen.

    If you’re remotely interested in Asian cinema, “Curse” should be on your “to see” list even if you don’t end up purchasing a copy. It’s not going to be everyone’s cup of tea, and even someone who enjoys these movies as much as I do probably won’t watch it often. We’re not talking about a cheerful and uplifting film, after all, but Chinese actions dramas rarely feature happy endings. Still, this is a better movie sporting more depth than I originally expected, and is definitely worth the time.

    I leave you with this parting thought: When in doubt, bet on the assassins with the chain-sickles. Those guys kick ass.

  • Meedio to Yahoo to MeediOS

    Some time back, Yahoo purchased Meedio and turned it into Yahoo Go TV, with some of the better features removed and a few of their own grafted on. Then they mothballed it.

    Meedio as a product is dead, but apparently enough people use it and love it that there’s a community dedicated to plugin and add-on development as well as to recreating the product entirely.

    So, for the sake of remembering where to look the next time I get a chance to build a HTPC unit… MeediOS.