Tuesday, December 22, 2015

My review of Star Wars episode 7 read it, love it, like it, revile it if you dare.

Star Wars blog for episode 7 or also known as "The fourth Real Star Wars movie."



You may not believe what I am about to tell you. And yes, I will understand if you have an internal monologue of soul stunning disbelief when you hear that this very blog holds information which might be kind of out there or hard to understand.

You see, I recently saw Star Wars “The Force Awakens” and I am here to make sense of it all for anyone who wants to hear it. That is once I get all two billion of my brain’s neurons on the same page.

This blog actually was already written. I am just transcribing it from an alien language for you to read. I found it in an email from my future self as a warning that this new movie is just the beginning of a new wave of Star Wars mania that will ultimately totally transform our culture. 

See, in the year 2029 George Lucas has died. I know, it’s sad, but it’s really okay because his brain and spinal cord are put into a robot and he dedicates himself to writing more Star Wars movies.

He can do this because he raises enough money publishing books to buy the franchise back from Disney at the bargain price of three trillion dollars. The fact that in the year 2029 books cost on average $200 for a short and cheap romance novel works out well in his favor.

In the future he doesn’t even call himself George Lucas anymore. He instead goes by Darth 3PO because in the fifth Star Wars trilogy, called a pentalilogy to be technically correct, C-3PO is seduced by the Dark Side of the Force and builds an army of space appliances that rules the galaxy. My future self knows this because his friend’s son told him, having already received a Master’s Degree in Star Wars studies.

In fact George Lucas himself is voted the President of the United States. But things do get a little complicated when he marries his own clone and thus calls himself first lady Darth 3PO. But by then approximately 51% of our nation are tolerant enough to accept this and as a result we escape total cultural implosion. This is also made possible by the Man/Robot Love Laws passed in the year 2025.

George also by new decree, or called ‘Georgeisms’(not Bills or Laws, that’s so not Star Warsian), creates his own private army that attacks anyone criticizing anything Star Wars. Not verbally attack, but physically attacks people with knives and guns and mountain lions trained to use knives and guns. The fact that a second internet is created for only discussing, watching, or purchasing things related to Star Wars makes monitoring criticism easier than in the days of a single internet.

My future self continually told me how quaint it remembers our time now. So many things have changed by his time; we only have a single internet, we don’t have flying cars, we have yet to utilize internal IV caffeine pumps or learn to grow kale on the bottom of the ocean where people who like to eat kale are only allowed to live.

Now with that piece of completely true prophecy out of the way we can forget my 2029 self and focus on the meat, the nuts and bolts, and the heart of this movie which is kind of a big deal in these parts.
And yes, in case you were wondering while sitting there in your chair quivering with anticipation of what comes next, yes there will be super massive spoilers coming in the next 500 pages of this blog. Oh, wait scratch that, I meant 3 pages. In fact the spoilers look just like this!




All super cool car accessories aside, I can’t understand people’s anger at getting a movie plot told to them in advance, hence the name spoiler, as in spoiled, spoiling, spoilery, and the forgotten playwright Spoilaticus Totalus who in ancient Greece told the ending of his plays to the audience beforehand. The reason no one has heard of him is because most everyone left after he did so and so no one actually saw any of his plays.

But my point is that knowing the plot and ending shouldn’t spoil anything, because a good movie should be based on enjoyable characters, inspiring plot points, and should be funny and beautiful to watch, as in great cinematography and camera work.

I can enjoy watching Star Wars or Top Gun or Big Trouble in Little China over and over and not be spoiled because I know the plot and ending. I have probably seen them a combined 30 times, so NO I say! It matters not. So I don't see how someone can call themselves a real movie fan and whine about spoilers, or refuse to watch a movie more than once?

And just to state for the record being chiseled into pristine marble somewhere at this very moment, I am no hardcore movie fan. At best I am more of a soft-core fan.

Now the premise if you will bear with me. Completely mind blowing trilogy is created, people go wild, nothing happens for ten-fifteen years, but creator suddenly decides to make prequels. Prequels ruin people's childhoods/lives/marriages/divorces/retirements, prequels are mostly CGI and back story, people sling criticism on creator, creator cries. Creator sells huge franchise to Disney, Disney knows exactly what to do, make it funny, make it exciting, bring back the characters that people loved so it feels ‘like good old times,’ and last but not least make trillions of dollars doing it. So no pressure J.J.




Now according to these terms Disney did exactly that. J.J. did a great job of making this film exciting, of introducing new characters and bringing back the old ones, and yes the movie is on pace to make boat loads of money.

As a student of film and story I give the movie a solid B letter grade and must break it into its three acts to fully analyze it. The first act felt brilliant, the shots, sets, backgrounds, ships, everything was beautiful and felt new and intriguing. The new characters and their situations as well as the action and plot pacing was phenomenal. And J.J. really earns an A here.

However, the second act is where the story starts to stall. This is where the two new characters get captured and run into none other than Han fricking Solo and Chewy. Now, this was an obvious nostalgia shot in the arm which is understood by your Blogger, but it also felt a bit forced and at this point the plot gets really boring as if they are now trying to make Han Solo have a central role and give him something Han Soloey to do, but it really side tracks the main characters story.

Instead if J.J. had created a new and interesting mentor character he could have kept the pacing going and kept my interest. But he didn’t and one feels like he was bowing to higher corporate powers in this decision, but that’s not my call or am I able to verify it.

The story does pick up in the third act and the antagonist is formidable and interesting although goofy looking when he takes off his helmet which I could live with. Other small problems with story revolve around the plot consisting of said bad guys just resulting to building a bigger Death Star, but that’s a minor problem. If it was done right and the pacing didn’t stall so much I could buy that the bad guys would just want to build another big weapon that almost defeated the good guys in the previous movies. I mean villains are usually in the business of building bigger and badder weapons just as a rule of thumb.

Now is time to address the fact that J.J. said the movie would be mostly practical effects, yes there were some good practical effects. And I realize now that he never promised to make it ALL practical affects. That said it still is a shame he didn't because it is still too easy to tell when they use CGI; for big explosions, the star getting sucked up, every light saber, the big, big bad guy, and for the slimy, rolling ten eyed ten tentacled monster, and yes dear J.J. all that CGI looked very fake too. 

There’s still no way getting around the difference between seeing something that is real and something that is not. Oh, my bad, I forgot to mention that Carrie Fisher was also done totally with CGI as well. Okay, just kidding, she just looked extremely wooden for some reason and talked like she was always trying to keep her teeth from falling out.

So to sadly conclude this blog, it will be stated that I got pretty much what I expected out of a J.J. Abrams production which is; good effects, some good characters, an exciting first act, and then a slow second act with too much pandering to certain aspects of old glory from said franchise(just like in his Star Trek films), and a somewhat satisfying, actiony ending with overall about as much character and plot depth as a toddler’s sandbox. 

But seeing as this was partially Star Wars; The Apology, it did enough. The record breaking box office proved that as well and will continue to do so as it appears that Disney will attempt to pull a Marvel and begin churning out Star Wars movies by the dozen over the years. And knowing that Disney owns Marvel that shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone. I promise I will continue to point that out, that is until Disney owns this blog, at which time I will be forbidden from saying anything contradicting the Star Wars/Disney supremacy. So while I can I will add that Bugs Bunny is wayyyyyy cooler and funnier than Mickey Mouse. There I said it. It isn’t 2029 just yet ;)

On one final, final note I recently listened to a Shamanic drum tape given to me by a dear friend. I listened to it and tried to visualize going to the Underworld, or the center of the Earth in my case, in order to contact my spirit animals. Now, I’m not sure I did it right or if I can even do it right, I’m just a rookie Shaman here let’s be honest. But I can tell you that if I did do the visualization right that my spirit animals are eagles, monkeys, griffins, and Marshawn Lynch. And yes that was a list in order of least to most important.

So that’s it. This is first year Shaman Lightening Fingers signing off. Lightening Fingers was my first Shaman name choice, the second was Rumbling Belly.

Sayonara, peace.

Monday, November 23, 2015

Mine own Ode to James Bond; a timeless poetic tale for the Ages of appreciating awesomeness.

Oh James Bond, you and your movies have been so great to me over the years. Let us sit and sip great Ale and think of the ways the lovable rascal of the title 007 has impressed us and me and thee over 24 movies. The list appeareth here now; 1. Underground Lairs. 2. Gruesome and inventive ways to kill henchmen/messengers/anyone that upsets the bad guy. 3. Piranhas in a pool. 4. Jet packs. 5. Mind blowing one-liners. 6. One punch knockouts. 7. SPECTRE. 8. Number 1 stroking his cat behind the barrier and coolly frying number 4. 9. Hijacked nuclear bombs(always a great plot device.) 10. How Q really hates that James wrecks all the gadgets he gives him. 11. All the gadgets he gives James, especially the 1964 Aston Martin DB5 with headlight machine guns, smoke, oil slick, and the handy, dandy, what no spy can live without ejection seat. 12. Golf with Goldfinger. 13 Being bad-ass and fighting Dr. No to the death over a tank of watery radioactive stuff. 14. Underwater scuba wars. 15. Running across the heads of crocodiles. 16 using a crocodile submarine. 17. Fighting Jaws. 18. Fighting Oddjob inside Fort Knox. 19. Dressing up as a clown and diffusing a nuclear bomb. 20. Being so smooth and classy and awesome. 21. Always knowing that he's going to defeat the big bad guy. 22. Always defeating the big bad guy and blowing up his underwater/inside a volcano/on an island bad guy lair.

These reasons herein the preceding list be yet a small smidgen of ways which the rouge bandit of England James Bond entertains us and expresses his righteousness.

My favorite Bond movies all stick to the clean and simple maxim of storytelling that can be summed up like this. Bond gets mission from M, Bond goes to location for mission, Bond fights people and meets ladies on his way to accomplishing the mission, The End. This highlights one thing Alfred Hitchcock always did and always preached about movie making, that you should give the audience most of the information regarding the story up front so they 1. know what is going on and why. And 2. can use all their wondering for wondering how the good guy will win out in the end(that is if it's that kind of movie.) The Bond franchise does this well by M. briefing Bond on who he will be trying to apprehend/follow/investigate, where he will be going to do so, ans who will help him once he gets there. Plot points plainly laid out. Mysteries erased. I mean James Bond isn't in the Mystery genre anyway right?

This past weekend I saw the new James Bond film called SPECTRE(which stands for Special Executive for Counter-Intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge and Extortion). And I must say that I didn't read too many reviews and online opinions this time so I was going in pretty fresh. That said, I will now resort to the tried and trued method of writing criticism and list the movies strengths first.

First, it had a great hand to hand fight between Bond and David Bautista on the train. Oh yeah, Spoilers!!! Daniel Craig as always was phenomenal, athletic, and smart. The super sneaky and dangerous vibe around the SPECTRE funeral and meeting were spot on and sweet, especially how David Bautista killed that guy basically for his job interview. This adds to the mythos of the Bond novels and the organization of SPECTRE as being based on Ian Fleming's dealings with the Illuminati during World War 2 when he served in the Royal Navy and which gave him all his ideas for the James Bond novels, which I find much more plausible a scenario than he was just having second thoughts about getting married and wanted to scratch his international spy, playboy, hero itch somehow.

But I digress, on with the high points of the film. The opening sequence was fast paced, action packed, really cool(I know my descriptions can be so specific sometimes ;)), and it wasn't fifteen minutes long like the one in Casino Royale. And while we are on the subject of Casino Royale for a second I must say that Shaun Connery would never go on a Parkour chase through a construction site and chase someone up a crane, just saying.

And now on to the part where this gets hard for there are flaws which I would like to point out, but in a nice way of course,  and no feelings are going to get trampled on. That's basically because I know neither Daniel Craig nor Sam Mendes will ever read this article.

First flaw. 1. They pulled a Star Trek: Into Darkness. Yes, that's right they did it, even after all the feedback on how lame it is. For those of you who don't know, pulling a Star Trek: Into Darkness will now forever be known as giving a film's bad guy a generic name only to flip on the audience once deep into the film and have said character reveal that he is actually the most dastardly villain of the franchise but was just using another name. This presents the problem of being meaningless to anyone who hasn't seen the movies with said bad guy in them for such a reveal to have any affect. Oh, and every press release, magazine interview, and actor and director interview must contain the smoke screen of "Oh, no he's not Kahn, he's just a guy named John Harrison." And I kid you not that I read a magazine article in EMPIRE none the less where Mr. Mendes states, "Oh, don't say the B word. Of course, he's not Bloefeld. He's Franz Oberhauser and that's all guys. Nothing to see here. And NO WAY will we disappoint fans by pulling a Star Trek Into Darkness."

Well folks he did and yes Christoph Waltz's character is revealed to be Ernst Stavro Bloefeld about two thirds of the way through. He being the leader of SPECTRE with their octopus symbol rings. Another fun fact, the NSA recently launched a satellite where the side of it has a painting of an octopus above the Earth and spelling out "Nothing is beyond our reach." Bet you didn't know that eh?


Okay, on with the review! With that said the only other big criticism I have is that the plot was just too confusing and I really never knew what was happening and why. For instance Bond drives to Austria but we don't know why. We only know he's looking for someone and then when he meets her he says he's looking for something else and we have no idea where or what it is only that some dying character spoke the important word twenty minutes before. At one point he walks into a cabin in a snowy forest. We don't know why. We don't know what he's looking for. I didn't know where the movie was going. It's hard to enjoy a movie if all my feeling of mystery is being tied up in the thought of "What in the heck is going on here and why is he doing this?"

And unfortunately the latter thought was repeated much more throughout the movie. It must be how Sam Mendes likes to construct a story. I remember I loved Jarhead and that had no plot, no mission, just characters existing in a landscape and reacting to what's happening to them. And that film was brilliant. I feel the simpler and more straightforward plot development fits movies like Bond better. But that's just my opinion.

With that said, Mr. Mendes did a great job with what he was trying to accomplish and the script he had. This movie already has many fans and has made lots of money. It is a unique addition to the James Bond cannon which has gone all the way from Goldfinger to Octopussy to Golden Eye and now to SPECTRE. Despite my criticism I do look forward to seeing the last installment of James Bond from Mr. Craig and whoever they get to fill the directorial role left by the departure of Mr. Mendes. Thank you for reading. That is all.

Sayonara
Jake


Monday, October 12, 2015

Post on The Martian, otherwise known as MATT DAMON!



So, I finally saw Matt Damon trapped on Mars and I must say that the above meme really got my excitement flowing to see it and was a thorough warm up to the main event.

If you don't understand the above meme, watch the movie Team America World Police, or watch this clip from the movie https://youtu.be/gnPWJOJYVKc

I went with some good friends to an Issaquah theater and there planted my butt and waited for the sciency stuff to get going.

And boy did the sciency stuff really science up the story. Filled with science, a true science buff will love this movie as there are lots of references to math and astrophysics that I didn't understand but must accept as truth for this story to make sense. You can't base a movie upon being hard Science Fiction and have half-assed science right? Right? This isn't Star Trek where you can say a futuristic sciency sounding word and fill a plot hole with it. NO! This is hard core science here, real life stuff, stuff that can and will happen at any moment and you must be ready. AT. ALL. TIMES. Thus extending the recent trend of movies trying to be realistic, yes that is a real trend my friends.

Okay, so I get what they were trying to accomplish here and I come out up front and admit that I didn't read the book not even the first chapter. But I did hold a copy of someone's in the Home Depot lunch room and pretended to read the last sentence on the last page and told everyone the famous last sentence was "And then he pooped his pants." And here is where the book and the movie began to not live up to my expectations.

First off it is super hard to have satisfying character development when the main character has almost no other human interaction. He is always by himself, talking to himself, or recording cool video blogs of his progress in trying to make stuff he needs to survive, food, energy, water. There is humor in the movie, boy did they ever try to put humor here and in many places it is sciency humor that only super sciency people will get, which I am not so that is why I found the humor to be really lacking in places. I don't know, just not my type of jokes I guess. Science guys that work in science labs will probably love it or anyone who is really literal and left brained. Is left brained the literal sciency one? I am so the other type of brained that I can't even remember what the sciency one is, but whatever it is, it's the opposite of me. The most relate-able humor was Matt Damon swearing or falling down.

If this movie were to be remade I would request lots more explosions and stuff going wrong for Matt Damon and maybe an evil alien or bad guy astronaut on Mars trying to kill him or steal his freeze dried teriyaki chicken and them having space fights and making space weapons out of the scant materials they have left and then Matt Damon finishing him off and laying down the final scene stealing one liner, something like "This planet is mine." or "Get off my planet." or "Your epidermis is showing."

But overall, Ridley Scott did a good job considering it is super hard to make something with this type of tone and with basically the main character being all alone the entire movie and trying to adapt it from a book which makes it even more super hard. So, 2.5 stars out of 4 for the Martian even considering the theater broke down at the climax and we had to wait 30 minutes for them to fix the projector which they did.

I leave you with an interesting fact that I found from another meme I saw on imgur.com that states; "Between Saving Private Ryan, Interstellar, and now The Martian, America has spent a lot of time and money trying to save Matt Damon." Thank you, thank you very much.

Alright, Sayonara. I'm out.
jake

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Mini post of just maybe a little significance, okay we'll see how it ends up ;)

Just an update wonderful people out there who maybe didn't want to read this blog but then thought well maybe since he hasn't posted in a while and then were like, well I don't have that much time, but sometimes his posts are funny and interesting in weird ways, so okay what the hay I'll read it and now here you are!

Great, now what I've been up to: 1. Going to school to finish the prerequisites for the Ultrasound program at Bellevue College. Now this isn't really complicated, it just involves about 80 million little steps that have to be done in perfect order so its mainly a test of patience, planning, and organization than anything. Just getting to the point where I could begin volunteering at the UW hospital to satisfy the volunteering requirement took about two months. Good thing I started early! My final quarter is this quarter and after that I send in my application, the application period is between Jan 1 2016 and Feb something 2016 so throw salt or something else over your shoulder for me. Thanks!

Anywho on to #2 the ongoing, unending, ever inspiring and sometimes maddening saga of trying to finish my book The Song of Jonas part 1 and publish it in some form that people can read dog gone it. So, 1 was finished and I started sending out submissions to Agents and in the mean time started part 2. So part 2 was going really good and am now about 90% done on first draft of it and since all agents I sent part 1 to were like "ummmmm we don't know, this sounds kind of weird and since its not accompanied by a perfect platform like a website, blog, or youtube account with already 1 million hits then we aren't interested, sorry," I decided to go back and make part 1 shorter. And I'm in the process of doing that or in other words "making it more like part 2, but also different."

In the mean time since traditional publishing is shying away from weird Young Adult novels that are too long, just like mine I have been thinking about self publishing on Smashwords and Amazon which is pretty cool in some ways and kind of a pain in more obvious ways such as no physical book being available in a real life bookstore. But oh, well maybe e-publishing will be easy and fun, or hard work and a little fun, or who knows.

So, that's my short update, nothing earth shattering here. Stay updated this fall for reviews from yours truly on the new Bond or as I like to say Borne in a Tux, and the Martian, or Saving Astronaut Matt Damon, and Star Wars part who the heck cares, which will have lots of lense flare galore and the usual J.J. Abrams staples that mean it will be pretty predictable, but hopefully good, fingers are crossing at least four times and it hurts.

Okay, Sayonara, later.
Jake

Thursday, March 19, 2015

A general post on movies

My post on why I like movies and movies that I like and why, no joking allowed.

1. I love movies that represent a hyper reality that looks and sounds fresh and interesting and unique and that you don't see everyday ever, at all. This is important because setting in a story can be used to really affect the mood of the atmosphere or the world if you will. Is it a dystopia? A sword and sandal movie set in ancient Greece? An alien invasion movie? Yes, please! I'll take three of each!

2. Movies that use practical affects or CGI sparingly and blend it in with everything. The wonderful thing about practical affects is that they are real. Real in a sense that a model or a miniature has density in three dimensions and can be picked up, moved, pushed, put into water, or blown up and it looks like something physical is really happening. Don't let the argument that a "oh, well a man in a rubber mask isn't real" fool you. You are supposed to suspend your disbelief that the rubber mask is indeed rubber, we're all past that by now. What the movie is supposed to do is make the scene work and look good so that you feel like a part of the story and can emotionally relate to the main character and what is happening to them. CGI has its places, but it is all too often taken for granted that "oh, well now with CGI we can create anything we want!" and the result is a ship or a character or a building that doesn't work, not because it actually isn't real, but because it doesn't look like anything that could possibly physically exist in three dimensions. This happens way too much and highlights why the special affects on the original Star Wars are still amazing and why that movie is still so beloved and why the prequels were so widely panned.

3. Good story. As a trained writer one of the first things my omnipotent writing teachers taught me when I was struggling away in that little nursery with all the other neophyte writers was that a good story trumps everything and in fiction that includes the elements of plot, character, and setting if we're talking the most basic elements. But what is happening now in movie theaters across the globe? The prequel disease is spreading and screen writers aren't learning the lessons that my omnipotent writing instructors taught us. Among other things one of the most important rules was that back-story is always more important to the writer than the reader. Meaning that the writer always loves back-story and loves writing it a million times more that a reader enjoys reading it. Why? Because it is just lists of details and doesn't add to the drama, danger, suspense, and conflict that a true story demands. And that is why, ladies and gentlemen, that prequels in all and any form will always fall flat in the conflict and suspense department. I know some people like the new Planet of the Apes movies and that is fine, but I can't bring myself to see them for that reason alone, that they are just back-story or else they would have been made with Charlton Heston.

4. TRUTH. One thing that my omnipresent writing instructors taught us was that good fiction has as much element of truth in it as possible. Yes, that sounds conflicting but it makes sense from the basic sense that everyday events taken to dangerous extremes are basically the garden of fiction writers. Case in point #1 Ian Fleming wrote his James Bond series based upon his experiences in Naval Intelligence and NOT in any way as some last gasp grasp at an imaginary spy/playboy lifestyle which is the truly lame current theory. Commander Fleming's stories were based on his experiences, that very powerful secret groups are behind many global events and they manipulate governments and cause lots and lots of problems. Now you can disagree with me that's okay and yes, I do read lots of conspiracy literature, but hey its not in the fiction section is it? And if you doubt any of it then go check it out. A true skeptic doubts and then verifies for him or herself and doesn't remain in willful ignorance. But then people have free will and so may choose the latter option if they really want it.

5. Because I grew up in the Golden Age of action movies and still live three blocks from the best movie store ON THE PLANET. Yes, that store is Scarecrow Video and by golly they have everything and by everything I actually mean there isn't anything that they don't have. They have so much it could almost never be watched and there is no way to actually describe the wide range of things they have. If you want movies from the Philippines, they've got 'em. Vietnam? Got 'em. Movies based on video games? Got 'em. Spy movies or Westerns or Kung Fu movies? PLeeeeaaassseee...... They have so many your eyes will start to bleed when you see it.

Now that Golden Age comment, let me explain. I grew up in the eighties and during that time such an amazing amount of classic action movies came out that studios are still, to this day, 35 years later trying to duplicate that creativity and movie magic and they haven't come close. Case in point, studios are still making Terminator movies, Predator movies, Alien movies, Indiana Jones, and Star Wars. They remade Total Recall, Robocop, the Karate Kid, and are planning to remake Kick Boxer and Ghostbusters! Now if they try to remake Caddyshack I think I won't be able to handle that. So if you find out that I'm in jail, you'll know exactly why. Still need more proof that the 80's were the best, okay I take that dare; Conan the Barbarian-remade. Gremlins-classic. Goonies-untouchable. Blazing Saddles-modern scripture, and yes it was made in the 70's. Tim Burton's Batman, Pee Wee's big adventure, Top Gun(rumored Top Gun 2 has fallen apart) all were incredible.

Now can CGI be used well? I'm glad you asked. For yes it can and the likes of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy as well as G.I. Joe: Rise of the Cobra proved that. Yes, I liked the first G.I. Joe movie, but I'm allowed to.

Well, my hands hurt from all that intense typing, but you get my point. Disagree? Why not leave a comment? What's up next? Well, I think I'll see Whiplash and maybe Exotic Marigold Hotel 2: Bedpan Apocalypse(That's actually the real title, yes...)

So until next time, Sayonara and keep watching movies and keep reading books!
jake