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Movies
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I liked the Disney stuff today, I've loved some of the breakout sessions on the Olympics, SharePoint Portal Server, the future of online Comic Book reading and the never-ending Guitar Hero II Tournament, but this is, by far, was favorite demo yet. Read More
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While not as awesome as the original Tron coin-op, I dropped many a quarter into Discs of Tron at the 7-11 near my house in Oklahoma City back in the '80s.
Many XBLA titles have come through recently that leave me with a resounding "eh," but this one Read More
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I was, until yesterday, a faithful patron of BestBuy. In my line of work, people tend to give me video games – brand new, still-in-the-shrinkwrap. Unfortunately, most of these are games that I’ve already got for one reason or another. Read More
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After considerable research, strolling through the aisles and conversations with Twokota, I think that the Westinghouse 42" 1080p LCD will be the newest addition to the McBlah household this fall.
Why HD? Basically, I'm a techno geek and I'm all Read More
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Ozymandias, of whom I am very jealous because he has obviously played Lego Star Wars II before release, has put together a great article about how 1080(x) resolutions, at least in this generation of HD/BR consoles, are output at essentially the same resolution, Read More
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I am not making this up. Sony actually let this happen.
From cnet.com.au:
"The first Blu-ray (BD) disc drive for desktop PCs is here, but be warned -- it won't play commercial BD movies.
Bautista is optimistic that [the] issues will be resolved Read More
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There's just something about opening night - movies are just better on the first day.
At least, they are for me.
EK and I checked out "PotC: DMC" last night, and I ate up every minute of it. I admired the fans dressed in pirate costumes, Read More
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Check out the enlightened comments by Howard Stringer, CEO of Sony Corp, in this article on sony-ps3.ca:
"When speaking of PS3's Blu-ray capability [Stringer] went on to ask, "When you bring into new technology, do you go for a cheaper transitional Read More
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Sorry for the 3-day-lull - I was dealing with a time consuming issue here at work that had me jumping, particularly in the mornings which is when I usually do the bulk of my blogging. But that crisis is over, and I'm back to full strength.
I'm Read More
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Like everyone else out in the Geekosphere, I'm eagerly awaiting Wednesday, June 28th - the release date for the new Superman movie. Personally, I hope Brian Singer (Bryan?) hits a home run with this one - a good reboot is exactly what this stale Read More
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Outside of LiveJournal and Chuzzle, my wife uses Windows Messenger more than anything else while she's sitting at our old, outdated, slow PC. Messenger is pretty cool, and Office Communicator is pretty average, but the new Windows Live Messenger Read More
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Silicon Valley geeks have apparently started their own fight club.
From the PI article:
"They may sport love handles and Ivy League degrees, but every two weeks some Silicon Valley techies turn into vicious street brawlers in a real-life, underground Read More
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I love my job - particularly the morale events. Every now and then, my group will take a long lunch, rent a theater (the whole theater) and see a movie. This happened a lot more often when I was in the Windows division way back when – sometimes it seemed like we were at the Crossroads 8 Theater every other week. But I digress.
Today we saw the Da Vinci Code and my first impression is that the movie as a whole was better than I thought it would be. Like the rest of the known world, I read the book when it came out a few years ago, and then reread it last month in preparation for this compare/contrast review. I even watched some of the History Channel specials on the subject, as well as a few religious films that, to coin a phrase, crucified Dan Brown for his “sacrilegious, historically inaccurate work.”
With this history, and after reading the negative reviews, I was prepared for, as one national writer put it, “Ron Howard’s worst effort since EdTV” but was instead pleasantly surprised. The pacing, while a little slow, stood up to my bathroom test, which is as follows: the harder it is for me to get up out of my chair and slip out for a few minutes, the better the film. Movies are supposed to keep my attention, and this one did.
As far as the potentially offensive content, it was there – for the most part. One subtle change I noticed was that the movie shifted Robert Langdon, Brown’s intellectual but action-handicapped hero, to more of a religious skeptic. While it is true that the last shot of the movie shows him in a penitent posture, kneeling (as seen in the previews) at the [deleted for the three of you who haven’t read the book], it is also true that during the controversial conversation between Langdon, Sophie (the requisite but slightly boring heroine) and Sir Leah Teabing (wonderfully brought to life by Ian McKellen – can this guy pick his roles or what?), Teabing is portrayed as the man with the radical ideas about Jesus while Langdon calls the theories “wives tales” and “unproven” before eventually going along. I believe that this was done to soften the blow – to take the burden of controversy off of the hero and heap it onto a smaller role.
The good: Shot on location in many beautiful places, it was worth the price of admission just to sit back and enjoy the scenery. (The fact that the price of admission was technically zero is an interesting point, though…) The mysteries unfold in a logical manner, giving the audience just enough time to fully grok the problem before revealing the answer, usually in an enlightening, albeit somewhat preachy manner. The cinematography and music were better than adequate and, as I said before, Ian McKellen’s portrayal of an English gentleman crippled by polio and living in France, was excellent.
The bad: McKellen may have sunk the boat, however, by dramatically overshadowing Tom Hanks, somewhat miscast but doing his best in a terribly written role, and Audrey Tautou, who is beautiful but brings little else to the table. Jean Reno was his usual intense self, but spent so little time on screen that I found myself wishing that he had a bigger role. Paul Bettany, who has come from nowhere to have a run of recent good fortune (Wimbleton, Master and Commander, A Beautiful Mind and his masterful work as Geoffrey Chaucer in the underrated A Knight’s Tale) was, frankly, unconvincing as the dogged albino Catholic assassin. I think that, while a few interesting plot points from the book were left out, the movie is about 15 minutes too long and could have benefitted from a more aggressive editor. Lastly, when you have a comic genius like Hanks, why wouldn’t you set him free to bring a little offbeat wit to the film? By the middle of the second hour, I was sick of watching him furrow his brow and frown at the camera.
All in all: Not quite worth the $7 evening price, but definitely worth your $3.50 as an entertaining matinee.
Rating: 3 Stars.
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From the SeattleTimes.com article:
"The Trojan Nuclear Plant's cooling tower took a year to build and cost more than $10 million. It came down in about 10 seconds Sunday morning...
The cooling tower, which was part of Oregon's only nuclear-power plant, Read More
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Christies is auctioning off props and memorabilia from all five Star Trek movies and 10 movie spinoffs. Ever want to own your own authentic transporter beam panel? Communicator? Captian's chair?
From the Reuters article:
CBS Paramount Read More
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