Wednesday 9 December 2009

Twilight: New Moon - Actually Very Good

Well, that was unexpected.
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I took my little sister to see the original Twilight film. Then I read the book to see if the film had, as claimed, deviated too far from the source material. And I've pretty much been making "emo" jokes since then.

To be fair, I'm using emo where "teenage angst" would be more appropriate, but... well, let's review:
  1. Bella seems to be wanted by every single guy at the school,
  2. Being this popular seems to irritate her intensely,
  3. Edward's tortured by his own inner demons,
  4. They can't be together because of his animal impulses,
  5. Neither of them will shut up about this stuff,
  6. "I was unconditionally and irrevocably in love with him." QUOTED FROM ORIGINAL TEXT.
My God, it's full of LiveJournal posts.
...
Which is sort of the point. I mean, this is how the Brontës' work became classics. Yes, it's bordering on self-parody, but that's what Melodrama is. And if there's one defining quality to the original Twiglet novels, it's melodrama. I mean, it's not my cup of tea, but it's harmless enough. It's certainly not as bad as that damn period where people would keep trying to convince me that The Da Vinci Code was gospel.
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But teenagers taking themselves seriously is always inherently amusing. So when I went into New Moon, I wasn't expecting to enjoy it, so much as tolerate and mock it. Everybody I know has either loathed or derided this film. Most have refused to go see it, which is why I went alone. I just wanted to give it a fair shot before I went back to making jokes about it.

Here's the short version. It's one of the best treatments of teenage angst on film I have ever seen. It's got a subtle sense of its own ridiculousness, something the first film really lacked, and this gives it a warmth it desperately needs to counteract the angst, without compromising the overall mood of tormented teenagerhood.

Kristen Stewart seems to have finally found a way to make Bella into a reasonably likeable character, while still maintaining the awkwardness and lack of confidence that made her inexpressibly annoying in the first film. Even in the period where she's just been dumped and is sulking, there's a certain sense of stubborness, a sort of "No. I'm not 'going on with my life'. You abandoned me, you broke my heart, and there's no way I can find you to get back together and/or have you beaten up. The only thing I can do to get back at you is to waste my life sulking. So sulk I shall."
Mark Kermode described it as "Heroic Moping", and I actually can see what he means. There's a lovely scene where the camera's revolving around Bella as she sulks her way through 3 months. It's all done through the images outside the window as she never moves, and it definitely works, especially when contrasted with her agonised screaming during her sleep.
These scenes could descend into farce, but they manage to make it work by switching the focus to Bella's Dad. You find yourself watching a man having to deal with his daughter's pain, and being totally unable to find a way to help, except by just being there, puts the audience in just the right place to care about Bella, because her dad does, and we like him.

Another supporting character who needs his due is that poor, dumb loser whose name I can't be bothered to remember. You know, the guy at the film whose only role is to make Jacob look cooler. Where's his team? Seriously, dude. Time to head down to the nuclear lab and start hunting for bugs, because god knows you're not beating Pecs O'Puppydog and Broody McSuicide with your super chronic stomach disorder abilities.

And then there's Pecs himself. This should be the most dislikeable role in all of recorded writing. "We're going to need you to look like a Greek God, be good with your hands, be sweet and tolerant about the female lead's deep-seated emotional problems, except when you're in a ferocious temper, in which case you'll just be all man, baby."
What saves Taylor Lautner from joining the Wesley Crusher hall of fame is the fact that his scenes are the first time we see Bella actually happy. Let's face it, Edward and Bella might be "irrevocably in love", but they're not friends. They have next to nothing in common, and they spend all their time together brooding or soliquising. But Bella and Jacob actually seem to get along as people. They do fun stuff together, they kid each other around, she starts smiling. I'm not sure we saw Kristen Stewart smile in the entire of the original Twilight film.
Of course, then the werewolf thing kicks in, and it all goes to hell. It's actually quite a nice touch, which must be in the original book, that just as she finds a new guy, she gets exactly the same damn experience. "I need to be away from you, it's too dangerous, I can't explain, sorry, bye".
And when they finally do work through that, guess who's baaaack! Seriously, Jacob and Bella spend most of the film getting thiiiis close, to the point where I'm stone-cold certain that there's an outtake where they just go for it.

There are two vampires worth mentioning in this film, and neither of them are Robert Pattinson. Firstly, Alice is awesome. Bubbly and pixey-like, she seems to be fine with what she is, and makes a brilliant counterpoint to Edward's tormentedness. Her scenes with Jacob are simply hilarious. Plus she's got mad car-stealing skills.
And then there's Michael Sheen's ridiculously fun turn as the King of the Vampires, placing him in the unique position of having played a Werewolf, a Vampire, a sitting British Prime Minister, and Brian Clough. Now THAT'S a CV. His scenes are going to turn up on Youtube, and if you like campy horror, you must see them.

It's not without its flaws. Yes, there's some appallingly bad dialogue between Bella and Edward. But as they're supposed to be teenagers in love, that's hardly inappropriate. And it's balanced by my favourite line of the film "It would be nice not to want to kill you all the time."
And yes, Edward seems to spend most of his time looking tormented and pained and Twiglety.
But it's countered by the section when he gets into a knock-down fight with 3 super-powered vampires. (Incidentally, here's an interesting aside. He loses, and yet gets everything he truly wants, not despite losing, but because of it. You could probably write a decent literary thesis based around that particular concept. Not to mention the fact that it looks pretty cool when he smashes the guy into the marble stairs.)
And the wolves don't look quite right. Bit too CGI. But they're still cool CGI, and you get the right feel of massive bear-like strength and size, which is what's actually important.
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So, that's my review. Now, what I can't figure out is why the geek crowd has taken so against these completely harmless books and the above average movies based on them.
Well, here's the obvious answer: because they're sheep, desperately trying to fit in with their own particular crowd, doing the exact kind of weak-ass crap that makes school such an appalling trial for every last human being to pass through the hallowed doors of education. But let's be generous, and assume that maybe 10% of them actually have some functioning originality or self-insight, and of those 10%, at least some of them saw the damn film. I have to assume that it touched off some communal nerve or some political point that caused them to take against it. But for the life of me, I don't know what it is.
It's even as if it's overly Hollywoodised. Hell, this is a mass-mass-market film, where at one point the Volturi are "delivered" a tourist party, including little kids. We hear their screams, while our heroes have to simply keep walking away because doing anything would get them all killed. I don't know of any film that wouldn't play that up as a big deal, with lots of "keep moving" "but can't we...?" "we can't risk it..." type dialogue. But here, it's all done through looks and body language, and it's creepy as all hell because we're expected to understand that that's what would happen. That's some damn impressive scripting, direction and respect for the audience's intelligence.
There's also a rather nice scene where we get to see that Edward's issues with "turning" Bella mostly stem from his religious beliefs, whereas Bella's response is effectively "yeah, I don't believe in any of that, you go right ahead and 'damn' me, I'll be fine with it". For all the talk of Mormonism and the religious messages, the fact that the main heroine's completely atheistic seems to have been overlooked.

Bottom line? If you want to watch a film about teenagers in love, which treats their pain as something other than a running joke, you'd be hard-pressed to find a better film in that field than New Moon.
If you don't, there'll be another comedy about geeks trying to get laid soon enough. Chris Weitz may have moved on, but Judd Apatow can't live off his savings forever.

Tuesday 24 November 2009

Playing Munchkin with the munchkins

Munchkin - The Card Game named after a D&D In-Joke named after a Politically Incorrect Aspect of a Film based on a Book about a Kansas Girl's Psychotic Episode. I think it's safe to say your mother has NEVER heard of this, and might well judge you for playing it. "Munchkin? Well, it's this... card... you know what, Mum? It's when you snort coke lines from the corpses of hookers."

But I'd heard really good things about it from generally reliable sources, so when I saw a box at the Thought Bubble Convention in Leeds, I decided to pick it up. When I'd get to play it was another matter though. With my scattered group of friends, I don't get a vast number of chances to play actual physical board-games apart from Christmas. And it's always Monopoly. I have a 2-year old copy of Carcassone that has been opened once, and never played.

Anyway, I was round at my cousins' home in Devon, we'd had a fairly intense day, for reasons which I won't be writing about here, and so I figured this might be a good way of getting our minds off things. So my sister, my two cousins and I sat down to test it out.

Of course, there was the inevitable "working out the rules" stage, the "arguing about the meaning of the rules" stage, the "realising you've got the rules wrong" stage and the "I'm losing to my little sister" stage, a necessary but painful stage that every big brother must learn to accept, at least if you want the game to continue past 5 minutes. But pretty soon we were hooked on the combination of ridiculous puns and devious machinations.

My favourite moment was when Felicity got brought down 2 levels by a concerted effort from our entire group to prevent her from winning. We got the full Shakespearean melodrama, the threatening that "if you're all against me, I'm not playing", and then the gradual talk-down after I pointed out that half the point of the game is to gang up on the strongest. Finally, I got to hear this classic line, "I'll play, if you don't treat me like I'm five... [pause] and I won't act like I'm five." And within 5 minutes, we were all laughing along again.

Another awesome moment was when Jo was cursed to wear a chicken on her head, and decided not to dispel it, because she liked the way it "looked". As her character was something along the lines of an elf-dwarf fighter-wizard wearing flaming armour, carrying a big rock, and accompanied by a singing and dancing sword, the chicken did add some much needed gravitas.

In the end, Alice, who'd been trailing the whole game, ended up with a character more powerful than the gods themselves, and annihilated the critter facing her, boosting her to level 10, and winning the game. And there was much rejoicing.

Here's what I like most about Munchkin. It's one of the few games which actively resists taking it seriously. You're building up a truly ridiculous looking character with phenomenal cosmic powers, and fighting enemies that range from D&D in-jokes to absolutely appalling puns. It's basically just there to make you laugh, argue and spend time with each other. And it did the job brilliantly.

And geeky or not, isn't that what games are for?
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"Hartley said that nothing reveals Humanity so well as the games it plays. Almost right. Actually, you reveal yourselves best in the way you play them" - Q, Star Trek: TNG

P.S. I literally spent 5 minutes thinking about what the title could be before realising what an obvious opportunity had presented it.

Sunday 25 October 2009

Yes, well, I said I might not get round to it...

But wow... that was an impressive amount of nothing I just wrote, huh?
Okay, let's try this again, but first I'm 25 and...
STILL ALIVE

Tuesday 24 March 2009

Okay Kids, Here's How This Is Going to WORK.

Right.

So, I've thought this more and more as I use Facebook Notes. "Man, if only I had some form of blog. Maybe I should make one." And I never get around to it. It's getting more annoying now that I barely use Facebook at all, mind you.

Now, I am absolutely certain that I could roll my own blog. The problem is that I have stuff I want to say "content", but by the time. Also, I get frustrated, distracted, start playing Armageddon Empires... I'm an ENTP procrastinator. So, it's time to set myself some achievable goals and a plan to acheive them.

Step 1: Create some actual content that interests me and publish via Blogger.
Step 2: Start messing around with web languages to make my own custom tool to meet my needs and practice my tech skills, so I am not as dependent on Google's imperialistic domination of what is admittedly now "the GoogleWeb".
Step 3: Work out a way to create a useful technical product that makes me millions.
Step 4: Publish this for those who wish to follow in my august footsteps.
Step 5: Go directly to Jail. Possibly even Gaol.

Now, I'm aware that (blogging!=coding). And I'm fully aware that I may not get around to this. But here's my statement of intent. At least two blog posts a week. At least one about web tech. Starting today.