Thursday, December 24, 2009

Bodyguards & Assassins(十月圍城) Review


After trying to get into a decent showing of "avatar", I decided to settle for second best and watch what was next on the list, "bodyguards & assassins", an all star cast historical drama about Sun Yat Sun and one of his visits to HK, and the many assassins waiting for him.

I didn't do that much research on the movie before watching it, but I knew that Donnie Yen was in it so it made me want to watch one of his movies on his turf. It was a good sign to see that almost all the seats were filled, just like Avatar. The other movies in the running this weekend were "Twilight: New Moon" and "Storm Warriors II", which were pretty empty and pathetic. They didn't look to appeal to audiences anyway.

"Bodyguards & Assassins" has been advertised to have built the biggest recreation of old time Hong Kong in history, and it was quite apparent they did quite an impeccable job. The set pieces are done so well, its amazing to see such attention to detail. Although the mustache on Eric Tsang was a bit hard to believe.

The movie has a slow start, with a quiet beginning setting up some of the relationships you need to know to make the later events much more of an impact. What I did like was that most of the characters were not in traditional roles they are usually in. For instance, Donnie Yen, most famous for his masterful performance in "Ip Man" is now relegated to a fledgling soldier, who has gambling problems and does anything for the right price. There were only 2-3 moments that were somewhat cheezy, but thats it. For the most part, they got the acting right with most of the scenes regarding China, reunification, guomintang, and family. The non-action scenes played out well, and told the story well.

The problem with a movie with so many characters is that there's only so much air time and so you can't get invested with any of the characters and there's too little time for development. They did well with the time that they had, although i felt certain characters like father character that orchestrates most of the events tends to be almost outwitted and left out of the most pivotal parts of the movie, for some reason. I felt it was a buildup of that character that doesn't really play out right for the audience.

The buildup is what they try to set up in this movie from the beginning. The whole Sun Yat Sen scenario is brought up at the beginning of the movie and in various instances in the movie they will inject some text indicating how many days until he arrives, like a countdown to some big big moment. Therefore, you'd expect the event to be momentous, and the climax of why you've been sitting there watching the events unfold the way they have. Bottom line, they did a good job satisfying the customer. The whole journey from when Sun Yat Sen arrives is very violent. I had hoped the 'bodyguards' fighting off the assassins had worked together more, but instead they all had their own vendettas and reasons and therefore each one had their own little scenarios. It was satisfying to see the overall picture, but some of the action scenes were a little too fast and the camera was intentionally shaky but it was just too hard to read sometimes.

However, as a martial arts epic, this one is different in that you have more raw fighting than you do "flying". Nobody flies in this film, and the weapons cut with blood spewing about. The only character with martial arts mastery is Leon Lai's character, who masterfully beats down a crowd of assassins with his metal fan, but unfortunately the scene isn't long enough, in my opinion, but he does a good job of protecting, as he is asked of.

As a whole, this movie accomplishes what I had thought it had set out to do, with stronger acting, dialogue, and drama than the martial arts, but there's no skimping on violence. The cast is strong and romances and maybe over-dramatizes the actual event, but it leads to great film-making and definitely satisfies those who are looking for a good martial arts epic.
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Wednesday, December 23, 2009

James Cameron's "Avatar"


James Cameron's "Avatar" has been getting rave reviews. I've been doing a lot of reading on it and getting positive reviews through word of mouth from friends on facebook, so it sort of bumped up my negative anticipation towards it. I think the media was all right by saying that they marketed the movie wrong. It's not exactly an action movie, but more along the lines of "District 9" where you become them, and then join them and fight back. It's not as political and thought-provoking as "District 9" but it does have heart and some parallels with military and colonialism. I even find it funny people are comparing the movie to "Pocahontas". That makes sense, except you gotta give Pocahontas some poison-lined arrows and a banshee to ride upon (don't forget to give her hair with mind-connecting tendrils). The movie itself, is awe-inspiring. As a whole you can view it as James Cameron's triumphant return to his sci-fi throne, wetting the appetites of fanboys worldwide with gun-toting mecha, ground-breaking graphics, and, of course, Sigourney Weaver.

I can say I was NOT a fan of the 3-d. It was great to see it, especially towards the beginning in the opening cryo-scene, but after that I didn't see that much of a big deal, especially since I'm a hobby gamer and I'm more enthralled this past year by games like "Uncharted 2" and even throwback to "Metal Gear Solid 4". The 3-d was definitely designed with the intention of being used with the movie, and kudos to Cameron for always trying to push boundaries, like he did with "Terminator 2", but I felt it was unnecessary to enjoy the experience. I did get a headache at the very end, but I get headaches from first-person shooters. But I felt it nauseating to have my senses overloaded, and all the while I had many question marks at the end of the story.

How did they learn English? I was never exactly sure when the main character, Jake Sully, asks Neytiri. Then everyone starts becoming bilingual. I'm guessing Sigourney taught them. Secondly, I felt they skimped on character development. They never fully went through anyone's character past, but only briefly touched on them. I felt less attached to most of the characters, and so I cared for them less. I liked the character development of Jake and Neytiri, but that was as we went. Although this was not a movie that has flashbacks, I did feel it kind of strange how certain events played out, like why was Neytiri out on her own or did Jake get fake prosthetics or something? Or was he born like that? Sooooo not sure how it was playing out. They did a good job with pacing and developing how Jake gradually changes from human to na'vi, but I found it was just like an imax experience, and I just wish there was more we knew about Grace(Sigourney Weaver), or the roles of that "other guy", the scientist/botanist that had a gun and also had an avatar.

Visually, what can I say? Cameron succeeded, beyond those doubts(of which include me) that these ugly aliens and their neon colorful planet had some worth, and it was more than a realistic CG film like "Final Fantasy: the Spirits Within" and more like an iconic film. I must say though, the memorabilia is cheesy. The movie is watchable, but I don't want to remember a lot of it later on. What I mean is, you won't find action figures, stuffed animals, and those awful toys I saw at McDonald's, in my room in the future. It's a great movie, but it doesn't have much in terms of likability in the character design.

"Avatar" gets no bias from me. I still treat it like any other movie I see, and I would still give it 85% because of its achievements, and all the effort I could see the entire team put in to push it just as far as they did. The story leads much to be desired from me, but at the same time it does stand up on its own, especially when you compare it to most of the dribble you see these days. Glad to see Cameron's still got it!
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Friday, December 18, 2009

Go IRONMAN!


Kudos to the sequel to IRONMAN. I just saw the teaser trailer to the second one and there's a ton of characters introduced(sadly no Mandarin), but Black Widow and ALREADY the introduction of War Machine are just huge additions. I'm still not convinced the wrestler playing this electro-whip guy. To my recollection, he was never that big of deal and furthermore, I have a peeve about fake accents. Especially considering it sounds so obvious.

Although it was cool to see Ironman and War Machine fight side by side at the end, I was more enthralled with Ironman flying through the air dodging gunfire. It brought memories of that old 90's movie that everyone forgot about: "The Rocketeer".

Anyway looking forward to this one this summer.
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Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Robot Sighting!


Another life-sized robot has been sighted in Nippon. Tetsujin-28 has been unveiled in NIPPON! Crap, what a time NOT to be in japan. If you're in the KOBE area, check it out! Last time I was there, all I found was h1n1 so i avoided the area. Now's the time to plan!

I still want to see the life-sized mobile suit gundam :(
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Monday, December 14, 2009

The Beginnings of Cute?

I've been wanting to write an article about "cute" in this day and age, but I haven't found time to. First and foremost, I am not trying to offend anyone or defame anyone's own creative art. Everyone is entitled to their own creative opinions, albeit controversial or not, and I always encourage creative and constructive feedback. I respect everyone's work here, and am only trying to draw upon comparisons based on observations.

So Japan has always been revered by me as the birthplace of what I call "happy-go-lucky cute". What this means is big shiny eyes, super cute animals, pastel colors, hello kitty, you get the picture.

Now I'm a big fan of the community on flickr, as most people know, and it by far hold some of the greatest talents on the planet. Upon my browsing, I've noticed a common trend, and I just want to prsent some candidates below before continuing. The question here is "who started it?"



Yo Amo La Leche


Andres Guturo


Marcelo Pellizo


Fo-Fotz


Tokidoki

Ice and Kream

Ok, so now that you have seen the subjects of my discussion, I am wondering your thoughts and where I am going with this. There are many similarities of course, and some are more well-known and iconic as others. The more obvious choice is TOKIDOKI, which has a worldwide reach, and a similar brand is TADO(below). Let's not forget KID ROBOT, with their endless supply of vinyl cute. This is all an established market.


Now my point here is simple and quite clear, do the similarities warrant artistic license and respect for originality, or is a style warranted creative freedom? There are BAPE wannabe's out there but they're far and few, because they don't survive long enough. As for the state of the cute industry, that's a different story. I personally all categorize them under the same genre, but I feel there is a means to carry out the same message, while not directly 'copying' or imitating.

Is there nothing harmful about a case such as this, or is this considered cashing upon someone else's market they've taken years to establish?

For me, I think its too similar. I feel there is so much room for growth and innovation, but its probably going to be explored by an industry leader for they have the experience and "opportunity" to explore what succeeds and what does not.

Beginnings of cute? Who came first? I don't know, but this is all something I'd like to hear about and explore further.
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Sunday, December 13, 2009

DALEK's new show


At my old job I got to work with some of Dalek's work, aka James Marshall and its great to hear he's got some new stuff. Although, his space monkey stuff is what I recognize more, but the colors and linework he does here are great. Check out his work at:

James Marshall “And There Was War in Heaven” Exhibition
Jonathan Levine Gallery
529 W. 20th St
9th Floor, New York, NY 10011.

Source: hypebeast
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Christmas Bearbrick


I'm not usually a fan of christmas-themed items, since after the fact they seem rather outdated and useless. However, this is really well done. The glow accomplished turned out really well. I personally only collect the small ones, since I find the big ones to be rather a space hogger.

Source: hypebeast
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Thursday, December 10, 2009

Year of Astronomy Poster 09

I really like this imagery. It's simple, yet modern. It doesn't need too much, and the symbolism can already communicate so much including eclipse and orbits.

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Order To The Galaxy


Order To The Galaxy, originally uploaded by DTH/CLR.

A mask to rule all. I love the balance here, and the iconic symbol. Although it might be harder to recognize without the helmet to non-geeks, but its still a great icon.

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Fashion hairstyle of Japan


Fashion hairstyle of Japan, originally uploaded by FLOP DESIGN.

Meticulous linework here. I'm a big fan of hair, and also japanese fashion mags so this is a great representation. I could see this for a cosmetic ad or shampoo line. I love the attention to detail to create the weight of the hair. It takes a long time, i should know. I deal with drawing hair quite often but never to this extent.

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exhibition poster


exhibition poster, originally uploaded by mil3n.

Much admiration here to the poster, for its handmade qualities. It's gone so digital lately and yet, to know that some stuff that LOOKS digital but is done by hand is reassurance that the craft hasn't lost its roots.

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Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Peat Wollaeger!


peat_wall_miami, originally uploaded by ☆ peat ☆.

Famous stencil graff artists Peat doing up some work in Miami! Great to see him still up to GOOD with what he's known for. Sick stuff!

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cityslickers


cityslickers, originally uploaded by theory_one1.

Theory One is in da house with another sick work. Although its a rework of his, its still a great improvement with nice visuals here, overlays, and really brings the surrealist idea out.

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69


69, originally uploaded by vitordumato.

A simple concept told through iconography. Ha ha, the color overlays work well here to tell the story. Great workup.

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HEY!


HEY!, originally uploaded by dxxxtr.

Great play of type and imagery here. I like the monotone colors here. I'm not familiar with the song but the hair totally reminds me of Kidd from "kidd n play" back in those 'house party' days.

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STARWARS


STARWARS, originally uploaded by EXKARRAVELHO.

Great reductive here. It never ceases to amaze me how iconic star wars designs are, and how they're easily the most recognizable figures in pop art these days. Although some people here in taiwan get "star wars" and "star trek" mixed up, STAR WARS is easily the more iconic and adventurous.

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What a pair!


DSC06783, originally uploaded by Śūnyatā.

Zany shapes, great textures, interesting swatches, monotone colors. An interesting matchup of sorts, with raw imagery. Thumbs up for creativity.

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GTI


GTI, originally uploaded by ♧ 小 孩 ♧.

I actually did see this car on the road earlier this month, a red one too! I like the simple, bold design here. The car isn't the greatest looking, but it has a design representing an era. Reminds me of those cold Jersey winters waiting while this bugger warms up with its lawn-mower sized engine.

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2535-九月號人物(男)


2535-九月號人物(男), originally uploaded by TuBo 土波.

A recent entry by TuBo. The gesture and shading are great here, realistic and manga-inspired style here. Be sure to keep on his photostream. He's got some great energy in his work.

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