I blog when I go abroad, and occasionally when I do stuff in the UK too. There's a nicer interface over here.

Showing posts with label films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label films. Show all posts

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Friday the 13th and other random musings

Friday the 13th
As I started this post, it was almost 2am on Saturday 14th November and I was watching Friday 13th Part V: A New Beginning. It's the one after The Final Chapter, an episode so final that subsequently there have been 7 more (not including remakes, but including Freddy vs Jason). I have them all on DVD, and ever since completing the set I've wanted to have a fest of this sort, a back-to-back all-nighter of watching them, on an occurrence of the date. Today I finally took that ball and ran with it.

These are seriously low brow films. I struggle to think of films more formulaic. They take no brain power to watch. Actually, that may not be the case: if you let them, they occupy the brain when you try to figure out what on earth the comically bad endings to part 2 and 3 are all about. They distress the brain when each episode starts with a recap that's way way way too long. They leave you with enough capacity to spend an entire film thinking "fuck, where else have I seen that actor?" without losing track of the action. But mostly, from episodes 2 onwards, they make you -- that is to say, they make me -- laugh. I think they're fantastic. (Actually, such a broad statement isn't strictly true: episodes 1-4 are great, 5-8 considerably less so (though 6 is OK), 9-10 + Freddy vs Jason back on point)

Does anyone know where my Making Friday The 13th book is? I have a feeling it might be in my garage. It's certainly not in my bookshelf, or in my bedroom. Wherever it is, it's probably next to my copy of If Chins Could Kill. I really want to find them both...so I can lend them to others.



Why can't I find any popular science books, or even introductory academic texts, on writing/script? Well -- actually -- I found one, the Oxford University Press Very Short Introduction To Writing And Script, but it was a huge disappointment. Mostly it was about various ancient scripts and when they were in use, when they dropped out of use, what they eventually morphed into, and how decipherment works. All very interesting to other people I'm sure, but not to me: what I'm really interested in is a history or explanation of, literally, why certain shapes came to represent certain sounds. Why individual scripts look like they do, in themselves and relative to one another. But I can't find anything like it. I've plenty of linguistics books about word meanings, about cultural differences in language, about language as an expression of thought (Pinker RULES), and about language development... but nothing about writing in the way I'm interested. Is it simply a case that we just don't know that kind of stuff about scripts?


I'd never heard of wulffmorgenthaler.com two weeks ago. But in that time I've seen links to their strips from two different sources; one of them reckons this strip says something about me. Maybe it does, but worse than that is how much of a kicking today's XKCD gave me. Ouch. (If you're going to read more of this post, make sure you read that XKCD strip first)


I've recently bought a parade of ever-fancier toys. Of most immediate relevance is that I upgraded my phone to the Android-powered HTC Hero, after years of being a Sony Ericsson fanboi. I have massively mixed feelings about it so far: there were loads of teething troubles getting it set up with contacts, getting it onto my wireless network at home, the alarm app is a load of shit (sometimes alarms don't go off, and when they do there's no snooze option), battery life is rubbish, ... but oh me oh my it's a fucking fancy shiny toy.

The Cowon S9 is a great mp3 player, I love the interface and the sound quality's superb, but I don't like how there's no way to record a log of what you've listened to and send it up to last.fm (who I continue to use massively, despite the bastards turning me down for a job in the summer ;-) ). Actually there may be a way if I use a more complex way of loading it up with music, but it's a load of hoop-jumping bullshit that I can't be fucked with.

The Squeezebox Radio is my best electronics purchase this year. The sound is amazing and I've loved the squeezebox server software for as long as I've known about it (which is over 2 years now). Access to all my music in my bedroom, when I fall asleep, when I wake up, when I have a lie-in, etc etc, with the most flexible yet simple to use interface I've ever seen, is just fantastic, something I've wanted for years. So in tandem with the ongoing project of re-encoding all my CDs, I now get to listen to them each morning and night, when previously I either couldn't, or had to do some kind of bullshit iTunes fakery and listen through laptop speakers. The Squeezebox Radio is nigh-on perfect.

I have flimsy justifications for getting these toys! Yay me!
  • I have always adored music
  • my last phone was horribly broken.
The truth is I already have 2 working mp3 players and one perfectly functional old phone, and could have got the broken one fixed. But until someone or something (preferably the former) comes along -- and I am trying to do my bit -- this pale facsimile of fulfillment will likely carry on.


Since I'm turning this long, rambling post into something which approximates a week or so of tumblr.com-esque snippets, I might as well embed a few song videos. These are tunes I think are incredible, or getting there at least. There's no reason why anyone should agree with me, especially as I listen to an awful lot of music and sometimes have a pretty low quality threshold, but still...these are great songs, and not remotely extreme metal.








Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Slack slack slack

Yes, I know I've not written much recently. Sorry. But frankly I've not been doing a lot of interest other than listening to shitloads of bands that oink and squeal, and that all goes here. Actually I tried to go see some bands last Tuesday at the Peel and failed, because the gig just plain wasn't on. Hmph. I've also vaguely been keeping up with the cricket but not watching it, although I did manage to listen to the last few overs of England's glorious victory this morning taking us, massively improbably, into the final against Australia. Cor. Add that to the weekend's rugby and we could be on a national sporting hat-trick, just need to beat Spain at the footy tomorrow...

I still don't have an mp3 player. I'm quite close to buying either a Trekstor Vibez or a Cowon iAudio D2, but not that close really. Mind you I am starting to get proper fed up with XFM. The other day the breakfast DJ was so fucking awful (the Friday guy, not Laverne) and he played 2 songs twice. Do they want people to listen to entire shows or what? Sigh. That said I get the feeling I'm in a minority when it comes to wanting a bit more diversity and variation on the radio anyway; the 8 o'clock shuffle seems to almost always include a track that gets played regularly anyway, and the "top 7 most requested songs of the day" thing at 7pm each day is also shockingly predictable. Why don't people request stuff that they can't hear just by tuning in for any given hour of any day?

I saw Casino Royale the other week. I thought it was shit. Well, the second half at least. Did a script writer die halfway through and they let a 6th form work experience lad write the rest? From the moment that bird was introduced to the plot it was just dreadful dreadful dreadful. And not just the script, but her acting too. Pah. Thankfully in filmic terms I managed to even things out by buying and watching Warrior King which, like its predecessor Ong Bak, is absofuckinglutely superb.

Sutton Ecology Centre is shit.

Saturday, December 16, 2006

Cricket. Fuck it. Cock it and pull it.

I wish I didn't care about cricket. We're so awful. It's not like I expected anything different, after the 2nd test, but I still can't stop watching the 3rd. It's painful. I thought it'd be over in 3 days but the Aussies have decided to fucking humiliate us. Gilchrist has just taken 24 off a Panesar over including 3 sixes. Sigh.

Burnout Revenge on xbox 360 is fun. When I'm in the right mood, of course, and last night to the delight of all concerned (ie my opponents, who in the past have had to suffer me storming off in a Big Gay Huff) I somehow was. Played 'til just gone 0200. Discovering that the soundtrack is a bunch of emo helped, Fall Out Boy FTW!

Threads is amazingly bleak, grim, depressing, distressing even. Astonishing film. Glad I live and work in London, I presume this place would be a nuke target and I'd likely get vapourized rather than survive.

I might go to this exhibition at the British Library later or tomorrow.

Monday, December 11, 2006

View from the morning

At my desk before 0700 on a Monday morning. What the hell is wrong with me? I have to go home early today.

I need to change the way I talk. I know there are plenty of people who get aggravated by lots of things in the way modern English works, specifically by the overuse of superlatives and extremes. The way people say "literally" in a way that means the precise opposite of "literally" is an example, I think, of the extremes I mean. Like "I literally shat myself when Slayer came on" -- no, you didn't, did you? You figuratively shat yourself, perhaps. Anyway. I'm as guilty of it as the next man but I've been inspired to try and change, and the reason is I saw a film last night called Death Machines.

See I'm prone to describing things as "the worst [whatever] ever". There's several instances where the '[whatever]' in question has been a film, and there are some wrongs to right. I need to apologise to the makers of Sliver. Home Alone? Not such a bad film. The Crow? I guess it has some redeeming features. Death Machines? Without doubt the worst film I have ever seen. And I've seen Plan 9 From Outer Space 'n all. And They Came From Beyond Space. And Maniac Nurses Find Ecstasy.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

These boots really ARE made for walking

Feet felt fine this morning. So fine in fact that I've been out and walked for another 2 hours or so already today, into and around Kingston and back.

Felt pretty rough last night though. But rough might not be the right word. I just felt ... strange. I dunno, can't really explain it really. I didn't have a headache or stomach ache but couldn't finish the pizza I ordered; my legs and feet felt OK; but I just didn't feel right. So odd I can't even honestly say whether it was physical or mental. Fuckin' weirdo.

My sleep patterns are a bit screwed too. I got to sleep at about 0100, and woke up just before 0500. Went online for a bit, chatted with Phil, and decided to read me brother's blog. I'm terrible with blogs -- I write and write and write but hardly ever bother reading anyone else's, and for some reason this was on my mind. Maybe my ears were burning, 'cos it turned out the most recent post at the time was in reference to one of mine. No death but a bit odd if you ask me...

Got back to sleep some time approaching 0630 IIRC, waking up again at 0900. Not really in the mood for getting up I stayed in bed reading Fortean Times until a fairly sudden mood change enveloped me and I decided to go shopping. For metal. With my feet and legs showing no signs of having been put through any punishment I figured I'd walk again, and headed into Kingston. Didn't have much of a list, other than wanting to buy the new album by Converge, and the one by Death Breath.

Oh, bollocks, in the course of looking up Converge's URL it seems the album I just bought (No Heroes) is available in its entirety, officially, on myspace! Bah. Not to worry. But anyway, yes I managed to buy that album. I also got:
  • Blood Mountain by Mastodon. No idea what these guys sound like other than this album is supposed to be superb.
  • Stench of Redemption by Deicide. Heard one track off this, read some reviews, and just generally wanted some death metal. In fact I'm listening to this album as I type this.
  • American Hardcore: The History Of American Punk Rock 1980-1986 by various artists. Didn't know this album existed, despite owning the book. Turns out it's not an accompaniment to the book though, but a soundtrack to the movie inspired by the book(!). I wish the difference were subtle, but judging by the tracklisting it means no Dead Kennedys and no Misfits. Not too bad for the album, they'd almost certainly be tracks I own, but it means the film is unlikely to be as good (for me personally) as the book. Oh well.
4 albums all less than a tenner each is quite a result. Although it seems to be the norm these days. Which is even more of a result, I guess. No Death Breath in HMV though, but my shopping wasn't over. I had a quick scan over the rest of the shop and found Lady Vengeance on DVD in a 3-for-20-quid sale, or as individually priced. The individual price was 19.95. I wanted the film anyway so looked for 2 others worth parting with 5p for, and ended up with Hostel and Syriana.

Left HMV and got most of the way out to the pedestrianised bit where a proto-Hayseed Dixie were putting on a bit of a show before remembering I had books to look for too. Well, book: after reading a review in Fortean Times I've decided I want to buy Skipping Armageddon: [subtitle I can't be arsed with]. Basically a demolition job (I think) on some crazy-ass right-wing religious nutjob. But Waterstones didn't have it, and neither did Borders. Well, I guess they might have, but I couldn't actually work out what section it'd be in. I had a look at religion, and politics, and social science, and biography, but no luck. Nearly bought a Mark Thomas book (this one), thought 18 quid was a bit steep for John Hartson's autobiography, but left empty-handed. I've got about 6 books I'm either halfway through or yet to start anyway FFHS.

I nipped to Banquet Records after Borders. I'm sure last time I went there they had a decent metal selection, but it's pretty piss-poor right now. Loads of punk/emo nonsense but barely any metal now. I'd gone in there really to look for Death Breath, but no chance of them having it really. Shame. :-( In fact it sparked off a bit of a lament. Why is Kingston so rubbish for music shopping now? Back in the day we had HMV, Virgin, The Record Shop, Beggars' Banquet (as was) and Tower Records. Can't remember if all 5 ever existed at the same time, but nonetheless it was until fairly recently a lot better than it is now. Virgin turned into some fucking clothes shop, Tower is half clothes, half PC World, and The Record Shop is now a knitting machine place (if I'm remembering where it was correctly). Actually, didn't TRS have two shops once upon a time? Ah I dunno. Anyway, record shopping in Kingston is shit now :-(

Enough about that though. Came home on foot (although I did wait for a bus for a few minutes, admittedly) and my feet still don't hurt. WTF?

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Singapore of six pints

Ouch. My feet hurt. I'm in an afternoon break having spent a long time walking around this morning and it was hard work. My feet and legs feel like they've done a lot of work, like I've been walking on sand instead of concrete or something. Anyway it's too windy out there atm to go where I wanted to go next so I thought I'd write a little bit about Singapore -- but, damn it, I've still yet more things to say about Hong Kong. Like about the streets being paved with women.

No, really, they are. If you can call the paved walkways that mean you don't need to go to street level in the area near Hong Kong/Central stations "streets", anyway. I read about it beforehand, or maybe saw it on the destination guide on the flight from Perth, but either way I wasn't quite prepared for what I saw. Basically hordes of women, proper masses and masses of them, go and have picnics or coffee mornings or whatever, in groups on the streets. They turn up in the morning, get their pitch, put down a blanket or something else to sit on, get out their knitting or cards or coffee or hampers or books or whatever it is they're going to do with their time. And there's a lot of that time, because I saw loads of women around in the morning on the Monday, and even bloody more in the evening. They were dissipating come the time I headed off back to the hotel but sheesh, it was mental. I saw maybe 2 fellas amongst the whole crowds, and it was really quite strange. Here, this bloke goes on about it too.

Pub philosophy. Them Australians in the bar on Saturday had made me wonder if the general gist is the same the world over. It certainly seems to ring true. What I mean is, the basic path through topics that groups of (typically) blokes go through when engaged in a long session on the sauce. The steps seemed to be:

  1. the matter at hand (inexplicable penalty miss/decision to use Jimmy Anderson in the last over/etc)
  2. the metaphysical or boundaries of science (the unseeableness of God, the edges of the universe, time travel)
  3. global (world politics, religion, war-torn regions and how to sort them out)
  4. personal (my wife doesn't understand me, i hate my job, i love you you're my best mate)
Is it always like this? I think it might be... not necessarily every step might be present, but I think the order is correct. Hmm. Or maybe I'm just talking bollocks.

I made a note about the above in my phone to remind me to write about it. I also made a note saying "Component is unaware of bug (football errors)" which I'm not at liberty to explain, 'cos I was very drunk when I typed it and now can't quite work out what I meant. It sounds like some insight about software engineering and how it might be analogous in some way to the Liverpool -vs- Bolton game I was "watching" at the time, I guess.

Is that it for Hong Kong? Who knows. I'll come back to it if I have to. But on Tuesday morning I left Hong Kong, having got myself booked on an airport shuttle bus at some ungodly hour, 7am or summat. It was a very nice coach, well airconned and with big comfy leather seats, and I was the only person on it. Until we stopped off at about 4 other hotels and it ended up full, bah. Got to the airport, checked in, went to the lounge. Now I know I was flying early, but still, I'm on holiday and would have appreciated a drink. Didn't get one because the bar wasn't open until 1pm. 1pm! If I'd been flying at 1pm I'd have been a bit pissed off at not being able to get a lager at 11am/midday.

The flight was my first on Cathay Pacific for this holiday. Being Hong Kong based I look forward to flying with them because they show some Hong Kong/Asian cinema, which means I can get a fix of violent-revenge gangster/fighting films. This time around there were about 4 films I wanted to watch (not all Asian) which was going to prove a challenge on a 3h40m flight. In fact there was a danger that watching anything was going to prove a challenge, because my video screen was nearly fucked. See, when I checked in they'd told me there was only one window seat available, did I want that? I said yes, and got given a boarding pass for 11A. On the plane I discovered that 11A might as well be called 1A -- it's the first row, not just in business class but on the whole plane (for this A340 or whatever it was). Result. I also discovered that the screen wasn't working, because they told me this. They also said that the flight wasn't full so I could move seats if it stayed not working (apparently "it might work soon, they're trying to fix it") but not to a window seat, obviously. Fuckin' bah.

During pre-flight preparations, taxi, take-off and the stuff they force you to sit through (UNICEF guff, duty free guide etc) the screen was fucked. Loads of flickering, or even just white noise. Grr. Seatbelt light went off and I was just about to ask for a change of seat when they flicked on the in-flight entertainment system (audio+video on demand on Cathay, hurrah) and the screen worked. Phew. Good.

Can't remember what the food was or what I had to drink. Didn't make any notes for some reason, nor take any photos. Probably because I had someone sat next to me. Oh, I remember, it's also because they took my bag and shoved it in the overhead lockers because there's no underseat storage, and I hadn't taken the notebook out. Ah well. What I do remember is only managing to fit one film in, the one starring Andy Lau. It's called A Fighter's Blues and if you don't want to know what happens because you're thinking of watching it I have two bits of advice. First, don't watch it, it's shit. Second, don't read the next few paragraphs because I'm going to spoil the fucking lot of it.

SPOILER STARTS HERE

Now I chose to watch this film primarily because of Andy Lau. I've seen a few other films of his and they've been good. Like House Of Flying Daggers, Hard Boiled 2, God Of Gamblers, Moon Warriors, Legend of Drunken Master ... but in the same way as Jet Li can make a bad film, by 'eck so can Lau.

It's a shame, because the plot had so much going for it. Upon release from prison for killing someone, a boxer discovers he's got a kid he didn't know about and is about to turn 14 or so. He wrestles with his emotions yadda yadda yadda, tries to bond while, crucially, attempting to extricate himself from his past. It's that sort of thing that generally means a film's going to be large: the past won't allow them to stop being violent until they embark upon a last mission which normally involves beating fuck out of hundreds of people and killing the mighty end of level boss.

Not so in A Fighter's Blues! No, not at all. In this film he boxes a bit, has a romance with a journalist, goes to jail, loses contact, comes out, discovers journo is dead but bore him a kid who is in an orphanage in Thailand. He journeys there, has the typical heart-rendering conversations/etc with his daughter ("YOU'RE NOT MY FATHER! YOU'RE NOTHING TO ME! I HATE YOU!", ... "I LOVE YOU DADDY!", ... ) and takes her to a boxing fight. This, of course, is in the same venue as his last fight (which he threw for money) and features a fantastic young boxer managed by the manager of, of course, the bloke against who that fight was. Who also happened to be the bloke he killed and went to jail for murdering.

So this is a bit odd. The people out for revenge are the bad guys. Except, um, they're not bad or out for revenge. They ask him to leave and not come back, but he says he wants to fight the latest top guy, this amazing guy 10 or 15 years younger than him. He wants to fight fairly rather than throw it. They eventually agree, Lau gathers an old contact or two and goes off on the best training regime available: a montage. Even Rocky had a montage, so at this point I'm thinking, right, he's going to fucking batter the guy and finally win the unconditional love of his daughter and the respect of the people he wronged and he'll do it by having 25 minutes of ace fight scenes.

No. Turns out, not at all. Round 1, he gets battered. Round 2, he gets fucking battered some more. Round 3, he takes even more of a beating. But there's no Rocky or shitloads-of-other-films-style ending coming up, he doesn't summon the energy to fight through the pain and land a massive punch and win the bout. No, he collapses and his face is all fucked up and his body is all fucked up and his daughter and the leader of the orphanage and his corner are all pleading with him to stop. He poignantly stands back up after round 4, staggering to his feet and staying really unsteady, and says "to the end". The previously silenced-by-his-warriorness crowd applaud and the 5th and final round starts. His opponent just stands there, Lau lands punches weaker than gnat's piss. Just tapping him. Then he collapses and dies.

For fucks sake! So, let's get this straight, having served his time for the crime, he proceeded to take revenge on... himself? And had a wholly ineffectual montage while he was at it! Lau, have a bloody word with yourself.

SPOILER ENDS HERE

Ahem. So, yes, that was the entertainment on the way to Singapore. Fucking hell this entry's going to be huge. Ah well.

So, I managed to be the first person off the plane when we landed (bloke in 1B was dicking around with his bags so I shuffled past him) and to my shock there was a woman holding a piece of card up with my name on it, at the gate. As far as I know people are only met at the gate for one of a few reasons: they're VIPs, they're disabled, they're criminals, they're in danger of missing their connection, or perhaps their luggage has gone missing. I wondered which was true of me and thought the last was most likely. As it turns out, it was the first. I was treated like royalty! The woman was there to escort me all the way through the airport, from the gate through immigration and baggage reclaim and customs right up to the waiting limo, there to whisk me off to the hotel. The last bit was expected: I had indeed booked airport transfer, but I thought it was going to be like everywhere else, where you get all the way airside alone and find a driver with your name or the hotel's desk. Not a full escort like this! Fucking ace. Then, when I got to the hotel there was virtually a team of people waiting to greet me. A woman opened my door saying "Welcome, Mr Foreman" while a porter said "Hello Mr Foreman, I will take your bags" and took my bags from the boot. The woman took me to the check-in desk, except it was more just a welcome desk as I got handed over to another woman who handed me a gift (scented candle) and led me to my room, where check-in was conducted. Holy fucking moly! I tell you, the wonders of having bought status with the hotel chain.

The room itself was fucking ace, too. Big, with a flat screen TV on a rotating base and connected to an iPod thing so you could use it as speakers (or even video? I dunno, I don't have an iPod). Free fruit and water, big bathroom with separate bath and shower cubicle, comfy seats, and .. a shit view. Ah well, can't have everything. As it goes I thought my bought status had entitled me to a room upgrade too, but then I couldn't remember what room type I'd paid for so it didn't really bother me. The only quibbles I had were the lack of pay TV (I was entitled to a free movie) and Singapore's government having banned some of the sites I wanted to visit on t'Internet. But I could live with that.

Stayed in the hotel room resting for a couple of hours, then decided to go explore. It was about 6pm come that time and hot out, but not desperately unpleasantly so. I had a guidebook with a map in it in my pocket but decided not to use it - everything's in English and I wasn't planning on going far, maybe just finding an ATM and then a bar or two to sample. In the end I took a bad turn immediately outside the hotel and walked for quite a while before eventually finding a subway station (with ATM in it), and a shopping mall. Walked all the way through that (supping a diet coke) finally ending up at Esplanade, a fancy theatre building miles from my hotel. Venturing back out onto street level I took a little wander around the grounds and along the side of the river, then went back inside and into Harry's Bar for a pint or two of Guinness.

Like in Hong Kong, a lot of bars in Singapore have a happy for the latter part of the afternoon/early evening, and refer to it as "1 for 1" rather than 2 for 1, meaning for each 1, you get another 1. I saw a sign on the outside of Harry's saying "1 for 1" but didn't study it beyond that, making the wrong assumption that I would be getting 2 pints for the price of 1 inside. I didn't. Guinness wasn't on the list of valid things. In fact, beer wasn't, I think it was only wine. I only worked this out after paying for the second pint (which I was automatically served) of Guinness. A better Guinness than in Hong Kong but still way behind Dubai.

There was Premiership on the TV in Harry's. This was no surprise. Every sports channel seemed to show non-stop replays of entire games, or at least highlights, on all the days when there were no games actually being played. They are fucking mad for it.

I really wish the pints had been half price, because as it is I paid SGD12 each for them. That's about 4 quid. :-(

Leaving Harry's I decided against retracing my steps (wasn't sure I'd be able to anyway) and just using the force. I had a pretty good idea of the rough direction I needed to go in and was too obstinate to use the map (and too unequipped by experience or tickets to use the subway or buses). Turns out I was wrong, as I ended up on a very extended walk through loads of bits of Singapore I didn't see in subsequent days, being completely out of the way for anywhere I'd want to go. Yes, I was lost. I finally gave up and referred to my map while waiting to cross the road at some point and discovered I was now only 2 blocks from my hotel, so it wasn't all bad.

Changed my shirt and then went to the hotel bar, my final destination for the day. While sat with my Hoegaarden forbidden fruits I pondered the idea of rescinding my "tell the truth" policy and start telling everyone who asked (cabbies, hotel staff, airline staff) that yes, fine, I'm travelling on business, fine, OK. And I'm scoping out hotels and airlines for who to give millions of dollars of business to so treat me well (the corporate sales manager of my Hong Kong hotel had indeed sent me an invite to have breakfast with him, and an application form for opening a corporate account. pfft!). I was getting more than a bit fed up at the surprise everyone was expressing whenever I said I was on holiday, see, even though such a reaction was entirely understandable. Ah well.

I've written down "licensing and temperature". What did I mean by that? Perhaps I meant that it makes some sense that our licensing laws have historically meant places need to stop serving at 11pm, if only to make us go home before it gets proper fucking cold. That doesn't ring a bell though. I wonder what I actually meant. Hmm. Ah, perhaps not going home before it's cold, but being able to have a decent night out even though you can't sensibly go to the pub before 8pm or so because it's so bastard hot in the day/evening. Singapore's record lowest temperature ever: 19.4C.

Anyway. My feet feel better. The Japanese grand prix is finished and it's just coming up to 3.45pm. I'm off to see if the wind has calmed down. If it has, the palace beckons. If it hasn't, I think I'm going to have a pint or two.

Monday, September 04, 2006

Violence is golden

Watching Desperado at the moment. I'm sure I've seen a film just like this, with Antonio Banderas in it even, but not actually this film. Not sure what it might be or whether I'm just making it up or what. Either way, this is pretty good so far (been watching for about 40 minutes, after giving up on I'm Gonna Git You Sucka because I'd missed the first 30 or so minutes, and because it wasn't as good as my memory had told me it was). Banderas just shot a shitload of people up in the bar where most of the action so far has taken place and he had a very nice line in shooting from behind his back, and kind of flicking his gun at people. Hmm, and right now he's covered in blood.

It's the 3rd film I've watched today. Or is it 4? Hold on, let me count.

  1. Desperado
  2. The Football Factory
  3. The Business
  4. My Cousin Vinny

4 it is then. Numbers 2 and 3 on the same day (and, in fact, back to back) might prove a little much for some people because they are so damn similar, but I bloody loved it. Danny Dyer is superb, and there being so many other actors in both films wasn't that off-putting at all. In fact it may have been more off-putting had they been playing radically different characters in each, but since they were playing nigh-on identical ones it was fine.

One thing The Business and The Football Factory prove are that something I was chatting about with Nige and Wooj yesterday definitely holds true: the British swear better than anyone else. Now, I'm aware my opinion is only really valid when talking about the English language, because in reality I've no idea at all what a stream of expletives in any other language sounds like, but we've really got it down pat for our eponymous tongue. The yanks can say fuck and bullshit fairly well but are useless at saying cunt, and don't have a clue about wanker and bollocks. Aussies and Kiwis are pretty rubbish 'n all. But Scots do it well, northerners do it well, and Londoners do it superbly.

Watching 4 films in a day probably gives away the fact that I've been monstrously lazy. But y'know, it's a Sunday and I'm on a 2 month holiday, so fuck it. There'll be a lot more films to come. I want to go see Snakes On a Plane before buggering off but I dunno if I'll find the time. One thing I definitely need to do this week is catch up with John and Hasty who have both been trying to get hold of me over the past 2 or 3 days and I've been really fucking rudely slack in getting back to them (ie, I haven't yet) :-(

Oh, hold on, I've seen 5 films today, 'cos I also watched Jet Li's "Twin Warriors". That was superb. Masses of wirework, definitely no Ong Bak, and an intro that went on for way too long, but an enormous amount of fight scenes and having Michelle Yeoh in a film is a definite recipe for success (I became a fan after seeing Wing Chun t'other night, although I'm sure I've seen her in other stuff too). Twin Warriors fooled me a bit though. Not strictly a revenge flick, it's about 2 tearaways who are (obviously) fantastic at kung-fu but a bit rubbish at the whole discipline-and-being-a-good-monk thing, so they get booted out of the Shaolin school in which they group up and learnt their shit and go their separate ways. It's the time spent as kids that makes the intro too long, although it also takes an awful long time for them to actually separate, because there's a good chunk spent being non-monk tearaways too. But once the plot kicks in it's mainly fight after fight after fight, except for a pretty odd sequence where Jet Li turns into a mental before a montage fixes him up. The ending is the bit that really fooled me though, and I won't spoil it here despite knowing deep down that no-one reads my blog (and certainly not for film reviews or recommendations).

The films on BA out of Europe in September look rubbish. I keep forgetting they don't have video on demand and am wondering if I can shove myself on a Qantas(-operated) flight to Sydney in a couple of weeks.

Heh. I come up on google if you search for vsnotplctz now, despite chris's attempt to steal that honour from me.

Monday, August 28, 2006

Being John Malkovich it is then

Sorted my watch out. By some miracle it appears I do have something that at least resembles a jewellers' screwdriver, and taking a couple of links out was easy enough.

Just put Being John Malkovich on after watching Pompey smack shit out of Middlesbrough. I was going to watch Apocalypse Now but it doesn't finish until 1am, eesh. Watched about 2 minutes of "The Invisible Maniac" (which is followed at 2255 by Toxic Avenger, no less) but it was too poor even for my tastes. BJM is a film my brother recommended I watch several years ago and along with Dodgeball, and more recently Zoolander, he was right about it being great. Last (and only, until now) time I saw it was on a plane, hopefully it'll be even more enjoyable on a real TV with decent sound and stuff.

My mate Ed just emailed me a knowhere URL where someone has claimed Paul Di'anno runs the Wilton pub in Salisbury. I've been to that pub and it was fucking great. Would have stayed even longer if I'd known that though!

Payback

Watched Payback last night. Not that big a fan of Mel Gibson really but as always Sky made it sound pretty good and there was bugger all else worth watching on. Turned out to be pretty. Gibson plays a criminal called Porter who was left for dead after some shenanigans involving his wife and a partner in crime, 'cept he doesn't actually die. Typical revenge flick -- probably why I liked it so much, revenge nearly always makes a decent plot -- he starts making a nuisance of himself amongst the stereotypically shady outfit called, err, "The Outfit", a bunch in whose employ the aforementioned partner is. There's also the standard love interest too, a whore who he used to chauffeur.

Basically he's after 70 grand, his share of the haul of the job they were doing when he was(n't) killed, and goes around killing people left right and centre until he gets to the end of level boss. There's some pretty nice/clever bits throughout in the way he stitches up and/or kills a few people. Mind you I was most amused by reading the continuity error bit on the IMDB page about 2 seconds before the exact scene it refers to happened, so I got to see it.

Dunno what films to watch today. Got Being John Malkovich on the Sky box, well, that and a shitload of others, but I've also got the Football Factory and Schindler's List on DVD that need watching. But before that I'm going to make another attempt at getting that shopping done, and I might grab meself a gourmet burger 'n all.

Sunday, August 27, 2006

I feel like I should write something

But I'm really not sure what. I always get bored of keeping this sort of thing up to date :-(

Simpsons is on Sky One at the moment. I've resisted ordering pizza, and instead ate a reduced-price quiche I bought from the Co-op up the road. Bloody nice it was too. As it goes I need to stop buying pizza, it's just so easy to order online. If only some other stuff was orderable online (eg Chinese or Indian), or more unrealistically, if only I could ever be arsed making something rather than just buying it in.

I bought pizza on Thursday night :-( after having a couple of pints after work, following it up with 3 pints at Waterloo and another 2 in the Flyer. I was on my own for the latter 5, getting a bit lonely and miserable and angry and depressed and stupid. Ho hum. Really didn't feel like going to work on Friday but I had to: I can't sensibly work from home without the laptop they've given me, and I'd left it in my desk drawers. Taking the day off sick would have been an option but since I'm working from home on Tuesday too (I love train strikes) I went in. At midday. Ho hum. At least it was pay day.

Did a morning's worth of housework and stuff yesterday before going to my first AFC Wimbledon game of the season. It was shit. Oh well. Went out with Hasty in Wimbledon later on and the damn pub stayed open 'til 1am. Had a beast of a hangover today, but I remembered how I got home which is more than can be said for Hasty, heh. It took me a while to haul myself out of the house to go do some shopping -- I was going to buy a couple of CDs, some books, a watch, a suitcase, some clothes, and perhaps a laptop and camera depending on how profligate I was feeling (my new credit card has a limit of 11,200GBP...). First stop was H Samuel, who had advertised a sale on Casio watches this weekend in the Metro last week.

Kingston's H Samuel doesn't stock Casio watches.

So into HMV I went. Couldn't remember the release date for the new Terrorizer album but Christ Illusion was taking pride of place so I picked up that, and the Municipal Waste album I'd been meaning to buy for months. That's when the hangover really started to kick in. There's something about aircon that really makes me feel fucking terrible when I've a hangover, and my head really wasn't having it. Bought the CDs and left. The Bentalls Centre was doing me in so I headed round to PC World, but decided buying a laptop wasn't the best idea right now. So I just came home. Watched Snake In The Eagle's Shadow which appeared to be one kind of Chinese dubbed into the other (ie Mandarin into Cantonese or vice versa), with English subtitles. Player have been showing loads of martial arts/gangster films from Hong Kong recently and I wish they'd show the ones dubbed into English. Not for the comedy value -- although I do appreciate that such value exists -- but because I could do with not having to stare at the screen the whole time. For a film like SITE'S(!) it's not so bad because the plot is so staggeringly familiar: old bloke teaches rare and powerful kung-fu style to young apprentice, who beats shit out of the evil head of an organisation which uses a different rare and powerful kung-fu style in a 10 minute long fight in the middle of nowhere at the end. Not that there's anything wrong with that -- I've watched loads of these films and never tire of them. As it happens I've just put on The Swordsman, another subtitled martial arts flick. Looks a bit more modern and well-made, but I recognise a few of the actors.

Unfortunately Player are just showing 2 films (twice each) over the next week, and I've seen them both before and not liked them. Even if I did like The Heroic Trio, I've got it on video so wouldn't need to record it anyway. Ho hum.

I'm finally done with booking hotels for my trip. A bit more research found me some places to stay in Perth and Hong Kong, while in New York I decided to stay at an airport hotel even though I have 3 nights there. Most people would head into Manhattan but the price difference was too great, and I don't really want to go there anyway. I'll probably get a cab or subway in on one of the two full days I've got there, but really I'm staying in New York just to rest up for a couple of days between flying in from Tokyo and flying back to the UK (not in business class!).

For all the other cities I thought it wise to book now and just use all the flights I'm booked on. If I get to Sydney when I want to, everything's fine; if I have to go 3 days later so be it. With family in Sydney it's a shame I might only get 2 useful days there, but on the other hand it's probably the place I'm most likely to visit again, and certainly a worthwhile destination for burning some of the BA miles I'll have by this time next year (ie: flying there for free*). Oh, and Expert Flyer says there's some availability on a flight one day earlier than my current one anyway, so that's good news.

I also took the opportunity, while booking hotels, to increase my membership of hotel programmes a bit. Why not go the whole hog, eh? Through work I already had membership of Starwood Preferred Guest (Yahoo! puts us up in the Sheraton, Sunnyvale) and Priority Club, and I discovered that the latter has a level of membership you can pay for: Ambassador. This takes your PC membership up to Gold level (not worth a great deal, I don't think) but also gives you a free upgrade to the next room level when you stay at an InterContinental hotel... which I happen to be doing. I'm also staying at a Crowne Plaza, and any way to squeeze a few more BA miles out of this holiday is fine by me. That's also why I joined Hilton HHonors, heh. But that was Chris's fault really.

Hold up -- I think I've seen this film before, recently too. Hmm. I'm going to put on Wing Chun instead. By 'eck I'm getting through a lot of films these days. Yesterday I watched Team America: World Police, and on Friday me and Wooj watched Sexy Beast. "No Don" "Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!" Heh.

Fuck! Before Wing Chun started there was a public information film, one about the coastguard, that I recognise from my Charley videos! I didn't realise they were dragging these things out for genuine use again, blimey.

Bank holiday tomorrow and rail strike on Tuesday means only 2 more days in the office for me this side of November.

Realised something a bit surprising earlier today: I've stopped looking at new release mobile phones. In the past when I've upgraded it hasn't stopped me keeping up with what's going on and looking for things that would do something a bit better, but it seems that I'm just too happy with my k800i. And it's true, I really have no complaints with it. The camera is perfect, I have no trouble using it as a modem over bluetooth or USB, I can ssh or browse the web or set my Sky+ box to record direct from it, I just can't think of anything up with it. And in fact last Saturday I felt the same, but Chris was playing with his and sending me messages that took advantage of some features I didn't know about, making me even more pleased with it than before. Turns out you can insert SE-specific (I assume) little animations and melody snippets and smilies into regular SMSes (ie, not MMSes). Fanbloodytastic that is.

Mind you I'm not sure I'll like the look of my next Orange bill, last Saturday alone I must have sent 50-odd SMSes and used a shitload of data too. Eek! Still, it'll be even more horrifying when I'm roaming all over the place.

A lot of those SMSes were sent while I was en route to Graham and Hazel's. They were having some kind of naming ceremony for their new sprog, and I was heading over with Loz and Yvonne's gift in hand. Originally I was going to get a lift over there, but their car broke down or summat, and on Saturday the possible alternative they lined up fell through. So I nipped round theirs and then went across to Lee on public transport. A bus from Hither Green goes pretty much straight to their house, and a Hither Green train was first to leave from Waterloo East so I got on that.

Now, I'd never been to Hither Green before and was unprepared for what came next. Firstly, at the bottom of the stairs, signs pointing left and right, with road names on them. I didn't have a clue which road I wanted, and had foolishly expected a sign to "buses" or similar. Using my finely-honed abilities in getting by with London Transport, I guessed that right was the correct direction. Outside the station there were no bus stops, but there was a map saying "Continuing your journey from Hither Green". Unfortunately it was just a street map. No signs for bus stops or routes or anything useful.

Hmm. What to do? Just about 10 yards away was a big crossroads, so I went and stood on the corner to survey for bus stops. After all, I knew for a fact that there was a bus which served the station. Couldn't see any stops though. Bought a bottled drink while considering my options, and when I came out a bus went past. Going the wrong way, and not stopping, but at least I was on the right side of the station. I started walking in the direction it went but missed which way it turned at the next crossroads, and when I got there I couldn't see it in any direction. Nor could I see any bus stops. For crying out loud!

Another guess was required, and I turned left. Pretty soon after a bus going in the right direction went past me. So while I'd missed a bus, it at least meant I was going the right way. Surely I was going to come across a bus stop soon? No, I wasn't. The next thing of note was an ominous looking turn along a road which looked like it might be one a bus goes along. I chose to assume it didn't, and carried on along my existing route. 5 minutes later I still hadn't found any stops, but at the end I could see a big road with buses going past. If I couldn't find a stop for the bus I wanted I could at least make alternative arrangements.

Reached that road and there were, of course, stops in both directions. Picked left, crossed over, and glory be the first stop was one which the bus i wanted served, and in the right direction 'n all. Hallelujah! Got on it and learnt the cause of all my grief: all the roads the bus goes along surrounding Hither Green are hail and ride sections of the route. I'd not seen anyone hanging around in likely stopping points and there'd been nothing at the station giving me a clue. FFHS. Obviously a very "you're not from round here" type service, where you can only use it if you already know. How are you supposed to know what time the last bus is though? Twats.

I had to leave the party after not too long 'n all, because I was off to a gig in town where the doors were opening at the ungodly hour of 1630. Only 4 bands on (despite Stargreen claiming 5, and because of that I missed Gorerotted :-( ) we eventually went in at about 1825 and only saw the top 2: Cryptopsy and Celtic Frost. The former were good but way too quiet, the latter were just good, but by unfamiliarity with the songs didn't help me. We were outside the venue again come 2145! Way too early, bloody club nights making everything happen 90 minutes earlier than is sane. Still, it gave us time to grab a pint, and I put one quid into a fruit machine that promptly paid me 50 quid out. Result.

Fuck. First ads in Wing Chun and I've not been following it at all. Time to stop typing and watch it (from the top) methinks.

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Full Contact

Chow-yun Fat is such an ace actor. Watched Full Contact tonight, I'd forgotten I had seen it before until remembering the very first scene.

AFC Wimbledon played at home tonight, against Ramsgate. We drew - "this match is for people who like S&M - 90 minutes of domination but no scoring" said Jonesy.

Going to attach a photo to this email just to see if it works. Doubt it will. It's one I took in Germany in June! It never even made flickr and probably won't make blogspot.

WTF, radio 4 just had a bit of news about a guy proving a famous mathematical conjecture. It made no sense at all! And now the weather guy is Darren Bent, a likely story.

Getting a recorded delivery in the morning so hopefully I can go in late(r). Bet the twat turns up at 0730! But nothing should ruin a day on which Fleshrot are playing!

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Drunken Monkey

Just finished watching yet another film, courtesy of newlly-discovered channel ActionMax. Yet more kung-fu, this time a Shaw brothers film called Drunken Monkey. Standard fare: kidnappings and vengeance, comedy clumsiness turning into graceful prowess, a montage, etc. The key to all the good guys' power was getting shitfaced and acting simian. Favourite move: lazy monkey's piss. Reminded me of several other films at various times, eg Buddhist Fist, Snake Deadly Act, Drunken Master. Probably because I've not seen any of those for a while though.

Should perhaps stop staying up watching films on a school night so often, hmm. Oh well!