Archive for April, 2010

DVD Review: Law Abiding Citizen

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The film opens with a very disturbing sequence. Engineer Clyde Shelton (Gerard Butler) is enjoying a quiet evening at home with his wife and daughter when the commonplace domestic scene is interrupted by the sound of someone knocking. Thinking it’s a takeout delivery, Clyde  opens the door to two criminals and is hit over the head with a bat. The next thing he knows, he’s barely conscious, gagged, and bound, and is forced to watch as his wife is raped and killed. Then his young daughter is taken into another room for a similar treatment from Clarence Darby (Christian Stolte). 

The culprits are arrested by the police but the ambitious D.A. Nick Rice (Jamie Foxx) makes a deal with the assassin Darby who accuses and gives evidence against his partner. He pleads guilty to a reduced count of third degree murder. Shelton is not happy. Rice agrees that both men are guilty but argues that the case isn’t airtight without the testimony, and if they lose, both men walk free. 

Ten years later, Darby’s partner is executed by lethal injection. Clyde abducts Darby and tortures him before killing him. Clyde is arrested without evidences and Rice seeks his confession. Rice soon realises that Clyde is not only seeking vengeance against the perpetrators but against the justice system that he feels has failed him. Throughout the film invites us to feel sympathy for Clyde even as his actions become more and more immoral. 

F. Gary Gray’s thriller works on an emotional level as the guilty meet gory ends although in the later part of the film credulity is stretched as the plot becomes more fantastical. A  mixture of disturbing violence and  guilty pleasure similar in ways to the old Death Wish films. 

Reviewed by Pat Harrington
SA:R (certificate #45572) | Canada:13+ (Québec) | Canada:14A (British Columbia/Ontario) | Iceland:16 | Canada:18A (Alberta/Manitoba) | UK:18 | Ireland:18 (original rating) | Norway:15 | Finland:K-15 | Philippines:R-13 (MTRCB) | South Africa:16LV | Australia:MA | Brazil:16 | Ireland:16 (re-rating on appeal) | Malaysia:18PL | Hong Kong:IIB | Canada:18A (Ontario) (re-rating) | South Korea:15 | Germany:16 | Netherlands:16 | New Zealand:R18 | Singapore:NC-16 | Argentina:16 | Portugal:M/16 | Taiwan:R-18 | Denmark:15 | Austria:16 | Switzerland:16 (canton of Vaud) | Switzerland:16 (canton of Geneva) | South Korea:18 (DVD rating)

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Games: Avalon Code (Nintendo DS)

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This is an engaging but complicated game from Rising Star. The theme is that the world is bound for destruction, but it will be recreated. The Book of Prophecy provides the blueprint. The Player is tasked with finding everything to be recreated and recording them in the book. Various enemies are trying to obstruct you.

The book allows you to scan objects made up of different codes but it also lets you rearrange those codes. That’s the fun bit as it lets you play with reality within the game. You can make enemies weaker by playing with the codes and perform certain actions (like customising weapons) with them.

I found the manipulation of the codes challenging and wished for a guide at some points! Finding and organising your codes is not that easy. Younger players might lose patience.

Avalon code is different and innovative. It’s refreshing and new. It’s a clever puzzle which presents a challenge.

Reviewed by Pat Harrington

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Books: Review of Orwell: The Authorised Biography

Orwell Biography

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When I read fiction I tend towards authors or their characters who are outsiders, mavericks, those who do not/did not quite “fit in” . Two of my favourite authors are Franz Kafka and George Orwell (Eric Arthur Blair). Both
died of tuberculosis; both had nightmare visions and both have had their names given to such visions: Kafkaesque and Orwellian. Nineteen Eighty-Four and Animal
Farm as The Trial and The Castle are novels I return to regularly. And thus I came to review the five hundred plus pages of Michael Shelden’s biography:
Orwell being as complicated and interesting a character as I might have hoped, a
man of the Left often most championed by those of the Right, a man who in
Nineteen Eighty-Four – no matter what the objections – portrayed a world closer
to our own than might ever have been expected. And as I began this review I was sent Billy Bragg’s autobiography The Progressive Patriot with a quote from
Orwell’s The Lion and the Unicorn: Socialism and the English Genius on Patriotism and Conservatism (opposites).  

Sheldon’s biography is ultimately satisfying and one immediately wishes to read
or re-read as much of Orwell’s work as possible (with clearer insight perhaps) –
but there were times when I felt distant from this tall, pale faced writer. In
many ways this distance stems from Orwell’s character itself. A hard-working,
intellectual – a practical man too (he loved carpentry and the natural world)
who believed in a radical form of socialism, though a particular English
socialism – a quiet, thoughtful, enigmatic man who was also a man of action. Yet
it is difficult to reconcile his seemingly reserved nature with the man who
would tramp and doss down with vagabonds, who would risk his health to live a
life amongst the down and outs in London and Paris; who had been with the
Imperial Police in Burma; a man who had the courage of his convictions and upped
and went and fought in the Spanish Civil War, seeing there the bizarre and
deadly in-fighting of the various leftist groups. 

Displaying valour (not just jottings in a writer’s pad) he was shot through the
throat and then, after a spell in a filthy hospital, had to escape Spain in a
great hurry. It seemed the communists were out to liquidate POUM (the
organisation Orwell fought for) and its members. (There were young, idealistic
men who went to fight in Spain who never returned – imprisoned and executed by
forces they had so recently fought alongside.)  

In many ways a troubled man, Orwell was often dissatisfied with his work and in
constant expectation of rejection and failure (even the name Orwell was taken to
remove the direct sting of rejection). Orwell spent much of his last remaining
years on the island of Jura and – importantly – finished Ninety Eighty-Four
there even typing the final draft despite the fact that he was in severe pain
and dying. He was to be treated in Switzerland and shortly before his expected
travel there he re-married. The ceremony uniting him with Sonia Brownell took
place around his hospital bed. Life must have seemed surprisingly hopeful for he
had planned a new novel and other works and expected to live at least another
ten years.  

Perhaps towards his end he also recognised he had become the writer he had
wanted and strived to be; Animal Farm had brought him commercial success as well as acclaim (and resistance and opposition – the publisher Victor Gollanz does
not come out well in this biography) but Nineteen Eighty-Four established him as
a truly great writer – and whatever the criticisms of Orwell as novelist – his
last two novels are classics.  

Orwell never ceased being a socialist – his warning in Animal Farm is for the
common man (or animal in this case!) to maintain vigilance and not to let
unscrupulous power-hungry beings usurp the true ideals of the revolution. It may
also be that – in Ninety Eighty-Four in particular there is much taken from the
author’s own life – BUT – we ignore the essential message of these novels at our
peril. I have just read a trivial (perhaps) piece of information about Tom and
Jerry cartoons and the careful, methodical, erasure of all scenes depicting
smoking. Banal indeed. Frightening? One immediately thinks of Nineteen
Eighty-Four – this is our cultural reference.  

As the world progresses one can only wonder who will be re-written out of
history – Orwell himself? Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four are intolerable
to any totalitarian regime. Nineteen Eighty-Four was originally titled The Last
Man in Europe – while there is one free thought and free-thinking man then
tyranny will be held at bay. Orwell’s writing will continue to support all such
free-thinking souls.  

Reviewed by Tim Bragg

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Books: review of The White Rooms

The White Rooms

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The White Rooms is a work of science fiction/horror, or dark science fiction, by Tim Bragg which portrays the results of the transformation of human society in the future under the pressure of a plague of disease-carrying spiders of enhanced intelligence and malevolence – which have arisen out of some kind of genetic engineering disaster. So this could be seen as a so-called “post-apocalyptic” or “post-catastrophe” story. Two of the best known examples of this sub-genre in pop-culture can be seen in the second and third Mad Max movies.
The White Rooms portrays human society in a very “stressed” situation. Indeed, the “world” portrayed in the novel is quite gruesome, as well as having elements of the sub-genre of “steampunk” or “dark steampunk” – where much of the technology has regressed to an approximately early industrial age level.
In that part of the Earth where the protagonist lives, human society has bifurcated into a zone inhabited by “Uppers” – those humans who have access to the anti-plague serum – and a zone inhabited by “subs” – who are mostly kept out of the Upper zone, and mostly left to the ravages of the plague.
Life is nevertheless none too happy for the “Uppers” – as even in their supposed safe zone, they have to constantly be on the lookout for encroaching spiders – who are kept at bay with the assistance of “helpers” – i.e., healthy subs who are permitted to live as slaves among the Uppers.
The Uppers have a shrinking birthrate, and they bring healthy sub children to the so-called “White Rooms.” The term has various, more sinister meanings in that world as well.
Apart from being an interesting exploration of what the impact of a catastrophic plague might be on human society, the book also offers an exciting action-adventure story.
There are probably two main attractions to the book. One is the careful working out of the various implications of a “post-apocalyptic” future of a genetic engineering/medical disaster, which will appeal to those with a taste for the baroque, gothic, or bizarre. It is somewhat similar to some of the writings of the well-acclaimed author of the fantastic, China Mieville.

Secondly, there is the sprightly action-adventure tale, which is set in motion by the limitlessly self-sacrificing love of a young woman from the sub zone for her infant son, whom she wishes to somehow place among an Upper family, to give him the prospect of a better life. The woman has through arduous struggle managed to keep herself free of the disease.
Working as a helper in his household, she draws in the protagonist of the story, an Upper whose own wife is pregnant. The use of the first-person narrative (apart from a few select chapters in the third-person) is an excellent idea for the book, which really catches the attention of the reader.
During one of his trips to the sub zone, the protagonist is unluckily bitten by a spider, and, becoming infected, he must take ever more extreme measures to extricate himself from a situation which is perilous not only because he has the disease, but because of how the Upper society handles those who are infected with that plague.
As the protagonist is faced with ever greater problems and challenges, he moves ever further away from the values of the Uppers.
In the reviewer’s opinion, there are at least three main weaknesses to the book.
First of all – at least as far as the reviewer has been able to determine — there are not enough clues given in the story as to where on the Earth it is taking place. It is not set far enough in the future that there have been huge geological changes, so the reader should be able to eventually figure out whether this story is set, for example, in what was formerly France and Spain, in what was formerly America, or maybe entirely in the former Great Britain.
Secondly, there was the lack of originality in the naming of characters – where more specific names might have more easily engaged the reader and avoided such dreadful clichés  — as calling the protagonist “Adam X” for example, and another major adult character, “Johnny”.
Thirdly, the presence of the disease-free land to the south-west, may seem too contrived. Would the spiders have necessarily been effectively blocked just by a quick-running river, as the author implies? Much of the author’s effort put into the construction of a grim but coherent background was thrown away by this “sanctuary” trope.
It should be pointed out that, because human society is shown as so enormously “stressed” by the surrounding environment in the author’s scenario, the possible political import of the story as far as specific, current-day social and cultural situations is rather small. For example, the names of countries known today have apparently been entirely forgotten, along with all current-day religions (except for some vestigial cultural residues).
The broader messages of the book, however, would appear to be — better freedom in material discomfort than subjection in material comfort — as well as — true freedom is well worth winning –  and the emphasis on the need for active courage in the face of evil — which, while not new ideas, are things which it is helpful to repeat today.

Mark Wegierski is a Canadian writer and historical researcher.

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THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO

ONE advantage of never having read Stieg Larsson’s bestseller means that Swedish director Niels Arden Oplev’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo came as a complete surprise. It didn’t seem to have a lot going for it as it was made in Sweden, the home of long drawn-out gloomy cinema. It was also subtitled and lasted for over two and a half hours. Still, Ulster was in the middle of a wild late March ice-storm so an afternoon in a nice, warm dry cinema seemed to have a lot going for it.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo has wowed audiences all over the world. This dark thriller opens as journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) is sent down for three months in prison when a magazine scoop he wrote on a big businessman goes up in smoke. He was set up as his sources refused to back up his story once it was published.
In the meantime he is hired by another businessman to investigate the disappearance and suspected murder of his 16-year-old niece Hannah some forty years back. This man’s rich and powerful family is riven with strife and petty jealousies. Two senior members of the family were activists in the Swedish Nazi party. One had even been commended by Hitler himself. The journalist’s job was to discover if any member of the family had murdered Hannah. As his journalistic career was in tatters he accepted the job.
The undoubted star of this unexpected international box-office sensation is Noomi Rapace who gives a rivetting performance in the role of Lisbeth Salander; the girl with the dragon tattoo. Lisbeth is an eye-catching cyberpunk straight out of one of William Gibson’s novels. She is haunted by a troubled past and her interaction with other people seems to suggest she has Asperger’s Syndrome.
An accomplished computer hacker, Lisbeth follows the journalist’s investigations and finds herself joing forces with him to find out what happened to the missing girl. According to press reports the director of Seven and Zodiac, David Fincher is planning an American remake starring Natalie Portman. Niels Arden Oplev’s memorable effort is much more of a dark and twisted murder mystery than either of Fincher’s masterpieces. He really will have to pull out all the stops to keep up with it. For those who can’t wait you would do well to get hold of the DVD of what is bound to become a cult classic.

Reviewed by David Kerr

Cast:

  • Michael Nyqvist as Mikael Blomkvist
  • Noomi Rapace as Lisbeth Salander
  • Sven-Bertil Taube as Henrik Vanger
  • Peter Haber as Martin Vanger
  • Marika Lagercrantz as Cecilia Vanger
  • Lena Endre as Erika Berger – Blomqvist’s colleague and long-time lover
  • Björn Granath as Police Inspector Morell
  • Ingvar Hirdwall as Dirch Frode – Henrik’s lawyer
  • Peter Andersson as Bjurman – Lisbeth’s legal guardian
  • Michalis Koutsogiannakis as Dragan – Lisbeth’s boss
  • Ewa Fröling as Harriet Vanger
  • Gunnel Lindblom as Isabella Vanger
  • Gösta Bredefeldt as Harald Vanger
  • Stefan Sauk as Hans-Erik Wennerström
  • Jacob Ericksson as Christer Malm
  • Sofia Ledarp as Malin Eriksson
  • David Dencik as Janne
Certification:
Norway:15 | Sweden:15 | Switzerland:16 (canton of Vaud) | Switzerland:16 (canton of Geneva) | France:-12 | Finland:K-15 | Switzerland:18 (canton of Bern) | Spain:18 | Italy:VM14 | Canada:13+ (Quebec) | Iceland:16 | Netherlands:16 | Portugal:M/16 (Qualidade) | Germany:16 | UK:18 | Argentina:16 | Chile:TE | Australia:MA | New Zealand:R16 | Ireland:18 | Japan:R15+ | Denmark:15 | Brazil:16 (re rating) | Brazil:18 (original rating)

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Film & DVD Review: This is England

This is England

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I remember the hype about this film; if I recall lots of hand wringing…was it meant to be edgy? Cutting edge? Challenging? Celebrating racism?! Boy, O boy – partly autobiographical i.e. not written by a middle-class student or sixth-former! Wooden acting, stereotypical characters – lots of warnings on Film Four following each commercial break -yes the language was “bad” but NOTHING about this film was gritty, subtle, multi-dimensional, worrying, questioning, thought-provoking…I can’t get over the auto-biographical slant – otherwise it was a film I would have expected to be made by middle-class folk who have never lived on a “sink-estate” about working-class characters they’ve never met and about politics they haven’t got a clue about or any sense of how those politics might take hold of the dispossessed. Just one cliché after another. It got a bit “edgier” towards the end – all I can say is, thank God I didn’t waste my money at the flics. As for the end – little Shaun (by the way what was the paedophile thing going on – or does paedophilia only occur if the GIRL is young! Where were the Film Four warnings about this? I digress!) – the end: “symbolic” – the Cross of  St.George flag tossed in to the sea – was there a flag so maligned by its own nation’s artists me wonders? Is it not possible to write a film script/play/novel that deals with working-class politics (non –“left”) that uncovers truths beyond the cliché? Any producers out there, I’m yer man! I could do a better job and I’d put my pen where my mouth is!!!  So – not impressed…doubly not impressed because against the backdrop of the Falkland’s war (and therefore of relevance NOW with Afghanistan/Iraq) and with the rise of “far-right” politics (could these politics be dealt with so lazily in this modern technological age?) this film should REALLY have hit home – got me deep down and provoked a multitude of thoughts – not just these negative ones. I guess the only thing to say about the film (was it really so raved about?) – is that the political-skinhead didn’t have a homosexual affair (see how many times THAT one happens) or discover he was – in fact – an ethnic minority or his granddad was Jewish. I’m not suggesting any of these things work, are subtle or even help the cause of all of us rubbing-along on this tiny isle. It’s simply that when it comes to any artistic offering on the “far-right” we never get something “focussed” just looked at “askance” with the eyes and intellect of a schoolboy. Well it got me typing at least…The French made a great film about racial tension called “La Haine” – I still recall that years after watching – it had an effect. It lodged inside me. This film will be forgotten (by me) come morning. O, and as a musician – the clumsy inclusion of piano notes and strings at times was…No I’m lost for words – cue violin and piano to end review!

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