The Innocence Mission


Came across one of The Innocence Mission's tracks on an MP3 blog somewhere, and sampled a few more of their free MP3 tracks off of Amazon. On "Today," Karen Peris' reminded me of Harriet Wheeler from The Sundays; that's a plus in my book. They're a great example of why it's good to release some MP3 tracks of your best songs for free on the web. After hearing a few tracks, I went on Amazon, read a few customer reviews, and snapped up a CD. Had I never heard one of their MP3s, I would never have dropped $10 on one of their CDs sight unseen. A few full-length tracks are much more convincing than just a song sample, as anyone who's been disappointed by a movie after seeing a thrilling and meticulously edited movie trailer knows.


I do think that the economics of the movie business may be different enough that releasing a movie for free on the Internet isn't as economically beneficial to the creators. There are fewer revenue streams to justify loss leaders in the movie business, but it's also the fault of studios who have inflated movie production costs to the point where often it's only the healthy sales of $20 DVDs and syndication fees for pay-per-view and network/cable TV broadcasts that help them turn a profit.


Kelly Leak!


Richard Linklater is directing a remake of The Bad News Bears

Billy Bob Thornton will play the coach originated by Walter Matthau. I'm guessing BB will channel and fuse his work from Bad Santa and Friday Night Lights


MT-Keystrokes: an ingenious new method for battling Comment Spam in Movable Type 3

It counts the number of keystrokes in a comment (using javascript) to guess if a person or robot entered the comment


A peek, just a peek, of the new Star Wars trailer debuting with The O.C. next week (Quicktime)

Other required viewing prior to Episode III is The Clone Wars, which aired as twenty five-minute episodes on The Cartoon Network last year. It was excellent


Buffy Season 1 in One Minute (MP3)


The Neorest 600, the Ferrari of toilets

From a Wired magazine article. According to its manufacturer Toto, this is the toilet for Brad Pitt, J. Lo, Cameron Diaz, Charlie Sheen, and Will Smith. The $5,000 toilet has a 16-bit processor and 512 Kbytes of RAM. The seat can be raised by wireless remote (Howard Hughes would've dug that), assumes it can save water when the seat is up, is tankless, and transforms into a bidet when you're seated. Gentle aerated warm water spray, catalytic deodorizer, and hot air dryer. Not surprising that this product comes from Japan. When I visited Japan in 1990 with a youth orchestra, I encountered for the first time a toilet that had two levels of flushing, a lower one for, well, number one, and a higher one for more serious business. Americans have a cultural bias against bidets, and I've been guilty of that in the past when abroad, but at some point in life you realize it makes a lot of sense. Ok, that's enough on toilets


Maybe it's worth waiting for the next generation of iPods, rumoured by Engadget to have 3X the battery life


Harris Poll detects confusion over the meaning of left-wing and right-wing

I'm not sure this reflects ignorance of the people as much as it does the meaninglessness of these reductive labels (and the simplistic polls that attempt to define them)


The demographics of insurgency, ethnic conflict, terrorism, and state-sponsored violence are the same everywhere: young men, out of school and out of work

The article suggests that policymakers consider increasing funding for programs that help nations around the world to make the demographic transition from a population of short lives and large families to one with long lives and small families. A major comonent of that strategy is to promote girls' education and improve women's rights in the workplace. I'm curious to see a chart of all the world's nations and where they fall on this demographic continuum


"Warm Up" by The Firebirds (MP3)

Cool 60s funky bluesy cover of "Light My Fire"


Why Your Brain is Not a Camcorder

Just a summary of a study, but one conclusion interested me: the same processes that create false memories create true memories


The Circular Life

Cool Flash site that allows you to explore locales in Italy over a 24 hour period through pictures and sound. Stopping at different points along the circular wheel reminded me of how much the web under-utilizes sound to create environment (or misuses, in the case of those old MIDI ditties that would embarrass a surfer at work)


"Sussudio" by Ol' Dirty Bastard (cameos by Kelis and Li'l Kim) (MP3)

From a hip-hop tribute to Phil Collins from European label Urban Renewal. Shoot, I'm way too late to pay my respects to ODB, huh?


Movie posters, remixed


Superstar


35th anniversary of the Adidas Superstar


Video clip of Halle Berry accepting her Razzie (click link under her photo)

Unfortunately, this didn't work for me on any browser in Mac OS X. I had to make do with the slideshow. Windows users come out ahead this time


Joe Sacco's comic "Complacency Kills," about his visit to Iraq on behalf of the Guardian (PDF)

Like a suggested reading companion for Gunners Palace


I'm not sure I love any movie score more than Bernard Herrman's score for Hitchcock's Vertigo


Download some tracks from Fiona Apple's unreleased album


National Book Critics Circle Awards nominees for 2004


Fiction

Edwidge Danticat, The Dew Breaker

Alan Hollinghurst, The Line of Beauty

David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas

Marilynne Robinson, Gilead

Philip Roth, The Plot Against America



General Nonfiction

Kevin Boyle, Arc of Justice: A Saga of Race, Civil Rights and Murder in the Jazz Age

Edward Conlon, Blue Blood

Diarmaid MacCulloch, The Reformation: A History

David Shipler, The Working Poor: Invisible in America

Timothy B. Tyson, Blood Done Sign My Name: A True Story



Biography/Autobiography

Ron Chernow, Alexander Hamilton

Bob Dylan, Chronicles Vol. 1

Stephen Greenblatt, Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare

John Guy, Queen of Scots: The True Life of Mary Stuart

Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan, De Kooning: An American Master


LSU professor tries to order customized NFL jersey with former student (and current Patriot DB) Randall Gay's last name on it and is rejected


Oscars, the day after


Halle Berry showed up to accept her Razzie for Catwoman (via Boing)


George Bush won a Razzie for his performance as president in Farenheit 9/11. The Razzie being the opposite of an Oscar. I want to see video of Berry's recreation of her sobbing Oscars acceptance speech.


"I want to thank Warner Brothers for casting me in this piece of shit," [Berry] said as she dragged her agent on stage and warned him "next time read the script first."


Many people involved in Motorcycle Diaries were unhappy that Antonio Banderas was selected to perform "Al Otro Lado del Rio" last night


Slate reads Jorge Drexler's singing of the song as his acceptance speech as a form of protest. This comes on top of the Minnie Driver/Beyonce controversy (Driver, looking to launch her music career, was crushed when replaced by Beyonce for the Oscar performance of "Learn to Be Lonely")



Backstage at her press interview, Cate Blanchett was asked whether the Oscar win would change her: "Absolutely, you asshole!"

See video of it at Oscars.com in the Video section, though it's all the way at the end of her Q&A section. Cate's great


Was Arnold at the Oscars last night? They kept playing the theme from Terminator. Was it an homage to the governor?


Jordan hits game-winning shot at the United Center

That would be the son, Jeff, for Loyola. Yes, this has nothing to do with the Oscars


77th Annual Academy Awards


I had some friends over to watch the Oscars tonight. My goal was to serve only Oscar-best-pic-nominee-themed food, but this year was tough. Sideways was easy: Sanford Pinot Noir, the one featured in the movie. I found a bottle at a wine store nearby. It was so-so, slightly on the bland side for a Pinot. Was that the one that was supposed to have just a soupcon of stinky cheese? I didn't taste it, but thankfully Hannah brought several excellent cheese from famed Murray's Cheese Shop in the West Village. Million Dollar Baby, also simple: lemon meringue pie. I also bought a key lime pie.


Ray was a bit tougher. I went with some fried chicken (soul). Fried it myself. Realized I need one of those splatter guards. By the time I'd finished frying 12 pieces of chicken, my face and hands resembled those of the Ralph Fiennes character from The English Patient.


The Aviator--blue peas or milk containers filled with my own urine. I copped out and went with nuts. And Finding Neverland? No idea. Pixie dust? Peter Pan peanut butter? Couldn't find that at any grocery store nearby. I asked my guests to imagine food in Neverland.


I spent much of the evening shuttling back and forth between the living room and the kitchen (in NYC, that means walking across the room) so I missed some chunks of the broadcast. But some memories stand out...


Chris Rock opening with a bang, dropping the hammer on Jude Law and Colin Farrell and, to some extent, Nicole Kidman. None of them were there, so we were deprived of the cutaway reaction shots. Rock gives major props to Russell Crowe, though, so if Law or Farrell come after him, Crowe may step in and defend him. To keep his insults equal opportunity, Rock stomps on Cuba Gooding Jr., who once was doing backflips on the Oscar stage. Hilary Swank was once the Next Karate Kid. Fortune is a fickle mistress indeed.


Rock also zaps the movie industry for making six Police Academy flicks but almost passing on Passion of the Christ and blasts George Bush. No worries about a diluted Chris Rock--this is his signature stand-up style, scorched earth in every direction.


Halle. Homina. Hot. Holla.


Morgan Freeman is the coolest cat in the house. He wins best supporting actor and gives a Morgan Freeman special of a speech: concise and classy. The man speaks the truth. Word.


Robin Williams schtick, completely expected, reminds me that Jack Nicholson isn't there. Where's Jack? After presenting the "Pixar Made a Movie This Past Year Award," Robin Williams stands in the background molesting one of the eight feet Amazonian escort models. Those women could guard Yao Ming in flats. What's their story? An eager global audience wants to know. In his blue tux, Prince looked like Mini-Me standing next to those giant women.


This was the shortest Oscar broadcast I've ever seen. One of the tactics? Send the presenter out to the audience where all the nominees are forced to sit together in a block of seats, or bring all nominees on stage before the award is announced so that the long walks back and forth to the stage are minimized. They also put a muzzle on Chris Rock after his opening monologue: segues from one award to the next are short and to the point. I miss the long, rambling Oscar broadcasts. These are beautiful people. I want to see more of them.


Scarlett Johansson drew the short straw and was this year's sacrifice for the technical awards, which are relegated to some other broadcast that we're shown highlights of. Where do they hold that, at the conference room of a Holiday Inn? I feel bad for those guys; sounds like they invented some really key filmmaking equipment. Well, at least they send a hottie every year. Ashley Judd and Jennifer Garner have been sent in the past. These award winners could've been visited by Paul Giamatti (who, I agree, was robbed of a nomination).


Scarlett Johansson has great skin.


In my Oscar Party Pool, I went conservative and chose almost all of the award category favorites. I'm ecstatic when Born Into Brothels wins, even though I've never seen it.


Ken asks what women see in Adam Duritz. The rest of us are silent. Duritz looks like the dude from Kid n Play crossed with Sideshow Bob. I should have been a rock star.


During the presentation of the nominees for one of the shorts categories, the camera catches one of the nominees snoozing. The women next to him shakes him awake. When he finds out he's lost, he goes back to sleep.


When Sidney Lumet is on stage accepting his lifetime achievement award, the broadcast keeps cutting to a shot of three women. Which one is his wife? Which one is not like the others? The one in the middle. Her dress deserves a best supporting award of some sort. During that montage of Lumet movie clips, I realize that he's directing some movie starring Vin Diesel as a lawyer. Definitely a good time to claim the lifetime award just in case the Diesel flick muddies the waters. I really enjoyed Lumet's book Making Movies.


Zhang Ziyi...oh wait, she's changed the ordering of her name to the American convention of first name-last name. Ziyi Zhang. She has great skin. Jake Gyllenhaal is bald.


Penelope Cruz and Salma Hayek appear on stage together as presenters. I've seen this before, in one of my dreams. I undo one more button on my shirt. Oh dear god I love high-def.


That's what Charlie Kaufman looks like! He exposes a dirty fact--all the nominees are given countdown timers on their teleprompters, and he's been allotted 30 seconds. Only if you win a lifetime achievement award are you immune from the baton of Sir Bill Conti.


Lots of empty seats tonight. I own a black silk tie and a tux, so perhaps I can land a gig as a seat filler.


Whenever The Incredibles is mentioned, the camera pans to Samuel Jackson. Not enough of the world knows who Craig T. Nelson is, I'm guessing.


I always feel bad for the dead people who don't receive as much applause during the dead person's montage.


Sean Penn is here! He takes the Chris Rock bait and defends Jude Law's honor. Not, however, that he doesn't rise to the aid of Colin Farrell or Cuba Gooding Jr. Even Penn has his limits.


Hilary Swank wins her second Best Actress Oscar and remembers to thank her husband Chad Lowe. However, Chad's not her best friend. That would be her publicist. She'll have to a win a third Oscar to make that up to Chad, but something tells me he isn't going anywhere. Swank got so buff for Million Dollar Baby that she split her dress down the back, all the way from the Bronx down to Brooklyn, stopping just short of Staten Island.


The little hand signal from Morgan Freeman to Hilary Swank during her acceptance speech? Merely confirms his status as the coolest man alive. If I ever get married, I'm booking Morgan Freeman to give my best man speech. He doesn't know me from Adam, but I don't think it would really matter.


I picture Thomas Haden Church going out after the ceremony and getting completely bombed. That might be confusing him with his character from Sideways, or maybe not. He was great in Sideways, but this is likely his 15 minutes of Oscar fame, so I hope my mental image comes to pass.


P. Diddy is asked to present the song from Polar Express, and he calls the movie a profound and moving masterpiece of animation, or something like that. Do you believe that P. Diddy saw Polar Express? Yeah, me neither.


When Beyonce sings, her left arm floats up and down like seaweed in water, or like an arm stuck out of a moving vehicle, surfing the airflow.


Prince is so short that the award winner for Best Song has to give his speech with his neck craned sideways. From his knees.


Jamie Foxx's speech is a well-tuned machine by now, and those who've watched the other awards shows this season mouth it silently like fans during the National Anthem at a baseball game. Secretly, I was hoping that just once, when he got to the section about his grandmother whooping his ass, that Foxx would've shook his fist at the heavens and screamed, "Well who's whooping who now you abusive witch!!" No, just kidding, I don't wish that. I've heard Foxx's speech a few times now, and it still moves me. And really, whose party would you rather go to than a Jamie Foxx party? The man was nominated twice, has an Oscar, brought his little daughter to the ceremony, and is an eligible bachelor. Just hand him a puppy dog and he could quite possibly have his pick of any woman in the world right now.


Scorsese loses out on Best Director yet again. The Academy needs to just announce that yes, Marty will be receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award eventually. It's too painful to watch him passed over again and again.


The Oscar broadcast is highly race conscious. Foxx wins? The camera immediately cycles through Oprah, Halle, and every other black actor or personality of note in the crowd. Motorcycle Diaries wins best song? Quick pan through Salma, Antonio, Penelope.


Fairly predictable Oscars this year. Picking the favorites in each category would've netted you at least 18 or 19 out of 24 categories correct, by my count.


It's always better to have too much food than too little food, but I've seriously overestimated. How much fried chicken and lemon meringue pie can one man eat before he requires angioplasty? I will attempt to find out in my own courageous Bridget Jones binge-eating orgy.


blah blah blah


Yahoo buying Flickr?

I mentioned earlier this year that I'd be shocked if Flickr wasn't purchased before year's end, and that Yahoo seemed to be the most likely suitor


Danica McKellar, Winnie from The Wonder Years, offers a math tutoring column at her personal website. An undergrad math major while at UCLA, she co-wrote a paper on percolation and Ashkin-Teller models (PDF). Follow the thread and you'll discover that she has an Erdos-Bacon number of 6 and that Dolph Lundgren has a master's in chemical engineering from U. of Sydney, speaks five languages, has an IQ of 160, and won a Fulbright Scholarship to MIT. [via MeFi]


Hong Kong Int'l Airport won Skytrax Best Airport of 2004

I miss the old HK airport, though. Landing there at night was one of the coolest flying experiences. One felt as if you were going to just land right on some busy HK street, between skyscrapers. No American airport ranked in the top ten


Yankees fan's effort to name FleetCenter in Boston DerekJeterCenter on Mar. 1 vetoed


Exposing your babies to classical music doesn't enhance their intelligence


Oscar picks


My guesses as to who will win...


Best Picture: Million Dollar Baby

I thought Sideways was the least flawed of the five nominees, but not enough people think of Sideways as best-picture-worthy content. Million Dollar Baby and Aviator cover grander material, and Oscar voters gravitate towards that. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind deserves not just a nomination in this category but a win.


Best Director: Clint Eastwood

Scorsese should have several best directing Oscars already, and perhaps the Academy will choose this year to finally reward him. But I've read so many stories about Eastwood having directed, acted in, and even written the score for Million Dollar Baby. Eastwood won the DGA Award, and that's traditionally been a strong leading indicator. I'm rooting for Scorsese to pull off the minor upset.


Best Actor: Jamie Foxx

One of this year's shoo-ins.


Best Actress: Hilary Swank

I didn't see Being Julia or Vera Drake, but Kate Winslet and Catalina Sandino Moreno were both worthy of a win here also. Swank was amazing.


Best Supporting Actor: Morgan Freeman

Clive Owen was brilliant in Closer. Morgan Freeman seems like he should receive a lifetime Best Supporting Actor Award, he's been the quiet, commanding presence off to the side in so many movies, and this will represent exactly that type of recognition.


Best Supporting Actress: Natalie Portman

Often a category where a surprise young actress pulls the upset, and if so, only Natalie Portman fits the bill. Everyone loves Cate, and she played Hollywood royalty in The Aviator. But there's always an upset somewhere, so this is mine.


Adapted Screenplay: Sideways

Won't win best pic, but will be recognized here.


Original Screenplay: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

No movie got shafted more in this year's Oscar noms. Should have been a best pic nominee, but the movie will have to settle for this consolation prize. Charlie Kaufman is due.


Foreign Film: The Sea Inside

I didn't see a single one of these! So I'm just going to guess the one I heard the most about. Downfall only just started playing in NYC last week. Voters in this category are required to see all the nominees; I couldn't be less qualified.


Animated Feature: The Incredibles

The category otherwise known as the annual Pixar Coronation Award.


Documentary: Born Into Brothels

The only one I saw was Super Size Me, and neither that or Tupac: Resurrection would seem to have Academy-favored content. Born Into Brothels does (the title says all).


Art Direction: The Aviator

I only caught The Aviator and Finding Neverland in this category, and The Aviator wins that matchup.


Cinematography: The Aviator


House of Flying Daggers showcased the same saturated color palettes that Zhang Yimou used in Hero, but it's also show-offy. Who has so many outfits they can always match their environment?


Film Editing: Million Dollar Baby

I can't choose between The Aviator and Million Dollar Baby. Thelma Schoonmaker has worked with Scorsese forever and is filmmaking royalty, but I'm guessing she'll take the fall for some people's dislike of the last third of The Aviator, giving way for Joel Cox, Eastwood's longtime editor, to win this Oscar. It's not fair, but often the longer movie suffers in this category.


Costume Design: The Aviator

Brad Pitt was naked in most of Troy, and some women would argue that's the costume of the year. This seems like an easy win for The Aviator, especially since Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events received mediocre reviews. The halo effect exists, much as it does for the MVP award in sports. Being on a winning team matters.


Makeup: The Passion of the Christ

I sure hope that was makeup.


Original Score: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban


Fun, playful score by a rejuvenated John Williams.


Original Song: "Believe"

The only song I heard in this category was "Accidentally in Love" from Shrek 2, and I can't remember it at all. I listened to a few 30 second sound clips on iTunes Music Store, and based on that, Believe seems like the type of saccharine that often triumphs in this category. It sounds like the type of song I'll hear in a mall in about ten years, as I wait in line for my kid to get a photo with Santa.


Sound Editing: Spiderman 2

I have no idea.


Sound Mixing: Ray

I loved the plane crash in The Aviator, but hearing Ray Charles in surround sound at a great movie theater was the sound mixing treat of the movie year.


Visual Effects: Spiderman 2

I thought the effects in I, Robot were unconvincing, especially in the scene where Will Smith is walking amongst row after row of robots. Spiderman 2 improved upon the effects in the original, though I'm still not sold on the movements of Spiderman in action. Still too cartoony. But it's the flashiest of the movies here, especially with Spidey-level shots as he swings between traffic (between the cab and trailer of a semi, yes) and off of skyscrapers.


Animated Short: Gopher Broke

I missed the screening of shorts at MOMA last weekend and Salon's one-day online screening. Why aren't these shorts hosted online for a longer period of time? I'd think the creators would to broaden exposure for their work. I didn't see a single one of any of the shorts in any of the short categories.


Documentary Short: Sister Rose's Passion

No idea.


Live-Action Short Film: Little Terrorist

Threw a dart.


Clips from all most of the nominees at iFilm


A Scanner Darkly


The trailer for A Scanner Darkly

Don't read the synopsis on the page where the trailer is!! The trailer, thankfully, doesn't give it away. Why do so many sites insist on ruining major plot points to movies? It really bugs me. It's nearly impossible to go to a movie and be surprised anymore. Anyhow, I know many people I know aren't fans of rotoscoping, but I am. Love Richard Linklater's movies, loved Waking Life (another rotoscoped Linklater movie), and so A Scanner Darkly already earned my $10.


...


Michael Sokolove laments the state of the NBA and suggests two ways to improve its play: ban the dunk and get rid of the 3-pointer


Tom Yum Goong, the latest Tony Jaa martial arts flick

That trailer looks like vomit, but here's the executive summary: Jaa beats the snot out of people with his knees and elbows. That title is unfortunate, but Jaa is worth the price of admission. Those who live in a decent-sized city in the U.S. might be able to see the Jaa's breakthrough flick Ong Bak in theaters now (click through the menu to see RZA's endorsement)


The Global Consciousness Project

Can this random number generator somehow predict the future? If nothing else, interesting fodder for a movie


Thundercats: The Movie

I'm not sure whether to laugh or cry. I never really watched the cartoon growing up, so without a prompt, I would've identified this as the work of Andrew Lloyd Weber on a bad acid trip


Review: Aliens of the Deep (IMAX)


I'm a fan of IMAX movies, and the geek in me hopes that 3-D tech will continue to improve so that movies can become even more immersive in the future, even if it's restricted to certain genres. This week I trekked out to Lincoln Square in NYC to catch the latest 3-D IMAX pic, James Cameron's Aliens of the Deep.


I haven't seen a 3-D IMAX pic in years. I can't remember what I had to wear at the last one I attended, but for this one I donned massive clown-sized glasses. The 3-D effect is inconsistent. At times, everything was sharp and the picture did seem to jump out at me, as in the case of an elephant reaching out with its trunk. At other times, objects in the foreground were blurry, and the depth imperceptible. The technology needs work.


As for the picture, it's a mixed bag. The movie is only about 45 minutes long, and in that time, less is devoted to fascinating sea creatures than to the young marine biologists and NASA scientists sent down in the submersible vehicles. A few creatures are quite magical, including a gorgeous ring-like jellyfish and a deformed-looking fish with feet. You can't argue with the young marine biologists and geologists (this could be the appealing cast of Real World: 3 Miles Under Deep in the Ocean) who gush over how lucky they are, but then they're seeing the deep sea krill live, while we get the blurry view through a robotic camera. Also, presumably they know the names of these creatures, but for the most part the audience is fed information like Cameron's: "This is off the hook!"


Cameron goes on to theorize that if creatures can survive the ridiculously harsh conditions deep in Earth's oceans (and I was curious how the shrimp and soft-skinned creatures like squid and octopus at these depths survived the lack of light, crushing pressures of the miles of water above them, and the scorching superheated air from within the earth, spewing out of mineral chimneys), why couldn't they survive similar conditions on Europa, one of Jupiter's moons? The movie concludes with a hypothetical meeting with such aliens on Europa, but at that point I was wondering if there was a director's cut with more underwater footage.


And, of course, I was disappointed that no giant squid were spotted. The closest I've come to seeing one alive recently was a New Yorker cartoon captioning contest ("Elusive? He's here every night.").


Another Google beta


Google Maps is sweet

Nice, clean interface, especially relative to Mapquest, and a sweet DHTML implementation. I like the 3-D pushpin results for businesses; try "pizza near [your zip code]" for example. What's needed now, for us Manhattanites, is a merger with HopStop functionality


Region 3 DVD of Kung Fu Hustle available for pre-order, ships Feb. 25

Aww yeah


miscellany


A company employs Third World laborers to play MMORPG 24/7 to create digital weaponry and later sues the game's creator for trying to crack down on the practice

And other humorous tales of lawsuits brought on by virtual events. I have this new image of my childhood, me taking a bath while someone I'd hired sits there rocking a joystick back and forth, helping my character run the 1600m run in the Decathlon for Atari 2600


Smoking ban in NYC hasn't hurt business

Though the analysis cited is far from scientific. Still, it's a blessing that coming home smelling of smoke and having to dry clean your outfit the next day is a distant memory. Let's hope public bathrooms without automatic flushing sensors will also go the way of the pterodactyl in the near future


Vietnamese man survives bird flu. Doctors puzzle over two mysteries: how did he contract the disease, and how did he survive?

Frightening possibility is that the disease has recombined with human flu and evolved the ability to pass from person to person, not just from bird to person. That could lead to a global pandemic. Docs believe one reason this man survived was his fitness; he runs 14 miles a day. If that's the level of fitness required to survive bird flu, I'm in trouble


Humorous ACLU ad about the implications of some type of national identity data warehouse

Of course, the private sector (e.g. Wal-Mart, your local pizza joint, Citicorp) sees this as a holy grail and has already made numerous efforts to build such global views of their customers


Implicit Association Tests

I stumbled home from drinks with a friend slightly buzzed tonight and took every one of these tests. It's embarrassing to have one's biases revealed so easily


Bode Miller wins first in the men's downhill at the world Alpine ski championships

Daron Rahlves finished second, making it the first 1-2 finish for U.S. skiers at a world championship. Said Miller afterards: "I don't have any weaknesses really. I'm decent on the flats, but not the best, I'm good on turns, good in the air, off jumps I don't really make mistakes. There's no hole in my skiing."


Police use Photoshopped photos to ID the location of a child pornography site

The police used the invisibles technique employed primarily for puzzles up until now. By erasing people from photos, they made it easier for the public to identify the location


A new movie by Shunji Iwai titled Hana & Alice

Umm, shoot, I can't read Japanese. I'm a huge fan of Swallowtail Butterfly and All About Lily Chou Chou (out on DVD Feb. 15, 2005!) though, so I hope this makes it to NYC. All About Lily Chou-Chou felt to me like a Japanese New Wave movie


Ourmedia.org will offer a place to host audio and video content for free, with unlimited bandwidth

Wow, how are they going to afford that?!


The Departed


The Infernal Affairs trilogy is one of Hong Kong's great movie trilogies, a labyrinthine cops-and-gangsters epic that jumps back and forth in time. Brad Grey and Brad Pitt bought the rights to the English remake, and Martin Scorsese is set to direct. I'm not generally a fan of American remakes of foreign properties that are fine as is, but Scorsese receives the benefit of the doubt, always.


His remake is currently titled The Departed (IMDb currently uses the Infernal Affairs poster as a placeholder) and will star Matt Damon and Leonardo DiCaprio in the roles of the undercover cop and gangster, roles originally played by Tony Leung and Andy Lau. Instead of being set in Hong Kong, the remake will locate the story in Boston, where the Boston police force and an Irish-American gang do battle. I read somewhere that Scorsese was condensing all three episodes of the trilogy into one movie, though to do so he'll have to lop off a lot. Jack Nicholson will play the Irish-American mob boss, taking the role of Sam (played by Eric Tsang) in the original. The cast will also include Mark Wahlberg.


Fat Pig


James and I went to see Fat Pig on Jan. 19. Neil Labute's newest play had premiered in NYC on Nov. 17, 2004, and as In the Company of Men is one of my favorite movies (to admit to liking it is repugnant to some people, especially those who consider the movie and Labute to be misogynist, but I enjoy professing my love for that movie the way I imagine certain Americans enjoy telling others that they like to take their coffee black, and strong; and I don't consider Labute misogynist, though I'm not sure I'd want him dating one of my sisters), I couldn't resist grabbing tickets to a premiere of his latest work. James is a huge Jeremy Piven fan, so I was hoping we'd catch him in the lead role as Tom, but Piven departed in early January to complete work on season two of Entourage.


Jo Bonney directed this production, and it showed at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in the Village. The premise of the play is simple: Tom falls for an extremely overweight woman named Helen. Does he have the courage to not just admit his new relationship but continue it in the face of the merciless scrutiny of his shallow coworkers Carter and Jeannie (also his ex-girlfriend)?


Fat Pig is more watchable than most Labute work (its run has been extended through Feb. 26). The dialogue is straightforward, and despite one's best intentions, it's difficult not to laugh at some of Carter and Jeannie's crass pronouncements about Tom and Helen. In doing so, you understand Tom's struggle. We all have prejudices we wish we wish we could shed, and our slavish devotion to conventional ideals of beauty is one of the strongest. Most of us can't summon the courage to oppose this socially accepted norm, but we pull for Tom to find it in himself to stand up for not only Helen but himself.


Steven Pasquale (currently starring on FX's series "Rescue Me") replaces Jeremy Piven as Tom and manages to evoke the requisite sympathy for a man who is perhaps too weak to be a protagonist. Andrew McCarthy plays Carter with a mannered sliminess; Labute's villainous men are not just chauvinists and misogynists but brazenly so. When McCarthy came on stage to take a bow after the play was over, he still wore an expression on his face as if to say, "My god I was fantastic out there tonight." I couldn't help wonder what Aaron Eckhart would have done with the part. Ashlie Atkinson, also from "Rescue Me," offers a brave and honest Helen who deserves the courage that Tom tries to summon. Jessica Capshaw, of "The Practice," plays Jeannie. Keri Russell played the part of Jeannie up until recently, and I would have enjoyed seeing her in that role if only because it goes so much against type for the former "Felicity" star.


I struggled with the idea that Tom would be friends with Carter and Jeannie given how purely repulsive both of them are, and what are the roots of their shallow attitudes? Is it a product of a Darwinian workplace or just so common a human trait as to be an archetype? The play doesn't reveal much. Still, if that aspect of the play feels sparse, it also contributes to the fable-like quality of Labute's work.


By play's end, the title takes on new meaning. The "fat" refers to Helen, and the "pig" to Carter, but both of them have the courage of their own convictions in a way that Tom may never have.


The introduction to the opening scene of Fat Pig:


A woman in a crowded restaurant, standing at one of those tall tables. A bunch of food in front of her, and she is quietly eating it. By the way, she's a plus size. Very.

Corpse Bride


It's only January, and already a movie outing has been scheduled for Halloween: Tim Burton's return-to-stop-motion-animation Corpse Bride (Quicktime trailer)


Official U.S. trailer for the most-fun-movie-I-saw-at-Sundance: Kung Fu Hustle


Trailer for the latest from Hirokazu Koreeda, whose After Life was a touching meditation on death: Nobody Knows


The documentary with the most buzz at Sundance was Inside Deep Throat, produced by Brian Grazer. It's a look at the influential at the influential porno (not Woodward and Bernstein's Watergate informant) and has been rated NC-17. It sold out and so I missed it, but Jason raved


The Aristocrats, et al


The opening text crawl from Star Wars Episode III has been released on the starwars.com


Ouch--apparently widescreen MGM DVDs sold b/t Dec 1, 1998 and Sept 8, 2003 were actually just pan-and-scan DVDs with the tops and bottoms cropped out. A class action lawsuit has been brought against MGM, and you have until March 31, 2005 to submit a claim form. If the suit is settled, you can either exchange each of the DVDs for $7.10 or a new, correctly framed copy


1 in 4 men suffers from trajectile dysfunction


Instant classic: Safin defeats seemingly unbeatable Federer in Aussie Open semis in 4 1/2 hours and five sets

Two of the players with the most game on the men's tour beat the crap out of each other for hours in the Aussie heat


Entourage filmed a scene for season two at Sundance at the Egyptian Theatre

I was there, saw the cameras out front, saw the Queens Boulevard poster outside the Egyptian Theatre entrance, and failed to connect the dots. I'm an idiot.


Black RAZR V3

Sexy


Sign up to be notified when the Kung Fu Hustle DVD is available for sale

I had more fun in that screening at Sundance than any other


The boys of South Park tell the Aristocrats joke (Windows Media File--vulgar and not for the easily offended)

One of the movies screening at Sundance was The Aristocrats, a documentary in which Penn Jillette (of Penn and Teller) and Paul Provenza follow 100 comedians doing their version of the joke. I didn't see it, but after reading the synposis, I was certainly curious about what the joke was about. The joke seems to be like Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto for violinists, a rite of passage for comics to prove their mettle.


How to get reservations at French Laundry


Google and Yahoo are introducing television closed captioning search capability, and Amazon announces block viewing for its A9 Yellow Pages

Still, no search service is able to locate individual missing socks from my laundry, though


$13 Smirnoff beats out premium, higher-priced vodkas in NYTimes taste test

I can now cite this taste test when explaining why I bought Smirnoff instead of Grey Goose for the pre-party. Certainly sounds better than admitting I'm cheap.


For the first time ever, cancer has passed heart disease as the #1 killer of Americans under the age of 85


Gone Sundancin'

[I realized that I posted a draft of an unfinished entry about Sundance before I left for Park City last Thursday...pretend I never did. I'll finish that one and put it back up here shortly because I do believe the logistics of planning a Sundance trip are highly complex and frustrating, but all that's ancient history right now. I've had a great time so far, and I have one evening of fun left.]
I've been at Sundance since last Thursday evening, and tomorrow morning I return home. Most this time, I've been offline, so apologies to those I've failed to respond to in a timely fashion.
Last year's trip to Sundance was a surprise, but Jason and I had so much fun we decided to toss our hats in the ring again, this time with more advanced planning (i.e., we actually bought movie tickets ahead of time).
Every night, I've gotten fewer and fewer hours of sleep, and last night I grabbed only three hours of shuteye after returning home from a midnight screening of the disturbing and brilliant Old Boy before my cell phone alarm started screeching. By the time I heard and comprehended the meaning of that shrill cacaphony, it was 7:55am. My first movie of the morning started at 8:30am. The drive from Susannah's place in Salt Lake to the theatre in Park City was a half hour in light traffic. Then a half mile dash on foot to the theatre from the parking lot. Probably not worth it. I turned off the alarm and crawled under the covers.
But it was too late. My mind had awoken, and I began to think of how badly I wanted to see Noah Baumbach's The Squid and the Whale. You can sleep when you're dead, and all that shit. I tried burying my head under the pillow to suppress the idea, but it only gained momentum.
Damn it! I threw off the covers, rushed into the bathroom and cleaned up quickly, threw on some pants and grabbed a whole bag of papers and winter clothing and sprinted out into the freezing Salt Lake City air to my rental car. What ensued was a frantic dash up over the mountain pass through a dense fog, my rental car struggling to stay over the speed limit on the uphill slopes. I parked at exactly 8:30, and then I sprinted a half mile in the cold to Racquet Club Theatre. I was seated just as the pre-movie short ended.
The Squid and the Whale was wonderful, validating my morning's effort. Baumbach is friend's with Wes Anderson, and they have similar sensibilities. The story is based on Baumbach and his brother's experience of their parents' divorce in Park Slope, Brooklyn, in the late 1980's. As with Anderson movies, the father, played by Jeff Daniels, is a selfish, immature man-child, yet vaguely sympathetic. The humor and music also reminded me of that in Anderson movies, but I thought The Squid and the Whale was more accessible and consistently funny than The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou. Great performances by Daniels, Laura Linney as his wife, and Jesse Eisenberg and Owen Kline as the older and younger brothers. It will most certainly get picked up by a studio before festival's end.
Joannie and Karen joined me this year for Sundance, as did Mike, Arya, Jon, and Bill. Jason and Jamie were here, as were a scattering of other folks from NYC and Amazon. Having everyone around added to the fun. We snowboarded one afternoon, cooked dinner and soaked in the hot tub another evening, dined at 350 Main our first night together for my birthday, and attended a few Sundance parties, gawking at celebrities and laying siege to the open bars. In between all that, I'll have seen twelve to fifteen movies by the time they wheel me onto my flight tomorrow morning on a stretcher, and that's not including the Mormon conversion show Karen trapped us in just before her flight out.
More later on Sundance after I return home, but one instant movie classic deserves mention: Kung Fu Hustle. It's an exhilarating slapstick martial arts comedy, and it's superior to Stephen Chow's previous hit Shaolin Soccer. Sony is distributing the picture, and it should hit theatres in March. As is common to Asian martial arts slapstick, it blends a seemingly incompatible set of genres, from comedy to musicals to romance to melodrama to action. As a bonus for movie lovers, Chow tosses in homages to The Matrix, The Untouchables, Spiderman, and a whole series of other movies. I haven't laughed that hard at a theatre in a long time, and at movie's end, Stephen Chow came on stage to a standing ovation from all of Eccles theatre, Sundance's largest venue, a school auditorium seating over 1,000 spectators.
If you have the opportunity to catch Kung Fu Hustle before March for some reason, do so. I didn't see any movies I really disliked, and we all had our opinions of all the movies we saw together, but we all agreed that Kung Fu Hustle was an instant classic, ironic considering it doesn't feel like a Sundance movie.
Jason and I have already begun plotting our return trip next year. After two years here, I finally feel like I grok the Sundance Film Festival, finally understand how to organize a proper Sundance trip for a large group in such a way as to ensure that everyone gets a healthy mix of snow sports, movies, parties, and free time. See you all at Sundance 2006.