Chat Box

Fyrehaar: missy came on after lil kim
Fyrehaar: i like it when she says nonsensical stuff
Rob: she is truly funky
Fyrehaar: i like that when a male rapper guests on her track he seems subservient
Fyrehaar: not like a highlight
Rob: she is a feminist
Rob: but is Kim a feminist?
Fyrehaar: in action if not in her professed position
Fyrehaar: kim is not a feminist
Fyrehaar: she is complicit in her own oppression
Rob: does she reclaim her own body by using it as a weapon?
Fyrehaar: she is exploiting her self
Fyrehaar: while she is aggressive
Fyrehaar: it is in a way that plays into male aggression and abets it
Rob: is she aggressively submissive?
Fyrehaar: yeah
Rob: that’s just weird
Fyrehaar: Missy is aggressive
Fyrehaar: but she doesn’t negate herself
Fyrehaar: she doesn’t seem to mold herself to fit a set of expectations based around male privilege
Fyrehaar: lil kim aggrandizes her ability to please men and be like
Rob: well, Kim is aggressive in an expected way. Missy is aggressive on a much broader scale
Fyrehaar: yeah
Rob: like her weirdness is aggressive
Fyrehaar: nicely put
Rob: she’s not just loud and crude
Fyrehaar: yup
Fyrehaar: like Beck
Rob: Lil’ Kim assaults your ears and your junk. Missy Elliott assaults your reality!

Ordo Cartographicus – Resource Distribution

This isn’t really much of a post, but I’ve been mucking around with the DoW2 map editor to see if I can use it to work on my design chops – “Christ, another blogger and/or game tester who wants to be a game designer?” Yes. Sorry – and I figured I may as well share any results in a public forum.

One of the early things I like to do when I’m working up a map is put down power and requisition points. In fact, it’s the third thing I do, right behind placing bases and positioning victory points. However, it’s occurred to me that I don’t really know how many of each is a good balance. I suppose more points will equal more resources and a faster fight, but too many would lead to clutter and imbalance. With these concerns in mind, I decided to have a look at Relic’s official maps for the game.

The short version is that for 1v1 maps Relic likes 4 or 5 of each, usually with a bit more requisition if you don’t feel like keeping it identical; the 6 requisition points in Green Tooth Gorge are a bit of an outlier. For 2v2, they like 5 of each, maybe 6 for a crowded slugfest map (p.s. I hate you in all your evil forms, Calderis Refinery). For 3v3 Relic likes 6 of each, with 5 in a map that needs lots of room to maneuver and 7 in a really big open map or another ugly sluggathon. Ugly but complete chart of data follows:

1v1 Maps Power Req
Green Tooth Gorge 4 6
Siwal Frontier 4 5
Calderis Refinery 4 4
Legis High Stratum 4 4
Leviathan Hive 5 4
Outer Reaches 4 5
Green Tooth Jungle 4 5
2v2 Maps Power Req
Calderis Refinery 6 6
Medean Cliff Mines 5 5
Golgotha Depths 5 5
Ruins of Argus 5 5
3v3 Maps Power Req
Angel Gate 6 7
Typhon Arena 5 5
Argus Desert Gate 6 6
Calderis Refinery 6 6
Tiber Outpost 6 6
Capital Spire 5 6
Siccaris Plateau 6 7

Ante Carto, Nullum Mundus

-ssr

Film Century 1.5 – A New Hope

Aug. 2 Crimes and Misdemeanors – The films of Woody Allen would like to remind you that while he has been an utter bastard to all of his wives, at least he never paid anyone to kill any of them, right? 79/150
Aug. 3 Tsotsi – Life is hard; how hard has it made you? 80/150
Aug. 6 Kill! (1968) – A fun, if occasionally grim cross between Yojimbo and Lethal Weapon. 81/150
Aug. 9 (500) Days of Summer – Set your watch by it: the corporate media will always copy the stylistic tics of the popular underground and shy away from the really meaningful ideas underneath them. 82/150
Aug. 10 The Ramen Girl – It’s been sort of terrifying these last few years watching Brittany Murphy ripen into the next vessel for Joan Rivers’ brain. 83/150
Aug. 11 Terminator Salvation – And why not, honestly, when we recall that the boring, bland, deluded, faceless, messianic machine-fighting dirtballs were the best part of the last two Matrix movies? 84/150

Film Century 1.5 – The Story So Far

At the start of 2009, I very quietly started a little task – to watch 150 movies in a single year year, reviewing each in a single sentence. Quietly, because I wasn’t sure this was going to work out and didn’t want to get hassled by my friends if I couldn’t swing it. However, it’s now August and the project is only somewhat behind schedule,which is frankly better than I expected to do. With the launch of FireandSonic.com, this project has a brand new home that’s both a bit higher-profile and far more appropriate. To officially welcome Film Century 1.5 to fns.com, I thought it’d be good to migrate all of the reviews to date from their previous home to a recap post here. Without further ado:

Jan. 2 Doubt – When Phillip Seymour Hoffman and Meryl Streep face off, no shred of scenery is spared. 1/150
Jan. 3 Becoming Jane – Infuriating people acting foolishly. 2/150
Jan. 4 Bukowski: Born Into This – A man so damaged that he lost the ability to emote with his own voice, and was forced to write instead. 3/150
Jan. 4 Dial M For Murder – Fun to watch because the only person in true danger is the villain. 4/150
Jan. 6 Bring It On: All or Nothing – A colonoscopy of Hollywood, committed to film. 5/150
Jan. 9 Milk – Brolin’s character and performance are weak links in an otherwise strong film. 6/150
Jan. 10 Charlie Bartlett – More proof that a good cast can elevate an ordinary script. 7/150
Jan. 11 The Namesake – The saddest and most profound moments in 20 years of a man’s life, as portrayed by Taj from Van Wilder. 8/150
Jan. 13 Yes Man – Liar Liar 2: Blowjob From A Granny 9/150
Jan. 14 Flakes – More proof that a good cast can’t save an ordinary script. 10/150
Jan. 18 Annie Hall – Much like Tarantino, Woody Allen is a gifted writer and director cursed with the awful taste to constantly cast himself as an actor. 11/150
Jan. 20 Cadillac Records – A fast-forward Cliff Notes version of history with great performances and lousy pacing. 12/150
Jan. 22 Slumdog Millionaire – This movie can’t possibly live up to the hype around it unless it somehow cures cancer and makes the lame walk, which is a shame since it’s really an ok film. 13/150
Jan. 23 The House Bunny – She’s All That 2: Too Much Makeup Makes You Look Like a Drag Queen. 14/150
Jan. 27 Underworld: Rise of the Lycans – Jettisons the franchise’s previous style-over-substance method to pursue a bold new vision in which both style and substance are ditched in favor of just showing two hours of Bill Nighy bugging his eyes out so you can see his ultraviolet raver contacts. 15/150
Feb. 7 Seven Pounds – The Passion of the Fresh Prince. 16/150
Feb. 8 Pride & Glory – You just paid money to watch a pretty good episode of Homicide: Life on the Street. 17/150
Feb. 10 Coraline – Easily fucked up and creepy enough to join the pantheon of great children’s stories like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Little Red Riding Hood, and Pinocchio. 18/150
Feb. 11 The International – Too stupid to be the thriller it wishes it were, this is really just a misbegotten action movie with two hours of mindless talky setup sandwiching 10 minutes of pretty fun gunplay. 19/150
Feb. 15 Smart People – A cringe-inducing little movie about selfish, thoughtless people that’s made refreshing by the fact that the selfishness is actually pretty realistic, as opposed to the sociopathic movie version of selfishness on display in, say, Margot at the Wedding. 20/150
Feb. 1 Body of Lies – A grim and uninspired series of betrayals and tortures that feels sadly familiar, both in terms of cinema and reality. 21/150
Feb. 28 Born Into Brothels – It’s haunting to watch children whose nature makes them at least somewhat innocent living in an environment that allows hardly any innocence at all. 22/150
Mar. 3 The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford – A gauzy, dream-like film about a faded rock star and his bound-to-be-disappointed #1 fan, artfully disguised as a western. 23/150
Mar. 4 Choke – Lite Club. 24/150
Mar. 4 Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa – Like a Hello Kitty vibrator: smooth, powerful, and cute in a highly mechanical way. 25/150
Mar. 8 I Am Legend – Oddly enough, has almost exactly the same strengths and weaknesses as WALL-E. 26/150
Mar. 9 Lost in La Mancha – Watch in horrified fascination as God Himself takes a steaming 90-minute shit all over Terry Gilliam. 27/150
Mar. 11 Watchmen – Every time Zack Snyder open his big stupid mouth, I get the feeling that this film’s artistic successes exist in spite of him, rather than because of him. 28/150
Mar. 15 Sukiyaki Western Django – Be careful what you wish for. 29/150
Mar. 17 American Psycho – Remember what I said earlier about our lazy shorthand memories of the 80s? 30/150
Mar. 20 Sunshine Cleaners – It really bothers me that in film, as in music, “independent” no longer refers to a method of production but to a defined and predictable aesthetic. 31/150
Mar. 21 Sita Sings the Blues – Charming animated film about shitty husbands in Indian mythology and today. 32/150
Mar. 22 Punisher War Zone – When some ancient galactic republic finally visits earth to test us for membership suitability and we submit as our cultural touchstones the Mona Lisa, Michelangelo’s David, the Rites of Spring, and Punisher War Zone, they’ll be justified in scourging our craphole little planet with nuclear fire faster than you can say “Repressing sexuality on a societal level leads to widespread acceptance of repugnant amounts of personal physical violence.” 33/150
Mar. 26 I Love You, Man – Tries to hang a lampshade on the homoeroticism implicit in buddy movies by mixing in romance movie tropes, but disappointingly stops shy of actually having the men fuck each other. 34/150
Mar. 28 Monsters vs. Aliens – Kids love fast-moving objects and familiar jokes, so get ready for some very fine animation and a lot of jokes you already know the punchlines to. 35/150
Mar. 30 Come Drink With Me – Dear Mr Tarantino: Just because the movies you watched as a child allow you to recapture some mild taste of your fast- and ever-fading youth doesn’t mean you get to tell the rest of us these shitty old movies are actually cool. 36/150
Apr. 6 Transporter 3 – Exactly the sort of self-satisfied retardation-fest that allows elitist movie jerks to feel better than you while they watch quirky gay wedding dramedies from Iran. 37/150
Apr. 11 Kung Fu Panda – Almost certainly the best kung fu movie of the last ten years, which I say as both praise for this great film and eulogy for the genre. 38/150
Apr. 17 Observe & Report – The Donald Rumsfeld of action comedies, this movie thinks it’s just being so clever when it goes over the line time and again, and by the time it tries to justify itself you just don’t give a shit anymore. 39/150
Apr. 19 The Constant Gardener – Neatly transitions from “what the fuck is my wife doing behind my back” paranoia to “oh God, they’re all out to get me paranoia” with only a little too much political stridency marring the effort. 40/150
Apr. 25 Adventureland – Awkward, sweet, fumbling and painful, like the memory of the first time you fucked the last person you broke up with. 41/150
Apr. 29 Anvil! The Story of Anvil – This documentary exists as a great big double-middle-finger dare to judge its subjects for being happy idiot losers. 42/150
May 1 X-Men Origins: Wolverine – Man, it’s tough to sound like the coolest guy in the movie once you don’t have Halle Berry around to pass off all the worst lines onto, eh? 43/150
May 2 The Hebrew Hammer – Lives in a delicate area between satire of ugly racial stereotypes and cultural self-criticism that makes it hard for a big white oppressor like me to know when to laugh, a.k.a. the Rock/Chappelle Zone. 44/150
May 5 Star Trek – Very smart moment-to-moment, line-to-line, but very stupid in the big ways, like the plot and character motivations. 45/150
May 16 State of Play – If newspapers are so great, why are they going out of business? 46/150
May 29 Up – Continues the Pixar trend of an absolutely sublime 10-20 minute short that’s been dragged out into a pretty good but ultimately superfluous animated feature. 47/150
May 30 The Candidate – Neatly encapsulates all the things I love and hate about modern American political campaigning in that beautifully cynical 70s style. 48/150
Jun. 2 The Spirit – Frank Miller takes you back to when men were heroes, women were there to validate them, and nobody would call you on this kind of goofy macho bullshit. 49/150
Jun. 3 Drag Me To Hell – Evil Dead 4: Fuck Spider-Man. 50/150
Jun. 7 Casa De Los Babys – A wonderful cast wanders around Mexico in this estrogeneric nothing-fest. 51/50
Jun. 12 The Hangover – Over the top without crossing the line, which is apparently a neat trick these days. 52/150
Jun. 14 Chocolate – You’re going to need to ask yourself if you’re willing to pay for some really great muay thai action by also having to watch the star of the film act literally like a retard for the entire running time; the answer may surprise you. 53/150
Jun. 20 Year One – How do you make a biblical comedy in this day and age and have it turn out this blandly inoffensive? 54/150
Jun. 27 Howard Zinn: You Can’t Be Neutral on a Moving Train – It never ceases to amaze me how demagogues can have so much empathy for those they agitate on behalf of, and yet so little understanding of how to reach an audience that isn’t already on their side. 55/150
Jun. 27 Dead Space: Downfall – Sorry kids, now matter how much red paint you spray around, cartoons aren’t scary. 56/150
Jun. 27 Resident Evil: Degeneration – It’s kind of shocking how CG like this feels like a refreshing treat if you use it to break up video gameplay, and an oatmeal dinner if you watch two straight hours of it. 57/150
Jul. 5 Ice Age 3: Rise of the Dinosaurs – I’m really hoping that someday, someone will make an entire CGI cartoon where nobody speaks. 58/150
Jul. 6 Wordplay – Lighthearted and psychological at the same time, as a documentary about obsessive dorks probably has to be. 59/150
Jul. 11 Public Enemies – Shot in a manner stylish and bold to a fault, but in service of a meandering and sometimes obfuscated story. 60/150
Jul. 11 Mission Impossible III – Awesome and stupid in all the ways we’ve come to expect from J.J. Abrams. 61/150
Jul. 11 Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me – If the show had been this weird and deliberately obtuse it wouldn’t have made it two episodes, but damned if David lynch doesn’t know how to film a nightmare. 62/150
Jul. 12 Eternal – Some people make erotic horror thrillers; these folks made a trashy softcore porn where annoying people die. 63/150
Jul. 13 Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers – Disappointing, disgusting, infuriating, but never surprising; a bit like finding ants in the national trash can. 64/150
Jul. 17 Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince – Plenty of special effects – and makeouts – but somehow lacking in magic all the same. 65/150
Jul. 18 The Fifth Element – You probably remember the silly clothes and Chris Tucker’s hair, but do you remember the amazingly cracking pace? 66/150
Jul. 18 Blazing Saddles – If anyone ever asks what the big deal about Mel Brooks was, show them this. 67/150
Jul. 19 Saved! – Probably the most pro-Christian satirical black comedy you’ll ever see. 68/150
Jul. 19 Raiders of the Lost Ark – You know how sometimes a band will peak really young and put out their best album first, then spend the rest of their careers trying to simultaneously recapture and trade in on that early good will, while you continually buy their albums in the ever-fading hope that you’ll love any of the new stuff as much as that first awesome record? 69/150
Jul. 21 Max Payne – The longest – and thus also the worst – Linkin Park video ever filmed. 70/150
Jul. 21 The Film Crew: Killers From Space – Rekindles a lot of very fond MST3K memories, but doesn’t really take its place alongside them. 71/150
Jul. 23 Uncovered: The War on Iraq – A broad but shallow catalog of Bush’s lies that’s probably historically important, but I knew this all this shit in real time; to those of you who weren’t paying attention, hey, thanks for this awesome war! 72/150
Jul. 24 Twilight – Wait, so the huge flap is over a sleepy-looking, socially-awkward vampire and his inexplicable obsession with a sleepy-looking, socially awkward girl who can’t completely close her own mouth? 73/150
Jul. 25 Veronica Guerin – It must be really tough to love someone who is willing to be taken away from you for the sake of their principles. 74/150
Jul. 25 Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire – As I watch these movies again and again, it becomes ever more clear that while Harry is meant to be a nice person, they go out of their way to show that’s he’s really not that bright. 75/150
Jul. 27 Push – For people who find the films of Timur Bekmambetov just too placid and comprehensible. 76/150
Jul. 27 American Hardcore: A History of American Punk Rock – I imagine the story of punk in the early 80s would seem a lot more relevant and inspirational to a young person today if it weren’t being presented by a bunch of fat, self-congratulatory 40-somethings. 77/150
Jul. 31 Funny People – Wonder of wonders, Adam Sandler finally figured out how to act and be funny at the same time, and all it took was giving him the lead in a reworking of Pagliacci. 78/150

I’m pretty sure that’s the lot of them – if I forgot to copy and paste any, well, take it as a given that I watched and reviewed them.

Onward, to glory.