The actor in this Star Wars – Episode III trailer spoof by Sequential Pictures really managed to capture the whiney side of Anakin Skywalker.
Category: Entertainment
Korean cinema: My Sassy Girl
Thanks to a glowing thread about this movie on a web forum, I finally got a hold of the apparently popular 2001 Korean film My Sassy Girl.
The movie comes from the true-life experiences of author Ho-sik Kim who made a best-selling book out of stories he posted on-line about his relationship with his girlfriend. In the film, Kyun-woo comes across a young woman drunk and belligerent on the subway and in a series of accidents is mistaken for her boyfriend. From there an actual relationship starts, usually involving her threatening to kill him if he doesn’t act the way she wants.
It’s actually a far better story than I’ve described and though the girl can be a real pain towards him, the story unfolds around the reason why she’s that way, and how it’s very much a conflict between her past and how much she’s quickly grown to like him.
Honestly, this film is great if you’re interested in watching an asian movie with your woman, but she doesn’t want the usual over-the-top martial arts violence-packed stereotype. Good use of humor, some real emotions and a great ending.
Moving art
If you find the idea of kinetic art that’s wind powered interesting, you might want to take a look at the Wired article “Wild things are on the beach” about dutch artist Theo Jansen.
Some of his work is truly astounding, such as this 2MB video of his animaris rhinoceros transport shows. For more videos of his work, check the “film” link on the artist’s website, strandbeest.com.
VW ad destroys a classic
The UK Guardian has an article on Volkswagon’s latest marketing item involving a CGI Gene Kelly break dancing through his “Singing in the Rain” movie number:
Blingin’ in the rain: The advert for the new Volkswagen Golf GTI hits screens tonight and was the result of months of negotiations with the star’s family, the movie rights’ owners and record label EMI.
It remasters the scene using masks, wigs and a digital techniques to impose Kelly’s face on the dancers. …
“The idea of Gene Kelly doing this wasn’t disrespectful. If he was around it’s the kind of thing that he would do, he was very innovative,” said copywriter Martin Loraine, from the advertising agency DDB London.
Judge for yourself: video (5MB, Quicktime Format)
Personally, I find most of it creepy in that Gene Kelly’s face doesn’t line up perfectly with that of the dancer’s body and the whole thing comes across as an updated dancing zombie from Michael Jackson’s Thriller.
What do you think? Add your opinion to the growing list below …
Han solos with an M-4
I think this screenshot from Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction, the new game for the PS2 and Xbox, answers the geek-cred question of “Who shot first? Han or Guido?”
This free-form combat game that takes place in a post-collapse North Korea plays like a Grand Theft Auto with air strikes and artillery. Since the game is from LucasArts, players who unlock the entire game have the opportunity to play as either Han Solo or Indiana Jones, leading to the screenshot taken above.