Project Trico
Two of my favorite video games are Ico and Shadow of the Colossus . . . actually, I think they are the only console games I’ve ever been able to pass (not that I play very many). They’re like puzzle adventure games. The team that makes them is working on a new title for the PS3 (which I guess I’ll have to get) which for now is being called Project Trico. The video on YouTube looks . . . interesting. Some kid going around with some strange cat-bird with arrows in it. The cat-bird’s movements look very realistic if it wasn’t so humongous.
Anyway, what I really loved about the video was the music. Very epic and inspiring. I learned from Wikipedia that music was from a 1990’s film called Miller’s Crossing, a Coen brothers movie, and the music was by Carter Burwell, who recently scored Twilight. So I put the movie Miller’s Crossing on hold at the library; I’m interested in seeing how the music fits with the dark gangs-and-guns story. I’m also probably going to end up buying the soundtrack (because they still sell on CD *cough* stupid Disney Records *cough*).
Google Wave
The other exciting thing I saw earlier this week was this video on Google Wave (or this article which sums up the main points). Ooooh, doesn’t that look awesome? Hard to say exactly what sort of impact it will have on online communication, but it could be very big. I’m especially interested in the real-time multiple-user collaboration; I would’ve loved to have that available while still in school working on group projects. I’m also excited by the gaming possibilities this could provide, and would be very interested in trying to program some gadget-games for it. I requested a sandbox developer account, but they never got back to me . . . of course, I’m sure tens of thousands have requested one, and when this Google Wave goes live to everyone, it will already be oversaturated with games . . . which is good! I look forward to playing them! But I will still want to try designing my own.
Benjamin Button (with spoilers!)
I finished watching the film The Boring Stupid Case of Benjamin Button the other day. Visually, it was great. The recreation of older time periods, the make-up, the cinematography . . . brilliant work. But the story . . . what story? There really wasn’t much of one. There was hardly any conflict, only a couple of very shallow romantic conflicts. The main character, Benjamin Button, had no important goals, and therefore there was really nothing he had to overcome. This is a huge disappointment because the premise, a boy being born old and becoming younger, would seem to spark many conflicts. How would others react if they knew the truth? (They didn’t seem to be very bothered.) How would he find love when he was young but looked old? (Easily, it seems.) When he was young, shouldn’t he be jealous of normal people? And when he got old, shouldn’t others be jealous of him? (Nah!) When he grew down into a child’s body, wouldn’t it have been more dramatic if he had been a wise 70 year old, trying to convince adults that he was older and more experienced than them? Nah . . . they just have him start forgetting everything when that point comes.
And, since Benjamin really had no goals, he had no personality. He never really wanted anything, besides to be with a woman every now and then. He didn’t struggle with envy for normal people, he didn’t worry very much about his awkward future, he didn’t deal with anger issues toward his father who abandoned him, he didn’t struggle with very much loneliness. Lots of missed potential.
It seems like the writers were in a bit of a hurry to create this film, because they did a horrible job. They expanded an idea into a screenplay without adding any story. *Sigh* It could’ve been good.
Remember . . . an idea is not a story! You might start with an idea, but the story still has to be about something. It might seem mundane or cliche, such as a simple love story, or a war story, or a life-struggles story (which is what Ben Button should’ve been about), but it needs that conflict built around the initial idea. You can’t just take the idea and run with it.
The only way Ben Button could’ve succeeded without a story is if it had been a comedy. Comedy can get away with there being little story because the point is in the little stories, the gags, the jokes. Forrest Gump had no big story, but it was funny. A Christmas Story had very little story, but it was funny. And I’m sure there are plenty more . . .
So I give Benjamin Button 2 out of 10 stars, which is pretty pathetic.
Okay, that’s all I have to say for today.
Anyway, I’m pretty angry with Disney right now. I saw that Michael Giacchino composed the score the Pixar’s new film, Up. Giacchino also did the scores for The Incredibles and Ratatouille. These are two of my favorite film soundtracks of all time; Giacchino is just brilliant. I was really looking forward to adding the Up CD soundtrack to my collection . . . but NOOoooOOO . . .
I don’t have much to say right now anyway. I’m not sure I’ll have my first album ready by August anymore; my interests have once again shifted to something else. Over the past week, I’ve been working on my
Anyway, one of the themes of the film was, not surprisingly, doubt. Which is a nice coincidence since I was just reading a book (and still haven’t finished it) called
I don’t know whether the final melody will be strange and random, very generic, or perhaps pretty good; I am eager to find out! It will have to sound like something after all. I think it will get much more interesting a few more notes or bars into the melody, when the first notes begin to actually influence our expectations of what note should come next. Oh yes, then it will be very interesting I think. In fact, I considered going ahead and writing the first couple measures just to get to that point right off the bat, but then decided against it. After all, maybe the beginning will be interesting too?
Somebody on a forum mentioned this website:
I know a few people who, alone or with others, are trying to build and start their own social networks. Of course, my first mental response does tend to be “oh, please, give me a break, like you’re ever going to be successful with that!” … but that was my first response to both Facebook and Twitter as well, so I’m obviously bad at predicting whether or not something will be successful. (Facebook still really doesn’t appeal to me that much, I just stay on it because friends and family are on it and it makes it easy to keep in touch with them all at once; I think they should really just all join Twitter.)
But who really lives as if nothing matters? Only people with psychological problems, as far as I can tell. Those who don’t believe in an afterlife still believe their actions matter (I think). I suppose the goal then becomes to be as happy as you can now, and the future really doesn’t matter, unless of course what you’re doing now would prevent you from being happy in the future. But the goal is all about pleasure and while I’m alive to feel it. How much pleasure and pain you felt throughout your life ultimately doesn’t matter in the end, but it matters now, because you’re experiencing pleasure or pain now.
Or what if he could never get his memories back? What would happen to the man he used to be? Surely there can’t be an afterlife for that man. He just vanished completely. What was the point of all the pleasure and pain, of all the hard choices, of all the decisions within those ten years if memory of them just vanished? Just that he now has to live with the consequences? But is he really living with his own consequences, or is he living with another man’s consequences, becausing having his memories erased makes him a completely new person?
What I admit I don’t like is hearing about around this season is other people’s vacations; it makes me want to retire.