Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Moving my reviews, sort of.

So, I've decided to re-activate my facebook account, and I've decided to just put up new movie/music/etc. reviews in to one of my status feeds as new comments. Granted, the medium sort of dictates that the reviews will probably be shorter than my blog entries here, but maybe I'll put longer rants here when needed. Til' then, here's the feed link, with blurbs on Rounders, The Great Buck Howard, and a little more written for 9 and The Blueprint 3.

More likely to come.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Once again back is the incredible...

No, I'm not talking about myself, but thanks anyway, yeah?

I am talking about "The Legendary".

I know, they're not making a comeback, because they didn't go away a long time. But in a way they did. One could argue The Roots descended into darkness with their last two albums, Game Theory and Rising Down; not the most fun-loving albums those were.

But a glimmer of light shines through with this new track, which debuted not too long ago on Late Night (Jimmy Fallon's show, which I blogged about here).

I say glimmer because it's not all sunshine and jumping jacks, but it's a more optimistically nuanced track that leaves the evil synths of Rising Down behind for the time being.

---

It's still blockbuster season, and I'm still involved. I have to say that The Taking of Pelham One Two Three was better than the version that came out this year, which was differed in title by using the numerals "1 2 3". The differences don't end there though, as the respective tones of each film couldn't be any more unrelated. Walter Matthau wins (But Denzel Washington is still the man).

Up was fun and touching. Not perfect though. I'm still not sure how I feel about "talking" dogs.

I'm sure I saw other movies too, but I really just wanted to say that I hopped back on to the Harry Potter express, after missing the last one (the only one I haven't seen), and I'm glad I did. Half-Blood Prince was very entertaining, but pretty much all just set up for the climatic two-parter The Deathly Hallows. Consider me hyped.

---

Hey Stockton folks, I just started going to a young adult group weekly meeting for Catholics (but non-Catholics are welcome). Really nice folk, and learning about faith in a (young) adult setting is great and something pretty much new to me. I've been in a young adult group that fizzled out shortly after it began, but this particular group has been around years now, so I could potentially be in for the long haul (or at least until I'm 39, which is what their website says is the cutoff). In any case, check out their site, lukefive.org and maybe see me there on Tuesday nights and hang out. They don't bite.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

A Review of CunninLynguists' Strange Journey Volume One

The following is my not so quite track-by-track review of the rap group CunninLynguists' mixtape, Strange Journey Volume One:


Departure (Intro)

After hearing this unoriginal, smug, and fake sounding introduction, I'm not looking forward to the rest of the CD.

2. Nothing But Strangeness (Featuring Looptroop Rockers & Hilltop Hoods)

The beat starts off promising. Then some bells come in, and the track just reminds me of the superiority of Pete Rock's beats in his heyday. I'm bored and the vileness of the lyrical content doesn't help. The nice vocal sampling that started the track and hinted at the it's potential comes back for the hook. Among the rest of the production, the sample is rendered unappealing.

3. Lynguistics (Live In Stockholm)

It sounds like the live vocals were blended in with a studio-built master track. It sounds weird on first listen, the way "The Food" on the finished version of Common's Be did.

Eventually "Lynguists" builds to a perfect ending, with the studio track dropping out to shine on the sound of the live audience cheering.

4. Move

This one is decent. Strong production combined with charismatic rhyme delivery make for the best all around track in this collection.

5. Spark My Soul (Featuring Substantial)

The first MC to rhyme doesn't have a voice that lends him any business to continue his rapping career without lots of work stepping up his skills, which aren't bad. After the second MC comes in, I decide that I don't want to listen to the rest of Strange Journey Volume One.

Only the beginning of track 11, "Georgia (Remix) [Feat. Killer Mike & Khujo Goodie]," up to the beginning of the second verse sound good enough to where I'll listen again. From there it's back to the album's business as usual. And business is not too good.

Fortunately, this isn't an official album. There is lots of room for CunninLynguists' to grow before Volume Two drops. That should help with the expansion of ideas and the tightening up of skills in all aspects, from production to vocal delivery. In short, if this rap group sticks to the formulas that worked on the minimal amount in this volume, they could end up making something I'll listen to from beginning to end while hoping for more.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Please Help Free Ezra Nawi

More info here and here. I'm just referring you to those sites without saying much else because I'm tired and still haven't been to bed for the night (and it's been daylight out a couple hours now). Hopefully I'll be doing a full post soon, since I've seen a couple more flicks like Up and the original The Taking Of Pelham One Two Three. Plus I have a full music album to review here. 'Til then, sit tight (not literally of course).

Friday, May 22, 2009

Summer Movie Season Is Here

Hey all. It's been awhile since I talked film, and just in time for blockbuster season, I've got some things to say...

My first summer blockbuster viewing went to Angels & Demons, the sequel to 2006's The Da Vinci Code. I'm well aware of the controversy of that first film, but I'm going to sidestep discussion of it. These movies are fiction and entertainment to me, period. And entertained I was with Code. A & D picks up the action this time around, and I wasn't disappointed. I have to say that this one treads into B-movie territory, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, even for past Oscar winners Ron Howard, who directs, and Tom Hanks, lead actor.

You might think a movie that's set in the Vatican and dealing with Papal election might be too heavy handed, but just enough humor is injected into the proceedings. And the action keeps things moving, making you forget the numerous holes in logic that are contained in this movie. Eventually, the outrageous last action scene pushes things over the edge, into the B-movie territory I alluded too earlier. Yeah, it's crazy, but I did like the first Crank film after all.

Coincidentally enough, like Crank, Angels & Demons involves a key helicopter scene in its finale. I can't really tell you which scene was crazier out of those two films, so that tells you how wild A & D gets. And I bet you didn't think I'd be comparing it with Crank, mind you. That might be a bad sign for some, but I give A & D a pass.

Next up in my blockbuster viewing went to Star Trek. I don't know what else to write that hasn't already been stated by the majority of critics, who dig this reboot of the franchise that goes back to the 60's TV show. I was a casual viewer of that show as well as it's spin-off incarnation, Star Trek: The Next Generation. Never in all those viewings have I ever seen such action as displayed in the new movie. Everyone does a good job, with a special nod to Simon Pegg's portrayal of Scotty. It kept me laughing, something I don't remember doing too much of when watching the TV shows. The guy who plays Dr. McCoy gets an honorable mention in the humor department too, as his scenes with Kirk, would-be captain of the Starship Enterprise, were enjoyable as well. Speaking of Kirk, the actor chosen to play him does a nice job too, even though I had doubts about his likability going in.

Like I mentioned, I was only a casual viewer of the originals. As such, it was probably easy for me to overlook certain things that hard core Trekkies (aka Trekkers) wouldn't in the portrayals of all the core characters as well as the way the overall Trek universe is presented in general. But it wasn't all mindless blockbuster spectacle, and the set-up for an anticipated sequel is executed just fine, introducing a whole new time line that preserves what's happened in the past (or more appropriately the future) without necessarily having to re-tread ground.

With Star Trek doing so well, it has become the go-to franchise now for space flicks, at least while the world of Serenity is on the shelf.

Lastly, I caught the sequel to A Night At The Museum. The original was entertaining enough, and I didn't really expect much in the sequel, even with some modern comedy regulars in tow, including Superbad's Jonah Hill and Bill Hader, and various cast members from The Office (U.S. version plus U.K. version's Ricky Gervais). It has its moments though, and enough of them for me to give it a pass. Ben Stiller does Ben Stiller again, and it might be time for him try something else, though his scenes with The Simpson's Hank Azaria were standouts.

Oh and Amy Adams charms as usual. I'd ask for more of her if there's another sequel, but I'm not going to ask for another sequel. This one ties things up just fine, and there's absolutely no need for a third one.

So there you have it. The summer blockbuster first shots have been fired, and it should continue to be an entertaining season, at the least.

Monday, May 11, 2009

I don't talk about my faith much publicly anymore, as I feel that most of the time it is a private matter, or something not to be discussed with non-believers unless it is welcome.

In this particular case though, I feel it's warranted.

I've got a cousin who is a few years older than me who, in the last year, was diagnosed with Leukemia. He and his wife had just had their second child when he learned of his diagnosis.

Things were not looking good at all. He was in isolation at the hospital, and was likely bed-ridden for a good chunk of it. Things were not getting better for so long, that they had to transfer him away from his home city in Northern California to Los Angeles for what I believed was to be some experimental procedures.

Yes, nothing was working to the point where the family decided to go with a desperation option.

At the same time, his brother was able to donate bone marrow to him for a transplant.

This was a few months back. I hadn't heard much since then, other than my cousin was sleeping a lot. I wasn't sure if things were any better.

Throughout the whole ordeal, I prayed. My family prayed. We are a religious family. But I wasn't sure how things were going to turn out. I was ashamed that I didn't have more faith.

But I'm happy to say that I found out yesterday that he's cancer free.

And for that, I praise and thank Jesus, the Lord.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Coming out of the dark.

Just coming in to wipe off the dust, and give a nod to some notables...

Happy-Go-Lucky: rented it, loved it. See it!

Cartworks: It hit #100 and is still going. That's my homie.

Til' the next...

-Derrick

Monday, March 9, 2009

What I Watched Instead.

Checked out Two Lovers starring Joaquin Phoenix and Gwyneth Paltrow.

There were no blue "muscles" to look at, and for that, I'm grateful for that alone that I opted for Two Lovers (the only nudity involved a brief shot of Paltrow's left breast).

Shots at that other movie aside, I enjoyed Two Lovers acting performances, especially by Joaquin Phoenix. It's not a totally depressing film, for the most part staying away from easy melodrama where lesser movies would have inserted it.

It's not the best film of 2009 (correction: it was actually released last year) that I've seen so far (I'd give that to Coraline) but I'd personally recommend it.

Other stuff I watched last week:

A Powerful Noise is an excellent documentary. Unfortunately there were only about a handful of us in the theater, and it was a one-time only showing in Stockton (and most likely in your city as well). If you can get a chance to see it though, I highly encourage you to do so.

I also caught the gruesome horror flick, The Descent, on On Demand. It was pretty fun to watch, but the ending left me a little ambivalent. Word is that there is a different (and maybe better) ending for the UK version. There's a sequel supposedly coming out based on the US version though. I'm kind of interested nonetheless.

On television, I caught the first week of Jimmy Fallon taking over for Conan O'Brien in the Late Nite slot, primarily to see how The Roots did as his band. They did a good job, and I'm glad that all of the band members are involved, including Black Thought, who did some singing here and there. The band also played with Ludacris for his performance, which was easily my favorite one out of the week.

As far as the rest of the show is concerned, it's not too bad. It's the first week, so I'm expecting it to get better over time as Fallon relaxes more into the role. He's definitely not as funny as Conan, nor do I expect him to be, but with tighter writing, I can see more special moments from the show accumulating over time. And using "the best band in late night" (in Fallon's own words at the end of each show) whenever possible wouldn't hurt.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Found music.

Some heat I came across while surfing the 'net (specifically Okayplayer's message boards). Enjoy...

"Grand Royal"- Capone N' Noreaga

"Turbulence (Mark Bell Remix)"- Deltron 3030

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Not Watching.

I don't want to watch Watchmen. I'm tired of morose comic book adaptations. I didn't like The Dark Knight, not better than Batman Begins anyway. I'm more looking forward to the slate of Marvel films coming out. But you can keep Watchmen. The graphic novel was enough for me, and the fact that the ending is different in the film is a deal breaker. Ask me why, and I have good reasons. Logical reasons. But no, I'm not watching.

Here's a flick worth watching though: Taken. Liam Neeson kicking ass and getting his white girl (daughter) back. Say word.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

I think my reading list just got a lot bigger.

I might start playing Sim City again.

I wasn't very good at Sim City when I played on the Super Nintendo. After a couple of hurricanes and fires, I quit. But after reading this, I just might try it out again. Hopefully I'd make a better mayor at this point.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Via Ryan North at Dinosaur Comics:

"February 19th, 2009: Karen Ellis suffered a house fire and lost pretty much everything. I'm mentioning this because her comic is good and you'll probably enjoy it (a journal comic that's interesting for the person who didn't write it! Nice) but also because if you've ever wanted to donate to her, now would be a good time!"

"Colombia has just surpassed Sudan as having the worst internal displacement crisis in the world."-witnessforpeace.org

You can take action easily and quickly on this issue over here.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Three more words on Coraline

No young children.

It's a creepy (entertaining) flick, bound to give out nightmares. So I just wanted to add that to my earlier review.

Maybe Shaq Read This Blog

I caught a large part of the All-Star game on Sunday, and a lot of that involved Shaquille O'Neal's playing time. What I saw was some great play from the big (and now older) man. Granted, he played just 11 minutes, but he won MVP for the game. Who knows, maybe I pissed him off. Anyhow, if he can give that much effort the rest of the year, Phoenix might just resurrect from their dismal first half, especially now that their head coach has been replaced.

They've gone back to an uptempo offense, and in two games so far, they've blown out the Los Angeles Clippers. Not too bad, but it's an untested sample size.

As for Shaq, he might not be able to keep up with all the running, but hey, if he gives the type of 11 minutes he gave for the All-Star Game consistently, then that's probably adequate.

Three Word Movie Reviews

Okay, I've watched a grip of movies since I last blogged, and that makes for too much to write. So I'm going to do each one in three words or less. By the way, I actually saw Notorious before The Reader, like I said I might. Same goes for He's Just Not That Into You. Everything else was after. Here goes (each title links to their respective Internet Movie Database page):

Notorious: Puffy didn't distract.

He's Just Not That Into You
: What a waste.

Chocolate: Autism violently fun.

Ghost Town: Pleasurable enough.

Coraline: Don't miss 3-D!

RocknRolla: Dude, I'm lost.

Be Kind Rewind: Really very amusing.

I think that covers it.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Ranking Best Picture, Minus One

Whoops. I forgot to mention Milk.

Well, I don't think I'll be able to catch it before the awards ceremony is broadcast since it's not in any theaters close by. I did see The Reader though. It was pretty good. I still like Frost/Nixon best.

Here's how I'd rank them, excluding Milk of course:

1- Frost/Nixon
2- The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
3 (tie)- The Reader
3 (tie)- Slumdog Millionaire

Doubt should have been in there. Good thing it gets a bunch of nominations in other categories.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

My new favorite author

I finished reading Malcolm Gladwell's Outliers: The Story of Success yesterday in a bookstore (I read the first half last Wednesday), and it was great.

I first learned about Gladwell after my favorite hip-hop band, The Roots, named an album after his book The Tipping Point. The first book of his that I looked at, Blink, was really interesting and enjoyable, so much so that I bought a copy for my girlfriend when we first started dating.

I didn't actually read all of Blink but always intended to do so. My girlfriend hasn't finished it yet, but hopefully I'll get my hands on it soon. Especially now that I've finished Outliers. I want to read The Tipping Point now too. Gladwell just writes so clearly and convincingly.

Outliers makes you look at how we usually view stories of success and why we're probably wrong. There are chapters about plane crashes, The Beatles, Bill Gates, and what rice paddies have to do with why Asians are so good at math, among other things. It's a fascinating book, and I highly recommend it.

For a taste of what the book is about check out the nice videos below:

Gladwell @ AIGA Business and Design Conference

Discussing Outliers on Charlie Rose

The third video below is a talk from around the time Blink first came out but cool nonetheless.
What We Can Learn From Spaghetti Sauce

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Please Tell Your Senators to Get On Board: Obama's Green Recovery Plan

Right now, the Senate is waffling on their support of President Obama's bold, green economic recovery plan.

Obama and the House of Representatives have already said yes to a green stimulus plan which includes $500 million for the Green Jobs Act! Their recovery plan will create good, green jobs for America - but only if the Senate gets on board now.

I took action on Green For All's web site. Please do the same: tell your Senators to get on board, and pass Obama's green recovery plan.

Seriously though-- Arnold would probably love his name on some currency.

Friday, January 30, 2009

The Big Cactus is a big mistake...

...for the coach's pick as an All-Star reserve that is.

Shaquille O'Neal was chosen as a reserve for the Western Conference All-Stars this year, and I don't think it was a proper choice.

Not over Al Jefferson. Not even over Andris Biedrins, who plays for my favorite team, the Golden State Warriors.

Just so I don't look too biased for mentioning Biedrins, let me say that Shaq isn't a better center than Denver's Nene either.

I'm mostly basing these conclusions on statistics. I don't know that that's the best way to back up an argument about something like this. But I believe it's a darn good way.

Shaq isn't even in the top 100 of Yahoo.com's Fantasy Basketball average player rankings (based on per game stats). A player like that does not deserve to be an All-Star, and it doesn't matter that we're not talking about fantasy hoops here.

The truth is that the players whom most people would consider to be All-Star caliber fall somewhere in the top 50 in the Yahoo.com rankings. You can't play fantasy basketball and win without an All-Star caliber player on your team. But like I said, Shaq isn't even top 100.

The funny thing is that he isn't even on a particularly good team this year, so saying that his team's record had something to do with it isn't really all that true. Nene's Nuggets have a better record than O'Neal's Suns, but Nene doesn't get to play in this year's game.

But O'Neal is a more popular player. He just isn't, however, the best player available for the All-Star game. And that diminishes what I think is the point of that game in the first place, which is to see the best players in the NBA play against each other.

But that's just me.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

A couple more for my consideration.

I saw two of this year's "Best Picture" Oscar nominees this week, Slumdog Millionaire and Frost/Nixon.

One of these should be added to my "Standout movies of 2008" list in my last blog entry. And the winner goes to Frost/Nixon.

The only "Best Picture" nominee left for me to see is "The Reader". I think I'm going to need to regard that one as a classic immediately after the final credit rolls in order for it to be deserving of its Oscar. The critics already believe it to be the very opposite of that, so I don't have much faith that it'll be anything more than a movie labeled one of the worst Oscar pics ever if it gets the golden statue.

I'm getting more interested. Unfortunately, I don't remember seeing it still being shown at any of the theaters I frequent. And who knows if I might end up choosing to watch Notorious instead. I would've done just that if there had been any more showings of it left at the times I went for Slumdog and F/N.

For sure though--I'm catching Puff/Big before Kate/Leo. Revolutionary Road is supposed to be better than The Reader, but I can wait for the DVD.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Top of the '08

Okay, ball starts rolling here...so hello.

My personal:
Standout movies of 2008
The Incredible Hulk
Doubt
Pineapple Express
Iron Man
Kung-Fu Panda
Chaos Theory
Redbelt
Persepolis (actually released in U.S. in December, 2007)
Flash of Genius
Sex & The City
The Bank Job
In Bruges
Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
The Visitor
How She Move
Leatherheads
Definitely, Maybe
Son of Rambow
Get Smart
Mamma Mia
Wanted
Tropic Thunder
Cadillac Records
Gran Torino
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Pride and Glory*

I was going to post other lists for books and music, but really, I largely spent far less money on those the past year than I did on movies. It's too complicated for me to try to break down the reasons why right now, but they're not a lost cause for me...yet.

Note: There was a list for "A Top Of The Head List of Favorite Websites, if not in 2008, then lately" but then I started cheating a little with the list so I just removed it. I might do it another time.

Anyway, there you go. Derrick does lists, for one.

*I realized I forgot to put this movie in the list the first time I posted this entry
.