Check out couchville, a new tv listings site that distinguishes itself with a novel click and drag interface for listings. I’ve been using titantv ever since yahoo’s tv listings ‘upgraded’ themselves and have been very happy with them, and really titantv has a number of features over couchville that will keep it as my primary tool for listings, but couchville is still in development and shows promise, and it’s worth checking out for the interface alone. It’s also worth noting that it’s produced by the BeyondTV folks, who are the developers of the BeyondTV PVR software I’ve been using for the last 3 or 4 years. The site incorporates statistics from the users of the software, which is either a plus or a minus depending on your take on the wisdom of crowds 🙂
Category: Movies-n-music
HBO picks up George RR Martin’s Fire and Ice series
Wow. Couldn’t be more please or surprised. HBO has picked up the rights to George RR Martin’s Fire and Ice series of novels and is going to produce at least one tv series out of it. HBO has been producing excellent episodic television for over 10 years now, generally much better stuff than the broadcast networks, and the Fire and Ice series’ gritty, hard core take on an authurian-themed medieval kingdom is perfect for HBO. I’m really looking forward to this.
The details can be found in this Variety piece.
Interesting little factoid – radio is doomed
I was asked to serve on the advisory board of the college radio station at work. We had our first meeting this past week and an interesting little tidbit came out that once I heard it made perfect sense, but which had never occurred to me. The current generation of students simply don’t use the radio – even if they own one as part of their stereo system they never use it. They don’t even use clock radios anymore. Why? Because almost all of them have ipods and use their computer as their primary source of music. This came out because it’s represented a challenge for the radio station (internet streaming is where it’s at), but I had one of those little light bulb over the head moments when the station director was talking about it.
This will lead to me helping them some with getting going with a platform that will enable podcasting (they’re already streaming), but the whole thing was pretty interesting to me.
A movie dilemma
Goodfellas, Mean Streets, Taxi Driver, Casino, Raging Bull…Martin Scorsese has produced some of the greatest films of my lifetime, and even his ‘failures’ are worth watching. He has a new movie out, The Departed, that’s getting almost universal praise (an almost unprecedented 95% score on rottentomatoes.com, for example). The dilemma is this – the film is an english language remake of a widely praised hong kong movie, Infernal Affairs, which I happen to have sitting in my DVR. Were you me, would you watch the original or the remake first? Were it anyone but Scorsese, I’d watch the original first but in this case I’m torn.
How I manage to watch so many movies
For whatever reason a couple folks emailed me about this recently. Maybe because I just updated the movie review section, who knows (it’s on the right in the links section). Anyway, it’s not a huge secret – basically since I’m single and have a lot of free time, I get to see a lot of movies. I also do a lot of ‘watch movie while working on laptop on the couch,’ and a lot of the movies I see are when I’m in this mode, especially the mediocre to crappy movies, which I tend to watch when I know I’ll only half pay attention whilst I’m working on something else. Lastly, I eat dinner in front of the tv, and generally watch at least half of a movie every night over dinner.
I stopped posting the movie reviews to the weblog because most of the time I only have a sentence or two to say about any given movie, and because if I posted to the weblog for every movie I watched, the reviews would quickly drown out everything else. The use of the wiki is sort of an experiment – so far it’s working ok, though I might end up folding the content back into the site, we’ll see how it goes.
And yes, I know I’m behind on the book reviews section, I’ll get to it when I can.
Sufjan Stevens is the stuff
All The Trees Of The Fields Will Clap Their Hands and The Transfiguration are currently getting constant play by me. Here’s a link to the amazon.com page for the album those tunes are on in case the direct links to the songs don’t work. One of the reviewers on the amazon site summed up my feelings for his album perfectly, which I’ll paraphrase – ‘a perfect blend of melody and haunting, sad optimism.’ I mentioned earlier how an old flame found me through this site (the good sarah, for those of you who remember her) and she and I have been trading emails, kind of working our way through old baggage. It’s been simultaneously fun and depressing, with just enough, oh, soul cleansing I guess, to make the depressing bits worth slogging through. Meanwhile I got surprised with a major life changing dilemma that I had basically known was coming, but it was one of those cases of pretending the future wasn’t looming. I’ll talk about what I can of that over the next few days, but anyway the upshot of all this is I’m in one of my rare melancholic fugues and I happened across Sufjan’s music at just about the perfect time.
Superb unheralded sci fi – The Quiet Earth
So I happened across an absolutely perfect sci fi movie about a month ago that I keep forgetting to blog. I’ve finally remembered. This is sci fi in the sense of ‘speculative fiction that makes you think’ and not in the sense of ‘light labers and exploding wookies and spectacle, grand spectacle, oh my.’ I’m a big fan of the former. The latter I can still enjoy but it doesn’t really do it for me the way it did in, say, my 20’s. Anyway the movie in question is a New Zealand movie from 1985 called ‘The Quiet Earth’. Normally I’d link over to the IMDB entry for the film but this is a movie that challenges you to think about what’s happening and the comments there or anywhere else will spoil it for you. I’d strongly encourage you to NOT look into the film – just add it to your netflicks list and watch it when it shows up.
That being said, I’ll observe that while the movie has a decent imdb rating (7.0 at present), it’s not for everyone. It has the laconic pacing of a movie out of the 70’s, and the story, which involves the experiences of a scientist who wakes up one morning to discover he’s the last living thing on earth, develops slowly. Still if you’re a fan of sci fi, you simply have to check this out, I’d give it 9 out of 10. I’ll also offer this up in lieu of the comments on IMDB – after you’ve watched it, ask yourself this question: was this a sci fi film, or a film about one man’s religious experiences?
New ‘The Shield’ season starts tonight
If you haven’t seen it before, give The Shield a try tonight at 10pm on the FX network. I had no idea how great this show is until I caught a reference to it one night (on the screensavers of all places), which led me to the reviewer’s weblog. Long and short of it is that it’s a great show – if you enjoy the Sopranos or The Wire on HBO there’s more than excellent chance you’ll enjoy The Shield.
The Matrix ends….
..with a whimper. I was one of the few folks I know who enjoyed the second one – ultimately pretentious but still interesting and visually compelling. I went to see the finale to the trilogy this weekend and left….underwhelmed. It didn’t out and out suck, the effects are still fun to watch on the big screen and the movie has the best punch in the history of cinema (I laughed out loud when I saw it), but the plot is basically a big let down and the dramatic, supposedly poignant scene near the end was dreadful. The secondary characters can’t act and the centerpiece of the film, the huge defensive battle at the heart of zion, took too long to get to. If you dig the effects and can stand bad acting and a poor resolution to the central story, it’s worth seeing on the big screen, but if the second one pissed you off the third one’s likely to do you even worse.
Catch me if you can
I finished watching this last night while exercising. I give it three stars. It’s a well acted, well directed and reasonably entertaining film that’s based on a true story about a teenager who runs away from home when his parents split up in the early 1960’s. He becomes the most notorious check kiter in the history of the country, racking up something north of $4 million in bad checks. Leonardo Dicaprio plays the kid and Tom Hanks plays the good hearted but bumbling FBI agent trying to catch him. The movie is a little on the dry side and I thought they pushed the ‘it’s all because of the tragedy of his parents splitting up’ angle a little too hard, but all in all I enjoyed it.
I find it interesting that Hanks chose to play the role of the FBI agent in this movie. He plays it very low key and there’s not much for him to work with. Because of this I would have expected a less prestigious actor in the role. He does a credible job, it’s just like…his talents are wasted here.