The Oscars 2008 24Feb08 | 1 comments

I had foreseen the difficult contention between No Country For Old Men and There Will Be Blood, two films that should have simultaneously won each category in which they shared a nomination.

Two moments really touched me and filled me with joy:

1. Glen and Marketa winning best song. “Falling Slowly” has haunted me since I saw Once, which was a wonderful film. They came and played here at Stubb’s this past November, but I was out of town.

2. Diablo Cody winning best screenplay.

Jumper 24Feb08 | 2 comments

If you’ve seen the trailer for Jumper, you have pretty much seen the entire movie. It is a fun special effects film populated with unlikeable characters that all act like dicks to each other.

1. There Will Be Blood
2. Ratatouille
3. Cloverfield
4. Juno
5. 9 Lives
6. NausicaƤ of the Valley of the Wind
7. Charlie Bartlett
8. The Big Lebowski
9. Jumper
10. Voices of a Distant Star

The Democratization of Video Games 24Feb08 | 1 comments

I grew up buying computer games that came in plastic ziploc baggies. The manuals had exotic cover art, depicting scenes that could never be reproduced on the limited hardware of that age. But I was a believer. For me, the experience promised by the cover of Temple of Apshai was delivered tenfold. The games I loved were often created by one or two designers working out of their garage, translating their passion for entertaining stories into something that fit on a 5.25″ floppy. Sure, they wanted to make some money off their efforts, but they did so as entrepreneurs, not at the behest of some gargantuan entertainment conglomerate. In those days, there was no real industry to speak of. These games were not products, they were art.

The video game revolution happened. Atari, Nintendo, Coleco and others fired their salvos for a few years and then went silent. But then the motherships from rival galaxies descended and their ground forces dug in, establishing the billion dollar revenue vortex we know today. Now it is armies of designers, artists and programmers laboring over the next blockbuster mega hit.

The indie game designers retreated to the PC, coding in Java or Flash or whatever got the job done. The work now done in this realm is the very definition of niche. Beautiful, innovative and commercially unviable games. Have you ever played, let alone heard of Facade, Knytt, The Blob, The Endless Forest, or Narbacular Drop? Well, most of you have seen Narbacular Drop. These days it goes by “Portal.”

To me, that was an important event. Portal was the poster child representing a group of games crossing over from the indie world to the mainstream world. I include Team Fortress 2 and Katamari Damacy among them.

Still, the developers of these games were uplifted by the investment of higher powers and remained beholden to them. The idea of an independent developer ever seeing their game running on a next gen platform was still an impossible dream.

Until last week. At the Game Design Conference, Microsoft’s Community Games section went live. These are homebrewed indie games created by anyone who can learn to use the free XNA devkit and pay the generously cheap developer member fee ($99/year). Games are reviewed by peers to make sure they meet certain standards and then show up on XBox Live where everyone can download them.

A handful of sample games were immediately available. Microsoft could have played it safe by selecting only side scrolling shooters or crowd-pleasing Sudoku clones. Instead they included games like Culture and Jelly Car. Culture is about growing flower beds and killing weeds. A video game about flower arrangement. Let it sink in. It is utterly engrossing, by the way. All I can say is, bold play, Microsoft. Well done.

Nintendo and Sony are launching similar initiatives, but, as far as I can tell, the ‘Soft has the tastiest offering in town at this point.

Welcome to the video game Renaissance. Go make something astonishing.

http://www.xbox.com/en-US/community/events/gdc2008/xna/default.htm

Trepidation 24Feb08 | 0 comments

So far things have been going pretty smoothly with the Something Real project. I have the venue, the website, a call for submissions, people to review films, and someone working on print advertising. I’m really fretting about the number of submissions, though. I really want to get a lot more films so there is a lot to choose from. I’ve received some definite contenders, but there are some that don’t really fit the theme.

I’ve started actively soliciting for specific films I found from other festivals and on YouTube. Hopefully that will help fill out the rest of the program.

The 4400 Cancelled? WTF? 10Feb08 | 12 comments

Why am I just finding out about this now? How did this news slip by me, AICN?

The 4400 was one of my favorite shows. A smarter version of Heroes with a liberal dose of X-Files.

Hopefully Sci-Fi will do the right thing and pick this show up.

Quick Updates 10Feb08 | 0 comments

1. There Will Be Blood
2. Ratatouille
3. Cloverfield
4. Juno
5. 9 Lives
6. NausicaƤ of the Valley of the Wind
7. Charlie Bartlett
8. The Big Lebowski
9. Voices of a Distant Star
10. Rambo

1. Veronica Mars
2. Lost
3. Torchwood
4. The League of Gentlemen
5. The Mighty Boosh
6. Witch Hunter Robin
7. Robot Chicken
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10.

High Rezolution 04Feb08 | 0 comments

Rez is one of my favorite games of all time. It is video gaming in its purest sense. I remember wanting to play the impossibly gorgeous virtual reality games depicted in Lawnmower Man and other early 90s films. Rez is that impossible game. While there are scores involved, Rez really rewards the player with beauty through the stunning visuals and music. It has achieved perfection on the Xbox 360.

Oh, and I forgot to include Zak & Wiki on the list. I’m still a short ways into it, but I have been quite amused thus far.

1. Rock Band
2. Psychonauts
3. Rez
4. Puzzle Quest
5. Zak & Wiki
6. Dreamfall: The Longest Journey
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Are you local? 04Feb08 | 3 comments

The League of Gentlemen is a nasty bit of BBC comedy. It has a high production value, memorable characters and it is just plain weird. Not as vulgar as Little Britain, but definitely grotesque at times. It can get dark and uncomfortable, falling between The Office and Extras on the discomfort scale.

And yes, Veronica Mars is still #1 after the astonishing season four premiere of Lost. The writing on Veronica Mars is better, the storytelling tighter and the mysteries are far more cohesive, if not as earth-shattering.

1. Veronica Mars
2. Lost
3. Torchwood
4. The League of Gentlemen
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