Tuesday, February 23, 2010

I'm addicted


to the Sims 3! I waited so long but then all my willpower just crumpled. Watch my real social life go out the window as I sim out. But it's so fun for my perfectionist personality :)
The new game is easier to use than previous versions and that makes it more rewarding. Everything is a little smoother and more detailed. Your sims make friendships easier and it takes less to make them upset. They also have a much more instant goal/reward system that keeps things running smoothly.

They also changed the game so that you are really encouraged to make one household and just stick with it rather than changing your active characters constantly. I'm not a huge fan of this because one of my main joys with the game is making my own sims and then having them meet in the Sim World.

They also have "opportunities" where you are offered a challenge and if you complete it, then you get rewards. I like this because it keeps the game spicy. I also love the new "trait" system where you can give your Sims characteristics like workaholic, flirty, lucky, daredevil, artistic, natural cook, hopeless romantic etc. Then they have certain affinities and can learn faster. All in all, a better change than from the first to second version. Sims 3 makes things easier for the player while being just as challenging and absorbing.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Oscar contender: The Hurt Locker

I finally got The Hurt Locker through Netflix, after it had been labeled "very long wait" for a very long time. There was no way I would have watched this movie except for two things 1) it was directed by a woman and 2) it is nominated for best picture. I do not go for war movies. But I wanted to see what a war movie directed by a woman and considered one of the best pictures of the year would be like.

So, first of all, yes it is still a war movie. There are bombs and military garb, and sweaty men drinking whiskey and wrestling with each other. There's alpha dog behavior and testosterone. The movie is basically about a bomb squad in Iraq. Their leader dies and a new guy, William James, replaces him. William James is wild and heroic and inspires his followers. The most interesting aspect of the film is James' psychology. As the viewer, we can see that he is on the edge of something- sanity, maybe?

James bonds with a young boy who is later killed. There is a sequence with James running around Baghdad as a vigilante, a wannabe Batman searching in a city of "infidels" for someone to blame for his young friend's death. James becomes an impostor, a vulnerable outsider doing a dangerous job for unknown, unclear reasons. There is no Truth to found in this version of war.

For me, the clearest statement of the film was the last five minutes. We see James back in the states, utterly lost in the sterile aisles of a giant grocery store. He is unable to bond with his family. The distance between the two realities- one of war, one of homeland- feels immense and uncrossable. When James goes back to Iraq, you can feel his joy. The war has changed him. He can't get that intensity of feeling, the tick tock countdown of a bomb, the adrenaline of good versus evil, anywhere else.

Good film, but I don't know if it is great. It wasn't radical, or cinematically stunning. It wasn't even that original. But despite all the macho violence, it did have a heart and drew me in. That's success in my book.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Snow day!

I worked a half day today due to Snowmaggedon's arrival in NYC. Here's a quick peek at the lovely white fluff in Harlem.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Superbowl Sunday

So I actually watched a whole football game! And the proper way too, with friends and tons of junk food and cold beer. The game was surprisingly interesting. There was the underdog spirit of the Saints and the whole rooting for New Orleans to actually gain a small but important victory. And they were losing for a while too, so it make the last touchdown sweet. The commercials were bad though. They were just boring and conservative. Now to enjoy the whole year before I watch football again!

Monday, February 1, 2010

Gaga rocks my world (and the Grammys)

Lady Gaga & Elton John

Check out this video of  Lady Gaga opening the Grammys with a fabulous duet with Elton John. Meld her ballad "Speechless" with Elton's "Your Song" plus glitter and glasses, and you've got camp heaven.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Bright Star

If ever poetry and film could intertwine, this would be it. Bright Star is a slow, dreamy, emotionally luscious film that, like all good poetry, still has a sting beneath all the flowery prose. What kind of sting? The sting of death, of poverty, or reality. What kind of great poet dies at 25, as Keats did? What a waste. But maybe it's the impending knowledge of your own mortality that brings out great poetry. It's really that mystery that makes Bright Star interesting. And to see, as always, the women behind the great men. The muse. The heart.

I liked Bright Star- it was hard to love. It's not at all what Hollywood grooms audiences to like. It has a very slow pace. The scenes are all about the dynamics between people, the power of words in a pale, light washed room. And most of all, it's about the clash between love and reality- not really Hollywood's thing. But it's my cup of tea. 

Friday, January 22, 2010

What goes around comes around

When I was a senior at Swarthmore I took advantage of their externship program to spend a week in New York City interning for Ark Media. Ark was working on a documentary about lobotomies. I remember watching One Flew Over the Cukoo's Nest and marking spots that referred to lobotomies and reading an autobiography of a woman who spent time in a mental hospital when lobotomies were common. I even went on a pre-interview to meet one woman whose mother was lobotomized by the infamous Dr. Walter Freeman. I sat in on an editing session with the director and editor as they pieced the film together. And now it's going to air on PBS! It's always interesting how different parts of your life collide.


The Lobotomist: American Experience airs 3/22/10 in NYC :)

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Project Runway Avenue

New York is the center of the fashion world! Or so declares Project Runway Avenue now in midtown near 39th street and and 7th Ave/Fashion Ave. I went to see the new signpost and catch a peek at the Runway cast. Heidi was a no show but I was more excited to see Tim Gunn. Michael Kors and Nina Garica were also there, which was cool but I didn't relate to them as much as the contestants.



A whole slew of them were there but the only two I could name off the top of my head were Austin Scarlett and Laura Bennett. Austin also appeared briefly on another of my favorite guilty pleasures, Say Yes to the Dress because he now designs wedding dresses.



It was a blazingly cold morning, but worth the pink cheeks and cold toes to see the designers in the flesh.

Also, the article and picture from Racked.com