It seemed like the internet wouldn't
shut up about this new BBC modern day Sherlock series written by
Stephen Moffat. Everyone knows the story of Sherlock Holmes, but
Stephen Moffat gives his own twist on it. It's set in modern day
London where a Dr. John Watson now home from the army is trying to
fit in with the real world again. He happens upon an old college
friend who introduces him to Sherlock after John mentions that he's
looking for a place to live. From there, Watson is swept into a life
of solving crime while living with a painfully brilliant sociopath.
I can't express how much I love this
series. Sherlock, played by the comically Britishly name Benedict
Cumberbatch, is wonderfully done. This isn't the loveably eccentric
Sherlock as portrayed by Robert Downey Jr. This is a character that
has no idea how to deal with or act in social interactions. He's
rude, offensive, thinks that everyone but him is an idiot, and that
anything not related to a murder case is boring. John Watson, played
by Martin Freeman, acts sorta as Sherlock's interpreter, trying to
patch up rude comments from Sherlock. It's easy to say that Watson is
the closest thing Sherlock has to a friend, despite all their rough
patches. Their relationship makes this show addicting to watch,
seeing them interact and be friends despite how different they are.
If you haven't watched this show yet,
I highly suggest it. Sherlock is a great story that has been redone
over and over, some have been good and some have been mediocre. This
is just one more to add to the good list.
So my computer broke. That was a thing. I was in the middle of typing something to my friend when it just.. turned off. To say I was mad was an understatement. So I checked the battery, the cord, the memory, the hard drive and the CMOS battery, none of them were the problem - especially since it obviously wasn't a virus. That only left one dreaded solution: my motherboard was fried. So I had a funeral for my poor laptop, and made it through finals borrowing other peoples computers, generally just for checking email purposes.
A few days ago I finally got a new computer, and now that I've finally fine-tuned it to my preferences, I can start blogging again! I know, it's very exciting. I have some catching up to do, so expect a slew of posts soon.
Long story story: Computer broke, but it's okay. I'm back!
*Note: This review was for my Cinema Appreciation class. So the review is in a pompus college essay format.*
I
should probably start off by saying I remember next to nothing about
the science I learned in High School; however I've always been fond
of a good historical movie. This movie is about Albert Einstein and
Sir Arthur Eddington, a German theoretical physicist and a British
astrophysicist, respectfully. More specifically it's about the
evolution of Einsteins Theory of General Relativity during a time
when Germany doesn't care to look into any science they can't use for
the Great War and Britain doesn't want anything to do with the
country they are going to war with. At this time everyone held
everything Newton said was put on a pedestal – which stated that
Gravity was what held the universe together, but gave no reason why
or what it was. This left the idea that God was the reasoning for
Gravity, the why behind the what. The only thing Einstein has done by
this point was suggest that everyone was moving at it's own time, and
that time was not a universal standard measure. With no way to prove
or disprove his theory, the British scientist at Cambridge decided
his theory was not relevant to the real world, especially with a war
going on.
Sir
Arthur Eddington wasn't so quick to brush off Albert Einstein.
Instead he sent Einstein a letter posing a question: why was Newton
correct about all the position and orbits of the planets except
Mercury. What was different about Mercury that just eluded Newton's
otherwise correct theory. With that question as a basis, Einstein
created his Theory of General Relativity which stated that it was the
Suns gravity that shaped space, twisting it out of it's original
shape and changing how we view it. If his theory was correct it would
completely change how the world was viewed, but first it had to be
proven. That's where Eddington came in, to observe space to see if
Einsteins theory was correct. These two scientists who have never met
went against what each of their countries were telling them to try
and understand the world around them a little bit better.
This
was a made for TV movie, co-produced by BBC and HBO Films. For being
a made for TV movie, I was surprised by the cast for the film. Sir
Arthur Eddington was played by David Tennant(Doctor Who, Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Fright Night),
Albert Einstein was played by Andy Serkis(Lord of the
Rings, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, The Prestige)
and Jim Broadbent(Moulin Rouge, Harry Potter and the
Half-Blood Prince, The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe)
plays one of Eddington's colleague. All three are rather big names
and all three were absolutely perfect in this movie. Andy Serkis's
Einstein was half crazed from his intelligence that was being ignore,
never going too overboard. He wanted more from the world than he was
getting, wanted to prove that he had knowledge that was worth
listening too. Jim Broadbents character played the main pro-England
character wonderfully. He thought that there was no way that Newton
could be proven wrong, especially by a German scientist. David
Tennant's Eddington was probably my favorite. He went against what
he's believed all his life – that God was behind everything –
went against his faith for the possibility that some scientists he
new met could be right. He played someone who was conflicted, hopeful
for the possibility of helping to discover a new theory but worried
about what this could mean for his Faith all while struggling with a
possible repressed homosexuality that David Tennant hinted at
perfectly..
My
only real complaint for his movie was that they didn't really touch
upon Albert Einsteins wife and kids very often. You saw them once
while he still lived in Switzerland before he moved back to Berlin
for his research, and once more when they came to visit him and his
wife found out he was having [another?] affair. You never find out
whether he and his wife split up or work it out, nor if Einstein
worked things out with his kids. As far as the audience knows, they
are out of his life forever and he doesn't seem to particularly care.
However that pales next to how much I enjoyed this movie. It felt
authentic and well thought out. All of their science talk was dumbed
down a little so I didn't so I didn't get lost in all the gobbldy
gook, yes still letting me learn something from it. This seemed like
a movie just about anyone could enjoy if they gave it a chance. It
has it's flaws, but the abilities of the actors manage to overshadow
any and all of them.
(Also: Wow I suddenly can't tab anything. that's super strange. I'll figure that problem out later.)
Yea, it's been a while. I have a lot of catching up to do. I don't really have a good reason except that I read a book that just left me so.. overwelmed? That might not be the right word for it. Anyways I couldn't stop thinking about it. I went to write about it a few separate times now and nothing I say seems to be able to describe this book properly. For those of you who don't know, John Greens new book The Fault In Our Stars came out January 10, 2012.
Hazel Grace Lancaster is a 16 year old girl with cancer. Some rare kind that has left her relying on an oxygen tank. For her life almost entirely consists of laying around the house watching bad reality shows, going to a cancer survivor support group and going to college classes. Not the most happening social life. Then she meets Augustus Waters and everything changes.
This book was equal parts funny, thoughtful, and devastatingly sad. I've read this book twice now since it's come out, and I still get swept up by it. In the book, Hazel has a book that means the world to her. To describe her book, she said: “Sometimes, you read a book and it fills you with this weird evangelical zeal, and you become convinced that the shattered world will never be put back together unless and until all living humans read the book. And then there are book which you can't tell people about, books so special and rare and yours that advertising your affection feels like a betrayal.” I love that and how unbelievably true that feels. For Hazel, her book seemed to speak directly to her – understanding her on a level no one else did with her cancer. I don't have cancer, but I do know what it feels like to be spoken to through a book.
I love everything about this book: from its pefrect description of books to its ability to portray a gradual relationship that left me breathless. Hazel and Augustus have a love that seems to come out of no where and sweep you off their feet while managing to feel real and true. It manages to remind you what it was like to fall in love, that maybe all the pain of just living is worth it just to have this person in your life. This is a book I feel like everyone should read. Maybe, just maybe, it'll become your special and rare book that you want to hide away from the world.
I also highly suggest watching this song that this person wrote about the book. It's hauntingly beautiful. Don't worry, there aren't any spoilers, just lots of quotes. I listened to this song while writing this review, it just sums up the book so perfectly.
Why We Broke Up by Daniel Handler
A family friend gave me a bookstore gift certificate, so I wandered through the book store either looking for a book I might not usually buy with my own money or one I really really wanted. I found this in the new release section for the Young Adult books and it was a little more expensive then most YA books were – putting it in the not usually category. This book was surprisingly heavy for it's size because it had paper you could print pictures on, the really thick king that are in children books. I guess when you have a full book of that paper, it makes the book super heavy. I was intrigued.
This book is written in a letter format. Min Green and Ed Slaterton just broke up. Min was the kind of person who saves everything from relationships in a box, mementos to remind her of different stages of their relationship. She loved foreign films and wanted to be a film director, Ed played football. They were very different from each other with very different social circles. Now that they've broken up, she is giving the box to Ed, since some of the stuff in there was his. Accompanying the box is a letter that Min is writing to explain their relationship and ultimately why they broke up.
This book let you follow their relationship from the beginning with pictures of items in the box, each item being explained how it played some part in their relationship. You get to experience a relationship spark, bloom, then end right there with Min as she relives everything herself. This is the sorta book that you just can't read without being reminded about you own doomed high school relationship. You know the ones, where your relationship suddenly springs up out of no where so fast that you forgot how different the two of you are. When it's over you look back and wonder why it didn't end sooner. This book manages to make you look back at that relationship with a sort of fondness for what it was, not what it ended up as. It manages to an almost painful to remember subject matter, beautiful.
This is a sequel to 13 Little Blue Envelopes, which is an excellent book. I suggest it. This book takes place about 6 months after the first one. Someone has contacted Ginny saying that they found her last Blue Envelope and wants to meet up. Without really thinking twice, Ginny goes off to England to continue her Aunts adventure. While there she find new friends and that not everything can stay the same.
I really really enjoyed this movie. 13 Little Blue Envelopes is a book that I definitely though tneeded a sequel so I was pleased to actually get one. This book was everything I hoped it'd be. It took me to places I didn't expect and brought me to places I'd hoped it would. The ending felt perfectly final, giving me the closer I wanted while still letting me imagine what could happen. It was a great sequel. I suggest reading the first one if you haven't and I greatly suggest the sequel if you have.
Storm Front by Jim Butcher
Harry Dresden is Chicago's only professional Wizard. He runs a private investigation where more often then not he gets calls asking if he really is a Wizard than a job. He's getting pretty desperate when the police calls him in to look at a murder scene who's victims hearts where brutally ripped out. It reaks of Wizard. From there his life goes down hill as he searches for the Dark Wizard who is the cause of the murder before he is blamed for it. Along the way he runs into vampires, a drug that grants the users magical Sight, an underground mob boss and a few demon.
My friend lent me this book, insisting that I read it. There are 15 books in this series so far. I know! What do you even do with a 15 book long series? So of course I was a little apprehensive. Any book series that just shells out books tends to be a little.. low on substance. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed this book. Sure it wasn't some literary gold mine, but it was enjoyable. I liked reading it and I found it sucking me into it's plot. It's a good book to just zone out in and relax.
Fool Moon by Jim Butcher
Harry Dresden is back. After his adventure in the first book, he's not on the greatest terms with the Police. When they call him in because of another suspicious murder scene, it doesn't take him long to figure out Werewolves are the cause. Now while investigating he has to work carefully since the Police are constantly suspicious of him. Dresden quickly finds out that trying to dodge Police AND Werewolves is not conducive to solving this murder.
Just re-read my second paragraph from the first book, because it's basically the same thing. An enjoyable read.
An oil drilling team's plane goes down on the way home from Alaska. Gathering together their senses and everyone still alive, they try to survive the harsh weather while trying to find civilization. And then the wolves come.
I was excited to see this movie: Liam Neeson fighting wolves. What more could you ask for? I gotta say, I actually got more than I asked for. The story was emotional and tense and I actually wanted all the characters to survive – even the dumb annoying ones. The movie definitely didn't pull any punches throughout the movie, especially at the end. Personally I loved the ending, it felt appropriate; however I know a lot of people who just didn't like it. Overall I liked the movie a lot more then I thought I would, it might even be going on my to be bought list.
I only watched this movie because my roommate heavily suggested it, but I was still hesitant. Chick Flicks aren't really my thing, and despite how much I enjoy Emma Stone I didn't have high hopes for this movie.
When Cal's wife asks for a divorce, his life gets turned upside-down. In a fit of depression and uncertainty, Cal wandered into a bar which a professional ladies man decides to take him up under his wing, Jacob. Jacob takes pity on Cal, giving his life a much needed make-over with the desire to win back his wife.
At first I wasn't into this movie. It wasn't particularly funny nor was it very romantic for being a romantic comedy. None of the characters seemed very interesting or dimensional to me and it just seemed so not interesting. And then there was this point in the movie, maybe about halfway thought, when it just suddenly stepped up its game. The romance of the moment swept me away, giving me an 'Aw' moment that I rarely get from movies. Overall the movie wasn't bad. It was a fun watch which is usually all I require out of romantic comedies. However that one moment of romance made the movie worth watching more me.
Also I'd like to note that I have no idea why everyone is obsessed with Ryan Gosling. Sure he's handsome in that classic Hollywood sorta way, but I wouldn't say he's significantly more handsome than any of the other actors. It just seems like the Gosling Fever came out of no where with no particularly good reason for it. If anyone can explain it to me, I'd appreciate it.