Saturday, December 24, 2011

Rangers vs Islanders and Flyers

1) Rangers and Islanders - Islanders did surprisingly well, their defense was intense. Rangers managed to keep the lead, though.
2) Rangers and Flyers - Lundqvist did amazingly with his saves. Considering the amount of shots made on goal...the fact that only two got in? Pretty darn good.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Super 8

Recently I was able to watch the movie Super 8, written and directed by J.J. Abrams. The movie was a good sci-fi flick, with cool effects and an altogether engaging story.

The movie starts with a backstory that serves to both (a) mention the main plot and (b) drive SEVERAL character relationships and subplots. The movie is about a train crash that occurs while a bunch of local kids (our stars) are filming a movie, and develops into a conspiracy-like mystery. It's almost like a dark Scooby Doo, though it touches on things much deeper than some guy in a suit who wants to keep kids off of his lawn.

The movie, the first central point of the plot, fades slowly into the background as the circumstances surrounding the train crash become more pressing, and the interplay of movie and said circumstances drive the exploration and evolution of many character relationships. In some cases, this works to be a sort of "Um, guys, the boat is on fire, stop kissing and making up and get moving," but it's never excessively drawn out like that. It's just that, in some instances, it seems a little out of place.

Contrary to the darker tone of the movie, the ending is surprisingly fairy tale-like -- and I'm saying that with the full knowledge that we are talking about science fiction. The ending made a viable, though improbable, resolution, tying everything up in a neat little bow that shouldn't be quiiiite possible when you're dealing with oh, I don't know, A FLAMING TRAIN CRASH. I can feebly try to justify the way it happened, but my attempted reasoning doesn't really have much power.

Overall, the movie wasn't bad, though.

Starburst Summer Fun Fruits

Every time I see a candy and the word "new," I seem to be drawn to it. XD Especially when it's relatively inexpensive.

So, when I saw Starburst's Summer Fun Fruits, I grabbed a package to try it. Overall, it was an average Starburst-ness for me, with two flavors I really liked, and two that I was meh on or just didn't like.

Kiwi Banana: I really, really liked this one. It was sweet and banana-y, but had a noticeable tang from the kiwi. Probably the one that made the biggest impact on me overall.

Strawberry Watermelon: It might be that I just don't remember how my favorite flavor (strawberry) tastes, but this one tasted a little like that -- it had that sweetness, but it was really gentle and had a freshness to it like watermelon. This flavor was also really good.

Cherry Splash: I still can't figure out what makes this flavor unique. To me, it just tasted like plain old cherry.

Lemon-Limeade: I didn't like this flavor for the sole reason that I don't like citrus flavored things, in general. For someone who does, though, I'm sure it tastes great.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Manchester United Got Pwned

Admittedly, I'm not a huge soccer fan (yet). As such, I don't have a clear way of the way the leagues are, particularly over in the UK. But, from what I've heard, Manchester United is the team to beat. Or it was. And, from what I know, or thought I knew, 6-1 is one hell of a point difference. So, since Manchester City beat Man U by five points...wow. Looks like both Manchester teams are doing well, from what it says here. (reading ESPN)

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Freedom

This CGI anime was actually quite engaging, very well done and had an awesome story from the most-bits that I saw. Eden is a moon base (or complex of moon bases, I'm not entirely sure if it's just one or all of them together) that operates by rigorous rules, keeping the last of the humans in order and alive. Takeru, a teenager in Eden, breaks a few of the stringent rules, getting him assigned to community service on the lunar surface. It's then that something falls -- a photo of a beautiful girl, a paradise-like setting, and a message that Earth is well, is anyone out there? Driven largely by his instant infatuation with the girl in the picture and curiosity towards a planet thought to be dead, and aided by his friends, Takeru starts an adventure that may very well turn the order of Eden upside-down. I didn't see all of it, but I saw a good portion, I would say. The story has a very epic feel to it with lots of funny moments interspersed. I found it rather enjoyable.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

The Galaxy Railways

*ahem* TRAINS IN SPAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACE No, seriously. Trains in space. They go from steam engines on up, but they are literal trains. In space. With windows that open. From the cabins. Into space. INTO SPACE. WINDOWS. Anyway. I'm going to get hung up on that point again, so I better spit this out quick. Father is a captain of a train called Big One, in the SDF or Space Defense Force. Being a captain, he's always away, so his two sons, Mamoru and Manabu, decide to sneak to the restricted train platforms to see him off. They end up on the train in space, and conveniently this happens to be the time that shit gets real. Let's just leave it at "Yes, seriously, his sons watch as he detaches Big One's engine and suicides into the threat." Fast forward five years, the elder brother, Mamoru, enters the SDF. Spoiler alert, um, he dies too. So then it's Manabu's turn to leave his mother behind and join the SDF. And then on the way to wherever the SDF headquarters is (IN SPACE) they crash through a time rift because the train derails, likely because Manabu and what is likely the female lead don't know how to get past their prides and close a window. That is open. In their cabin. In space. And the time rift takes them back so that Manabu sees his brother die, AND the obento that was packed for Manabu gets left behind with said brother, so that he gets to die with a picture of his family by his side and a mouthful of his mother's home cooking. And that's about the first two episodes.

Jewel BEM Hunter Lime

At first, I was drawn to this anime because it was deep in the corner, in the "I have never even heard of this before" category. So, out of curiosity, I pulled it out. The story had to do with a magic user, Lime, who must recover seven magical jewels. Or something. With her partner Bass, a blue-skinned, three-eyed humanoid that has to hide in human form and has a perverted streak enviable of any anime character, the angel-winged Lime must transform into various outfits and go incognito to find and recover the jewels. Which turn into monsters that are absolutely freakin' adorable chibi object things. So basically, adorable chibi things + cute, buxom babe + perverted jokes everywhere. And Bass constantly falls/gets run over/etc. I lost count of the craters he made. And that was just episode 1. A good example of your run-of-the-mill over-the-top, fanservicey, quirky anime, at the very least. Unfortunately I only had access to a little of the animation so I can't honestly give a formed opinion on story...it's not epic or anything, but seems straightforward, at least. ...Did I mention fanservicey? I think I keep on understating that.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Power Stone

I have no idea if this was an anime originally or not; it had a more kidsy cartoonish look to it from the getgo. That, I could deal with. The peppy, young-oriented feel I could tolerate. Forced voice acting that made me grind my head against the wall? No way.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Last Writes

I just finished another Jaine Austen novel, the one that I believe is second if going chronologically, Last Writes. This one was hilarious - Jaine manages to get on as a guest writer on a sitcom, and finds out how un-glamorous Hollywood life can actually be. Of course, everyone is starstruck (and proposing their scripts), but the gossip train really fires up when a murder occurs on set.

This story was hilarious and emotionally charged, with Jaine investigating upon an earnest request. While she battles the rigors of television production and the demands of her cat, Prozac, the mystery unfolds in a way that is a surprise unless the reader has a good memory and/or reads the book in one sitting (most mysteries go like that, though, unless you take notes, which...you're going to find out, ANYWAY, so...) and has lots of logical explanations that makes the most common guesses (my most common) at least partially right. Fingers point everywhere until the story, at last, crests at the confession.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Cherry Cheesecake Murder

Hollywood comes to Lake Eden in this highly entertaining installment of Hannah Swensen's delicious detective work. (Er, snooping. She's not investigating officially, after all.) This book broke from the others I've seen in that it started with a prologue -- from the getgo, you know who the victim is. This leaves room for most of the book to focus on the relationships between characters and to establish possible motives while watching a small town relish in the limelight. Added to the mix, if Hannah's debacle between two suitors wasn't bad enough, an old friend appears on the scene and seems to somewhat sweep Hannah off her feet. The book is mostly relationships and happenings of a small town, gossip and little problems. This is fun to read, and gives the reader a lot to think about, especially with the murder victim already in mind.

I think this was my favorite one yet.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Nelson Tethers: Puzzle Agent

I recently played the game Nelson Tethers: Puzzle Agent. It's a computer/iThings game that is also available through the PlayStation Network, for those of you that don't own anything more Apple than...well...an apple, or don't feel like downloading games onto your computer, be it for preserving a dinosaur or paranoia (I don't blame you).

The story delves into the one-man Puzzle Agency sector of the FBI. The lone agent, Nelson Tethers, is called to rural, wintry Scoggins, Minnesota. The Scoggins eraser factory, supplier of the White House's erasers, has shut down after a mysterious incident, and it's up to Agent Tethers to solve the mystery and get a fresh supply of erasers before the President has to strike things out for lack of a better correction method.

As the premise probably suggests, the plot is rather amusing, with characters that personify a quirky little town in the middle of Where The Hell Am I. It's rather short, though, and leaves with only one question answered at the end after leaving another plotstring in blatantly untied view and hinting at several other "wait, WHAT?" points. It's perfect for a sequel, for which there already is -- Puzzle Agent 2 was released by Telltale Games was released at the end of June for computer/iThings.

Since it is a game primarily based on puzzles, and since it is a game, the gameplay, of course, is a serious factor. The puzzle games weren't impossible; I was able to blast through most of them, to be honest, though some took some good thought and there was one towards the end that I got REALLY stuck on (by this I mean "I spent two hours with sleep in between trying to get the damn pattern right"). So, they're not the hardest in the world, but they're good exercise for one's mind. There's a variety of puzzles, from straight out stare at the answers and use logic to a wee bit of math to turning panels in order to make a viable path to the goal. There were also a few jigsaw-style puzzles, where you had to arrange things in a certain way - i.e., at the very beginning of the game, you have to reconstruct a ripped up piece of paper to read a hidden message. Although these sound like they would be difficult, the game has a mechanism where the pieces snap together when they're in the right position, like an online jigsaw puzzle can. This makes it a lot easier, and there was one puzzle (right after the one I got stuck on) that I literally was able to do by dragging one piece around, randomly dropping and collecting until the entire thing was done. As such, these puzzles seemed kind of extraneous, but without that mechanism they would have seemed ridiculously hard.

All in all, the short time I spent on this game was really enjoyable. It tickled and engaged the mind all at the same time.

Friday, August 5, 2011

The PMS Murder

On a recent murder-mystery binge, I finished The PMS Murder, one of the Jaine Austen books by Laura Levine. Jaine's wise-cracking, food loving personality warmed up to me and cracked me up almost as soon as I started flipping the pages. The writing was as quirky and funny as I remembered from This Pen for Hire and the selection from Candy Cane Murder. I thoroughly enjoyed weaving my way through the Los Angeles mystery of a murder at a very high-scale home -- one at which Jaine herself happens to be at when the death occurs. Interactions with Lance, her nosy next-door neighbor, and the other personalities in her fellow murder attendees/suspects are entertaining and Jaine's sharp wit keeps things interesting and moving. Plus, watching her job as a freelance writer pan out alongside the story is quite amusing.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Candy Apple Red

One of the genre of murder mysteries followed by everyday, plucky women that find themselves in a situation with the curiosity and means to discover who committed the murder du jour, Nancy Bush's Candy Apple Red introduces odd-job worker and Oregon resident Jane Kelly. Using the knowledge gained from criminology courses she took to fawn over a now ex-boyfriend, Jane dabbles in tasks such as bearing the bad news of a 72-hour eviction notice to their recipients. By association, she is brought into a slightly different job, one that concerns an infamous local tragedy. Jane goes through her tasks with an irresistible sass and wit, taking plunges more hesitant people wouldn't dare, getting drinks on the house while schmoozing with Lake Chinook's best, and finding herself getting more and more involved in a mystery that blooms to bigger and bigger proportions. The book moves at a good pace, with several humorous asides and subplots that wind their way into allegories and unexpected revelations -- or that just provide a moment of amusement.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

The Locket

The Locket by Richard Paul Evans was an intriguing story. The book is essentially a flashback, with the prologue and epilogue being "present day". It tells the story of Michael Romney, a Utah man struggling to keep on his feet and make ends meet taking care of his terminally ill mother, a duty he forfeited his college education for. Michael takes up a position at The Arcadia, a nearby nursing home. Michael's relationship with his coworkers, the residents of the home, and his girlfriend, Faye, intertwine in ways that grab the heart and keep one unable to put the book down. A twist midway through shows the effect of relationships and personalities, eventually bringing the book to an immensely satisfying ending. The writing is heartfelt and connects deeply, bringing characters to life almost as though it is a stylized biography.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

A's @ Yanks, Yanks Pound A's

I really wish I'd watched the game last night. Thanks to the wonders of the internet, I got to see the incredible nine-run inning. A three-run homer, two forced runs, and finished off by a grand slam by Teixiera. Wow.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Derek's 3000th

I know this is late, I've been neglecting this blog, I suppose. :/ But I wanted to leave a short blurb to congratulate Derek Jeter, again, on his 3000th hit. What a milestone, first Yank to do it. And he did it with a bang - a home run! That moment was amazing...

Japan Wins Women's World Cup

The game was really intense, from the peripheral view I was able to get. USA scored, then Japan caught up. Rinse, repeat. The penalty kicks were what it came down to, and Japan outmaneuvered USA there for the win - in great part thanks to Japan's goalie, the USA penalty kicks missed, while Japan made the requisite scorings. Congratulations to Japan and the USA both, it was a great, great game.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Women's World Cup Finals

I will be honest, I wasn't REALLY paying attention, just peripherally hearing what was going on, but the finals might have to be watched. Japan vs USA. That...is going to be really interesting, it sounds. Gonna have to pay attention there.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Rozen Maiden

I recently watched the anime Rozen Maiden. From what I hear, there are two seasons; I watched just the first. I have to say, I really liked it. It was an interesting mix of adorable shoujo, comedy, and action. The characters they did introduce were distinctive, in my opinion, and the story carried on quite well. It was certainly a fun watch, though not without its darker moments, as the often Gothic theming might imply...it was really good, I thought.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

"Blow" by Ke$ha

It's a catchy song, a lot of her stuff is, but listening to it more closely, the line sounds to me like:

"this place about to blow"

As in, the copula is absent. There is an 'is' missing.

Yes, this is what occupies my attention. Blatant, repeated grammar misuse. Not saying I'm perfect, but it's noticeable for me.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

The Canucks and the Sharks (NHL Semifinals)

So, looks like the Canucks are in the finals, they took out the Sharks with what appeared to be relative ease. Bruins and Lightning play tonight; Tampa Bay (Lightning) is on the brink of getting pwned out of the finals, but they're not out of it yet. The Bruins are playing strong, though. If it's not gonna be Canucks vs Bruins, there's going to be a tough road ahead on the ice.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Opening Day: Yankees Win!

I can't believe I got so caught up in things that I didn't post. Opening Day was Thursday, and the Yanks were the openers for the American League (Atlanta and Washington opened for the National League; the Braves beat the Nats 2-0.) CC (Sabthia) pitched damn well, and the Yanks won their first game of the season! It was 6-3, in the end. Great start of the season for the Yanks! :)

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Nets @ Knicks

This game was pretty intense. At halftime, I saw, the Nets were actually ahead by ten points exactly. Throughout the third quarter, though, the Knicks slowly caught up, and the game ended with a pretty close score of 116-120 Knicks.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Rangers @ Bruins

An intense last period, with Lundqvist blocking a barrage of shots by the Bruins, who I'm sure were desperate to tie it up. Alas, their efforts went unrewarded - the Rangers won the day, score 1-0. Lundqvist has a personal season high of 11 shutouts now, I believe the statistic was. (Got that from ESPN I think...not totally sure.)

Paprika

Finally, finally, FINALLY got to see the animated movie Paprika, directed by the late great Satoshi Kon. I've been wanting to for a long time because the stills I'd seen were so beautiful and colorful. And, now that I've seen the movie, I know why.

The story is one of those "the bounds of technology may have been reached; see how tampering with nature is screwing us over!" ones. Scientists have developed a device called the DC Mini, which allows people to view and record dreams. However, a terrorist has gotten ahold of said device, and it's up to the scientists, as well as a mysterious dream-world woman, a chipper redhead named Paprika, to stop them before they make all hell break loose.

The movie is interesting and intense, and the theme is certainly applicable to today. The visuals are great, and just as trippy as one would expect a movie that half takes place in dreams would be.

I'm quite glad I watched it at last.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Superbowl XLV

The Sports Aspect:

This was a great game. The Packers were on it at the beginning, holding the Steelers at bay and scoring two touch downs in something like twenty-four seconds -- it was pretty intense. A Packer grabbed the ball/intercepted/whatever and ran with it like a maniac right after the first touchdown.

And then the Steelers began to play. (injuries on the GB side probably didn't help much) They stopped being sloppy and started being dangerous. They started scoring -- at first it was just a field goal, but then there were a few good touchdowns. The gap started closing, and fast. A two point conversion brought it to a six-point game. In other words, if the Steelers scored a touchdown and got the extra point (which is more or less a given), they won. Green Bay'd been on top the whole game, and now, they had two or three minutes to defend themselves from giving it up at the end.

Long story short, they managed to hold out. Green Bay managed to get possession of the ball with about fourty-five seconds left, give or take a few, and that was that.

The Green Bay Packers won Super Bowl XLV with a score of 31-25.

The Non-Sports Aspect:

Christina Aguilera opened with the Star-Spangled Banner. I admit, although I respect her voice, I was frankly disappointed with the performance she gave. She embellished the anthem so much that there were points I could barely tell what song she was singing. I'm not talking the way that Jimi Hendrix did the anthem on guitar - THAT was a GOOD way of embellishing. This was a bad way. She slurred words together and everything. It wasn't very good at all.

The half time show was all right. It was the Black Eyed Peas, being very sparkly with lots of lighted costumes (for them and their scads of dancers). Very Tron. The audio work was pretty bad, though. I actually texted someone to ask if my television was going wonky, and they were like, no. What I heard was a lot of leveling issues, such as Fergie's voice being muted out and then coming back...it's like they couldn't balance it right or something. I will say, though, it was an interesting show. Besides, there's one part I HAVE to give them absolute props for. When I heard "Sweet Child of Mine" playing, I was like, is that Guns n' Roses? What? And then Slash came out of the stage!!! I seriously squealed, pretty much. Huge fan. (Slash is the guitarist for GnR). Also, Fergie's voice really goes well with that song. She does a good parallel to Axl Rose.

The commercials this year were pretty good. Some of them were eh, but some of them were great. My favorites were the Pepsi Max commercials, hands down. There were three of them - the first date one, the dieting one (where the girl keeps taking away food from the guy), and the watercooler one (ends up with a jerk getting a Pepsi Max to the nuts). Also, the Sealy commercial that showed a bunch of couples lying next to each other in bed and then going "it's better on springs" or whatever...that was funny. There were sooo many good commercials. And you can find them all here:

http://msn.foxsports.com/video/shows/super-bowl-commercials-2011

Friday, February 4, 2011

Devils @ Rangers

I caught only the last minute or two of this game, and wow, what a heartbreaking ending to catch. The Rangers, in something like the last fifteen seconds of the game, made not one but two rather good shots at the goal. With five seconds left, I remember, something got past the goalie but was juuuuuust wide enough to bounce off the goalpost the wrong way. They were THAT CLOSE to forcing overtime, but it didn't happen, and the Devils won the game, 3-2.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

This Pen For Hire

I talked about Candy Cane Murder in a prior post. By sheer chance, when I'd grabbed that book from the library, thinking it was just a pure Joanne Fluke Hannah Swensen mystery, I'd passed by gloms of books by the other two authoresses. For whatever reason, I didn't pick up any of the Leslie Meier ones - the all holiday/event-themed titles didn't appeal to me, I think it was - but I did pick up one by Laura Levine - the apparent debut novel of the Jaine Austen series, This Pen for Hire. When I realized that the second short story about the wise-cracking Californian coincided with that novel, I was excited, because I liked the urban tone of the novel (a little more relatable to me than a cozy small town where everyone always knew everyone or a rural area where...it was...rural. And you were pregnant.). Also, Levine's short story had been highly comedic.

Well, This Pen For Hire was like a full novel version of that short story. It was a great read. And, the characters were so endearing, I figured out who the real murderer was about halfway to three-quarters of the way through the book (or suspected), but I refused to believe it - I did not want that character, of all the characters, to be the killer. Of course, that was on purpose, but it was still a character connection. And, the novel was wise-cracking humor all the way through. It had some good subplots and really set up the potential for a good cast of characters.

Overall, I'm not sure if this has displaced the warm, fresh-baked coziness of the Hannah Swensen novels in my "unconventional murder mystery heroine" book, but I'm sure as heck letting Jaine munch on Hannah's cookies up there at the top. And...maybe I'll check out a Meier and see if Lucy Stone can chill with Jaine's friend Kandi, a fellow ex-New Yorker. (I'm getting very corny now. Wow.)

In less silly words, I enjoyed the book.

Hercule Poirot's Christmas

When I went to the library (over a month ago, now...my fault for taking out loads of books at once), I was in a Christmas spirit, and grabbed a few Christmas-themed mysteries, including a work by the great Agatha Christie that I happened to lay eyes upon: Hercule Poirot's Christmas. As witih all other novels by Agatha Christie that I've read, it was very proper, very polite English reading. And, as with all those other novels, it was good reading. I thoroughly enjoyed following Hercule Poirot's thought processes - he was brought in rather early in the novel, which I appreciated, because there have been times where he does not make an appearance until quite near the end - and trying to assemble the well-laid clues for myself. I fell for a few red herrings - at the beginning of the book, someone mentions that the butler would lie to protect anyone in the family, and that continuously led me down wrong paths - and honestly, the mystery was difficult to figure out. It's funny, though - in all my overspeculation, I actually had the right killer, but I ended up ruling them out in my own deliberations. And there were a lot of red herrings and lies and curiosities for one to work through - Agatha Christie really is a master, the mystery's solution was embedded deeply beneath several other mysteries. It was a feast for the mind, that's for sure. And I regret taking only one Agatha Christie novel out from the library this time.

An ironic take on the Christmas spirit, and a wonderful novel.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Eleven Minutes

I just finished reading Paolo Coelho's novel Eleven Minutes. I read The Alchemist a few years ago, and fell in love with it; this book was just as enrapturing. It took a mature, spiritual view to love, desire, and sex, by telling the story of a Brazilian girl's sex life, from innocence to becoming a prostitute to having spiritual revelations and pondering what it is she is doing. The book explores sex unabashedly, sometimes a bit explicitly, but it never seems racy or overly smutty. Throughout the entire book, the more explicit bits are used more in the monumental turning points of her spiritual growth.

The book, besides having loads of food for thought on its particular subject, has its own dose of amusement. Particularly towards the beginning of the novel, the author adds what are almost his own sarcastic/sardonic asides in parentheses as he narrates Maria's (the protagonist) life in third person, making humorous addendums; of course, this could be a device to show Maria's innocence and naivety. Additionally, there is a clear reference to Coelho's prior work, The Alchemist - there is a sentence about Maria having read a book about a shepherd and how he follows his dream (which, for those who don't know, is the basic plot of The Alchemist, pretty much).

It's only the second book from Coelho that I've read, but I loved it, again. If I'm lucky, I'll be able to read yet another Coelho work, The Zahir soon; there are no guarantees for me on that one, though.

NFL Playoffs - Championships

Packers vs Bears - The Packers had the upper hand in most, if not all, of this game. They clearly outplayed the Bears, though it wasn't a blowout; the game, as a whole, didn't have a lot of scoring to it. The final was 21-14, Packers, making them the NFC Champions and sending them to the Super Bowl.

Jets vs Steelers - Everyone saw this one coming. There was a point where the score was 24-3 Jets, and I believe that may have actually been at halftime. Their defense and offense, compared with the Jets' inability to move the ball down the field (likely due to the Steelers' defense as well as some miscommunications within the team), shut the Jets down. To their credit, though, the Jets came alive towards the end, and were within a touchdown of winning. If they had managed to take possession of the ball in the last two or three minutes and score a touchdown, and then keep Pittsburgh from scoring, they would have won. But this elaborate plan fell through, as Pittsburgh held on to the ball in the critical moments. You knew it was over when Rex Ryan slammed his headset down. The final score was 24-19, Steelers, making them the AFC Champions and sending them to the Super Bowl.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince

I'd heard a lot of omplaining about this movie - that a lot of things had beeen changed, and that it really strayed from the book in irritating ways.

What I noticed about the movie was that it was very dark. Literally. I watched the DVD, and the only way that one could have a prayer of seeing the movie half the time was if the television was the only light-producing source in the room, practically. It was really hard to see what was going on, and a lot of details and such were lost because of it.

Also, I did see the differences between book and film. The two major ones concurned the Burrow and the end of the movie, with the major character death. First, the Burrow scene bothered me. It really did. It was like, I understood the symbolism and all, but it was still a "was that REALLY necessary?" sort of thing. The second scene, surrounding the major character death (in the Harry Potter series, from book four, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, onwards, there was one death per book - er, well, the first had the prequel deaths and the seventh was a veritable bloodbath), was what I had heard a LOT of complaint about. Admittedly, I found the ending to be very calm and stagnant, so to speak, with not much action, but the death scene I thought was done very well, and the infamous wand-raising thing I found to be a pretty nice thing. I didn't react to it as badly as a lot of people seemed to.

The concentration on romance in the movie kind of bothered me. I mean, I think part of it was in the books, as well, but it was incredibly pronounced. It felt like a major aspect of the movie.

Oh, and the revealing of the half-blood prince's identity...so anticlimactic.

I dunno. I guess compared to the action-packed stories of the previous books (particularly Goblet of Fire) and movies, this one was very slow and somewhat...quiet, almost.

I definitely see why people didn't like it. It wasn't a -bad- movie, though, just not as good as its predecessors.

By the way, best scene of the movie came at the beginning, in the Weasley twins' shop:

Ron: How much is this?
Fred/George: Five galleons.
Ron: How much for me?
Fred/George: Five galleons.
Ron: But I'm your brother!
Fred/George: Ten galleons!

NFL Playoffs - Divisionals Day 2

Seahawks vs Bears - The Seahawks' miracle run ended today. They actually made a pretty good comeback, considering. For most of the game, it was a shut-out -- the Bears were ahead by twenty-something points and the score was twenty-something to zero. The final score was 35-24, but the Seahawks, though they managed to lessen the damage by a lot, could not nullify it, and they lost.

Jets vs Patriots - What a game. The Patriots had the upper hand at first, finishing the first quarter off with a field goal. But, the next quarter, the Jets went to work, making it a 14-3 score at halftime. The Patriots began to catch up the third quarter, but the fourth quarter was the big one. Both teams scored in the final quarter - the Jets added another 14 points onto their score, and the Patriots made a valiant effort to catch up, scoring 10 points. But, the game was decided even before the timer ran out -- they started celebrating (with backflips, literally) with something like 0:23 left. The final score was 28-21 Jets, leaving an intense game with the other number one seed knocked out - another upset, one might say.

Kekkaishi episode "Hurry Grandpa Shige"

Vic Mignogna is always a pleasant presence in an anime. :)

This anime, though, voicework aside, is pretty good. It's like how Bleach is, or was, with emphasis on the comedic as well as the obvious element of action.

For instance, at the beginning of this, Yoshimori's teacher takes a while to wake him up, to the dramatically freaked out reaction of the class. Once he awakens, the teacher explains the story he slept through. The story is told visually by little shikigami playing the story's characters. I found that an amusing, adorable touch.

The evil spiderish lady here really reminds me of Kagura from InuYasha. Similar look, for certain. That bored, heavy-lidded look, and the hair, and the earrings...she's like Kagura, and omg, she even has a spiderweb on her jacket, like Kagura's scar. That's interesting. Also, her voice is quite similar.

And interesting, a man with a number seven on his back. It's more elaborate, but very reminiscent, to me, of Bleach. The Soul Reaper captains, I mean.

Bleach [unkown episode]

This episode, I think, is relatively recent; it's the whole thing about the Kasumiyoji (it's something similar to that) clan, and there's a big face off right now between the head of the Soul Society (and, of course Ichigo) with the bad guy...who has arm weapons that look suspiciously similar to Chad's. Hm. I'm not really up-to-date with the series, so that could be something. *shrug*

Anyway. My thing for this episode is, I've heard the word "explain" at least five times in this episode. I dunno, it bothers me. It feels like it's getting repetitive, I suppose, because it's actually noticeable. :/

I would probably be more drawn in if I didn't come in in the middle of this...it's a dramatic story, very enrapturing, indeed, and quite heavy and complex, but I'm simply out of the loop so I'm not as understanding as I could be, I'd say.

Enter the Dragon

I just watched the Bruce Lee movie, Enter the Dragon. I must say, for all the hype and cult loyalty you hear about with this film...I'm not going to say it was bad, but it was surprisingly corny. Don't get me wrong, the fighting was amazing. But some of the acting was a little iffy, and some parts of the movie were confusing or just plain boring. The beginning, especially, suffers from this. Once he gets onto Han's island, things pick up, and that's where the fighting kind of really begins, so that's pretty much where it gets interesting, because the movie is certainly a focus on martial arts.

NFL Playoffs - Divisionals Day 1

Ravens vs Steelers - This game seemed to be pretty well fought out. The score was close throughout, pretty much, and for a long time in the fourth quarter, it was tied at 24. Near the end of the fourth quarter, though, the Steelers scored a touchdown, which gave them the necessary boost to win the game (31-24) and move on.

Packers vs Falcons - One could say this was a surprise. Atlanta was the number one seed, while Green Bay was the sixth. And, while the Packers have definitely been strong - after all, they beat the Eagles - I know many were thinking that the number one seed would have the advantage. To the delight of certain other sixth-seeders (cough), the Packers proved that seed number means nothing. They did not defeat the Falcons. They all-out POUNDED the Falcons. The score was pretty close at halftime, but the Packers all but exploded after that. This sixth seed brought the upset, big time, defeating the Falcons 48-21.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Haunted New York City

I read this book by Cheri Revai, Haunted New York City: Ghosts and Strange Phenomena of the Big Apple. It outlined some (okay, a good number) of ghost stories and urban legends pertaining to the five boroughs of New York City. It went at them by borough, A to Z. It was about a hundred pages worth. While the stories were interesting, I think my mindset tends to be skeptical. A lot of the stories had me more than cynical - most of them I found hard to believe, or was simply not convinced by the accounts given in the book. But, that was just me. In terms of looking for an interesting book about the city, or just an interesting collection of legends and the like, it was good.

NFL Playoffs - Wild Card Day 2

Packers vs Eagles - The Packers took the Eagles down. As tough a team as the Eagles proved to be this season (this going mostly by a certain game against a certain New York team as firsthand proof, eck), the Packers managed to beat them 21-16.

Ravens vs Chiefs - I know some people were worried about the Chiefs as a potentially dangerous contender, but it was quite clear today that the bigger threat is Baltimore. They all-out creamed KC, 30-7.

Candy Cane Murder

I was rather surprised when I picked this up. Rather than being just another one of Joanne Fluke's Hannah Swensen mysteries, it was a three-in-one -- two other authors under the same publishing house contributed to the book, making it a set of three short stories.

The first story was a typical Hannah Swensen murder mystery. It's Christmas in Lake Eden, Minnesota, and a local department store tycoon plays Santa...until he ends up dead. In typical Hannah fashion, the tight-knit ties of family and a small town mix with scrumptious cookies for a heartwarming yet bone-chilling mystery that's got a laid back, cozy pace.

The second story, written by Laura Levine, is a murder mystery starring an LA girl, Jaine Austen. While Jaine - who, as an aside, would fall head over heels for Hannah('s cookies) - deals with the doom of an upcoming Christmas in Florida with family and the discovery that volunteering to spend time with motherless girls isn't as simple as it seems, she takes on a request from a local roofer to clear him of suspicion. A roof that he recently fixed came loose, causing his former client to fall to his death, but he swears the roof was done properly. Jaine's story has a grittier feel to it than the former, having a more urban setting and pace.

The final story is probably the most relaxed of the three. Written by Leslie Meier, this follows Lucy Stone, a New York City mother moved to rural Tinker's Cove, Maine. She doesn't run around chasing down murderers - with a toddler in tow and a second child on the way, this comes as no surprise - but rather tries to solve the mystery of the local librarian's mother's death by digging through memories and records. This story is laid back, showing the historical mystery as well as Lucy's struggles to live in a major "fix-er-up" with funds drying quickly, all the while dealing with her child and husband.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

NFL Playoffs - Wild Card Day 1

Saints vs Seahawks - Wow. Not only have the Seahawks been making waves with being the only team in the playoffs with a losing record (I think in league history), but they beat the Saints, and beat them pretty thoroughly. 41-36 was the final score.

Jets vs Colts - Tight game, it was. I saw the beginning and the end. The beginning, I remember, took over a quarter to get a score on the board. Indianapolis scored first, then the Jets tied it up. Fast forward to the fourth quarter, 14-13 Jets. The Colts' star kicker gets a field goal from (double-checking with ESPN here) the 50 yard line. And it was a model kick, too, all nice and straight and...it was a doozy. Problem for the Jets was, there was less than a minute on the board now. ESPN says it was at 53 seconds left. They turnover to the Jets, some good rushes, some good plays get them to the 32 yard line. The clutch catch that gets them there is close but doesn't go out of bounds, so the clock is still running. It stops at three seconds and they attempt a field goal, there, a tooth's skin away from losing. The crowd was silent until you heard a player shout "YES!!!" - field goal successful! Final score, 17-16 Jets.