Thursday, September 13, 2012

Writing about Films for the End of the Summer

This post was supposed to be in Chinese, but I’m lazy.

In exactly four days’ time, I’ll be carrying my satchel and hitting school. Before the end of a long hot summer vacay, and before work is thrown at me in all the advanced Stats courses I’ll be taking this year, let’s talk about something that make me happy – films! Films that I have seen and have not seen.

I hate big budget movies. I don’t really watch them but I just don’t like them. The only great thing about the end of school vacations is the films playing at the cinema. Fewer soulless big budgets, and more room at almost empty houses for me!

Intouchables



I don’t think I’m pretentious, but I like pretentious things. French cinema being one of them. The French have a way with making visually elegant and emotionally delicate (?) films. I mean Hollywood has done this topic (handicapped people/carers relationship and the like) to death. But Intouchables is especially touching, and frankly, just different.

It did not try to guilt you by showing the viewers the accident happened to Philippe, the rich man, nor did it try to emphasis on the class difference between Philippe and Driss (perhaps they did through imagery, but unlike in Hollywood films where the characters have arguments on class difference over and over). All it did was exhibit their truthfully wonderful friendship.

I was so nervous throughout. I was scared that something would come up and ruin the beautiful portrayal of their relationship. Intouchables is not a peak-valley-peak-valley-peak oscillating wave. It is a prolonged calm journey (like complete destructive interference!). With incredible acting and music, along with occasional but perfectly-timed humour, you taste the richness of the emotions in your mouth. Who cares about an exciting storyline? The emotions you feel are magical enough!

What more can I say, apart from je suis touché? I want to give all the people I love a massive cuddly hug. I cannot recommend Intouchables enough. It’s a film to be savoured alone, with your loved ones on your mind.


Seeking A Friend for the End of the World

The title – what a mouthful! The Chinese title isn’t that much better either (I hate 食字 a lot). But since I love, like L O V E, names that I have a hard time pronouncing, I choose to reference this film in the post title.

Now, back to the film itself.

I believe it’s hard to make a good movie about the apocalypse, as again, this topic has been done to death. But the filmmakers of Seeking A Friend for the End of the World choose to focus on the other side of the story. It’s a film about ordinary people, not some world-saving space-travelling superheroes.
With an end-of-world theme, it’s very easy to fall into cliché traps. **SPOILERS ALERT** The only major cliché it has fallen into is that the two main characters fall in love, real suddenly too... This isn’t your usual action-packed apocalypse blockbusters, Seeking A Friend for the End of the World begs to differ. It doesn’t try to make you cry, it makes you think. What would you do if you have exactly 21 days left to live? Would you do something that you would not do otherwise? Does doomsday give you an excuse to confess your love and your feelings? The film gets darker and darker as it gets closer to the doomsday. I couldn’t hold it in anymore. Tears flooded out at the very last scene.

The Eason Chan 陳奕迅 song 人來人往 kept playing in my head. 閉起雙眼我最掛念誰,眼睛張開身邊竟是誰。如果距離世界末日二十一日,你身邊的誰會是你最掛念的誰嗎?

Ranting time:
  1. I can’t stand Keira Knightley. I’ve had enough of that chin and that squeezed face since A Dangerous Method. As usual Steve Carell’s annoying, but great performance from him.
  2. It is an excellent film. I would prefer this over an action flick any day. But perhaps I would enjoy it more if the lady five seats away from me would shut up. The most I could endure is artificial laughter sound effect they have in horribly unfunny talk shows. I really didn’t need her over-reacting 哎呀s and her narration/explanation for everything that I understood. I respect the elderly, but senior citizens like her make morning screenings unbearable.

Liberal Arts


I don’t want to like Elizabeth Olsen, for no particular reasons really. But I agree she shines in Martha Marcy May Marlene (what an annoying character though). Liberal Arts looks really good and I’m a sucker for movies about college. It just looks really good.


Ruby Sparks

I haven’t even seen the trailer for this… but it had me at its Chinese title – 書中字有夢女神. I like books and I have a 女神… in order to NOT let the poison guy in me gets the better of me, we’ll stop here.


Upside Down

When I saw the title and Kirsten Dunst, I was uncertain, by “uncertain” I mean “uninterested”. Then I was “forced” into watching the trailer (pre-movie advertising)… though it reminds me too much of The Adjustment Bureau (which is truly a bad thing), it looks pleasing. At least it involves Physics (a bit Spiderman-y?)… and forbidden love.


Ted

Pretty much self-explanatory. Who isn’t looking forward to Ted?


Thanks for reading.


Summary:
  1. Watch Intouchables NOW.
  2. If you can stand Steve Carell and Keira Knightley, and **SPOILERS ALERT** they as a couple, watch Seeking A Friend for the End of the World.
  3. I’m looking forward to Liberal Arts, Ruby Sparks, Upside Down and Ted.

Sunday, September 09, 2012

To-do (Sep 2012)

Some parts of this post were written earlier… I hope things still make sense:

One year ago, or two blog posts ago, a friend said she liked the direction along which my blog was going – lifestyle blog (?). I told her one of my childhood dreams was to become the editor of a successful lifestyle magazine. To realise the dream I could never realise, I'm implementing some new types of posts, reflecting the style of lifestyle magazines.

I couldn't decide on how to name this post - Items to Put on Your To-do List! or On Your To-do List, Now!... both very creative names, aren’t they? Eventually I’ve chosen to stick to a less bizarre name… TMI. In To-do I'll introduce activities or things that I suggest my readers to try out. There isn't any review, just some lines to support my suggestions.

To read
Before I Go to Sleep by S. J. Watson.

Bitten by the reading bug in London in July, I started reading regularly again. Since then I have started three books, the only one that I have finished* is Before I Go to Sleep by S. J. Watson.

A review will be written soon and posted on a book review club blog, owned by the world’s two most amazing people – Theodora and I, of course!

Shameless plug:
Fishing in the Tadpole Kingdom Fishing in the Tadpole Kingdom Fishing in the Tadpole Kingdom Fishing in the Tadpole Kingdom

* I have my reasons. One of the two unfinished, now abandoned, books involves torturing and brutally killing dogs. The other is a non-fiction!


To listen
Moonrise Kingdom OST

This is what I’m listening to at the moment. I’m no soundtrack expert, but apparently Wes Anderson’s films always have great soundtracks. This is true for Moonrise Kingdom (which is an AMAZING film by the way). Very great soundtrack, indeed… it’s trying to teach you something about music too! Admittedly I am spoilt and have some nice computer speaker system (for its age), but listening to beautiful tracks whilst enjoying a beautiful film in a cinema is an experience that could never be beaten.

I saw Moonrise Kingdom at the Hong Kong Summer International Film Festival. Full house. We all sat through the end credits and enjoyed The Heroic Weather-Conditions of the Universe, Part 7 by Alexandre Desplat. We all clapped. Clapping rarely happens here… what about a standing ovation next time?




To watch
Moonrise Kingdom



Love the cast! Love the story! Love the soundtrack! Love how beautiful it is! Go see it. Very entertaining too.


To Rome with Love



Laughed my heart out during the whole film. I think I enjoyed this more than Midnight in Paris, which was very good. A lot of people are going to disagree with me on that.

To Rome with Love made me hate Penelope Cruz a little less, and love Jesse Eisenberg a little more. Still no opinion on Greta Gerwig. Though I loved Woody Allen’s character, maybe he should stick to directing/writing…


Young Adult



Don’t have the luxury to go to the cinema? Watch Young Adult. It’s funny and really sad at the same time. Is it wrong to say that I could relate to Mavis at my age? *Spoiler Alert* – Uncomfortable ending.

Jason Reitman’s officially my favourite director. Now I wish he were more good-looking.

Got this song stuck in my head ever since. The Concept by Teenage Fanclub.



To go
Flow Bookstore

I’ve actually written the introduction of a post on this little gem, but that post isn’t going anywhere… so let me introduce Flow here.

Selfishly I’ve debated whether I should talk about Flow on my blog… you know, some things are better not said. I’m not sure if I want my favourite bookstore to become everyone’s favourite! But at the same time I want people to know how great this shop is! As I realise my blog isn’t as popular as I imagine it is… here we go:

Whilst googling “garage sale in Hong Kong” during one of my many sleepless nights, I found Flow Bookstore. I dragged my friends there the next day. It wasn’t hard to locate at all.

Flow is a second-hand bookstore, the kind that you don’t think exists in Hong Kong, where chain bookstores dominate. They sell books, all kinds of books, and DVDs. Flow offers a treasure-hunting shopping experience. You’ll be rewarded if you look carefully. I found The Lonely Planet Guide to Experimental Travel (new, unread), Essays in Love by Alain de Botton (perfect condition, at almost half the chain bookstore price), along with many other books that I once thought of reading! You know that familiar line “I WANTED TO READ THIS BOOK BEFORE!!!!”? You don’t have to worry about the condition of the books, or the price, at all. I immediately cancelled my Amazon order when I got home (I’d ordered Essays in Love but it wouldn’t arrive until a month later). I purposely left books un-bought so I would go again!



The owner’s an awesome man, so well-read and passionate. We had a little chat on Alain de Botton. He also mentioned that he was working on a database of items!

Flow reminds me of Any Amount of Books on Charing Cross Road in London. But it’s better because they sell book club books here.

Flow Bookstore
7/F No. 29 Hollywood Road
Central
Hong Kong
Website


To eat
Home-cooked meals
The reading bug won’t get off me. And in August, I was bitten by the cooking bug. I went on thousands of cooking websites. I watched millions of Youtube cooking videos. I got myself the Jamie Olivier cookbook Jamie's Ministry of Food: Anyone Can Learn to Cook in 24 Hours. But still I haven’t made a proper dish this summer! Well, apart from blueberry muffins, but they turned out really bad.

Jamie's Ministry of Food is a great cookbook – aesthetically pleasing and useful. Too bad summer’s coming to an end… so cooking project in Christmas? I’ll update you on this one.

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Incidentally, regular posts will either be in English OR Chinese. Bilingual when I have the time, and trilingual blogs will come when I have the time to learn a new language.