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25 July 2008 @ 09:14 am
The Dark Knight  
I am a week overdue in telling you about The Dark Knight. This is the best movie I've seen this year, in a summer when my expectations are unprecedented.

You remember I said that in order to avoid bankrupting myself on theater tickets, I would only see this season's crop on video, in second-run theaters, or as a gift from a friend, as an excercise in moviegoing self-discipline. I've held to that. Jen asked me months ago to pick one film as a gift from her, and on the strength of the trailer and its predecessor Batman Begins, I selected The Dark Knight.

The plot was superb. Usually I hope against hope that a summer blockbuster's story will at least make sense, and this one did, but I had no idea what was going to happen. It tied everything together with themes about whether or not there is any real courage.

Heath Ledger performed the Joker as if from beyond the grave. Aaron Eckhardt was just amazing as Harvey Dent. The supporting cast was stupendous. It's not often I get to see Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, and Gary Oldman for the price of a single ticket!

I laughed, I cried, I cheered, I clapped, I was on the edge of my seat. No, I mean it, all of those things, out loud. How often can you say that about a movie?

My favorite line was delivered by Morgan Freeman to the accountant. If you've watched it, you know the one. I realized at that moment how strongly we were sympathizing with the Batman, very concerned for his well being. Was not Morgan Freeman's delivery perfect to put it in perspective? So very funny.

Where on earth could the Nolan brothers possibly go from here?

1. The obvious choices seem impossible. Nobody wants to see the Penguin and Riddler. Those characters, like most Batman villians, have been done with such campiness so often that it became their identity. They get no love. No crime lord in the Nolanverse will be named Oswald Cobblepot. But he doesn't have to be. This is forgetting that the Gotham of Nolan is one of re-invention. In Batman Begins, a villian wore a burlap sack on his head, and it worked. Don't say that they can't make a trick umbrella seem plausible. The problem is merely a failure of imagination.

The best evidence I can show you is that the comic book Doctor Octopus was a chubby guy in a leotard with a bowl haircut, but the costume design and the performance by Alfred Molina in Spider Man 2 made it into what was, at that time, the best superhero movie ever. I don't want Spider Man 4, I want a film titled Doctor Octopus. I am that much of a Doc Ock fan now.

2. The villians from The Dark Knight again. Right now, Heath Ledger has a sacred aura with fans, so this may be risky. But if anybody can find a replacement for him, it's the creative team that chose him in the first place.

3. Minor villians. I think this is most likely. Batman Begins had Scarecrow and Ras Al Ghul, remember? I pored over the Batman's Rogue Gallery growing up, and even I said, "Ras-al-what?" Well, OK, Clayface will never happen, but there is no reason not to do a realistic version of Killer Croc. That way maybe the third movie will be about Batman again.
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 09:44 pm
PyOhio Program  
This is the PDF for the program I designed for PyOhio. It's Ohio's regional conference about Python, a free and open source programming language. It takes place Saturday of this week. Alas, I will not be able to attend due to conflicts.

The program is to be printed on one double-sided 11"x17" sheet and folded twice.
 
 
24 July 2008 @ 12:20 pm
Happy Birthday to Me!  
Yesterday was my birthday. I also happened to be the first time I've celebrated my birthday in some 12 years or so. Contrary to popular belief, I don't dislike birthdays, it just has always seemed a rather odd thing to observe; a commemoration of something that I literally had nothing to do with--my birth. My mother would seem a more logical choice of people to solemnize on this auspicious occasion, being the person that went through the discomfort and inconvenience of pregnancy for over 9 months before suffering the (apparently) agonizing pain of child birth simply to create me. Even my father would be a more obvious choice, being at least a participant in the creation of me. I had remarkably little to do with it. During childbirth, they don't yell for the child to climb, they yell for the mother to push.

So I don't dislike my birthday. I think my feelings toward it would be better described as bemused disregard. At best, I find birthday wishes awkward in that "where does the conversation go from here." It is my experience that any conversation that begins with an allusion, no matter how oblique, to my mother's birth canal can lead nowhere good. As such, all birthday wishes seem to follow the same pattern...
Other Person: Happy birthday!
Me: Thanks.

*long, uncomfortable pause followed by some awkward filler*

Other Person: So, feel any older?
or
Other Person: So what did you get?
or
Other Person: So, today you fell out of your mother?
Awkward.

So my birthday began with a series of birthday wishes via my central point of contact, my Blackberry. By the time I got up for brunch, I had received a half-dozen or so texts, IMs, emails, or phone calls wishing me a happy birthday. I met [info]matt_arnold for a nice birthday brunch, during which several more messages came in. By the end of lunch, I had pretty much resigned myself to the inevitable... people were going to wish me a happy birthday, so I just needed to sit back and enjoy it. I wandered over to [info]sheryl67 & [info]rbradakis's place and hung out with them, helped paint for a bit, then had dinner when [info]atdt1991 and [info]blue_lucy arrived. When she got off work, my baby, [info]ellalthea joined us, and what started out as a day of painting and prepping a room turned into an impromptu "birthday" thing with a bunch of people that I love (and Neil Gaiman's Blog) that included food, Key Lime Pie (my favorite), presents (I got a hardcover of Warren Ellis's new book, Crooked Little Vein), awesome company (the inclusion of Neil Gaiman's Blog almost, but didn't quite, offset the lack of my kids... but the B's totally filled in!), and modified rules Rock Band (modified how, you ask? In the best possible way, I reply).

Before long, a strange thing happened. I really started to enjoy it. I mean REALLY started to enjoy it. Not the hanging out, but the "for me" aspect of it. At some point, once my mind had made the transition from "this is a celebration of my birth" to "this is an arbitrary date chosen to celebrate my EXISTENCE", I started to dig on the outpouring of Jer love. Not that there is anything wrong with it, but I never considered myself one of "those people" who got into the attention and such associated with these things (not, mind you, that I'm anything but a whore for attention, but I am a completely different sort of whore for attention). As it turns out, I am exactly one of "those people". It was awesome scrolling through my friends list and seeing the birthday wishes. It was great to be utterly and completely loved for a day before I go back to my mildly curmudgeonly ways and everyone can go back to tolerating me :P

Thank you all for making this so fantastic. Best... birthday... evar!

Now, for the homework part of the exercise... I don't have all of your birthdays. I have most, but not all. If you are reading this, be it on LJ, RSS, Facebook, or elsewhere, please comment with your birth date. All replies are screened, so if you don't want the world to know, or if you don't want to celebrate, I simply just won't show it, just let me know; but I invite you to let the world know and enjoy a little bit of what I enjoyed last night. (Except Neil Gaiman's Blog, that's for me!)
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Current Mood: loved
 
 
23 July 2008 @ 10:13 pm
You're so vain... you probably think this blog is about you!  
Neil Gaiman's Blog... *sigh*
In honor of my birthday, Neil Gaiman's Blog and I had dinner at Che Bradaki. Neil Gaiman's Blog was such a delightful conversationalist, but it would appear that Neil Gaiman's Blog doesn't find me in the least bit funny... but hey, I'm eating dinner with Neil Gaiman's Blog, so who cares, right? After a delicious meal, Neil Gaiman's Blog and I adjourned into the living room for a viewing of Mirror Mask. It was a little odd, watching the movie with Neil Gaiman's Blog, since it is Neil Gaiman's Blog's movie. The evening was over far too soon, and Neil Gaiman's Blog had to leave to do what Neil Gaiman's Blog does. I should stop, though, before it starts to look like I'm just name dropping Neil Gaiman's Blog. Peace!











PS Neil Gaiman's Blog, Neil Gaiman's Blog, Neil Gaiman's Blog, Neil Gaiman's Blog.
 
 
Current Location: Neil Gaiman's Blog
Current Mood: accomplished
Current Music: Tori Amos - Caught a Light Sneeze
 
 
 
23 July 2008 @ 12:16 pm
Underworld 3: The Rise of the Lycans  
I did a search on Brightcove.tv and there's nothing definitive (so far as a trailer) and something on dailymotion (about 4 minutes long) that you can't view unless you're a member there. Wikipedia has the slated release date as January 23rd, 2009...

...for whatever that's worth.

Found 3 fanvids on YouTube, this being the most informative one, but they're not what you'd call trailers per se.

 
 
Current Mood: predatory
 
 
23 July 2008 @ 12:04 pm
Rise of the Lycans.  
 For those of you who adore UnderWold there is a third one coming out. It is actually, technically, the first in the series. It's called "Underworld: Rise of the Lycans". It's basically from Lucian's point of view.

 Just a friendly heads-up I've been meaning to post for sometime, I've known about it for several months now, but haven't gotten around to posting it. I think it might be coming out next month? I'll keep you posted.

 Run free.
 
 
Current Location: Animal Madness
Current Mood: sore
Current Music: "Fly Away" - Lenny Kravitz...
 
 
23 July 2008 @ 03:27 am
Can't sleep  
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Current Mood: awake
 
 
22 July 2008 @ 04:03 pm
Oh, The Updates!  
Well, it's been 5 days since I've posted an update of any substance (and I think I'll let lie, right here, the debate a to whether or not anything I've ever posted is truly of any substance), and as is wont to happen, my lack of updating is due to an abundance of things to write and update about, rather than the converse. What does that mean to you? Another long, boring, catch up post!! Yay for you.
Tales of acting, moving, daring, and bats to follow... )
 
 
Current Mood: enthralled
 
 
22 July 2008 @ 03:25 pm
Well I Think They Have Swayed My Vote  
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Current Location: Office
Current Music: Wonderful Life - Gwen Stefani
 
 
22 July 2008 @ 01:51 pm
 
In this post, I will make another feeble attempt to think like a businessperson. Well, perhaps not quite. Business plans are stereotypically concerned with starting a company, hiring employees, changing the world, and becoming rich. This plan concerns merely generating enough supplementary income to live on. I have realized that life itself requires a business plan, so that counts.

As I have been mentioning to anyone who will listen, I am inspired to earn income by having customers and tip-donors rather than offer a service to clients. My long-term goal is to reach a place where I earn $2,000 a month by going directly to users of my creations, without having to work for a BigCo or a client.

As Escape Artists has a cozy team of about half a dozen, and all our listeners are consuming something that I absolutely love, I consider that part of this plan. I consider a successful webcomic artist or internet musician to be another type of person who lives this way.

My latest scheme is to make games and sell them on my website. What prompted all of this was finding out how easy and inexpensive ceramic is. It also plays to my strengths, both as someone who likes building things with his hands, and using art software. Custom cookie cutters, and rubber stamps based on my own vector illustrations, will make easy and fast replicas. I just press the stamp into a sheet of clay, for an entire game; then cut out the tiles with my custom cookie cutters, which I've already made. The first set is drying now.

I'm used to game designers telling me that the only way to make and sell games is a massive outlay of capital, based on a small business loan, to get a production run of plastic parts in China.
What little credit I have is mildly poor, so I used to feel game entrepreneurship was beyond me. It turns out the cost of a 7"x9" rubber stamp made from my vector art is only $35. I'd only ever have to sell one copy to make back the money to start the product line. I'd lose on the cost of my own labor if I only sell one copy, but it's the way I would want to spend time anyway. In the worst-case scenario, I've made beautiful things that previously only existed on paper. I don't see a downside.

I think many of my products will involve Japanese, since I have familiarity with that, and I know people who can help me get in touch with lots of students who might like to buy beautifully-made learning games.
 
 
22 July 2008 @ 11:27 am
New Tor.com  
Tor.com is not your typical company website, once again proving why they're my favorite paper publisher. This site is a reader community, offering author/editor blogs, free original stories, and a cover art gallery. To generate anticipation before the site launched, they were giving away one free unrestricted ebook per week. Now that the site is launched, they're re-releasing all of the ebooks in that program for free at the same time, plus a new graphic novel. They kicked it off with a new story set in the Old Man's War SF future by John Scalzi, and a new story set in the Lovecraftian spy-agency setting by Charlie Stross.

The grand opening is grand indeed-- worth checking out at the very least. I for one intend to stick around. When you register, please type Matt_Arnold into the User Search and add me, and if I know who you are I'll add you back.
 
 
22 July 2008 @ 01:38 am
Mine!  
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Current Mood: silly
 
 
21 July 2008 @ 11:43 am
07/21/08 Homepage Spotlight  
[info]thelifelist
A forum for exchanging lists of things you'd like to have done before you die.
 
 
21 July 2008 @ 11:42 am
07/21/08 Homepage Spotlight  
[info]ljsecret
Share a secret through the means of art, under complete anonymity.
 
 
21 July 2008 @ 11:29 am
07/21/08 Homepage Spotlight  
[info]mourning_souls
A community for cemetery photographers, dark poets and anyone else who appreciates and admires the beauty of cemeteries.
 
 
20 July 2008 @ 02:52 pm
Did you know?  
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Current Mood: excited
 
 
20 July 2008 @ 02:18 pm
Necto night  
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Current Mood: tired
 
 
20 July 2008 @ 07:39 am
SMOS Dinner tonight!  
So I am hosting our next SMOS dinner!! It is today anytime after 2pm (dinner will be served around 5pm). I am located in New Baltimore.
 
The new beach just opened up down the street for swimming and we will be grilling hot dogs and chicken for dinner. Please bring a side dish to pass if you can and also a lawn chair if you have one.
 
We will be serving dinner, socializing, talking Penguicon 7.0 and playing games.
 
Please email me if you have any questions, need directions/address, or if you are interested in hosting a SMOSdinner yourself!
 
 
19 July 2008 @ 09:22 pm
[mobile]For Sheryl  
You know what I love...posts like these...
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Current Mood: Amused