All posts by Wan Kong Yew

May December (2023)

I really liked this dark drama about an actress researching for her latest role but then after finishing it I went online to read up on what people had to say about it and discovered that it’s considered a comedy. That made me wonder if I even understood it correctly at all. In the end, I don’t think I was wrong though. Despite the overbearing horror music and the absurdity, I believe director Todd Haynes fully means for the audience to seriously engage with the topic. It’s unsettling, deeply uncomfortable for everyone and none of the characters are quite certain what to think of the situation themselves so it’s only to be expected that the audience will feel the same.

Continue reading May December (2023)

Doki Doki Literature Club!

This is the famous visual novel that outwardly resembles one of those popular dating simulators but is actually a horror game. That’s hardly a spoiler as you need to wade through some pretty serious content warning messages before you can start playing and the game is so well-known. People reference it so often that I thought I should just get around to completing it myself. It’s free anyway and very short.

Continue reading Doki Doki Literature Club!

The Hole (2021)

This may an Italian film but it barely matters as there is no dialogue whatsoever. There’s only a foreword and an afterword in Italian explaining what it’s about. Instead what we have is pure visual storytelling and some of the best cinematography I’ve seen in recent years. This is also a film that defies genres. It’s technically a dramatic reenactment of an event in 1961, the exploration of the Bifurto Abyss cave system. Yet it’s staged like a documentary with no particular focus on any characters with the exception of a local of the area. It is amazing in all respects and it makes me wonder what other historical films might be like if they were made like this.

Continue reading The Hole (2021)

The English Patient (1996)

I never watch this back in the day and it was never on my watch list. But it popped up while I was browsing Netflix and my wife noted that it was a film she liked. This is a very long film, especially so for a romantic drama, but no can deny the beauty of the cinematography nor how deeply affecting it is. This really has it all, an aristocratic desert explorer who has some serious bad boy vibes, the last gasp of the pre-war internationalist period, all mixed up with passionate love so intense that it overcomes marriage vows and gentlemanly conduct. I have quibbles about its structure and the relevance of characters like Hana and Kip, but it’s a good film that deserves its place among the great romances.

Continue reading The English Patient (1996)

Arboreality

After last month’s hefty non-fiction book, I thought I’d go with something lighter. It’s an expansion of an award-winning short story about climate change to novella form. Some have complained that it doesn’t add that much to the already great original story but since I’ve never read it, this works well for me. I actually think that it could stand to be expanded even more as it is set entirely in one particular part of Vancouver Island and characters appear in media res with no introduction. Since the geography and ecology of the area are so important, it was tough for someone like me who has never even been to Canada to get into. I had to read up information on the setting but it absolutely is a beautiful and moving story about the slow-moving climate catastrophe.

Continue reading Arboreality

Delicious in Dungeon

We tend to have bad experiences with anime but this one is not only popular at the moment but was also a recommendation from our cinephile. Honestly the premise of an dungeon diving story that is focused on food sounds both original and fun. Unfortunately the quality of the show on an episode to episode to basis varies by quite a lot. Apart from schtick about food, it’s still a fairly generic fantasy anime with all of the usual faults of the genre. It’s not awful but I don’t think we’ll be back for the second season.

Continue reading Delicious in Dungeon

Air (2023)

Films about corporations are rare and one that portrays a large corporation in a good light are even rarer. Moreso than it is about Michael Jordan, the story here is really about Nike’s rise from being a middling sports shoes company to the global behemoth it is today with the help of the Air Jordan line. It’s so flattering to Nike that it’s hard to believe this isn’t some sort of Nike commercial. Ben Affleck does a decent if unspectacular job at directing. It’s rather heavy-handed in mining 1980s nostalgia and too blatant about playing up the mystique of Michael Jordan, but it works well enough and I’m pleased as punch that it even exists.

Continue reading Air (2023)