I, Tonya (2017)

As this was one of the most talked about films last year I was inevitably going to watch this and it helps that I actually do have some memories of the incident as it’s called here. Funnily enough I was one of those mentioned in the film as remembering it as being Tonya Harding herself who assaulted Nancy Kerrigan. Though it looks like a documentary, I think it’s fairer to think of this as a biographical film.

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Recent Interesting Science Articles (September 2018)

Not much of note this month. We’ll start with the exciting space news and no, it’s not the one about the tourist going for Elon Musk’s moonshot.

  • Instead, it’s the strangely under-reported announcement by JAXA, Japan’s Space Agency that two rovers launched by its Hayabusa2 spacecraft have successfully landed on an asteroid named Ryugu. The rovers themselves are only 18 cm in diameter each and Ryugu is a rock with a diameter of about 1 km Yet the interception took place about 300 million km away from Earth and to do so Hayabusa2 made a circuitous journey of over 3,200 million km over four years, making this an incredible achievement in precision and control.
  • As always, drawing general conclusions about life outcomes from data should always be seen with a skeptical eye but this study about predicting income is sure made for the headlines. Crunching through a trove of data that covers nearly three thousand participants, it purports to show that delay discounting predicts income better than other factors such as age, ethnicity or height. This refers to the ability to delay immediate gratification in exchange for a bigger future reward. The result is as expected but I notice that this ability in the present and not when the participants were children so I’m not sure if it means that much.
  • The last article is a very speculative one about a new take on the well known Schrödinger’s cat thought experiment. Instead of a cat, this scenario uses two physicists, each of whom performs an experiment on a friend that they keep in a box. One friend in a box can toss a coin and send a message to the other friend in a box who can then guess the result of the toss. Each experimenter can then open each box to conclude which side the coin landed on and yet in some circumstances the results will be inconsistent, meaning that the model is wrong or reality itself is somehow inconsistent. Apparently the physics community is still divided over what to make of this experiment though it is currently impossible to actually carry it out.

The Postman Always Rings Twice (1946)

This is one of those classic Hollywood films whose title everyone has heard of but probably rather fewer have actually watched. It’s based on a crime novel that was very popular in its day and thus was a popular subject for film adaptations. In fact, there are so many that I was confused about which one was supposed to be the famous one and picked this from the Golden Age of Hollywood. While it’s true that this certainly is the most famous of the adaptations, I’m not sure that it’s the best one.

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Paddington (2014)

As this is clearly a children’s movie I had no interest in it. But after the sequel was released last year I heard some very good things about it and it hasn’t escaped my attention that it has an insanely high Rotten Tomatoes rating. This first film isn’t as highly regarded but is still considered quite okay so I thought it would be appropriate to watch it before the sequel.

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Close-Up (1990)

This is the only the third film we’ve watched by legendary Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami and it’s his earliest one yet. This film seems to have helped establish the director’s reputation in the west though it was panned in Iran itself. It’s based on a real event with all of the main people involved playing themselves though understandably most scenes are reenactments.

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Superflight

In between playing the epic-sized games by big studios, I like to mess around with the small, indie ones. I have to say that while the big games are certainly more impressive both in terms of scope and production values, I usually find the small games to be more memorable due to how different and unique they tend to be. This tiny game is a case in point. I doubt that most people are going to play it for more than a handful of hours but it’s such a fun few hours different from anything else you might have played that it’s likely to stick in your mind for a long while.

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The Sweet Hereafter (1997)

This one made it onto my list as it is a highly regarded film, being apparently considered one of the best Canadian films ever made. It was inspired by a real life accident involving a school bus and a truck but I think it’s been fictionalized enough that it doesn’t matter. I found that I didn’t like it much however due to how its focus seems sort of spread out and how it doesn’t follow through on its individual storylines.

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