Fallout 4

So I’ve been playing Fallout 4 for a while now. I got way more engaged in it than I thought I would considering that my initial impression of it is that its production values are barely any better than the previous game and there are all kinds of annoying bugs and glitches. But the sheer size of the game and the variety of the environments you can explore really won me over. The settlement construction portion of the game is both frustrating and time consuming but I have to admit that it’s pretty addictive.

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Loveless (2017)

We’ve previously watched director Andrey Zvyagintsev’s Leviathan and loved it so getting recommendations for this one from friends and The Economist wasn’t really necessary. Though internationally successful, Leviathan made the director unpopular with the Russian government especially since he had accepted government money to make it. Loveless seems to have been mostly made with foreign funds but at least its production wasn’t banned.

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Gate of Flesh (1964)

This marks the third film we’ve watched by Seijun Suzuki, surely one of the most unusual directors Japan has ever produced. Unlike Branded to Kill and Tokyo Drifter however this one is not about gangsters even if it does star Joe Shishido with his famous, artificially-enhanced cheekbones. Instead it’s about a group of prostitutes in Tokyo immediately following Japan’s defeat in the Second World War.

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Darkest Hour (2017)

This film gained our attention when we caught one of its trailers in the cinema and of course as a serious film it went on to be nominated for several Oscars. I’m not sure we would have been interested in this ordinarily but we had a free evening in KL recently and as I knew that this was only shown in a limited number of places in Malaysia, we took the opportunity to watch it.

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Midnight’s Children

So this was an entry in What Makes This Book So Great though as Jo Walton noted, it isn’t usually regarded as a genre book. It is however world famous as the novel that launched the career of Salman Rushdie. The novel is hugely popular, especially in the UK, and won the Best of the Bookers twice. I’d argue however that while it does have ‘genre’ elements, it doesn’t read like one and shouldn’t be properly considered as science-fiction or fantasy.

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The unexamined life is a life not worth living