This one was put on my list when Robin Williams’ death reminded me that I’d always wanted to watch The Fisher King. I’ve seen snippets of it over the years, most memorably scenes of a monstrous red knight bearing down on a terrified Williams in New York city, but have never actually watched the whole thing. Given its title, I was also curious about how the storyline ties in with the Arthurian legend.
Like most people, the first I heard about this film was the shocking news, certainly spread for publicity reasons, that it would feature big name actors and actresses having unsimulated sex. As it turned out, professional pornography performers were actually used and the faces of the familiar actors and actresses digitally composited onto the naked bodies. Combine this with the famous posters of the well known actors and actresses making orgasm faces, and it’s clear that the producers were going for maximum shock value. For this reason, I chose to watch only the first volume of the film for fear that it might turn out to be terrible.
I’m massively late this month due to having to make an extended stay in Kuala Lumpur to handle some personal issues and hence having no access to my regular computer. I’m now back however, so here are the five articles for this month:
The first article I have isn’t an announcement of a new discovery as most of my posts tend to be. Instead, it’s an exploration, published in The New Yorker, about what it is like for a person who is blind from birth to be able to see for the first time. In particular, if a blind person can differentiate shapes using touch, can he or she tend recognize the same objects upon seeing them for the first time? It turns out that it is incredibly difficult to make sense of what you see when you are doing it for the first time, so it is a skill that needs to be developed over time based on building up an internal database of “visual memories”.
The coolest bit of news all month is easily the discovery of the largest dinosaur yet found, and hence the largest terrestrial animal known. Newly named as the “dreadnoughtus”, it is calculated to weight about 65 tons, heavier than a Boeing 737 jet. Its size was extrapolated based on fossil remains found in Argentina, as reported in this Washington Post article.
This next article from Scientific American isn’t about a new discovery either but it is highly topical. Instead, it talks about using a tried and true method to attempt to treat victims of the current outbreak of ebola. Since new drugs for the disease are still largely unavailable, doctors are proposing to transfuse patients with the blood of survivors of the disease in the hopes that the blood already contains effective antibodies. This is in fact vaccination in its oldest form.
The next article is for coffee lovers, including my wife. Publishes in The New York Times, it’s a cool look into how caffeine evolved in coffee plants. Some highlights include how coffee plants evolved the molecule differently from other plants that also contain coffee like cacao and how the plant uses it as a toxin to prevent other plants from germinating in the soil near it.
Finally this article from The Guardian talks about how the nerve endings on finger tips actually process the touch sensations it receives before sending the results to the brain. It’s a finding that lends extra credence to theories that state that the mind is effectively what the entire body, or at least the nervous system distributed throughout the entire body, does as opposed to merely the brain.
Once again this is a pick that originally came to my attention from a Broken Forum post and subsequently reaffirmed when I realized that it is in the Criterion Collection. At first glance it is nothing special, just a generic Japanese gangster film with a bog standard plot out of hundreds that were produced in the 1960s. But as you watch it, it becomes increasingly obvious how this is a film that must have been far ahead of its time nearly 50 years ago.
One of my favourite comments about this film is on Broken Forum, when someone mentioned how it’s a film that he’d recommend to almost nobody but he still liked it himself. This unexpectedly turned out to be so very true for my wife and myself. I found myself completely won over by its charm and cleverness but my wife found it irritating and boring.
Once again, Wall Street is one of those films whose influence is widely felt in popular culture. Michael Douglas’ Gordon Gekko is considered one of the greatest movie villains of all time and even Princeton’s Algorithms class on the Coursera platform included a snippet of the famous “greed is good” speech when talking about greedy algorithms. As such, it’s pretty embarrassing to not actually have seen this movie.
As I’ve already mentioned in this blog, South Korean directors have an exceptional record with me. Given this, and that it’s by Bong Joon-ho who directed one of the best monster movies of modern times, that it’s science-fiction, and that it’s based on an unusual French graphic novel, there’s no way that I would be missing this.