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 ArborealityDelicious 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 DungeonAir (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)Broker (2022)
The combination of Hirokazu Kore-eda and Song Kang-ho practically makes this a must watch and the unusual fact that Kore-eda has chosen to make a Korean film is even more intriguing. This one still shares the theme of being about parents failing their children and indeed is supposedly a companion film to Shoplifters. Unfortunately I found this one to be on the weaker side with moments that just a touch too sentimental. Even so you can see right from the opening shot what a skilled craftsman Kore-eda is and he can imbue meaning even to a deceptively bland phrase.
Continue reading Broker (2022)Nier: Automata

I’m in no hurry to get through the games in my backlog as usually production values are so high now that they’re just as good whenever I get around to them. But this is one case where I might have left it in the oven for too long. Playing a 2017 game in 2024 is kind of pushing it but I think this never looked very good even back then. I added this to my list a while back because it has a lot of many passionate fans and it adds old school shoot ’em up elements to the action genre. But I ultimately found it to be an underwhelming and overrated game.
Continue reading Nier: AutomataThe Earrings of Madame de… (1953)
This French film by German director Max Ophüls defies genres as it at times feels like a comedy and other times like a serious romantic film. It boasts superb production values with lavish sets, over-the-top period costumes and a very aristocratic atmosphere. As my wife noted, its opening title card with its music feels very much in the style of Hollywood. Yet it soon becomes clear that its conception of the proper relationship between a husband and wife and of the role of passionate style is very much in the European style. I don’t really get the humor in play here but I did enjoy its delicious subversiveness.
Continue reading The Earrings of Madame de… (1953)Close to Vermeer (2023)
This documentary tells the behind the scenes story of the exhibition of the largest collection of Johannes Vermeer ever that was mounted in 2023. It was needless to say a tremendous success with its limited number of time slots being sold out immediately. We’ll never get to see its like in person but this documentary at least gives us some idea of what it’s like as well as a fascinating look into the kind of work that goes into organizing such events. The film does assume that one has already some basic idea of who Vermeer was and his significance and there are no grand revelations or new insights on offer but it’s an interesting and educational documentary all the same.
Continue reading Close to Vermeer (2023)




