Call of Juarez: Gunslinger

This was a free game that I decided to try for a bit because it’s been a while since I last played a shooter and I actually liked an earlier game in the series. I did finish it as the game seems rather easy to me even at hard difficulty and it’s quite short but I didn’t really like it at all. I thought it felt extremely linear and the story is just a tour of the most famous names of the Wild West with a classic revenge plot as the connective tissue.

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Key Largo (1948)

From time to time, I’m still working through the Hollywood classics and I keep being amazed by how enjoyable they are. I see this John Huston film being described as a noir but I don’t think it counts as one. I’m not sure what the genre is called but it’s one of those where the characters are all trapped by circumstances in a confined space and have to put up with each other. As usual, this provides the opportunity to go into what makes each of them tick and it’s a real pleasure to see even the supporting characters being put under the microscope. Great performances all around and it even ends with a relatively realistic yet thrilling gunfight!

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C’mon C’mon (2021)

So this is a case where I absolutely agree that director Mike Mills has made an incredible film and yet this is the kind of film that doesn’t accord well with my own tastes. The theme here is communication, specifically of the verbal kind to express one’s thoughts and emotions, and so this film really is all about talking. To facilitate this, the film actually deemphasizes its visuals so as to be as unobtrusive as possible and I believe it was shot in black-in-white for that reason. The result is a work that perfectly delivers on what the director set out to accomplish but is also about listening to people talk to such an extent that it’s off-putting to me personally.

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Interesting Science News (December 2022)

Fewer news articles this month but that is also because I have decided not to highlight some of the more overrated and salacious articles that have gone viral recently including the claim of obtaining net energy from a fusion reaction and the paper that female snakes are discovered to have clitorises.

  • The easier to understand bit of news I have this month is this paper about progress being made towards the development of a universal flu vaccine. As most people should know, existing flu vaccines are seasonal as doctors have to observe which particular strain of flu is currently most widespread and choose the appropriate vaccine. So it makes sense to try to use the new mRNA technology to create a vaccine that encodes antigens from all 20 known influenza A subtypes and influenza B lineages. Testing on mice and ferrets showed that it worked to generate the desired subtype-specific antibodies when challenged by different viral strains.
  • The next article is too difficult for me to really understand, let alone summarize in any reasonably accurate manner. Doing my best, I will simply say that one of the most important problems in pure mathematics is the Riemann Hypothesis which claims that the distribution of prime numbers is not completely arbitrary. The news is that a Chinese-American mathematician Yitang Zhang has made progress in this topic. To be fair, he only claims to have disproven a weak version of a conjecture that serves as a counterexample to the hypothesis. Nevertheless if proven correct, this does represent progress and given how important prime numbers are, in modern cryptography for example, should be considered a huge deal.
  • I usually skip over particular inventions but I like this one. It’s a new way to stop condensation forming on glass surfaces like spectacle lenses and windows that doesn’t require an outside electricity supply. It’s actually a thin layer of gold in between layers of titanium oxide. This absorbs solar radiation and heats up the glass enough to get rid of condensation. Unfortunately it doesn’t work at night and while you might be concerned about the cost of gold, so little is used that the cost is actually quite low. This is one invention that I’m confident will make it to the market almost immediately.
  • ChatGPT has been making waves lately and I’ve been playing with it myself. However there’s is no one definitive article I can link to for now as everyone is still experimenting and learning. In general this year has been the big breakout year for AI and one of my favorite examples is the development of a bot that can play the boardgame Diplomacy. This article summarizes the rules well enough. The upshot is that it’s a wargame set in Europe but the rules are simplified and the game emphasizes communication between the players. They must make deals with one another to survive and there are inevitable betrayals. The bot is able to convincingly act like a human including talking to the human player in plain text messages, making deals, relating what is being said to what is happening on the board and making plans. I just love this YouTube video of what it feels like to play against the bot.

Alois Nebel (2011)

Here’s another Czech film and coincidentally it’s centered around the railways as well. As is so often the case, the shadow of the Second World War hangs heavily in this film and yet the specific event it is about, the expulsion of Germans just after the war in the face of the advancing Russians, is completely unknown to me. This made it difficult for me to understand what was going on and who all of the characters are. Nonetheless I can still appreciate enough of the personal story of the titular character to realize that this is a great film and the rotoscoped animation makes it uniquely beautiful as well.

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Peacemaker

I rated The Suicide Squad as probably my favorite of the DC superhero films I’ve seen so if James Gunn is making a spin-off television show from it, I’m all onboard. Though this is a DC show, it features characters so obscure that their comic book origins barely matter. This gives Gunn a free hand in doing pretty much anything he wants with them and that’s key to why this series is so good. It has great character development, funny dialog, even if there’s a little too much of it at times, a good enough plot and surprisingly strong action scenes. I’d characterize this as an attempt to copy the MCU’s formula but with something close to an R-rated sensibility. As far as I’m concerned, the formula is a winning one.

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Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar (2021)

Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo are an established comedic duo and I suspect that how much one likes this film directly depends on how much you like their act. I’ve never seen any of their work before this and I have to say that I was totally flummoxed by the tone of this film and who it’s meant for. Eventually I was able to work out that it’s really a power fantasy for middle-aged women while embracing maximum silliness. This isn’t really a film that is to my tastes but I do acknowledge how well-made it is and how fully committed it is to its particular vision of female friendship.

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The unexamined life is a life not worth living