I’m not really an enthusiastic fan of the films of Wes Anderson even if I tend to enjoy them and this newest one makes for a pretty good illustration of why. It’s almost pure style with no real underlying theme except for a love of its setting. There’s no character development and it actively tries to avoid emotional engagement. Anderson himself calls it a love letter to journalists, well, maybe a very specific kind of foreign correspondent from a bygone era. But it feels to me like more of a tribute to France, at or at least a kind of idealized France of the 1960s according to the American imagination. It’s supremely gorgeous and fun but ultimately feels hollow and unsatisfying.
Continue reading The French Dispatch (2021)Ran (1985)
Ran was Akira Kurosawa’s last epic and is one of his most famous films despite it being made so late in his career. It’s considered an adaptation of Shakespeare’s King Lear though it seems that the director was originally inspired by a real figure from Japanese history Mōri Motonari. While Kurosawa was never a very subtle director, I found this to be much too heavy-handed and obvious for my tastes, like a lavish, exaggerated stage play. It does look incredibly beautiful and being the most expensive Japanese film ever made at the time, features some of the most impressive large-scale period battles put on film. It even manages to convey the effective use of tactics to win battles!
Continue reading Ran (1985)Desperadoes 3

As I promised a while back, I enjoyed Shadow Tactics so much that I decided then and there that I would play the Western-themed but similar genre game by the same developer. It took a while but here we are. This title pretty much offers the exact same type of gameplay and I unfortunately discovered that I don’t really like the Western-theme much after this being the second such game I’ve played this month. The guns do indeed make this more action-oriented if you want but it still feels more satisfying to be stealthy so this felt like more of the same for me. Eventually I warmed up to it enough to be just as engrossed by the more complex levels but I still prefer the earlier game more and I had no desire to replay levels for the sake of grinding stars and achievements.
Continue reading Desperadoes 3The Beatles: Get Back
This series may consist of only three episodes but the total running time adds up to over eight hours. Even if it’s The Beatles, it gets boring watching four guys muck about the studio just doing their own thing. I’m not a particular fan of the group but I persevered anyway, treating it as a kind of inside look on the creative processes of genius musicians as well as their group dynamics. Plus of course it’s fun to listen to their performances as they experiment with different variations and even do covers of other people’s music to warm up or relax.
Continue reading The Beatles: Get BackCODA (2021)
I added this onto my watchlist more out of sense of obligation than anything else as it was one of the big winners at last year’s Oscars. For a while this film fell on the wrong side of being too sickly sweet for me but it did eventually win me over when it focused on how the main character’s ability to hear is making her deaf family too dependent on her. I note that this is a remake of a French film but the original wasn’t notable enough to register on my radar. Out of curiosity, I sought out its trailer to take a look and yeah, it’s so similar down to the sex jokes that there’s no point in watching it. This not being a very consequential film anyway, I’m actually kind of glad that I watched this American version as its production values are visibly better.
Continue reading CODA (2021)On the Job (2013)
After being so disappointed by No Time to Die, it’s reasonable to ask if it’s even possible to make decent action movies set in the modern era. This film from the Philippines makes for a great counterexample as it limits the scope of its action to reasonable levels. Despite its limited budget, its cinematography is fantastic and it doesn’t compromise on its plot and character development either. This is admittedly a very dark film but that this what it means to treat the subject of violence and killings seriously. It seems that I was way late in hearing about this and this was successful enough that an American remake is in the planning.
Continue reading On the Job (2013)The War of the Worlds
This is a science-fiction book that everyone will have heard of if only because of the vast number of adaptations inspired by it. I similarly have never read the book itself before this, thinking that I already knew all there was to know from the adaptations. Watching a discussion of the top science-fiction novels however made me realize that there still is a lot of value in revisiting the old classics because they are classics for good reasons. As such I’ll be adding some science-fiction classics into my reading rotation beginning with this one by H.G. Wells.
Continue reading The War of the Worlds




