After Blind Massage and Summer Palace, here’s a third film by Lou Ye and it’s one of his earliest yet. Another reason for adding this to our list is because it stars Jia Hongsheng who life story was featured in Quitting as well as Zhou Xun who was his real life girlfriend for a while. It also felt appropriate to watch this after visiting Shanghai recently and we even recognized a bridge from our visit in the film.
This documentary has been well-liked enough to appear on various critics’ best of year lists. But what convinced me to put this on my list is a strong recommendation by Tyler Cowen of it offering plenty of social science to think about while urging the audience to be skeptical of its conclusions.
Continuing with the theme of bigger, more complex scenes, the above is I think one of my best work so far, an attempt to model a building on a city street. It’s not really that difficult to model, just that it’s a lot of work to get all of the detail. I used the Archipack add-on for the doors and windows and downloaded the plants from Blendswap. The background is of course a HDRI map but everything else is my own work.
This second part follows directly from the first one and as they were shot together should be seen as a single epic. Nonetheless there are discernible differences. Unlike the first one, this one takes place across a much shorter span of time as we approach the present. With the level of violence escalating drastically in this one, it also starts to feel more like a conventional action movie.
Once again I heard about this epic from The Economist which annoys my wife to no end as Indian films tend to be tediously long. This one more than qualifies for being long as the whole thing comes to well over five hours. It was divided into two parts for theatrical release and so this post covers the first part.
I’m shit at fighting games but keep buying them anyway. This one was a dumbly dumb purchase because although this ultimate version was released in 2016, it’s based on a 2011 game and unfortunately looks the part. The models, textures and effects are all pretty low resolution and look worse than even the other fighting games I’ve played a year or two ago. In addition, I found that I know only a small smattering of the Capcom characters and hence don’t really care about them.
When film critics crank out their best of the year lists, it’s fair to say that this title will appear in many of them. It’s not just that this Danish film is genuinely good, it’s also that its gimmick makes it stand out. There’s basically just the one actor who appears on screen and there is only just that one scene shot in a single location. Yet it has no difficulty being both very tense and riveting.