Challengers (2024)

This is one tennis film that really is not about tennis at all. As the character played by Zendaya states it plainly, it’s about relationships. Luca Guadagnino is a director who seems to be specializing in erotic passion in all its forms and so this is right up his alley. Here the physicality of sports stands in for sex and their competitiveness fuels the passion. It’s a slick, bold and incredibly sexy film but I think it overdoes the stylistic touches and shifts in time.

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20 Days in Mariupol (2023)

I followed the Ukraine War religiously for months but even a news addict like me had to pace myself since it has dragged on for so long. This harrowing documentary takes us back to the earliest days of the war, focusing on one journalist’s perspective in the ill-fated city of Mariupol. Its narrow focus means that it makes no attempt to explain the broader context of the conflict. But being able to see the invasion of the city on a day-to-day basis gives it an authenticity and emotive impact like no other.

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The Innocent (2022)

This turned to be a more commercial film than the titles that usually end up in my to watch list. I suppose I was misled by its sky high Rotten Tomatoes rating and the fact that actress Noémie Merlant who so impressed the world in Portrait of a Lady on Fire won a César Award for her performance here. In the end this is an entertaining, well-balanced crime comedy but it’s a little old-fashioned and not particularly artistic.

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Noita

I’m terrible at platform games and terrible at roguelikes and this is both! I wanted to give this a go anyway due to its very interesting gameplay mechanics. It doesn’t look like much with old-school pixel graphics but that’s actually part of what makes it so special. Every pixel of the game world is physically simulated and so everything is potentially destructible with the right effects! The problem is that the environment becomes incredibly chaotic and combined with how little healing is available in-game, it’s a very difficult game. I ended up using a mod to give myself extra revives after dying just so that I could actually see more of the game.

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Possession (1981)

This film is most often described as psychological horror but it really defies genres. It’s also hard to categorize in other ways as well, being an English-language film made by a Polish director that is set in Germany and features mostly European performers. One thing that’s certain is that it’s a genuinely horrifying film, if only due to Isabelle Adjani pushing her performance to extreme lengths. Critics have been struggling since it was made to make sense of it and I think it’s not really possible to nail it down to some particular intent on the part of the director but watching it is certainly an engrossing and disturbing experience.

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Smoke Sauna Sisterhood (2023)

So this is a documentary that is full of imagery of naked female bodies, yet none of it is sexually titillating in the least. The intent seems to be to show that women’s bodies are just bodies, in all shapes, sizes and of all ages. The smoke sauna is apparently a part of the culture of Estonia and this film shows a group of women enjoying the experience in each other’s company while exchanging personal stories. There are no names and no other narration. The images, both of the women and the natural setting of the sauna, are beautiful, the stories are affecting, and that’s enough to make this a wonderful film.

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Science News (March 2025)

This month we have both a good number of science announcements interesting enough to be included here and they are also so important that everyone should know about them.

  • Let’s start with the one that will raise the most hackles. It’s a study of studies aimed at measuring the accuracy of gender stereotypes. The impolitic yet unsurprising finding is that they are mostly true in that people are generally accurate at assessing whether men or women were higher on some given trait or characteristic. That said, they underestimate gender differences in cognitive abilities and academic performance and overestimate them in personality traits and behaviors. Also worth noting that individuals were less accurate at these judgments than the group as a whole, a finding that is in line with similar studies.
  • Next is a paper that seems especially relevant to us in Malaysia given recent news about health insurance costs. It discusses the rise of genetic testing and how the data thus obtained can be used to predict health outcomes. Yet many jurisdictions around the world have banned insurers from pricing their products using genetic data. This creates a mismatch between individuals who have undergone genetic testing and insurers that will only grow worse as genetic testing becomes more pervasive and more accurate. It is difficult to see how health insurance markets would continue to operate under such conditions.
  • The major medical news this month has to be the so-called ‘tumor to pork’ announcement. It’s about a Chinese team inserting a pig gene into a virus and using it to infect cancerous cells. This then causes the body’s own immune system to treat the cancer as a foreign entity and attack it. The virus used, the Newcastle disease virus, is thought to be relatively harmless to humans though it is deadly to birds. The team used the technique to treat a variety of untreatable cancers including liver, ovarian, cervical etc. with excellent results.
  • Finally a major discovery in the field of cosmology. Data from the James Webb Space Telescope reveals that around two-thirds of observable galaxies spin in one direction while remainder spin in the other. This contradicts the existing model of a homogenous universe in which more or less equal numbers of galaxies should spin in the opposite directions. One explanation that has caused excitement is that our own universe exists within a black hole and therefore was itself born rotating. This carries the implication that every black hole in our universe is a doorway to another baby universe. The less exciting explanation is that our own perception is skewed by the rotation of the Milky Way galaxy. I like the exciting explanation but in cases like this it’s usually the mundane one that holds true over the long term.

The unexamined life is a life not worth living