Caramel

That's two in two movies I've watched this year, both of which have been absolutely supreme. So much so I can claim that this one is also in my top ten of the year (the other being Persopolis). Caramel is basically the Lebanese Amelie. Believe me I don't say such things unless I actually mean them, but everything about this movie was a joy to watch.

The movie is set in Beirut, and considering the times that Lebanon is going through right now, it was extra special for me and heartbreaking at the same time to watch this movie as I got to see more elements of the country and the people celebrated rather than destroyed. What's even more special to me about this movie is that it portrays the city as something vibrant rather than how it is traditionally shown broken, battered and bombed. It gives it a certain filter and lets it shine slightly. Sure there are times when I felt that it would have been nice to show the city at night, but that's a minor point and the director Nadine really gives us a Beirut to wonder about.

The story centres around 5 women living and working in Lebanon and how their romantic lives evolve along with the expectations of the world they inhabit and their families and upbringings. The great thing about this movie is that none of the characters are perfect, in fact all of the women are far from perfect, they're all real and that adds the most amazing layer to the whole story. They each have their own problems and obstacles to overcome which slowly unfold throughout the movie.

My only fear is that people in the Western world may not appreciate some of the situations and customs that inhabit the story. While they're not crucial to the enjoyment and understanding of the story, it adds a whole other dimension to the story that they are portraying, in a certain way you have to be Lebanese to appreciate that this is actually true and it's the reality. Specifically the police scene and the hotel scenes. Trust me when I say this, that's all true, no dramatisation for the movie.

The director Nadine Labaki (who also wrote this) does a masterful job of injecting so much humour and warmth into this movie, which is where the direct comparison to Amelie comes from. It's been a while since I was given a set of characters that were all likeable and beautiful in their own right. In my view this is probably one of the hardest things to do in a movie and Nadine hit all the correct notes on this front.

One thing I want to comment on is the beauty of the lead actress and fundamentally the sex appeal that she oozes and that is lacking in a lot of American shows that I watch. It struck me as odd that this woman who isn't stick thin as is required by the 10pounds-added-by-the-camera world that we live in. Sex appeal cannot be brought or added on, it's just there, in a Marilyn Monroe kind of way.

Finally I would be remiss if I didn't mention the excellent soundtrack that was chosen and composed by Khaled Mouzanar (whom the director I believe is engaged to, good name btw son) which fits the movie feel to a glove and adds yet another exceptional layer to the movie.

I honestly don't want to give much more about this movie other than it's something that people who enjoyed Amelie would find the same kind of magic in this movie.

The Ties that Bind

For the last Battlestar Galactica season, I'll be reviewing each episode from this 3rd episode, 'The ties that Bind'. So if you've not seen the episode yet, I suggest you stop reading and come back once you've done so. I guess you can consider this your SPOILER WARNING (that's for the entire post in case you were wondering).

Plot Threads

So Kaylee was the centre of this particular episode and the fact that she found out that her husband, Colenl Tai and Tory are all Cylons and obviously her obvious murder once that toaster kills her after she's taken the child from her.

It's a shame that this character died in this fashion, but I guess finally we're dealing with some proper ramifications in this season. It's been a pretty slow burner as the first two episodes have been pretty mediocre as far as I'm concerned. Definitely did not provide the correct level of punch that you would expect from a final season. There's no time for them to frak around with silly exposition. Each episode has to be complete dynamite, seeing as they only have 22 episodes (19 now) to wrap the entire story and tie up all the loose ends...after a fashion of course. I'm sure they'll leave some questions for the audience to decide for themselves, but my hope is that the major elements are discussed and explained.

Meanwhile, Kera is commanding a ship through space trying to find Earth, while fucking off everyone around and acting like more of a bitch than she normally can be. obviously she's changed and it's going to be interesting to see what exactly happened in the 2 months that Kera was away and why she's acting the way she's acting, completely spaced out. Is she the last Cylon?

Then you've got the Lee Adama thread. obviously they've put him in this position seeing as his and kera's love thing is all but over, and she's got her mission and Anders has his, he can now do his thing and screw around with Rosaline's administration and play politician. Out of all the characters on this show, I guess Lee has had the most change than any other character on the show. He's had the most friends become enemies, enemies become friend type scenarios than anyone else and they're poised to continue that fine tradition throughout this series as well. Do you get the feeling that he's hoping to take over as President once Rosaline kicks the bucket?

As if that's not enough plot threads, you've then got the crazy civil war that's going on with the Cylons. So half want them to get the Diana's up and running again and the other half want to neuter everyone apart from a specific number of models. I'm not sure where this is going to be honest.

CGI Cylons

One thing that i definitely noticed and wish they go back and sort out for the rest of the seasons, is the new look of the kick ass Cylons. The whole chromed goodness is pretty awesome as far as I'm concerned. I used to think that this was one of the weakest aspects of the actual CGI work that BSG elevated but they've really brought their game up for this one.

Overall I liked this episode a lot more than the other 2 episodes, however they're still not giving enough information as I'd like and not progressing certain elements of the story as much as you would hope them to, however looking at the trailer for the next episode, they do seem to be kicking things up to the next gear. Here's hoping.

MacHeist Retail Bundle

In a word, RUBBISH. The newest MacHeist is up and running and basically it's a really poor showing this time around. See the last time was an AMAZING collection of applications that included Pixelmator and VectorDesigner. This time around you have some of the same applications and a few random new ones as well, but NO killer application.

Don't get me wrong I REALLY rate Awaken, use it every day, I really like Coversutra, use that every day (tried using Cha-Ching but couldn't really get to grips with it at all); crucially all three of these applications were in the previous MacHeist that was held not 3 months ago. What is the application in that bundle that would make you excited? Seriously? It's not there. Unless they start adding some good stuff, there is no way that this Heist will be as good as the previous one and for good reason. Who exactly are they trying to get on board on this?

On a personal note, there is really no application out there that I want, apart from maybe a better FTP application (there are a couple of good ones knocking about but I've not decided which one i should go for) and a better torrent client (transmission is doing exactly what I want and the development is constant so hopefully there'll get some basic UI issues sorted out and add being able to search and add torrents from within the application itself and I won't need a new torrent client either).

Is this Comedy?

So went to Jongleurs yesterday for part of Reid's stag-do and I've got to say that apart from the compare (is that how you spell compare?) and the last act, the other three were mediocre to bad. The first comedian to come on stage, was mildly amusing but crude as you like, the second guy got confused and decided to do something singing but would mumble his lines when he spoke and didn't come out very well, by the time the third guy came out we were hoping for someone funny, alas we got death on stage. I've never seen that before to be honest. The guy was dying on stage as NOTHING he was saying was striking a real cord with anyone. Also as it happened our table was the lairiest of the bunch (get 15 guys on a stag-do will do that) and having most of his material come off as completely ignorant (there is funny and then there is just plan wrong,...since when were people from Sudan, Asian?).

Thankfully the last guy did save the show slightly and had like 100 or so jokes that he kept rattling on and did a very good job of keeping everyone under control. Which basically made me think about standup comedy in general. The first of which is the fact that it is EXTREMELY difficult to do properly (I knew that was the case, but until I witnessed someone really die on stage I wasn't clear as to the real extent).

The thing is I've been listening to the AWESOME Bugle podcast, which is one of the funniest things I've heard in a really long time. Different format admittedly, however the point still stands that new comedic talents do exist however sadly they were not at Jongleurs last night (and based on that I'll probably steer clear of the place and look for my standup fix in other establishments).

The fox is back

Late last year I made the move to a mac and while there was a bit of getting used to certain things I've been really very happy with everything that it's offered me in terms of getting on with computing in general. However the thing that I've missed the most is Firefox with all of it's plugins and general speed and open source goodness. I tried Camino and i've got to say it's good in some respects but trying to get any of the blasted plugins to work was a mission in and of itself. It just seemed to me like it wasn't really there in terms of both backing and development as Firefox, which is just as well. So for the last couple of months I've been using Safari, and while I like a lot of stuff in Safari, I think there is room for improvement.

Enter Firefox 3 Beta 4 which was released earlier this week. DAMN that's MUCH better.

I've installed GRApple Yummy theme, which is basically a correct integration of the theme into Leopard and I'm away. Firefox 3 is faster than Safari at loading up, it's slowly starting to get all the various plugins updated as well and crucially it now also looks the part as well. I've not really played around with the browser much yet but one of the more welcome additions is the fact that now I can look for plugins and themes from within Firefox itself rather than going to the mozilla website and searching. It's inspired me so much so that I installed ScribeFire straight away and I'm writing this from within there which I've never done before, just because I can.

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