Wednesday 31 December 2008

HC Again

The reason I've been busy is because of hardcore gaming! Three days, around 12 or so hours each day (more or less) and it had already been going on two days! Would have been another half-day but was already full and I spent the rest of that day passed out anyway...

Not sure what the official name was, but we filed it under Tonga. Day One - Trip To Tonga: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7.

Day Two - Terror in Tonga: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7. Why So Serious?: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4. Beaten To Death: Part 1, Part 2.

Day Three - Hey, I'm in gaming! It starts with an inevitable recap, but as I was out of it, don't ask me what the plot was. Not that we did that much either. Mainly a combat... and that's about that. Eh. Guns Are Bad, MmmK?: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6.

Then we take a break for a different GM, Bert, who solidly linked this in to a previous adventure. Very well done. And a real Terry-centric mission too! I Am Paco: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7.

Day Four - back to the big mission, and another change on cast, although I refuse to allow a long recap (and given that we have no idea what is going on plot-wise isn't really needed). We try to stealthily enter a place we could easily have taken by storm, frankly. But, eh, we didn't want to be too obvious. Cafe Tug Of War: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5.

Then we need to move to the next place (with a very thin reason to go anywhere). However, we weigh up the going there with the how to get there without dying, and completely avoid the best way... not that our advisers helped. But lots and lots of discussion ensued. UN Discussion: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5.

So, we finally get to the next plot point (as far as we could tell) and immediately everything falls apart. Well, it would really, wouldn't it? We really don't have the skill set for this sort of mission. And listen out for Terry being very, very cold. Get In The Chopper!: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5.

(Then there's a little After Game Discussion: Part 1, Part 2.)

Day Five - Finally get to the end, which is surprising for all! (And the cast continues to change.) Research time, get ourselves some information, and still have no idea what's going on. Considering how distracting Logan is, no-one can complain that we take a long time. On To Cairo: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6.

So, we want a military solution. We aren't wanting to go against an army, and why should we? We have some KBC resources at our command. That'll fix everything! However... they were all bird-brains. Fortunately (...maybe...), we have another resource... and then everything ends... It Went To The Birds: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5.

And then one last After Game Chat, in which the plot (such as it is) is revealed! Huzzah!... the hell?

[END]

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The Next Doctor Who

Finally, after all these... couple of months... new Doctor Who! And it was... meh!

With all the speculation that this was a rip off of The One Doctor, no-one suspected that we had picked the wrong audio, but it did quickly become obvious that this was instead Minuet in Hell. Still, nice to see the shots of yester-doc, and still the TV Movie is considered canon, no doubt to many people's annoyance.

Cybermen tried to take over the city and/or the world? Say it ain't so! Again! ... I can't think of anything interesting to say about that, so will just pick on certain points. It was nice to see Hartigan's red dress if only because of the rest of the show being bland grays and browns. Colour, people, colour! Merry Drab Christmas, Mr Lawrence! And look at all the widdums who are made to work... in the middle of the night... after presumably a long day of working... and are still quite energetic and not at all sleepy. Uh-huh. With some of them more successfully portraying their heavy burdens than others who apparently can easily toss about heavy sacks. (Should I also mention the overdone mascara?)

But this is a time of Christmas, and, more importantly, a time of David Morrissey, and while I have no idea who he was, I still don't have any interest in seeing him in anything else (although I did keep thinking of Neil Morrissey). Dervla Kirwan played an excellent typical RTD Villainess (Villainatrix?), although she obviously won't be returning (so was she "saved" in her final moments as all villainessatricies are?). Velile Tshabalala was not quite the Rose stand in (she actually did as she was told!)... and other people were also on-screen.

In all, another not-quite-thrillingly exciting Christmas special.


Next time: no idea, but there's a good chance it won't be on earth... okay, I didn't believe that before I even finished typing the sentence...

[END]

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Tuesday 30 December 2008

Santa Claus Conquers the Martians!

Part 9:

Part 10:

[END]

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Monday 29 December 2008

Santa Claus Conquers the Martians!

Part 7:

Part 8:

[END]

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Sunday 28 December 2008

Santa Claus Conquers the Martians!

Part 5:

Part 6:

[END]

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Saturday 27 December 2008

Santa Claus Conquers the Martians!

Part 3:

Part 4:

[END]

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Friday 26 December 2008

Santa Claus Conquers the Martians!

I'm going to be busy over the next few days, so am posting a movie in parts that you could find yourselves on youtube...
Part 1:

Part 2:

[END]

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Thursday 25 December 2008

Some Thoughts This Xmas


[END]

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Wednesday 24 December 2008

Shadowrunning In-Between

Finally got around to getting to WARGS again, and played Shadowrun. Moreover, since I picked up some of the manuals, I played my own character this time! Basically a Face/Adept by the name of Mr In-Between (after the song).

As it happened, the adventure was at the end of a long series of adventures set in Denver, and it didn't involve us doing much that coming across an item everyone wanted, then deciding who got it. Ended up being a rather quick game as we just went "eh... let's go with him" and then got on with trying to set everyone else up, although it all went off with everyone fighting and we only got away due to a special spell that had been developed.

The next set of Shadowrun adventures is in New York. Hopefully I'll be able to get in on those, although there is no WARGS next month as there is Kapcon!

[END]

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Tuesday 23 December 2008

HC Again

I get to play on three different days! Logan started playing on Thursday due to having a live gamer around, and I tried to get in as soon as I got home (on my Friday). From hearing the file, I managed to get in just as someone else fell out. Good timing!

So I'm there for the first part of the adventure, in which we get an amazing action scene involving the Mouse, but otherwise fumble around with no real idea of what's going on or how to solve anything... and then when we continue the next day (with slightly different players) I say "let's do this", find the plot and solve the whole thing easily. Huh. School Guardian Lions: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8.

After that, we consider the ongoing campaign issues and decide to try a different tack on investigating the ghoul-type creatures under New York. Consider that we have little idea of what we are doing and typically go into these sorts of situations without being prepared. What Could Possible Go Wrong?: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.

Then we went for a nice easy CSI type mission. Even easier for me as I had already heard others do it, so I was on No Brainer. There was basically one piece of important evidence they nearly managed to avoid and couldn't believe when they got. Storage Redux: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

Next day, after doing other things (see next post), I jump in at the end of the session. We don't have huge amounts of time, but do some talking, and get involved in another player's story. Robert's Reaming: Part 1, Part 2.

Then we don't get to think of another mission quickly, do some thinking and planning, but otherwise end up chatting. Bit of planning and wind down: Part 1.

[END]

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The TSV Religion

The next TSV is out in the archives: TSV 61. Of note is the article examining New Zealand's own production of Seven Keys to Doomsday (although the actor playing the Doctor was from England, not NZ), and high humour can be found in the Time Flight cartoons.

My own work increased in this issue. For one, I wrote a piece looking at the way religion is used in Doctor Who and how it is generally negatively portrayed (usually to make conflict for the story). Not sure I'd take the same stance now, but the point is still valid.

I also stepped up as the main reviewer of the BBC books, which I now think back on, starting with:
The Ancestor Cell: Still remember this badly. As in: remember this as being bad. It really was a clunky, clumsy way to end the Future War arc (although the arc did need to be ended).
Casualties of War: Nice book, pleasanter than many other reads, but not brilliant.
Heart of TARDIS: Dave Stone was a bit more than a little full of himself here. Especially the Fourth Doctor and Romana stuff.
Prime Time: All I recall is that this was a bad send-up of the BBC. Oh, and the revealed death at the end.
Imperial Moon: Bad, bad book. Bad plot device to start, badly written, just bad.

Read also Paul and Alden.

[END]

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Monday 22 December 2008

Torchwood: Almost Perfect

Last of the current set, Almost Perfect by James Goss.

People are perfect. Or, at least, can be made so. Some people may die along the way, but that's the price of perfection. And Ianto is a woman. So, you know, comedy ensues!

James is way into Facebook and every chapter heading is basically a Facebook status update. Which is really annoying if one (such as me) isn't into Facebook because it just comes across as idiotic. In many ways this book is trying to be hip and fresh and new, and it works for a while... but also gets in the way. I'm not sure that James Goss' style really suits for Torchwood. The plot twists are such that the story changes in each of the three sections, but the last section is almost an entirely different story.

The three cast members are almost generic caricatures of themselves, with Jack being horny and Ianto and Gwen bitch-fighting. Emma becomes annoying, and the rest of them aren't worth talking about.

Not a great book. Slightly readable, but nothing to get excited about.


Order: After Exit Wounds of course.

[END]

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Sunday 21 December 2008

What to Read?

So, a friend finally got around to reading Watchmen. And then he asked: what else should he read? (At least, relating to Graphic Novels.)

The two other classics usually mentioned are V for Vendetta and The Dark Knight (the original, not any of the sequels). I would also add in Ronin, as I really like it.

Then again, I like anime, so would add in Akira, Domu, Dominion Tank Police and Ghost in the Shell.

More recently, I tend to stick to the more mainstream comic houses, so recommend stuff like Animal Man (the stuff by Grant Morrison) and Doom Patrol (ditto). The Superman set: Death of, World Without and The Return of. Batman Knightfall and Knightsend (they never published Knightquest which is in the middle). Oh, and Green Lantern is a great series (although basically ignore from when Kyle turned up onwards).

On the other side: Nick Fury vs Shield, various Spiderman (Saga of the Alien Costume, Vs Venom, Cosmic Adventures and more), and they've got huge tomes out collecting lots of runs of their comics.

Going broader, Maus is a must. From Hell is a great read. Bone has to be enjoyed. Cerebus is an interesting descent into madness. Fury (Joss Weadon future Buffy-universe story). League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, although earlier works are better than later.

Then there's the 2000AD stuff such as Judge Dredd, Pete recommends America and also the first two volumes of Strontium Dog. (Pete also recommends Hellboy, which I have only seen the movie versions of, but he loves them.)

Quite a bit there, but what graphic novels would you recommend?

[END]

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Saturday 20 December 2008

Torchwood: Skypoint

The second book in the current Torchwood book series is Skypoint by the author of Fragments Phil Ford! No, wait… could easily be mistaken that he was the one.

This story continues the classic plot line of: get a bunch of people stuck together and slowly kill them off. That might not sound original, but Phil really mixes it up by having the Torchwood crew endlessly spend far too much time lost in their memories of their times before they joined Torchwood… he really must have liked Fragments as many, many pages are devoted to replaying the moments that we saw on screen. Gah! We saw the episode, they’re traumatised, we get it!

The main villain and monster is rather lame. No reason Phil didn’t focus on it, it really isn’t worth the effort of trying to get to it. And the ending is really quick and pathetic too. Bah. Really, really bah.

The crew are well done, but we’d hope so from Phil. The residents of Skypoint are… he tried to make them interesting, but doesn’t devote as much time to them as the memories of Owen, Tosh and Ianto. (Seriously, man, just watch that episode again yourself and don’t inflict it on us.)

In fact, that’s a decent summary of the book. Go watch Fragments and avoid this book.


Order: Gwen’s just back from her honeymoon, so between Something Borrowed and From Out of the Rain it is!

[END]

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Friday 19 December 2008

The Day Keanu Stood Still

I’ve lost track of how many remakes I’ve seen this year, but now we’re up to An Inconvenient Truth (although possibly with less computer imagery than that movie). Have to say, if you want someone who doesn’t react as a human would in any way what-so-ever, yep Keanu Reeves is an excellent choice.

I haven’t seen the original Day, but suspect this is as heavy handed as that was. Certainly we are in no doubt that the humans have brought the earth to ruin and only by destroying humanity can the earth be saved. ...and that’s about the extent of it really. Not huge depth here, and the military forces aren’t exactly exemplars of caring and supportiveness. Just as well there’s one righteous man in Sodom… I mean, one good woman in New York. (Not that there’s a lot of religious imagery here, unlike the first one.)

Anyway, yes, ‘Woah’ boy is in it, as well as that woman who was the girlfriend interest in the Hulk, and of course Gary Hobson from Early Edition. (Yes, frankly, none of them are worth naming. Performances are all right, but no-one really cares about them.) Nice cameo from John Cleese but that man can’t do anything wrong, and James Hong, of course, who seems to be in every movie nowadays (which isn’t a bad thing).

Not a terrible movie, but one that doesn’t bother with ‘subtly’. [And yes, they say that line...]

[END]

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Thursday 18 December 2008

Didgeri-dumb!

Have you seen this article? Can you believe it?

Nicole Kidman upset Aboriginal groups because she played the didgeridoo, which is a cultural no-no. Fine, there are some traditions and such that we honour, there being a more than a few people getting upset over the French use of the Maori moko for example.

But the excuse? "It's not meant to be played by women as it will make them barren."

What? Are you freaking kidding me? Apparently, merely touching a musical instrument can strike women infertile… You have got to be seriously kidding me.

There are some way out there freaky thoughts, but this is beyond bizarre. Although, to be honest, there are other 'touch this and things will happen' ideas that are just as stupid. Yes, 'stupid'. Merely suggesting in a book that girls dare to play the didgeridoo is enough to cause offence.

Really? How about your stupid woman-insensitive culture that says "women shall not be allowed to do this!" (At this moment, I'm not sure this statement isn’t directly at a large number of religious organisations as well.)

Touching the didgeridoo makes women infertile. There's no about of head-slapping that makes that line make sense.

(Do I even dare ask for scientific evidence for this?)

[END]

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Wednesday 17 December 2008

The Chronicles of Risan: Part the Seventeenth

Once again it was just three (Alrick, Lia, myself) because the other two (the dwarf and the swordmage) got nicked! It was the middle of the night when suddenly we were attacked by a group of fishmen (worshippers of Dagon? Hmm... wrong game, methinks)! The attackers weren’t that tough to be honest, and the remainders that we were fighting dived into the ocean rather than continue the fight… but when they were gone, so were our comrades!

The sword was reminded of a nearby outpost that might have been known for creating those kinds of creatures, and thus we were on our way. The outpost itself was a rather decrepit sight, full of disrepair, but there was one old man still there, working on maintaining what might well be described as a giant submersible metal lobster (also known as an Apparatus of Kwalish). And, it turns out, that the creatures we encountered were from a nearby underwater city... wow, it was amazingly convenient that we managed to get a submarine right when the plot revealed an underwater city, but let’s not talk about that right now.

We take the lobster for a test drive, but it wasn’t easy to either control or work out where we are, and very nearly either collapse the ship due to pressure, have it fill with water via the leak or loose ourselves in the sea. Eventually we spy the city and a nearer cave of, according to the inaccurate map, the black dragon... ! Most likely, the two were taken to be sacrifices to the dragon, so we head for that.

Once out, we head in through a passage… and was attacked! Some of those particular creatures were particularly hard and pounded me something serious. There were also swarms of fish, but really one creature thumped and thumped hard and I was the lucky recipient. We still managed to kill him, but couldn’t spend too long in the water before the dragon we knew was coming and I was not looking good going into the last fight.

The dragon tried to tempt us, but we thought beating it up would be a better idea, although there were two more swarms of fish (that swam in the air!) to aid it. The fight started moderately well, pinning the dragon, but one swarm just stuck to me and hammered me (not that the dragon didn’t get some bashing in either). Yeah… I fell down… started dying... and the swarm continued to attack me... Although the warlord came to my aid, I continued to be done over and came very, very, very close to dying...

However, I found out later, the warlock had been beating on the dragon by herself and also dealing with another swarm. By the time the warlord came to her aid, she was down… and the swarm... the dragon died... the swarm died... and the warlock died...

Another price has been paid in our ongoing missions...

[END]

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Tuesday 16 December 2008

HC Again

With the return of Dale, we opted for a nice easy CSI style mission, one that would gently ease his new character in... and cause him lots and lots of san loss. Yay! Dumpster: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.

Rather than do something else, we were up against a deadline, so we tried to find a mission... and ended up just wandering around. Monkey Urine: Part 1, Part 2.

After a long wait the next day, I managed to get in, and we went on a previously ignored Cthulhu style mission. However, since time had marched on a lot, a lot of the players, and the GM, were a little punch drunk, and so the mod might be a little more light-hearted than was intended. Curse of Anubis: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5.

[END]

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Sunday 14 December 2008

90 Days and counting

Yeah, time for my .02 cents of opinion on the 90-day probation bill. In some ways, on paper, this does indeed sound like a good idea. Sure, let the SME businesses try people out and if they don't work out, let them go without problems. However, there are a few gaps between intention and reality...

First, the workers aren't stopped from starting legal action against the employees for discriminatory reasons, and how many workers might possibly consider this? Fine, some workers are willing to accept that they aren't suited, but there are those that will either take offensive (real or imaginary) or just see this as an easy lawsuit. I can already see many SMEs not taking advantage of this just to avoid the potential court cases.

Second, it is said that some businesses wouldn't follow the rules anyway, so this bill won't matter. Uh, reminds me of the line: If you outlaw guns only the outlaws will have guns. Just because the bad ones are doing it doesn't mean you give power to the good ones to do it too.

Third, yes, some businesses will be seeing this as a way of getting through cheap labour without worrying about paying wages. Against this is the problem of continual retraining and not keeping developable peoples. However, if this is going on, it'll most likely be in the sector where training is not high, ie manual labour or common low-base job. This is what most of us really think will be going on.

Time will tell if this works, but most of us are highly doubtful. Cynicism vs hope, and there's not much of the latter...

[END]

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Saturday 13 December 2008

Torchwood: Pack Animals

Over to more Doctor Who reading, this time picking up the Torchwood books (set during series two). First up, Pack Animals by Peter Anghelides.

Another book based on an exciting card game, MonstaQuest in this case. Fortunately, it's not really about that, but about the guy who created that game and seems to have based his monsters a little too closely on known Rift-related creatures. (Although the tiger on the cover doesn't really feature, although Gwen in those boots do.)

There's a lot of padding here as Peter takes a lot of time detailing people being attacked by various creatures, and then various members of the Torchwood crew deal with these attacks in various way. Without really that much variety. It's not until over half-way that the real plot is uncovered, but even then a lot of pages are passed without anything happening. And as for the ending... 'anticlimactic' doesn't quite cover it.

The crew are moderately well captured, but just aren't on screen all that much, and we don't get inside their heads at all, they are just there on the page being a part of the scene without being characters that we connect with. The other characters are all too flash-in-the-pan to care about.

A lot of a 'meh' book. The best thing about it is the cover.


Order: refers to the upcoming wedding and Owen's dead, so between A Day in the Death and Something Borrowed then.

[END]

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Friday 12 December 2008

Quarantined

Dexter's sister gets a movie all of her own! Might make for an interesting one-off Cthulhu-style mod (think about that far too much), some interesting examples of getting some insanities due to much san loss... But, enough of that, and on to yet another American remake of a foreign film, this one Rec.

Basic plot: people get trapped somewhere and then taken out one-by-one, crossed with a zombie variant movie for much death. The conceit of this being that the movie is all shot through one camera. Like Cloverfield, it makes for some nauseating moments (not very many), some admittedly brilliantly done in-screen special effects, and an amazing example of technology in that the camera has a battery that lasts for many, many hours...

The effects are well done, with blood spurts and body parts being defiled in all manner of ways (and a very in-your-face death). Undoubtedly some cgi-fixed up pieces, but still impressive considering that they are presented as part of one-shot sequences (as far as we can tell, could be many edits in there, film effects are very well composited these days). But some how I doubt that the Scott character was indeed holding the camera all the time.

So the main star is Jennifer Carpenter. She starts out well, fun strong character, but ends up screaming a lot. A whole lot. Pretty much nothing but screaming. Although, to be fair, most of the other characters end up screaming as well. Or growling. It's not exactly stretching performances here. There are other recognisable faces in this as well, but no-one really outstanding.

Ultimately, however, the entire movie is undercut by the trailer, which spoils everything if you have the slightest memory of 'dramatic moments'. Certainly I knew of some scenes up coming which took away a lot of power to scare. And then the movie ends. Just ends. Huh...

[END]

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Thursday 11 December 2008

Sarah Jane Adventures: Episode 2.11/2.12

Nice first episode, but really spins its wheels in the second.

Wormwood is back, and with many surprises! Didn't expect her to be on the run, but its a slightly nice change from the usual. I say 'slightly' as the final revelation of part one kind of slips back into normal alien 'destroy all' mode. Although the surprise guest appearance at the end made up for it.

The second half then sits down and spends a lot of time with Wormwood blathering on and on about being a mother. And I mean really takes up a lot of time on the topic. Is there nothing else going on here? Okay, some minor stuff with the Sontarans, but ultimately it is just Samantha Bond espousing huge chunks of dialog.

Which she does well. Not her fault the script she got saddled with. The rest of the crew, aside from Tommy Knight, doesn't get a lot to do, with just one of them with Elizabeth Sladen to make sure she doesn't come across as a mad woman espousing her own dialog, but otherwise just standing there. Not that Tommy has a huge workload either, but at least he's on screen for longer. And, hey, nice to see Nicholas Courtney back, although the Brig is clearly getting on a bit. (And yes, the great Simon Chadwick twist was immensely forseeable.)

Hardly a brilliant moment to end series two on, and I am surprised Maria didn't return for it, but no doubt there will be a series three and we shall see what that brings.


Next time: There is no next time! But there is just two weeks away...

[END]

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Wednesday 10 December 2008

Quantum of Boredom

This is going to be an odd review. The latest Bond pic is... boring.

It might be that I was a little tired, but... it didn't really come across that the makers were trying any more. "Throw in a car chase, have a couple of things explode, shot lots of people, that'll make them happy." Even the director found other things to shoot and put in the film rather than shots with the actual cast in them. And as for the plot... well... it was really rather lame. They are trying to set up some big organisation, but I'm not at all impressed by their plans so far.

Daniel Craig presumably is a good actor, but wooden doesn't come close. The "Bond girls" are... pretty in a vague way. Mattieu Amalric is a wanna-be bad guy, but hardly rates as a threat. Judy Dench is the only person to bother watching this movie for.

Frankly, the entire movie can be summarised in this Sony ad featuring Bond, in which Daniel Craig stands there while things explode and he just barely has an expression on his face... yawn...

[END]

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Tuesday 9 December 2008

The Chronicles of Risan: Part the Sixteenth

We return to our ongoing excitement with the artificers, and come across a lighthouse/guard outpost. Wanting to have a nice chat, we head in in our longboat. Aren't we nice? As in: nice targets! We just manage to get to the tower as they start shooting the cannon at us. (Just as well I'm such an amazing thief or we might not get in through that hatch.)

Inside, humanoids attack us, mostly human and yet riddled with dark veins of chaos energy. That can't be good. I get to be a lot of a spectator, and yet still get hit. How dare they! They do have an interesting store room, which they tried to put behind a locked door... did I mention I was an amazing thief?

We found the room that was loading shells to the cannon upstairs, so I decided to head upstairs and try to stop them using them. Nice idea. Pity about the bad guy in the exo-skeleton armour. Hitting him was interesting, caused lots of springs and bolts and stuff to fly off, and he liked emitting a lot of steam. Now that was annoying.

Others in the area shot at up with fancy weapons that shot lumps of metal (what? we're in a fantasy setting, we don't recognise guns). My bow is still better, really, but I didn't get to introduce them to that as by the time we finally got the exo-chap down, they ran away!

Looking at the notes, we need to jump through the rift into the chaos plane to get to the home islands. I'm sure that won't be a problem at all...

[END]

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Monday 8 December 2008

HC Again

In the latest weekend of Heroic Cthulhu...

For some reason, I just don't know why, I GM'd! Back during Fright Night, I survived "weird stuff(tm)", but the set up was incredibly interesting, and so I took the next step and made the consequences of that night be an HC mod! (In some way, that made up for me missing HC that day.) Had to come up with why it happened, of course, and red herrings dangled, but ultimately it passed the time. House on Appletree Lane: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6.

Since I didn't get to play, I jumped in on the next day, and we continued on-going missions, in this case in the form of going to Belize. What's the worst that could happen? Belize Redux - The Finish: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7.

[END]

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Sunday 7 December 2008

I Want To Believe

[Guest blogger: Jeff Stone! Very eloquent...]

.......is a two-part episode of Millennium dusted off, rewritten with Mulder and Scully, and unleashed on the big screen to a legion of X-Philes, who must have spent the whole film going "THIS is the best they could come up with?!"

It is quite bizarre just how....underwhelming this film is. As I say, it's not an X Files story!! It even has Creepy Hawk-Nosed Guy from that silly devils-in-a-diner ep of Millennium. You can see exactly where the padding has been brutally shoved into the script to extend it out to feature length. The 'message' about stem cells is muddled...good? Bad? What would Jebus do? Are we supposed to care? The 'metaphors' about faith and belief are heavy-handed and ponderous. Skinner's cameo is an insult. The connections we are shown to the priest, the agents etc. all make sense, but in such a vague way that you feel that they started backwards with the secret and worked out how they could have M & S investigate it. I dunno if that makes sense, but the film doesn't really make much itself.

The film is also MISERABLE. None of the humour that leavened even the most depressing TV episode. Again, this is Millennium, not the bloody X Files. It's sad that the best moment of the whole thing is a strange joke involving Bush and J Edgar Hoover.

Oh, and the kiddy fiddler priest has lung cancer. Never mind why that should be relevant or necessary to the story, but WTF. Let's give him lung cancer.

Another thing that amused me is how the movie is a 'reverse Corman', in which millions were spent to make it look like it cost about $50,000. This is POOR, Chris. This is DULL. This is not a movie; this is not even a good TV episode. I am reminded of the DW TVM in 96...all that time to write a killer script, all that money shelled out (by Fox, the worst TV network in the known world, both times) - and *this* is all they could manage.

F**kin' pathetic.

I'd love to see the outtakes, where Frank Black is running around solving this case instead of our two heroes.

Jeff

[END]

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Saturday 6 December 2008

Doctor Who - Just A Show

There's something here for all of us:

Thou shalt not question Stephen Fry, indeed!

[END]

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Thursday 4 December 2008

His Dark Materials

Yes, I've finally gotted around to reading that almightly holiness of atheistic fantasy: His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman. Ehh...

Okay, out of the gate, yes, the Church is presented as a bunch of loons that consider ruling by fear and suppressing thought to be a good thing. But that's what Pullman is bashing. Not religion, but the acts done in its name.

Beyond that, not much direct attacking of religion at all. In fact, I would even say this is more agnostic fantasy than atheist fantasy, Pullman does not discount the possibility of some god, just doesn't have a god hanging around the story. He does have a spiritual message, and hammers that home, especially in The Amber Spyglass, so it's not like he removes religion without having anything to replace it.

As for the fantasy itself... I wouldn't call it amazingly brilliant. It's a coming of age story (which is the point of the matters he is talking about), but still largely fits the generic mold established by Joseph Campbell (I am incredibly cynical, aren't I?). The first book is more exciting that the second, and the third is just wacky. (Really? The mulefa world evolved naturally? Why am I having trouble believing that?)

Interesting point: for the movie, they ended the first book a little too early, and don't bring out a major event that would have changed the way some of the people were viewed. For a long while I thought the message was going to be "all adults are evil, trust the children".

A series that has been hyped more than it really deserves, especially around the anti-religion message. Readable, yes, but I'm thinking the Narnia books have more re-readability than these.

[END]

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Wednesday 3 December 2008

I was In Bruges

This so wants to be an arthouse film, but it can't quite pull it off. (Not the least because it goes for an amazing number of f's per minute...) Lots of imagery, lots of in-depth discussions of the meaning of life, lots of... really pointless sitting around talking, not much happening.

Two criminals are sent to stay the radar In Bruges, but why they are in Bruges in particular and what they are going to do while there slowly comes out in the film, and there are things going on in the town that they get involved in... But the key word there is 'slowly', and the movie really drags in the middle. Fortunately, the second part really kicks it up and works to keep the audience going.

Since seeing Lake Placid, I've liked Brendan Gleeson as an actor, and continued to like his performance in this. Colin Farrell does a nice job as the frantic Ray. Ralph Fiennes is brilliant, coming in as Harry Waters. Clemence Poesy has a rather different role to her Harry Potter one, but a final credit has to go to Jordan Prentice.

Not a brilliant movie, barely one worth watching to pass the time. There are plenty of worse movies, but if you have the patience to get through the middle, the movie then becomes watchable.

[END]

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Tuesday 2 December 2008

HC Again

Another whole weekend of roleplaying! (I wasn't going to play on the second day, but events happened that made me give it a shot.) Moreover, due to the previous day being a holiday in USAland, Logan started early. So, over 24 hours of role playing!

But not really a clear case delineation. In fact, we got into three cases at once! (On the next day, Logan offered us a fourth, but we declined.) Two Cthulhu type missions and one campaign related one. We concentrate on one, and then another, but not really on the third... at least, not yet. Trouble Comes In Threes: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8, Part 9, Part 10, Part 11, Part 12, Part 13, Part 14.

So, on the next day, we have different people (me and Pete are repeats), so we need to brief them before we can get underway. Unfortunately, while Pete gives very detailed briefings, they are very long briefings. Indeed, this is four hours of briefing! Although, the last hour is investigating the connections of magic in the building and causing much san loss... except for my character, who knows better. Gateway to Adventure: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.

So, instead of dealing with any of the cases, we go for option four: something else. A picnic, as it ends up happening, as Logan draws things out even more. But there is a matter we need to take care of, and might aid us in the other cases. Swift Resolution: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7.

After that, we turn back to our previous cases. After taking care of a last detail, we finally look at the third case... and find out that we should rush in shooting! No, wait... we find out that we shouldn't do that. Ultimately, we aren't sure what we should do. Grave Discussions: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.

[END]

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The Chronicles of Risan: Part the Fifteenth

Pausing in our saving of the artificer islands, Alrick, Lia and myself are called away (technically a month’s travel away!) to the land of the Shadowkin, which we had visited before (as chronicaled in Part the Sixth). The Shadowkin were dwellers in the Shadowfell (aka the Dark Dimension) before leaving for some reason and arriving here, around 500 years ago. They retained their homeland by the means of a dark dome about their city, making their sky dark.

While they were Raven Queen worshippers (as am I), a small sect started worshipping Amaunator the Sun God, and after their head priest died they thought him assassinated and declared that they would bring down the dome (thereby killing everyone else). We were called in to resolve the situation. Ah, an opportunity for diplomatic discussion and conflict resolution…

Upon arriving at their temple, Alrick immediately insulted them and they reacted by attacking us. Yeah, we are not Party Subtle, nor Party Parley either. They had angels on their side, but that end up being less of a problem than we thought.

Wandering through the temple, and nearly getting burnt after finding a trapped exit, we head up (sun god… must like being worshipped from high places, right?) and find a room behind a magically locked door (ha! says my thief side) in which there is a big angel, minor angels and a dead high priest. After challenging the angel, we find out that the evil priest binded the good angel, which didn’t please it any, and it wouldn’t mind if we killed it (aka sending it back to its plane). It was bound to defend the room (from anyone entering), and we decided that if the others in this temple were worthy then Amaunator would stop the angel from killing them, so we could test them by throwing them in here (note: cross off Party Ethical). [Also, turned out the angel didn’t help the priest perform a ritual that ending up killing him, so that angel ain’t exactly pure either.]

At that point, we detected a rumbling of a ritual and headed off to find the other clerics doing their ‘dome destroying’ bit. Getting near them made other angels appear, while not all easy to deal with, we finally do although the ritual progresses. However, after we take out the guardians, the clerics are more amendable to our point (yes, a sword point), and we deal with the head cleric (go me!) As for the rest, we test them in the angel room and find they’re not worthy. (Yes, I am supposed to be good, but they turned away from the Raven Queen, so religious war they get.)

Not sure if we’ll deal with the angel or not…

[END]

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Monday 1 December 2008

Terrible, terrible joke

This is something you can do next time someone does something you don't like around you. Set it up by saying:

"You remind me of my friend Richard."

Wait for a response, hopefully along the lines of "why's that?" to which you then reply:

"He's a dick, too."

Glares and/or groans will inevitably follow.

[END]

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Friday 28 November 2008

Bounty Head Bebop

[This is an unpaid advertisement...]

The Universe is a dangerous place, filled with criminals of every shape, size, and specialty. Smugglers, gun runners, thieves, murders, and worse are choking society and making it hard for law abiding citizens to go to work and live their lives. But what do you care? You’re not a law abiding citizen. You’re a bounty hunter.

Get ready as Heroic Journey Publishing releases Bounty Head Bebop, a Far modern science fiction game about the universe’s worst bounties and the bounty hunters who catch them. Using a modified version of the OGL D20 ruleset called the Inverted 20 or I-20 system, Bounty Head Bebop is a fast paced game with an emphasis on cinematic, high action role playing.

“The system integrates well with a cinematic flair while being somewhat familiar to more traditional gamers,” said Mark Reed, founder of Heroic Journey Publishing. “It feels like a quality hybrid game, something that isn’t overly rules light, but definitely rules quick.”

The game supports a number of different play styles with rules for psychics and space combat included. Bounty Head Bebop also comes with a large number of weapons, skills, and edges for players to choose from so that they can make each character and their gear unique. There is also a sample adventure included in the book to get gamers up and running quickly.

Initially, Bounty Head Bebop will be released as a PDF available for purchase from RPGNow and other One Book Shelf sites. Within the next few weeks, Heroic Journey Publishing will have a print copy version of Bounty Head Bebop. “The PDF is coming out first because we switched printers at the last minute. The price per book was much lower and it will actually make the quality of the book much better I believe,” Reed said.

Read more about Bounty Head Bebop at http://www.bountyheadbebop.com or purchase it at RPGNow.com.

[END]

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Thursday 27 November 2008

Sarah Jane Adventures: Episode 2.09/2.10

And, lo, in the garden at Gethsemene, did the temptation of the saviour of us all begin... well, something like that. Only more confusing.

The first episode: really well done. Things are built up nicely, yes it was an obvious trap, but it was just as obvious that there was no way Sarah Jane wasn't going to go through. And, of course, she had to try to save her parents. Who wouldn't? Of course, everything goes wrong... (BTW, was I the only one thinking "Don't touch the baby!"?)

And then the second episode happens. Er... what? Just a straight out "do this", no consideration, linear plot. Just like the ending to Father's Day really. And everything hinged on two people driving off in a car...

It would have been better if they had used the car to drive over the Trickster, at least that would have tied that moment into the story, but nope, they just get in the car and drive off... hardly the most exciting of moments... And where did the Touch of Death(tm) come from? One moment they are killing things left and right, the next they are touching and hugging with no problems. Wah?

Rosanna Lavelle is fine enough casting for Barbara Smith, but Christopher Pizzey is rather uneven as Eddie Smith. This isn't help by the script laying on the "we love Sarah Jane" meme thick and sickly. Gareth Roberts seems to have lost any sense of subtly.

A nice opener, but fail on the follow-up.


Next time: One-eyed squid things?... KEWL!!!

[END]

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Wednesday 26 November 2008

Ghostly Town

The latest Ricky Gervais vehicle is out... no, that's not fair. Most of his previous appearances, when he's been in control, has been all about what I call embarrassment comedy, the comedy of humiliation. Not so here (because he's not in control), and Ricky Gervais turns in a pretty good performance.

The very basic script "weird guy gets girl" is straight forward enough, but the whole ghost angle, while falling in some very predictable tropes, in nicely layered in. One take they make is that the ghost thing is flipped around... which I picked up on before they hammered it home. Which is one problem this movie has: every now and then one character will just pop out this little speech that delivers a wee life lesson... but it is so obviously there to instruct the audience on what they are supposed to be getting from this. Oi.

Ricky Gervais plays a very grouchy character, but don't so without being too obnoxious. He's rude, but the kind of rudeness that comes from having no social skills, not malevolence. Greg Kinnear plays a smarmy bastard, so he's not straying far from type either. Tea Leoni is a more toned version of her usual characters, and still comes across as very hot.

A decent comedy picture, one that doesn't have Ricky Gervais be as abrasive as usual. Better than I thought it was going to be.

[END]

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Tuesday 25 November 2008

The Chronicles of Risan: Part the Fourteenth

Today I found myself in a very unusual situation... but before I get to that: we set sail for a month to get to the islands where the artificiers came from that are using the blue prints to create devices intended for endless energy that in fact open rifts to the demon dimensions and let the foul spawn through... (draw breath) ...as you do.

We encounter an island where there are no birds, no fish, nada. Well, except for a ruined city, piles of bones, and ghosts. Not that the ghosts are the problems. Nope, that would be the two flesh golums traipsing around the city sucking marrow from the bones as well as the very ghost forms of the departed people. Really, really big flesh golums...

I spend most of the fight dazed and unable to do anything really exciting except fire the occasional arrow. I do hit, and get some damage going on, but can't really bring to bear the full force of my training. However, the rest of the peoples do manage to do some damages as these things go stomping around that they are finally brought down. Huzzah!

That's when the ghosts tell us that there is something much nastier up in the hills. And that there are lots of islands where this has probably happened as the big empire split into little dominions. Oh joy...

The big hilly thing is a large black blobby thing that flies around dripping ichor and keeps out of range, so once again I'm having problems do anything decent to it. Other party members bring it down, and then proceed to stomp on it a lot, with more potshots from me. I do get the final blow in, at least as far as I can tell, so I'm saying I did.

But the unusual thing was... not once did I get my swords out and attack with them. Huh. Not my style at all, and yet I was still fairly effective...

[END]

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Monday 24 November 2008

HC Again

It's that crazy time again! 20 odd hours of Heroic Cthulhu (and that is 20 'odd hours', not '20 odd' hours...).

First up, some minor matters to clear up with our own internal inn, and also we visit the small cubical with many, many chimp. In short, we take care of... Monkey Business: Part 1, Part 2.

Then we go on a nice, easy CSI case... yeah, right! Death and mayhem and the resurgence of an old enemy (not mine, but close enough). Gates of Delirium: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7.

Then I get up far too early (see previous post) to get in on the next day's gaming from right at the beginning, mainly because of the chance to goof around with the craziest one of all, Matt Lung (who plays Hugo Harrington). This time it is an easy CSI case, although not too easy. Statue: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6.

Finally we get to take care of the KBC calendar and earn us some money. Quite nice amounts of money as it turns out. Then we are thrown into a situation where it is the end of the world. Gee, how nice. But, to be very modest, I do basically provide the answers to this mod. The Lesser of Three Evils: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6.

Once that's over, we have Christmas... and go into space... the usual sort of thing. (And, so very, very, very stupidly, I throw away a lot of poz. Stupid, stupid, stupid...) Christmas Wrap: Part 1, Part 2.

[END]

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Sunday 23 November 2008

Too early!

There's a five o'clock in the morning apparently! What's up with that?

Although, more interestingly, why are there two five o'clocks? Why did we decide to start counting again from the middle of the day (or alternatively the middle of the night)? It's all about the meridian, but we don't count to the meridian, it's hours after the post or the ante... but surely it would make sense to just start counting from one point and keep going until you hit that point again (hence all those hundred of hours the military keep going on about).

There is an answer to all this. The Discoverers is a book I've been told about that explains the history of various things, including the origin of why time is split up the way it is. I even have a copy. However... over 700 pages! In a hardcover! That's a lot of reading!

One day, I will read it... one day... perhaps when I'm up at five in the morning again and wondering why...

[END]

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Saturday 22 November 2008

Brainiac not so brainy?

At which point does flash in the sake of science mean throwing out the science? As in the following clip:

Pretty cool? Yep! But accurate...? The Mythbusters tested it, and the results weren't quite as spectacular... so this means that the Brianiac crew didn't quite follow the science... or did they? This discussion is interesting, but does raise the point: to make science fun, does science have to be sacrificed?

[END]

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Friday 21 November 2008

RollnRocka

Caught the first of what appears to be a trilogy. Aside from one particular plot thread, this is good Guy Ritchie stuff (clearly getting away from Madonna was a good thing, although I seemed to be one of the few people that liked Revolver).

As ever, there are a few subplots going on, involving gangsters trying to get money, and a painting that gets stolen and/or moved around a lot, that cross back and forth in amusing ways. The ending is a lot more coherent than his previous films, and I was surprised by just how... it worked out. (And then the end title card says "they will return...".) The only real dull (if that is the best term) moments are those involving Johnny Quid.

Can't say that I overly recognise the cast members from other places (I know some of the titles from IMDB, but not exactly ringing a lot of bells). That doesn't mean they aren't strong presences, and do indeed stand out.

Definitely a film to see if you like these films, and it looks to be a good start to the next batch of Guy Ritchie movies.

[END]

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Thursday 20 November 2008

HC Again

For some reason I ventured into the GMing ring again. I start by presenting them with about four plot hooks and then seeing what they did.

The first thing was the rather urgent matter of Janet. I knew what might happen, but it all depended on what they wanted to do (what with all the idea of free will and all). Not the most happiest of outcomes, but an obvious one. Fire Angel: Part 1, Part 2.

Then they decide to go to Trinity. Not a hard matter. Just need to drive and have appropriate directions. I had something in mind before which I was thinking of linking in more, but my first plan for introducing this came to fruition. SPF1000: Part 1, Part 2.

Never fear, they get to Trinity. I didn't want to do an exorbitant plot with lots of intricate details, so I went with this nice, easy straight forward story. More plot points are laid down for those that notice. Propers Gold: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

I get in on the next day, in the middle of the mod (part 7 to be exact). Unfortunately, I had already heard a previous crew go through this, so it was a 'no brainer' for me. Still, some nice driving moments for Terry. Odin: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6, Part 7, Part 8, Part 9, Part 10, Part 11, Part 12.

After that, I finally get some time to do things Terry wanted to sort out, although we are incredibly distracted. Unfortunately, there was something I forgot, so will have to attend to next time. (This episode is named for the fame of what one player continually does in these evenings... and this was doubly humourous due to one urgent question that needed to be asked.) Abel Fell Asleep: Part 1, Part 2.

[END]

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Don't Cha Push My Humps

It's weird what remixes people put together...

(And if you want to see Alanis Morrisette's take on the Black Eyed Peas song...)
[END]

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Wednesday 19 November 2008

Friends lost, people alienated

Big long title for this movie. Yeah, mainly because of Simon Pegg (come on, when's the next team up with him and Edgar Wright?).

This was based on a book, which I'm slightly interested in seeing now, as what this movie was translated into is by and large another typical "fish out of water meets woman who loves him" story. On that level, meh.

Fortunately, lots of Pegg pratfalls and screw ups to keep the audience amused in the meantime. The antics are not the most original, but nicely handled.

Jeff Bridges is great in the role of the head honcho, and Gillian Anderson gets to be totally different. Kirsten Dunst tries out a new accent, and Megan Fox looks like just another pretty face (as in: I didn't recognise her as Megan Fox, but as "oh, yes, I've seen her before, can't remember which as she's not that distinctive"). Also spotted the IT Crowd and Agatha Christie.

An enjoyable enough movie, although not one to hit the big box office...

[END]

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Tuesday 18 November 2008

The Chronicles of Risan: Part the Thirteenth

In a strange tower in the middle of the sea, surrounded by demons, with a sword demanding to alternatively get them or get ourselves out. Must be a Thursday.

After a brief discussion with the sword (which I am now holding as the Dwarf got away), we decide to try for a more subtle approach (amazing for us) of not racing for the top and instead try to find another way up. First room a meeting room, second room a bedroom with fire immoliths, third room a lecture room, and... wait a minute!

The immoliths are frakking annoying creatures to fight. Even though the universe had shifted to only make them half as healthy, they were still a bitch to hit and had this annoying ability to reach out and grab us, and well as curse us as just generally tick us off. When we finally put them down, we find out our minions were fighting off a Vrok (which I didn't managed to get to and hit...).

Pausing a moment, we got some more information out of the sword and found out the demons had broken through a century ago... this was all due to them wanting a perpetual powersource which they created by tapping into a hell dimension which slowly opened up and tada! Fortunately this was only the experiment area and not the full power source which they sent back... (d'oh!).

After looking around a little more (and getting an imp for our Warlock), we forgo the subtle approach and go back to our usual "charge" tactic, which gets us slammed against half-a-dozen demons in the stairwell. I was trapped up the stairs, the rest at the entrance, so I wasn't able to help, but still managed to put a few down by myself.

At this point we realised we were all drained of internal healing ability. Oops. No chance to rest either, or the tower would respawn.

Up to the control room, and trying to occupy a many (6) tentacled thing while the Warlord tried to shut it off the main controls and close the portal. And more demons coming out while we did so. Two of which were some chaos beasties that liked to go after the weak amoungst us. Such as the Gnome... the crazy little guy who gave his life (not entirely willingly) while we saved the tower... First death in our party (which I was sure was going to be me, to be honest)...

With heavy hearts (and sacks of loot), we set our sights for the land of the artificers to save them from themselves...

[END]

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Saturday 15 November 2008

My 1.5 Seconds of Fame

I'm in the news! I am the news!

Well, in that my face and (one-liner style) opinion is printed for the movie Mirrors, which I'm sure no-one would be able to guess at (in fact, if you want to know, go pick up the DomPost Weekender, page B7).

Irritatingly, I had to go buy one as well. I say that because this week we have been getting complimentary copies of the DomPost each morning. I have no idea why, no idea how far widespread (my street? my block?? Newtown???), but there it was.

I did wonder if these free papers would be a hit on the local paper distributors, but the one guy I asked when I picked up today's paper had no idea what I was talking about, so I'm sure no-one is poorer off because one big companies decided that dairies and co shouldn't sell papers...

Anyway, we live in modern fleeting times, so I'm now with my face in the limelight (or flashlight, it got pretty whitened out...).

[END]

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Friday 14 November 2008

srorriM

Mostly spur of the moment, I caught another movie last night... and it was brilliant!

I've complained before about American horror movies, but Mirrors was a fantastic piece of cinema... so it didn't entirely shock me when I found out it was based on a Korean picture. Still, this movie was remade right. The most important point in this sort of movie is to build atmosphere, and this movie piles it on in spades (there are several "surprise!" moments, and they got me. If anyone had done the "hand on the shoulder" gag...).

The concept is quite easily, a variant on the haunted house, this time a department store with mirrors. Lots and lots of mirrors. Always thought that mirrors were a great source of supernatural weirdness, so this movie was a grand moment for me. The climax moment was a bit "we need something here" that didn't entirely fit the build up, but then the final scene was very well done.

Kiefer Sutherland is always good at playing a tough guy and a guy going over the edge, so he well fit this role. Paula Patton gets some actual scenes to star in, and Amy Smart doesn't get enough screen time.

I really need to see the original, but in the mean time encourage people to go see this! (And also thought this would be a good HC mod... I need to stop doing that.)

[END]

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Thursday 13 November 2008

Death Raced

So I caught Transporter 3, in which the Transporter is sent to prison because he can drive a car... (okay, so it's not really the Transporter, but could fit so easily into that universe...) Anyway, the plot is about as thin as a politician's election promise, but it's not like people are watching this for the in-depth character portrayals.

Nope, it's about death. And racing. And combining them. Well, actually, about the stunt teams pulling off some really cool stuff and the model makers getting to have fun (not that this is in any way the first, nor the last, movie to do so). The death of Dreadnought was a particular favourite moment of mine (no, I'm not spoiling anything by saying that, as it was obviously going to happen some how).

Jason Stratham puts in his usual performance and you really believe he's behind the wheel of a car that is likely not on a sound stage nor being towed, but is CGI'd into someone else's driving effort. Ian McShane steals the scenes he is in (and deservedly so), Joan Allen could be more of a bitch, and Natalie Martinez is there to look pretty.

A high octane (boo!) movie that's exactly the sort of picture you want to go see if you want something fast and explody to watch.

[END]

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Wednesday 12 November 2008

Sarah Jane Adventures: Episode 2.07/2.08

Dark weighty material for a kid's show. Once again we see into the dark mind of the Joseph Lidster.

Wow, Dad ran away with Mum's sister! Not the usual storyline, but nice to see them doing something different. The "Bad Dad is a Monster" does become very blunt at the end, and the "remember the beginning of the episode" is a rather dated device.

The whole pendant angle was almost incidental to the main focus, which did surprise me, and I like it!. The reappearance of Sarah Jane after missing for the episodes (the Wiki entry explains why that was) was more than slightly corny.

Still, nice to see Maria back, if only for a plot point. I reckon she'll be back in the last episode (although it does depend on how much schooling she was trying to get.)

Gary Beadle comes into the series and gets right into the role. He has a definite screen presence, although that pink shirt in the cloudy last scene doesn't work at all well.

A definite "nice try" episode, somewhat suffering from the lack of Sarah Jane (who's series it is), but Joseph Lidster just can't write happy. (And I wondered why the picture of the parents were so specific. The 'next time' explains that.)


Next Time: Oh, the return of Mr. Ineffectual...

[END]

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Tuesday 11 November 2008

The Chronicles of Risan: Part the Twelfth

After saying goodbye to the Amazonians (we'll be back to sort them out later), we return to a mission of old whereby we head to the island of Mufu to deal with some slavers (after having previously destroyed the necromancer based economy, we turn our sights to another island infrastructure.)

Once there, we present the necromancer's head, are declared heroes, then search for the altar that turns the populace into slaves. After giving various guards the slip, we enter to find Fey guarding the place, just waiting for someone stupid enough to attack the place. And yes, we are more than stupid enough to do that. It's a heck of a fight, as one guy just refused to take damage (he just passed it on to the others around him). Very much a whittling process, but finally take him down.

With the altar destroyed the slaves are no longer compelled. And then we go free the elders. Who immediately start a slave revolt, with killings in the street. We intervene as best we can, but can't stop the corrupt leaders from being put to the death (although, to be honest, we didn't really try all that hard to protect them...).

One place the necromancer wanted to go was to a tower, so we head out there, which turns out to be a light-house like structure that just floats on the water... odd. Once there, we find some interesting fire damage and a room of demons. Fight, fight, fight, with me nearly dying. Short and sweet, (but punishing when they hit), we send the demons back to their hell. Which, as it happens, isn't that strange a trip for them.

We "rescue" an intelligent sword that tells us there is a portal we need to close that the demons are coming through. This sword is, somehow, one of the artificers that create not very interesting weapons, and while the personality is annoying, the Dwarf puts up with it (the sword becomes a Kopesh so it's axe-like enough for her to use it). Getting to the portal is the next step...

[END]

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Monday 10 November 2008

HC Again

Two CSI mods this time. We nearly get into something more interesting, but can't think of some way to come up with a measurable goal, so instead end up with cracking more normal cases.

First up, one that seemed familiar, but was a show I didn't watch. But tune in to see two of the PCs pick a suspect straight off. Gay Bar: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6.

Next, I shark in after they do some crazy stuff, so back to san restoring simple cases. This time, there is more of a mess to get around, and we get the fun of a remote controlled case (which we try to skip). From Father To Son Redux: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5.

[END]

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Best Pron Article Evah!

So, on Stuff (Dominion Post in this case), there's a Most Viewed Category. One seems to be there pretty often, falling off and then getting back on again...

Really. Let's take a look at when that article hit the paper:

June.

Let me repeat: June! And yet, it's still on there! Two possible reasons: it is the best article ever and should win a Pulitzer... or something else is linking in.

Purely for scientific interest, I thought I might see how hard it is to hit that article with obvious Google searches. "Girl sex photos" ranks it number eight (when I ran the search). Adding "12" makes it number one, but I doubt that's really what people are going for. Adding "Computer" to original three words also comes out on top. Restricting the first search to NZ pages also makes it number one.

Nice to see that Google pron searching is keeping the news alive...

(Looks like "beach nudity" is heading the same way...)

[END]

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Sunday 9 November 2008

It's so easy!


[END]

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Saturday 8 November 2008

Lara vs the Prince

Here's a well done amusing video I stumbled across.

[END]

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Friday 7 November 2008

Max Pain

The title above may be the obvious take, but it's a true one. Cutting to the chase: this is a bad movie. I'm not sure if those who played the game love it, but since I haven't, all I can say is: crap!

I'm guessing the script writing went something like: play the game for many, many hours, then write the script from what was remembered. Possibly with an intention to go back and re-edit to ensure it made sense, but if so, that never happened. The disjointed script is what makes it on screen, and we get a very disjointed movie.

There is a plot surrounding drugs, but I'm wondering if the director was on any when he decided that cutting all over the place, never explaining anything, and, most importantly, never actually using any form of lighting was the best idea ever. (Which, for all I know, is an exact replication of what the game was like.)

Marky Mark, in the lead role, embraces his one defining quality: grimminessity. He goes for a dour expression, and lets nothing distract him from the mission of being obsessed and gloomy. The rest of the cast show more expression, although I'm not sure Beau Bridges (great actor that he is) was entirely suitable for his role.

Unfortunately, there can easily be a sequel, but we can only hope the negative reviews kill it dead. Don't bother with this.

[END]

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Thursday 6 November 2008

Language: Epic Fail!

When did "fail" become a noun? It was a perfectly working verb, with a perfectly working noun form: failure. But now... (Okay, to be accurate, "fail" is already a noun, but specific to the stock market, not a general phenomena to be experience by all and sundry. Especially sundry, as they're usually the ones to failure... [Ha! Let's work it both ways!])

Is this the result of the txt gnrtn? Is this Lolcat's "I can has grammar?" Is this merely a symptom on the ever increasing laziness of the people around us (damn youths, and get off my lawn!)? Or merely just another internet meme? (Most likely originating with yet another bad Japanese translation.)

When did typing three extra letters prove to be such a chore? Or is this the start of a new language rule evolution? Will we have "a see to behold"? Is there an example of "manage in action"? Are you now reading a "publish post"?

Language changes over time, and with the internet and desperate attempts to wring out any sense of bizarre humour, this is hopefully just another flash in the pan, hopefully to end in the same bin as "All Your Base Are Belong To Us".

[END]

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Wednesday 5 November 2008

Dice Science

More to it than you'd think! And more interesting too! (As long as you get an interesting presenter.) (Part 2 below the fold.)


[END]

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Tuesday 4 November 2008

Time's Chumpion

I obtained and finally read Time's Champion, the final magnum opus from the pen of Craig Hinton (as finalised by Chris McKeon).

It certainly fits in with his previous works, huge epic events, the universe in danger, higher dimensional beings at war, time and space crashing around us, dark side versus light side, dogs and cats living together...

On reflection, there are two plot threads here, the threat to Gallifrey and the threat in 1908... and although a connection is stated, I'm not really buying it. They really are two different events that are jammed together in the same book to give people stuff to do. (I'm not saying one has been added for padding, 'cos at the moment I'm not sure which that would be.)

Basically, the book is more complex that it needs to be, and does seem to rack up a large page count without entirely justifying the expanse of paper used.

Character-wise, there is plenty of evidence that Craig likes this team (certainly not the least of which is that this isn't the first time he's written this pairing), and he spends a lot of time delving into them and their motivations, and exploring a lot of what has been brought up in other people's books (which is the polite way to say there is a lot of continuity references here, and indeed if you haven't read his other works, you are going to miss out on a lot of what's going on here). I don't accept his Valeyard explanation (although it's better than Matrix), but can't deny that he tries to get in everything he can.

It is a heck of a book to bow out on, and should be gotten if you are getting the books, but not for the faint of heart.

[END]

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Monday 3 November 2008

HC Again

A whole slew of podcasts as I made an effort and got up early enough to join in on all but about 30-45 minutes of "Saturday"'s game.

First up, a short mod... in which we did something... which I'm sure has no long-lasting significance or impact on Terry at all. Anyways, I present: Delivery: Part 1, Part 2.

Next we did an extensive CSI type mod that had been done before, but not by any of us. It call came down to a moment of brilliance... which wasn't me. Revelation: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, Part 6.

More random chaos followed, and we prepare for the great excitement of actually finding out what happened to John Swift. Wow. That worked really well. In Search Of...: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.

Recently we'd been taking care of some big items in the KBC campaign, and this is no different. With John Swift back, and his son bugging us, we finally managed to have a heartfelt reunion... with swaths of blood all around... Father & Son: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3.

After that, we wanted a nice easy case of simply people going out and killing other people. Which apparently happens in New York. Whodathunk it? Anyway, speaking of a certain song... Addict: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4.

Following on from events raised in the last mod, we deal with another long standing issue... Robert's son... and a piece of mail. In another moment of brilliance, this time mine, the case is cracked. Unfortunately... Extra Topping: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5.

[END]

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