AMC’s series Breaking Bad has been buried under heaps of awards and praise in its three seasons so far. Among the accolades, the show has garnered 3 consecutive Emmy awards for Lead Actor in a Drama Series for Bryan Cranston’s turn in role of Walter White, and for good reason. Breaking Bad is a showcase of great television in almost all aspects, from editing to cinematography, but it’s the development of White that makes the show so fascinating. Cranston embodies a character unlike any I’ve ever seen before on TV, and acts the part with such conviction it’s hypnotizing to watch.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Great Characters in Television: Walter White
AMC’s series Breaking Bad has been buried under heaps of awards and praise in its three seasons so far. Among the accolades, the show has garnered 3 consecutive Emmy awards for Lead Actor in a Drama Series for Bryan Cranston’s turn in role of Walter White, and for good reason. Breaking Bad is a showcase of great television in almost all aspects, from editing to cinematography, but it’s the development of White that makes the show so fascinating. Cranston embodies a character unlike any I’ve ever seen before on TV, and acts the part with such conviction it’s hypnotizing to watch.
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Occasional Movie Review: Super 8
In a small town in 1979, a group of kids shooting an amateur film accidentally document a suspicious train crash that nearly gets them killed. As they recover from the experience and naively try to put their movie back together, they find the event has not only affected their film project, but their own friendships and, to a larger extent, the entire town as well. Caught up in the mysterious occurrences and the responding military presence, tensions rise and the children find themselves at the heart of the conflict.
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Occasional Movie Review: X-Men: First Class
In the Second World War a young Erik Lehnsherr is separated from his mother in a German work camp when a Dr. Klaus Schmidt takes interest in his remarkable ability to bend metal to his will. Isolating him to work on his powers, Schmidt kills Lehnsherr’s mother right in front of the boy when he realizes he is unable to control his powers on command. Meanwhile in America, a similarly young Charles Xavier finds a blue-skinned runaway named Raven stealing food from his kitchen and takes her in to live with him. These events mark the first step in the development and eventual founding of Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters and The X-Men, but not before setting in motion a winding story that weaves itself into the events of the Cold War in the 1960’s.
Friday, May 27, 2011
Final Thoughts: LA Noire
In my previous post I gave my immediate reactions to the first hours of LA Noire, a 1940's detective story that follows the career of WWII vet Cole Phelps as he rises through the ranks of the LAPD. I was hesitant to write about the game at such an early stage, knowing that any declaration I made would be premature and vulnerable to change, but I wanted to get my impressions down early, since I knew it was a particularly long story.
Thursday, May 19, 2011
First Impressions: LA Noire
LA Noire, the newest game by Rockstar, has built itself a lot of expectation with its revolutionary motion scan technique and its sheer size, supposedly taking up a full 25GB layer of a Blu-Ray disc (3 DVDs on the Xbox 360). Promises of new graphical fidelity and a huge new narrative built around the already successful Rockstar open-world model captured the attention of many video game players and even drew some from the cinema crowd, and the all-around hype has placed the game near the top of the list of most anticipated games of the year. At the time of this article, I’m not even halfway through the game’s story and still making my way up the ranks of the police force, so I don’t have a full game to reflect on. However here is my take on the game so far.
Friday, May 13, 2011
Occasional Movie Review: Thor
In the realm of Asgard, Odin (Anthony Hopkins) is nearing the end of his reign as king. His decision to pass the title to his eldest son Thor (Chris Hemsworth) causes envy in the younger Loki (Tom Hiddleston), who, in the hopes of removing him from the throne, manipulates his brother into recklessly starting a war with an old and powerful enemy. Blind to Loki’s betrayal, Odin banishes Thor to Midgard for his heedless arrogance, casting all of his Asgardian power into the hammer Mjolnir and sending them both to Earth. His apparition takes scientist Jane Foster (Natalie Portman) by surprise and, unbeknownst to her, his proximity puts Earth and everything she knows at risk. Thor struggles to deal with his banishment and dual existence, striving to defend Earth and Asgard from what he has wrought and to reclaim his power as the God of Thunder.
Thursday, May 5, 2011
The Importance of Portal 2
I already talked at length in a previous post about what makes the first Portal such an important landmark in the video game industry so I’m going to try not to backtrack too much into the same arguments here. Portal was a fantastic game and a huge surprise to players everywhere, but it was a small treasure, far from a full game experience and its praise and acclaim quickly turned into a clamouring for more. Four years later, Portal 2 is the fully realized sequel to the original adventure into Aperture Science, and it attempts to expand both on Chell’s journey and on the success of its predecessor.
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