I have had the new Carrie Blu-Ray since it came out but only watched it last night. I enjoyed it, Chloë Grace Moretz and Julianne Moore are pretty much fantastic in everything they do, this was no exception. Julianne Moore gave a stellar performance as Carrie's mother Margaret White, much better than Piper Laurie was in fact.
Chloë Grace Moretz was fantastic of course, but the trouble I have with her in this movie is she is just too good looking. Sure Carrie is supposed to be an outcast, but she is no Sissy Spacek.
The story is what we all know at this point; enjoyable yes but not really needed.
Stats
4 Watched / 2 New
Sunday, October 4, 2015
Saturday, October 3, 2015
October Movie Challenge: The Sixth Sense (1999)
1999's The Sixth Sense was a huge surprise hit. The writer and director, M. Night Shyamalan was all but an unknown at the time. This movie is also the first and best use of what is now known as the "Shyamalan twist". Ignore some of his latter movies (though I will admit to enjoying "The Happening") and enjoy this one for what it is.
I have been wanting to rewatch this one for years. Knowing "the twist" is one thing, seeing the movie in light of that is another. One thing is sure, Shyamalan is a damn fine director. Course the cinematography from the legendary Tak Fujimoto (of Silence of the Lambs fame) so the movie looks good.
Haley Joel Osment is praised for his acting, and it is justified, but let's not forget the stunning performance from Bruce Willis. Casting mega action and comedy star Willis as a ghost who never touches anyone throughout most of the movie was genius. I have liked Bruce Willis since "Moonlighting" and he did not disappoint here. The surprise of the night though came from a young Mischa Barton as the girl killed by her Munchausen syndrome by proxy mother.
I watched this one with my youngest son, who had never seen it. It was great to see his reaction to everything and then the final twist. He loved it.
Almost immediately after seeing this for the first time I wanted to use an adult Cole Sear (Seer, get it! It's a twist name!) in a Cinematic Unisystem game. Make him older and more jaded like Micheal J. Fox's character in the Frighteners.
Still might do that.
Stats
3 Watched / 1 New
I have been wanting to rewatch this one for years. Knowing "the twist" is one thing, seeing the movie in light of that is another. One thing is sure, Shyamalan is a damn fine director. Course the cinematography from the legendary Tak Fujimoto (of Silence of the Lambs fame) so the movie looks good.
Haley Joel Osment is praised for his acting, and it is justified, but let's not forget the stunning performance from Bruce Willis. Casting mega action and comedy star Willis as a ghost who never touches anyone throughout most of the movie was genius. I have liked Bruce Willis since "Moonlighting" and he did not disappoint here. The surprise of the night though came from a young Mischa Barton as the girl killed by her Munchausen syndrome by proxy mother.
I watched this one with my youngest son, who had never seen it. It was great to see his reaction to everything and then the final twist. He loved it.
Almost immediately after seeing this for the first time I wanted to use an adult Cole Sear (Seer, get it! It's a twist name!) in a Cinematic Unisystem game. Make him older and more jaded like Micheal J. Fox's character in the Frighteners.
Still might do that.
Stats
3 Watched / 1 New
Friday, October 2, 2015
Friday Night Videos: Happy Birthday Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner
Today marks the 64th birthday of Gordon Matthew Thomas Sumner, better known to the world as Sting.
Growing up (and still now) I was a HUGE fan of the Police. In fact my first folder I kept my character sheets in had the symbols from Ghost in the Machine scribbled on them.
When Synchronicity came out it was such a shift in my thinking that I can barley quantify it. From this I read Jung, which would lead to degrees in psychology (undergrad and graduate). I read Lolita (thanks to "Don't Stand So Close to Me") which lead me to read other literary greats.
(Seriously. Read Lolita. It's dark, messed up, and brilliant.)
When I got married the song playing "for me" was Sting's "Fields of Gold".
So yeah. I am a fan.
Plus he went to St Cuthbert's Grammar School, so how could I *not* associate him with D&D?
But there are a lot of good songs I associate with gaming.
Back when I was working on the Buffy RPG we were working on a series of linked adventures about a Djinn. The first few appeared the core books and my adventure "The Dark Druid" was supposed to be Episode 1. It never quite came together for the reasons these things don't but I wrote a lot for it. Some of those adventures later became part of "The Dragon and the Phoenix" and "Season of the Witch".
"Desert Rose" from Mercury Falling was one of many songs I listened to then to get me in the mood. This video represents that crossover. In both the Djinn arc and Season of the Witch the characters have to find their answers in the desert in the adventure Desert Rose. Plus I love the bits from Algerian Raï singer Cheb Mami. Sounds so cool. Plus is that the same driver from the Duran Duran video "The Chauffeur"? (no I know it's not...but I imprinted in the 80s).
Often with me music will inspire some idea, plot or character. Sting's "Shape of my Heart" from Ten Summoner's Tales is not his most upbeat song. I remember listening to it and thinking of a man who was a gambler decided to deal with fate. He became the instrument of fate, loosing his eyes in the process and everyone he loved. He knows that the fortunes he deals for others are just as much about him and one day he will find what he lost. That character became The Dealer and he can be found in Halfway.
The Soul Cages might be Stings best sounding album from a audiophile perspective, though I also like the vinyl version of Dream of the Blue Turtles. It is also (naturally) a dark album. Lots to do with death and transitions and how fathers die and sons become fathers in turn. Nothing lays the pathos bare better than the song of the same name, "The Soul Cages". I always considered this a "Ravenloft" album.
What do Zenyatta Mondatta, Dream of the Blue Turtles and Bring on the Night all have in common? All have a slightly different version of Sting's own "Shadows in the Rain". The later, jazzy versions don't share the darker edge of the 1980 Police version, but all are still good. This song also was the inspiration for a rather pivotal episode in both the Buffy Djinn arc and later in the Dragon and the Phoenix.
Anytime I want to get in the mood for some Celtic-themed gaming you can do worse than listening to the Chieftains. The Chieftains and Sting together is something rather special. Having them sing "Mo Ghile Mear" is fantastic. I swear I can hear Éire herself singing.
Speaking of hearing Éire. Going back to Ghost in the Machine for a bit, the Police's "Invisible Sun" has haunted me for years. I have wanted to use the imagery from this song for years. It was one of the many influences on my Ghosts of Albion adventure Blight. It is a main part of my current D&D 5 game, Come Endless Darkness. I like the Ghost version best, but here is an extremely gratuitous version with Sting and Bono. No one chews up a stage like Bono.
Happy Birthday Sting!
Growing up (and still now) I was a HUGE fan of the Police. In fact my first folder I kept my character sheets in had the symbols from Ghost in the Machine scribbled on them.
When Synchronicity came out it was such a shift in my thinking that I can barley quantify it. From this I read Jung, which would lead to degrees in psychology (undergrad and graduate). I read Lolita (thanks to "Don't Stand So Close to Me") which lead me to read other literary greats.
(Seriously. Read Lolita. It's dark, messed up, and brilliant.)
When I got married the song playing "for me" was Sting's "Fields of Gold".
So yeah. I am a fan.
Plus he went to St Cuthbert's Grammar School, so how could I *not* associate him with D&D?
But there are a lot of good songs I associate with gaming.
Back when I was working on the Buffy RPG we were working on a series of linked adventures about a Djinn. The first few appeared the core books and my adventure "The Dark Druid" was supposed to be Episode 1. It never quite came together for the reasons these things don't but I wrote a lot for it. Some of those adventures later became part of "The Dragon and the Phoenix" and "Season of the Witch".
"Desert Rose" from Mercury Falling was one of many songs I listened to then to get me in the mood. This video represents that crossover. In both the Djinn arc and Season of the Witch the characters have to find their answers in the desert in the adventure Desert Rose. Plus I love the bits from Algerian Raï singer Cheb Mami. Sounds so cool. Plus is that the same driver from the Duran Duran video "The Chauffeur"? (no I know it's not...but I imprinted in the 80s).
Often with me music will inspire some idea, plot or character. Sting's "Shape of my Heart" from Ten Summoner's Tales is not his most upbeat song. I remember listening to it and thinking of a man who was a gambler decided to deal with fate. He became the instrument of fate, loosing his eyes in the process and everyone he loved. He knows that the fortunes he deals for others are just as much about him and one day he will find what he lost. That character became The Dealer and he can be found in Halfway.
The Soul Cages might be Stings best sounding album from a audiophile perspective, though I also like the vinyl version of Dream of the Blue Turtles. It is also (naturally) a dark album. Lots to do with death and transitions and how fathers die and sons become fathers in turn. Nothing lays the pathos bare better than the song of the same name, "The Soul Cages". I always considered this a "Ravenloft" album.
What do Zenyatta Mondatta, Dream of the Blue Turtles and Bring on the Night all have in common? All have a slightly different version of Sting's own "Shadows in the Rain". The later, jazzy versions don't share the darker edge of the 1980 Police version, but all are still good. This song also was the inspiration for a rather pivotal episode in both the Buffy Djinn arc and later in the Dragon and the Phoenix.
Anytime I want to get in the mood for some Celtic-themed gaming you can do worse than listening to the Chieftains. The Chieftains and Sting together is something rather special. Having them sing "Mo Ghile Mear" is fantastic. I swear I can hear Éire herself singing.
Speaking of hearing Éire. Going back to Ghost in the Machine for a bit, the Police's "Invisible Sun" has haunted me for years. I have wanted to use the imagery from this song for years. It was one of the many influences on my Ghosts of Albion adventure Blight. It is a main part of my current D&D 5 game, Come Endless Darkness. I like the Ghost version best, but here is an extremely gratuitous version with Sting and Bono. No one chews up a stage like Bono.
Happy Birthday Sting!
October Movie Challenge: War of the Gargantuas (1966)
Going back a bit to movie I first saw years and years (at least 30) ago on KPLR TV out of St. Louis. War of the Gargantuas was a sequel to Frankenstein Conquers the World, though I didn't know that at the time.
All I knew is it freaked the heck out of me. Those giant monsters eating people and spitting out their clothes recall bugged me when I was 10-11. It was one of the sources of the the Gargantua monster I would later create.
The movie this time around was not scary but still fun to watch. It was shorter than I remember and I am sure there were more scenes of Gaira eating people.
Interestingly it stars Russ Tamblyn looking almost exactly like his daughter does now. She is now the same age he was in this movie.
I always wonder when one actor is speaking English and the rest Japanese are we supposed to assume they are all speaking the same language?
In any case I now need to see Frankenstein Conquers the World.
Stats
2 Watched / 1 New
All I knew is it freaked the heck out of me. Those giant monsters eating people and spitting out their clothes recall bugged me when I was 10-11. It was one of the sources of the the Gargantua monster I would later create.
The movie this time around was not scary but still fun to watch. It was shorter than I remember and I am sure there were more scenes of Gaira eating people.
Interestingly it stars Russ Tamblyn looking almost exactly like his daughter does now. She is now the same age he was in this movie.
I always wonder when one actor is speaking English and the rest Japanese are we supposed to assume they are all speaking the same language?
In any case I now need to see Frankenstein Conquers the World.
Stats
2 Watched / 1 New
Thursday, October 1, 2015
October Movie Challenge: Spell (2014)
Spell (2014) aka "Nam Man Prai".
A monk/sorcerer is caught in customs with a strange vial, a love potion he claims. It gets into the wrong hands and soon poor Prae (played by Wanida Termthanaporn) is infected. She goes from sweet, shy office girl to a sex fiend. Somewhat literally since during sex she transforms into this monster (a "ghost" in the translation) that looks like a cross between a hag and a lamia.
The movie is a bit confusing in places, mostly because it is from Thailand and I think the translation was a bit off. Also I am not 100% that some scenes were cut out.
The monster in this was a nice little shock the first time since I was not expecting it. The story is your basic morality play of "don't have sex, sex is bad, mkay?"
Though there is a neat little twist at the end.
Nam Man Prai I guess means "love potion" or "love spell" in Thai.
For games I guess a cursed love potion could turn whomever drinks it into a homicidal hag.
All in all not a bad flick to start out October!
Stats
1 Watched / 1 New
A monk/sorcerer is caught in customs with a strange vial, a love potion he claims. It gets into the wrong hands and soon poor Prae (played by Wanida Termthanaporn) is infected. She goes from sweet, shy office girl to a sex fiend. Somewhat literally since during sex she transforms into this monster (a "ghost" in the translation) that looks like a cross between a hag and a lamia.
The movie is a bit confusing in places, mostly because it is from Thailand and I think the translation was a bit off. Also I am not 100% that some scenes were cut out.
The monster in this was a nice little shock the first time since I was not expecting it. The story is your basic morality play of "don't have sex, sex is bad, mkay?"
Though there is a neat little twist at the end.
Nam Man Prai I guess means "love potion" or "love spell" in Thai.
For games I guess a cursed love potion could turn whomever drinks it into a homicidal hag.
All in all not a bad flick to start out October!
Stats
1 Watched / 1 New
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Class Struggles: The Invoker (4e)
Taking an odd turn today and looking at a 4th Edition class.
One of the nice things about 4e was the number of class choices. There were dozens, if not not scores, of classes. 4e popularized the notion that each class has a role; Leader, Controller, Defender and Striker to roughly correspond to the classic four classes of Cleric, Wizard, Fighter and Thief respectively. There are also areas of power, Divine, Arcane, Martial, Primal and Psychic. For the game it worked well and there was a lot of interesting class choices that were based on role and power choice.
The Invoker has no precedent and no update (so far). It first appeared in Player's Handbook 2 for the 4th edition and it is described as a Divine controller than channels raw divine power. In a way this makes them the divine counterpart to the Wizard; an arcane controller.
It could be described as the "Fist of the Gods".
What makes the Invoker an interesting choice is not just it's role, but the fluff text that goes along with it. So an Invoker would worship or honor a god as part of the whole pantheon. The examples given state an Invoker of Bahamut would also likely honor Tiamat. Invokers are all shown worshipping older gods; not Old Gods or even Old Ones...but the first gods that are still worshipped today.
In fact most invokers would be the tireless enemy of any "Old Ones". In the 4e fluff they are described as the human/mortal agents of the Godswar vs the Primordials. Replace that with Titans, or Old Ones or even demons and you get the idea.
What strikes me most about this class is how well it could be added to any old-school or 5e game.
In 1st/2nd Ed it would be a sub-class of the cleric. The invoker can turn/rebuke undead like a cleric and it also has access to divine spells. Of course you could make an invoker easy enough with good role-playing and a conscious choice to take damage dealing spells and limit yourself on the healing magic. Since invokers are much more of a "kill them all and let the gods sort them out" type of holy warrior I would also say that Raise Dead, Resurrection and Reincarnate are out of the question.
For their spell lists. Well the powers/spells in the 4e PHB2 are very colorful; Blades of Astral Fire, Glyph of Imprisonment, Cascade of Five Suns. Most do damage based on Wisdom modifiers (which in 4e includes level). If I were to create an old-school Invoker I would give them some invocation spells from the wizard's list. Not more than 1 or 2 per level though. I would make sure they had plenty of damage causing spells they can do from a distance. Plus the spells all need to have very grandiose names, such as "Righteous Fury of 10000 Blazing Suns" or "Wrathful Vengeance of the Plough God" (Plough god? Yeah, think about how important agriculture, growing and food was/is to people). These are not hippy clerics of the "God is Love" type, these are the Old Testament, destroying people in a genocidal flood types.
The closest thing Pathfinder has to this concept is the Inquisitor. While their missions are the same, the invoker is believed to have a piece of divine power instilled in them while the inquisitor is all too mortal. Still though there are some good ideas for some more spells on the inquisitor spell lists.
I think the reason I like the invoker so much is that it really is how I always liked to play to some clerics. I have played several clerics over the years. First first character was a cleric of the "investigate and destroy evil" type. I have played a number of paladins as well. In fact my 3.x edition one was known as "The Fist of Pelor".
This class appeals to me as another sort of cleric. One that is more action and dealing damage than one that is contemplative and healing damage.
Plus I forgot how much fun some of the 4e stuff really is. There is a lot going on in this game and it is a shame it will be tossed aside as a failed experiment.
BTW +Jonathan Becker has been running a series of posts on his thoughts of 4e. If you have played the game it is interesting to see it through the eyes of someone experiencing it for the first time. If you have never played it then it is worth your time. He has not gotten around to the invoker yet, but I am curious to see what he has to say.
One of the nice things about 4e was the number of class choices. There were dozens, if not not scores, of classes. 4e popularized the notion that each class has a role; Leader, Controller, Defender and Striker to roughly correspond to the classic four classes of Cleric, Wizard, Fighter and Thief respectively. There are also areas of power, Divine, Arcane, Martial, Primal and Psychic. For the game it worked well and there was a lot of interesting class choices that were based on role and power choice.
The Invoker has no precedent and no update (so far). It first appeared in Player's Handbook 2 for the 4th edition and it is described as a Divine controller than channels raw divine power. In a way this makes them the divine counterpart to the Wizard; an arcane controller.
It could be described as the "Fist of the Gods".
What makes the Invoker an interesting choice is not just it's role, but the fluff text that goes along with it. So an Invoker would worship or honor a god as part of the whole pantheon. The examples given state an Invoker of Bahamut would also likely honor Tiamat. Invokers are all shown worshipping older gods; not Old Gods or even Old Ones...but the first gods that are still worshipped today.
In fact most invokers would be the tireless enemy of any "Old Ones". In the 4e fluff they are described as the human/mortal agents of the Godswar vs the Primordials. Replace that with Titans, or Old Ones or even demons and you get the idea.
What strikes me most about this class is how well it could be added to any old-school or 5e game.
In 1st/2nd Ed it would be a sub-class of the cleric. The invoker can turn/rebuke undead like a cleric and it also has access to divine spells. Of course you could make an invoker easy enough with good role-playing and a conscious choice to take damage dealing spells and limit yourself on the healing magic. Since invokers are much more of a "kill them all and let the gods sort them out" type of holy warrior I would also say that Raise Dead, Resurrection and Reincarnate are out of the question.
For their spell lists. Well the powers/spells in the 4e PHB2 are very colorful; Blades of Astral Fire, Glyph of Imprisonment, Cascade of Five Suns. Most do damage based on Wisdom modifiers (which in 4e includes level). If I were to create an old-school Invoker I would give them some invocation spells from the wizard's list. Not more than 1 or 2 per level though. I would make sure they had plenty of damage causing spells they can do from a distance. Plus the spells all need to have very grandiose names, such as "Righteous Fury of 10000 Blazing Suns" or "Wrathful Vengeance of the Plough God" (Plough god? Yeah, think about how important agriculture, growing and food was/is to people). These are not hippy clerics of the "God is Love" type, these are the Old Testament, destroying people in a genocidal flood types.
The closest thing Pathfinder has to this concept is the Inquisitor. While their missions are the same, the invoker is believed to have a piece of divine power instilled in them while the inquisitor is all too mortal. Still though there are some good ideas for some more spells on the inquisitor spell lists.
I think the reason I like the invoker so much is that it really is how I always liked to play to some clerics. I have played several clerics over the years. First first character was a cleric of the "investigate and destroy evil" type. I have played a number of paladins as well. In fact my 3.x edition one was known as "The Fist of Pelor".
This class appeals to me as another sort of cleric. One that is more action and dealing damage than one that is contemplative and healing damage.
Plus I forgot how much fun some of the 4e stuff really is. There is a lot going on in this game and it is a shame it will be tossed aside as a failed experiment.
BTW +Jonathan Becker has been running a series of posts on his thoughts of 4e. If you have played the game it is interesting to see it through the eyes of someone experiencing it for the first time. If you have never played it then it is worth your time. He has not gotten around to the invoker yet, but I am curious to see what he has to say.
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
2015 October Horror Movie Challenge
I so look forward to this every year, but this year I think I am going to fall a little short of my goals.
Busy time at work and with projects means less time to enjoy some horror.
So this years theme will be "Attacks of Opportunity". That is, I will watch movies as the come on or as I get access to them. The nice thing is this year I have Netflix in addition to my Amazon Prime. So I do have many more choices. Plus I have a stack of DVDs laying here that need to be watched.
Normally hosted by Krell Laboratories I think offical hosting is now covered by the Facebook group.
Busy time at work and with projects means less time to enjoy some horror.
So this years theme will be "Attacks of Opportunity". That is, I will watch movies as the come on or as I get access to them. The nice thing is this year I have Netflix in addition to my Amazon Prime. So I do have many more choices. Plus I have a stack of DVDs laying here that need to be watched.
Normally hosted by Krell Laboratories I think offical hosting is now covered by the Facebook group.
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