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Snapping
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Being The
Geekly Diary of Waider
(may
contain traces of drinking, movies, and sport)
- June 21
- Shutter Island:
it's funny that the trailer seems to portay this more as a horror
movie than a thriller movie, or at least that was my take; it's
pretty much straight-up psychological thriller. Much as with
The Bookshop I'm not exactly happy with it because it
works out pretty grimly in the end, regardless of how you
interpret it.
- June 17
- Manually verifying a few of the videos and I'm seeing a couple
of cases where the TV firmware is clearly at fault: the current
movie is 1m23s into what the TV claims is a 4s video... there are
a few cases so far where I've ripped the wrong title, possibly
through mixing up discs again.
Also I still haven't figured out the subtitles thing.
- June 16
- My understanding of DVD construction is, despite doing some
research in the course of my current ripping
yarn
adventure, somewhat sketchy still, but I think one of my
disks has a wacky sort of copy protection on it that effectively
amounts to multiple copies of the same movie, with all but one of
them pointing at an unreadable block on the disk. It's all made up
of pointers, so it doesn't mean they've put 100 copies of the
movie on the disc, just two - one with the bad block, and one
without - and the navigation data points to one or the other as
appropriate. Now, this is based on observation and theory, and
I've not yet checked the resulting (successful) rip, but if this
is the case it's an interesting (if somewhat futile)
copy-protection system: a pirate - yaaaar! - tries to do a
bit-level copy of the disc and can't because of the deliberate
insertion of unreadable blocks, so they then resort to using the
navigation files to pick out the "good" blocks only to be stymied
by the fact that their 4GB disk is producing 400GB of data. I
dunno.
And of course all this is so much wasted effort since it's been
overtaken by streaming services anyway.
- June 15
- The Bookshop
is one of those stories where, oh, spoilers, the expected denoument
never arrives, and horrible people get away with being
horrible. You don't even get the satisfaction of them feeling
guilty about being horrible because they clearly don't. I don't
much enjoy this sort of thing; I expect my escapism to right the
wrongs of the world (possibly through blowing up things, driving
fast cars, or throwing out witty dialogue). OH WELL.
- June 14
- Lost track of things here for a bit. Still slowly ripping DVDs;
a few of the more recent ones are TV series and I've not yet decided
how best to auto-rip them.
I am sure there are internet fora dedicated to fighting over
Anatomy of a Fall,
specifically with respect to what actually happened. It's
excellently done, and it's interesting to see how in a court
everyone behaves as if every single person acts as a rational
being with perfect recollection and logical movitations for their
actions. You kinda want to ask these people if they know any, you
know, humans.
Also I think the blood spatter evidence from the defence is
compelling. FIGHT ME.
Also yes I did notice the gender split in who agreed with the
prosecution and who agreed with the defence.
- June 07
- Steve Jobs
was disappointing: it simply didn't have a story. Three half-hour
segments from Jobs' business life and a definite leaning into
portraying him as an unmitigated asshole, all of which was done so
much better in the other Steve Jobs movie, and that
actually had a storyline to follow. Waste of talent and
time.
- June 06
- Our internet radio appears to have lost the ability to
stream. This may or may not be related to the fact that favourites
on the device are managed by some sort of third-party site which
has gone through some issues. Plus, I don't know how long it's
been like this because it's also a perfectly capable FM radio, and
that's what we've relied on. I am tempted to poke it with the
various hacking toys but at the same time I've got more than
enough half-finished projects to play with.
- June 01
- I've had Split Second
on my to-watch list for so long I can't recall why I put it there,
and having watched it I definitely have no idea. It's sort of
Predator meets Blade Runner meets ... I dunno, Lethal Weapon with
a side order of is-it-or-isn't-it occult. I think they basically
asked Rutger Hauer to tear up any scenery he happened to be near,
edited it together, and called it a movie.
- May 31
- Amsterdam
was also a bit of a lark. As with last night's 1956 fare, this
2022 movie has been called "too complicated" which, well, it's
not; it's actually pretty straightforward. But also lots of
fun. Granted, it gets a little preachy in spots (needs less "tell"
and more "show") but that's a minor quibble.
- May 30
- The Killing
was a fun piece of work. I see the studio at the time thought the
non-linear timeline was confusing and insisted on a voiceover,
which to me just suggests that the studio thought the audience was
an unsophisticated bunch of rubes. I dunno, it didn't seem that
difficult to follow, but who am I to question the wisdom of the
greats etc. etc. Anyway, this one's definitely worth a look to see
early Kubrick doing his thing.
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