Archive for the ‘Movies’ Category.

The Revenge of the Sith

My wife spent Thursday and Friday at bed, with a particularly tiring case of the flu. In Saturday, however, she felt a lot better, so in order to celebrate we went to watch Star Wars episode III. I will not comment here much about the movie, because it was already reviewed to death in countless sites; but I’ll try to add some personal insight. There might or might not be spoilers ahead.

1. First of all, I would like to tell you how breathtaking this movie is, visually speaking. The visual effects look seamless and well rendered, and the ambientation is very well done. Especially, I enjoyed the first sequence very much, even though a lot of movie pundits said that it was one of the film’s weakest points. Why, I don’t know; for me it was just superb. But good looks were not only limited to special effects: just seeing Miss Portman with jasmine flowers over her hair was simply beautiful and impressive in its own way.

2. The acting was generally lousy or bad. It was painful watching Natalie Portman trying to convey a great deal of emotional baggage over such trite lines. Hayden Christensen is much better than in Episode II, but he is still below standards. However, Ian McDiarmid stands above all others: his role requires him to be almost Satanic, and he does the job with great flair.

3. In general, the movie is a Faustian tale of personal doom, and is a great illustration about how Satan deceives through his lies. However, not everything is commendable: Obi-Wan says at one point: “Only the Dark Side speaks in absolutes.” Yeah, right; then, is the Lord Jesus Christ on a side other than Light, perhaps? This is an outright deception.

With this caveat and with the 1000-ton grain of salt that comes with the Star Wars universe, I think the movie could be enjoyed very much by all of you. Recommended.

Cold Mountain: Isn’t that Jim Caviezel?

I watched Cold Mountain the other day. Nothing new here; the movie is mostly irrelevant but not entirely bad.

However, I have a question for people who might have watched it: In the scene where Sarah (Natalie Portman) gets “visited” by some Yankee soldiers, don’ t you think Jim Caviezel is one of them? I checked out the credits at the IMDB and they turn out nothing.

Any clue…?

Summer Movies Galore: K-19: The Widowmaker

Info on the Internet Movie Database When K-19: The Widowmaker first came to our town, I passed on the opportunity to see it; “I don’t need another catastrophe on film”, I thougt. Later on, in my goings to the video rental store, I saw this movie again, and once more I ignored it. Perhaps my reaction was due to my disappointment at learning that this was no “Hunt for Red October” movie, but something about an accident and the men that barely managed to save their lives. However, one day my wife stopped at the video store on her way home, and brought it. “I thought you might like it,” she said. Oh well. As usual, it paid off to heed my wife’s advice. If I can tell anything in advance about the movie, it is that I liked it a lot; and that you might as well, too.

The movie is set in 1961, the year when the Cold War reached one of its peaks at the Cuban Missile Crisis. As the initial screens dutifully remind us, these were the years where the doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction was in full sway. Those were the years of nuclear bunkers, multi-megaton termonuclear devices, and spooks real or imagined. Pretty romantic for many, but definitely not funny for those who had to live through these years.

In the midst of that scenario, the Soviet Navy is ready to give operational status to their newest nuclear submarine, the K-19. She is a “boomer”; that is, she’s a submarine intended mostly for firing of missiles containing thermonuclear warheads. In other words, K-19 is not an attack submarine whose main mission would be establishing naval superiority through an array of offensive weapons directed at enemy threats on the air, the surface, and under the surface. However, she does have torpedoes, as all boomers do, mainly for defensive purposes. The ship is powered by two nuclear reactors, located at fore and aft, respectively, and is powered by a sizeable crew. The main movie set is very well thought out, and reflects the state of Soviet naval technology of the late fifties and early sixties. It also conveys very well the cramped, claustrophobic atmosphere inside the submarine.

With all that said, the movie starts off. After a verbal skirmish with one of his superiors, Captain Mikhael Polenin (Liam Neeson), the ship’s commander, is relieved from command. But since time was running thight, he was assigned as Executive Officer (XO), or second in command. For the command post, the Russian Navy selected Captain Alexei Vostrikov (Harrison Ford), the son of a disgraced naval commander who died in the Gulag, but with newfound influence thanks to his marriage to a niece of a Politburo member. Soon it is pretty evident that the commanding styles of both men are different and opposite, and this is reflected in the crew as well.

After fulfilling their first objective (a missile test launch near the North Pole), the submarine heads for the American East Coast for patrol duty. Then the unthinkable happens: a major coolant leakage in the aft reactor causes the temperature of the chain reaction to rise way above their safety level of 400 C or lower. The reactor crew tries unsuccessfuly to halt the chain reaction. Soon enough, the reactor temperature reaches levels dangerously high, and if it explodes, it could start a massive explosion of the submarine’s nuclear arsenal. Given the current political climate of tension, distrust, Cold War and Mutually Assured Destruction, this not only would be a major environmental catastrophe; this would bring Armageddon.

Thus we have the main conflict in the story. This is the stage for a major showdown of character in face of adversity, a true test of convictions. The movie delivers, and the tale that ensues is harrowing, gut-wrenching, and strangely exhilarating to the very end. I mean, the acting is OK, even though it is nothing to write home about; but I couldn’t help thinking of the catastrophe of K-141 Kursk, sunk in the Barents sea in August 13, 2000, with all hands. The K-19 episode was so close to this and much more.

Overall, I liked the movie, and I have no problem to give it my recommendation. Very good in several respects.

Some points worth considering

At the end, there are several points worth noting in the development of the movie:

The clash of leadership styles. It was pretty clear that Captains Vostrikov and Polenin had leadership styles pretty different. Polenin was friendly, and almost paternalistic; he believed in leading a group of friends, coworkers, and subordinates. He saw himself more as a facilitator than as a true commander, relying on the trust and respect of his crew. Vostrikov, on the other hand, pushed the crew to its limits almost from the start, and the crew almost broke down under the pressure. He wanted to maintain a cohesive crew, bound by the common crush of adversity, real or made-up. He also failed to show true naval leadership, because a captain should not put his crew under continuous, torturing pressure. He should set high standards, and stick to them; but crew morale should be high as well. Vostrikov relied too much in the political commissioner for maintaining the morale; but morale, as well as the setting and maintenance of high standards of seamanship, is a function of the Captain’s leadership.

It is worth mentioning that both men based their leadership in paternal figures. There’s one scene when Polenin tells Vostrikov, “I believe the captain should be like a father to his crew”, to which Vostrikov retorted, “If you knew my father you would be paralyzed by fear.”

This is interesting because God is our Father, too; so how paternal figures are presented to us are critical in our relationship to God. We are often too quick to judge people who reject our Lord; and in many occasions, they never knew a real father figure, or what they had was just a stern dictator who never showed true affection.

The value of human life. Early in the movie, a high-ranking naval officer tells Capt. Vostrikov that Polenin “placed his ship and his crew above the interests of the Party”. Later on, at a very heated moment, Vostrikov states that his loyalty Lies only with the Soviet state. What becomes clear from this contrast is the true outcome of materialistic worldviews: human beings are no more than little thinking machines and they have a value exactly equal to any other piece of machinery. The only valuable, important being, is The State; and when some piece of junk becomes more valuable, human lives are ditched without a second thought. Vostrikov echoes this worldview, while Polenin’s actions tell that he still regarded human life as sacred in some way.

So we have a dilemma: should we carry our mission and lose lives, or save lives and fail to accomplish our mission? Master and Commander: The Far Side of The World, which I hold as the best naval movie in many years, illustrated this dilemma in many ways; but there is a scene where Capt. Jack Aubrey tells Maturin that he, as a captain, has to look for the well-being of his crew, but sometimes he had to choose mission over crew lives, and the crew knew it and even expected it. However, in Soviet naval doctrine this “sometimes” was changed to “every time”. And here we see the profound, de-humanizing force of socialistic materialism. As usual, C.S. Lewis said it all:

The rescue of drowning men is a duty worth dying for, but not worth
living for. It seems to me that all political duties (among which I
include military duties) are of this kind. A man may have to die for
our country, but no man must, in any exclusive sense, live for his
country. He who surrenders himself without reservation to the temporal
claims of a nation, or a party, or a class is rendering to Caesar that
which, of all things, most emphatically belongs to God: himself. (Learning in War-Time)

True loyalty. We already saw that Captains Polenin and Vostrikov were in strong disagreement as to how to handle the ship; and this disagreement and clash of leadership styles was apparent to the crew. However, Polenin knew his place as a sailor and his loyalty was to the ship’s captain, even in testing times.

During one scene there’s a mutiny led by two high-ranking officers. They wanted to hand the ship to Polenin; but Polenin refused, gave back the command to Vostrikov, and placed the two men under arrest. Later on, in the investigation that followed the incident, Polenin is speaking of Vostrikov in the highest terms, saying even that it would be an honor to sail under Vostrikov’s command.

This is also important considering that a follower of the Lord could face trying and tough times; and while one might question God, it is essential to keep following Him.

What is a real hero? The reactor officer, Vadim (Peter Sarsgaard), freaked out when he had to go inside the reactor room to perform emergency repairs in dangerous conditions. Though he got strange glances from other members of the crew, no one questioned him. Later on, when the repair broke out, he went on on his own and fixed it, getting twice the radiation exposure, and the captain told him that he was a hero. The point is, Vadim behaved like a coward first, but then he gave decisive and courageous help. It is OK to be afraid: the stuff heros are made of is not precisely lack of cowardice or fear, but a realization that these feelings are real, and are dealt with by a conscious choice of the will.

Widespread corruption costs lives. In one of the first scenes of the movies, a test fails because of a defective switch. A doctor dies trying to get to the supply truck, because he was given the wrong drugs. One of the gauges in the reactor room is defective: the operator must give it a tip with the finger to get the correct reading. The failure of the aft reactor is due to a leaky pipe. When emergency repairs had to be made in a high radiation environment, it turns out that there are no anti-radiation suits in the boat. See a common thread? Failure to follow standards, willingness to cut corners in production, too many mistakes made by a careless bureaucracy, all this points out to widespread corruption. Someone lined his pockets with the rubles that were necessary to make the submarine run smoothly. For this greed and carelessness, several crew members died.

Faith vs. superstition It is comical to see how superstitious the sailors were. When the champagne bottle did not break during the ship’s dedication, they thought: “We’re cursed!”. It is comical because these sailors were supposedly the cream of the crop of Soviet Russia, the foremos example of atheism by establishment. In another scene, one of the operators of the reactor was holding a cross when the reactor officer (Vadim) saw him, and reminded him that no religious icons or images were allowed inside the ship. Later on, when this same operator was lying in the infirmary, dying from radiation poisoning, Vadim himself put the cross on this man’s trembling fingers. How great the irony; when you refuse to submit to God in faith, you’re left to the worst –and crippling– superstition.

"Tron" or Windows vs. GNU/Linux

For Christmas, I received "Tron" (The 20th Anniversary Collector’s Edition). Things have settled down enough so that I was able to view it today. It has been a few years since I last saw it, and then I was a little distracted and didn’t catch some of the things I did this time.

Before I get going to far, as word of self-introduction. My name is Josiah Ritchie (flickerfly as I’m known on Buzzing Bye, my blog) and I am an IT pro using Gentoo Linux, Windows 2000, XP and 2003. I’m a huge fan of Gentoo and not of the other OSs in that list. I am a moderate fan of several other distros. I have been a Christian for 19 years. I hope to acquire my AA (and move onto a BA) at Washington Bible College at the end of this semester, when I pass “English Comp 2″, a notoriously heavy work-load class that I’m looking forward to with a touch of trepidation. Someday, I’m going to figure out how to use my conglomeration of skills on the mission field. Back to our regularly, scheduled program…

First, "Tron" is a cute allegory between the digital realm and the physical realm. Within that digital realm, I see another allegory, not intended, but interesting in the concept of foreshadowing. Within the digital realm, there is a good force and a bad force. The bad/rouge “Master Control Program” is a program designed to learn by assimilating the programs found on other networks into himself. Eventually, the MCP determines that he could improve the management of earth by 900 to 1200 percent and begins the process of doing without man, much in the same way as Asimov’s “I, Robot” short story collection theorizes and the recent movie by the same name with Will Smith.

Anyway, to the software development corollary. I suggest that the MCP is Windows and those fighting against the MCP are Linux. The MCP is the one big thing in charge. It integrates lots of things into one marriage of lots of features. In the movie, the MCP appears to be so unweidly that the humans lose control of it and it develops as it chooses. Linux, rather is a conglomeration of many different parts that the user organizes together as it sees fit to accomplish the task at hand. The operating system itself is developed as a kernel, “Linux”, and the programs that make it possible to work with the kernel, “GNU”. Hence the GNU/Linux name many people use. Outside of that, you have a multitude of other lesser utilities like grep, tr, sort, sed, locate, cat and less. That is, as any experienced shell coder knows only a very small collection of what is available. Piping these together makes the GNU/Linux OS powerful in a way that Windows couldn’t imagine, but is working towards emulating. We can even break this down to the kernel. The Linux kernel is normally compiled in a modular way allowing the admin to add or remove the ability to work with certain devices or complete certain tasks at will. This is somewhat emulatable in Windows, but only to a degree.

In the long run I’m saying that things are much more under control, both in development and by the end-users as it is much easier to work with small, not so complicated things than it is to try to wrestle with one big part. That is, afterall, one of the basic tenents of troubleshooting, and who hasn’t heard of the ever so popular acronym KISS?

In the movie, the monster MCP tries to take over the world by trusting in itself and is taken down by the smaller and more agile programs that are able to be easily worked with by users.

Maybe, for my next post I will coorelate the MCP vs. the programs struggle to aspects of faith…

Summer movies galore

Summer is here in full swing, and our VCR is, too :) . We’ve been renting a lot of tapes with movies to watch. So far, I remember watching Troy, King Arthur, Spider Man 2, Hidalgo, and K-19: The Widowmaker.

Expect reviews of these in two or three weeks ;)

Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World

poster thumbnail for the movie When Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World came to Asunción’s theatres, I was busy, tired, newlywed, and very short on the green stuff. I was experiencing a painful exit from my job as an English teacher at a local Christian academy, and did not have the time or money to go and see it. So the movie went down before I was able to see it. And I regretted it.

Fast forward six months, and I am checking every week on the local video rental store to see if they carry the tape. When they finally do, I was very happy to rent it. And all I can say is wow!

I am a sucker for sailing ships. Perhaps because I’ve seen them only in pictures, and never saw a seashore save for a few glimpses here and there, and what I could see from a plane. Perhaps because I am a Navy Ensign in the Paraguayan Armed Forces Reserve. But the fact is that sailing ships and Old Navy settings are like a dream to me. Peter Weir’s movie hooked me since I saw the first glimpse of an ad because of that.

The story is based on the historical movies of Patrick O’Brien, a well-know historical novelist of the Anglo-Saxon world, and practically unknown to me. The adaptation is faithful to O’Brien in spirit, but not in the letter; I can certainly understand the disappointment of O’Brien buffs when they saw the movie with all the liberties taken in the script. But overall, the script carries out very well and it is a great introduction to O’Brien for a lot of the global world, myself included.

The movie is situated in 1805, and the degree of historical accuracy displayed in it is astounding. My wife mentioned that Crowe (as Capt. “Lucky” Jack Aubrey) had a kind of scar in one of his earlobes, much like an “old warrior” scar. This degree of accuracy is especially telling in the nautical themes, with all the jargon and lore of the Royal Navy of that time.

However, in my opinion, the one of the most important things on the movie is the values shown. Master and Commander shows that you could make a big blockbuster movie without showing cleavage or resorting to the lusts of the audience. It was uplifting to see virtues such as honor, courage, loyalty, patriotism and wisdom as living realities embodied by Aubrey and his crew, and not as the abstract, unattainable abstruse concepts they are thought of now.

And finally, the respectful acknowledgment of the Christian faith made throughout all the movie is almost incredible. Would you think of a feature move in today’s world that has a bunch of rough men saying the Lord’s prayer with heartfelt conviction? This movie shows that Christianity is a faith for the brave and courageous, and not for “sissies”.

All in all, an excellent movie in almost all aspects. There are, however, two aspects of possible concern: (1) There is a lot of strong, “sailor” language that includes a lot of profanity, so be careful if you choose to show to your children; and (2) there’s a lot of violence seen and implied. If you are prepared to deal with those elements, then you have a winner here.

Verdict: Strongly recommended. A masterpiece. Especially suited to watch with your male teenagers and have “men-talk” with them afterwards.

(Picture courtesy of The Internet Movie Database. Enter to see the IMDB’s page for the movie.)