Wednesday, 5 August 2015

Computer Chess






 Computer Chess is set in a cheap Californian hotel, around 1980, and revolves around an annual chess tournament for programmers. Or as one character puts it, "the computer plays chess versus other computers.

Visually the movie is bold, idiosyncratic and shot like a low budget eighties documentary. Director Andrew Bujalski and cinematographer Matthias Grunksy used old 1969 Sony video cameras, the resulting footage in hazy tones of black and white. There's also the occasional split screen and overlaying text like an image on an  overhead projector.

The cast includes many non-actors some of whom are software developers, who add credence to their lines. Their costume and appearance, nerdy and awkward. They look more like the real deal. Less like Hollywood actors dulled down for comedic effect.

You could be lulled into thinking nothing much is happening beyond the chess tournament. But strange things happen. There is a short sequence of washed-out colour that ends with one character stuck in a repeated loop of movement like a chess piece. There's also an influx of cats, night wanderings down long corridors and a lingering 'mysterious lady' who haunts the hotel lobby.

Also staying at the hotel, touchy feely couples attending a relationship workshop. When the two groups interact it is often uncomfortably funny, as in one programmer's re-birthing and another young reserved programmer's dalliances with an older swinging couple.

Initially Computer Chess looks like a dry documentary from the digital dawn about the semblances of artificial intelligence. But it's weird and funny, with a lot of strange things happening beneath the surface. 


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Sunday, 2 August 2015

The Penguin Book of Modern Fantasy by Women



I haven't blogged here in a very long time. Probably due to being back at university, but also because to be honest I haven't enjoyed anything as much as I enjoyed reading the Penguin Book of Modern Fantasy by Women, edited by A. Susan Williams which I read, I think, about a year ago now. Basically everything I've read since then has been an author I discovered thanks to this anthology, and everything else has been re-reading what I'd already read by familiar authors in the collection. So, I thought I would just get it off my chest how much I adore it. It's an incredible anthology, possibly the only collection of short stories of which I haven't sneakily skipped a couple (or a few, or like half?). And, every time I go back into it I find out something new and impressive about various authors. It includes the obvious gold standard queens of female fantasy - Angela Carter, Margaret Atwood, Ursula K. Leguin, and our beloved Janet Frame. However, the lesser known writers are actually just as good or even better. I don't know if they're really lesser known, I figured out I was a bit late to the party with Shirley Jackson, but anyhow. A little list of my favourite figures from the anthology:

Leigh Brackett: Her story in the anthology, 'The Lake of Gone Forever' is a stand out to me, and I just found out she wrote the screenplay for 'The Empire Strikes Back'??? I'm embarrassed I wasn't already reading her. If you like good science fiction, find her here!

Anna Kavan: 'A Bright Green Field' also stuck out to me in this collection (for all the good things you want in sci fi/fantasy: imagery, spookiness, palpable political allegory) and I then found out she has some ties to the New Zealand literary landscape. Kavan spent 18 months or so here, meeting the likes of Frank Sargeson, and offending some with her bleak characterizations of New Zealand published back in the UK - quoted as saying that New Zealanders live "in temporary shacks, uneasily, as reluctant campers too far from home". In 'Anna Kavan's New Zealand', Jennifer Sturm offers a broad and sympathetic reading of Kavan and her time here, analyzing the effect of her time here on later works (notably her novel Ice), and her indeed quite fond feelings toward our still relatively young, and culturally ambiguous country. It's an interesting, if slightly glum read - Kavan was not a happy woman, but, as often goes her writing did not suffer. You can find more of her here, and I suggest you do.

Leonora Carrington: I had only known Carrington as a surrealist artist, and her painting 'The Giantess" graces the anthology's cover. Her writing is as wonderful and odd as her art, and "My Flannel Knickers" manages to stand out in the collection at not quite 3 pages long. You can find more of her here.

Christine Brooke-Rose: I adore Christine Brooke-Rose, and fell in love with her about a paragraph in to her story 'The Foot', narrated by the phantom pain in the amputated foot of a beautiful young female patient. Very nasty and disturbing, and full of exhaustingly mellifluous sentences. Brooke-Rose is not easy to read, in fact she can be very hard to read, but she is very, very worth it. If you want an author that plays with language and narrative stance, but doesn't leave you feeling like that was the entire point of the exercise, please read her! After I read 'The Foot', I was dying to read her collection 'Go When You See the Green Man Walking' and tried to suggest a purchase, only to learn it was out of print. However, a few months later on in October 2014 I learned that it had been republished, and promptly had it ordered in, and you can find it here.

I could go on forever. Joanna Russ introduces the anthology and is another favourite, and whose literary criticism is essential, particularly 'How to Suppress Women's Writing' which I am suggesting for purchase right this second. Kit Reed is definitely worth a look. Muriel Spark is in there, Octavia Butler too. I'm not even really a fan of Anne McCaffrey (bit romantic for me?) but that said her short story in this anthology "The Ship Who Sang" might actually be my favourite (and, to be honest, it's very romantic and made me tear up). I recommend this anthology to everyone I know, and am slowly making it my mission where possible to add as many of its authors as I can into our collection. If you're into sci fi or feminism then it's essentially a guide to people you should know about, and would like to have been. Read it!

Thursday, 23 July 2015

The goodness of Gaiman




Neil Gaiman is something of a treasure to libraries, and not just because of the incredible books he writes. He is a strong advocate for fiction and reading which is very evident in his recent lecture 'Why our future depends on libraries, reading and daydreaming' 
It is no wonder with quotes like "Google can bring you back 100,000 answers. A librarian can bring you back the right one" that Mr Gaiman is beloved by librarians the world over :)  

The following are my top 5 Neil Gaiman recommendations. This was a pretty difficult list to narrow down, but these are my personal favourites - I'd love to hear which are yours!

Number 5
I'm going to cheat a little and link both The Sandman comic series and the various Death comic mini-series together, as they are after all connected. The Sandman comics were amongst the first I read when I was getting back into the whole comic scene in the mid 90's, and it is easy to see why they are considered classics in the genre.
The series centres around Morpheus, also known as Dream from The Endless, and he and his siblings Death, Destiny, Destruction, Desire, Delirum and Despair take us on a series of unbelievable exploits. The series has a very mythological feel to it, as do many of Mr Gaiman's works. I'll always have a soft spot for Death, who is always so much fun to cosplay, and the deluxe edition of her tales are well worth checking out.

Number 4
Mr Gaiman is a very diverse author and writes for ALL ages. He has many titles for kids under his belt, from the super cute Chu series of picture books to the rather spooky Coraline (I still look at buttons and shudder). But my favourite of these is the wonderful Fortunately, the milk.
Mum is away and Dad is in charge, and he's forgotten the milk for breakfast! Luckily he has some rather marvellous adventures getting it. Such a fun story to share with the littles (or not so littlies) in your life.

Number 3
From the very creepy beginning of The graveyard book where a small toddler manages to survive his entire family being murdered by a mysterious assassin, I was hooked. Bod (Nobody) Owens ends up being raised by the spooks at the nearby graveyard, a crazy assortment of characters. This was one book that stayed with me long after I finished it, in the very best way possible. I'm not sure how you can be creepy but heart-warming at the same time, but this book somehow manages it.

Number 2
Unbeknownst to me, I already owned a Neil Gaiman book long before I was even a fan. Another of my all time favourite authors is Terry Pratchett, and I own many of his books, including Good Omens: the nice and accurate prophecies of Agnes Nutter, a witch, which a little later down the track I realised was a collaboration with that same comic guy I really liked :)
In this fantasy comedy about the impending end of the world, Aziraphale the angel, and Crowley the demon are on a mission to find the (rather nice) 11 year old Antichrist and avert Armageddon.

And in my top spot - Number 1
Stardust is probably the only book I own in any format I can get it. I have the exact hard copy as pictured above. I have the stunning 4 part graphic novel set, beautifully illustrated by Charles Vess. I have the DVD of the movie adaptation (the book is better, lets face it, it usually is - but the movie is pretty lovely). To me this has the same magical timeless quality of The Princess Bride.
Tristran Thorn sees a falling star, and sets out to retrieve it in order to win the heart of his supposed one true love. He is not the only one questing to retrieve the star, and a fantastical adventure ensues. This book makes it not only on my top five Gaiman list, but also on my overall top five book list!

So those are my personal favourites, and I have missed so many wonderful titles I also loved off this list - the novels American gods (hopefully soon to be a TV series) The ocean at the end of the lane and Neverwhere, the stunningly beautiful The sleeper and the spindle (he retells the classics like no one else), his recent short story collection Trigger warning: short fictions and disturbances....I could seriously go on! Thanks Mr Gaiman for letting us share in your daydreams, they are indeed a magical (and sometimes very spooky) place :)

Monday, 13 July 2015

Don’t Forget the Motor City


A lot of the movie Only Lovers Left Alive, takes place in Detroit. And I had never realised a city in ruin could look so beautiful. Some of my favourite scenes involve the two central characters, long-term lover vampires Adam (Tom Hiddleston) and Eve, (Tilda Swinton) driving around Detroit’s empty streets at night. Past vacant lots of long grass, two story homes where families haven’t lived in for years and magnificent buildings in ruins.

At a New York Film Festival press conference, the movie’s director Jim Jarmusch, talked about how he was drawn to Detroit’s “post-industrial visual feeling” and described what had happened to Detroit as “sad” and ‘tragic”.  Detroit made and lost a fortune with the auto industry and was weakened by racial conflict and crime. The city is now bankrupt and near abandoned.

But Detroit was once known as “the Paris of the West” and the grand buildings stand as testament to Detroit’s moneyed past. During one of Adam’s and Eve’s night time drives they visit the Michigan Theatre. Adam shows Eve around and tells her (and us the audience) about the theatre’s past. It was built in the 1920s for “huge sums of money”. And “built ironically on the exact same site Henry Ford built his very first prototype.” The huge theatre seated 4000 people and hosted concerts and “even movies”. Now, further irony, the theatre has become a carpark. Nobody seems to know what to do with such a vast space. While Adam is talking, the camera slowly moves across the ornately decorated ceiling, crumbling but still beautiful. The scene ends with the two actors standing back to back looking up at the ceiling, dwarfed by the sheer size of the place.

For me, this is the best Detroit-by-night scenes. It’s striking, atmospheric and I think it sums up Detroit’s past and present.

Sunday, 5 July 2015

Crossing off my Reading Challenge! Part One (and a half)




As everyone might remember, in April I posted my Reading Challenge for ya'll to see. I've since made progress (as one should hope, seeing as we're halfway through the year now - scary!) and here it is - Update One-and-a-Half (having already shown my undying love for cat warriors in my 'first' update).

Alright! What have I read so far?

A book published this year - First Frost by Sarah Addison Allen (Published January 20th, 2015)

As we already know from a previous post before I thought to make my challenge public, First Frost is by my very favourite adult fiction author, Sarah Addison Allen.
The Waverly family is plodding along nicely, until suddenly everyone loses spirit. The first frost is coming, and everyone is uneasy. Claire doesn't know if her magic is working - or if she even had any to start with, and Bay, her niece, is trying to make her way through high school after her powers make a huge mess of her reputation with the one person who matters.

I cannot possibly explain how much I love her books, but just take my word for it. Apparently, they're similar in style to Diana Wynne Jones (says a well-read friend) which I haven't read (yet) so if you're a fan of hers, these books might be for you. When I finally could get my mitts on this latest one from SAA, I read it in one go - not hard, as this ones quite a bit shorter than her others - and loved it, as I expected.

A book with a number in the title - Th1rteen R3asons Why by Jay Asher

Thirteen Reasons Why is about a teenage girl who, before committing suicide, records 13 'reasons' of why she came to the conclusion to do so, and then sends them to the people 'responsible' for her death. The main character, Clay, receives them one morning in the mail, and slowly listens to why the girl he thought he was possibly in love with killed herself.

It's a morbid read that does well in showing how suicide and depression is still taboo and 'ignored' - despite how common it is and sheds some light on why that can't happen anymore. In that way, I respect it. I just didn't think it was for me - not because of content/themes, but because the main guy, Clay, got on my nerves a little.

A book with non-human characters - Black Wings by Christina Henry

Maddy is an Agent - someone who leads the dead to the after-life. She's also broke and in need of a flat-mate to help pay her rent. Enter Gabriel, a hunky guy who just happens to know about her past and her mother's death, and who inadvertently brings a whole bunch of demons knocking on Maddy's door. She has to fight or die, and with Gabe's help, she finds she is much more than just an Agent.

A paranormal/fantasy romance. Angels, demons, 'Agents', titan-like beings that like to mess stuff up. A fun read that was easy to get through, but not for if you're wanting some serious thinking to go on - so it's like most of the books I read, haha.