Wednesday 23 March 2011

I should have long figured out why people have food biases (ie prefers not to eat products of certain kinds, usually meat). Because the are cute. Or lovable, depending on how you see it. Essentially you become some kind of animal racist eating only the few meats because you eat them often and got used to them/ they do not have a place that high in your heart so you cool/ you have dietary restrictions etc.

Meat is meat. Why isn't killing chickens as cruel as killing dogs for food, just because we have domesticated them and got a soft spot for them? (China doesn't kill any dogs fyi, they actually have "farmers" breeding specific dogs to grow and eat instead. Of course, given China's bad PR outside of its country, it's understandable if you don't believe...)


Today damn regret, we went to the Factory Tour to Wugang (where they make, craft and generally doing metallurgy) and there was this really cool uncle in his blue factory uniform, wearing black sunglasses, a yellow helmet and a flaming welder on his left hand, looking at us, and I failed to take a picture of him! His posture there and then simply exudes a kind of biker manliness, like those beefy Japanese factory uncles. URRRK.

And I feel damn bad when the first thing I can think while stepping into the factory is:" Halo Reach last level! The shipyard! Pillar Of Autumn!". Considering how they can simply have sample shots of factories dealing with metal making and then craft a futuristic but recognisable future of the ship breaking facilities (vats of molten metal, walkways for personnel only, conveyor belts, spare parts littered all over the place)...
Sorry brief nerdgasm while in the factory :x

Rockmelt's a pretty awesome browser to use while over here in China, I can still receive twitter and facebook feeds without a vpn, and do limited postings on facebook and only being unable to retweet followed tweets from protected users. How it does it I don't know, but hey, no one's complaining! Of course having a vpn is still much better hurhurhur. Poor Tor. Installed it but can't get it to work here :(
China makes me sleep earlier than I used to like school time early wonder if that would still be the case when I get back to Singapore.




lousydude walked on the sunny side.
3/23/2011 12:43:00 am.
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Tuesday 15 March 2011
127 Hours

From the beginning, you knew the end.


With 127 Hours, the marketing pulled off quite a daring move. You know he is trapped by a rock in the canyons, with limited food, water, and 127 hours before he even gets rescued. How does he survive it, how could a movie with only mainly 1 guy acting most of the time work, and how do engage the audience enough before you reach the ultimatum: Cutting off the arm?

Thankfully the director is able to pull it off despite the great pressure he might have.

Unfortunately I missed the part before he fell into the canyon (Which seems inconsequential, after reading some quick summary). From there, our character Aron begins to set out his items and prepares to survive through the night (and eventually days) before he gets rescued, while keeping a daily video log of himself. Meanwhile, he attempts to extract himself from the rock, first by chipping it away with his blunt swiss army knife, and eventually choosing to remove his arm. Throughout his ordeal he continuously attempts to maintain his sanity till he can get himself out.

What might appear as a physical constitution becomes a battle of one’s mind as Aron battles his own emotions and fear induced hallucinations, going through several stages of the 5 Stages of Grief. From keeping himself entertained by acting as a radio DJ interviewing himself, his fears of dying in the canyon with regrets, to a brief acceptance of what he believed was his “destiny” to die down there. Music and sound effects played a great role during such moments, (I had no idea it was A.R Rahman) helping to pace the flashbacks and the characters mood, to setting up tensions for scenes like where he cuts off his arm, creating High Octane Nightmare Fuel for some viewers (Of course Your Mileage May Vary).



Still, the flashbacks can be confusing to some viewers, where the boundaries between reality and fantasy are blurred more than once. Still, on hindsight, I suppose that’s the whole purpose of it, where what’s real and imaginary meld to form a reality of its own when one’s on the verge of insanity and death?

Definitely a movie to watch, and for those who always never believed those motivational talks on how people live to achieve a better life after such terrible ordeals, this one might help offer a glimpse into the energy that powers them during those critical moments between life and death, and is as close as you can get to the actual hardship they have to go through.




Hi from China! Blogging about a movie that I've just watched beats doing my China reflections anyday. (Day 1 to Day 7 still not done oh hohohoho)

Have fun kids alright? It is the holidays after all, I don't care if you are from a Polytechnic like me or in a Junior College, loosen up, feel a little. ;)


lousydude walked on the sunny side.
3/15/2011 02:11:00 am.
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