Sunday, May 28, 2006

Movie: Over the Hedge

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketStudios:DreamWorks SKG
Release:May 19, 2006
Genre:Comedy, Kids/Family, Animation and Adaptation
MPAA Rating:PG for some rude humor and mild comic action.


This one has a lot of laughs ... mostly on dialogue. Hammy has most of the visual gags. The storyline itself is a bit lame and it tries hard to make the moral lesson obvious. A lesson can be learned in a good story without showcasing or putting the spotlight on it.

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketMemorable moment? The spiel on humans and food. Absolutely hilarious observation on human behavior. Talking about food, I think it's amusing that Vincent the bear's favorite Spuddies looks so much like the Philippine Spuds from Jack 'n Jill, the Sour Cream and Chives flavored one, specifically.

Saturday, May 27, 2006

Movie: X Men 3, The Last Stand

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketStudios:20th Century Fox
Release:May 26, 2006
Genre:Action/Adventure, Science Fiction/Fantasy and Sequel
MPAA Rating:PG-13 for intense sequences of action violence, some sexual content and language.


The ending of Xmen 2 obviously hinted of Phoenix rising in the third one. Phoenix in this movie though is nowhere near the Phoenix I saw in the cartoon series. It's a total bummer she ends up killing Cyclops in the first quarter of the movie.

Now Storm looked like a woozy in the 2nd movie that it's delightful to see her fury in this installment ... we finally see a Storm that deserves to command the Xmen with the departure of Professor Xavier. Ah yes, Professor X dies too ... although that scene after the credits gives us hope of his return.

An extraordinarily big number of mutants were packed into this movie. Some had good exposure, others were just for show. The scenes with the young Angel were good, but if one is to expect real action from the adult Angel, then you'd be disappointed. Rogue didn't do much either. Wolverine only has one thing on his mind for half of the movie... get to Jean Grey. It's almost like a male dog who could think of nothing but get near a bitch in heat. Oops... sorry if the words shock the prim ones, but I couldn't think of anything better to describe it.

Overall, the movie's entertaining. I must admit though that it has less impact on me compared to the first two movies.

Friday, May 19, 2006

Movie: Da Vinci Code

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at PhotobucketStudios:Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group
Release:May 19, 2006
Genre:Drama, Thriller, Adaptation and Politics/Religion
MPAA Rating:PG-13 for disturbing images, violence, some nudity, thematic material, brief drug references and sexual content.


I like this movie better than I like the book. Simply because the Langdon here is more skeptical than the Langdon in the novel. Impressively, the movie's scene that pays tribute to Mary Magdalene actually brought a tear to my eye - which didnt happen when I read the book in 2003. As in the novel though, the final answer to their quest is pretty obvious to the audience way before the characters realize it ... and they're supposed to be specialists in their fields.

If you haven't heard of the book this movie is based on, you'd probably find yourself wanting to read it just so you could understand the story better. I'm warning you though, the book starts out promising but all in all is nothing more than an adventure novel that strings together all those lunatic fringe theories surrounding Jesus. And those theories are probably old... the one about the paintings surely. My grandmother, who was born in the 19th century and died mid 1980s told me when I was little that the paintings of Jesus usually have hidden meanings and I should take notice of the hand gestures. I don't recall much of what she was explaining because I was below 10 years old and I just categorized that topic as too weird to pay attention to. I remembered my grandmother at once after stumbling across the Templar Revelation in the late 90s. Apparently, other people have an obsession with those paintings. I still find it too weird.

Not that Da Vince Code hasn't touched on an "obsession" of mine. I call this the movie that made those "lost gospels" popular and therefore expensive. Which slows down my book collection, no thanks to the outrageous prices.

Anyway, I'm more into hunting the pseudepigrapha these days (ever heard of Jubilees?) as I already have some of the new testament "lost books" (the Infancy gospels are truly bizarre). I saw a compilation of pseudepigrapha in the DLSU library, but I was studying then and despite borrowing it for about two weeks, never really got to read it. At least I know it is available, and I'm figuring out where I could get my copy (I was too shy to ask the librarian then, ok?). The upside to all these interest in the books these days is that more of them are popping up. Insanely, they pop up one by one now whereas before you're more likely to find a compilation.

My grandma had little to do with this interest. It resulted from a required term paper in Biblical Theology where the professor assigned each student a different book from either the apocrypha or the pseudepgrapha. Unlucky for me, the gospel I had to write on is remembered only because it existed but no text has survived time. I found a number of "lost" gospels in the SSC College library but not the one I was supposed to write on. I found them very interesting and made a note to have my own copies if I could find and afford them.

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