What I'm All about


Video Games are a interesting and exciting form of entertainment, but not all games are equal. Some are good, some are bad, some are lies and some are hidden gems.

I want to help people find out if a game is worth it's price or if their money would be better spent on a sub-sandwich.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Ender's Game. War Is Not A Game! ...or is it?

Out of the huge amounts of books I have read in my lifetime I have seen many make the transition from text on paper to motion pictures on the big screen. Some have been rather lackluster, while others have been... well lets just say some left a lot to be desired- I am talking about you Eragon!

 Fortunately for me in the past year the two books that are neck and neck for the spot of my favorite both received film adaptations with large budgets and talented cast. The first is The Hobbit which has had a huge following due to it being the prequel to The Lord of the Rings trilogy, which already has a massive audience. The second is Ender's Game, which to be honest is comparatively a much more obscure series. Both series are similar in many ways despite being in the near opposite genres of fantasy and science fiction. What I'd really like to talk about is how much Ender's Game left to be desired and how it could have benefited from the methods used in what will be The Hobbit trilogy.

To help get things into perspective watch this trailer for Ender's Game as well as these two for the first and second part of The Hobbit trilogy.
                                                                       Ender's Game

                                                    The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

The Hobbit Desolation of Smaug


                                                                   Whats it all about?

Ender's Game was originally a novel written by Orson Scott Card, which along with it's sequel Speaker for the Dead, received notable awards such a Hugo Reward and Nebula Award. The movie was Directed by Gavin Hood, who I know from his work on Wolverine: Origins (2009) as well as an acting role on the popular science fiction series Stargate SG-1 (2004).


                 Orson Scott Card                                                                                            Gavin Hood















Asa Butterfield, best known for his role in Hugo (2011) and The Boy in Striped Pajamas (2008) stars as the movie's main character: the cunning, intelligent and tactical Ender Wiggin. Meanwhile acting legend Harrison Ford co-stars as the manipulative, ruthless and borderline cruel Colonel Graff.

            Asa Butterfield                                                                                           Harrison Ford


















                                                                   So whats the plot?

The plot is actually relatively straight forward. Years ago an ant-like alien race known as The Formics attacked earth and by some miraculous feat Earth's greatest military commander sacrificed himself and single-handedly halted the entire invasion. Years later Ender Wiggin is enrolled in a special program where the best and brightest of earth's children groomed to one day move on the orbiting space station known as Battleschool where they will be forged into the perfect military soldiers and commanders. Implanted in the back of his neck is a special device that allows observation of his every action through his own eyes by military officials such as the drastic Colonol Graff.

This is the basic plot without any spoilers and ends up being a great movie with many moments that made me tremble with anticipation, as well as stellar action scenes. Unfortunately without the prior knowledge of having read the original book many parts of the movie may end up confusing or seem much less significant than they were intended to be. It is more than likely both the book and movie are great places to start, but I would not advise going with one without the other as they both compliment one another extremely well.

                                                                     How did it go?    

Overall I quite enjoyed this adaptation of one of my favorite books. Gavin Hood and Harrison ford no are strangers to the Science Fiction genre and thought it may seem like blasphemy I honestly feel this was one of Harrison Ford's best performances to date and that is saying a lot. I was a tad bit disappointed with Asa Butterfield's performance however. For someone who's previous major roles are characters that are meant to cause a lot of emotion in the audience I feel like he simply didn't capture the true essence of the character. Ender was meant to be incredibly intelligent child who is forcibly forged into a perfect and ruthless tactical commander at the age of only six years old! He carries the weight of knowing that the very survival of his species is on his shoulders at it is supposed to slowly crush him until he begins to worry hes not even human anymore! That is how the character was meant to be portrayed but he is instead naive and easily manipulated. Some people praise the serious demeanor of his acting, but whether it was poor a transfer in novel to screen writing or the actor's style I feel like the true core of the Ender character was lost in translation.

Had the movie focused on that instead of the action it may have been one of the best movies of all time. The adults in the movie did a much better job in their roles and the contrast between the scenes featuring Colonol Graff and the other adult characters seemed almost like a completely different movie than the scenes featuring Ender and the other children. I believe it tried to hard to be like other more recent science fiction movies that focus on grand battles and sleek futuristic technology.

John Bane provided his opinion in his November 5th, VLOG video. His opinion was that when you got to see a movie adaptation of a book your expectation is to see certain scenes you imagined when you were reading and how accurately they match up to it. "It was an action movie, it really was." He states while adding that the main focus of the story was really the non-action elements.        

The Slashdot blogger known as Soulskill does make a very good argument in the movie's defense though. "It's inevitable that a successful book won't fit within the confines of a movie script." They mention at the end of their article. Though this is most definitely true it brings me back to the comparison I mentioned earlier regarding The Hobbit Trilogy.

                                                                 The Hobbit Comparison

I feel that Ender's game wound have benefited by being split up into multiple movies with powerful scenes instead of jammed into one where it felt it needed to gloss over many of the more dramatic scenes in favor of fast paced action. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey left out no details that were in the book, in fact it actually added content from additional books in the series that took place at the same time. Ender's Game could have done this and in my personal opinion pulled it off way better. I'll stop there due to the risk of spoiling either of these amazing series for those reading, but I am deeply saddened by the loss of this opportunity.

                                                                         Final Verdict

Ender's Game is by no means a bad movie. It has spectacular action scenes and excellently portrays them just as I imagined them from the book. Is it a cultural milestone that will have an impact on the world at large? Much to my disappointment it does not. It instead tries to attract a younger demographic with fast paced action and the typical "growing up really sucks" stereotypes. Even worse it still attempts to act like it is the incredibly serious and emotional plot featured in the books. This has been the fate of many famous movie adaptations of literature and was my biggest fear when I heard it was being produced. I fear the chances of a sequel will be minimal due to the confusing plot and a very poor release date that forced it to compete with anticipated movies like Thor: The Dark World. Many critics agree with many of these points according to a recent post by CBS shown below.

Creating this review has made me want to reread the book as well as read more books from the series. It made me mostly want to experience what I felt the first time I read it, but with the more realistic perspective that the movie portrays. I went to see the movie with my friends and they liked it as well for the most part. One of them has read the book and the other hasn't. The one who has't was rather confused about the plot while the other was happy with the action scenes, but liked the book more. By creating this I realized a lot of movie adaptations are directly affected by public opinion of their authors. Ender's Game was almost scrapped due to  controversy on Orsan Scott Card's personal views on subjects such as gay marriage. Tolkien led a rather charmed life and was an all around well liked and celebrated person in general. Maybe these things have a larger affect than we realize.




John Bane's Vlog
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bZuaA0KBTpo

CBS Post
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-207_162-57610451/enders-game-reviews-critics-weigh-in-on-sci-fi-film/

Soulskill's Review
http://slashdot.org/story/13/11/06/1921209/movie-review-enders-game

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Smart watches, Its about time. OR Why I love Nostalgia.

So I was perusing my usual haunts on YouTube the other day (game reviews, internet personalities, cat videos, etc.) when I noticed the ad for Samsung's new Galaxy Gear smart-watch. It was a trip down memory lane as I watched the figures of my childhood flash by one at a time. From The Jetsons and The Mighty Morphin Power Ranger to Knight Rider and Inspector Gadget, there were familiar faces and voices all around. It even flashed back before my time with Predator and Star Trek, series I knew and loved as did my older siblings and my parents. Each and every time it displayed real life versions of their high tech make believe super watches. All this conveyed to me in just over a minute. I had heard about the new smart-watch race kicking off, but this was really the first bit of relevant advertising I've been bombarded with.

For the first time in a long time I remembered a little toy watch I got with a spy kit on my eighth birthday. I would always pretend it was a radio, a stun gun, anything and everything that wasn't actually a watch. It brought back memories of just a few years ago when I bought an arm band to hold my I-Pod while jogging. Yes, that's why I bought it. For jogging, not because it was just plain awesome to have a smart device on my wrist.

Only one thought went through my mind the first time I saw this ad. Its about time.



Now you see there's a really unfortunate part of growing up that most people have to deal with at one point or another. Nearly everything from your childhood was an elaborate ploy for someone to take your parent's money. G.I. Joe was toys, Pokemon was video games and Ronald McDonald was fast food. When I first realized this I felt a little lied to. The world was saying that all these characters, these worlds and these things I possessed were just part of a giant scheme to take my money. Maybe this is the reason people tend to abandon the things they liked as kids in favor of more "adult things"or maybe its just me being way more philosophical then is worth the effort. All I can say is that as I grew older still I realized something bigger, I was strangely okay with all this.

I am nineteen years old and I still buy Pokemon games, I still watch the new G.I. Joe movies and I still eat at McDonald's, even though the food is bad and Ronald McDonald has been all but disowned. How is all this relevant to smart-watches you may be wondering? Its simple really. Nostalgia.

If you ask me nostalgia is the greatest way to get someone to buy your product. This ad takes the pleasant feelings of your past, feelings which you may have a hard time feeling these days, and beats you over the head with them. It shows you those famous and memorable things from your childhood, things you thought were a glimpse of the far future and tells you they aren't so far away anymore. The characters you know and loved growing are perfect to advertise this new and strange product because they are familiar and you can associate certain feelings with them.

Basically what this ad is attempting to do is convince you that this product is over fifty years in the making and if its good enough for the people with cars that talk or fly or transform into giant robots, than you would be an idiot not to try it out yourself. It takes fifty years of TV culture and shows you what you've been missing.

In my opinion, which I respect, this ad has hit it's mark really well, assuming said mark is directly to me. This has got to be one of the better commercials I have seen to date and it has really just stuck with me since I saw it. It  has managed to get me genuinely excited something new for the first time in a long time. It manages to be old and new at the same time and I cant say I've seen this method before.

Whether you just want the newest thing or you just really want to pretend you're in Star Trek and talk to your wrist, then this product is for you. It seems like it may be a bit of a niche item at first, but when you can get someone to trade in last year's I-Phone for this years plus a hundred dollars then it likely wont stay that way for long.

This ad's greatest strength is how well it establish the product's credibility. It makes you think back to just how long the concept of a watch that is more than a watch has been around and how its finally happening. But the fact that the ad focuses so much on the old media it is also a bit of a weakness. I realized I got so engrossed in the nostalgia that I was a bit disappointed when they showed the product itself. Besides being on my wrist and being small it doesn't seem all that different then my current smartphone. Maybe if they followed up on why this is actually better than what I already have it would give me a larger incentive. Admittedly if I was in the market for a smart device then I would definitely be all for this, sadly having both an I-Pod and I-Phone my tech fix is quite satisfied for the moment.

I'm not alone in the assumption that this ad plays directly off of nostalgia, both Vlad Savov and Sean Buckley (listed below) agree. Many people on YouTube are appreciative of the ad as well some even saying its one of the few they bothered to actually watch. Many went far enough out of their way to comment on the video with just how much they enjoyed it. From what I can see the ad has definitely accomplished what it was intended.

Based on what I gathered from comments and other blogs about this ad its essentially one of the first shots in the new smart-watch wars. With Apple's announcement of their new smart watch Samsung has responded in full with their own marketing campaign.

After really digging into this ad I realized that a am surprisingly okay with this marketing strategy. I greatly enjoy the feeling of nostalgia, enough to the point that I am perfectly willing to gloss over the fact that people are really just trying to get me to give them my money.

Product website:
www.samsung.com/Galaxy

Sean's Article:
http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/06/samsungs-galaxy-gear-ads-play-on-your-nostalgia/

Vlad's Article
http://www.theverge.com/2013/10/6/4809222/samsung-galaxy-gear-us-commercial-video