And the answer is... I'm 90%:
Which Norse God or Goddess are you most like?
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Darkmatters: H O M E
Reviewed by Matt Adcock
I haven’t enjoyed a Woody Allen movie since 1973’s Sleeper so imagine my surprise when two of my very best friends tell me that Match Point is really good and I have to see it…
It becomes obvious to me that either –
a. two of my best friends are lying bast*rds
b. two of my best friends have been in touch with each other and thought it would be funny to send me to see a duff film
or
c. two of my best friends are right…
So I went and saw Match Point – on the plus side I thought – at least it’s a thriller (I’m always up for a good thriller) and it’s got Scarlett Johansson in it and I’m always up for a bit of Scarlett Johansson (you can guess which bit in particular)…
And I’ll be tied up and unspeakably assaulted with a unwatched DVD copy of Broadway Danny Rose if Match Point didn’t actually turn out to be a great little thriller!
So, faith in friends restored and I can now honestly say that I ‘enjoyed a Woody Allen film the other day’… without smirking and shaking my head. Anyway, Jonathan Rhys Meyers plays Chris Wilton – your average guy who marries the ditzy daughter of a rich family (Emily Mortimer) and then meets his new potential sister in law - Nola Rice (Johansson) and falls for her.
Murder, sex and all sorts of tension ensue in a most agreeable fashion. Meyers gets some great lines like:
“The innocent are sometimes slain to make way for grander schemes. You were collateral damage.”
My favourite interchange between Meyers and Johansson is this:
Chris: So you are aware of your affect on men?
She replies: They think I'd be something very special.
Chris: And are you?
Nola: No one's ever asked for they're money back.
Catch it on the big screen if you can – or be sure to see it on DVD!
Poster Quote: “Match Point gave me a Woody I could be proud of…”
Darkmatt Rating: öööö (Passion Temptation Obsession stylishly done)
"Hey - look everyone... I'm having it off with Scarlett Johansson... in public!!"
Altered Carbon
by Richard Morgan
Reviewed by Matt Adcock
Stuart Carter over at http://www.infinityplus.co.uk/ says “a first novel so exciting, so addictive and so bone-crunchingly in your face that it beggars the need for such virtual reality as it occasionally employs.” Unfortunately he’s not talking about Darkmatters but Altered Carbon and whilst he's obviously more impressed with AC than I was (or just trying to get a jacket quote in the next print run)- in the main I have to concur with his thoughts...
A friend leant me Altered Carbon after I’d mapped out the plot of Darkmatters for him – ‘it’s kind in the same area’ he said – and he’s right. If you like near future action thrillers with serious amounts of gunplay, hot women, robots and cool heroes then I’d urge you to check this out.
Quick plot overview from Wikipedia: “Kovacs is an Envoy - a member of a military unit formed to cope with the challenge of interstellar warfare. In the novel's universe, faster-than-light travel is only possible by transmitting the digitally stored mind via 'needlecast' across space into a new sleeve. Transmitting normal soldiers in this way will severely inhibit their effectiveness, since they will have to cope with finding themselves in a new body while fighting. To combat this, Envoy training emphasises the mental techniques necessary to survive in different bodies over physical strength (which is useless when the soldier is downloaded into a new body). The effectiveness of the Envoy Corps' mental training is such that Envoys are banned from holding governmental positions on most worlds.
Kovacs - who is killed in the novel's prologue and stored in digital form - is downloaded into a temporary sleeve formerly inhabited by Bay City policeman Elias Ryker and turned loose on the investigation. The plot unfolds through Kovacs's "hard-boiled" narrative. Kovacs eventually solves the mystery, but only after great personal suffering under which he is able to bear up only because of his Envoy training.”
Darkmatt Rating: öööö (future violent noir – detective thriller meets cyberpunk)
"Drew Barrymore - would make a good 'Ortega' - one of the love interests in AC"
You can probably pick up a copy of the book here: www.amazon.co.uk
Other books that I’ve reviewed that you might like if you enjoyed Altered Carbon:
Pattern Recognition by William Gibson
Check back for review this weekend.
More photos: underworld-2-evolution
Darkmatters: H O M E
Darkmatt Rating: öööö (grim but good... from the maker of 'The Cooler')
"love the artwork - and from the end credits am sure there's an Asley Wood influence / connection?"
Reviews of other films and stuff you might want to read indexed here
Darkmatters: H O M EDarkmatt Rating: öööö (a simple but tasty oriental treat)
Matt Adcock meets Ziyi Zhang
"Ziyi was hot but hadn't quite got the hang of the YMCA dance..."
Earlier post about the Geisha including some lovely photos of Ziyi Zhang
Reviews of other films and stuff you might want to read indexed here
So Ziyi, was Memoirs of A Geisha a book you knew?
Zhang: “I read it five years ago. I’d heard about it from many of my friends who just loved it. I loved this story, it was so special. I never thought that one day I could be in this story, playing this character. So for me, the first time I heard I had got the role I was happily surprised. At the same time I felt tremendous pressure, because I knew Rob was going to make this movie in English. For me that was my biggest obstacle, because English is my second language and I only started learning it two years ago. I just felt that then I had to live up to their expectations and had to give all my best efforts. You can’t let them have any regrets, you have to do your best.”
What was the hardest aspect of geisha training?