Creative Output
Posts Tagged flying
Reviews of a Mid-air Movie Marathon
Posted by Angela Brett in Culture, Holidailies on December 16, 2014
Technology is great. For instance, did you know that you can get to New Zealand from Europe simply by sitting in three different chairs in the sky and watching about seven movies while people bring you a succession of breakfasts and dinners in no discernible order? It doesn’t even cost any more money if you book it the day before instead of several months in advance, although it can be quite disruptive to daily blogging projects, and pretty much everything else. I know because I did it a week or so ago. In an attempt to get back on the Holidailies bandwagon, I’m going to review the movies I watched. I’ve never reviewed movies before, and I’ve also never properly slept on a plane before, so chances are these are poorly-written reviews of movies interspersed with the daydreams of a sleep-deprived mind.
First off, I can’t remember any scenes which would cause any of these movies (except perhaps the last one) to pass the Bechdel test, but I was awake for more than 48 hours that day, and I wasn’t specifically looking for such scenes, so I don’t trust my memory. I am pretty sure that they all had mostly male protagonists, so such scenes were not the norm. That means that even if they passed (and at least one apparently did), they didn’t do it with flying colours, even if I was flying at the time and they were in colour.
I’ve put the movie descriptions from the in-flight entertainment system at the start of each review. The order of the reviews is only approximately the order I saw the movies in.
Filmed over 12 years with the same cast, this film is a groundbreaking story of growing up as seen through the eyes of a child named Mason, who literally grows up on screen. Snapshots of adolescence from road trips and family dinners to birthdays and graduations, and all the moments in between, chart the rocky terrain of childhood like no other film ever has before.
I was going to start with Winter Soldier, but the premise of this seemed interesting, so I played it on impulse. I wasn’t sure whether it was going to be a documentary or a movie. It was a movie. With all the effort and risk involved in filming the same cast over twelve years, it’s a shame they didn’t really come up with a plot for it. There were entertaining slices of life, though.
The film jumped from one year to the next without any clear indication that time was being skipped, so sometimes (especially during the parts where there were four children instead of two) it was difficult to tell when there were new characters and when they were just the old characters a bit older with different haircuts. Keeping the same actors is a great idea in theory, because it should be easier to recognise the character as a year-older version of the same actor than a completely different actor, but they still changed a lot. It could be that they deliberately changed the haircuts and hair colours of the actors in order to make it more obvious that they’d skipped some time, but I’d have been happier if they’d just put a date or ‘six months later’ title on the bottom of the screen.
Captain America: The Winter Soldier
Marvel’s “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” finds Steve Rogers, aka Captain America, living quietly in Washington, D.C. But when a S.H.I.E.L.D. colleague comes under attack, Steve joins forces with Natasha Romanoff, aka Black Widow, and a new ally, the Falcon, to battle a powerful yet shadowy enemy – the Winter Soldier.
Planes are a good way to catch up on all the movies the whole internet seems to be talking about which you somehow didn’t hear about or get around to seeing until it was too late. There were surprisingly few of them on offer (the internet talked so loudly about Guardians of the Galaxy that I saw it in the theatre soon after its release) but with this one I finally found out why the internet has been saying ‘hail hydra’ so much lately. My first flight was less than six hours, so I actually had to watch the end of this on my second flight. I’m more used to having two twelve-hour flights and a one-hour flight, so this was a bit of a jarring intermission. They didn’t even serve overpriced popcorn in Dubai airport. Anyway, it was a good superhero movie, with no gratuitous love interest that I can remember, but still a plot point borrowed from Romeo and Juliet.
The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared
With his 100th birthday approaching, Alan Karlsson has led a long and eventful life. Despite his age, Alan has grown restless and while still in good shape, decides to flee his boring everyday life.
I pressed play on this one as soon as I saw it in the list. I read the book several years ago on the advice of a friend, and was excited to see the movie, even though it’s in Swedish and at that point in the flights I wasn’t sure I’d be able to keep my eyes open to read the subtitles. I managed it well enough. The movie is good fun, although it necessarily misses some of the details and subplots of the book, because that’s what movies do. If you liked Forrest Gump, you’d probably like this; the guy’s life is a similarly unbelievable string of events. He reminds me of me. He also reminds me of Werner von Braun.
While studying the evolution of the eye, molecular biologist Dr. Ian Gray and his lab partner, Karen, make a stunning scientific discovery that has far reaching implications and causes them to question their once-certain scientific and spiritual beliefs. Risking everything he’s ever known, Gray travels halfway around the world to validate his theory.
A more accurate description would be, ‘While studying the evolution of the eye, Dr. Ian Gray, with the help of his student slave who turns out to be competent, useful, and maybe even listed as a co-author, Karen, makes all the scientific discoveries he hoped to make. Later, he discovers that somebody else seems to be testing an unstated hypothesis that might cause them to question their spiritual beliefs. Risking a disappointing mid-air movie marathon, he flies halfway around the world to perform a single uncontrolled experiment to test what he hypothesises that hypothesis might be, with inconclusive results.’ I was disappointed, but I was still entertained enough for the amount of concentration I still had.
In the year 2048, Jonas lives in a seemingly ideal world of conformity and contentment. Yet, as he begins to spend time with The Giver, the sole keeper of all of his community’s memories, Jonas begins to discover the dark and deadly truths of his community’s secret past, and realises that to protect the ones he loves, he must achieve the impossible and escape their world.
Just another dystopian utopia. A bit like Pleasantville, with a mandatory daily dose of I Feel Fantastic. The final quest reminded me a bit of Milo smuggling a sound out of the Soundkeeper’s place in The Phantom Tollbooth. The title caused unpleasant goatse flashbacks.
As Earth faces an relentless assault from an alien race, Major William Cage is unceremoniously dropped into what amounts to a suicide mission. Killed within minutes, Cage finds himself inexplicably thrown into a time loop, forcing him to live out the same brutal combat over and over. But with each battle, Cage gets more skillful and, alongside fellow soldier Rita Vrataski, closer and closer to defeating the enemy.
It’s like Groundhog Day, but the groundhogs are aliens casting their shadow over everything to forecast six more weeks of human life or an early extinction. In the very last scene, I thought to myself, ‘Hey, that guy looks kind of like Tom Cruise.’ Then the credits rolled and it turned out to be Tom Cruise. I’m quite proud of myself because I don’t usually recognise actors, and Tom Cruise is especially nondescript.
(No description, since this was on a code-shared Qantas flight, and they don’t put the descriptions from their comparatively-terrible in-flight entertainment system online)
After watching this, I vaguely remembered a co-worker telling me about such a movie several years ago. It sounded really interesting and I wanted to see it. That’s weird because this movie only came out this year. Perhaps my co-worker is actually a future version of myself who travelled back in time to mess with my head. Or perhaps he was telling me about the Robert A. Heinlein short story —All You Zombies— that the movie is based on. Anyway, I really enjoyed this film, and watched the beginning of it again during the last half-hour or so of my last flight. I think the Bechdel test needs a fair bit of clarification before I can say whether this movie passes.
Boyhood, Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Edge of Tomorrow, flying, holidailies, I Origins, Movie marathon, movies, Predestination, reviews, The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared, The Giver
- Apple AppleScript art biology cern chemistry comic computer-assisted computers conservation death fairy tale fantasy found haiku found poetry french grammar haiku Haiku Detector history iOS JoCo JoCo Cruise JoCo Cruise Crazy Joey Marianer Jonathan Coulton language LHC life linguistics lipogram love Mac MacInTalk Marian Call math mathematics maths meat Mike Phirman music NaPoWriMo New Scientist open mic parody Paul and Storm performance physics poem poems poetry programming prose puns recording rhyme science robot choir science science fiction sex software song song fu songs sonnet space speech synthesis Star Wars superhero superheroes synaesthesia tom lehrer translation video writing about writing
Follow me on Twitter
My TweetsRecent Posts
- Joey sang some more parody lyrics I wrote, and another Hallelujah
- Linguistic Alternative Polka (“Weird Al” Yankovic parody lyrics)
- We got married (to each other) and then did cute couple things on a boat!
- How I got to work at CERN (video) and some rambling about video (text)
- A successful ploy to increase engagement
June 2023 M T W T F S S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 My other sites
Other writers
Thing A Weekers
Archives
- October 2022 (1)
- June 2022 (1)
- April 2022 (2)
- January 2022 (1)
- December 2021 (1)
- May 2021 (2)
- April 2021 (3)
- March 2021 (2)
- February 2021 (2)
- December 2020 (1)
- November 2020 (1)
- September 2020 (1)
- August 2020 (2)
- July 2020 (1)
- May 2020 (3)
- April 2020 (2)
- March 2020 (1)
- February 2020 (2)
- January 2020 (3)
- November 2019 (1)
- May 2019 (2)
- April 2019 (2)
- March 2019 (1)
- December 2018 (2)
- September 2018 (2)
- August 2018 (3)
- July 2018 (1)
- June 2018 (1)
- May 2018 (2)
- April 2018 (2)
- March 2018 (2)
- January 2018 (1)
- December 2017 (2)
- November 2017 (1)
- September 2017 (1)
- July 2017 (3)
- June 2017 (3)
- May 2017 (3)
- April 2017 (5)
- May 2016 (1)
- March 2016 (1)
- October 2015 (3)
- August 2015 (1)
- July 2015 (3)
- May 2015 (3)
- April 2015 (3)
- February 2015 (1)
- January 2015 (1)
- December 2014 (11)
- November 2014 (5)
- October 2014 (4)
- September 2014 (1)
- August 2014 (3)
- July 2014 (3)
- June 2014 (7)
- May 2014 (3)
- April 2014 (18)
- March 2014 (3)
- January 2014 (1)
- November 2013 (1)
- October 2013 (2)
- August 2013 (2)
- June 2013 (4)
- May 2013 (7)
- April 2013 (4)
- March 2013 (4)
- February 2013 (1)
- January 2013 (3)
- December 2012 (6)
- November 2012 (3)
- October 2012 (2)
- September 2012 (3)
- August 2012 (3)
- July 2012 (5)
- June 2012 (3)
- May 2012 (5)
- April 2012 (6)
- March 2012 (4)
- February 2012 (1)
- January 2012 (1)
- December 2011 (3)
- October 2011 (2)
- September 2011 (1)
- August 2011 (1)
- July 2011 (2)
- February 2011 (4)
- December 2010 (4)
- November 2010 (1)
- August 2010 (2)
- July 2010 (2)
- March 2010 (1)
- February 2010 (1)
- January 2010 (2)
- December 2009 (6)
- November 2009 (1)
- October 2009 (1)
- September 2009 (2)
- June 2009 (5)
- April 2009 (3)
- March 2009 (5)
- February 2009 (7)
- January 2009 (4)
- December 2008 (6)
- November 2008 (5)
- October 2008 (4)
- September 2008 (5)
- August 2008 (5)
- July 2008 (5)
- June 2008 (7)
- May 2008 (5)
- April 2008 (4)
- March 2008 (6)
- February 2008 (2)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
Please tell me if you do something cool with it.