Manga, Anime, Gaming, Sports, TV, Film
Tue Jan 14, 2014 10:53 am
Wow, Get a horse seems really good. It's like if you added a bit of randomness to a complete and well-built structure already full of randomness.
Thu Jan 16, 2014 6:34 pm
Breaking the Maya Code, a 2008 documentary on the decipherment of Mayan hieroglyphs. Very interesting stuff, especially where it shows that the modern-day Maya are now becoming reacquainted with their long forgotten history as a result. I had read Michael D. Coe's book back in the mid '90s, but it was nice to have this as a refresher course.
Sun Jan 19, 2014 6:47 am
Foreign film:
Chak De! IndiaIt’s Gatas Brilhantes, minus the Gatas and futsal, crossed with
Shaolin Soccer, minus kung fu and soccer.
A good "Girl Power" movie.
Sun Jan 19, 2014 2:07 pm
^ Bend It Like Beckham minus Keira Knightley and soccer?
My latest: Shakes the Clown (1992) — I love Bobcat Goldthwait's dark, twisted sense of humor. It had been far too long since I'd last seen this.
And then… Yobi, the Five-Tailed Fox (천년여우 여우비, 2007) — A weird hodgepodge of characters, including a shape-shifting fox, kids at a camp for maladjusted schoolchildren, a mysterious, shadowy figure, angry, flying rabbit-spirits, and a group of shipwrecked extraterrestrials, come together in this beautifully animated fantasy from South Korea.
Fri Jan 24, 2014 5:07 pm
Bad Milo! (2013) — Ken Marino plays Duncan, an office worker whose stress has manifested itself as a gremlin in his colon. The monster comes out of Duncan's butt, deals with the people who are stressing Duncan out (with lots of violence and bloodshed), and goes back inside. It's a charming, heartwarming tale.
Fri Jan 24, 2014 5:45 pm
^ note the glyphs @ 1:05
LOL, this reminded me of todays “GET FUZZY”

erilaz wrote:Breaking the Maya Code, a 2008 documentary on the decipherment of Mayan hieroglyphs. Very interesting stuff, especially where it shows that the modern-day Maya are now becoming reacquainted with their long forgotten history as a result. I had read Michael D. Coe's book back in the mid '90s, but it was nice to have this as a refresher course.
I guess I originally saw this documentary on the History Channel a few years back. But I have been watching it via Netflix rental. It is amazing, gives me hope on being able to read Japanese someday.

Aren't Human Beings amazing? Yuri Knorosov, the Russian linguist, who realized that the Mayan language symbols were related to Mayan as it is spoken. David Stuart at age 10! Human Beings are awesome. There is also "Cracking The Maya Code". Maybe that's the one I saw of TV?
Sat Jan 25, 2014 4:03 am
Yeah, I laughed when I saw the glyphs in
Bad Milo! 
Another thing that I found very interesting in the documentary was how Ernst Förstemann made seminal contributions to the field, deciphering the numerals and calendrical glyphs in the Dresden Codex. I'm quite familiar with Förstemann's work in another area, having frequently used his
Altdeutsches Namenbuch, a huge etymological catalog of names of people and places in the older Germanic languages.
Thu Jan 30, 2014 6:46 pm
esm wrote:Toki o Kakeru Shōjo (he Girl Who Leapt Through Time) (2010)
At first I thought it was going to be like the 2006 animated version, and then I found out both of these versions are sequels of the original story. But anyway, I loved this movie. At first it seemed a little silly, but the ending was really good.
I really want to see the 1983 version.
I just saw the 1983 version.
(You can find it on YouTube here; turn on the captions for English subs.) It turns out that it's by the director of
House, Ōbayashi Nobuhiko. It's not as flat-out bizarre as
House, but it has some similarly quirky visuals and effects.
Mon Feb 03, 2014 3:25 pm
Love and Honor (2006)http://www.imdb.com/video/screenplay/vi ... _=tt_ov_viActress Rei Dan reminded me of Eripon in this movie.

Ending theme.
Mon Feb 17, 2014 12:08 pm
Like Father, Like Son (そして父になる) (2013) — Another excellent, emotional film with great child actors, directed by Kore-eda Hirokazu. A workaholic architect and his wife learn that their six-year-old son is not their biological child, having been switched with another newborn at the hospital, and they and the other parents must figure out what to do.
Impact (1949) — Film noir shot (and mostly set) right here in the San Francisco Bay Area. Philip Ahn as the old Chinese gentleman, Ah Sing, had what I thought was the best line in the movie:
POLICE LT. QUINCY: Are you Ah Sing? Understand? You savvy English?
AH SING (without a trace of a Chinese accent): Also French, Italian, and Hebrew.
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