Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Going with the 'Flow'


The first time I watched this trailer, I was instantly hooked. But being a more arthouse project, the film got a very limited run. Glad I got a ticket to today's screening at The Projector -- and the very first time I took advantage of the senior citizens' price.

'Flow' is a beautiful piece of storytelling. There isn't much of a plot but a journey as we, the audience, literally follow the flow of wherever the story takes us. In a world seemingly left behind by the human population, our protagonist, the black cat, lives a relatively comfortable life in an abandoned house probably once occupied by a sculptor with a cat obsession. For some reason -- which isn't important since cats don't ever ask 'why' -- the world is flooded in a deluge that drowns all but the tallest of peaks. The cat is able to swim to a boat cast adrift, only to find it is already occupied by a capybara. Thus begins the tale of a boat that eventually collects an odd assortment of stranded animals: a materialistic lemur, a golden retriever, and a heron injured while protecting the cat from hostiles.

The animation is smooth, and while it betrays computer graphics, the style looks like every cel is painstakingly painted. Each animal behaves like it should, and anthropomorphizing is very limited to how the capybara, heron, and to some extent, the cat quickly figure out how to steer the boat using the rudder. Through the journey, we are treated to scenes of bravery, compassion, heroism, generosity and of course, conflict, as this microcosmic Noah's Ark learns to trust one another and eventually care for each other.

What I also love about this movie is that there is no human dialogue at all. Each animal makes its own sounds, but meaning is communicated through tone and body language The artists must have studied the movements of each animal carefully, and faithfully reproduced them convincingly on screen. As I'm watching them, I'm also thinking about my animals at home. Would they be able to survive as ably if their human owners unexpectedly disappeared?

There's an obsession over mirrors and reflections as a recurring theme. Clearly, the movie is an allegory about unity in diversity, and how different talents complement each other when contributing to the greater good. The goldie gains the cat's trust by mirroring its movements, so there is a strong statement that's being made about what we can accomplish together as we navigate the chaos and uncertainty of living in our reality.

But I also detect an undercurrent of caution against selfishness too. The boat picks up a pack of dogs stranded in rising waters, but almost immediately they cause problems for the original crew. Although not outright hostile, there is a conflict over ownership of the things the lemur has brought on board. They also eat all the fish the cat had worked hard to catch. And when their help is really needed to save a life, they bail. While it was a moral obligation to save their lives, there really was no time to set boundaries and conditions before taking them on board.

Overall, this movie is more of an experience than anything else. It moves from one situation to the next. Some are breathtakingly gorgeous, others are tense and ominous. Like the current that keeps the boat moving forward, so too do we go with the flow.

Friday, December 06, 2024

Bekhauf: High energy inspiration by Bloodywood ft BABYMETAL (Pt 2)


Bekhauf official MV has dropped. It's not an anime series but an animation featuring the vocalists of Bloodywood and BABYMETAL in an action-packed battle against deities from both Hindu and Japanese pantheons. The narrative runs parallel to BABYMETAL's Karate: forced to fight, the protagonists hold their own against fearful opponents, they suffer a setback, they focus on rescuing one another before combining forces to finally win. Interestingly, the stakes are not exactly life and death but for the respect of the antagonists. In this sense, adversity is a test of resilience and being able to count on each other in a fight to the end. 'Bekhauf', according to the subtitles means 'fearless', but it's more like being undaunted, not reckless.

Musically, the track is a (head)banger. It's full of high energy and a driving beat, great for a cardio workout or an on-the-road playlist. It doesn't have a catchy hook -- that is, I've watched the video a couple of times now but if there's an earworm in there, I haven't got it yet. On the whole, it's great to listen to, but offers little to crowd participation, though this is only my first impression. While the end credits list KOBAMETAL as the Producer, this track sounds more like a Bloodywood piece than a BABYMETAL one. That's not a bad thing. I like the diversity in the metal, pop, rap, electronica combination, the encouraging storyline of the video, and I got to listen to Bloodywood for the first time.

Bekhauf: High energy inspiration by Bloodywood ft BABYMETAL


The ladies of BABYMETAL have turned in yet another collab, this time with Indian metal band, Bloodywood. As of now, the full audio track is available on Bloodywood's channel. Anxiously awaiting the full MV drop which, going by past experience, should be by about midnight tonight.

Meantime, I'm posting the YouTube trailer link which is very anime inspired. The catch phrase is "fear is a choice (but the choice is mine)". This concept and the music sound more serious than dance poppy. The track is mostly metal featuring a lot of male harsh vocals amidst a driving, relentless heavy rhythm with what sounds like SU's clean vocals seemlessly blending in to smoothen the tone, backed with MOA and MOMO's harmonies. The ladies' voices are rather electronically processed, perhaps for an ethereal effect, contrasting the grounded and growly male voices. The bridge features a clear traditional stringed instrument, though with the electronic effect it's hard to tell which one. Drums out, SU gets a beautifully rendered verse to herself. This is one high energy song meant to inspire and encourage, like "Leave It All Behind" but with less didactic lyrics. Well, less didactic English lyrics, anyway.

Have to tune in again later to match the visuals to the audio for a better picture of what this collab is all about. I don't know what "Bekhauf" means, and for now I don't want to find out. Could this song be the intro to a new anime series? The trailer suggests a story that could be epic.

Tuesday, December 03, 2024

Katsu craving


Had a katsu craving, but didn't feel like going to the usual place and wanted to try somewhere else. Wandered around Takashimaya's basement food offerings and found this place, Kimukatsu. Just what I was looking for.

A healthy chunk of breaded pork, crispy on the outside, tender inside. I like that when I order the garlic option (original, cheese, and garlic being the top sellers according to the counter guy) it isn't shy on the garlic. I also like that the sauces come in dipping saucers, and not slathered on top so I get to control how much or little flavour I want in every bite. Left is teriyaki, right is shoyu, if I'm not mistaken.

What's unique is the rice that comes individually portioned. It's a nice touch to have a staple that isn't dished out of a generic pot but rather is specially cooked just for you. Please don't make the mistake of eating the rice directly from the wooden steamer and make a mess. Take the extra step to scoop it out into the empty bowl provided, like a civilized person. Thank you.

Honestly, I initially thought the pork may not have been enough for the amount of rice served, but taking polite bites and alternating the meat with the shredded cabbage and pickles, the whole set proved just right. I wish they'd also provided a napkin to deal with cabbage whiplash, but there was a box of facial tissues fully on display on the counter, and not difficult to reach for, at least from where I was sitting.

Finally, the matcha was more robust than I expected. More like a proper beverage than a tea. Maybe it's because when ordering I said 'matcha' instead of 'green tea'. Would that have made a difference? Anyway, it was a satisfying finisher to lunch.

Nice to have a second option to the usual, with comparable quality for a marginally lower price too.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

Agatha All Along: Con All Along

Episode 7 from last week was so impactful that the two remaining episodes released concurrently today on Halloween struggled to match. They were still good and answered a few remaining questions, regardless.

Episode 8 brings us full circle minus the witches that died on the way. Death isn't playing around. Dead is dead. But she is a professional doing her job, so there are no theatrics with her... well... Firm, but patient she allows Alice to rue how short-lived her curse-liberated life has been before asking, "Are you ready?". Rio/Death has also one of the most meta moments early in the episode when she uses her knife to slash the scene like it was a stage backdrop -- which it is -- and disappears into the rift.

As in the Wizard of Oz, Billy's shoes get them home, or at least to the site of the last trial. Agatha recognizes it as her basement, though it seems she is joking at the time. The final trial, though supposed to be for the green witch, is for everybody to pass individually. Jenn, High Priestess "unable or unwilling to use her power", pieces together who had put the binding spell on her (it was Agatha All Along) and frees herself. Having made a deal with Rio, Agatha helps Billy Maximoff get what he's missing even though it is specifically what Rio does not want for Billy to have. Agatha's busy betraying everyone left and right at this point. She passes her trial on a technicality, but what she is missing she does not get back.

The 3 surviving coven members finally return home. Back in William Kaplan's room, Billy realizes how alike he and Wanda are. The Witches' road and Coven Harkness' journey on it was entirely made up based on the items and knick knacks that decorate William Kaplan's room. Billy Maximoff has created a Wandavision-like hex bubble in Agatha's (or rather Ralph Boehner's) basement  through which the coven traveled. If not for Billy's imagination, the Road doesn't exist at all -- and Agatha has known it all along!

Which brings us to the finale. I was wrong about Agatha being secretly good. She's a very horrid person, perhaps due to her mother and original coven being dead set on killing her way back in the 18th century. Ever since then, she's lived with a persecution complex, surviving on preemptive strikes on any coven she discovers. Rio asks Agatha why she lets people believe she sacrificed her son for the Darkhold, to which she replies that the truth is much worse.

While it is not clear how Agatha and Rio became so close, Rio allowed Agatha's son, Nicholas, 6+ years of life although he was supposed to die at childbirth. The Ballad of the Witches' Road was cobbled together by Nicholas and Agatha while they celebrated their bond and their journey together 'down the wind-y road' which was Nicholas' original lyric. The Ballad spread as Nicholas performed it in public places to make money. After Death finally came for Nicholas, Agatha took the opportunity to use the song that once was about the love between mother and child, turning it into a con in which she traded the lives of entire covens for their power. This story doesn't explain the Darkhold, but it does show that Agatha betrayed the innocence, purity and beauty of her son's memory just to feed her addiction to power. The one good thing that came of her life corrupted into a scam.

In my analysis of this entire series, I never asked one very crucial question. If this story mirrored The Wizard of Oz so closely, who is the Wizard of Oz? The con artist. The trickster. The one with no power, but made use of the power of others to get his way. It is Agatha All Along.

Friday, October 25, 2024

Music box


A little souvenir from our staff bonding exercise today. We crafted our own music box diorama from a selection of figurines brought over by the vendor, Okdodoo, a local startup. My first attempt is messy with the use of too much glue. The residue is obvious in the shiny flecks on the display surface. I had my eye on a larger, more realistic looking tree, but was seconds too slow to grab it off the parts table. Hence this more stylized tree which I'll take as a metaphor for why we can't have nice things. Regardless, I'm pleased with the overall composition which avoids excessive symmetry, and things arranged along a straight line. The music is, of course, a couple of bars from the "My Neighbor Totoro" theme. The tone is pleasant, soothing even, and worth the wind-up, at least while the novelty still lasts.

A shout-out to the two partners of Okdodoo who are 'live' demonstrations of taking the path less traveled by foregoing their corporate careers to pursue a creative passion. Each item is hand-crafted by the two of them. They didn't detail their process, but it's clear they're fully committed to their craft and motivated by a love for what they do. Given today's activity theme of the future of work, these two gentlemen clearly embody some of the many traits that we would like to see in our kids as we prepare them for their futures.

Thursday, October 24, 2024

Agatha All Along Ep 7: it's about time

As the season is winding down, the revelations are coming thick and fast. The trial is for Lilia, the coven's seer. My guess about the road under the Witches' Road proved correct. Lilia and Jen, having been hurled into the bog, get sucked under and deposited in an underground passage. The route to this trial, though, takes place within the fractured and improperly sequenced timeline of Lilia's centuries' old existence.

The creativity of this episode in telling the story through a disordered jumble of scenes -- that gives the audience a taste of the disorientating kind of life Lilia has lived -- and still making them all make sense to the overall narrative so far is amazing. When all the pieces fall into place for both Lilia and us, her sporadic and incongruous outbursts throughout the season turn out to be spot-on premonitions and warnings acquired from the future, but are too fragmented and devoid of context to be useful. This is exactly Lilia's gift and curse, and the reason she has chosen to neglect her power. Just because she can see the future does not give her any ability to alter it, so what's the point when all she sees is Death?

Lilia's trial helps her understand her true purpose, finally giving the lion the courage to face her visions and see them through to the end. When seen in their totality, her visions are not really as bad as when she just catches glimpses of incomprehensible bits and pieces which are scary because without proper context they seem so random, hopeless, and futile. This key realization gives her the means to literally turn the tables on the Salem's Seven with some apparent finality, and not a moment too soon. For Lilia, herself, it's bittersweet that the end of her trial gives her a new beginning too.

Also, it seems to me that each episode, like in Wandavision, moves our characters through time. In AAA, the movement is backwards through history. Episode 7 puts us in a medieval setting, but the costumes are based on contemporary Hollywood depictions of fairy tale witches. Agatha is the classical Wicked Witch of the West, which is the persona she projects in front of people. Billy is Disney's Maleficent (I admit I don't yet see the symbolism, though he does brag about having the cheekbones for it, referencing Angelina Jolie who played the role). Jen is dressed as the Disney version of Snow White's evil stepmom in disguise as the hooded fruit vendor bearing a poisoned apple as a reference to Jen being a shyster hawking toxic products prior to the Road. Lilia is dressed as the classical Glinda, the Good Witch of the North, who although takes offence at the cultural stereotyping heroically plays out the role for real by the end of the episode. While Agatha already knows who Rio is, Rio's true identity is revealed in this episode too, although among the rest of the coven only Lilia gets to see it.

Saturday, October 19, 2024

What's the scene, drama queen?


Continuing with the witchy vibe from the last few posts, we get a storm in a stirring ladle from 'Wicked' star, Cynthia Erivo, who is upset over a fan edit of the movie's promotional poster. In homage to the 'live' Broadway poster of the musical, the fan casts the shadow of the hat's brim over Erivo's eyes to create a more photorealistic version of the same.

Erivo takes exception to her soulful eyes being "erase[d]", and by extension, the erasure of her entire being. Seriously? It's a movie poster, not a personal boudior portrait. The character being portrayed in the poster is Elpheba, supported by her best friend, Glinda (played by Ariana Grande). The Broadway poster sets an important scene focusing on the relationship between the two characters. There is the sense of closeness, of course, but also confidentiality, conspiracy, and with just a hint of a smile (and with obscured eyes), a sinister plot being hatched. Less is more.

What exactly is happening in the OG movie poster? With Erivo's face in full view, choosing "to look down the barrel of the camera to you, the viewer..." those eyes, beautiful as they are, "communicate" nothing of the relationship, or the scene the two characters are in. In fact, it looks like Elpheba is not even paying attention to what Glinda is whispering in confidence to her, and by looking straight at the audience, it's like Elpheba can't wait to spill the tea for us. Besides, Elpheba is not a fourth-wall breaking character like Deadpool or She-Hulk are (unless she is in the movie?), so if Erivo is promoting anything in the movie poster, it's not the movie, but herself -- especially since she is so perturbed by a fan edit that she takes so personally.

When you're in a movie poster, you are not you. It's distastefully unprofessional for a performer to put themselves above the production they're in. Get over yourself.