OK, random blog posting title. Merantau is the name of a film from Indonesia due to be released there in autumn this year. I just watched the trailer and it looks amazing. If you like Tony Jaa and the like, then definitely check it out and keep your eyes open for it. It’s in Indonesian but the trailer has English subtitles so I assume it’ll have an international release as well.
I just realised that Ong Bak 2 is finally out as well. Off for a dig for that…
The fourth of the recent X-Men films, Wolverine takes a step back in time to fill in some gaps from X2. There are no great surprises for anyone who’s read the comics and there’s really not a lot of plot. More a sequence of set pieces and shots of Hugh Jackman looking to the heavens and roaring. Or squealing in his earlier incarnations.
Some characters such as Stryker, who appeared in earlier films (though set later in Logan’s life) are played by different actors but on the whole, the cast is OK. The special effects are pretty good in most places, which important as there’s very little else in the film to get excited about. Except maybe Mr Jackman in the buff (yes, Leah, I’m looking at you).
Plot-in-a-nutshell: young boy growing up discovers that he and his brother both have mutant powers. They run away, grow up and one goes bad. He hunts for the good one so the army can “help” him and they meet other mutants on the way.
No spoilers, but anyone who’s remotely familiar with the comics will know the story anyway. My main quibble is fanboy related. We all know Wolverine gets his invulnerability from Adamantium being bonded to his skeleton. We see the procedure in the film (and briefly in X2). Needles go in, squirty-squirty, out comes the superhero.
So if all they’ve done is plate his skeleton, how come his bony claws turn into sharp knives? Shouldn’t they just be shiny bony claws?
But I digress. The film’s entertaining enough for its running time, but it’s a little like X3 – all eye candy and little plot. The final battle scene has some rather nice destructions in it along the scale of the Golden Gate Bridge being ripped up but after all’s said and done there’s a lot more story in the X-Men canon that could have been used.
Tell me this doesn’t look like a rather awesome film. “Presented By” Peter Jackson and by a first-time feature film director, Neill Blomkamp, the visuals look superb and the trailer’s simply intriguing. District 9 is due out in mid-August. Definitely one I’ll be keeping an eye out for.
A simple request. You own Iron Maiden. You own the rights for the production of PlayStationsoftware. I demand that you use these to force the manufacturers of Guitar Hero to do an Iron Maiden edition.
We’ve got an Aerosmith one with Metallica on the way (sadly including a load of crap from recent albums). Maiden have countless classics out there and as far as I’m aware only two have been used in past Guitar Hero games (“Number of the Beast” in III and a cover of “The Trooper” in the XBox 360 version of II, I think).
Who wouldn’t want to riff along to “Aces High” or “Fear of the Dark“? And think of the backdrops that could be used. Classic Maiden live stage sets, Eddie in his multiple forms… It’d shift thousands!
This Traveler IQ was calculated on Monday, April 20, 2009 at 01:12PM GMT by comparing this person’s geographical knowledge against the Web’s Original Travelogue‘s 3,938,360 travelers who’ve taken the challenge.
Globetrotter XL is another geography game similar to one I linked ot a long time ago. Give it a shot. It’s pretty good, though if I recall correctly the other one did let you pick continents and countries to test your knowledge of as well as just a world map. Having said that, I can’t find the game link anywhere on my blog so if you can find the page it’s on…
[update] OK, I can’t find it anywhere on my blog which is weird. Maybe I emailed it out. So here’s a link to it on TravelPod – it’s called Traveler IQ. My top score so far is 271,821 reaching level 8.