Friday, July 15, 2011

Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows Pt. 2 (2011)

The Harry Potter films come to an end with a movie filled with action, death, and 3D effects but curiously devoid of genuine emotion. Those disappointed with the previous film will find much to like and it stays fairly faithful to the book.

The movie starts out with the ending of Part 1, but this time processed into 3D. This means an even murkier and darker experience in the theater, but those who view it in 2D won’t  have much of a brighter experience. Most of it is set at night or indoors with reduced lighting with a bleached out palette.

Following the death of Dobby at the end of the last movie, Harry and company gather some more intel on what Bellatrix Lestrange was up to. Critical information comes into their hands thanks to a kidnapped goblin and so they decide to stage another infiltration of a highly guarded institution. I have to say Helena Bonham Carter did a great job of mimicking Emma Watson’s mannerisms while playing the polyjuiced Hermione masquerading as Bellatrix. Oddly enough, that was one of the highlights of the film for me.

The raid goes disastrously like all their plans do, which is actually mentioned by the characters later in the movie. But it does give us, the audience, some fun with a very well rendered dragon and I always give extra credit for well done dragons. From there things move to infiltrating Hogwarts, which has become something run like a concentration camp or gulag. This is where all the real action takes place and things morph into a war movie, but with magic instead of guns.

The preparations for combat and Voldemort’s assault on Hogwarts are quite well executed. Chaotic battles, heroic sacrifices, and deaths of characters we’ve gotten to know fill the second half. But the deaths failed to have emotional impact for me, unlike the book. I suspect that is due to them being rushed, despite splitting the book into two movies. Some key dramatic moments suffer from it, especially near the end.

With little character development in this half of the book, The Deathly Hallows Part 2 suffers the same problem. Aside from Snape (Alan Richter) and Harry (Daniel Radcliffe), only Helena Ravenclaw (Kelly Macdonald) seemed to get anything meaty and she is a new character only briefly seen. Most of the supporting characters get what amounts to cameos despite their importance in the past. Ron (Rupert Grint) and Hermione get their expected moments, with Ron delivering comic relief.

While I was pleased with how Neville (Matthew Lewis) got his moments to shine, the last one was not handled well. It was played more for laughs than drama and it rang the wrong note. Likewise, Mrs. Weasely’s (Julie Walters) big moment was laughed at in the theater due to a lack of setup and once again being played for laughs. That was just criminal as it should have been something of great intensity. Those who have read the book will understand why I’m complaining.

The big duel was also disappointing and things kind of trail off after that. But the epilogue was nice and the CGI aging looked good. It seemed like a lot of the film was so geared at the 3D effects that they lost sight of effective pacing.

On the topic of the 3D experience, I thought it was a mixed bag. Anything involving spells and magic looked really good, especially the barrier put up around Hogwarts. But crowd scenes appeared jumpy, for a lack of a better word. Something wasn’t working effectively there and it was distracting. From that, I assume the 3D was done in post production rather than filmed with 3D cameras. Another film out this year that was done in post was Thor and it had a better feeling of depth, for comparison.

I didn’t go into seeing The Deathly Hallows Part 2 with any particular expectations or reservations. Though I could have used a reservation to get a better seat. Please forgive me, it is after 3 AM here as I’m writing this and things are getting stupidly amusing. Back on topic, the local small town theater got the movie for a midnight showing with little warning, so of course I had to take advantage of the opportunity to see the end of the Harry Potter film era.

So what is my final take on the flick? It was okay, but something of a disappointment. Most fans will like it better than the last, but I preferred the previous one. It had more heart and this one was strangely flat to me. The crowd at the theater applauded at the end, so that’s good enough. A big box office haul awaits it no matter what.

Speaking of the crowd, they skewed younger with teens predominating. All age groups were represented and I actually had to stand in line for tickets. Amazing for a midnight showing in a small town with a population of 1200 or so. Everyone was in a good mood and generally well behaved.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Harry Potter Midnight Showing in Spring Grove

Just a heads up in case anyone from my neck of the woods lands on the blog: the final Harry Potter film will have a midnight showing in 3D at the Spring Grove Cinema in Spring Grove, MN.

I was at the last one and plan to go to this one as well.

Health 7-13-2011

The temperatures are in the 70’s, the sun is shining, the humidity is down, and my daily test of playing Audiosurf went well so I went off for my first walk since the last one I posted about. It went better than the previous one, but still was disappointing in how hard it was. Ah well. Hopefully there will be more progress instead of bronchitis as the year continues.

Had a bad night, back pain was pretty impressive and a dull constant headache has been present since getting up. Sinuses aren’t great, but they’ve been much worse.

The weekend is going to be an extreme endurance run with a youth trip to the Temple on top of the usual. I will definitely stay low key on Friday.

Bad Moon Rising

There are those who actually believe we emerged out of the recession and are worried we are going into another. Well, we aren’t. We never got out of the first one and it isn’t a recession, but the early stages of another Great Depression. While we have more social safety nets in place, they aren’t going to last very long at this rate.

One myth on the Left is that Social Security is a “lockbox” and all the funds are safe there to pay it out. If that were true, how could President Obama threaten to not send checks out next month? Note that this is a threat in political speak and his verbal tones suggest he was eager to issue it.  While it is a despicable thing to do, it does unmask the fallacy of the lockbox.  Another Democrat President ended that isolation of Social Security funds from the general fund back in the 1960’s – Lyndon Baines Johnson. They are now controlled at the whim of our government and are not guaranteed.

But the most interesting thing about this is that there will be money to spend on Social Security and other needed things even if we can’t borrow money. It means drastic cuts elsewhere, but that is at the discretion of the Treasury. Which means it is at the discretion of the President. In other words, Obama is threatening to cut off benefits for political gain in the 2012 elections. Some servant of the people he is.

Being on Social Security Disability, this hits me directly. Loss of Social Security means no food, no shelter, no Internet, and the loss of everything I have.  I can’t say I’m surprised how cavalier the President is about the people who will be affected as he is part of the Chicago Machine which is all about thuggery. The willingness to hurt the elderly and disabled just to damage the Republicans shows the quality of Obama’s character.

Sadly, that is only the beginning of our problems. The debt ceiling will mean nothing in the near future because an economic catastrophe has already begun across the globe. Large things tend to be slow moving and people don’t notice the changes until they hit critical mass. And much like an avalanche, they can’t be avoided.

The jobs report for June in the United States is an unmitigated disaster. 18,000 jobs were purportedly created when we need 150,000 new jobs created each month just to match population growth. Notice I used the word “purportedly.” At The NY Post it is revealed that 131,000 jobs were estimated out of thin air to pad the number upwards. In the United Kingdom, their latest report on employment isn’t quite as grim, but it isn’t good.

Meanwhile, the PIIGS crisis in the European Union continues unabated. Ireland just got relegated to junk bond status and Greece continues to be a bottomless sink hole despite hundreds of billions of Euros dumped into it. I don’t even want to discuss the problems China is having with inflation and bad loans. Two ballyhooed stimulus packages have failed to do anything positive at all and now they are talking about another one, QE3. Throwing money that doesn’t exist at something caused by spending money that doesn’t exist is not a sign of intelligent or even sapient behavior.

What will the second Great Depression look like? That’s hard to tell, since there has been so much wealth generated worldwide since the end of World War II. As mentioned before, there are safety nets in place that weren’t previously in developed countries. But there has never been so much debt in place as we have today. It will hit slower than in the 1920’s and 30’s and it has already begun.

We have much more to lose, so the possibility of it being more dramatic and catastrophic increases due to the simple fact the masses aren’t acquainted with real hardship anymore. What happens when food supplies become permanently disrupted? What happens when fuel is too expensive to allow easy migration to better places? What happens when electricity becomes unreliable with rolling blackouts the norm? What happens when groups begin hoarding resources? Those are all questions the world is going to have to face very soon.

Here in the U.S., we have a cultural divide that is now unbridgeable. The Left have gone so far away from common ground with the middle and right that the political frictions we see now are going to look quaint by comparison when the real crisis hits fully.  Though the truth is the middle will do whatever the group in charge tells them to do, so really they don’t matter. It is a sad thing, but the result of apathy/fence sitting is the loss of any real say in things.

My prediction is greater division and rising violence, both of which have already begun. Frustrations will continue to grow and the political class will continue to play games as long as they are comfortable. By the time anything will be attempted seriously, it will be too late.

So where does that leave the little guy? Up a creek without a paddle in most cases.

All we can do is prepare ourselves for the worst outcome and pray for the best. Storing food for more than threes days of supplies is a beginning. Having the ability to protect yourself wherever you are means exercising your 2nd Amendment rights here in the States, no matter how you feel about firearms. Most of all, you need to be spiritually prepared.

In God you can trust, but not man. I wish people would remember that whenever the latest demagogue of any political persuasion shows up.

Monday, July 11, 2011

Turn, Turn, Turn

One thing is constant in life and that is change. That scares a lot of people but it is like death and taxes in that it is unavoidable. To me, it keeps life interesting or at least not boring.

Yesterday, the La Crosse Ward saw a change in leadership. Bishop Steven Sorensen was released after four years and having to manage the incredibly difficult task of merging two units. That is an unusual place to be put in, to say the least. Hopefully life will be a little easier for Bishop Sorensen and his wife – they have earned it.

Matt Baker was called to be the new bishop and he will do a good job. I had the pleasure of working alongside him in the La Crosse 2nd Branch presidency and he is a standup guy. Things will be different as they always are with a bishopric changeover, so it will be interesting to see the changes. My prayers and best wishes go to Bishop Baker and his wife.

Meanwhile, we continue to get thunderstorms tromping through on a nearly daily basis. This morning had another one I was vaguely aware of; too much weekend wore me out and not even an earthquake could have gotten me up. A little change in the weather pattern would be nice.

I’m planning to get a Blu-ray drive before the year ends. Not having a lot of money and the unexpected expense of a new backup drive has derailed discretionary spending for the month. Reviewing TRON: Legacy made me really want the extra resolution since some of the screen captures would make great desktop wallpaper. Alas, it wasn’t meant to be. With Blu-ray’s getting much cheaper and dual packs with DVD more common, it is a step I need to take.

This week is the anniversary of the opening stages of the Battle of Britain, so I think I’ll watch the film of the same name again and review it. While I love the series Fractale, I’m getting burned out reviewing science fiction and fantasy. Time to dig out some old favorites for a change of pace.

Friday, July 08, 2011

Fly Like an Eagle

In the night sky of 1957’s Autumn, people could see the glowing dot of man’s first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1. It was a colossal embarrassment for the U.S. government and a great achievement for the Soviet Union. But America rallied and made it all the way to the Moon the year I was born.

So earlier today, the last space shuttle launch happened and the last mission for the program got underway.  I have mixed feelings about the whole thing. On one hand, the United States has abandoned manned space missions and likely will never return to government ones in my lifetime. On the other hand, one of the biggest wastes of time, energy, and money by our government is finally coming to an end. This is not a knock on the astronauts, but on the NASA bureaucrats who designed the program and ran it.

The space shuttle never lived up to a fraction of what it promised to do. Regular spaceflight is still an elusive goal as is doing it cheaply. Two spectacular and preventable accidents killed fourteen astronauts along the way. Did we get the big space stations and labs in the sky we should have had by now? I’m sorry to say the International Space Station is nothing to be excited about. About the only real gain out of all this was the Hubble being refurbished and its achievements in astronomy.

For those of us who grew up in the 1970’s or before, there was promise of great things just around the corner in space exploration. Large space stations, moon colonization, manned missions to Mars, and further exploration into the unknown. None of those things have happened and it is decades later with every attempt to do so shot down before it goes anywhere.  As an American, I find it tragic that we will now have to hitch rides with the Russians to even get to the I.S.S.!

Maybe the mistake was relying on the federal government to do something so important. Maybe the comfortable laziness spawned by too much material wealth stripped us of any daring. That promised future which gleamed so brightly in the night sky looks lost right now.

Our only hope is now with private firms going into space.

Thursday, July 07, 2011

Don’t Bring Me Down

It looks like rain again. The sky is overcast and the weather service predictions changed from a clear weak to chances of thunderstorms every day. What is this, Seattle?

Yesterday, I went outside to tag damaged and “junk” trees with spray paint for the eventual purpose of having them cut down by a neighbor. To my dismay, I found the mini wind break of asian elms is in dire shape but not due to the wind damage. The large one on the South end contracted wet wood years ago and I’ve been lobbying to get it cut down. Sadly, it is too late and every tree in the line is now showing symptoms – including a very large cotton wood.

The entire line of trees has to be cut down before the disease spreads to the oak, maples, and willow. Sigh.

Originally, the line of trees planted by my late mother was supposed to be kept at shrub height and be decorative. But it was too much for me to maintain and I let it go. Personally, I thought it turned out better looking that way and it served as a nice windbreak. In the end, the little trees took the brunt of the wind damage last Friday along with the back yard maple that always gets damaged. So they did their duty, but I’m not happy losing them.

At least my external back up hard drive has already been replaced. I ordered it on Tuesday and received it yesterday to my shock. Buy.com came through and I didn’t even pay for shipping. All I can figure is that the warehouse must be in Minnesota for the drive to make it that quickly.

So now equipped with a Maxell 1 TB drive, I was able to image the boot drive – a big improvement over simply backing up critical personal files. It also has a rocker switch for turning on and off, not a pushbutton like the Western Digital. That drive would turn itself on every time the power went out and came back on, which is what I suspect killed it.

Oh good, the sun is peeking out. It would be nice to get the garden and yard dried out but I’m not holding my breath. Speaking of the garden, I had to do a second round of planting peas since only a few plants came up. It will be interesting to see if we produce much given the weather.

More tired than usual today, but got some needed things done the last couple of days including a Home Teaching visit, grocery shopping, and cleaning and maintenance work on the Mini-14. it shouldn’t have the misfeeds and odd lock opens now.

The sun is hiding again, time to wrap this up and get to work on the long delayed TRON: Legacy review.