Tuesday, August 7, 2012

A new trailer from New Zealand

While I consciously do not follow the news from New Zealand, just to keep my future movie experience a surprise, a new "The Hobbit" trailer reached my ivory tower lately. Which I could not ignore due to obvious lack of willpower in this case.


What can I say? If you loved Jackson's LOTR, you'll probably adore this one for the very same reasons. If you hated it, there is still a good reason to drop your prejudices and enjoy a damn good movie. I do hope at least some of the childish spirit of the source would be preserved in the upcoming and overtly epic "The Hobbit" trilogy, otherwise looking forward to see if it manages to touch some strings of mine.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Dawnguard now available on PC

As stated on BethBlog, TES V: Skyrim first story-based DLC, Dawnguard, has been announced available on PC at QuakeCon 2012. I'm off to get it - let's see what it's got for me.

Friday, August 3, 2012

The saga of Biôrn


Credits
A film by: Benjamin J. Kousholt, Daniel D. Christensen, Mads Lundgaard Christensen, Jesper A. Jensen, Jonas K. Doctor, Steffen Lyhne, Pernille Ørum-Nielsen, Frederik Bjerre-Poulsen, Jonas Georgakakis

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

"Signal to Noise" by Neil Gaiman, a review

Signal to Noise

My rating: 4 of 5 stars
“The world is always ending, for someone”, he says.
She is trying to quieten the baby, and does not hear him. I doubt that it would matter if she did.”
A tale of the last days of a movie director. Never boring, McKean's illustrations are great as always. And what it had to say - from signal to noise, it's always signal to noise.

The good thing about some of Gaiman's writings - like the beginning of American Gods and the human subplots in The Sandman series - is their realism. The ability to touch feelings not many put into fiction perhaps finding them too small or short-lived, lacking greatness. But that's what makes "Signal to Noise" personal and strong.

Might be a bit too specific for a typical comic book reader, but it really touched me.