Hey, Elon

This is the weblog of the guy who is occasionally @inquisitor on Twitter, who is also @inquisitor@mas.to. I have Facebook/Instagram/LinkedIn but they’re under my actual name and I have no interest on promoting those here.

And if you want to ban me for saying that, as you have just done with Paul Graham, hope you liked setting your billions on fire. It’s like you want to be the KLF, only with much more cash and way fewer tunes. Just stop.

Facetious Movie Awards, 2018 Edition

Yes, it’s the end of 2018, it’s been a while, and it’s time to return to my favourite theme of the year: joke movie awards. Because there’s been enough both good and bad this year to deserve them, and I almost have as many jokes as there are Grammys.

There may be some barbs at 2017 movies as well, as I missed out on doing this last year. This set of awards is brought to you by the Cineworld Unlimited card, without which I wouldn’t see nearly as much rubbish as I do.

And as The Favourite isn’t out until 2019, I think I’ve seen pretty much everything that’s worth seeing that’s out this year. So let’s go…

[FYI: This blog has been edited to fix a typo, and a statement about Steven Spielberg changed because, unfortunately, I remembered about Crystal Skull. Further edits will also be noted here.]


Best Animated Movie: Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. Effortlessly fun, endlessly inventive, and appropriately respectful to almost every version of Spidey ever put on paper. The best thing Sony have done with any of their Marvel properties without supervision from the mothership, and hopefully the start of more (as long as Lord and Miller can stay in the loop.)

Hon mentions to Isle of Dogs (but then I am a Wes Anderson fan so I would wouldn’t I?), Incredibles 2, and Ralph Breaks the Internet.

Best Superhero Movie: Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse. See above.

Best Non-Animated Superhero Movie: Black Panther. Hon mentions (in order) to Avengers: Infinity War, Deadpool 2, Ant-Man and the Wasp, and even Aquaman. In fact, it would be a really strong year if it wasn’t for…

Worst Spinoff: Venom. Everyone at Sony, no matter what generation, appear to be obsessed with the idea that Venom is a good character and a decent one to build your spinoff around, rather than the terrible relic of Dork Age storytelling he actually is. And Tom Hardy is not going to save you.

Best Stunt: Tom Cruise quite literally breaking his leg while jumping between buildings in Mission: Impossible – Fallout.

Runners up: The rest of Mission: Impossible – Fallout, which has the single best set of cascading action sequences since Fury Road. The bathroom scene, the terrifying Paris car chase, the helicopter sequence, the dream sequence, the HALO jump, and on and on and on… Chris McQuarrie needs to keep making these until he actually does run out of steam.

Best Documentary: Science Fair, a National Geographic film following a set of students from various means and training levels (but all with tremendous ability) as their talents get them into a massive Intel-sponsored international science fair, held in Los Angeles. So well done.

Best LGBT+ Movie: The outstanding 120 BPM (Beats Per Minute), brilliantly evoking lives of protest, dance, liberation, and just about managing in the era of AIDS. Hon mention to Love Simon, which managed to make a classically constructed teen movie about a gay relationship without being preachy and with being generally charming.

Best Musical: Anna and the Apocalypse, a charming little tale about a Scottish high school girl whose worries and issues with a mediocre life in a place that is not Port Glasgow (but it was filmed there) are washed away by a sudden outbreak of viral zombies. Also, it’s set at Christmas. Brilliant.

Runner up: A Star Is Born, in which Lady Gaga shows that she actually can act – and well. I suspect she’s got the Oscar nailed down, but we shall see. And Mary Poppins Returns, which is very much a do-over with a massive Dawes ex machina as its ending, but a very nicely done one.

Best Moment in a Terrible Musical: Most of Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again is generally competent but completely dull; you don’t care about anyone, none of them sing anywhere near as good as Agnetha and Anni-Frid (although at least they only give Pierce two lines of S.O.S., bless him), and the plot is a complete nothing. And then almost as you’ve lost the will to live Cher turns up, and is Cher for four minutes, and it almost gets camp enough to work. It doesn’t, but not a bad try.

Best Villain: Daniel Kaluuya as the utterly compelling yet completely terrifying Jatemme Manning, an enforcer and live-wire for his up-and-coming big brother Jamal (an also terrific Brian Tyree Henry), in Steve McQueen’s excellent and underseen Widows. As far away from his Get Out role as it’s possible to get.

Best Supervillain: Michael B. Jordan’s compelling and somehow a little sympathetic Killmonger in Black Panther (which only makes him more fascinating.) Runner up: Thanos, obviously.

Best Ending: Spike Lee’s BlacKkKlansman. FUCK ME.

Best Score: The at turns beautiful, mesmerising, creepy, and all of these things at once score created by the late Jóhann Jóhannsson for Mandy, a film that would be a lot less of an experience without it. Runners up: Daniel Pemberton following up his fantastically varied Guy Ritchie work with an actually good film on Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and a decent one on All the Money in the World; plus the quite fun Cousteau-plus score on Aquaman by Rupert Gregson-Williams.

Worst Oscar Snub: That said score for Mandy doesn’t qualify for the Best Score Oscar because its American distributors sent it straight to the iTunes Store during its New York/Los Angeles qualifying run. (Even Netflix are smarter than this, possibly because they know that Roma is going to clean up big time.) Might not have got it, but it deserves a nomination.

Best Joke: Christopher Plummer reshooting all over Kevin Spacey on All the Money in the World, a film which was actually probably improved by the replacement (and which at least is better than Alien Covenant: well done Ridley.) But still not as good as Trust, which while a TV miniseries provided the Infamous to its Capote.

Worst Joke: Deadpool 2 fridging Vanessa (even if temporarily). Not quite as blatant a bad move as Kingsman: The Golden Circle‘s utter bullshit wiping out of every sympathetic female character in one go; but unlike Kingsman, Deadpool 2 was actually a good film and was also 2018.

Shoulda Been Rejected At The Pitch Stage: Four words – Eli Roth’s Death Wish. You don’t even need to add “starring a bored Bruce Willis” to make this seem more like a bad idea. Terrible, terrible, terrible.

This year also featured Show Dogs, which might also apply.

Least Appropriate BBFC Rating: I’d say the 15 for Death Wish, but that was at least a cut version; so I’ll go for the 15 for The Predator, in which a guy gets graphically bisected in the first five minutes (more graphic than a lot of the 18-rated Mandy).

Most Appropriate BBFC Rating: 15 for 120 BPM, a true sign of the times and an entirely reasonable one. Shame no teens will see it cause it’s French; they could really learn something.

Surprised At The Reaction: You would have thought from a lot of the Internet reaction that Ready Player One was a total disaster; in fact, it’s a generally charming piece of work that fixes several of the biggest problems of its overrated source material (notably that no-one has any agency other than its arrogant and loathsome hero, for whom everything falls down like a dominoes record attempt).

Considering how nostalgia cycles, I think the world of the film actually sort of works; and out of Spielberg’s two films this year, I actually preferred it to The Post. That one had far too much of insufferable journalists going on about how someone doing their job is somehow heroic, and with even less insight than its writers’ previous Spotlight, whereas Ready Player One is just really quite fun.

(The Post does have good work from Bob Odenkirk and a nice final shot though. Spielberg has never himself directed a really bad film – with the exception of Indy 4 – but he’s produced a bunch.)

Worst Casting: Clint Eastwood casting the guys that were actually on the 15:17 to Paris, which is more of a philosophical question than it should actually be a casting decision.

Worst Franchise Starter: This year’s had a whole load of films that promised a bit, aimed for a Cinematic Universe, and then fizzled out completely: like A Wrinkle in Time and Mortal Engines. There’s also Peter Rabbit: despite the fact that it made bank, which makes it worse (in a year where Paddington 2, a far superior film in every possible way, got ignored completely in the US). Venom, which similarly seems profitable, is a runner up; but we’ll have to go for what was originally called Robin Hood: Origins before Lionsgate realised how awful that sounds, which literally has a scene in which Robin of Loxley gets a draft notice. For the Crusades. And it’s not meant to be funny.

Worst Franchise Closer: It’s a toss-up between The Maze Runner and Fifty Shades. I’ll take the latter. At least they’re done now.

Worst Delayed Sequel: Oh boy. Some year for this. The Predator, The Girl in the Spider’s Web, Escape Plan 2, Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again, Super Troopers 2, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Johnny Depp(Colin Farrell was probably still available), Ocean’s 8, Pacific Rim: Uprising. Out of this, I’ll go for The Predator, which has the most promise and fritters it all away; shit title, decent enough first act, I don’t care about any of the characters, really bad sequel-baiting ending.

Best Movie With The Rock In: Jumanji 2 doesn’t count because it was last year, so it’ll have to be Skyscraper. Which is good old fashioned disaster fun with a few clever touches, but a dumb McGuffin.

Weirdest Movie With The Rock In: Who in Hollywood actually comes up with an idea like “let’s make a movie vaguely based on that old Midway game, we’ll steal a few sequences from True Lies, and we’ll stick the Rock in it as a gorilla expert?” Apparently, the people behind Rampage, comfortably the most stupid yet somehow fun film of the year.


I think I’ve come to the end of all the possible awards with that. So let’s end with a little tribute section, because it’s been another very bad year for the arts.

RIP: Jóhann Jóhannsson. Anthony Bourdain. William Goldman. Ursula K. Le Guin. John Morris (who did the Young Frankenstein score). Lewis Gilbert. Nicolas Roeg. Isao Takahata (and if you’ve not seen Grave of the Fireflies, it’s one of those one-and-done films that sticks with you forever). Milos Forman. R. Lee Ermey. Raymond Chow (the Golden Harvest boss without whom we wouldn’t have Bruce Lee movies, at least not in the same way.) Burt Reynolds. Neil Simon. Penny Marshall. Harlan Ellison. Steve Ditko. Stan Lee. And probably more significant people I haven’t named here. So many.

And to play us out:

IBM 1401, A User’s Manual, by Jóhann Jóhannson.

Buttery my a…

So I’ve just flicked across onto MTV R and, as usual for an MTV channel, it’s running adverts. The one that got my attention was an ad for the spreadable margarine Flora Buttery fronted by Gary Rhodes, who must really need the money – at least Jamie Oliver and that berk doing the Aldi ads are fronting for decentish food products, not hydrogenated vegetable fats.

The main trick it does is the good old Pepsi Challenge format – Flora Buttery versus Lurpak Lighter Spreadable (not named in the voiceover but printed in an ultra-light Helvetica along the bottom) on crumpets. Lurpak Lighter Spreadable is, of course, the tasteless version. The ad then tries to make it look like most people preferred Flora Buttery in their taste test.

However, the best bit of the ad is where along the bottom of the screen (this must be an Ofcom mandate or something) it prints the true results:

Out of 200 people tested. 48% preferred Flora Buttery Taste, 45% Lurpak Lighter Spreaable, 7% had no preferences.

In other words, 96 people liked Flora Buttery better than Lurpak, but 90 people liked Lurpak better than Flora Buttery while 14 people couldn’t give a damn. Not only is the difference within the margin of error but it shows that in their own taste test, a very large number of people preferred the other brand anyway, and more people either did that or didn’t care than gave some preference, no matter how small, for Flora’s own product.

I believe the phrase is ‘epic fail’.

Coming up tonight – Eurovision 2008 liveblogging

Later tonight, why not come over to Twitter and watch my Eurovision 2008 live blog? (If Twitter’s not working, I’ll do it here.) I like Sebastian Tellier. I don’t think our entry’s the worst thing we’ve ever put in; not when our last few included Scooch and Daz Sampson. Who knows, we might even come in halfway through the table… hah.

What follows behind the “continue reading” link is a reprint of my Twittering for the Your Decision show with added explanatory and exclamatory comments.

Continue reading “Coming up tonight – Eurovision 2008 liveblogging”

My interests, according to Ticketmaster

Ticketmaster semi-spam: interests

Considering that I’ve only ever bought one thing from Ticketmaster, and that was some very sold out elsewhere Nine Inch Nails tickets, you might think that this might not match my interests at all. You would be right too; I use them for ticket alerts for bands I actually like (before finding any other ticket site to buy the actual tickets from), and there’s no Pop Idol/X-Factor/Max Martin Identikit Machine alumni amongst them. Hey, at least it’s funny.

Another “clever” 419 in my mailbox

This one is new to me – it’s all done in Jesus’ name! So of course I had to do another deconstruction.

Dear in Christ,

Well, I’m not “in Christ”, so there’s a hit right away. Hell, I even link to Pharyngula on my linkbar. Obviously has just bought a mailing list from one of the other scumbags in the area.

Calvary greetings in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. I am Deacon George Useh, a member of Day Spring Ministry, basically a Prayer and deliverance Ministry.During a Prayer and fasting session in my Ministry, I asked our Lord Jesus Christ to give me the opportunity to redeem my life and purify what remains of my wealth, God delivery revealed to me to Invest in His Kingdom through you and your
 Ministry.

Jesus told me to, uh, “Invest in His Kingdom” by scamming the unbelievers out of their savings! Wow, how cynical.

As the bible says\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"Go to the world,preach the gospel,spread his words,heal the sick............\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"

…and scam all the mugus? Oh, not there in my copy, but maybe Nigeria’s translation is different. I have no idea.

I got your email when i was lead by the spirit to be in search of the man of god on Christan search on the Internet.Like i have told you earlier in my last email that the lord minister to me to give to charity.

Well, except for the inconvenient fact that I’m somewhat lacking in religon and I’ve never seen any email from this known 419er before…

The first link on Google for the name, by the way, is a police blotter in Chatanooga which features someone who’d received fake money orders from the exact same scammer earlier this year – this particular variant has been operating for a while. You’d have thought a spammer would make sure that he was using names that couldn’t be zeroed out by a run on Google, but there you go.

I am not interested in the Earthly commissions as my rewards is from the Heaven above.I and my institution are blessed to help the needy and not after the rewards of the world as the bible says if not the lord that buideth the house the laborer labour but in vain...........

…and then the labourer sent out a mass spam campaign to a bought-in list of email addresses and rolled in it for a few years.

Nice spelling issue there – “laborer labour”. It does look like there’s more than one hand in this letter from the fluctuations in spelling and capitalisation, one American English speaker and one UK English speaker at least.

I will like to donate to you/ministry and i will like to donate through a money order of 6,500 dollars for him to cash.Better still,i have some other charities which i wants to donate funds to and i will wants oncashing the cheque to help me donate some part of the money to the other charities or needies as well.

And now we get the money order element of the scam. $6500 seems awfully small for a scammer to use, but it would be big money in Lagos.

I am giving you 2,000 dollars out of the money and i wants you on cashing the cheque to help me donate the remaining 4,500 dollars to some other charities or needies whose in formations i will give you when the cheque is cashed in the cash stores.I will want you to furnish me with the following in formations below:
(1)Name which you wants the check to be addressed
(2)Address where you wants me to send the cheque to(NOT P.O BOXES)
(3)Your Mobile telephone number for prompt communication.

Wow, nice way to have enough information to steal someone’s identity. This scam could be extremely lethal:

  • “I want your bank account number for security” or
  • “Can you send me a photocopy of something with your address on it so I can verify?”
  • Hence, identity theft for credit card applications/loans/bank accounts/passport applications/so on and so forth

But because the scammers are thick, this is probably just a cheque cashing scam (and notice this uses both British and US spellings in different parts of the email again). You cash the cheque, the scammers receive $4500 in the post and then the local cheque cashing place calls up demanding all their money back when it comes through as fraudulent.

That NOT PO BOXES thing is probably to catch out scambaiters, but I’m not entirely sure on that one. Maybe there is an ID theft element here of some sort, but I can’t be certain.

The ending is quite something:

As soon as i received this informations,i will go ahead to send you the check.After the successful completion of this first phase of the lords works with you then i can go ahead to send you another cheque and hence the continuous works of the lord.

I Am Yours In Christ,
Deacon George Useh
E-MAIL: Gospelpromoters001@yahoomail.fr

Look! A promise for more! And a disposable Yahoo France email address! Look at the confidence engendered by this guy.

And the ‘Lord’ has “continuous works”! Well, this scammer certainly does, that’s for sure. At the very least, however, we can be assured that if the Christian God, or for that matter a Jewish or Muslim God really does exist he’s going to hell – that’s at least four commandments right there (the third and eight through ten), and you could push for six (one and two, because as a 419er and as a scammer he obviously idolises Mammon.) I think nothingness is probably better, but who’s to say?

World’s dumbest scammers #2, and a rant

My inboxes seem to be magnets for new viruses, 419 scams, stock spam with images or .pdfs and occasional phishing attempts for banks I don’t even belong to. I seem to get all the dumb ones; or at least, only the dumb ones get through my regularly updated Bayesian-trained SpamAssassin setup to my main inbox folders.

The lotto scam is of course a variant of the traditional 419: the main difference is that people who get taken in should be treated a bit more sympathetically (but only a bit more) than those who get done by the standard 419 as they don’t think they’re doing anything illegal. This one ticks all the moron boxes, however.

It was sent from another hacked/dodgy American Linux webserver, which means I think it’s from the same or a related gang to the one that sent the phishing scam I mentioned a few days ago. The domain name resolves to “host4seo.com”, which appears to be a spam nest. Looking at the webserver mentioned, it’s a default Apache with cpanel.

FROM: THE LOTTERY DIRECTORINTERNATIONAL PRIZE AWARD DEPT NL.21 NIN NAMARAL SRAATWEG 5009 GL.
GL.GTI 1815GA AMSTERDAM,
Amsterdam,Netherlans.

Hmm, “Netherlans”. That sure sounds legitimate.

PRIZE AWARD DEPT. REF No: 9590 ES 9414BATCH No: 573881545-NL/2007TICKET No:PP 3502 /8707-01
SERIAL No: 05908 LUCKY No: 9-43-97
[FOR CATEGORY "A" WINNER ONLY]

See the random numbers! SEE THEM! They mean.. Uh. What do they mean?

ATTN: LOTTERY WINNER.We wish to congratulate you over your email success in our computer balloting sweepstake held in Netherlands.

At least they can spell it right this time.

This is a millennium scientific computer game in which email addresses were used.

A “millennium scientific computer game”. Whew, I feel reassured already.

What are 419 scammers actually on in order to think that people will be taken in by this crap? You’d surely have to be thicker than the spammers themselves to fall for that one.

It is a promotional program aimed at encouraging internet users,therefore you do not need to buy ticket to enter for it. You have been approved for the star prize of $1,500,000.00 (One Million,Five Hundred Thousand Dollars) To claim your winning prize you are to contact the appointed agent as soon as possible for the immediate release of your winnings, with your Full Names, Contact Telephone Numbers (Home, Office and Mobile Number and also Fax Number)and also with your winning informations via email to process the immediate payment of your prize.The Validity period of the winnings is for 7 working days hence you are expected to make your claims immediately, any claim not made before this date will be returned to the MINISTERIO DE ECONOMIA Y HACIENDA.

I assume seven days is the usual length of time it takes Netcollection to cancel email accounts for sub-moronic Dutch 419ers.

I like the fact that this has obviously been edited from a version of the lotto scam relating to the Spanish lottery (notoriously big, hence the original target of the lotto-scam 419 variant) and they’ve forgotten to correct the name of the ministry. Very “professional” work from these losers.

Contact Person
Mr.Leonaert Bramer
Fax: +31-847-368-137
Tel: +31-614-797-465
Email: mail@adminclaimsdeptnl.netcollection.co.uk

Incredibly, these numbers are actually in the Netherlands (although the email is with a UK ISP who should hopefully cancel the bastards). The fax number has been around for months, the telephone number only shows a Google hit on 419eater.

Of course, sending hundreds of large pages of alternating dark greys interspersed with a decent greyscale representation of a certain notorious goat-related shock site image to the fax number via, say, tpc.int and a disposable webmail account in order to clog up their fax machine and stop them receiving messages from victims would somehow be very very wrong. Christ knows why, of course, these are Bad Guys and they need to be taken down, but because I know that vigilantism doesn’t actually work I won’t descend to their level.

(Besides, it’s probably a computer anyway, and the phone is probably voicemail.)

Which of course means letting them get away with scamming people until someone with authority actually does something other than cut off their email dropbox. It’s a great ethical dilemma which exists with regard to scambaiting and scambusting: the law is currently completely ineffective at punishing people like these, whether it’s 419ers, eBay scammers, fake “I’m from the water board” guys doorstepping OAPs, or to be honest most other white collar offences.  The laws are on the books already, there just isn’t the enforcement power. Jail isn’t generally even offered to these people, and the fines given are miniscule – especially for big companies scamming, who can get away with murder (amount earned by ITV scamming X Factor red button voters out of 15p a vote, £250,000; Ofcom fine, nilch – amount earned by the BBC from the Blue Peter screwup, nilch; Ofcom fine £50,000. Should have been the other way round, I think.)

These people must do a tremendous amount of damage. 419ers wreck lives. They’re just like bogus callers; in the case of the lotto scams, there was recently a local news story in my area about a pensioner who got done by a lotto scam, just like this one but handled entirely over the phone. I want to wreck their life for once. Why the hell can’t the Dutch do anything? The Netherlands have been 419 central for years. I simply cannot believe that these aren’t the same people.

Part of the problem why nobody does anything about scammers is local corruption, of course, which works in Nigeria where the kind of money brought in by 419 scamming can shut up even the highest up of prosecutors, but not nearly as much here or in the Netherlands. The main problem is tying them down, and this requires work – worse, the kind of work that is in a very grey legal area, that is sending the scammer an affirmative to see whether he’ll come out in the open. There’s so much 419 spam and so few legal investigators that only a token effort can ever be made, and as a result people will continue to be conned by them.

All we can do without becoming like them is to keep deconstructing their schemes, putting them out in the open,  and occasionally lead them along entertaining garden paths. The more the average person knows about scam-spotting, the less likely they are to be taken in; what is needed is a heavy bout of publicity, which we could have if Panorama or Tonight with Trevor McDonald go back to their consumer protection roots instead of just making up scare stories about Wi-Fi. Hopefully, with a bit of luck, the 419ers, spammers and all the other scumbags who scam over the net will find their mark supply dried up with no possible replacement. That will be a joyous day. In the meantime, we just have to keep working at it.