A mainstream attitude

So the nominations for the NME Awards‘ Villain Of The Year category are:

  • George W. Bush
  • Tony Blair
  • Gordon Brown
  • David Cameron
  • Johnny “Razorlight” Borrell
  • Amy Winehouse.

Exactly what has she done to deserve this? All she’s done is have a breakdown while having the indignity to not totally submit to everything the paparazzi want to do to her. Not that it matters, of course, because Bush will win just as he’s done every year since 2003, but it’s the principle of the thing. Of course, the NME love dealing in pap photos of her, so I can guess whose side they’re on…

The Hero Of The Year list features a guy named Ryan Jarman, who in a first for me with current musicians I actually had to Google. He’s the singer in the Cribs, so I think that pretty much decides how hopeless this list is; worse, he said this:

“The mainstream attitude of indie bands today is a bigger problem than global warming”

meaning that indie bands shouldn’t actually try to make, you know, interesting music – an “indie” attitude in NME terms isn’t about how many copies you sell, it’s how many XTC riffs you can rip off in a much less appealing way without any form of originality or tune.

Half the awards are sponsored, too – very indie. The live act award is of course sponsored by Carling, whose brand is on what’s possibly the worst toilets in Glasgow (at least that I’ve had the misfortune to use) and the Best Video award features only one interesting video (Justice’s “D.A.N.C.E.”). Best Album Artwork is abominable. Many of the artists in the Worst Band award could do with being swapped with the Best Band award; they’d look about the same (you can keep the Hoosiers though).

If you want to vote on this tawdry excuse for an awards show you have to give IPC (that is to say Time Warner) your address and navigate a whole bunch of this-is-opt-in, this however is opt-out check boxes. Privacy invasion much? They can go please themselves; I certainly won’t.

A warning

PHP’s date generation function is mktime(second,minute,hour,month,day,year). AAARGH. If you’re going to put a date function in a language mostly designed for doing web database work, at least do it using ISO style year-month-day-hour-minute-second increasing significance dates; say, in the same style as MySQL. The mktime function as it is now is hideously counter-intuitive for anyone who isn’t American. Worse, the format to convert dates from strings strtotime isn’t configurable and is fixed as m/d/y except where the first parameter is above 13, so I had to write a parser to convert strings from British d/m/y and put them in the mktime function manually.

Still, I’ve got to use it so might as well deal with it.

Mel Gibson has a lot to answer for

Scotsman.com: Hero Wallace voted greatest Will in history (8th January 2008)

SCOTS legend William Wallace has been voted the “greatest Will of all time” in a new poll.

English poet William Shakespeare, often considered the best playwright in literary history, was pushed into second place in the Co-operative Legal Services (CLS) survey of 3000 people.

Nothing whatsoever in Braveheart is actually at all anything like what Wallace actually was and did; he was from a Borders noble line and would thus have been an English/French/Latin-speaking non-clansman, his family wasn’t massacred when he was a kid (which is a massive corruption made by the movie from even the hideously unreliable Blind Hary), he spent much of the period 1298-1303 in France lobbying the Pope rather than hanging out with a useless guerilla army as the movie implies (which he only did for a matter of months in 1304-05 before stupidly getting himself captured, and he wasn’t betrayed either), ordered a series of slash-and-burn raids on northern England’s villages and monasteries that would nowadays be seen as a war crime and he didn’t shag Isabella of France – and a good thing too, as she was ten at the time he died and hadn’t even met the future Edward II yet.

Worse than all the historical inaccuracies, the movie isn’t even any good; it’s clichéd rotten, has some awful acting (only Patrick McGoohan seems to be having any fun, hamming it up as Edward I, or “Longshanks” as the movie keeps on repeating) and is quite possibly the worst film in my lifetime to win the Oscar for Best Picture. At least the battle sequences work, and Hollywood hasn’t made a hagiography of Robert Bruce yet (although Braveheart does go some way in that direction).

Wallace is only #1 on this list because of the publicity around Braveheart making people believe that it was actually the True Story; what I’m bitter about is that this has pushed Shakespeare, a figure of infinite importance to English-speaking culture who happened also to write some bloody good plays, to #2 in favour of a minor historical figure blown up by romantic delusion, hagiography and Mel bloody Gibson.

And as for the Scotsman’s headline, one thing is definite: he was no hero. Hardly anyone actually is.

The Hard Sell Film Awards 2007

I’ve decided to do things a bit different this year and instead of a Top Ten I’m going to do some facetious awards instead; after all, if the writer’s strike continues this year’s Oscars aren’t going to be very fun, so why not?

Again, the usual caveats are that this is all personal opinion and people may or may not agree with any of it. Let’s start nice and go on from there…

  • Most Entertaining Big Budget Action Movie: The Bourne Ultimatum

Stupidly gives away the most entertaining stunt of Bourne’s in the trailer, but even then I don’t think a better rollercoaster ride through the dark side of the War On Terror could be managed. Paul Greengrass’s flashy style really does work for these movies, too; giving it a claustrophobic, realistic feel. Also, it’s clever, and proud to be so, you’ve got to admire that in Hollywood nowadays.

  • Most Unexpectedly Enjoyable Franchise Juggernaut: The Golden Compass

It should have been called Northern Lights (even the credits say “Adapted from the novel ‘Northern Lights'”), and it ends way too early, but their Lyra’s not too terrible, the styling’s pretty neat although a bit too shiny, they didn’t screw up the religion too badly and Nicole Kidman has been unfairly maligned by a lot of people. It’s OK, and it deserved much better; not least from New Line.

  • The Princess Bride Award for the Film that should have Done Much Better at the Box Office: Stardust

Stardust actually made about as much at the box office over here as it did in the States, despite the horrendous marketing campaign that sunk it over there simply being copied; mainly because word of mouth was allowed to spread before it was taken out of the cinemas. The marketing campaign was dreadful: it made the film look like a poor Disney Channel original, taking everything completely out of context and making it look treacly, something which the film most definitely is not.

Stardust is a fantastic film, Ricky Gervais cameo aside, with great humour and verve; owing a lot to the film which this award is named after, which also sank at the box office and was rescued by video. Hopefully Stardust will have the same lasting memory.

  • Most Unexpectedly Enjoyable Sequel: Die Hard 4.0
  • Better Than It Should Have Been: Die Hard 4.0

Yes, it had computer hacking so amazingly unrealistic it made The Net look like an everyday tale of script kiddies everywhere. Yes, it has been toned down severely for PG-13. Yes, it does have some massive plot holes. Yes, it thinks that firing a car into a helicopter is a neat stunt. But you know what? It is. Kevin Smith making a cameo as the traditional basement nerd? Neat! An over-ambitious, completely impossible threat from a bunch of nerds with Alienwares? Hilarious! John McClane? Still the best traditional action hero around, by far. Len Wiseman’s direction? Not awful. Very much my guilty pleasure of the year.

  • The Patrick Bateman Award for the Slimiest Utter Bastard in a Major Motion Picture: David Strathairn for The Bourne Ultimatum

No contest here really – the brilliant Strathairn (last seen as Edward R. Murrow in Good Night and Good Luck) wins this most coveted of screen awards for the role of Noah Vosen, a CIA desk jockey who panics and uses murder as a first resort when the shit hits the fan, thus attracting the attention of one Jason Bourne. “It ends when we’ve won” indeed.

  • Best Performance by a Child Actor: Thomas Turgoose, This Is England

Shane Meadows is the British film industry’s best working director, and his method of finding actors from local youth groups has turned out some startling results; none more in this, where his local ex-troublemaker find Thomas Turgoose is entirely believably brought under the wing of a group of skinheads and eventually is forced to reconsider all his allegiances. Truly astonishing work in an astonishing film.

  • Best Performance Full Stop: Sam Riley, Control
  • Best Ensemble Cast: Control
  • Best Use of Music in a Motion Picture: Control
  • Best Film I’ve Seen This Year: Control

As you may be aware, I am a bit of a Joy Division fan so this might be a little skewed, but everything is right with Control. The use of black and white, Anton Corbijn’s framing and imagery, Sam Riley’s assured and uncompromising performance as the often difficult to like Ian Curtis, the way it all works with the music, the acting talent used for pretty much everyone, the fact that Corbijn managed to do it all on the cheap… Remarkable.

  • Best Ignored Performance of the Year: Michelle Pfeiffer, Stardust

An extraordinarily varied role, Michelle Pfeiffer nails it and gives one of the most confident and fearsome performances that no-one noticed. It’s great to have her back.

  • The David Lynch Award for Weird, Yet Good: I’m a Cyborg, But I’m OK!

The new movie from Park Chan-Wook, the man who gave us Oldboy and Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance – and nothing whatsoever like either.

  • The Matrix Reloaded Award for a Sequel that Just Lost Its Way: Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End

I actually liked Dead Man’s Chest on a “not as good as the first one” level and as such the opening of At World’s End was a bitter disappointment – nothing whatsoever of interest happens in the first hour of the film and it’s a really hard slog to get to anything interesting, the nadir being the poorly thought out sequence with multiple Jack Sparrows that irritatingly recurs throughout the film.

Once you get past that stuff there’s some interesting double-dealing and battle sequences, but it’s really hard getting there – and as such the Matrix sequels are an entirely correct comparison.

(And what was with the opening hanging sequence anyway? It’s completely out of tone.)

  • The Showgirls Award For Sex Scenes That Leave The Least To The Imagination: 300

It starts off like your traditional soft-focus movie sex scene, then it gets harder, and then it cuts back to reveal Gerard Butler and Lena Headey going at it doggy style. It was practically the sex scene from Team America, only with less bodily fluids. And that’s not even mentioning the rape scene later on…

Oddly enough, 300 would later feature the “freedom isn’t free” line from that very same movie, only said entirely seriously by our next winner…

  • Worst Actress: Lena Headey, 300
  • Worst Actor: David Wenham, 300
  • Worst Ensemble Cast: 300
  • Director who should Never Ever Ever Use A Green Screen Again: Zach Snyder, 300
  • Worst Acting Performance from a Normally Decent Actor in a Decent Movie: John Malkovich, Beowulf

Why is it that some people just can’t work in front of a green screen? Headey was far the worst offender of these: she is truly horrible in 300 and brings the entire movie crashing down around her. She’s just wrong; but the thing is, practically everyone else in the movie is too, only slightly less so. Wenham’s voiceover in particular has a massive dose of Braveheart syndrome, and the bits where he’s acting are just as grating – but he was OK as Faramir in Lord of the Rings and so we can only assume he was taken down by the green screen. The same applies to the worst casualty here John Malkovich – almost as bad in Beowulf as he was in Eragon, except here he’s actually killing a decent movie.

Headey is the new Sarah Connor in the Terminator TV series. Hopefully she’ll be better in front of a real camera with a director whose name isn’t Zach Snyder. As you might tell, I am not looking forward to Watchmen.

  • Most Overrated Supposed Geek Movie Which Geeks Unaccountably Seem Forced To Continually Praise: Transformers

Come on, it’s directed by Michael Bay, the man who gave us Armageddon and Pearl Harbor. It’s not for us, it’s for morons. Why do the Ain’t It Cool crowd still think it was manna from heaven? It really wasn’t, it just threw out occasional crumbs to Transformers fans whilst fitting in Bay’s military obsession and a traditional and highly clichéd Government Conspiracy plotline.

Also, I’m not done with this movie, as I bash something I cut out the original review for space reasons with the much coveted

  • Mandingo Award for Gratuitous Xenophobia in the Pursuit of Cheap Laughs: Transformers

Whose bright idea was the Indian call centre scene? Who thought it would be a great idea to have the Big Military Hero bash one of his comrades for speaking Spanish? And who decided to have one of the robots take on the Black Sidekick who Sacrifices Himself For The Crew stereotype? Not only are these scenes tasteless and borderline racist, but the call centre scene doesn’t even make narrative sense in any way whatsoever.  It feels tacked on, sordid, and very much worthy of the trophy.

  • The Rob Halford Award for Manly Men doing Manly Things to Each Other: 300

I suspect that in any other year, 300 would have walked the previous category, but Michael Bay just had to come along and put his foot in. Instead, it can console itself with this, which it greatly deserves.

  • The “Bit With Ricky Gervais In” Award for the Worst Moment in an Otherwise Decent Movie: The bit with Ricky Gervais in Stardust.
  • also considered: The bit with Ricky Gervais in For Your Consideration.
  • also considered: The bit with Ricky Gervais in Night at the Museum (although that movie’s poor even without him).
  • also considered: The bit where the Ordinary Boys show up as the Gryffindor common-room Big Tune in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

Ricky is of course a serial offender for movie-killing and he almost does it to the otherwise fantastic Stardust. His cameo with Robert de Niro, otherwise a surprisingly competent comedy performer, almost kills the film stone dead; the only saviour is that both of the film’s villains have their various ways with him afterwards.

Ricky’s performance at the Diana memorial concert, whilst not qualifying for this particular awards night, would be a decent contender for the year’s “Jump The Shark, Hit The Floor” award.

  • Worst Franchise Movie: Saw IV

The world really did not need this movie.

So that’s it, only one final envelope left to go and then we’re done. It’s rather special…

  • Jon Peters Award for Worst Idea of the Year: Harvey Weinstein, Bob Weinstein, Matthew Stern, Rob Zombie, Malek Akkad and everyone else involved, peripherally or otherwise, with Rob Zombie’s Halloween

First, there is Rob Zombie, the man who brought us House of 1000 Corpses and The Devil’s Rejects, a man fond of nothing more than tit shots, incest and gore. Then there is the idea of remaking Halloween, John Carpenter’s brilliant, restrained, effective and unimprovable slasher. Then the producers responsible for the series came up with the idea of putting the two together…

Worthy winner, I think. The movie is even worse than the idea, which is somewhat shocking; more shocking, in fact, than anything in the movie which tries to be.

There we go, the awards are done. I’d just like to thank wordpress.com for blog hosting, my family, my friends, my agent, my… [fades to black]

Fedora 8 install calamities

Own a Toshiba Tecra M2 (or, apparently, many business-focused Dells and other big-name do-their-own-BIOS brands) and having big trouble installing Fedora 8? Is it hanging at /sbin/loader? Then you need to press TAB at the installer’s first screen and add the command

nohz=off

to the boot line. You also need to go into advanced GRUB options while installing and append this to the kernel boot line. This is apparently a bug they thought they’d fixed a long time ago and that I know for a fact wasn’t showing up in the release candidates, which is somewhat irritating. That’s Linux development for you, I guess.

Oh, well, on with comparing Fedora 8 to Ubuntu Gutsy… I liked Fedora 8 at the betas and I’m interested to see how it is now.

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.

Goodbye, Vista kill switch

In SP1, it’s gone.

They aren’t removing the other WGA stuff – in fact, they’re making it more annoying – but the kill switch (knocking the system down to Internet Explorer only) for pirate copies was almost certainly a step too far, especially since it could very occasionally malfunction. Much fairer to simply have a bunch of annoying warnings rather than the nuclear measure, and a sign of exactly how much SP1 should improve the operating system.

[As an aside, exactly why is it that people bash the User Account Control system when UAC is only required in the same places that the sudo type equivalent would be on Mac OS X or Linux – that is, for changing important system settings or installing applications? On a normal Linux system, actually, you have to run sudo more times to configure and install stuff than you ever have to click the ‘Accept’ box (or type a password if you’re operating user/administrator) in UAC on Vista, so why Slashdigg et al keep on bashing Vista based on UAC is somewhat perplexing. The only problem with UAC is that certain people in the ancient past wrote applications that demanded full administrator permission to run because of poor programming, and Microsoft finally called them on it. Just a thought, anyway.]