Sunday, February 20, 2011

Americans and Internet Explorer

Having just found the "Stats"-function on my blog (Shut up >_<) I have learned a few interesting things.
Number one: I have almost ten times as many pageviews from the US as from Sweden (Hello over there).
Number two: 72% of the people who read my blog use Internet Explorer (Go away) and Yahoo Image Search or Bing (Seriously, Stop).
And three: As it turns out, I have about 1400 pageviews on my blog, and ALL OF THEM want to know exactly what Val Kilmer looked like playing Doc Holiday.
Seriously.
That post has 936 pageviews today, followed by a distant second of 22 (That was the post where the Nightflyer and I came out as a couple, so I guess we are about 2.3% as interesting as Val Kilmer playing Doc Holiday) and the photo of of Doc Holiday is, along with the general keyword "Val Kilmer" solely responsible for every single Referring URL to my blog. Every one.
The post is also responsible for virtually all of the Search Keywords to my blog, except "Nallenon.blogspot.com" seven times, and "dota 6.60" twice. What the fuck? "Val Kilmer" has shown up as a search keyword 677 times.

As much as I agree that Doc Holiday is an awesome character and Val Kilmer makes a brilliant representation of that in the movie, I wasn't expecting that post to be the highlight of my Internet career. Oh well, what can you do.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Good and Evil

In the old days, there were monsters.
Demons hiding in the dark corners of the earth, trolls in the forests, imps, goblins, Fae. Monsters, all. These creatures were evil, and in contrast to them stood humans. Light, goodness. Good is the opposite of evil.
In the old days, there were dark places where the dark things hid.

Today, there are no trolls. No demons, no imps, no goblins. No dark places where the dark things can hide. There are no dark things. We have out-scienced the darkness. There is no longer true evil. All modern evil can be seen from its own point of view, and understood.

What happens when we, as a culture, as a race, have outgrown our fear of the dark? Where does goodness go when there is no more evil? Does the scale shift? Are we less good, now that there is no true evil to balance the scales?

Perhaps we need our Leslie Vernons.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Resident Evil and 3D

Alright, let me just make one thing clear to you, people who made Resident Evil: Afterlife. If you have, at the end of the last movie, introduced a very large number of clones of the now superpowered protagonist, it is considered a cheap fucking cop out to start the next movie with a short and storywise rather redundant scene in which ten or twelve of them show up to murder some dudes, before blowing them all up, conveniently forgetting that there were another 80 or so, never mention them again and subsequently rob the real one of all her superpowers. If you also forget that she does not have superpowers for the rest of the movie, then you will not only look like incompetent writers, but also tremendously stupid.

Right. As you may have surmised, we went to see the new Resident Evil tonight. It has, as Yahtzee would put it, full 3D up the arse, but I'll get to that later. I had read a few of the reviews printed about this movie, but I rather felt they all missed the point. It seems a bit unfair to mark down a Resident Evil movie by a lot because the story is bad, while also remarking on the great effects and awesome fight-scenes. Story has never been a very strong point in the RE-movie franchise, and they have really only had effects and violence to sell. This one did this pretty well, although it was a bit hampered by the new and improved 3D.

There are of course several situations where people get to hold the idiot ball. Let me list a couple:
1. If you spend time, effort, bullets and a life to get into an armory stocked full of military grade weapons, do not, I repeat, do not leave the room bringing nothing but three pistols, some explosives and one sub-machine gun. Especially not if you are there to get weapons for eight people against a horde of thousands of zombies. Bring automatic weapons for everyone.
2. If you are holding a motivational speech in front of roughly 20 helicopters, each stacked with roughly 20 armed and armored soldiers, and you use the phrase "This will be the fight of your lives", you had better make sure you are not talking about them fighting about a hundred people standing about on top of a cargo ship, if those hundred people have two pistols and a pair of sawn-off shotguns to go around. It will not be the fight of anyone's life. It will not be a fight.

Now, for the 3D aspect. I personally felt that it was nice when it was not doing anything spectacular. I liked it when it was just subtly showing distance between characters in a crowd or some similar neat little effect. Whenever it did it's gimmicky bullshit of making someone point a gun at the audience, just so we would remember that we are watching a 3D movie, I felt that it broke the immersion. Even more so when I had to turn my head to look straight at the edge of the screen to make the 3D work properly over there. You don't want to remind people that they are watching this through a medium, you want to immerse people in what you are showing them.
Not to mention the times the 3D just plain didn't work properly, although that was thankfully rather rare. More common was 3D where there was no reason for there to possibly be 3D, like on the monitor of a guy in a security station. How exactly is his job made any easier by the fact that the face of the guy he is talking to is 30 cm further away from his face than the rest of the screen, where all the vital blocks of information is? Why does this feature exist in his workplace?

Right, while we are on the subject of effects: It would actually be nice if there was one single moving organism in the entire movie that was not either 1: One of the few surviving uninfected humans, or 2: A very large boss-type character showing up, fight without splitting it's face open. Seriously, every single zombie did this. They looked a lot like the bloodsuckers from S.T.A.L.K.E.R, which got old really fast. I'm sure there are things doing this in the games, but why couldn't you have some of the normal zombies from the first three movies? What was wrong with them? Did they all die?

Conclusively, I can't say that 3D was worth it, really. It had a few neat, subtle things about it, but the times it didn't work or overworked itself pretty much undid it all by breaking the immersion.

Oh, right, I almost forgot. It was a fun, but pretty strange, touch to have the guy sitting locked up in prison claiming not to be a criminal, and having a fully hatched plan to break out of it, be played by Wentworth Miller.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Boll and Quality?

Uwe Boll made a good movie?
A good movie by Uwe Boll?
Uwe movie Boll good?
Boll good movie Uwe?
Movie Uwe Good Boll?
...
My mind fell off.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Star Wars Holiday Special and DEATH!

GAAH! FUCK! EVERYONE MUST DIE! JUST DIE! MAKE IT STOP! SHOOT EVERYTHING!

Thursday, April 8, 2010

A Bunny, and All The Time In The World

(For some reason, hotlinks did not work. No clue why, can't be bothered at the moment, so I'll just leave it like this:)

This Comic:
http://www.prguitarman.com/index.php?id=103

This Game:
http://www.ferryhalim.com/orisinal/g3/bells.htm

That is all.


(No need to thank me, you go on ahead and waste the rest of your day.)

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Murderers and Cameras

Assassin's Creed II update #1:
Just a very small thing, but if anyone does not want one very small aspect of gameplay spoiled, I guess stop reading.

Ubisoft: STOP IT WITH THE FUCKING CAMERA ANGLES!
They add nothing to the game and it's a cheap-ass way to lengthen gameplay by making us do each fucking timed puzzle three fucking times to memorize exactly when the camera is going to lock itself in a corner to give me a useless hint (read "Bat to the face") of where to go next, while simultaneously making sure I Do Not Go There, by changing what my previous "Run straight ahead" command means!

Other than that, the game rocks.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Storygnomes and Payne

Let me just get this one thing straight with all of you movie-producers who regularly read this blog:
If you take a game and make a movie out of it, and upon looking back at your work realize that you have managed to make the story and the characters worse than they were in the game, you have failed miserably. This is much more evident if the game you took only gives the player three ways to interact with things: Jumping over them in slow-motion, punching buttons/cabinets/doors, or shooting them in the face. How you managed to take this, on the surface rather simplistic premise, and ruin the otherwise actually surprisingly good story, is beyond me.
What was your intention, really? You take an archetypal anti-hero who shoots more or less everyone he sees, while wearing a smug grin and tossing around dark city noir poetry made up on the fly, and make sure he has virtually no discernible personality, who only starts killing people for real after he almost ODs on some superdrug? How is this in any way an improvement?

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Christmas and Television

First of all: Happy ChristmaHannuKwanzaa!
Second: Who the hell watches Two and a half men at six thirty on Christmas Eve?
Isn't that just the most terrible thing you have ever heard?
"Some people do not celebrate Christmas" isn't an excuse either, since it's a terrible show.
It's all just sad.

On the other hand, there is a lot of snow here, and I have taken about a rough million pictures of it all. This little city is surprisingly pretty when one hasn't seen it in a while.

EDIT: Det här måste jag dock säga på Svenska: Varför i hela helvete visas samma Kinesiska ankjävlar i år igen? Vem bryr sig, egentligen, om ett gäng ankor i Kina? Varför är det viktigt, för vårt lands julkänsla, att få se att det finns ett litet gäng ankor i Beijing? Jag förstår det inte alls.
On the plus side of things, Christmasfood was, as always, excellent.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

December... And. Stuff.

Wooo, it's my birthday, yaay.
..Might update this later, in case something worth telling happens.
For now, woooo.

EDIT: There will be an update along shortly, probably.
For now, I just wanted to point out that the Video of the Now feature went away to have intercourse with its own ear, and I locked it in its room for now, until it learned its lesson.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Shakespeare and Nonsense

Today we were at the Globe Theater and Tate Modern. The Globe Theater is a rather acurate replica of the theater Shakespeare owned and operated in, and it is very impressive. When I say owned, I actually mean "stole", which is one of the coolest things one can do with a building of that size. Very interesting place with a very interesting guided tour. We learned about how the plays were set up and a lot about why the theater looks the way it does.
We also learned about interesting things that the people in the area did to amuse themselves when they weren't at the theater, and I feel I must tell you about some of these things.
The first one consisted of chaining a bear to a pole, setting some dogs on it, and then betting on how quickly the bear would kill the dogs.
Another was to tie a monkey to the back of a horse, and having dogs chase it in a circle, scaring the monkey and making it scream. This was considered hilarious, because apparently monkeys sound like women when they scream.
When the people of the day would get bored of messing with animals, they decided to pick on the poor people instead. So they made what was essentially a big piñata full of fruit, hung it up over some open bit of land, and then threw firecrackers at it until it broke. Poor people where then allowed to go and pick up the fruit. While the richer people threw firecrackers at them. Great fun.
People say that the internet has desensitized us. I don't think that's the case. We desensitized us.

After the Globe, we went to the Tate modern.
The Tate Modern is a gallery of modern art.
I really, really, Really hate modern art.
I could see the point of literaly no things in the entire building.
From what I can understand, modern art relies very heavily on the viewer to see what isn't there, to see beyond the obvious and see the artist's intent. This makes no sense to me either.
What I hate most about modern art isn't the art, it's the community. The fact that, whenever someone does not understand modern art, that person is uneducated or unsophisticated. The idea that they keep trying to justify their creations with artistic sentences.
"Blah blah blah after commiting random acts of violence to random objects the artist reveals a hidden meaning of the objects"
No. You ran over a trombone with a steamroller. Good for you. There is no "hidden meaning" in a trombone that only comes out when you run it over with a steamroller. It is a trombone. An instrument. It was designed to make a certain kind of noise, not to have hidden meanings in it to be steamrolled out.
And I don't care how fancy words you use, you simply cannot justify a video of a naked man in a monkey/mongoloid-mask spasming around and smearing red paint all over himself as art. It is not art, it is bad YouTube.
Modern art simply makes no sense to me, and whenever I actually try to "see beyond the obvious", rather than just be amazed at the stupidity of it all, it makes my head hurt.
Summary: The Tate Modern was the most depressing building I have ever been in. I could have appreciated it a bit more if I had been able to just talk about how amazingly stupid it all is, but whenever anyone said anything about a painting one got angry looks from people around, people who undoubtebly thought they were better than me because they could understand why an empty canvas with a knifewound in it, or some very large circles of runny red paint on a white wall, is art.
Well, if that's the meassure of intelectuality, I'll settle to be a retard, thank you very much.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Masks and Me

I was going to write a post about what we've been doing, but I decided against it.
Instead, I'm going to talk about an interesting thing I realized the other day:
I miss me.
It feels like it's been the longest time since I was me, properly.
I had a long talk with one of the girls in my class a week or so ago (I think she was a bit drunk at the time) and I realized that I can't be me when dealing with most people. I knew this in part already, but I hadn't realized how much of me I had to take away in order to not make people uncomfortable or annoyed. When I hang out with the guys in my class, I can pretty easily just take a simple layer of stereotypical manly behavior and use that as a personality, it's a relatively simple piece of acting and an easy roll to fall into, but it's not really me, in any proper sense of the word. I have been able to be a part of me when we've been playing games at an internet-cafe here, that part has been very nice, since that is actually a role I can feel is a part of proper me, but other than that, I miss being able to relax and just be. It doesn't work here, or with these people. The biggest issue is, I think, that I'm much more used to the Scout-way of making friends, which is usually very direct. This doesn't seem to suit most other people, so I come off as annoyingly direct and personal. Not an optimal first impression. The good thing here has been that a lot of people have been drunk a lot of the time, and that tends to move people slightly further towards my favored way of socializing, but it is still pretty far from "the real deal", and it also tends to be quite temporary, what with people sobering up and all.
I guess that, in essence, what I really miss most is the possibility to meet new people and make friends without having to limit myself and go through layers of rules and technicalities every step of the way in order to not drive people away. It is really quite taxing, in the long run.
There were other things to write, but I forgot them. I'm sure you're all surprised.
Cheerio.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

White Bread and Awesome

Today (26/10) was an interesting day. I’ve eaten nothing but various versions of those triangular sandwiches the English love so much (9 of them, in total) and breakfast, which was also toast. Not my most healthy day ever. On the other hand, we had a guided tour of the older parts of Canterbury, and of Canterbury Cathedral. That building is by far the coolest one I have ever seen. It rocks. Everything in it is incredibly detailed and beautiful, and I’ve never seen stonework with that kind of detail before. Also, our guide was an elderly woman, who was also awesome. She liked Henry VIII (or, well, she liked talking about him, I don’t think anyone actually Liked Henry VIII) and she was great fun. She also showed us something called "the dunking chair" (sp) which was originally used for checking if women were witches or dead. It was a chair at the end of a long pole, out over the river. What they did was that they tied the girl in question to the chair, popped it into the water, waited until they got bored, and then brought her up again. If she by some miracle was alive, she was burned at the stake. So far, pretty standard. The funny thing happened after they had stopped with the witch hunts. Then, the chair was mostly used on nagging wives. It had a similar idea, except they were only kept underwater until they learned their lesson. Every once in a while, one realizes that we have actually come rather a long way on this whole gender-neutrality issue.

On the down side, my hostess (Geraldine Irons, that name rocks), doesn’t have an internet connection, and for some reason I can’t figure out how to connect to the two wireless ones I can reach from here, which is a shame because they both have very good signal strength. It just says that I have an "invalid IP address", and I don’t know how to fix that, since it’s already set to dynamic. Annoying, is what it is. I plan on getting a pass card for the university tomorrow (there hasn’t been any time yet) so that I will be able to check my mail, and post this. Hopefully, after that, I’ll be able to use Skype in the Wi-Fi zones the university has on campus some time.
Now I’m in my room, having just fixed my adapter for the power plugs. It didn’t fit originally, so I spent some time cutting bits of plastic off of the adapter it with a razorblade. Not entirely sure if that’s the best plan, but it works anyway. I’ve never used a razorblade without anything to put it in or hold it with before, so it was a novel experience, but it was the only sharp blade my hostess had in her house. If I hadn’t been able to fix it, or find a new, better one, I wouldn’t have been able to use the computer, which would have been rather terrible, since it took a bit of effort and space (not to mention air-plane weight ratios) to bring it.

After the tour, I went to a nearby pub with Longshanks and four other guys, and Longshanks managed to order one of the coolest appetizers I have ever seen. It was fried potato skins with bacon and cheddar. So it was basically a few thin bits of hollowed-out potato, which was made unhealthy by frying it, and then further unhealthy by adding glorious bacon, and then they covered the whole thing in unhealthy cheese. It was great. It was quite expensive, though, at £4.75.

28/10: I can post this now, I finally found time and opportunity to register an account at the university ,as well as a computer I could access without having gotten my pass card. I'll keep you updated as I go along, now it's time to go downstairs and have another Cider at the Student Union (which is on campus, by the way. Half of the guys got overly excited about the idea of taking a pint between classes).

Cheerio.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Money and Games

Games I've bought in the past two weeks, organized in the batches I bought them in:

Desperados 2 - Cooper's Revenge
Assassin's Creed
Gothic 3
Peter Jackson's King Kong
Warcraft 2
Heroes of Might and Magic 3
Caesar III

Fallout
Fallout 2
Fallout tactics
Age of Empires
Age of Empires - The Rise of Rome
Age of Empires II
Age of Empires II - The Conquerors

Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell - Pandora Tomorrow
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell - Chaos Theory
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell - Double Agent
Spiderman - Web of Shadows

I suck at having money. Granted, it was far from as expensive as it seems, but still.
I suck at having money.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Murders and Births

An impromptu C-Section performed by an unschooled pit fighter/murderer, with a pocketknife, on his murdered wife, next to the dying body of the man who just killed both the wife and the husband, and who was in turn killed by the husband, and all to the tunes of "You are my sunshine".
I think that is just about the most disturbing scene I have ever seen in any movie.
It was awesome.