Thursday, May 30, 2013

Ender's Game - Book Review

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I recently finished Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card.  Instead of going into a lengthy plot synopsis here's a direct like to the Wikipedia article, which I feel gives an adequate enough description.

I personally loved the book.  Now, there are many that are not Sci-Fi fans in the least bit,  (although, its just as hard to believe that vampires and werewolves fight over some girl, but hey to each their own!) but it is actually not as Sci-Fi as you would expect.  It follows Ender Wiggins, who is 6 years old, who attends a special school designed to train children from young to become military fighters against a 100 year, on-going war against the Buggers.  It's interesting to follow the book through the eyes of a 6 year old, even though we quickly realize his intellectual and even emotional capacity is well beyond his age.  By the end of the book Ender is 11, so we have covered about 5-6 years of his life.  He is put through many trials, which are all strategically controlled by the government, and handles them better than most adults would.

The role of technology in the book is very important.  The children are monitored through devices on their neck - their thoughts, actions, and even actions of others that they see, are watched by the government.  At the school which Ender attends to receive training, they play games on their desks (which, from reading I assume emit the games 3D to the player), which also become personal, as well as is very significant in the end.  Another important aspect is the blogging that takes place, which essentially gives way to a new Religion and doctrine.  The original book was published in 1985, but there were drafts that were done in the 70's.  Card was wise beyond years to predict the impact of technology on society, especially putting so much emphasis on the blogs.  Now-a-days our society is incredibly dependent on social media, many of which are blogs, to receive and distribute information.

I thought the book was slow, believing that we were supposed to read about the impending bugger war, but realized that it was much more than the war.  In fact, the simulated battles at Battle School were written so incredibly simply (not much detail - froze my legs, shot the laser, battle over).  The books addresses a number of different issues and themes including compassion, humanity, the relationship between adults and children, as well as the mental capacity that we believe children should have versus their actual mental capacity.

All in all, it was incredibly enjoyable, where even non Sci-Fi fans would be able to appreciate it.  7/10.  I'm interested to see how the book translates to the big screen later this year in that we know the majority of the time many aspects are left out and its never as good as we read it.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Going Bovine - Adolescent Book Review

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Summary

16 year old Cameron is barely making it through High School, while his widely popular twin sister Jenna ignores him as much as she can.  Cam's dad is a professor at the University, who he suspects is having an affair with his T.A. and his mom is a hands off, community college English professor.  Cameron's favorite and best memory is of when he went to Disney world and nearly drown in the "Its a Small World" ride.  Despite his seemingly mundane life, Cam is given some shocking news. - he is going to do.   He is diagnosed with Creutzfeldt-Jakob variant BSE which is commonly known as Mad Cow Disease.  Enter a possible angel hallucination Dulcie who tells Cam, while he is in the hospital, that he must go on a quest, despite dying, to save the world within two weeks.  If he saves the world, he also saves himself.  His hospital bed mate is "Gonzo", a fellow student at his high school, who is also a dwarf, obsessed with games, and has a constant fear of death brought on by his over protective mother, who Cam convinces to go on the quest with him.  They escape from the hospital for a wild cross country road trip.  They must follow a series of very vague clues, which may not be clues at all. They first arrive in New Orleans and meets Junior Webster, jazz musician extraordinaire, and the Wizard of Reckoning for the first time.  They narrowly escape, while the wizards claims Webster's life.  Webster tosses Cam his trumpet before dying.  They then begin to travel to Florida, for a huge spring break party.  While spending the night at a motel, Cam walks to a nearby gas station, which ends with him being invited to a party by two new acquaintances.  At the party he stumbles on a yard gnome, who surprisingly begins speaking to him and reveals that he is Balder, a Norse god, who is meant to be on the journey with Cameron in order for himself to make it back home.  He joins the gang and continues to Florida.  Along they way they pick up three college hitchhikers on the way to the spring break party.  The three kidnap Balder as they part ways, which Cam and Gonzo do not realize until about an hour after the fact.  They race back to get Balder and get caught up in the spring break festivities.  They eventually get Balder back.  Throughout the entire trip, Dulcie has shown up to help aid Cameron although most of the time he never saw it as help.  He eventually realized he was falling for her.  That night at the hotel Cam loves his virginity to one of Jenna's (his sister) friends, and then shortly after makes love to Dulcie.  The next morning Cam remembers that he was supposed to reconvene with Gonzo, who bursts through the motel door brandishing a brand new mohawk, and a boyfriend.  They attend a concert at, where Cam subsequently ends up saving the world from the "Fire Giants" which appear throughout the book and are causing the end of the world.  He travels to Disney world where he encounters the Wizard of Reckoning who turns out to be himself.  Cam blows the trumpet that Junior Webster gives to him before he dies, and the wizard collapses into himself.  As this happens, we flash back to the hospital room where Cameron passes away.  The last chapter we find Cameron floating through space with Darcy which we can assume is his version of the afterlife.

Review

There are a number of different characters and points in which I have left out of the summary.  All in all I believe the book itself, considering it is written for adolescents, deserves a 7.5/10.   It is a modern take on the classic Don Quixote, which was regularly referenced in the novel itself.  I personally think Bray told the story brilliantly in that approaching the subject of death and dying among a younger audience is a toughie.  I think its incredibly easy for a teen to relate to.  There is strong language in it (we see "fuck" often), there is sexual references and experiences, and there is drug and alcohol usage.

Throughout the book we figure out that the trip is a hallucination of Cameron's dying mind.  It was argued recently that the act of his death was too short, done in just a page, however, I personally feel that because we had flashes to the hospital room and Cameron's pain, we experienced more than just a page of his death.  Plus, it would have been a completely different book if it only followed his death from the disease.

The book addresses the subject of not only living in the moment, but also of appreciating things differently.  We need to begin to value simple pleasures in order to actually live life.  Before being diagnosed, Cameron is going through life, not actually living life.  Through the road trip, he actually begins to experience life and its simple pleasures along with its complexities outside of his little world.

Bray skirts over all sexual experiences though, which could or could not be a big deal.  For example, Gonzo turns out to be gay.  How many teens do we know, would find out that their very good friend is homosexual, and not even ask one question?  I am definitely not saying the choice should be questioned, but more as they would at least be a little inquisitive.  Another instance is when Cam looses his virginity, there is literally no detail in regards to it.  I understand it was written for teens, so we do not need for intense detail.  I personally believe that Bray intentionally did this to influence teens that sex and sexuality may not be such an important subject considering the main theme is life.

I think the novel was beautifully researched.  There are SO MANY cultural and religious references.  I did find out however, some of the translations were not exactly correct, however the factual cultural and religious references were spot on.  There were Hindu, Islamic, and Buddhist references, among many others.  So with the exception of the translations from a different language, I thought that aspect was great.

Final

7.5/10

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Fast & Furious 6 - Review ** SPOILER ALERT*

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Last night I had the absolute pleasure of attending an advanced screening of Fast & Furious 6 at the beautiful AMC Sunset Place 24.  I won tickets from KeepItClassic.com (check out the winners list for my name!).  This is one of the more recent franchises that I believe has not died out yet (save for Tokyo Drift, but there's always a family outcast right?).

Synopsis

The opening scene begins with a high speed race (what did you expect?) between Paul Walker's character Brain in a GTR and Vin Diesel's character Dom in a Charger.  They pull up at a very quiet and calm building, which turns out to be a hospital - Brian is about to be a father.  Dom tells Brian that when he walks through those doors, their previous life (criminal) is over with.  Flash to Dwayne Johnson's character Agent Luke Hobbs.  There has been a number of thefts over 12 different countries lead by Luke Evan's oh so sexy character Shaw and his second in command, surprise not so surprise Michelle Rodriguez's character Letty.  Hobbs, along with his partner Riley (pay attention to this) knows he needs Dom's team to get a hold off Shaw.  He goes to Dom with a recent picture of Letty.  Dom rounds the team up and they agree to do the job in London, for full amnesty of course.  Few scenes occur where they try to catch Shaw, which we know is not happening because its way to early, flash to Dom chasing a GTX, which turns out to be Letty, who prominently shoots Dom in the arm and escapes.  Back at the lair, Dom does not understand why she did that, while Brian tries to offer up sentimental support.  They learn that Braga is involved, Brian travels back to the US with the help of Officer Stasiak (remember the agent that Brian slams face first into the wall at the department? He does it again, but this time in jail).  Stasiak buys Brian a 24 hour window in the jail where Braga is located.  Braga confronts Brian and tells him Letty wasn't killed but instead has absolutely no memories prior to the accident.  Shaw found her and brought her on his team.  Braga also tells Brian that Shaw does not let you get close unless he wants you to.  We learn of a street race going down, but sadly for all my car fans (I included) its just Dom and Letty who take to the streets, then stop, and have a warm and fuzzy heart to heart.  She drives off, Shaw drives up and has a pow wow with Dom (geeze, Dom is just in a connecting mood isn't he?).  Dom refuses to leave without Letty - his family.  Cut to Tej (Ludacris) finding out that Shaw's team is hitting a military base for a chip that they need in order to create world chaos (what else would they be doing?).  Dom's team figures out that Shaw wanted the base to move the unit, so they planted someone there to breech security.  Long, intense chase down a stretch of road, where Shaw becomes even more villianistic when he moves his commandeered tank to oncoming pedestrian traffic.  Roman (Tyrese) somehow gets his car attached to the front of the tank and wraps a cord/string/rope around it.  Shaw sends Letty to cut the rope, knowing that he is sacrificing her. Brian manages to flip Roman's car over the side of the bridge creating an anchor.  In creating the anchor, it flips the tank, with Letty still on top of it.  Dom flings himself out of his car, catches Letty mid-air, and lands on the hood of another car across the way.  Back at the base, Hobbs pays visit to Shaw, then brings him out to tell Dom that his people have kidnapped Mia (Jordana Brewster) and he will walk free.  They agree, and before Shaw leaves he turns to the group and says "Coming, babe?"  They pan over to Letty, but then unfocus on her, to refocus on Riley (remember Hobb's partner?) who says "I wouldn't miss it for the world." and walks out with Shaw.  Break to a high speed chase down the runway, and then a floating island (huge ass military plane) overhead.  Lots of fighting takes place.  Brian gets Mia back and off the plane, Dom fights Shaw, Letty fights Riley, Hobbs fights a big muscle-y mirror of himself from Shaw's team, Tej and Roman and stuck to a cord attaching them to the plane thats taking off, as well as Han and Giselle in their car, and two of Shaw's goons in they're SUV.  Mid-air one of the goons grabs Giselle, Han wrestles with him and is able to grab Giselle from falling.  ** SPOILER ALERT**  Giselle sees the guy climbing back towards them, lets go of Han, shoots the guy, and slams to the ground.  They manage to bring down the plane.  All the bad guys die, all the good guys (well our guys) live with the exception of Giselle.  Hobbs asks Dom his price, Dom says 1327.  Flash to their home from the first Fast and the Furious.  Han says that he is going to Tokyo.  Last seen ends with a race in the streets of Tokyo, where a car slams into one of the racers and the car blows up.  The racer is Han and the scene is the other POV of Han's death, with Jason Statham getting out and calling Dom.  Movie ends.

Review

All in all I would give the movie an 8/10.  My main grievance is that obviously they can't make it solely based on car racing anymore, but the most we got was a quick back and forth about vehicle specs, a few high end vehicles, and the two minute race between Dom and Letty.  The action in the movie was incredible, as the graphics, stunts, actors/actresses, and everything else.  It is still a great franchise and I cannot wait to see 7.

Final

8/10