Film & TV
Rogues Gathering, Part 2: Built Upon Hope
by allancarreon on Dec.21, 2016, under Film & TV, Geeky
Rogue One, Part 1: The Gray Side
Spoilers, young padawan!
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, despite being a stand-alone film almost divorced from the main film series in terms of tone and the characters who populate each one, is essentially a direct prequel to the original 1977 film, Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope. Some have even joked that if you wanted spoilers to Rogue One, all you needed to do was watch and read the opening crawl of A New Hope.
And it’s a pretty accurate statement, too. See for yourself. (continue reading…)
Rogues Gathering, Part 1: The Gray Side
by allancarreon on Dec.20, 2016, under Film & TV, Geeky
Star Wars – especially the main episodic film series – has been known for its fantastic lightsaber fights, its mystical subtext, its galaxy-spanning tales of heroes and tragedies and triumphs. In many ways, it is a family epic – the story of the Skywalker family, from Anakin to Luke and Leia to Kylo Ren (and, if speculations are correct, even Rey).
Despite its primary depiction of one’s struggle to remain good and to resist the temptation to turn evil, it has also largely been a story that is pretty black and white in its morality. Good vs. Evil. Light vs. Dark. The Heroic Rebels vs. The Villainous Empire. The struggle has always been about simple right and wrong, and with perhaps the exceptions of Han Solo (who, in being a mercenary, was in it for the money and not for a sense of justice, at least until he developed over the course of the series), Lando Calrissian (whose initial betrayal was due to being compromised but in the end proved to be an ally), and Finn (the stormtrooper who turns his back on the Empire in The Force Awakens) the majority of the characters have either been plainly good or bad.
The rebels have arrived.
by allancarreon on Dec.19, 2016, under Film & TV, Geeky
Holy. Fucking. Shit.
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story is the best Star Wars movie since The Empire Strikes Back. The 3D/4DX audience that I was a part of last Saturday actually even applauded heartily when the credits came up.
And I shed some tears. I’m not even going to pretend.
Watch out for my full review soon.
A Different Kind of Feminist
by allancarreon on Dec.17, 2016, under Film & TV, Music & Theater, Society
“People say that I’m so controversial, but I think the most controversial thing I have ever done is to stick around.”
There is a reason why she’s the queen, the icon, the goddess. This powerful and moving speech that Madonna delivered recently shows exactly why.
Madonna: Billboard’s Woman of the Year
She is no man.
by allancarreon on Dec.16, 2016, under Film & TV, Geeky, Literature
Happy 49th birthday to the Shield-Maiden of Rohan who showed us that it takes a woman to vanquish a Nazgul that no man could ever destroy. Miranda “Eowyn” Otto will always be the biggest badass of The Lord of the Rings movie trilogy (yes, Legolas my darling dearest, you come in a very close second).
Throwback: Spicy Christmas
by allancarreon on Dec.15, 2016, under Film & TV, Music & Theater
I miss these ladies.
It’s just a little crush.
by allancarreon on Dec.14, 2016, under Film & TV, Society, Travel & Culture
Not like I faint every time we touch.
Raising The Bar
by allancarreon on Dec.13, 2016, under Film & TV
These are the posters for this year’s Metro Manila Film Festival. Judging by these alone, you can tell this year’s entries are really dead-set on showing creativity and quality.
Sure, they may not all end up as fantastic as we would want them to be (but of course we hope so), but just for sheer commitment towards veering away from trash and challenging the establishment, they’re already winners in my book.
Hardy Boy
by allancarreon on Dec.10, 2016, under Film & TV, Queer
Ever since I first saw him on Inception six years ago (wow, time flies so fast), I have been a huge, huge fan of Tom Hardy.
Not only does he look, well, just look at him, he’s also a mighty fine chameleon of an actor.
The lovely English actor has done the sociopath Bane in The Dark Knight Rises, the gritty Max in Mad Max: Fury Road, the cute Tuck in This Means War, and more. He’s been nominated multiple times for his acting across various bodies, including an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor for The Revenant, and has won quite a number of them (no Oscar yet, though… but as with Leo DiCaprio, all in due time, babe).
Riding with the Goddess
by allancarreon on Dec.09, 2016, under Film & TV, Music & Theater
Two of my favorite people. One car. Singing. Music. Laughs. Gossip. ‘Nuff said.