Tuesday, March 25, 2008

The Passion


During the week leading up to Easter, the BBC screened a four-part drama about the last week of Jesus' life. I watched it, and thought it was very good. It was quite unlike other 'Jesus films' I've seen, I think partly because it focused on Jesus humanity more than the others do. It seems to me that most portrayals of Jesus have him quite aloof and detached from what is going on around him, whereas in this version, we see him crying and laughing, telling jokes, and just being human! Joseph Rawle, who plays Jesus, said that a major inspiration for how to play the role was Philip Yacey's 'The Jesus I Never Knew', especially a single line: 'God didn't cheat' i.e. he felt everything a man could feel. Very interesting.

Also, the whole setting seemed more 'real'. The mania of passover and the politics between the priests, the Romans and the people was shown very clearly. And the filmmakers also managed to show almost everyone in a good light. We see the motives behind the actions of Judas, Pilate and Caiphas, and sympathise with them. It just seems to be showing a much more realistic story of what must have been going on.

As the drama moved closer to the crucifixion, the flow was lost a little, I think because the filmmakers were concerned to include as much as possible of what happened, whereas earlier they had been more liberal. This made the third and fourth parts seem a bit disjointed, as though they had got a selection of scenes and just stuck them one after another. But other than this minor point, it was a really good piece of TV. Watch it if you get a chance.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

A little rant about Easter

Just a short rant here.
This year Easter Sunday is the 23rd of March. This is relatively very early. This has caused havoc for education authorities in this country who have had to decide whether to have their 2 weeks 'Easter' break starting that weekend, or a few weeks later. Almost always, the school break encompasses the Easter weekend, but to do that this year would make the Spring term stupidly short and the Summer term stupidly long, so many areas are taking the bank holiday weekend off, then going back to school for just 9 days, and then having the 2 weeks holiday. Bit of a joke really.
The Christian festival Spring Harvest, which normally takes place over 3 weeks, has had to spread itself over 5 weeks to encompass the school holidays across the country.
On a more personal note, the halls of residence in which I live are closed for the bank holiday Easter weekend, as they always are. Fair enough. But this year, I need to stay there over the weekend because I'm still on teaching practice until the 4th of April (Durham having chosen the later option for the 2 week holiday). Therefore I'm having to go home for 4 days before rocketing back up to Durham for 9.
I said that March 23rd is very early for Easter. It's actually only physically able to be one day earlier - it can fall on any Sunday between March 22nd and April 25th according to Wikipedia. And you know how they decide? "Easter is observed on the Sunday after the first full moon on or after the day of the vernal equinox". So they find the Spring equinox, then find the first full moon after it, and make the next Sunday Easter.
Is it just me, or is this at least in the top 3 most stupid things in the world? Just fix it and save everyone the trouble! Easter should be the first Sunday in April (or whatever), and stay there. Then it'll shift by about 4 days, rather than over a month.
Someone make me king of the world and I'll sort it out.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Wizard Rock

The Harry Potter books have had a bit influence on British culture, but one of the most bizzare and unexpected outcomes has been the development of the musical genre Wizard Rock. Dozens of band draw inspiration from the series (and the series alone, they only sing about the Harry Potter world) and perform in bookshops, libraries and all sorts of fan conventions.

I haven't heard much of the genre, but of what I have heard, the music isn't bad. Shame about the lyrics: "We've got to save Ginny Weasley from the basilisk, we’ve got to save the school from the unseen horror" (Save Ginny Weasley by Harry and the Potters). The band names are equally lame - others include Draco and the Malfoys, Remus and the Lupins, and The Moaning Myrtles.

Having said that, it's harmless stuff, though I think any music with only one inspirational source is incredibly limited, but if people enjoy it then fair enough. But today I saw the results of the Wizard Rock People’s Choice Awards. Awards included 'Best band fronted by a magical creature' (awarded to the Whomping Willows, even though plants don't count as creatures in Rowling's writing), 'Best evil wizard rock band (Draco and the Malfoys, even though Draco isn't evil in the end), 'Best music produced from beyond the grave' (The Moaning Myrtles) and 'Best holiday song' (Christmas with the Weasley's by The Remus Lupins). Is it just me, or are they trying to give every single Wizrock band in existence an award?

The biggest sham though is the Lifetime Achievement Award, which went to the Whomping Willows, who have been in existence for all of two and a half years. Lifetime Achievement?! What a joke.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Favourite films? Or just the best?

I know what my favourite ten films are. But over the last couple of days I have been very geeky and have given several films I like scores in various categories, weighted the categories, and ranked the films quantitatively. I was surprised that some films performed much better or worse than I expected. For example, one of my top 10 finished in 15th and a film I expected to be mid-teens came 7th.
It is clear that this method I used, while designed to examine each film critically, does not give an entirely accurate picture of my personal favourites (though the top 5 at least are pretty spot on).

I scored the films out of 10 in nine categories: plot, characters, themes, script, acting, mood, visual, audio and re-watchability. I weighted each section to give a final score out of 200, and the results of the 26 films scored so far are below. However this is not exactly a rank of my personal favourites, but rather an attempt to objectively decide what I think are the best films I have seen. Obviously I have seen more than 26 films, so there may be films I have not scored yet that will enter this top 26.

Rank

Film

Score

1

The Lord Of The Rings

197

2

Gladiator

176

3

The Matrix

170

4

The Green Mile

167

5

Stardust

166

6

Shrek

161

7

Shrek 2

159

8

Fight Club

158

9

Minority Report

158

10

The Man In The Iron Mask

157

11

Good Will Hunting

157

12

The Shawshank Redemption

156

13

A Beautiful Mind

155

14

Chariots of Fire

154

15

Notting Hill

152

16

Moulin Rouge

148

17

Cool Runnings

147

18

Equilibrium

145

19

Forrest Gump

143

20

Usual Suspects

143

21

X-men trilogy

142

22

Monsters Inc

139

23

The Rock

138

24

Toy Story 2

137

25

Finding Nemo

134

26

Toy Story

129


Clearly I am quite a harsh marker. Only 7 films got over 80%. According to the star rating, thats only 7 5-star films. Luckily I think the star system is a sham and don't use it. But I don't deny I am hard to please when it comes to films. They're all measured against a ludicrously high benchmark (see film #1!).
For now this system will suffice, but I don't really like marking out of 10 because I often get split between two numbers. So sometime I'll probably redo it scoring each category out of 20. Good times.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

The weight of the world

Lyrics to 'The Weight of the World', by Editors, from their 2nd album, An End Has A Start:


Keep a light on those you love,
They will be there when you die.
Baby there's no need to fear,
Baby there's no need to cry

Every little piece in your life
Will add up to one
Every little piece in your life
Will mean something to someone

You fuse my broken bones
Back together again
Lift the weight of the world
From my shoulders again

Every little piece in your life
Will add up to one
Every little piece in your life
Will mean something to someone

You touch my face,
God whispers in my ear
There are tears in my eyes:
Love replaces...
You touch my face,
God whispers in my ears
There are tears in my eyes:
Love replaces fear

Every little piece in your life
Will add up to one
Every little piece in your life
Will mean something to someone


Not a religious band, but this is so 1 John 4:18..."There is no fear in love. But perfect love drives out fear"...Love replaces fear. This is so true. And I love the idea that God speaks to him through the touch of another person, and through this, love replaces fear.

Saturday, March 01, 2008

My favourite songs

My favourite songs at the moment are:

British Sea Power – Carrion
Delirious – My Glorious
Enya – Wild Child
Idlewild – American English
Jars of Clay – Worlds Apart
Lifehouse – Quasimodo
Mew – Am I Wry? No
Sabio – Mother
Stellastarr* - Lost in Time

Other honourable mentions should go to:

British Sea Power – Please Stand Up, Waving Flags
Casting Crowns – Stained Glass Masquerade
Coldplay – Yellow
DC Talk – Jesus Freak, What Have We Become?
Delirious – Heaven, Investigate, Obsession, Deeper
Editors – Weight Of The World
Easyworld – Junkies And Whores, This Is Where I Stand, Stain To Never Fade, Demons
Enya – I Want Tomorrow, Flora’s Secret, One By One
Feeder – Morning Life
Idlewild – You Held The World In Your Arms, Let Me Sleep
The Kissaway Trail – Smother + Evil = Hurt
Lifehouse – Hanging By A Moment, Sick Cycle Carousel, Simon
Mew – 156, She Came Home For Christmas
Muse – Time Is Running Out, Citizen Erased, Micro Cuts
Oasis – Slide Away
Rock’n’Roll Worship Circus – Loving You
Sixpence None The Richer – Melody Of You
Strangeday - Fogpilot
U2 – Beautiful Day