Other posts related to review

The Best Games of Last Year

BJ | January 30, 2008 1:05 pm
  1. Portal
  2. Bioshock
  3. Forza Motorsport 2
  4. Mass Effect
  5. Half-Life 2 ep 2
  6. Call of Duty 4
  7. Rock Band
  8. God of War 2
  9. Crackdown

There’s some notable stuff missing, but I haven’t played Super Mario Galaxy enough to form an opinion. Portal is unassailable in its perfection. Bioshock still has me pondering its story/narrative, with moments that still pop into my mind. Forza Motorsport is a great sim, where you can actually powerslide and do donuts (no donuts in GT4). Mass Effect is flawed but wonderful in its epic storyline. Half-Life 2 ep 2 had the craziest final showdown in recent memory. Call of Duty 4 crossed the line into modern war, both literally and emotionally. Rock Band is awesome fun, but isn’t too great when playing solo. God of War 2 takes everything from the first game and kicks it up a notch. And Crackdown does everything right that Grand Theft Auto does wrong…

No Country for Old Men

BJ | 12:46 pm
<No country for old men

I’ve been meaning to make a post of my favorite movies of last year. I’ve been waiting to see There will be Blood to make a final judgement, but I can’t really keep silent anymore.

There’s a certain bombastic nature that gets ascribed to the screen. Movies are about plot, or if they aren’t about plot they’re about people, and finally if they aren’t about plot or people they are used as metaphor to express something deeper. No Country for Old Men is all three. An engaging thriller, it features a hunter/prey style plot revolving around a sociopathic killer and a hotshot modern day cowboy. This is not a by the numbers genre piece. It is the best movie I’ve seen in recent memory. The subtle manipulation towards tension is perfectly expressed in the most intense scene I can ever remember seeing in cinema. There’s no violence in this scene, just dialogue. You’ll know it when you see it.

Javier Bardem does an amazing job portraying Anton Chigurh, the sociopath of the movie. He is entirely unlike anything you’ve seen in cinema before. Not cold, not really calculating, since both of those would require understanding of humanity, but more like a force of nature, fate if you will, and the only thing that can derail fate is chance. These thematic elements pop up throughout the movie without becoming too self-important to distract you from what you’re watching. Most everything in the movie occurs twice though you’ll be hard pressed to notice since the occurance of chance changes outcomes. This central theme of repetition is tied into the heart of what the movie is about.

Go see it.