http://www.ocremix.org/index.php
Eric showed me this site - it's a whole bunch of remixes of video game music done by all kinds of people. My music tastes are broad, and I usually don't listen to dance/techno/electronica kinds of things, but some of the more unique and atmospheric stuff I like. :)
Particularly nice is the song for Black & White, one for Ecco the Dolphin called "Broken Machine", "Force of Light" for Shining Force III, and three different versions of "Terra" from the Final Fantasy series: "Death on the Snowfield", "Terral in Black", and "Terra Black Crystal". FF7 "String Machine" is nice, too... ohhh, as is FF6 "Mystic Forest"....
Wednesday, February 25, 2004
Tuesday, February 3, 2004
Flying in a Small Plane
My dad had his drivers liscence only one month longer than he had his pilot's liscence, to start. He went to college in Florida to get his commercial pilot's liscence but never finished. Sometime before I was born, he bought a Cessna 180. Ours was white with brown and orange in a more creative pattern. It seats 4 people total.
So, I have been flying since I was in my mom's womb. Pop used the plane to go moose hunting and salmon fishing, and just to go places. Growing up, we went out flying nearly every weekend -- we'd always get excited when Pop was going to take the garbage out to the Dump because the truck we had had a big ole gas tank with pump in the back that we used to fuel the plane with. If we went out to the Dump, there was always a good chance that afterward, we'd go out to where the plane was and go flying.
What its' like to fly in a small plane
First off, it's not like in TV or the movies. Planes are LOUD and you have to yell at the top of your lungs to be heard if you're not using a headset. The engine is so loud because minimum speed in a Cessna 180 to keep in the air is somewhere around 80 MPH. And you're usually cruising around at 180 MPH. Another thing is the seatbelts. The two seats in the back of my dad's plane had the belts like you'd find on an airliner. The two front seats have over the shoulder harnesses that latch into the part that goes across your lap. If something were to happen and you were flung forward and you didnt' have the harness, your weight would push the yoke (steering wheel) forward and you'd be putting the plane's nose down. Especially not good if you're being flipped over (a friend of my dad's flipped his plane and it WOULDN'T of happened had he had the harness setup).
Taking off is the BEST part - there isn't as much G-force as on an airliner, but since you're smaller and closer to the ground, you feel like you're going faster, and the climb seems sharper... It's the difference between running as fast as you can, and then dreaming you're running faster than humanly possible and feeling fantastic about it. Nothing beats the rush you feel when taking off. :D I physically am unable to keep from smiling when I take off in a small plane.
And the ride is SO much bumpier. Airlines make me feel weird because they generally don't bounce around ENOUGH. Taking off and landing is, too -- I've only landed on pavement in a small plane once in my life. Everything else has been rocks, gravel, sand, silt, and dirt. Anyway, but your stomach does the drop thingey a LOT. You get used to it, but I'm not immune to it like my dad is. I don't get motion sickness, though, probably because I grew up with the plane.
I miss it a lot. It's just so different from anything else, but even growing up with it, you knew it was special. Everything about flying is so different from anything else... After we'd land, if Pop didn't get the plane in the right place we'd get out and you push on the wing struts to get it back into place over the tie-downs. And you tie down each wing and the tail, and there's a way to do it, too. Now, we've got the boat. You get close to the dock, and whoever isn't piloting is hanging on the rail so when you get close, you grab a line and jump off the boat and onto the dock, and use your line (not a ROPE, a LINE) to hold the boat in place -- one person on the front end, another on the back end. And you tie it down in a certain way.
Doing things with the boat, I feel like we're faking it. We're trying to be something we're not. It's just not the same.
So, I have been flying since I was in my mom's womb. Pop used the plane to go moose hunting and salmon fishing, and just to go places. Growing up, we went out flying nearly every weekend -- we'd always get excited when Pop was going to take the garbage out to the Dump because the truck we had had a big ole gas tank with pump in the back that we used to fuel the plane with. If we went out to the Dump, there was always a good chance that afterward, we'd go out to where the plane was and go flying.
What its' like to fly in a small plane
First off, it's not like in TV or the movies. Planes are LOUD and you have to yell at the top of your lungs to be heard if you're not using a headset. The engine is so loud because minimum speed in a Cessna 180 to keep in the air is somewhere around 80 MPH. And you're usually cruising around at 180 MPH. Another thing is the seatbelts. The two seats in the back of my dad's plane had the belts like you'd find on an airliner. The two front seats have over the shoulder harnesses that latch into the part that goes across your lap. If something were to happen and you were flung forward and you didnt' have the harness, your weight would push the yoke (steering wheel) forward and you'd be putting the plane's nose down. Especially not good if you're being flipped over (a friend of my dad's flipped his plane and it WOULDN'T of happened had he had the harness setup).
Taking off is the BEST part - there isn't as much G-force as on an airliner, but since you're smaller and closer to the ground, you feel like you're going faster, and the climb seems sharper... It's the difference between running as fast as you can, and then dreaming you're running faster than humanly possible and feeling fantastic about it. Nothing beats the rush you feel when taking off. :D I physically am unable to keep from smiling when I take off in a small plane.
And the ride is SO much bumpier. Airlines make me feel weird because they generally don't bounce around ENOUGH. Taking off and landing is, too -- I've only landed on pavement in a small plane once in my life. Everything else has been rocks, gravel, sand, silt, and dirt. Anyway, but your stomach does the drop thingey a LOT. You get used to it, but I'm not immune to it like my dad is. I don't get motion sickness, though, probably because I grew up with the plane.
I miss it a lot. It's just so different from anything else, but even growing up with it, you knew it was special. Everything about flying is so different from anything else... After we'd land, if Pop didn't get the plane in the right place we'd get out and you push on the wing struts to get it back into place over the tie-downs. And you tie down each wing and the tail, and there's a way to do it, too. Now, we've got the boat. You get close to the dock, and whoever isn't piloting is hanging on the rail so when you get close, you grab a line and jump off the boat and onto the dock, and use your line (not a ROPE, a LINE) to hold the boat in place -- one person on the front end, another on the back end. And you tie it down in a certain way.
Doing things with the boat, I feel like we're faking it. We're trying to be something we're not. It's just not the same.
Monday, January 26, 2004
Red Sonja

YAY! It's finally here!
I've looked everywhere for this movie on VHS or DVD for over 10 years. I knew I could find it online, but with shipping and handling... well, I didn't bother to look. 'Til last week. Got it on amazon.com for a whopping $8 something total. :P It's on VHS; the movie only exists on DVD in Germany, region two, at the moment so I'll suffer for now. Up UNTIL now I'd only seen Red Sonja edited on television (which we had a recording of until my stepdad taped over it. *glowers*). NBC used to show a movie on Saturdays after cartoons were over. They played the same films a lot, and they used to show Red Sonja often. And when you're a kid, if you liked any kind of semi-realistic action with swords and horses, well then! This was the movie for you! Our couch had really tall arms on it which we would saddle up like horses, and on commercial breaks we would run around with plastic swords and look for the Talisman, like in the film. lol.
But if you DIDN'T grow up with the movie Red Sonja, and you have high standards for film, then to you it would be one of those films that has a bit too much class for "Mystery Science Theatre". But not much. ;) The film is a kind of Conan spinoff - Arnold is in it as a warrior named Kalidor. He's not the main-main character, though. Brigitte Nielsen plays the title role, a woman scorned who learns to fight better than anyone in the land so she can get revenge on the people who destroyed her village and raped her when she was a young woman. A 12 year old Ernie Reyes Jr. (who played Keno the pizza boy in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2) is in it as well.
The best part is Queen Gedren (Sandahl Bergman), Red Sonja's arch enemy. As a kid you just don't pick up on any of the queerness of this woman's obsession with Sonja. Which makes it so much more fun to watch now I'm older. :D ~*sigh*~
Red Sonja is interesting in that it was originally going to be a much higher quality film than the end result. They had top of the line costuming and film score. The costumes really are top-notch and extremely varied. One website I read pointed out that this film has the greatest variety in headwear of any film they've seen. The music was done by Ennio Morricone, the guy who did the stuff for "Fistful of Dollars" and "The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly". It's quality stuff - and though there seem to be only two main themes (the travelling, main theme and the panicked fight theme) that repeat a lot, at least the catchy travelling theme is... well, catchy. It definetly conjurs up images of warriors galloping across mountains and hills on horseback.
And then there's the bad... the acting is horrendous. What is interesting is that nearly everyone delivers their lines in the same, stilted, unsure manner. It's SO across the board that you almost forgive it as just the way people seem to speak in that universe. Or you just laugh at it - the dialague makes this film highly quoteable. Nearly any sentence spoken aloud on its own is good enough to cause laughter in those who hear it. ;)
And of course, it has the 'gay is evil' theme - but Queen Gedren is so lovably shallow and evil I just want to pat her on the head. I mean, other than 5 year olds, no one is taking this film seriously, so have fun with it. The fight scenes aren't half bad and the sets are interesting, too. Just try saying the characters lines out loud and there is laughter to be had. :D
One of my favorite movies of all time - but it's a special case. ;)
Edit to add: since the original posting of this I have obtained the film on DVD - readily available at supermarket chain stores across the U.S. for about $8.
Monday, September 29, 2003
The Journey of Natty Gann [DVD]

I am really pissed at Disney for the lackluster job they did with the DVD of The Journey of Natty Gann. One of the few older Disney films that really showed the harsh realities of life during whatever time it was in the world's history, but also just had a good ol' adventure without too much sap to it. I don't know how to describe it. I know they later did things like "White Fang" and all, but the realtiy of that era didnt feel quite as gritty as it should of. Maybe that's just me.
The point is, it is a great film. It does a great job of depicting the Great Depression from a kids point of view in a family film sort of way.
I remember when I was a kid and seeing all the trailers for The Journey of Natty Gann. They were EVERYWHERE. I don't really remember how it went now, but it had the sappy reunion scene as its major focus - which, while it is the goal of the movie, isn't the overall feel of the film. I just remember how much I HATED that trailer - it was on every Disney rental we got, it was in all the theatres - it was EVERYWHERE. But it seems that after it went through its theatrical run, it dropped off the face of the planet, and off the shelves of Disney as well.
I can't count all the crap they have released - and then to see how much they have ignored this single decent film and what little effort they've done to promote it. It has ended up as one of those rare movies you stumble across one day on daytime TV or on that one wall at the locally owned video rental place and there is just nothing else to watch. So you watch it, and you go, "Wow, that's really something" and are suprised you'd never heard of it before. It's not Oscar quality by any means, but it's a solid film. I can't even remember the last time a Disney film got a "wow" out of me.
The lack of attention paid to this film by Disney is simply ridiculous. My sister and I had been looking EVERYWHERE for a copy of it on video. She finally found one on e-Bay which I got for either Christmas or my birthday. It's very old and I would of hated for it to get eaten by a VCR so I never watched it. Then my sister found out Disney was re-releasing a lot of their older live-action films on DVD. We crossed our fingers that The Journey of Natty Gann would be one of them. Sure enough, I was going through the Multnomah County Library's catalogue of DVDs and I saw The Journey of Natty Gann listed. It was out on DVD.
Long story not as long - we found it at Suncoast and so we bought it.
Now, I will say I am glad to have this film in nearly any state I can get it in, don't get me wrong. But I have to say, after everything this film has gone through, being neglected...
Disney USED to be about quality, way back when. Anything, no matter how big or small, got treated all the same - it's all DISNEY stamped, it should ALL be good, it should ALL be crafted and released with the same QUALITY. So much for quality control.
First, the front of the package was terrible - the image is visibly pixellated, for one. And they don't use the old film title logo, which I think says a lot. But that is personal opinion there.
Then you open the box and you want to cry looking at the DVD itself. It has the same picture as the cover, but whoever did the pre-production for it must of been drunk or vindictive because they didn't set the screen angles right for printing, so you end up with a rosette pattern in the dots which is Graphic Design 101. And VERY VERY ugly. ugh.
Then there is the DVD itself. The ONLY extra it has is captioning in English. No cast/crew info, no trailer -- NOTHING. Absolutely nothing. The last Disney film I checked out had TONS of extras... geez.
Then the film itself. As far as I know they ONLY released it in Full Screen - which is not good, because it was filmed in a very wide format, and so the framing they did when they edited it "to fit your screen" is terrible. Because, like I said, Disney doesn't do Quality anymore. And I am not sure what process they do when they convert older films to DVD, but this had all the little burned out bubbles, and the picture shakes as if the film strip were rattling around when they scanned it for DVD. I've seen this film on TV many times and it never shook like that.
I must say, though, I am still glad to have this film because I love it so much, but I am very angry with Disney and the way they ignore their own work. It pisses me off.
Just a few other notes of trivia... I never noticed before, but they curse a lot in this film - way more than any other older, PG Disney film I've ever seen. Mind you, I dont know what the language requirements are for PG, but they say "shit" three times, one near-"fuck" a "sunuvabitch" and quite a few "Damn"s.
And last note of trivia - for those of you who have seen this film or watch Stargate. After Natty is on the train that blows up, and her wallet is found in the wreckage, her dad, Sol, leaves work and goes down to see if he can't find any other trace of her at the accident. Well, you know those little railroad access cars that officials or workers use to get around on the rails to check on things? While Sol is looking around, up in the background, out of focus, is a man on one of these cars. He yells something down to Sol -- as soon as I heard his voice, I recognized him. I watched in the credits, and sure enough, it was Don Davis -- as in Don S. Davis who plays General Hammond on Stargate SG-1. howz about THEM apples? :P
Thursday, September 4, 2003
Heroes of Might & Magic 4
My roomate got Heroes of Might and Magic IV (HoMM4) finally. I had been looking forward to it - I've been playing the HoMM series since the first one, and a bunch of friends from college who played the game loved 4 and were just really impressed. I'm not sure what to think. Some things, like the magic and heroes structures, are just so different, you can't compare. Things like graphics and music are a billion times better, of course. But it is SO flippin' hard! There is NO gold - actually, an obvious lack of gold in the game, so it is really hard to buy up creatures and things, and even on the easiest settings, the computer has massive armies that you can't beat. Admittedly, I like to win - though I don't want it to be too easy, this game is way too difficult.
Your hero is a character that can be built up through actual combat on the battlefield, too. While your hero could increase in skills in previous HoMM games, other than casting spells the hero wasn't really a part of battle, keeping battles soley about your army. I think that in this incarnation of HoMM the hero character is really distracting on the battlefield and takes away from the army.
And I don't like the colors for the heroes - there's only red, blue and green that are halfway decent. *shrugs* There are a lot of improvements, like the interface and buying all the creatures at once in your town, but it seems like a different game all together - whereas HoMM 1, 2, & 3 are almost the same game, just bigger and better each generation.
Overall, HoMM4 is a totally different creature than its predecessors and in ways I don't care for.
Your hero is a character that can be built up through actual combat on the battlefield, too. While your hero could increase in skills in previous HoMM games, other than casting spells the hero wasn't really a part of battle, keeping battles soley about your army. I think that in this incarnation of HoMM the hero character is really distracting on the battlefield and takes away from the army.
And I don't like the colors for the heroes - there's only red, blue and green that are halfway decent. *shrugs* There are a lot of improvements, like the interface and buying all the creatures at once in your town, but it seems like a different game all together - whereas HoMM 1, 2, & 3 are almost the same game, just bigger and better each generation.
Overall, HoMM4 is a totally different creature than its predecessors and in ways I don't care for.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
