Friday, February 24, 2012

Response to Submission 4

Good Claims:
Vivar Sonar Leer

Reading Reflecting and more reading

Not as Good Claims:
"When first looking at these amazing hand animals or paintings some may feel astonished or think it is unbelievable." - this claim evaluates the picture instead of analyzing.

"Reading through all the posts, you can't help but agree with him."

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Jaws submission



This opening scene is pivotal to the rest of the film because it already sets the stage for the theme of horrific deaths by sharks. The frantic movement of the kids and the thundering suspense of the music conveys this sense of carnage  and trepidation so that the audience might pee their pants in fright.  

The opening scene of Jaws features a lot of stereotypical thriller conventions: the tension filled music, the female character being the victim, having the other character – who could possibly save her- being unaware that anything is wrong. The girl, thinking she is safe when she swims to the buoy but is infact going to be eaten!


In the opening to the film the majority of the scene is shot from the sharks perspective giving the audience the idea that she is not safe and also gives some indictation in which direction the danger is coming from, this creates even more tension as the attack seems inevitable. The editing of the sequence when the two teenagers are running to the sea and when the girl is being attacked is shown in quick fast paced, frantic cuts of shots from different angles. In contrast to the calm, static, lingering shots of the boy who has fallen asleep on the beach. The opening sequence is set at night time/early morning. The scene starts off with a bunch of young students having a beach party, as you can imagine this usually includes. All of these small little things dealing with the motion of the characters add to the horror theme of the movie.


The beginning starts quietly, then the middle part where the tension becomes gradually louder and louder until the climactic ending becomes silent again. The silence at the end is a good representation of death. The screaming ans splashing about when the attack is happening is a great contrast to the boy lying peacefully on the sand near her. You kind of expect the boy to hear her struggle and the audience get a glimpse of hope that the boy will come and rescue the girl, but when that doesn't happen, the shark successfully kills the girl and the scene becomes silent once more.

The Calder Game post

The plot line is absorbing and intricate, and as with each of her previous books, Balliett introduces many concepts involving art, math and literature. We learn the myth of the Minotaur, that half-man, half-bull who ate humans. We learn more about pentominoes, Calder’s particular love, and explore the meaning of patterns of five. We see how words can go beyond our senses:
"Black, black, black went a drip someplace to his right. He’d never realized how much the word fit what it sounded like: the flatness, the no-color, of dark water on dark stone. Black, black, black. "
The change in the initially prickly relationship between Petra and Tommy is handled well and realistically, based as it is on their mutual feelings for Calder. Unless they can overcome their differences, they don’t stand a chance of finding him. With the stakes so high, this is very clear to both of them.
The ending is very satisfactory, wrapping up all the separate pieces. We’re also introduced to another interesting character who, I suspect (and hope), will become part of the team in the next book in the series.
Most wonderfully, though, I came away from my reading of this book with a desire to explore Alexander Calder’s work more fully. I wanted to see for myself the beauty of his mobiles. I wanted to play the Calder Game: design my own mobiles on paper, balancing ideas, things, concepts in ways they have never been balanced before.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Short List 2/21/12

Here are my opening scenes for the week:

Jaws - There aren't many movies that can top the thrill and suspense of Jaws. It is one of the greatest and well-known movies of all time and that is why it is on my list.

Indiana Jones: Raiders of the Lost Ark - Hunting for treasure, Arrows flying everywhere, Booby traps about ready to blow, and then there is the classic boulder ready to demolish anything in his path especially an agile little man named Indiana Jones.

Mission Impossible 3: Some of Tom Cruise’s best acting comes in these first five minutes, in which Ethan Hunt, chained to a chair, attempts to convince an eerily calm Philip Seymour Hoffman not to kill his fiancee. Maybe not the best opening scene but I love this movie.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Full Podcast Response on Middle School



I don’t know what it is about the middle school episode of This American Life, but it seems that everybody is able to connect with this episode. I think this happens for a couple reasons. 1) As far as I know, everybody went through middle school and it was only a couple of years ago. Therefore, we can all look back and remember a lot of little details from middle school that lets say a 40 year old wouldn’t be able to remember. 2) Middle school was a very important time because it was really when everybody started to grow up. It was that huge transition period between elementary school and high school (two completely different things). This transition is what caused the problems and laughs of middle school because everybody took this switch into the teen years at different paces – some people more mature then others, some people focused on sports or school or girls/boys or drugs. There were so many possibilities that none of us had ever experience. Stuff completely new to us. Didn’t know what to expect. Didn’t know what to do. And look what happened as a result: Middle School.


The podcast starts with Annie who is a little unsure of herself, which definitely is common in middle school. She doesn’t want to put her name out because of all the bullying and making fun of that could happen if anybody catches wind of her talking on the radio. However, she seems to express the same feeling that everyone has: middle school is just awkward and no one really enjoys it.

Probably my favorite part of the podcast is what follows Annie’s session: Middle School Dances. Once again, no one really knows what to expect or even what to do at a middle school dance because we had never done anything like it before. This uncertainty is progressed even more by the interviews of various middle school students. Ethan is afraid that he won’t know how to dance correctly, and as a result, he doesn’t slow dance with anyone. 5 different guys asked Autumn to the dance. However, instead of saying yes to one guy, she gives all the guys an “I don’t know,” leaving them in a state of befuddled hopefulness.  Also, the 20-minute middle school relationships are classic. They show the kids as having a elevated aggressive amusement with "love" but it is very far from pragmatic. 

Overall, the bleak pessimism that the kids exude through their unsureness about middle school underscores the negative influence that middle school has on young teenagers. 

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Podcast Response: Notes on Middle School

Everybody always seems to have that same outlook on middle school - it definitely wasn't the best experience ever (one to forget actually). Whether its the overall uncertainty about a school dance - asking a girl to dance  (or getting asked by 5 different guys), deciding what to wear, trying not to get interrupted while slow dancing with the "special someone," getting asked out right as the dance begins while drinking a glass of root beer - or dealing with random problems like smelly kids, homework, and bullying over immature troubles. But either way, there appears to be a common consensus about middle school being an overall pain and a period of time to laugh upon but to forget and replace with high school.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Reading post: The Calder Game

This book has been sitting on my shelf for literally forever. Picked it up randomly the other day. 
Calder, Petra and Tommy are back again in The Calder Game, another mystery involving a famous artist – this time, it’s Alexander Calder and his beautiful mobiles and statues. The three find themselves separated near the beginning of the book when Calder goes to England with his father, who is attending a horticultural conference near Woodstock, home of Blenheim Castle.
One thing on my mind at the start of the book was how the author would manage to get Petra and Tommy across the ocean from Chicago to England. It does require rather more suspension of belief than normal, and is really the only “flaw” in the book. When Calder goes missing, Mrs. Sharpe arranges to bring both Petra and Tommy with her to England to help look for Calder; it did strike me as odd that there was no objection from the part of the parents to this arrangement. But this is a small point, and doesn’t take away from the rest of the book at all.
Which, in a nutshell, is really wonderful. As with her previous books, Balliett illustrates concepts and ideas beautifully with her writing; for example, in the following passage in an early chapter where the three children visit an exhibit of Alexander Calder’s mobiles with their classmates, Petra, the word lover in the group, comes to her own personal understanding of his art:
“Petra forgot the frustration of not being allowed to write, and thought instead about pulling sentences apart and balancing words in three dimensions, as if they could float off a page. Words as things, not just meanings … words in space, words set free! Could it be done? Petra’s mind felt as if it were exploding with possibilities.”
Helquist’s illustrations add to the mood of the story, and this time around, I found myself involved in the happenings in The Calder Game in a way that I wasn’t in the two previous novels. After all, there is so much more at stake. Calder is missing.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Angels and Demons 469-610 (end)

Well I finally reached the end and this is how it went: After viewing Kohler's tape Langdon, Vittoria, and the cardinals confront the camerlengo; Shortly before the beginning of the novel, the Pope met with Leonardo Vetra who believed that anti-matter was capable of establishing a link between Man and God. Vetra's beliefs caused great discomfort to the camerlengo. While discussing Vetra, the pope reveals that his support is due to science having given him a son. Without waiting to hear the explanation and horrified that the Pope appeared to have broken his vow of chastity, the camerlengo plots to "rectify" the situation. He poisoned the pope and, under the guise of an Illuminati master, he recruited the assassin, to kill Vetra, steal the antimatter, and kidnap and murder the Preferiti. The Camerlengo planted the antimatter in St. Peter's in order to be seen as the savior of Christendom. The Illuminati "involvement" was merely a plot engineered by the camerlengo to cover his own plans. It is revealed that Camerlengo Ventresca himself was the birth son of the late pope, conceived through artificial insemination. Overcome with guilt Ventresca soaks himself in oil and immolates himself before a crowd of onlookers in St. Peter's Square.


I thought this ending was fair, but surprising at the same time. Even though there is a number of cultural inaccuracies dealing with the Catholic faith that obviously bother me, I still think Dan Brown, if nothing else, does a great job of creating an entertaining book full of suspense and thrill. I would recommend this book to just about anyone looking for an entertaining book but does not get bothered by the religious contradictions in the book. 

The Dark Knight

I had this idea that I can't believe I never thought of before during class the other day. Some people might know that I am a total movie buff and I love going to movies and seeing them over and over and over and over again. So over the next couple weeks I'm going to try to take some of my favorite movies and look at their opening scenes - see what happens, how it sets up the plot, tone, and characterization, and maybe even compare it to other similar scenes. So this week it begins with one of my favorites: Batman: The Dark Knight.


In the opening scene of this movie (if you haven't seen it), a bunch of thugs dressed like clowns rob a bank. But the clever part is that each one of the thugs, after they complete their job (cutting the power, opening the safe, taking the money), is killed by the next thug. However, none of the guys realize that the Joker is actually one of the thugs working with them. As always, the Joker prevails untouched with all the bank's money. This scene full of gunfire sets the stage for the movie as explosive and exciting. For example, the best part of the whole scene is at the end when a bus just randomly breaks through the side of the bank. It's totally unexpected but totally awesome. The Joker and the rest of the gang's immense desire to rob the bank conveys a sense of caustic ferocity as though they were babies that would do anything to get their toys. And of course nothing will stop the Joker from getting what he wants because frankly he has nothing to lose.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Second Short List


Not Really sure what about this chicago sky line I liked but when I started looking at it I was mesmerized for like 5 minutes. - Tony Katai (some of this guy's pictures are inappropriate just a heads up). 


Another interesting but kinda weird tumblr. This guy takes photos like all day of everything he sees in his taxi cab. Some really cool pictures. - Things I see from my cab


This guy is originally from australia which caught my attention because australia is awesome but he has pictures from all over the world of landscapes and buildings but mostly the sea. some really cool stuff. - Ojae's blog 

My Favorite Short Lists

More Cowbell, please - I think this blog did a really good job of analyzing a simple picture, but going in so deep into things one wouldn't even process when the picture was first looked at. very creative and very real.

On the Effect of Heavier Things - I think this blogger took something that when I look at, I just think its a bunch of  blocks stacked on top of each other that a 4 year old made or something. But somehow this blogger finds and analyzes a deep meaning that is simple yet rich all from a picture of 3 blocks.

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Sports Logos

Sports have become our hobbies, our wants, our needs. Every Sunday it's watching Peyton Manning sit on the bench while Curtis Painter runs around like a wild man without a clue. Or watching Kobe Bryant drop 45 points a game without even trying. But nothing beats the memory of Christian Watford's buzzer beating game winning three-pointer against #1 ranked Kentucky. But a lesser known aspect of the game is not necessarily the players themselves or how the play, but what appears on their jerseys. As sports have become more popular, the logos of the franchises have adapted to the new audience in order to produce a better financial product or just to please the crowd.

As seen here in the logos, the older ones being on the left, there is an obvious difference between the two. The older ones have a blocky, simplistic feel that exudes a comfortable and calm sense. On the other side, much different from the old, the new logos have a complex fierceness attributed to them. In the Cav's logo, a sword was added which almost conveys a sense of power. The newer logos almost progress to a disney-like feel full of cartoon characters. The colors are more bright and the lines are more curved and less block-like conveying a sense of excitement ready to start the game. Maybe the owners of the teams wanted to create more excitement of the fans by changing the logos to a more animated feel. However, more and more teams are consistently wearing their throwback uniforms in some sort of re-cultivation of history back towards the good days of Magic Johnson, Dan Marino, and Wayne Gretzky.

Angels and Demons pg 307 - 469

"Tell me... How can the church condemn that which makes logical sense to our minds! How 
can we decry that which is now the very foundation of our society! Each time the church raises 
 its voice in warning, you shout back, calling us ignorant. Paranoid. Controlling! And so your evil 
grows. Shrouded in a veil of self-righteous intellectualism. It spreads like a cancer. Sanctified by the 
 miracles of its own technology. Deifying itself! Until we no longer suspect you are anything but pure goodness. Science has come to save us from our sickness, hunger and pain! Behold science - the 
new God of endless miracles, omnipotent and benevolent! Ignore the weapons and the chaos. 
Forget the fractured loneliness and endless peril. Science is here!"

First of all, this is a very controversial topic which really gets me going and I am a Catholic too for any of you who were wondering. But here goes nothing....

I have to admit, I could hardly write that paragraph above without wanting to erase it. It makes the hair on my arms stand up. But I’ll be OK after I pick it apart. First of all, this book assumes that the Catholic Church is the only church. Christianity is not a denomination, but rather the body of Jesus Christ on earth. It spans denominations and is only recognized by the condition of the heart and the fruits in a person’s life. Not everyone claiming to be a Christian is actually a Christian. Yes, we have all done stupid things and the Catholic Church throughout history, especially, has been associated with atrocities (killing of Protestants, killing of Muslims and Jews, etc.)… but not all Christians agreed with the evils their church hierarchy committed – even back in those dark days. God sees into our hearts, and it is sad that the world can not distinguish between true Christianity and the fake kind which actually is self-serving and self-righteous. Anyone can take a good thing and make it bad - if we use it to serve our own purposes and thus begin to worship material possessions like money rather than God. Christians have a calling to live out our faith, and a lot of us lack in that area on different occasions (me included). We are called to be ambassadors of Christ, and we all should remember books like this one (and the sad theological suicide found within it’s pages) when we think of the seriousness of that charge.

Secondly, Science, as I stated above is not proving that faith is archaic and un-necessary. In fact, every shred of True Scientific evidence over time has proven the Bible to be true. I could write an entire book on this, but I don’t have to, because plenty of authors have beaten me to it. Science is actually a Tool that has done nothing but prove the Christian God’s account (through the Bible) is factual. Almost every branch of Science was founded by a Christian. You don’t have to leave your brain behind when you leap off the faith bridge. When you see the truth about what macro-evolutionists want you to believe up against the true evidence (not the propaganda and lies), you will see that it is more of a leap of faith to accept their dogma than it is to believe in a Creator. Christianity has nothing to fear from Science. It is rather far-fetched to believe someone would be so afraid of Science that they would embark on a formidable killing spree (as this book depicts). I am in no way trying to hurt or denounce Dan Brown as a person or writer, all I am saying is that I disagree with a lot of the Christian philosophies presented in this book. However, as unlikely a story this may be, Dan Brown does a phenomenal job of entertaining his audience through this Faith/Science conflict novel.