Posts Tagged ‘Books’

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Sherlock Holmes – The Movie Review

December 26, 2009

After all that excitement generated by playing the online game, I finally caught the film at midnight on Boxing Day at a whim with the suspicion that it would be great. After a good night’s sleep, here I am, writing my review with the Sherlock Holmes soundtrack (I have their website open) in the background for ambience.

For anyone who doesn’t want any spoilers, don’t click on! you could check out this earlier post with the movie trailer as well as some initial thoughts on the Holmes and Watson characters.

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Sherlock Holmes Movie (2009) – Trailer

December 15, 2009

I’ve always been a pretty big Sherlock fan. I picked up a collection of his short stories at a used book fair one day, and there was no going back. I devoured that book, then proceeded to procure his entire collection of short stories, before moving on to his classics like Hound of the Baskervilles, Sign of Four, etc.

Sherlock was the first detective series I loved (well, not counting Enid Blyton’s Famous Five back in my youth), and from there it led me to Agatha Christie’s various detectives – Hercules Poirot, Miss Marple, Harley Quinn… but I was always fondest of good ol’ eccentric Sherlock and the stalwart sidekick Watson.

Imagine my glee when they announced the release of a new Sherlock movie casting Robert Downey Jnr. as Sherlock himself. Holy hell, Tony Stark is Sherlock! How fabulous is that, I loved RDJ in Iron Man (also coming out next year, can’t wait!) and from what I’ve seen of the trailer, he makes for an intriguing and more physical Sherlock than we’ve seen before.

More thoughts below:

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Coraline – The Movie Review

November 8, 2009

So I have FINALLY had the chance to watch the Coraline movie, my first 3D movie no less, and what a visual treat the show is. Naturally as movies go, it’s a riff off the original book, with several changes made for length and such, but overall I think it was a stunning 3D interpretation of the text.

Some thoughts, spoilers below:

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Peter & Max – A Fables Novel

October 17, 2009
Peter & Max - A Fables Novel

Peter & Max - A Fables Novel

After 12 Vols and many more chapters of Fables, creator Bill Willingham has released the first Fables novel, and surprisingly, it’s not about some of his more popular Fables characters like Bigby or Flycatcher, but 2 characters that according to Willingham, have only appeared in one panel each in the entire Fables run so far.

The titular Peter and Max turn out to be Peter Piper, who picked a peck of pickled peppers (when did he appear in Fables? I need to do a read through!)  and his elder brother Max Piper, who grows up to be the Pied Piper of Hamelin and makes his single panel appearance in 1001 nights of Snowfall, in a story within a story about Frau Totenkinder.

Overall I really enjoyed this story, I could not stop reading once I started, tired as I was after an entire work week! It’s a little bit odd in the beginning, because Fables has always been told through comic format, and to see those familiar scenes rendered in prose form needs some getting used to, but once things get into full swing it’s told in usual Fables format: a little dark, a little funny, sometime violently, but always interestingly.

Spoilers below up to Fables Vol 12 and the entire Peter & Max novel! Gogogogogo read it first before clicking through.

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The 13 Clocks – James Thurber

December 11, 2008
The Thirteen Clocks - James Thurber

The 13 Clocks - James Thurber

I first heard of this book from Neil Gaiman’s Blog, where he highly recommended it as one of the best stories he’s read and how he enjoys reading it out loud to his children. Also, he wrote an introduction for it, and really anything endorsed my Neil Gaiman is always something worth checking out in my opinion.

No idea where that original post is though, but you can always view Neil’s blog here.

So I head to Kino and get myself a copy. It’s a hard cover book, no dust cover, and I finish off this quaint tale in my bus ride home. It’s not a long tale, but it’s of a nice length for a relaxing read.

The 13 Clocks is a fairytale of sorts, it tells of a prince in disguise trying to win the hand of a princess from the hands of her evil uncle with the help of an unlikely and scatterbrained benefactor.

It seemed like a modern sort of story, then I check trusty wiki and find out the story was written in 1950?! Wow. I think the hallmark of truly great stories is that they transcend the ages and even reading it now, doesn’t feel dated at all.

I won’t spoil the story by summing it up, but I highly recommend this to anyone who like a light enjoyable read. Now I’m going to read it again and I’ll come back with my favourite quotes soon.

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Harry Potter – The Tales of Beedle the Bard

December 7, 2008

In the final book of Harry Potter, JK Rowling makes reference to a story called ’The Tale of the Three Brothers’, a series of children’s stories written by a  Beedle the Bard. It’s is one of several well known wizarding children’s ‘fairy tales’, a story referencing the ‘Deathly Hallows’ that Harry has to search for.

At the end of 2007, JKR handwrote and illustrated just 7 editions, 6 of which she gave to friends and family, 1 of which she put up on auction to raise funds for charity. Luckily for all of us, Amazon.com was the one who won the auction, and they kindly shared pictures and content with the public at large.

However, they decided to raise even more funds and decided to publish it in versions for the masses. There’s the collector’s version, which looks like a beautifully crafted book straight out of a magical chest/old archive. I love HP but I don’t have that kinda fanaticism, so I sprung for the cheaper version (at 25% off at my fav book store Kinokuniya when I bought it , great deal), the Bloomsbury hard cover edition:

The Tales of Beedle the Bard

The Tales of Beedle the Bard

It’s a pretty small book and a pretty simple one featuring 5 short stories and has an intro by JKR as well as afterwords and footnotes by Dumbledore himself after each story. Overall it was a pretty light and fun read. More below the cut, spoilers!

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Fables Vol 11 – War and Pieces

December 7, 2008

My first book review! Before i discovered the wonders of TV serials, books were my first love. I discovered the Fables series quite by accident really, I was looking for new material to read (re: obsess over) and I’d been hearing interesting things about ‘Fables’. What piqued me was that it took these well known story figures and turned them into whole different characters by meshing their lives together, and giving them new pasts and presents. I love the ‘other POV’, the story that could have been/actually was and stuff like that.

Fables Volume 11 - War and Pieces

Fables Volume 11 - War and Pieces

War and Pieces is Volume 11 in the ongoing Fables series, and collects from issue #70 – #75. In Kingdom Come, we see Boy Blue and Rose Red work out their relationship, how Cinderella would kick Bond’s ass and Fabletown finally wages war on the Empire. Massive Spoilers, proceed only after reading.

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