X-men First Class Movie Review, Trailer

OK, I love movies and I like most prequels and X-Men First Class did not disappoint.

If you ever wanted to know exactly how Xavier got himself wheelchair-bound, or why Mystique ended up on Magneto’s side, or why Magneto is suck a stinker, this movie will fill you in on all of those things.

I read some reviews on X-Men First class before I took some people to see it, and some reviews stated that Xavier, Magneto and Mystique are the 3 most popular characters in the X -Men series so it’s good that much of this movie was centered around them.

I wish the movie didn’t focus so much on the relationship with Mystique and her inner battles seeing as how all the mutants went through similar issues, and in regard to Mystique being one of the characters X-men fans are most interested in, I beg to differ there….

Wolverine is a huge Fan Favorite, followed usually by Cyclops, then the third pick is usually saved for a favorite bad guy.

My 3 favorite characters are

Xavier, Magneto, and Wolverine

Wolverine is powerless against Magneto due to to exoskeleton being made of a certain metal or something.

Magneto is impervious to Xavier’s telepathy stuff due to the helmet he wears

Xavier is still the man, can do anything because he can make anyone except Magneto do stuff.

Rock, paper scissors almost…

What younger generation likes for X Men characters

Wolverine, Cyclops, any X-men that can fly except for the butterfly wings girl who spits fire

Back to the X-men First Class Movie Review, Trailer

Here’s a trailer

 

 

In this movie we also found out about the anti-telepathy-intrusion helmet Magneto ends up wearing in the later movies, but they really glossed over this part (Russians made it, moving on…  huh?  details please!!!!)

Even if X-men First Class wasn’t a prequel filling in some blanks for X-Men fans, it would still be good as a standalone movie.

But then again, I love the whole concept, and it’s pretty hard for me to NOT like this type of movie as is has superheroes, action, limited plot, and a reliable guilty pleasure

Hellhole by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson (book review)

Ok, I just finished reading Hellhole by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson and it’s not too bad if you’re into reading the sci-fi futuristic genre.

Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson most notably wrote the Dune prequel and sequels series of books, plus their own books too, but nothing can ever compare to the Dune series.

Everything I read in the sci-fi genre gets compared to Dune, because it was an experience for me and Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson did a fantastic job on keeping that series going.

Hellhole by Brian Herbet and Kevin J AndersonAnyhow, this is a Hellhole review and it’s got some similarities to the overall theme of the Dune series….

  • Elite group of oligarchical commerce driven nobles vying for position constantly
  • A corrupt ruling class
  • A rebel force on outskirts of civilization (a la Arrakis, or Dune planet)
  • A noble, moral leader sent into exile (a la Duke Atreides)
  • And a surprise that I almost gave away here that is akin the what the Fremen offered in the Dune series

I have a tendency to re-tell the tales when I review a book or movie but I will try to make this a literary review not a re-telling….

Hellhole is good because it’s dumbed-down enough to make even a new reader get up to speed ASAP on what happened, or is happening, unlike the dune book where you were forced to learn a new vocabulary and learn or wonder about all the new breeds, species, and life forms being introduced at almost every turn in the Dune books.

I like how they devote a few pages here and there to fill in missing gaps in the storyline, and I’m not saying this as a bad thing.

for example, there’s a rebel leader/general in this story and Hellhole, like many other books glosses over and passes over the origins and specifics of the dispute in order to get the story moving along and to introduce the characters and establish the plot line.

But what I really liked is that at some point in the book, we get the nitty-gritty on everything that happened and in a concise clear-cut manner, and I think that’s great because while I’m reading the chapters, in the back of my mind I’m wondering, “so what’ happened during the battle that sent the General into exile”.

Hellhole is book One of a 3-part series and I will definitely be looking out for and reading the next two books, either to get closure on what happens next or for enjoyment and entertainment purposes.

Dune Books by Frank Herbert – original series, prequels, and sequels

I picked up my first Dune book back when I was about 11 years old, and back then I was a bookworm who read all types of stuff but never really got into the science fiction genre

The Dune series is by far and way the BEST science fiction series ever written, and I write this knowing that many people agree.

when I first picked it up it was so enticing and it sucked me right in once I saw that there were words in here foreign to me, words like Bene Gesserit, gom jabbar, Fremen, etc…  It was this “foreign-ness” that made me want to struggle through my first reading of dune, but I was reading it from a kid’s point of view; a kid who wanted to read yet another adventure action story, and I wasn’t looking to get bogged down in a series, or an epic.

By the time I was done reading Dune as an 11-year-old, I was getting fluent in Frank Herbert-isms, meaning that the sprinkling in of foreign words to the reading were more easily understood by the time I finished it.

Then I read the rest of the Dune books later on over the course of the year, and even though I read them out of order and confused myself mightily, it also proved that each book by itself is an entertaining read.  The rest of the series was good, if not better because it gave me more adventure, action, plot, intrigue and even more words to learn.

I gave away all my dune books, then about 20 years later, I was in a book store looking for something to read, something light like a john Grisham book… and I saw that there were PREQUELS written by Frank Herbert’s soon and another co-author contributor, and at this time I realized that Frank Herbert had died, (RIP, and thank you for this legendary legacy of literature! ).

The dune prequels = awesomeness because they told us readers how it all began much like the prequels for the star Wars movie showed us how Darth Vader came to be.

After I slammed through all the prequels, I saw that SEQUELS were being written too, holy crap! More Dune books?, Bring it on!

Dune prequels, more details to come later but some summaries first.

In the dune books there was a bias/fear/prejudice against anything technoligically designed that oculd think for itself, or rather….anything that posses machine-like artificla intellegience was banned.

The Butlerian Jihad referenced in the Dune books is covered in the prequels, and the Machine Crusades was a great bookthat covered this in detail.  Other prequels talked about how all the machines came into power and the enslaving of humanity that ensued.

The Dune Sequels discussed what happened after the Scattering, which was when the Gom Emperor Dune let his jihadists run amok, unchecked out into the rest of te universe, and it intorduced some fantastic new evolved species in these sequels too.

that’s what I loved about the dune books, they were always new developments among current species, and sometimes new species developed via intermingling of sects, or just random evolutions and advancements.

If you like the sci-fi genre or just a challenging and enjoyable read, or two, or 12… :) get going with this series but make sure you start with Frank Herbet’s first book in the series, Dune, by frank Herbert…

  • Then read all the rest of the original series of his book, skip the poetry stuff
  • Then read the prequels to get up to speed
  • Then read the sequels…

The Boston Marathon, and Heartbreak “Hill”

I ran my 3d Boston Marathon this year, and am writing this post to tell you what’s it’s like, and what the big deal is regarding “Heartbreak Hill”.

Background: I’ve run 3 Boston Marathons, and this one was the one I trained the hardest and most properly for by doing longer runs, training for months and having specific time goals I wanted to attain.  I started training when I was 229 pounds and was hovering around 180 pounds on race day.  The last marathon I ran was 7 years before this on e(2011) and I weighed 160 pounds at that running.

I’m not a fast runner, and that’s something that is going to have to be trained out of me if I’m ever going to get a time under 4 hours, and that is something that has to be trained INTO me by increasing my natural long distance running pace.  2011 time was 4 hours 7 minutes and 15 seconds, and this was the first time I ran the marathon without having to stop and walk for a little bit (wanted to though! ).

OK, so what’s running the Boston Marathon like?

It’s fun, exciting, long, yet not so long, and a world-class enjoyable event if you try to make it so…

It’s easy for the first 12 miles because the hype is looming large in your consciousness, there’s college girls cheering you rather loudly which adds an extra kick to your stride, and elevation wise, it’s pretty much even/downhill for the first 12 miles or so.

Most first timers will run too fast during these 12 miles then get a nasty wake up call at the first hill they encounter after 12 miles mark.

It also sort of sucks trying to keep to a certain dedicated running pace when you’re dodging runners almost the entire route, which is why it’s best to try and get into a corral for a charity group of runners then take off with them (as a real charity runner of course).

In my opinion, the Boston Marathon has 2 parts, the easy first 12, then the real hard part which is miles 12-26.2.

The hardest hill I encountered, and still remains the hardest part of the route for me, is the big hill at mile 17 or thereabouts…  There’s a little bit of a crowd thinning at this point, everyone’s chilling, sitting, eating, drinking, relaxing and cheering and like most amateur runners, I’m sort of gassed at any distance beyond mile 15, so when there’s a big long hill at mile 17, it’s a killer, especially knowing that there’s the dreaded Heartbreak Hill to encounter still!

Heartbreak Hill or rather the heartbreak hillS, are a joke!

It’s more like a series of hills spread out form miles 20-23 and the reason it’s hyped up so much is because in just about every long distance event, there’s runners dropping down to walking at any mile past 15, but especially so at every mile beyond that point.

So the series of hills encountered in miles 20-23 are runner-killers but in my training I’ve run up worse hills, just not at the 20-23 mile points.

The reason I decided to write about this is, most people think there’s a certain hard part to the Boston Marathon, and that it’s called Heartbreak Hill, when the reality is, any hill or semi-incline past mile marker 15 is going to be tough for amateur runners like myself.  Also, this is the first time I actually remember what these hills were like and was dreading them so much for whatever reason.

So don’t believe the hype about this…. if you can run 15 miles in a training run, you can run continuously at least to mile 20 without stopping, and if you can run 20 miles in a training run, then you can run through the series of heartbreak hills without stopping, too.


Black Swan Movie review, and opinion

So I rented Black Swan after forcing my girlfriend to site through Sucker Punch.  I felt bad I dragged her to see that so I figured I’d get a “girly” movie to make up for the first bad movie we saw that night.

the whole point to this movie was to be amazed at the transformation the White Swan (Natalie Portman) goes through on her way to becoming the Black Swan, or so the critics say/said…

As I watched this movie I was of the mindset that I was gonna like it because it got rave reviews, but the more I watched it, the more I wondered what the fuss was about so I tried harder to dig deeper into my cave-man-brain to try and see what the critics saw that was so great.

Was the dancing transformed?

the character changed that’s for sure, but I guess I was looking for something my Cro-Magnon one-eyebrowed self wasn’t smart enough to see clearly…

Did the White’ Swans dancing during the course of the movie and progress from perfect White Swan-ness into Black Swan style, seductive/ feel-the-music-let-yourself-go-even if-its-imperfect mode?

I can’t dance, and I’m surely no judge of interpreting dance moves but the backup who was good at dancing black swan style surely looked like she was doing the black swan thing better than the Natalie Portman character was at the end.

This movie was entertaining, most guys won’t dig it, except for the lesbian scene.

I tried to like it, I really did but even my GF didn’t like it.

My guy friend at work liked it  a lot though, so it’s really a judgement call, and this Black Swan review probably only leaves you with more doubts than before on whether or not you should go rent it, buy it or whatever (sorry)

Sucker Punch Movie Review

Sucker Punch is the story of a girl who gets sent to a mental institution after an accidental murder is blamed on her.

As it turns out the mental institution doubles as a bordello/whorehouse where young scantily clad ladies dance for clients.

In this fantasy tale, the protagonist strives to free herself (her mind) from the clutches of the evil people running the place, and in order to do so she must complete a series of quests.

What I liked about Sucker Punch:

The action scenes were OK, especially the ones with the ninjas and giant ninja robots, so cool, at least in theory (you can never go wrong when you combine Ninja + robots, known fact!! :) )

What I didn’t like about this movie:

It was rated PG-13 so I though tit was OK to bring my son and his friend to it, but I never expected the movie to be filled with so much scantily-clad teenage girls, then have to uncomfortably sit through that hoping there’s a gory action scene which would get us away from the half naked-ness.

Who I think this movie is good for:

OLDER teenage boys who like mindless movies, with minimal sensible plot lines and lots of skin.

OLDER teenage girls who maybe wanna feel empowered by watching “strong” women kick but ton the big screen

Who this movie is not good for:

Parents who have children under 12, or children who aren’t quite ready for such an overwhelming combination of killing, slashing, buring, explosions and skin…

ALSO: If you have children and you don’t feel comfortable explaining to them what prostitution is, then don’t bring them to see this movie.  If they’re old enough to understand what tha tis, and you’r eOK with the action killing scense, then by all means go see it.

It’s moves along quickly, you won’t be bored, but like I mentioned earlier, the movie did seem kind of long for me because I was uncomfortable with the overall plot (girls dancing for clients and murdering their way out)

Salu International Scam

Apparently the leaders of Salu are swiping downlines from other members and IBOs and placing those members underneath their buddies’ downlines.

So, they’re stealing signups and putting them in other people’s downline to play favorites and to boost income of their buddies in the organization,

More information will follow soon