Tuesday, 24 March 2009

Infinite Superiority

Considering my previous post, I thought I'd add something more positive...

We just watched Slumdog Millionaire this evening. Compare it with Watchmen. Compare the complex plot that steps easily between past and present and is so well constructed that it keeps you actively engaged throughout the film's 120 minutes (rather than making you periodically nod off). Compare the charming narrative that is beautifully written, combining English and Hindi without making a burden of the subtitles. Compare the superb acting founded on the minutia of expression and gesture that is natural and a joy to behold. Combine all that with a great soundtrack, stunning lighting and cinematography and the fact that Kingussie, (where I went to High School) is mentioned rather prominently, and you get a very satisfied Kat.

Plus Danny Boyle is a local lad... just wish I'd been at his local pub when he showed off his oscar!

Sunday, 22 March 2009

Comic? Or Not?

On Friday night I and my family had the misfortune of seeing Watchmen at our local Odeon. It's somewhat of a family tradition now: When my folks visit, at least one night we will usually go for a meal and then catch a film. We like good old-fashioned hokum - action, sci-fi, adventure... anything as long as it's not too high brow. The idea is always to have fun. If we walk away intellectually challenged or provoked into thought, so much the better, but fun is the ultimate goal.

Now, it's admittedly rather slim pickings at this time of the year with Oscar season well and truly over yet still months until summer blockbuster territory, but Watchmen seemed to fit the bill, particularly upon reading Vue Cinema's blurb:

"A complex, multi-layered mystery adventure, 'Watchmen' is set in an alternate 1985 America in which costumed superheroes are part of the fabric of everday society. When one of his former colleagues is murdered, the washed up but no less determined masked vigilante Rorschach sets out to uncover a plot to kill and discredit all past and present superheroes."

One might read the above and think this movie is a comic book superhero romp of the type that has become familiar over the last few years. Perhaps a Spiderman type film - colourful and fun with lots of action? Perhaps one might even hope for something as classy and well constructed as the recent Batman movies? Or maybe the uber stylish Sin City springs to mind? Whatever it is, it's surely got to be fun and exciting, right? Unfortunately, not. Instead, at a length of 162 minutes, it is probably about 157 minutes too long. The plot plods, the action is tacked on, the characters are made of rice paper and the climax leaves you with a bitter aftertaste. Yet it starts with such promise.

An exciting, if dark, opening culminates with the hurling of ex-superhero, 'The Comedian', out of a high-rise window to meet a grisly death on the pavement below. This progresses swiftly into one of the best opening sequences I've seen in a long time: A moving pseudo-biographical montage of the previous 4o years of superhero history plays to Bob Dylan's The Times They Are A-changin'. Great stuff and very stylish! If there had been a bomb threat, a powercut, or an act of God there and then, I think I would have left the cinema happy. Instead I sat through the next two hours wondering if laser eye surgery or even watching paint dry would be more interesting. I'm not going to betray the plot of Watchmen in case any of my readers are brave enough to try it out for themselves, but hopefully I can give an indication of the flaws of the film without giving too much away.


Firstly the acting is generally poor. Jeffrey Morgan, as gritty and fatally flawed superzero 'Comedian', gives quite possibly the best performance of the movie. Billy Crudup isn't bad playing the emotionless but somehow angst-riden, Dr Manhattan. However, their parts are limited and much of the 'action' revolves around Laurie Jupiter (Malin Akerman) and Dan Dreiberg (Patrick Wilson). Neither actor is capable of carrying this film and Akerman in particular is the movie equivalent of chocolate mousse... looks nice but no substance. She was decidedly wooden and completely unconvincing. Wilson might have come across better had another actress been cast to play opposite him but as things stand, his performance is also lack-lustre.


The plot is, at times, satsifyingly complex as you are guided through history in an effort to solve the mystery, but it drags, making the two and a half hour film feel more like four hours. Plus, the climax is about as satisfying as an empty box on christmas day. There was more attention paid to constructing the rich tapestry of the past than to the actual plot, which should have been the driving force. It was almost as if the plot was a device for telling you about the Watchmen history rather than the other way around. The turning points are consistently weak - not due to the events themselves, but due entirely to poor writing that gives you no build up to the most significant events, dumping a character's change of heart or realisation on you with little or no warning. As a result everything felt a bit cobbled together and ultimately any curiosity that might have been built up in the early part of the film is very quickly forgotten.


There is also a good deal of highly gratuitous sex and violence throughout. I am by no means a prude but I was seriously uncomfortable at times and felt that the movie lost, rather than gained, something as a result of this approach. The rape scene was a especially ill conceived and would have been more effective if handled slightly differently. Instead, it felt like violence for violence sake while it could (and should) have been so much more important.

On the whole there are very few positives that I can take away from Watchmen. It does have a decent soundtrack. It has some nice special effects. It has a handful of really nice visual moments. However, this film is schizophrenic: It doesn't know what it wants to be. There is a very definite effort to create a visual style but it's uncohesive, lacking the raw edgy feel of Sin City or the glorious visual riot of something like 300. It achieves something more like Spiderman or Superman, but this too is disrupted so that the film doesn't really achieve any solid visual or generic style. Watchmen wants to be stylish and grown-up but also wants to be a generic action/superhero flick. The sex and violence are a failed attempt to bring the film into the adult market but instead it simply gives the scenes a bolt-on feel and prevents the movie from having a wider, less sophisticated appeal. It wants to be thought provoking but the only thoughts it provoked in me were suicidal ones. It wants to be clever but the lack of a skilfully crafted script makes it plod instead. It's a shame - it had the potential to be much better but fell flat on almost every front.

Wednesday, 18 March 2009

Willy Wonka's Choco Recession Bites


This morning, while trying desperately to stay awake long enough to eat my crumpets and drink my coffee, Sky News did a piece on the Somerdale Cadburys Chocolate factory near Keynsham in the West Country. It seems that Cadburys are planning to close the factory by 2010, with the loss of 500 jobs in an area that is already struggling in the midst of the recession. Somerdale, and the Bournville factory in Birmingham, which is also set to close with a loss of a further 200 jobs, will be relocated to Poland. However, it seems that this move is part of a long term cost cutting exercise that began last year and is despite a strong performance in a difficult economic climate (in February this year, Reuters reported 2008 pretax profit of £559m with a projected growth in 2009 of around 4%).

This prompted me to wonder two things:

1) How realistic was portraying Willy Wonka as a local hero when he apparently sacked all his workers and hired Oompa-Loompan immigrants at half the salary? And

2) How many other companies were forcing redudancies and making sweeping cost cutting measures while hiding behind the economic downturn?

You may glance back over this blog to find a post concerning the closure of the First Choice Holidays call centre in Salford which certainly has an air of underhandedness about it. How much was their decision influenced by their long term plans, and how much by the recession? At least TUI Travel will be continuing to operate from the UK: I find it strange and troubling that a name with such a strong association with the British national identity should think it a good idea to move a sizeable chunk of their operation to Europe.

Food for thought indeed... or at least chocolate for thought.

Sunday, 8 March 2009

New Trek Trailer

OK, so the voicings of my blog have been far too preachy, far too ranty and far too whingey of late. Time for upbeat happiness!

A new Star Trek trailer has been released.

Despite being a devoted Trekkie for most of my life, I can hardly claim to have been excited at the prospect of the new Trek Fest, even with JJ Abrams at the helm (who, in my opinion is a god among men, rather like my other most favourite artists: Aaron Sorkin and Peter David). It's my love of the Trek icon that made me sigh with despair when the new movie was announced. Voyager was supremely disappointing and could have been so much better if the folks in charge hadn't become bored by it. However, Enterprise was the really crushing blow. Could the franchise take the weight of another 're-imagining'? I feared it might not. And as someone who would kinda like to have the many Trek stories that are banked up in my brain unleashed on the world, that prospect worried me. Casting did briefly peak my interest - Zachary Quinto as Spock is inspired and Simon Pegg as Scotty is.... interesting - but I still didn't feel that enamoured, particularly as the first couple of trailers were rather bland. The most recent one, however? Now that's more like it...


Check it out: http://www.apple.com/trailers/paramount/startrek/

Time will tell if it's as good as the franchise deserves or the name 'JJ Abrams' promises, but for one bright, shining moment I'm hopeful.


While we're talking movie trailer eye candy, another one that's worth a look (hubby stumbled across it on Friday) is 'Knowing' with Nick Cage. As an actor, Cage's roles are bit hit and miss. He's done some great stuff like Con Air, Lord of War and Gone in Sixty Seconds; and he's done some utter tripe! (Need I mention The Wicker Man, World Trade Centre and Ghost Rider?) The premise of this movie is a bit like Next - predicting the future and preventing disaster - and I suspect Cage will play pretty much the same character. But that's OK, because he always plays the same character! This is not going to be intellectually chellenging, but I'll settle for something that's lightly thought provoking with lots of cool special effects. Either way, the trailer looks interesting!

http://www.apple.com/trailers/summit/knowing/

Thursday, 5 March 2009

A Licence to Print Money

Today, the Bank of England has made the decision to print more money.... because this tactic worked so well for Zimbabwe! The really troubling thing, however, is that it seems they don't actually print any more money. Instead the BoE presses a button and, by magic, the UK suddenly has £75 billion more than we had a moment ago. Can I have some, please?

It reminds me of something we were discussing at work recently. A colleague proposed that instead of pumping the billions into the banks who, lets be honest, have failed us all, we should rather give £1,000 to every UK citizen - man, woman and child. At a current UK population of nearly 61 million, that would only be £61 billion. Bargain! Especially when we consider that the banks have already cost us over £100 billion! Imagine having a grand gifted to you, right now. What would you do with it? Some people will spend it, blow it on a holiday or a shopping spree. Retail is saved! A family might pool it's cash and use it to put a deposit on a house, or to buy a new car. The housing market and manufacturing industries get a boost. Others will invest it in pensions, stock, or savings and the banks get money to lend to the rest of us. It's almost as magic as printing more money!

But seriously, regardless of the action taken thus far in the UK and abroad in the face of the recession, there is one thing that continues to bug me. Ultimately, the situation that we're in right now is because the culture and economy of the UK (and many other nations!) is built on credit. We're living in a throw-away society and we're groomed from an early age to get into debt. From the moment we enter college or university, we're offered student loans, personal loans and credit cards and the average student will leave a three year degree with over £17,000 of debt, even before they have a mortgage. As of the end of January this year, total UK personal debt stood at £1,457 billion (£1,225 billion in secured loans and £233 billion in consumer credit). When and where will this end? The government is desparately trying to get the banks lending again: why? So the UK population can get further into debt? I am by no means an expert in economics but I do know enough to realise that strong growth is not possible without an eventual correction - a crash. Therefore, it seems to me that we're standing on a precipice: we can choose to take a step back and put the breaks on spiralling personal (as well as national and commercial) debt, or we can do the opposite and run forward towards the edge at full speed.

Even if 'printing' more money works and eases the recession, I worry that all this action will amount to is the financial equivalent of plastering over cracks and hoping for the best.

Sunday, 1 March 2009

Sucks to be Proven Right

It's at times like this that I really feel like a bit of a doom-sayer. I distinctly remember, on 9/11, standing in the TV lounge of a hotel in Tunisia saying that the twin towers were coming down. I'd seen enough movies and 'Seconds from Disasters' to know that the buildings, already compromised by the force of the impact of the two aircraft, we weakening by the second because of the intensity of the blaze. Aircraft fuel burns very hot and it was inevitable that this would eventually heat the buildings' metal sub-structures to the point that they could no longer support the weight of the floors above the blaze. Sometimes it sucks to be right.

A little over a year ago I left First Choice Holidays in Salford following the merger of the two package holiday giants, First Choice and Thomson. Like most people, I have bills to pay and even though my hubby works full time too, my salary is needed to supplement his income. I didn't want to be left in a position where I was made redundant with no job to go to, so I jumped long before I was pushed. When I chose to leave there were many people that questioned my decision: I'd been there over 5 years so was in line for a decent redundancy payout. In response, I distinctly remember saying that I was certain the call centre would close. Even after the company said that they were going to maintain the presence of a customer service department in this location, I was still sure that, ultimately, the office would close... maybe not in a few days or weeks or months, but in a matter of years, Salford would be robbed of a key employer. I had seen it happen before: In the 5 years that I worked for First Choice I saw the closure of the Kilmarnock call centre; I saw the closure of the closure of the call centre up near Teesside; and finally the closure of the airline customer service centre at Manchester Airport. Each closure brought more pressure and longer hours on my colleagues in Salford, and they continued to work with crappy pay and little complaint.

Many of the people that I worked with have already been made redundant. I know several that are still out of work and, although it's more luck than anything else, I am thankful every day that I didn't agree to hang on for the sake of a bit of cash. Choosing to leave means that I was able to pick and choose my employer and as a result I managed to get a really good job that is essentially 'recession proof'.

This time last year Tui Travel PLC made the decision to operate a customer service centre at the Salford site, making hundreds of local people redundant, but effectively securing the jobs of hundreds more. This week, Tui Travel PLC have announced that they are closing the First Choice Holidays call centre in Salford altogether, effectively pulling the rug from under those people who have stayed loyal to a company that has done them know favours. These people have been through a lot in the last 12 to 14 months and must've thought that they were safe.

I think the words of one First Choice employee on the Manchester Evening News website sums the situation up entirely:
x
"They put us through this last year, then announced in October that due to a business reshuffle they were closing down Coventry and creating a dedicated customer service centre in Salford, covering all aspects of holidays, weddings, cruise etc. Thinking our jobs were safe we all pulled together migrating all bookings on the old system onto the Thomson system. Now this has been completed they say that Manchester Ops are closing and everything is being relocated to Coventry. It stinks, they used and abused our loyalty, getting us to do a job nobody wanted to do or was not capable of doing down there. Some of the girls in CS [customer service] received 30 sacks of mail just before Christmas from Coventry, now that its done, we're surplus to requirements."

These are the people who look after you before and after your holiday. The bosses don't give a hoot once they've got your money, but the people who work in this call centre do care - otherwise they wouldn't do the job. TUI's actions are shameful.