Jan 19 2010

‘Spider-Man’ to be rebooted with Marc Webb, My Tips for Him

Word just hit on the streets that Marc Webb has been tapped to direct the new Spider-Man reboot after Sam Raimi walked away from Spider-Man 4 just a few weeks ago. Cinematical has the details of Webb vault from directing music videos to possible blockbusters (with a little (500) Days of Summer in the middle).

I love the Tobey Maguire trilogy (I even like the last one despite its flaws), so I was disappointed to see a fourth movie fall apart. However, I think Webb has some great potential to make a Spider-Man film that can resonate emotionally, rather than just another special effects film.

Here’s my list of suggestions for the Spider-Man reboot:

  1. Take liberties with the story: While I initially disliked the decision to incorporate Parker’s web slinging abilities to his spider powers (in the comics he makes his own web-shooting bracelets), it was ultimately the right decision for simplicity in a film. In any case, Spider-Man has a long twisted history to pull from and it would be a shame not to tap the best parts.
  2. Don’t take too many liberties: the Mary Jane & Gwen Stacy crisscrosses in the previous trilogy eroded one of the strongest elements of Spider-Man’s backstory. Have Gwen in there, have her die when the time is right (maybe not the first movie), have Peter take this hard. Maybe then, in the followup movie, you can have a little Mary Jane.
  3. Service the fans: Raimi did a great job of seeding Peter’s world with people the fans knew and tantalizing them with villains like Dr. Curt Connors, but the followup to the wink was infrequently realized. (It’s too bad we’ll never get to see the Lizard.) Webb’s got a whole new start so I’d love to see some off-hand references to Eddie Brock and Norman Osborn even if they don’t show up at first, just make sure they show up eventually. Marvel is doing a great job at this with their own Avenger properties, for example: SHIELD references in Iron Man or Stark showing up The Incredible Hulk (with more to come). Steal this page from their playbook.
  4. Venom: for fuck sake, get him in there. Perhaps only as Eddie Brock in the first movie, but don’t wait until the last bit of the third movie. I’d ask for a Carnage but it really couldn’t be done right with a PG-13 rating that Sony would want.

Jan 11 2009

Favorite iPhone Apps of 2008

  1. Instapaper – Synergizes web reading between the phone and your computer through ‘the cloud.’
  2. Evernote – Synchronizes notes between the phone and the computer through ‘the cloud.’
  3. Delivery Status Touch – Tracks orders/packages/deliveries, gets information through ‘the cloud.’
  4. Air Sharing – Allows you to copy all sorts of files to the phone over WiFi for viewing and reference without any network access
  5. Now Playing – The best way to look up movie times and reviews. Uses phone location data to find theaters around you.

A note about the cloud:

Cloud synchronization is a key theme for many great mobile apps, because, with a persistent internet connection, the iPhone is a revolutionary tool to connect your life when you’re out and about with your life on your computer. This is vitally important to mobile computing because no one wants to enter much information on a little device, but we want that information quickly accessible when we’re out and about. Synching with the could is already working magic for the first 3 apps above (they wouldn’t be on any top list without this feature), and you’ll be seeing it all over the place over the next year (for example, iWork.com).


Jan 10 2009

Favorite Albums of 2008

  1. Nine Inch Nails – Ghosts I-IV
    Sure Richard D. James did it first (twice), but Trent and company knocked this one out of the park with very organic ambient music that pulses with life. The fact that it was all done without a label makes it even better.
  2. Meiko – Meiko
    The indie folk genera gets injected with wit and charm. She’ll be everywhere in 2009…
  3. The Black Keys – Attack & Release
    A rift heavy album that is packed from start to finish with great tracks and not a single bad song.
  4. Ra Ra Riot – Rhumb Lime
    My long time favorites finally released their full length this year, a wonderful splash of songs which celebrate life, longing, and love.
  5. The Raconteurs – Steady as She Goes
    The boys from Tennessee (as Jack White likes to say) delve even deeper into Southern Rock and mine out one great guitar rift after another layered with some great vocal interplay between White and Benson.

Jan 1 2009

Favorite Games of 2008

My favorite games of 2008 are presented here in no particular order:

  • Braid and Mirror’s Edge share an award for reinventing platforming, a genre I normally dislike, in new and supremely creative ways. Braid is probably the most creative video game I’ve ever played while Mirror’s Edge has some of the slickest design aesthetics.
  • Far Cry 2 and Burnout Paradise share another award for bringing great open-world gameplay to their respective genres (shooter and driving respectively). Both succeed because they make learning the environment (be it shortcuts through city streets or sniper hills over mercenary camps) just as important as raw driving or shooting ability.
  • Left 4 Dead, Resistance 2, and PixelJunk Monsters all get awards for perfecting co-op gameplay. The best parts of these games are impossible to win without good team-work, but that requirement feels more like an opportunity than a burden.
  • The Witcher Enhanced Edition and Mass Effect for PC prove that even great games can be better with some polish. Both games suffered from dramatically long load times in their original forms but that is no longer much of an issue in the improved versions. The Witcher also received the kind of polish that it always deserved in its Enhanced Edition which smoothed out the uneven dialog and cumbersome inventory management. Mass Effect also got some inventory improvements in the PC version along with better squad control. There are two take-away lessons here: it’s hard to do an RPG right but extra work can make a big difference. I hope that publishers looking to rush RPGs out the door in the future take note of this; some great RPG games have died unnecessary deaths because of hurried ship dates (See Vampire: Bloodlines or Knights of the Old Republic II).
  • Sins of a Solar Empire get big kudos for transplanting the one-more-turn ad-infinitum addictiveness of games like Civilization into a RTS game that’s nearly impossible to stop playing. It’s so good, in fact, that after two marathon games when it first came out I’ve been loathe to pick it up again because I worry it will consume me.

Jan 8 2008

Top 5 Albums of 2007

I present my Top 5 Albums of 2007:

  1. FeistThe Reminder: Overplayed and too popular now (so I might have to hate it henceforth), but this doesn’t change the fact that it’s an amazing album of indie rock at the core. Not having any track less than good on the album helps too.
  2. LCD SoundsystemSound of Silver: Electronic music taken to whole new places with touching and insightful lyrics.
  3. EarlimartMentor Tormentor: A masterpiece of the introspective with layers of strings upon haunting vocals upon wonderfully tuned distortion.
  4. Ra Ra RiotEP: A band that you’ve never heard of (unless I’ve already shilled them to you) perfected the art of rocking out to the cello & violin.
  5. Cinematic OrchestraMa Fleur: Listening to this album is like watching your favorite a bittersweet film; if you close your eyes you can see it play out right in front of you.