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littlerhymes ([personal profile] littlerhymes) wrote2025-07-12 11:24 pm

Sydney Film Festival 2025

I saw a bunch of movies at Sydney Film Festival, several weeks ago. My favourite was probably The Circle (2000, Jafar Panahi) screening as part of a Panahi career retrospective. He's an Iranian director who has been persecuted, imprisoned, and forbidden to leave Iran at various times, and has won numerous film awards.

This movie is set over the span of one day, starting in a hospital maternity ward and ending in a prison cell, giving glimpses into the lives of women under the Islamic State regime. A grandmother laments the birth of a girl because it will mean her daughter (the baby's mother) is likely going to be divorced by her husband; a young woman newly out of prison tries to secure passage home; a woman tries to secure an abortion; and so on, through all the hours of the day. It's so skilfully directed and so naturalistically acted and shot, each storyline bleeding into the next so simply. Panahi was present at this screening and took questions after the movie (some much worse than others, as is the way with public Q&As).

I also had a great time, in a very different way, with Lesbian Space Princess (2025, Emma Hough Hobbs, Leela Varghese). Princess Saira of Clitopolis, a world entirely peopled by lesbians, must go on a quest to rescue her ex-girlfriend, who has been kidnapped and held hostage by Straight White Maliens. This is a silly, funny and very Australian animation with art in a style that reminded me of Adventure Time. The humour is mostly as obvious and silly as indicated by the names; and the other villain of the story, aside from the incels, is Saira's own lack of self-esteem.

There's some very knowing nods here - there is a "problematic (space) ship", the main character's magical girl moment is straight from Revolutionary Girl Utena, one of the other main character is from a "gay-pop" group who runs away from overwork, etc. This session was introduced at the film festival by the directors, who said "we are two nervous people, between us we made up one confident person who could direct this movie."

I liked The Mastermind (2025, Kelly Reichardt). Set in 1970s against the backdrop of the student protests against the Vietnam war, a struggling suburban dad decides to rob a museum of several artworks. He recruits a few people and so begins a rather terrible heist. This is a slow moving, understatedly funny movie, watching all of his schemes unravel in the most obvious ways.

And I liked Twinless (2024, James Sweeney) - when Roman's twin Rocky dies, he ends up at a grief counselling group where he meets Dennis, who has similarly lost his twin Dean. The two strike up a friendship, with Roman the gruff hockey loving straight guy from Idaho, and Dennis the urbane gay guy. Then the movie flashes back, and there's several very funny and/or devastating reveals. It's structurally interesting and the black humour made my neighbour physically cringe at times with second hand embarrassment.

And then there were 2 movies I straight up did not enjoy. Both were documentaries unfortunately lol.

Tokito (2024, Aki Mizutani) subtitled "The 540-Day Journey of a Culinary Maverick" is purportedly a documentary about chef Yoshinori Ishii, who opened a new restaurant in Japan in 2023 after many years living and working overseas. I say 'purportedly' because this is nothing more than a glossy advertisement. It is beautifully shot, gorgeously filmed, but it is just an ad.

The Shadow Scholars (2024, Eloise King) is a documentary about Oxford Professor Patricia Kingori's research into the world of "contract cheating", focusing on the booming trade in Kenyan writers selling their work to students in the global north. The subject is fascinating and I was so interested to hear from the Kenyan writers - these intelligent writers who are capable of doing the work on their own merit but the credit and qualifications go to the privileged students who can buy their labour, reinforcing global inequalities. However - it's a very clumsy and vague documentary that spends a lot of time on filler interstitials - my god, yet another panning shot of Oxford?
helloladies: Gray icon with a horseshoe open side facing down with pink text underneath that says Sidetracks (sidetracks)
Hello, Ladies ([personal profile] helloladies) wrote in [community profile] ladybusiness2025-07-11 06:51 pm

Sidetracks - July 11, 2025

Sidetracks is a collaborative project featuring various essays, videos, reviews, or other Internet content that we want to share with each other. All past and current links for the Sidetracks project can be found in our Sidetracks tag. You can also support Sidetracks and our other work on Patreon.
Read more... )
maharetr: Comic and movie images of Aisha's eyebrow ring (The Losers) (Default)
maharetr ([personal profile] maharetr) wrote2025-07-11 09:26 pm
Entry tags:

Reading, inspired by actually finishing something and still having several things on the go

The incandescent by Emily Tesh. DAMN, girl can write. This was an impeccable love letter to teaching (in UK private schools, anyway), to teenagers, and to teachers. It's a very well done magic system, I appreciated the shit out of Saffy's character, and several moments were downright electrifyingly gripping. The ending, tho? Smidge too pat, and I'm bewildered about what happened to [redacted character] and their actual motivation. Anyone who's also read it feel like weighing-in in the comments? That aside, I loved being able to curl up in this world, and I'm sad it's over. I wavered back and forth on Tesh's novellas, but between Some desperate glory (real good, not perfect) and this (REAL good, 95% perfect), I'd definitely pick up the next thing she puts out.
Note: there's now epic spoilers in the comments, heads up.

Currently reading:
The hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy by Douglas Adams. Rereading, for Elle Cordova's patreon bookclub. First 10 or so pages in and I'd forgotten how sharp it is. It's a real pleasure.

All systems red by Martha Wells. I remember why I bounced off this the first time during Hugo reading. I totally believe that the writing gets much tighter as the series goes on, and I'm tempted to jump to either book four, as [personal profile] fred_mouse started there and said they had no problems doing so, or dive headfirst into the TV series. Probably the latter.

ETA: Have now watched ep1 of the series, and hells yeah, there's that worldbuilding and vibrancy that I was missing.
fred_mouse: line drawing of sheep coloured in queer flag colours with dream bubble reading 'dreamwidth' (Default)
fred_mouse ([personal profile] fred_mouse) wrote2025-07-10 03:53 pm

Books with genAI?

For Reasons, I'm looking for fiction books--preference for kids, but any age will do--with anything that looks a bit like generative AI. Chatbots in particular would be a win. I've been doing a fascinating dive into the librarything tag cloud*. Note that at this point it doesn't have to be a well written or readable book

adding: I'll take recommendations for artificial general intelligence as well; I'll care about the line between them later, when I've used them to generate the relevant keywords

What I've found so far

  • Do You Remember Being Born - Sean Michaels
  • Artificial: A love Story - Amy Kurzweil
  • The Future Happens Twice Trilogy - Matt Browne
  • We Solve Murders - Richard Osman (I didn't see why in the blurb, but the tag was there, and the library has it)
  • Tell the Machine Goodnight - Katie Williams

Not found, but remembered: "Better Living Through Algorithms" by Naomi Kritzer, which is questionable because it is probably meant to be artificial general intelligence rather than generative AI, but at this point I'm not being that picky because the hit rate is so low.

also! the closest I've got at this point in kids books is Wild Robot and the sequels; failing to work out where to find more. (in english. I've found a book that looks perfect in Chinese)

*so thankful that people put all sorts of tags on their books; I'm having a great time working out what maps to what tag. If I get it together I'll write a post off the clock about what I found that was truly batshit

renay: photo of the milky way from new zealand on a clear night (Default)
Renay ([personal profile] renay) wrote in [community profile] ladybusiness2025-07-08 12:36 am

Let's Get Literate! July 2025 Hopefuls

Well, I made a reading list last month...how did I do? Read more... )
littlerhymes: (Default)
littlerhymes ([personal profile] littlerhymes) wrote2025-07-06 04:21 pm

June reading

Last Night in Montreal - Emily St John Mandel
Midwinter Nightingale - Joan Aiken
The Witch of Clatteringshaws - Joan Aiken
Little Fires Everywhere - Celeste Ng
36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem - Nam Le
Red Sword - Bora Chung, transl. Anton Hur
A Magical Girl Retires - Park Seolyeon, transl. Anton Hur
The Spear Cuts Through Water - Simon Jimenez
Batman: Wayne Family Adventures 2, 3 and 4 - CRC Payne, Starbite
Batman: Nightwalker - Marie Lu
Nightwing 1: Leaping into the Light - Tom Taylor, Bruno Redondo

books and comics )
fred_mouse: Night sky, bright star, crescent moon (goals)
fred_mouse ([personal profile] fred_mouse) wrote2025-07-05 02:06 pm

Ridiculous weekend plans

I need some down time this weekend. I have any number of things I want to have done, but I'm restricting myself to things that can be done sitting on the bed, minimal movement. To whit:

  1. Finish reading The Dictionary of Lost Words - DONE! Highly recommended fictional account of the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary
  2. Read Attached - book on romantic relationships. in progress (started Saturday)
  3. Finish Creating a Second Brain - collected from the library yesterday, read a chapter on the bus
  4. Finish Library of the Dead - this one is due back on Monday, and being Libby, will get autoreturned.

Which, not actually outside the bounds, as long as I am actually doing those.

stretch goals, of which I'm hoping to achieve at least one

  1. close tabs (current: 526, goal: <500) in safari
  2. finish reading the fic I'm part way through (there might be more than one of these.
  3. progress Eldest's quilt (this is not an 'on the bed' activity; it is added so that if I need to get up and move around, I have a task)
  4. write up my goals for the next 6 months
  5. blog post about how the study is going.
fred_mouse: screen cap of google translate with pun 'owl you need is love'. (owl)
fred_mouse ([personal profile] fred_mouse) wrote2025-07-03 11:41 am
Entry tags:

typo du jour

..look at the underlying code or moth...

  • me, describing someone else's approach to understanding large language models.
alierak: (Default)
alierak ([personal profile] alierak) wrote in [site community profile] dw_maintenance2025-06-30 03:18 pm

Rebuilding journal search again

We're having to rebuild the search server again (previously, previously). It will take a few days to reindex all the content.

Meanwhile search services should be running, but probably returning no results or incomplete results for most queries.
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charlottechill ([personal profile] charlottechill) wrote in [community profile] mag7daybook2025-06-30 10:56 am

Blast from the past

Wow. I haven't been here in *sooo* long.

Escapade 35.5 (online) inspired me to poke around my old, much-loved fandoms, and of course M7 is one.

I'm glad people still post occasionally. I'm glad folks still enjoy the show.