Monday, January 30, 2017

Protest against Trump's #MuslimBan in London

Owen Jones called for emergency demonstrations against Trump's #MuslimBan and the UK's complicity to be held across the UK today, Monday 30th January 2017. Here are my photographs from the London gathering outside Downing Street.

 








 
 
 

Sunday, January 29, 2017

Enjoyed Hidden Figures? Chalk it up to the film's blackboard moments

Taraji P. Henson as Katherine Goble in Hidden Figures (2016)

blackboard moment

noun.

A classic film scene in which the undervalued and/or bullied protagonist effortlessly solves a problem, especially mathematical, and displays their calculations on a blackboard. Often, everyone then recognises their brilliance.

"Taraji P. Henson should have been nominated for that series of great blackboard moments."


Hidden Figures



Oscar-nominated Hidden Figures stars Taraji P. Henson as Katherine Goble, a mathematician at NASA who can do analytic geometry (whatever that means). This expertise allows her promotion from 'computer', reading data and carrying out mathematical tasks, to a member of the all-white, all-male top team engaged in cutting-edge research for human spaceflight. This biographical drama is basically chalkboard moment after chalkboard moment, which I think makes the film even more uplifting.

Good Will Hunting



The classic edition. Unrecognised genius Will Hunting (Matt Damon) is employed as a janitor at MIT. A professor played by papa SkarsgÄrd challenges his students to solve a complex mathematical problem, and Will casually (and anonymously) puts the answer up on a board. In this clip, the professor puts up another, more difficult, problem. Using a blackboard in the corridor, Will solves that one too. Cue "oh my god" moment. How d'you like them apples?

x+y


Too shy to speak up in class, Nathan is a boy genius who struggles to fit in at a maths camp in Taiwan, where he is preparing to compete in the International Mathematical Olympiad. In this scene, he screws up his courage and talks through his solution to a maths problem. This is an unusually accessible explanation - a blackboard moment for normal people. (Well, sort of.) That could have made the scene less wowing, but its emotional impact more than makes up for the problem's simplicity.

Matilda



I was obsessed with Matilda as a child. Making chocolate fly into your hands and humiliating teachers? Hell yes. In this scene, Matilda uses her powers to pose as a ghost and accuse Miss Trunchbull of murder. Cool.

School of Rock



The blackboard moment that springs to mind in Jack Black's comedy about an unemployed, failing musician pretending to be a teacher is somewhat different. It doesn't quite fit the mould, but who's complaining? No one who's ever seen School of Rock will forget the scene in which he tries and fails to write Mr. Schneebly on the board.

You could also argue it has another, slightly more traditional blackboard moment. In the montage scene above, Dewey starts to become a real teacher, and uses the chalkboard to create a glorious mind map of musical genres and rock bands.

Pay It Forward (2000)

Find other examples of this trope in The Man Who Knew InfinityPay It Forward and Rushmore. A more basic version is simply equations-on-a-blackboard, which feature in countless films from A Beautiful Mind and 21 to A Serious Man and The Theory of Everything. Kevin Spacey, in particular, seems to have done loads.

A bit of Googling reveals that nerds get quite frustrated about gobbledygook on background blackboards and basic theories being used to show off a character's supposedly astounding intelligence. But in this post-truth, fake news world, I really don't mind. I always find this type of empty, 'look at this genius' stuff thoroughly enjoyable (probably also because I am clueless beyond GCSE-level maths).

Have I missed any good ones? What is your favourite blackboard moment in a film?

Monday, January 16, 2017

Film: La La Land

Spoilers ahead.


Bring back happily ever after, that's what I say.

How many of you have ever felt personally victimised by Damien Chazelle? A follow-up to the brilliantly tense and passionate Whiplash, I went into the director's latest film, a romantic musical comedy-drama set in Los Angeles, thinking I was about to enjoy a classic love story. That's what the trailer led us to believe. (In fact, it cheekily highlighted moments from the film's final 'what could have been' sequence rather than its actual events.)

In the vein of '90s and '00s films such as My Best Friend's Wedding and The Break-Up, we were handed an anti-Hollywood love story. I should have guessed. The references to Casablanca were just one of the clues hinting that Mia (Emma Stone) and Sebastian (Ryan Gosling) were not going to make it. In some ways, it was traditional Hollywood, and I'm adult enough to acknowledge that.


But La La Land's dream-like quality and excessively cheerful opening scene seemed to suggest we'd be rewarded with a happy ending. The magic, the tap dancing, the stars: it all pointed to fate, serendipitous love. To spoil the best 'our song' a couple has ever shared, and mislead the audience by appearing to follow a predictable structure with a break-up in the middle, felt like emotional betrayal.

I understand the message of the film was that relationships doesn't always last forever, but can nevertheless profoundly change you in positive ways and that's honest and good. Oh yes, it's ever so mature and grown-up. But how could you (yes you, Damien) promise a fantasy, then punch me in the gut with a huge and hurtful heap of reality? That is just cruel.

8/10

(Surprised by my score? I loved most of the film. That's why I was so devastated. And I will never see it again.)