Had a movieful weekend:
Everybody Street. A fantastic documentary about street photography in New York. Even if you're not into photography at all, this is worth watching as it will help you look at fleeting moments differently. I found it quite inspiring.
Pulp Fiction: Bought the BluRayz for like $7 at Tar-jay when I was back in the US some time ago. Finally got around to watching it. Delightful.
Akira (Really Fucking Loud Edition): I've raved about this festival before, and I know I sound like a broken record. My words do it no justice. Most anime fans (especially those that read the manga first) diss the movie regularly for being too compressed. I feel this is unfair as such arguments overlook a lot of the cinematic feats of the movie... the most noticeable is the perfect infusion of the soundtrack. On par (and maybe even better) than Blade Runner in that respect. How can you not like mass destruction being played to such soothing music?
Anywho, with the foreknowledge of what the experience would be like, I hand-picked a mate for a man date. We were having some beers and dinner when I mentioned it didn't have subtitles and he kind of freaked.
Thanks to the internet, we got a timed script. That worked out perfectly -- he was really moved by the whole experience. It kind of made me lament the old days of analogue subtitling. The early internet had tons and tons of timed (and untimed) scripts available for download (and had to be run on an amiga!), and were relatively easy to find. What the fuck happened? It took me 20 minutes of scouring (and being unable to download the SRT file which I think was ripped from the official disc) until I decided to seek help here. RIP that part of the intarwebs?