Categories
Movies Reviews

Review: I’m Not There

I’m Not There

I’m Not There is a brilliant, but flawed beautifully strange movie. As I’m not particularly knowledgeable about the life and work of Bob Dylan I cannot say whether it is an effective study of the man, I would suspect that if you were looking for that then Don’t Look Back or No Direction Home would suit your needs better.

All the six actors playing the part of ‘Dylan’ are wonderful although through no fault of his Heath Ledger’s Robbie Clark seems the least Dylan-like. Of the supporting actors I think Bruce Greenwood deserves a lot of praise for his dual roles of Keenan Jones and Pat Garrett. It’s packed to the gills with references to or homages of other movies and references to the life and work of Bob Dylan himself of course although I think I probably missed far more of the latter. With the Richard Gere segment being heavily influenced by Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid it is appropriate that Kris Kristofferson be the narrator for the story.

My two main criticisms of the film are that there is almost no narrative flow between each of the segments, the film mostly just seems to cut between them at random and it seems unnecessarily long I don’t believe the film would suffer from having many of the scenes cut entirely.

Categories
Computing

Dutch RFID transit pass cracked and cloned

Roel Verdult, an MSc. student from the Raboud University of Nijmegen, used an RFID tag emulator to perform a successful practical relay attack on the single-use OV Chipkaart (the Dutch RFID public transportation card), that uses MIFARE Ultralights. [via]

His report is titled Proof of concept, cloning the OV-Chip card (pdf link)

Categories
Copyright Uncategorized

Copyright regime vs. civil liberties

In this special interview Rick Falkvinge, the founder and the leader of Swedish Pirate Party, gives his own views on the wildly heated political filesharing debate in Sweden, evaluates the political and technological prospects of P2P and talks about the dangers of citizen surveillance and Big Brother society. “Our enemy has no intellectual capital to bring to the battle”

Categories
Reviews TV

The Wire: 5.02 Unconfirmed Reports

Bubbles has been clean 15 months but he still can’t face his deomns and hasn’t gotten over the death of Sharrad.

This ain’t Aruba, bitch. – Bunk Moreland

Foreshadowing on Lester? “I could die happy”
Lecturing Sydnor on the attributes of such a career case. It’ll either make you or break you.

Snoop has an itchy trigger finger and wants to get on with enforcing some discipline only what with all the surveillance they can’t.

Fucking games’ rigged! – McNulty

Carcetti is not even thinking of finishing his term. But is thinking of running for Governor 2 years in. Echo what I said last week how the hell does he think he can do that without getting a result in turning Baltimore around? Is he hoping he can continue on the surge that saw him win the mayoral election?

Mother of four always catching hell. No statuesque blondes anymore.

McNulty arrives on a bus to investigate the death of a mother of four.

Whitting wants to depict the Dickensian aspects of kid’s lives. Meta commentary on season 4 of the Wire. Doesn’t want an amorphous series depicting society’s ills.

Avon and Marlo – Westside!
Nothing but love in my heart for West side niggas

Templeton has a hard time getting the baseball opening day story he wants.

The MCU can’t shop Marlo’s murders to the FBI because of Carcetti pissing off the US attorney.

Monk – Go west coast.
Snoop – Fuck those west coast niggas in B-more we aim to hit a nigga.

Although it’s not shown it is implied that Templeton’s solution to finding he’s wasted a day at the ball game and has no story to show for it is to make shit up and the lack of corroboration only adds to the sense of veracity of his fictional creation. Or at least Klebanow believes it but Haynes is thinking there’s something hinky.

Having dropped out of school Michael is now being schooled by the likes of Chris and Snoop in the art of the hit. Arrive early no surprises. But Michael has a conscience about killing folk especially for the slightest of reasons such as rumours floating about on the street that Junebug may have dissed Marlo. Meanwhile Avon has hooked Marlo up with Ivan so that he can help him set up a meeting with Vondas.

Bubbles needs a reason to live. Hope helping out at the soup kitchen makes him feel worthwhile and gives him some way to justify his existence.

Has Jimmy gone too far with this serial killer preying on the homeless shit? I’m not sure how he thinks that doing this will allow them to get back up on Marlo, even if the bosses do open up the faucet how does Jimmy think he can get away with diverting money and resources away from the serial killer case.

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Uncategorized

White Dwarf game

White Dwarf is basically three games in one involving moving with your mouse a small white circle which exerts a gravitational like pull on other coloured circles which cross the gameboard.

I think the most fun play mode is Original in which you have to collect the green circles and then touch a blue circle to bank the points you’ve accumulated all whilst avoiding the red circles.

If that description makes little sense I urge you to go play it and you’ll soon pick up the knack of it.

My best score so far 15590

Best score on the Avoid mode is around 56 million!

Categories
Reviews TV

The Wire: 5.01 More With Less

So we return to Baltimore for season 5 of arguably the best show on television The Wire and we are straight into Bunk in the interrogation room with a young black man. Bunk and the other murder police prey upon the stupidity of their suspect by making him think that his mate has ratted him out and then they pull the old Xerox machine as lie detector gag that we last saw way back when in Homicide: Life on the streets. Apparently this is based on a real incident that David Simon wrote about in his book Homicide.

“The bigger the lie, the more they believe.” – Bunk Moreland

Seems that we may get some of the threads left hanging from season 2 of the show tied up as the credit sequence features a photo of the late Frank Sobotka and we get a mention about McNulty’s undercover vice operation that went all the way to home base shall we say.

Seems that in the year and a bit since the events of season 4 that Sergeant Ellis Carver has been given a promotion to Acting shift Lieutenant in the Western. I think Carver has come a long way since the early days when he was partnered up with Herc and has become a really good officer first under Bunny Colvin and now Lieutenant Dennis Mello. But he’s facing a tough time of it trying to maintain the discipline and morale of his officers what with the city fucking them over on the promised pay increase and the rescinding of overtime payments.

Why is Carcetti so fixed upon the idea of running for Governor so early? He believed he would damage his chances of running for Governor if he took the money from Annapolis, which would have meant kowtowing to the current governor. But in refusing the $50 million he’s fucked up any chance he had of actually fulfilling his pledges on cutting crime and so looks to have damaged any Governor bid he might be considering anyway. Surely he would have been better placed a few years down the line having turned the city of Baltimore around and the people of Maryland would not look toodisfavourably on his having down it with money from the state.

Wow Dukie’s grown some in the past year, he looks taller than Michael now although he still needs to fill out a bit if he’s to survive working on the corner.

It was great to have a weak Lieutenant on the Marlo case because it meant that Lester could run the case as he saw fit, but now the budget restrictions that weakness means that the Lieutenant is not able to support them and help them get their overtime pay for what must be the biggest cases that the department is running.

The cutbacks are not just restricted to the police in Baltimore as The Baltimore Sun like many newspapers in the US is facing the same fate. Took me a while to realise that it was Clark Johnson portraying City Editor Augustus “Gus” Haynes, I’ve not seen him on screen since Homicide in which he played DetectiveMeldrick Lewis, looks to be very well suited playing a journalist now.

Bloody hell Mayor Carcetti really is determined to burn all his bridges and refuse all possible outside help be it state or federal isn’t he even now that things look bleak after a year with a police force on a restricted budget.

The police may be on Marlo but they are still completely unaware of the existence of the co-op, if they’d been closer to taking down Marlo the cops may have unwittingly found themselves bugging the co-op and they might have had a chance to seriously cripple pretty much all the drug dealing operations in the city. However things in the co-op aren’t as harmonious as Prop Joe would like them to be as Marlo is stirring things up and is probably seeking to divide and conquer.

Reginald aka Bubbles has been clean since the accidental death of his protege Sherrod and though his life is somewhat better in terms of his circumstances he is not emotionally well as he is still feeling heavy guilt overSherrod’s demise.

Do more with less I think will be one of the underlying themes of the season as every institution in the show is feeling the pinch and ironically The Wire itself is having to more with less as they only have 10 episodes in this final season to tie up the storylines although this being The Wire you can’t expect everything to reach a conclusion as the reality of the world is everything is caught in an ongoing cycle. If the Major Crimes Unit do succeed in taking down Marlo then yet another player will rise to take his place as did Marlo after the fall of Avon Barksdale.

The show is definitely hooking back to Season 2 with Chris going to the court house in order to track down information on Sergei Malatov the ‘Russian’ hitman for ‘The Greeks’. Looks like Marlo is looking to deal directly and is trying to find a way in.

Finally the moral of the story seems to be if you are dirty incompetent police then you can do fine in the private sector as Herc has having been kicked off the force he is now working for the slimeball lawyer Levy.

Categories
Movies Reviews

Review: Shoot ‘Em Up

Shoot ‘Em Up

A strange movie this one as it seems like a bit of a cross between two of Clive Owen’s previous movies Sin City and Children of Men with a bit of Looney Tunes thrown in for good measure.

Mr. Smith (Owen) finds himself the reluctant guardian of a newborn when he rescues a heavily pregnant woman from a killer. Upon despatching the hitman with a carrot Smith discovers that the guy he killed wasn’t alone and a whole host of armed men are apparently in pursuit of the pregnant woman. Paul Giamatti as the leader of the gang of killers plays Elmer Fudd to Clive Owen’s Bugs Bunny, is he like Fudd “a pussy who uses a gun to make him look tough”? Well next to Owen’s unstoppable killing machine the answer has to be yes.

Shoot ‘Em Up is also peculiar in that it is an anti-gun movie that is extremely violent with dozens of people as the title suggests being shot to death if they are not being killed by the occasional carrot when Smith finds himself out of ammunition. Enjoyable but not wholly satisfying.

Categories
Movies Reviews

Review: Enchanted

Enchanted

Categories
Computing Security

Cyber thieves target social sites

The BBC reports that social sites such as Myspace and Facebook are prime targets of cyber thieves.

The quasi-intimate nature of the sites makes people share information readily leaving them open to all kinds of other attacks, warn security firms.

Detailed information gathered via the sites will also help tune spam runs or make phishing e-mail more convincing.

It is not just the information that people make public that they wouldn’t ordinarily tell a stranger but that add-ons to these social sites may inadvertently create vulnerabilities whereby criminals can compromise a users computer and install trojans or keylogging software to steal bank details.

Categories
Security Uncategorized

Demos Report on National Security

Bruce Schneier recommends reading National Security for the Twenty-First Century by Charlie Edwards of the think tank Demos.