Bella - Heartland Film Festival Winner

Filed under: Indiana, Movies — posted @ 4:02 pm on October 30, 2007

Indianapolis has an annual film festival called The Heartland Film Festival. This year’s winner for Best Dramatic Feature was Bella.

A little over a year ago, Karen and I sat in on a pre-screening of the movie at a FamilyLife staff meeting. I blogged about it back then.

If you get a chance, go see it. It is an excellent movie, very well done independent film.

You can find out more about it and get theater info here:
http://www.bellathemovie.com

Cool New Podcast - Ear Reverent

Filed under: Entertainment, Theology, Church — posted @ 11:57 am on October 14, 2007

Bob Lepine of FamilyLife has started a new podcast titled Ear Reverent(iTunes need for link to work.)

His description of the podcast:
“Some people like to blog, but I often sit behind a microphone and interview people. This podcast is my audio blog so-to-speak about faith, culture, church, the arts… stuff that I like to think about.”

The first episode caught my attention. He talks with Jim Henderson who hired an atheist to visit churches with him in order to write a book, Jim and Casper Go to Church: Frank Conversation about Faith, Churches, and Well-Meaning Christians

Give it a listen…

The Power of the Crystal

Filed under: Entertainment, Movies — posted @ 11:51 am on October 12, 2007

Cool! The Jim Henson Company is working on a sequel to the 1982 fantasy puppet movie, The Dark Crystal called The Power of the Crystal. Apparently, this has been news for some time but I’m just now hearing about it.
The Power of the Dark Crystal

I remember going to see the first movie with my brother when I was a kid. I don’t think it did very well in the intial release but I loved it. I have since bought it on DVD. It has quite a few “new age-ie” elements that I could do without but the story is action/adventure pitting good against evil.

The sequel is scheduled for a Spring 08 release.

It sounds very interesting:

In the late 1970s, with his creative instincts and Hollywood power swelling to their greatest levels up to that point, “Muppets” creator Jim Henson found himself obsessed with the dark, deranged work of English illustrator Brian Froud.

He befriended the children’s-book author and recruited longtime collaborator Frank Oz, and together the three spent the next half-decade developing an ambitious, human-free movie that would mix the world of Froud with equal parts “Lord of the Rings” and Kermit the Frog.

The result was 1982’s “The Dark Crystal,” a fantasy flick that debuted as a commercial and critical failure and has since lived on as a fondly remembered near-classic along the lines of ’80s movies such as “Tron” and “The Last Starfighter.” Frustrated by the limitations of technology, Henson, who died in 1990, took to discussing two different “Dark” visions in interviews: the film his imagination had longed for and the version hindered by fishing line and awkward action sequences.

Now, like a woodland creature called to action by Gelfling heroine Kira, “The Dark Crystal” is preparing to rise up again. And this time it has technology on its side, along with one of the hottest action directors in all of geekdom.

“I did television shows like ‘Dexter’s Laboratory,’ ‘The Powerpuff Girls,’ ‘Samurai Jack’ and ‘Clone Wars,’ and then I decided to go into features,” said highly stylized Russian director Genndy Tartakovsky, offering a preview of his upcoming film debut, “The Power of the Dark Crystal.” “I love the first movie. I saw it [when I was young], and it’s resonated with me throughout my life. Through all the jobs I’ve had, we always referred to it. We would go, ‘You remember that scene in “Dark Crystal”? That was great the way that shape was put in,’ or something like that. [I’m determined] not just to relive it, but also to honor it.”

Such a tribute would be impossible without remembering the man who was a quarter-century ahead of his time. And as the film enters production, it should be quite easy for Tartakovsky to remember Henson daily, since Henson’s daughter Lisa is producing.

“Puppetry has come a long way since ‘The Dark Crystal,’ ” said the amicable co-CEO of the Jim Henson Company. “When ‘The Dark Crystal’ was made, it was the first time that all those techniques were really refined to the degree that they could be put in a feature film. Since then, puppetry has come so far that the puppets we’re going to use are going to be much more emotive than the originals. In addition to that, we can augment them with digital effects, but very subtly.”

The “Power” script continues the tale of elfin heroes Jen and Kira, last seen returning the shard to the evil crystal and seemingly abolishing the vulture-like Skeksis from their land. Set many years after the first flick, “Power” casts Jen and Kira as king and queen, now overseeing a kingdom whose peace is disturbed by a visit from the underground-dwelling U-mun people. After the Gelflings refuse their request for a shard of crystal that could preserve the U-mun race, a desperate visitor takes it anyway, threatening their world with another thousand years of chaos.

‘Dark Crystal’ Sequel Gives Jim Henson’s Puppet Epic A Second Chance MTV.com

Background Images for PaperChange

Filed under: random stuff — posted @ 9:30 pm on October 3, 2007

By the way, I’ve downloaded a bunch of images from Exoteric Roach that I use with PaperChange on my laptop.

Paper Change 1.0

Filed under: random stuff — posted @ 7:24 am on

For those that are interested, I’ve created a new version of PaperChange. (Click here if you want to know what PaperChange is.) I’ve added a few new features such as displaying the filename being displayed, randomizing the sequence the wallpapers are displayed and allowing faster transitions. The delay can be set as fast as 15 seconds now.

I also found a few bugs that have been fixed. If you find any bugs or any suggestions, let me know.

PaperChange 1.0