Showing posts with label games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label games. Show all posts

Friday, September 14, 2012

Video Games

          As I mentioned the first day of class, video games are a huge passion of mine. I know that this is a class about film and TV and what not but I still feel like video games can tell some amazing stories that can make you feel just as attached as a great movie or a great show. When I was younger games always fascinated me and I always wanted to play them. It was difficult for a while because since I was a kid, I really didn't have any money. But after a while I saved up and bought my first console, the Nintendo 64 and the very first game I bought was The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. Little did I know that the first game I ever bought would be considered to be  one of the greatest games ever made by many video game reviewers. Upon finishing the game I knew that video games would be something I wouldn't be giving up anytime soon.

          Flash forward to present day and it has only become more and more of a passion. Don't get me wrong I do love watching new movies and everything but there's nothing like experiencing a game for the first time. The main reason I love games so much is because you're the one who controls everything. You're the one that decides how long it's going to take to progress the story along and you're the one who makes all the decisions. Now I know that most games have a story that you can't change or anything but it's still a fascinating experience playing through it. The first game where I really felt like I was experiencing something more than a game would of had to have been Bioshock. A first person shooter that came out in 2007. This game was much more than just a simple shooting game, it had a very rich and in depth story that really made you the player feel connected to the world and to the characters in it. Not to mention it had one of the best plot twists that I've ever seen. After the twist your jaw literally drops wide open in disbelief, it's a moment I won't ever forget.
          Now I've played plenty of other games recently that I would highly recommend to anyone. The Mass Effect series, Silent Hill series, Alan Wake, Batman Arkham Asylum and Arkham City, God of War Series, Heavy Rain, Portal and a whole bunch of others that I'm just forgetting right now. If you aren't a very avid gamer then I would highly recommend at least trying a couple of these because there really are some great stories to be told here. If you are a gamer and haven't checked some of these out yet then go do it right now because I assure you, you won't be disappointed.

Friday, September 7, 2012

The Hunger Games (Movie)

The other day, I watched the move, The Hunger Games, with my friends.  I had read all the books and frankly, was in love with them.  I'd seen the movie before, but decided that this time, I would watch it from an analytical film perspective rather than judging it on how much different it was then the book because frankly, no movie can capture an entire book or book series perfectly as we've seen many times (Harry Potter, Twilight, ect.).

I loved the DIY approach that Gary Ross took when shooting the movie by having most of the movie shot "hand held" which most feature length blockbuster movies never do.  I noticed very quickly that whenever the scene was taking place in a high tense situation or an impoverished area, everything was shot hand held and the editing was extremely fast jump cuts and very bare bones from an editing perspective.  This puts the audience in a certain mood I could tell from watching it.  It became even more noticeable during the few scenes that were in the rich capitol where every shot was either a tripod, steady cam, or jib type shot with extremely smooth cutting from an editing stand point.  Everything was very refined and more typical of most blockbusters to show the wealth of the area they were in.

They way this movie was shot was very different in my opinion from most blockbuster type large budget movies and from that aspect, I thought the movie excelled.  They did a great job of capturing the "indie feel" that the book had been written in.  There also isn't a ton of music in the movie which I think is very important because most of the "districts" didn't have any organized music so it wouldn't make sense with the story.  The only songs were folk type songs which was cool because they were sung by the actors and no instrumentals.  It was very affective in that sense as well.

Overall, it was a well done movie in my personal opinion from a film perspective.  I enjoyed the indie look because that is personally the style that I am drawn to.

Tyler Chadwick

Friday, May 13, 2011

Monday, April 25, 2011

International Museum of Photography and Film

Are you aware that you are just an hour and 45 minutes away from one of the great film museums in this country? The George Eastman House in Rochester NY should be one of your soon-destinations if you have not been there.
This 1925 Jos-Pe camera has one of the largest lenses I have seen (excluding astronomy of course) Its almost half foot diameter lens enabled it to take 3 negatives simultaneously via beam-splitters, each filtered red, green and blue, that when optically composited together resulted in a full color image.


There is also a collection of some "spy cameras" some of them quite ridiculous, like this one called Pocket Photo-Revolver! I don't think anybody would be the least concerned about being surreptitiously photographed when pointed at with it!

I really love the Mutoscopes which are like glorified flip-books. These are in a hands-on area where you can play around with different devices and even print your own silhouettes or draw your own animations and play them back in a Zoetrope

Not only do they have a great collection of many of the most important cameras, projectors and other very strange paraphernalia going back to the humble simple mechanisms of the moving image, but they also present large exhibits, like the current Civil War collection as well as the upcoming 360|365 George Eastman House Film Fest (formerly known as the High Falls Film Festival or HF3) which starts in a couple of days. There will be 21 countries represented by about a 100 films that will be running in four venues around town. Among some of the highlights this year, Julie Taymor (Lion King, The Tempest, Titus, Frida) will be present to receive the Susan B. Anthony Award.

So, don't potato yourself, get of your couch and head on to one of the beautiful regions around us at the shore of one of the great lakes. Just as an extra enticement, the Strong National Museum of Play is just a few blocks away. You will be able to intoxicate yourself with every imaginable game you remember and many you have no idea they existed, from the earliest toys to the current electronic and arcade games and virtual reality research.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Games with a Purpose or GWAP's

How many tags?

Tagging has become one of the most invisible but significant elements of digital media. Although it is not immediately apparent, when we search on the web, in our own folders or in the public library, we depend 100% on tags and their accuracy to find what we are looking for.

A tag can be described as a non-hierarchical keyword which can identify a piece of information. In this respect it can be considered metadata, since it is information about information.

Now, tags are usually keywords chosen by someone to describe a particular aspect of that information. In the case of an image for example, tags would vary greatly depending on who "tags" the picture. Since this is not a very reliable way to describe anything, various tools have evolved that attempt to remedy this situation by applying crowdsourcing to solve this problem.

Delicious is one example where each individual tags a particular site with as many keywords that might bring it up again in a future search. We all know how easy it was to completely lose sight of a great site among our bookmarks simply because we forgot either how we named the bookmark or the name of the site itself which can be pretty cryptic anyway, no to mention the fact that before Delicious, bookmarks resided in our computer so we could not access them if we were away from it. So now our bookmarks, that old term, reside in the cloud, for everyone to access.

Google, whose main purpose is to make information accessible to everyone (some might disagree), has developed sophisticated algorithms to classify and tag all the information available on the internet and the cloud. However, tagging and classifying images, videos and music has proven to be specially difficult, because of the same problem we face when we ourselves attempt a description.

So what is the solution? depends on the users of course, to do the dirty work. Google Image Labeler is one such tool that has proven very effective. It's simple, fun, game-like minimal interface allows you and a random partner to label images with ever more complex tags, and it gives you "points" depending on the complexity or precision of the label. For any label to work, both you and your partner must submit the same keyword or descriptive phrase.

This idea was originally proposed by Carnegie Mellon's Luis von Ahn, who also developed the infamous and ubiquitous captchas. Originally called the ESP game, which is when I first played it some years ago, it was subsequently licensed by Google. One important difference is that now, if the picture that is presented to you has been tagged before, all those tags are now off-limits, so you have to come up with new ones. This was in response to the fear that tags would become very generic since it is easier to agree on an obvious word, like bird, instead of for example agree on the specific species name.

I have for a long time been intrigued by how we, humans, have suddenly, as the tools became available, become busy bees tagging, describing, sharing information, even as trivial as to what we are doing at the moment, where we are, what we ate etc. (Twitter and FB being the best examples.) My own weird take on it, is that this is the way the "system", the cloud or the emerging consciousness of our information age, gathers all the necessary bits and pieces to achieve the critical mass or the tipping point in order to wake up. A few years ago this thought was simply part of the SF literature. Today is is just a waiting game.

And please, while you wait, tag your posts!

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

The Power of Drill Baby, Drill!

If games and virtual environments were not critically influential in "educating" people by drilling into their brain and responsive system whatever message we wish to convey, then we would not spend so much money, time, research etc. in such medium. But the fact is that...


"Manhunt 2" is a video game in which characters kill
and torture using items such as a fuse box and a toilet.
Photo Credit:
Rockstar Games Via Associated Press
Related Article:

Study Links Violent Video Games, Hostility