Month in Review: April 2022
May. 8th, 2022 10:41 amStill a busy month, work and life-wise, so most of the sections will be pretty bare.
TV and movies
Unusually many things to say here, since I did two long-haul flights and watched 4.5 movies during those.
The flight out was an overnight one (ish), so I was tired and just wanted easy fare, which resulted in Encanto (enjoyable) and The Etenerals (typical Marvel fantasy nonsense - I wouldn't say it was a good film, per say, but it was pretty diverting).
I had some more braincells to spare on the flight back, so I watched The Wandering Earth, which is a Chinese scifi film based on a Liu Cixin novel that surprised me with actual budget and a lot of interesting language use, and Hunt for the Wilderpeople, which now has the honour of being the Taika Waititi film I've enjoyed the most - it was both serious and funny, and not so much of the parody/over the top humour that usually doesn't gel for me in his stuff. The .5 movie was a Donnie Yen one called Iceman: The Time Traveller - the bit I saw was entertaining enough (and I am always a sucker for time travel stories), but I was starting to feel and the Cantonese was doing my head in, so I didn't watch the entire thing.
I barely watched any TV, just continued the watchalongs I'm already doing (Nirvana in Fire, Detective L, Guardian, Lost Tomb Reboot, most only sporadically) and bounced off my attempt to join the Joy of Life watchalong, though that was partly due to the timing on Sunday evenings.
( Books etc under the cut )
TV and movies
Unusually many things to say here, since I did two long-haul flights and watched 4.5 movies during those.
The flight out was an overnight one (ish), so I was tired and just wanted easy fare, which resulted in Encanto (enjoyable) and The Etenerals (typical Marvel fantasy nonsense - I wouldn't say it was a good film, per say, but it was pretty diverting).
I had some more braincells to spare on the flight back, so I watched The Wandering Earth, which is a Chinese scifi film based on a Liu Cixin novel that surprised me with actual budget and a lot of interesting language use, and Hunt for the Wilderpeople, which now has the honour of being the Taika Waititi film I've enjoyed the most - it was both serious and funny, and not so much of the parody/over the top humour that usually doesn't gel for me in his stuff. The .5 movie was a Donnie Yen one called Iceman: The Time Traveller - the bit I saw was entertaining enough (and I am always a sucker for time travel stories), but I was starting to feel and the Cantonese was doing my head in, so I didn't watch the entire thing.
I barely watched any TV, just continued the watchalongs I'm already doing (Nirvana in Fire, Detective L, Guardian, Lost Tomb Reboot, most only sporadically) and bounced off my attempt to join the Joy of Life watchalong, though that was partly due to the timing on Sunday evenings.
( Books etc under the cut )