Showing posts with label 3D. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3D. Show all posts

Swordfish




Hollywood knows nothing about hackers and this is evident in Swordfish. However, it is not primarily a hacker movie and that is one of its saving graces. The plot actually revolves around a multi billion-dollar bank heist of a hidden DEA slush fund that will be used to finance covert anti-terrorist activities. The story unfolds in a strange manner, beginning in the middle, flashing back, and then returning to the present. It opens with Gabriel Shear (John Travolta) the film's enigmatic villain delivering a compelling monologue about Dog Day Afternoon justifying his actions to FBI agent Roberts (Don Cheadle) right before a terrible explosion that becomes suspended in time while the audience gets a full panoramic view of it. This is one of the many action scenes that make Swordfish a thrill to watch, and the special effects are great. After the blast, the movie zooms back to the squalid dwelling of Stanley Jobson (Hugh Jackman), a recently released hacker who sports the Kevin Poulsen look, and who is under the same parole conditions that Poulsen faced, as well. He is not allowed to touch a computer or anything that can connect to one. Enter Ginger (Halle Berry), who attempts to recruit Stanley for a cover project headed by Gabriel. Not wanting to see another prison from the inside, Stanley balks, but Ginger temps him with something he can't resist, the chance to regain custody of his daughter, Holly (Camryn Grimes), who is in the unrelenting grip of alcoholic, porn-star mother.


Stanley agrees and finds himself at gunpoint by Gabriel, forcing him to crack a government system in under a minute. After finally getting in (and getting off) he is offered $10 million dollars for his services (like the government won't notice that) and learns what Gabriel's motivations are. He also learns that Gabriel isn't really Gabriel. In fact, he isn't really anybody. Shearer has changed his name, identity, and face so many times that even he can't keep track himself.


Now here is where Swordfish turns into the one that got away, namely, Halle Berry. The only thing she did well in this movie was look sexy and her entire her role was preposterous. She did bare her breast (reportedly for a nominal fee of $500,000) which served no other purpose in the film but to show that she had mammaries, but nonetheless don't disappoint. However, the scene was poorly placed in the film, even though it was under the guise of tempting Stanley--whose only interest in her was borrowing her car and visiting his daughter.


The computer hacking factor did little more than give Swordfish a technology edge. The computer setup, graphics, and buzzwords sound somewhat credible, but anyone who knows anything about hacking, encryption, or computers in general would find several glaring and comical errors. The director could have done some consulting with geeks to add a bit more realism to the cyber element.


Travolta does a good job as the bad guy in this flick and his casting was a credit to the film, as well as Cheadle, although you wonder if he'd just got a promotion from his old job in Traffic. Still, he plays the cop very well and is quite sensitive to Stanley in his current situation, despite the fact that he was the one who busted him years earlier. Still, Cheadle is one of the few genuine characters of the entire film.



The Number 23




The Number 23 is mystery detective story with a mix of thriller and suspense experience. Starring Jim Carrey who played the role of Walter Paul Sparrow. It started with the book titled Number 23 in which Walter became obsessed with the number 23. He thought of the number 23 as a curse, a hidden mystery, a magic. It all got worst as Walter  read the book and imagines things like he was one of the characters of the book and it goes with the flow of his life until he reach at its end just and only  to find out that the last chapter of the book was unfinished. This leads Walter to discover the ending story of the book ang unravel its mystery aswell as the mystery of Walter's unknown personality.



MAGICKA: Game Review

  • Did you ever wanted to try to combine elements with different attributes but you don't have the guts to do it because it's probably risky and you would end up DEAD!?
  • Would you like to know if having only a single power which such as healing would make you fit to survive?
  • Would you want to become a powerful wizard or sorcerer capable of manipulating all kinds of elements just like for real?
That's simple and easy! PLAY MAGICKA!


Magicka is an action-adventure PC-Game developed by independent developer Arrowhead Game Studios. It was released via Steam for Microsoft Windows. Of course, a free trial version download was made available for testing and reviews.
Magicka is played in a 2.5D environment which requires a little bit of high graphic specifications.
It is played in a third person perspective wherein you're controlling a wizard capable of manipulating, combining, forging 8 elements namely: Water, Earth, Fire, Cold, Shield, Life, Arcane and Lightning. It is great how the game apply the laws of physics while depicting the world of Sorcery and Magic.
It's fun when you wet the character and and make him use Lightning which suddenly electrocute the Mage(*laughs), it's not mean though since I'm just doing it in a game. I'm also impressed by the way how both Fire and Water mixed up and instantly forms into a form of Steam while combining Water with Cold forms a spray of projectile Ice shards. 
There are lot of different combinations and formula to form one magic into another. Combining a Shield element to any types of element would form barriers with that same attribute combined eith the Shield. For example, combing Shield + Earth =  Stone Wall,  Shield + Ice =  Ice Wall. You could also stack additional elements to improve the effect and feature of your magic such as when you add Fire element into a stone Wall it will produce a a burning Lava Stone wall. Also, depending of the number of elements of the same attribute that you add will increase its power and effect. For example, adding 4 Earth elements into a Shield element will come up with a very strong and tough wall of stone blocking and covering you from any harm. 
You could also create mines depending on the element that you use which are intended for traps that will instantly detonate when someone passes by on it including the caster itself.
You could also imbue elements into your weapon which make it more effective in battle and survival. Placing Water + Cold element respectively into your weapon will turn it into an Ice cold blade capable of defeating monsters with Low Ice element resistance such as Lava Golems.
You could also coat the caster with different shielding elements instead of turning them into a wall which will just make it hard for you to escape. Coating yourself with Shield Element will make your armor stronger and tougher.
You could also use the caster's elements to fix any circumstances the comes in the way. For example, when you have been burned by a certain monster and your caster is on Fire, you can make use of the Water element and cast it on yourself to extinguished the Fire and vice versa. Another impressive part of the game is that, using 3 to 5 elements will make your movement slower meaning you can't run around with a powerful spell combo ready to go. Once you learn the basics and and understand the flexibility of the system, it's addictively rewarding. 
Practice and experimentation is the best part of the game. After enough play your fingers will dance across keys with trained precision and unleash healing beams and put up fiery rock walls and conjure rain clouds, summon skeletons and revive fallen teammates.
Playing Magicka isn't about going through the motions with a control scheme you've used a thousand times before. It requires some reflex training that can reward you with wildly entertaining success on the field of battle. Unfortunately, Arrowhead's game is in need of patching at the time of this review, and bugs, crashes and connectivity issues occur with regularity. Even so, with a level-headed team of four, Magicka's cooperative action is entrancing chaos. It's rare for a game to feel this mechanically satisfying.

Watch the Official Trailer and be one among us!

Transformers 3: Movie Review



The First one was great

Transformers 2




The next one was a Big Blast




Transformers 3

The thirs one was "PERFECT!"

Regardless of not having Megan Fox on the third installment of the Transformers Movie Franchise, It surely hits the Blockbuster and got a 5 star rate on Sci-Fi category again(Bay and Spielberg are such a bad ass Duo). Moreover Rose Huntington-Whiteley deserves the role even for a starter way to go Carly.

Imagine yourself having a Car-turning-to-War Machine Robot guardian. Well what more would you ask for? I envy Sam for always having bumblebee beside him, even for the fact that in was unreal. 

The concept and the idea of the film was well planned. The anticipation of the films one after the another is the key to its success. The characters of the film were balanced equally to maintain excitement and anxiety of what we longed for. All I thought was Optimus was the strongest and no one can match him, but the third installment proved to me that no one in the Cybertron world is capable of fighting the decepticons unassisted. Thanks for Bumblebee and the rest of the Autobots squad. It's just sad losing Ironhide. He's way to cool to be annihilated. Thumbs down for that.

But overall, the film was perfect and......... well perfect is perfect.. Nothing more to say.

Viewers would definitely crave for Transformers 4. XD