Thursday, November 6, 2003

The Matrix Revolutions

The Matrix Revolutions: eh.

It was ok, but not great. I mean, it just seemed off and it's hard to describe why. The special effects were great, and I thought flowed better than in Reloaded. But there was something wrong with the way the film played out, too much activity in too many places perhaps. In the first two movies, most of the activity takes place either in the matrix, or outside and the story flows along. In Revolutions the story is disjointed, with action occurring in 3-5 places concurrently. I don't know how I'd fix it either.

It's flawed but I'd see it again. Not over and over again (then again, I didn't see The Matrix over and over again either. I didn't see it until months after it came out when I was about to go to Sydney for the first time.).

e.p.c. posted this at 17:14 GMT on 6-Nov-2003 . , Comments [1]

Death by Optimism

In Death by optimism, NYT columnist Nicholas D. Kristof writes: … Ultimately, Saddam's rule collapsed in part because he couldn't read Iraq and made decisions based on hubris and bad information.
These days, President Bush and his aides are having the same problem. Critics complain that they lied to the American public about how difficult the war would be, but I fear the critics are wrong: they didn't just fool us ? they also fooled themselves.
Evidence suggests that Mr. Bush and Dick Cheney may have actually believed that our troops would be, as Mr. Cheney predicted, "greeted as liberators."

I wish administration officials were lying, because I would prefer hypocrisy to delusion ? at least hypocritical officials make decisions with accurate information.
Policy by wishful thinking is crippling our occupation. Initially, U.S. officials didn't restrain looting because they regarded it as celebratory high jinks. Then, confident that security was in hand, they disbanded the Iraqi Army. They didn't push hard to bring in international forces.

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e.p.c. posted this at 20:52 GMT on 6-Nov-2003 .

Slightly acerbic and eccentric dog walker who masquerades as a web developer and occasional CTO.

Spent five years running the technology side of the circus known as www.ibm.com.

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