Ethereality News & Weblog

March 31, 2007

Spiderman 3 & Surf’s Up (new trailers)

Posted in: My Life, Art & CG, Film/TV/Animation, News — Rob @ 10:59 am

NEWS:
New trailers for Surf’s Up and Spiderman 3 are up.

Once the films have premiered, I’ll be able to show the work I did for both. Out of the two, I’m more excited about Surf’s Up–the trailers look gorgeous and made me laugh pretty hard, and the premise is a lot more original than most of the talking animal movies we’ve been bombarded with in the last few years. Spiderman 3 would certainly be entertaining, but I don’t typically get too excited about spandex tights superheroes–even when I was in the comic book industry they didn’t excite me that much (I was always more of the indie/alternative/underground type).

March 11, 2007

Getting back on track

Posted in: Photography, My Life, Video Games, News — Rob @ 11:23 pm

News:
Just a quick update so that no one thinks I’ve died or something. It’s been extremely hectic lately–new job, new apartment, and basically, trying to organize my life back into some semblance of normality. I wanted to wait and do a proper update, with exciting photos and all that, but it’s one of those situations if I don’t find fifteen minutes to update now, I’ll just keep putting it off until I felt like my life was back on track–that can take weeks more than it already took.

So the short version is, I just accepted a job offer from a casual game company in the Bay Area, and am now their games art director. It’s going to be interesting working on games that don’t require long production periods or cutting-edge machines to play, and targets a whole different segment of the market as opposed to the typical male teen to adult audience. I personally believe the casual game space has not reached its real potential yet–too many people are still thinking inside the box of what casual games can be. It’ll be interesting to help contribute to the growth of casual games.

Weblog:
Elena and I finally found an apartment we liked. It’s located close to downtown San Mateo (Bay Area, California), about 1,000 square feet, with two bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, and two baths. There are three Japanese styled sliding panes that separate the den from the living room, and that was one of the main reasons we picked the place–it would give me a lot of flexibility when I do studio photography at home. Basically, I get to remove an entire wall at will and open up the shooting space for more creative light and camera placement. Once we get settled, there will definitely be a stream of new photography coming, and I’m not talking about the casual shooting I’ve been doing so much of in the last year–it’ll be some pretty exciting studio photography.

Unpacking all of my crap from six years ago (when I packed up everything and put them in storage, and then went off to see the world, sort of) was a real shock. I knew I had a lot of crap, being a bit of a pack rat, but after two weeks of unpacking and still not finished, I must admit I have a problem. Admitting you have a problem is always the first step, right?

The new job takes a bit getting used to. I’ve art directed before, both in games and in CG animation, but this is the first time I’ve been officially designated “senior management,” and have to attend more meetings than I think is normal. I’m probably the only guy in senior management who doesn’t have the title of VP, but because I oversee the art direction of all the games the company develops and publishes, I’m by default the head of a department, and that makes me senior management. When I was the creator/writer/director/art director at a CG animation studio, I was juggling a lot more responsibilities, including wearing the hat of the audio director, and even with all that going on, there were never so many meetings like now. I guess every company’s got it’s own culture. The meetings themselves are actually quite productive; no wheels are spun–everything is to the point, well planned, and efficiently executed. I’ve sort of walked into a burning building in a way though, since they haven’t had an art director for…ever, so I really had to go in there and rescue a lot of stuff that desperately needed an art director. It’s been pretty crazy, and I have a feeling it’ll only get worse before it gets better.

February 10, 2007

Welcome to Black Mesa

Posted in: My Life, Art & CG, Film/TV/Animation, Video Games, News — Rob @ 9:17 pm

News:
I have just officially joined the Black Mesa team. I’m very excited to be involved, as Half-Life is one of my all-time favorite games, and it’s also the game that changed my life (turned me into a serious gamer, and established my love for FPS games). What the Black Mesa project is, is essentially fulfilling the promise that Half-Life: Source didn’t. All the Half-Life fans thought HL: Source was going to be a complete update of the original game, with all brand-new graphics, enhanced level designs..etc, just like Counter-Strike: Source, but it wasn’t–only the physics engine was updated to the Source engine, the rest remained exactly the same. So what the Black Mesa team is doing is trying to fulfill that promise, by doing a total remake of Half-Life as a Half-Life 2 MOD, with the Source engine, all brand-new graphics, updated level design and characters, new music, new voice acting..etc. So far, it’s won the best anticipated MOD of the year twice, and gotten some great media exposure. Even Valve has mentioned the game on Steam and said they’re looking forward to playing it just like everyone else. For those of you who are Half-Life fans, you can see why I’m all excited like a little school girl. I have always wanted to join a MOD team to work on something I’d really enjoy being a part of (I have never worked on a game I’d actually buy as a gamer in my entire game industry career so far), and I couldn’t have asked for more than working on the game that made me a gamer all those years ago.

Some screenshots from the Black Mesa MOD (look at the embedded comparison images from the original game–the improvement is startling–as it should be with today’s technology and overall raised bar for excellence across the industry/fandom):

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Weblog:
Elena and I have been hunting for a new apartment, and after looking at a few places, we realized that we absolutely need a place that’s at least 850 square feet in order to not feel like we’re suffocating. The main problem is really me though, as I need space for my home recording studio. In the Bay Area, you’re looking at around $1,500 a month for a two-bedroom apartment of that size. This might sound ridiculous to those of you living in areas with cheaper housing, but that’s just how things are here.

While waiting for our food at a pizza joint the other day, we saw some infomercial about natural cures for health problems that sounded too good to be true (don’t they all?), and out of curiosity, I did a bit of googling. I didn’t have to look far, since the charismatic con-man by the name of Kevin Trudeau is all over the internet, and most of it is about his criminal history as an unscrupulous fraud. This article from The Salon is a good read to find out more about this piece of shit who should be locked up.

I personally have an intense hatred for people like Kevin Trudeau–people who are certainly very intelligent and charismatic, but use those qualities for fraud, selfish greed, and exhibit an obvious contempt for all that is true and just in this world. These opportunists without scruples are exactly the kind of people that I’ve seen too many of while living in China–they have turned China into a festering cesspool filled with corruption, greed, lies, and disrespect for human life.

The older I get, the less faith I have in those with power. If I really want to see the ugly stains on humanity, I only have to look to our own government, corporations, and in some cases, organized religions. It’s truly a wonder how we, as a species, can even last as long as we did, when so many at the top of the food chain are exactly the same type of people like Kevin Trudeau. How did we ever allow someone like Bush Jr. to con his way into the White House? When will we have another leader that can instill a sense of hope, idealism, and faith in the goodness of mankind? We desperately need a leader that can inspire the goodness in us–someone much like Bobby and John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr, Mahatma Gandhi, or Nelson Mandela.

A couple of quickie film reviews:

Marie Antoinette
- I respect Sophia Coppola’s creative decisions, but I feel her choice of material was a letdown. If she had applied the same creative decisions to a different historical figure, the result would’ve been far more meaningful. With Marie Antoinette, I don’t feel that as a person, there is anything about her that’s worth a whole film to show in a different light–even in the way she was flawed is very mundane. Maybe the contrast between her mundane existence and her extravagant environment was part of the message, but it does make for a very boring message.

The Prestige - I liked this better than The Illusionist, although I really disliked Christian Bale’s character. The plot twists in this film weren’t nearly as predictable as in The Illusionist, and the performances were in general stronger (although I can’t say I’ve ever warmed up to Scarlett Johansson’s acting. She was appropriate in Lost In Translation, that was it). Seeing David Bowie was a real treat, as I think the last film I ever saw him in was Labyrinth.

Finally finished playing Dark Messiah of Might and Magic, and I’m glad I didn’t give up on it as I almost did about a third into the game. Although the writing never got much better (you could totally see the plot twist right in the first chapter of the game!), it does have a lot of fun moments of gameplay. I’ve always wanted to play a good fantasy based FPS, and now I have. The melee combat was fairly satisfying, although I wanted more of a fighting game type of combos and upper/lower attacks. I mean, what kind of melee combat doesn’t allow you to sweep the feet of your opponent or kick him in the knee? What about grappling? Maybe one day a developer will finally make the ultimate FPS fantasy game, with sophisticated fighting like that of the fighting genre, the immersive perspective of a FPS, and the inventory/storytelling of RPG’s and adventure games. A boy could always dream, right?

I’m getting really excited about Mass Effect. Bioware is a company I trust (although I could never get into Neverwinter Nights), and what they’ve shown to the public so far is nothing short of stunning. If there’s a compelling portrait of next-generation gaming, that is it. Other titles I’m looking forward to off the top of my head are Alan Wake, Stalker, Dark Sector, Unreal Tournament 3, and Bioshock.

January 27, 2007

License to…drive

Posted in: My Life, Music, Film/TV/Animation, Latest Works, News — Rob @ 5:05 pm

NEWS:
The last piece of the current batch for The Spoils is done, and I was told by Tenacious Games that I’ll be able to show them publically in early March, once they’ve been to the printer. I might paint more for the next batch, depending on what my schedule is like.

WEBLOG:
Elena just got her driver’s license, and on first try too! We (me and her driving instructor) were so sure she’d fail, because she’s a very nervous driver–the kind that will immediately slow down and not know what to do as soon as any tiny thing goes wrong. Her reaction time is also very slow (never played any games while growing up, including sports, video games..etc), so it takes her a long time to react to any changes on the road. Now that she’s got her license, I still make sure she never drives alone because she needs time to build up faster reflex and decision making ability while assessing road conditions. The stuff her driving instructors (she tried two Chinese ones, at a total of $800) taught her are only useful for passing riving tests, and are completely useless in practical driving. In fact, some of the stuff they taught her are downright dangerous! I had to undo a lot of the bad habits they taught her (or teach her a lot of the driving common sense they didn’t teach her). My brother Dennis’s father-in-law is a reserve cop, and he confirmed that a lot of traffic accidents happen because Chinese drivers are taught by Chinese driving instructors, and the instructions are not always sound in terms of practical driving safety, though they do help you pass the driving test given by the DMV. It’s kind of like how native Asian English teachers will teach academic English that will help you pass tests, but is useless when it comes to real life situations, yet that is the kind of English taught in schools throughout China, Taiwan, Korea, Japan..etc.

In the recent years, private English instruction schools that advertise “genuine foreign teachers!” have popped up all around Asia–they are basically non-native teachers who are white, and thus will teach “practical real life English.” Many of these teachers do not speak any Asian languages, which to me is kind of pointless. How can you explain the subtleties and nuances and complexities of a another language if you have no base of reference to use for analogy or explanation?

Here are some quickie thoughts from recent movie viewings:

Flags of Our Fathers - I liked the combat scenes more than I liked the dramatic scenes, because I felt the dramatic scenes were a bit heavy-handed. How many times do we need to be reminded that the Native American character felt disgusted by the whole thing, and that he feels like a fake?

Letters From Iwo Jima - Dramatically it’s more interesting and engaging than Flags of Our Fathers (the two films are companion pieces to each other), but there are a lot less of the epic combat scenes. I liked the atypical portrayal of the Japanese soldiers, as it humanizes them and makes them easier to relate to than the stereotypical portrayal of loyal, proud, and fearless Japanese soldiers who would die for their country without batting an eyelash.

Pan’s Labyrinth - I really wanted to like this film, but in the end I was disappointed. It’s not a bad film–I just didn’t like some of the execution, and how some of the characters behaved didn’t seem believable to me–even for a fairytale. I feel that the glowing praises from the critics for the film seem a bit excessive–in other words, this film is overrated in my opinion. It also seems strange to me that Children of Men is on average rated lower than this film, as I feel Children of Men is a far superior film in just about every way.

The Illusionist - Although the film is very predictable (at least to me, as I figured out the entire structure of the film by the time the Norton and Biel’s characters meet again as adults–and that’s at the beginning of the film), it was still entertaining enough to sit through. I had hoped for more realistic explanations of the elaborate/complex magic tricks, but I guess that’s just not the focus of the film.

I’ve always liked Edward Norton, although I feel he hasn’t grown as much as he should’ve as an actor. Maybe this is because he had such juicy roles to play right at the beginning of his career, and it’s hard to find roles that top his early ones. I mean really, his roles in Primal Fear and American History X–very hard to top those.

Apocalypto - Mel Gibson is a director whose film I’ll always watch, simply because the man’s a very talented director. He might have a bit of a martyr syndrome, but at least his outlook is one of idealism. The film itself is certainly engrossing, but it was a lot more simplified than I had hoped. I wanted to see Gibson make a statement about how power and superstition corrodes an ancient civilization and destroys it from within, but the film is mostly an action thriller.

Cars - To date, I’ve never disliked a Pixar film (although my first viewing of Finding Nemo irritated me so much I turned it off before the plot even really kicked in. My second viewing of it was much, much better). I really do feel that Pixar is one of the best storytellers in the world currently, as they instinctively know how to tell a great story, and the beautiful visuals are just icing on the cake. Other studios try to copy Pixar’s success, and although some can achieve similar technical excellence, they just aren’t nearly as talented as storytellers. No amount of budget, staff, marketing muscle, or board meetings can equate the brilliance and purity of talent, and Pixar’s got more of it in its little toe than…well, you get the point. Oh yeah, I liked Cars. Are you surprised?

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (remake) - Embarrassingly, I must admit I’ve only seen the beginning of the original, and it felt quite dated and had horrible acting. I quite enjoyed the remake, as it was technically very well made, with a more modern sensibility, and far superior acting. Of course, I understand the original’s place in film history,and I will watch the whole thing one of these days, even if for the sake of educating myself on this famed classic. Oh, and although Jessica Biel is a bit of a “buterface” (only a little bit), the director really showed off her package in the remake. Elena and I were both drooling whenever she was on screen with those tight jeans and bare midriff.

Superman Returns - I like Brian Singer as a director, and I think he did a good job with Superman Returns. I was hoping for a film that was less safe–less faithful to the apple pie vision of the classic, but I ended up during the whole film comparing Brandon Routh to Christopher Reeve, simply because they really tried to capture the same feel of the classic. Kate Bosworth as Lois Lane was nice–she’s far cuter than Margot Kidder (as a kid I always wondered what Superman saw in her–she seemed dorky and homely to me), and has more of the kind of aura that I believe Superman would be attracted to. Kevin Spacey as Luther–well, either you like Kevin Spacey or you don’t. I do, so I enjoyed his performance.

Little Miss Sunshine - Although I enjoyed this film, I do feel it’s way overrated. The messages conveyed in the film were simplistic and a bit naive, and the ending was surprisingly silly (bordering slapstick), even though I was aware it’s supposed to be a comedy/drama. My favorite parts of the film were the ones dealing with the teenage son–I could totally identify with him and his angst, although I’m way past my own angst (I better be, at age 34).

Monster House - Cute film, and thankfully not another modernized fairytale or talking animal story with pop culture references–I can’t stand those anymore. I was almost sure the girl’s voice was done by Kirsten Dunst since it sounded so much like her, but it wasn’t. The secret behind the house was a bit bizarre for a children’s film though, as it unintentionally vilifies obese women with bad temper.

Clerks 2 - Although I think Kevin Smith is hit or miss (and usually more miss than hit), I enjoyed this one more than I thought I would. The geek humor won me over, and I liked the general positive attitude as it balances out all the cynicism.

The Breakup - A quality comedy/drama, but perhaps a bit overrated. I guess it’s one of those films that appeal to the general public, and it is safe enough, yet has enough of a unique take on the relationship thing to have gotten all the praises. I was hoping for something edgier and darker, but then again, it’s a Jennifer Aniston film afterall.

Blood Diamond - I was surprised to see Jennifer Connelly in this film, although she fits the role quite well. DiCaprio is an actor I’ve always respected, because even as a kid, he had a dark intensity about him (he played a street-wise troubled teenager in the TV sitcom, Growing Pains). The film was entertaining and the story is one I care about, because I’ve always hated diamonds for as long as I could remember. Even as a child I thought diamonds were ridiculously overpriced and the prestige our society bestowed on the damn pieces of rock was disturbingly perverse.

Idiocracy - I don’t know what Mike Judge did to piss off Fox, but they seem to want to make his life hell. Idiocracy was released with no promotion, no trailer, and only in 125 theaters nation-wide, and this was after suppressing its release of two years (as opposed to the normal average of 2,000+). The film itself is an extreme satire that makes fun of the less intelligent trends in pop culture, corporate greed, environmental apathy, and the stupidity of urban youth culture. Although the satire is biting and spot-on, the execution is often done with toilet humor (literally, toilets are involved), which I think was a bad choice. It does have some knee-slapping moments though, and is worth seeing.

The Lake House - Two actors that doesn’t do anything for me, and a remake of a foreign film (The original was a Korean film titled “El Mare,” starring the very spunky and cute Jun Ji-Hyun, better known as the “My Sassy Girlfriend” chick)–it had to be bad, right? Well, it wasn’t a train wreck, but it wasn’t a good film either. Watch it if you really have nothing better on your “Movies to Watch” list. Why did I watch it? Well, I wanted to see how a Korean film would be adapted to fit the American audience–call it a lesson in contemporary cinema trends. I fear for Old Boy. I hope they don’t destroy that one.

And here are a couple of TV shows I’ve enjoyed recently:

How Music Works - Excellent British TV program that teaches the inner workings of music in a way that even non-musicians could understand and appreciate. It even covered a few things I didn’t know. The host uses well-known examples in both classical and modern music and points out the similarities and links between them in terms of how they incorporate music theory in identical ways. Similarities between music from different cultures are also talked about, and how human beings all respond to music in similar ways, regardless of where we’re from. Highly recommended.

The Office - I’ve known about the show (both the U.K. and the American version), and finally gave it a try. The U.K. version wasn’t as funny to me, as the satirical nature of the content really needs a biting edge to work, and the U.K. version was just a tad too low-key to strike the funny bones hard enough. The American version is just so much funnier, because the comedic timing and the cast is simply turned up a notch, and thus strikes the funny bones harder. My favorite moment so far was when everyone made up fake diseases for the health care forms they had to fill out. “Hotdog fingers” had me choking on my food–literally. Elena was worried for my safety and declared that The Office is simply too dangerous to watch while eating or drinking.

January 1, 2007

Good-bye 2006, hello 2007!

Posted in: Photography, My Life, Music, Video Games, Latest Works, News, Dolls & Toys, Books — Rob @ 11:48 pm

NEWS:
I just signed a contract to score an upcoming video game. It’ll be my first time composing the score for a game, so I’m really looking forward to it.

The legendary demo group Alcatraz contacted me recently, asking me if I wanted to join them (they’re aiming to have a rebirth at Breakpoint 2007. Their last release was in 1995). I’ve known about the demo scene for a while now, and I’ve always admired their creative approach to programming, graphics, music..etc. The limited footprint of their executable files always had me in awe, and I can totally see how the demo scene had influenced various developments in the mainstream video game industry. So, I said yes, and I look forward to contributing to the Alcatraz group.

Here are some BJD (Ball Jointed Dolls) photography I did during a New Years party (click on pics to see the whole set):

Kitty Cat Diary updated:

WEBLOG:
New Years Eve is also my birthday (I turned 34), which can suck for some, because it’s so close to Christmas and you get only one present, and on your birthday the whole world is celebrating New Years–your birthday is the last thing on their minds. Luckily for me, I never celebrate anything, because I don’t believe in the whole concept of showing you give a shit on a specific day of the year–you should care all the time. Since meeting me, Elena’s adopted the same philosophy, so we never go out of our way to celebrate Valentines, Christmas, New Years, Birthdays..etc. We make an effort to be loving and understanding to each other everyday, and we spoil each other rotten without needing any excuse to do so.

None of this means we’d refuse other people’s invitation to festive get-togethers though. So when my bud Emory invited us to his New Years thing, we happily said yes. Here are some photos I took that night (click on pics to see the whole set):

My brother Dennis got me a couple of books I’ve been wanting for my birthday–the Sonar 6 Power! book and Cakewalk Synthesizers book. I love it when I get new bathroom reading material. He also took us out to dinner–you can see the photos Elena took in her blog entry.

Speaking of bathroom reading material, I had finished reading two books I highly enjoyed recently–The Zombie Survival Guide and Blade Runner/Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?. The zombie book is right up my alley since I’m a huge zombie fan–now I know some of my past zombie evading strategies were shaky at best. The Blade Runner book (I hate calling it that, because the real title is “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?” and should remain so, no matter how popular the movie adaptation becomes) was awesome because I never knew the film version left out so many essential elements. The two are so different in tone and approach that I think of them as two very different entities. It’s hard to say which I enjoyed more, since I really loved both.

So, what am I looking forward to in this new year? First, we need to move out of our temporary place and find a decent place that we can call home. Then, I want to complete the missing pieces of my home recording studio so I can be more productive music-wise. I also need to secure a steady stream of clients for my freelance work, or get a full-time job instead (I never got that call from Gentle Giant Studios to ask me to move down to Burbank–no one knows why the CEO never gave the nod to the managers–not even the managers). I want to take my photography up to the next level and shoot some magazine cover-worthy sessions. I need to help Elena get over her English learning difficulties and also help her get her driver’s license. We both need to get in shape–we’re soft and flabby right now, and we hate it. Man, that’s a lot already. Let’s see how much of it we can accomplish this year.

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