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November 23

老DAmon的阶段性大圆脸和新剪的超傻头。。。。我想一头磕死了


左边儿这个姑娘死活都不告诉我她叫什么名儿。。。。。算了。。。人家也不想惹麻烦。。主要是club里面儿音乐超杂,要大声喊人家才能听见我说什么,我声儿一大英文发音就极其不标准,一句what is ur name都要喊个三四遍,人家死活也不明白我说什么了。。。于是。。。就交流不起来了。。。。。我应该在家里好好冲着阳台喊,练习这么几句跟人搭讪的话,(btw搭讪的英文叫"pick up line"),我还需要多多积累,好好减肥。。。这样才能要到numbers。。。

我的pickup lines:
what is your name?
You are such a nice dancer!
i had fun dancing with you!
Hey, this is my friend XX
Which club do u usually go to....

还真想不出其他的来了
小胖子一个。。。。。。。老Damon哎。。。你完了。。。


再来一个,这下看见下巴了。。。


海盗装~那会儿还是长头发呢。。。5555真伤心。。。

November 21

用文字和自己交流

知道的太多不好
想的太多也不好
好好的呆在北京、上海挺好
加州下午的阳光
听起来挺好
但是D觉得自己一直都不好啊
今天一觉醒来已经是11点
冲了个澡
朋友来叫吃饭

我跟他说
sori i rly cannot make it, my hair's all wet
say my bests to Alice and Dennis
他说
giv me a hug
tks

David
虽然我在LA大部分时间都是无所事事的拖延时间和panic attack
but
the times i spent with u are awesome
u told me
life is beautiful
think positive
David
u r awesome! for 10000% sure

下午LA3点18
屋里充斥着奇怪的味道
我偷偷爆了室友的爆米花
我估计他们闻到了味儿
i think i pissed them off

我终于变成个没偏见的人
meaning i had a panic attack last night
我莫名其妙的给他打电话
听见他的声儿
我不能自已的哭了
好久没像SB一样哭了
我想北京
我想新加坡
我想上海

和L通话
又哭又笑
一边打电话一边室友在吃午饭
我用中文讲
这样他们不知道我在说什么
我一直觉得打电话是一件personal的事情
我从来不想让别人听见我电话里说了什么
所以我从来不在图书馆,cafe
这种大庭广众之下打电话
我知道这是我的偏见
但是我不介意别人在我面前讲电话

我的中文比英文好多了
写东西极其顺溜
我终于明白为什么每当我该工作,写论文的时候,我十万八千里的不想写
因为我不知道改用什么词儿
我不知道什么样的英文可以表达我的意思
所以我就panic了

加州下午的阳光
真不错
“过一次小胖子的生活”
不成
再这么胖下去
回国什么club都进不去了可


feel like the world stopped in the past few months and it starts to rolling again

i had this strange feeling and then everything's going on as well again
November 13

Picasso, Rodin, Gerhard Richter, Vege restaurant, Yoguart land, Antichrist, Arron Koblin

Modern Art
Picasso, prostitution scene, the characters reaching out, gazing at us, there's no Victorian neoclassicism space, instead, we dunno where it is, who they are, the table is sliding to us, there's no narrative

http://ftp.ccccd.edu/andrade/WorldLitII2333/Images/picasso.avignon.jpg http://www.artquotes.net/masters/picasso/picasso_selfport1907.jpg

Modern sculpture, Rodin, Balzac
he looks like wearing a pair of sun glasses....
http://www.bluffton.edu/~sullivanm/rodin/balzac3.jpg


430 pm comparative literature lecture by silverman, kaja
on photography, tho the photos r pretty nice, but i didnt quite get her point

space is different in temporality every seconds
phenomenology, temporality
visibility, invisibility
disclosure

Vege dining
"Hollywood Bowl"
the Americans rly loves ranches, dressings, toppings, sources, this vege dish taste like nothing without the dressings, i personally prefer the garlic ranches, tho i know it's super fat....it's only Tofu, broccoli, reddish, squash o and brown rice i guess
totally fall in love with cheesy stuff, cheese cakes......and frosting, u r just so delicious@@@@
Yoguart land, hmmmmm, yummy + toppings, peanut

Antichrist
brilliant
i wanna go see it in the movie theater
Lars Von Trier's 'Antichrist' File:Larsvontrierantichristposter.jpg



October 30

515 night last night!

我亲爱的室友们,谢谢你们~~(虽然我觉得的我又喝高了lol)tks guys~~~
我们得pre-party with my super awesome roommate一起灌vodka,grey goose + trade joe‘s orange juice
之后hitting BJ's pumking beers


之后去Westwood Brewing beers and beers和Alex and Van会合,5个人乱七八糟的聊天喝酒

之后回家继续vodka,screw driver

让我回想起在上海的日子,真开心

hope they dont mind i upload all the pics lol, anyways i'm lousy and dunno how to rotate photos~~~~heeelllp~
super long laid-back 7mth vacation~~~~

Halloween parties tonighttt~~~~ still havn't got my costumes, omg.....need to hit the street sooon

September 21

5 Movies in a role, Nice! love LA's movie theaters

Punch, Drunk Love - on my small computer
The Informant - the Grove, Pacific Theater
Bright Star - the Grove, Pacific Theater
All about Lily Chou-Chou - home TV
Contempt - bigger screen flat TV




August 30

District 9 - sth u shd catch in the movei theater as an urban planner, urban designer

the movie's adapted from one of Sony's video game, directed by a guy who's only 29, and it is awesome, the best sci-fi of the yr!!

saw e movie today at Hollywood Chinese Mann Theater,LA (with J just back from Paris and me from NoCal) i'm super thrilled, kinda like the way NYT put it, in a mocked news and documentary plausible secnario, the movie is no longer trying to tapping on how aliens destroy the earth once and once again. Conversely it is trying to probing into the question - what the human will do to them? see the trailer and catch the movie if u can. it's shoot in a rundown urban refuge camp in Johannesburg, just like thousands of shantytowns in the developing worlds. also unveiled some racism issues, i couldn't help but to see the MNU as a parody for the UN. the plotline is lame, but the way it's presented is an novice, once of the best movies i've seen this yr (better than the new Infurious Bastard, Qunti-cum-Brad Pitt one)
i just love the trailer, and its augumented reality virtual game
District 9

btw, i hope everyone can find a way to fb and twit in China, all my bests

damn'it i just cannot stop quoting from NYT, this movie review is so well-written, tho i don't wanna quote but, again it is damn well-written, it said everything i wanna say just in a superior and more elegant way, just read it

A Harsh Hello for Visitors From Space

For decades — at least since Orson Welles scared the daylights out of radio listeners with “War of the Worlds” back in 1938 — the public has embraced the terrifying prospect of alien invasion. But what if, notwithstanding the occasional humanist fable like “E.T.,” all those movies and television programs have been inculcating a potentially toxic form of interplanetary prejudice?

“District 9,” a smart, swift new film from the South African director Neill Blomkamp (who now lives in Canada and who wrote the screenplay with Terri Tatchell), raises such a possibility in part by inverting an axiomatic question of the U.F.O. genre. In place of the usual mystery — what are they going to do to us? — this movie poses a different kind of hypothetical puzzle. What would we do to them? The answer, derived from intimate knowledge of how we have treated one another for centuries, is not pretty.

A busy opening flurry of mock-news images and talking-head documentary chin scratching fills in a grim, disturbingly plausible scenario. Back in the 1980s a giant spacecraft stalled in the skies over Johannesburg. On board were a large number of starving and disoriented creatures, who were rescued and placed in a temporary refugee camp in the part of the city that gives the film its title. Over the next 20 years the settlement became a teeming shantytown like so many others in the developing world, with the relatively minor distinction of being home to tall, skinny bipeds with insectlike faces and bodies that seem to combine biological and mechanical features. Though there is evidence that those extraterrestrials — known in derogatory slang as prawns because of their vaguely crustacean appearance — represent an advanced civilization, their lives on Earth are marked by squalor and dysfunction. And they are viewed by South Africans of all races with suspicion, occasional pity and xenophobic hostility.

The South African setting hones the allegory of “District 9” to a sharp topical point. That country’s history of apartheid and its continuing social problems are never mentioned, but they hardly need to be. And the film’s implications extend far beyond the boundaries of a particular nation, which is taken as more or less representative of the planet as a whole.

No group, from the mostly white soldiers and bureaucrats who corral and abuse the prawns to the Nigerian gangsters who prey upon the aliens and exploit their addiction to cat food, is innocent. And casual bigotry turns out to be the least of the problems facing the exiles. As it progresses, “District 9” uncovers a horrific program of medical experimentation yoked to a near-genocidal agenda of corporate greed. A company called M.N.U. (it stands, none too subtly, for Multi-National United) has taken over administration of the prawn population, which means resettling the aliens in a remote enclosure reminiscent of the Bantustans of the apartheid era.

The M.N.U. executive charged with carrying out this program is Wikus van der Merwe (Sharlto Copley), a nervous nebbish whose father-in-law (Louis Minnaar) is the head of the company. Cowardly, preening and hopeless at projecting authority, Wikus is the kind of guy who gives nepotism a bad name. It says a lot about Mr. Blomkamp’s sense of humor, and about his view of his own species, that this pathetic little paper pusher is his chosen agent of mankind’s potential moral redemption.

But I’m getting ahead of the story, and perhaps overselling the allegory. Not that the metaphorical resonances of “District 9” aren’t rich and thought provoking. But the filmmakers don’t draw them out with a heavy, didactic hand. Instead, in the best B-movie tradition, they embed their ideas in an ingenious, propulsive and suspenseful genre entertainment, one that respects your intelligence even as it makes your eyes pop (and, once in a while, your stomach turn).

The early pseudo-documentary conceit, which uses footage that pretends to have been harvested from news choppers and security cameras as well as some by the unseen crew accompanying Wikus on his tour of the prawn camp, fades away after a while. The academic authorities do too, having served the dual functions of providing narrative exposition and demonstrating the high-minded uselessness of official liberal discourse.

Once a terrible accident befalls Wikus, we are at his side and under his skin, and “District 9” subtly shifts from speculative science fiction to zombie bio-horror and then, less subtly, turns into an escape-action-chase movie full of explosions, gunplay and vehicular mayhem.

In the midst of it all you almost take for granted the carefully rendered details of the setting, the tightness of the editing and the inventiveness of the special effects. Not the least of these are the aliens themselves, who are made expressive and soulful without quite being anthropomorphized. (Their whirring, clicking speech, partly understood by Wikus and others who work with the creatures, is translated for the rest of us via subtitles.)

One in particular, named Christopher Johnson (Jason Cope), becomes Wikus’s protector and ward, and their relationship turns “District 9,” in its final act, into an intergalactic buddy picture, with some intriguing (and also possibly disappointing) sequel opportunities left open.

At its core the film tells the story — hardly an unfamiliar one in the literature of modern South Africa — of how a member of the socially dominant group becomes aware of the injustice that keeps him in his place and the others, his designated inferiors, in theirs. The cost he pays for this knowledge is severe, as it must be, given the dreadful contours of the system. But if the film’s view of the world is bleak, it is not quite nihilistic. It suggests that sometimes the only way to become fully human is to be completely alienated.

“District 9” is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). It has intense violence and violent swearing in the languages of two planets.

DISTRICT 9

Opens on Friday nationwide.

Directed by Neill Blomkamp; written by Mr. Blomkamp and Terri Tatchell; director of photography, Trent Opaloch; edited by Julian Clarke; production designer, Philip Ivey; music by Clinton Shorter; produced by Peter Jackson and Carolynne Cunningham; released by TriStar Pictures. Running time: 1 hour 51 minutes.

WITH: Sharlto Copley (Wikus), David James (Koobus), Jason Cope (Christopher Johnson), Vanessa Haywood (Tania) and Louis Minnaar (Piet Smit).

http://movies.nytimes.com/2009/08/14/movies/14district.html





 

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damon wong

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