Posts tagged with “review”

Movie Review: Annihilation (2018)

Horror is a divisive genre of media, and for good reason. Some come to horror movies for a controlled adrenaline rush - wanting to feel anticipation, a rush of terror, and at the end of the two hours know it was just a movie. Others come for an atmosphere - a steady crawl of creepy, rather than the rise and falls of "jump scare" flicks. Often, the latter can end up having as much to say as any other thoughtful drama or heart-filled slice-of-life movie could.

Annihilation, a 2018 horror film starring Natalie Portman, somehow pulled off both of these.

There's plenty of scares that'll make you jump out of your seat, creatures just close enough to reality to make us wonder if they could be lurking in a dark corner somewhere, and tons of shots of gore to terrify. But underneath it is also a movie full of heart, trauma, and of all things, beauty.

Portman stars as a cellular biologist, tasked with a team of other scientists to explore a phenomenon called The Shimmer - a strange area forming around the site of a meteor crash. It turns out her expertise are precisely what's needed in this scenario - whatever was in the meteor is causing everything within this Shimmer to radically mutate - locations, plants, fungi and animals all pose unique threats to the team as they try to get to the center of the crash site.

Interspersed with these tense action sequences is the tale of a woman wracked with guilt, and indeed each of the team members is handling specific traumas as they make their way through these trials. And at the end of the day, the soul of this movie is not in the stellar set designs or amazing visual effects: it's that inevitably, each woman responds to the horror around them in unique ways. An overarching theme presents itself of cancer - and each team member reflects a different response to someone or a loved one receiving such a diagnosis. Some respond with anger, others fear, some give up and let it consume them, and yet others fight with everything they have.

One of the best aspects of this movie is the unique aesthetic of the Shimmer - everything within becomes lush, overgrown and bright - there is a terrifying beauty in the mutated plants and the prism-like quality it gives the sky. It evokes the similar bright, floral designs of Midsommar, though the terror is far more about facing the unknown. While a few of the performances were somewhat underwhelming, Portman and Jennifer Jason Leigh both stand out with amazing performances that women are not often given the opportunity to have in Hollywood. The core team being all women feels like a deliberate subversion of a typical action-horror cast, and works well with the deliberately-flipped aesthetic of a bright and light-filled horror movie.

I'd recommend Annihilation for fans of horror wanting something new, that isn't afraid to reject formats typical of the genre, who like a piece that was determined to play with both the darkness and the beauty of something totally alien.

Review: Armaid, Trigger Point Therapy Assisting Tool

People who know me personally are aware of my daily struggles with wrist and arm pain.

I spent my free time drawing, painting, and knitting, and I love to fidget. Of course, the constant use of my arm and hand has led to some issues. I've dealt with carpal tunnel in the past, and am currently dealing with a condition known as de Quervain's tenosynovitis, which causes pain in my thumb and down the thumb side of the wrist and arm.

And believe me, as an artist, it stinks.

I've tried many things to deal with the pain over the years. I know many brands of wrist braces by heart at this point, and my spouse can attest to the amount of compression gloves and bands I have laying around the house. I've even gotten acupuncture done. And while a lot of this does provide relief, I still wanted something that felt like I was being proactive about dealing with my issues, rather than treating symptoms as they came up.

In came the Armaid.

The Armaid is an interesting tool - it looks like an odd white clamp, with an interchangeable part on the side. The device is fairly simple to use - add on one of the provided five attachments, use your free hand to clamp the device to the arm experience pain, then move your arm back and forth. This helps the user provide trigger point therapy to the areas where there is pain. Each of the attachments provides a different sensation - harder ones for very stubborn muscle knots, or softer ones for more delicate areas such as the wrist and hand.

I'm not going to say this stuff will guaranteed get rid of your conditions - but doing the routine daily has seen a massive improvement in me. I've gotten rid of muscle knots, and am more importantly getting back to my most important hobby: drawing, without dealing with tons of pain. Doing the routine consistently (using YouTube videos that the Armaid company provided) has allowed me to work on my health in a way that doesn't involve just sitting around resting it in a brace or waiting for my next acupuncture appointment.

The Armaid costs $79.00USD for the device and one attachment, or $129.00USD for five interchangeable attachments. Being able to get back to activities I love? Priceless.

Book Review: Untamed by Glennon Doyle

(or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Unleash My Inner Cheetah)

art by Jordan Watson, 8/12/2020. gouache

Like many people out there, I've spent the pandemic reading books. You remember books? The ones you'd hide under your math textbook and sneak a paragraph from while the teacher wasn't looking?

...Okay, maybe that part was just me. But I do know many others who have gone back to old favorites or used that time quarantined indoors to get back into a habit of reading.

And what a book I managed to grab here. Untamed is Glennon Doyle's hit book of 2020. It's a memoir, a short story collection, a self-help guide, and a critique of all the ways society views women, wrapped up into one powerful 352 page punch. Doyle manages to bring complex issues in feminism, mental health, and sexuality into a stark light with snapshots of her life. With her reflections on shampoo bottles, snowglobes, and soccer matches, Doyle masterfully presents how society molded and shaped her to become a bulimic daughter, to an alcoholic adolescent, to dutiful mother and wife, to finally, and most powerfully, herself.

My copy of Untamed is now thoroughly loved - borrowed and returned, highlighted, scribbled in, a few pages wrinkled from tears I couldn't stop from spilling. I saw her, I saw myself, I saw other people in my life. Doyle has a remarkable talent for metaphor, perhaps best illustrated by the opening story of a cheetah, bred in captivity, dreaming of the wild.

"Ah," the cheetah sighs, "I must just be crazy."

"You're not crazy," Doyle retorts. "You're a god damn cheetah."

And may we all find the wild we're dreaming of.