Showing posts with label magic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label magic. Show all posts
Sunday, September 10, 2017
BEAUTY: Illustration--Jenna Barton
Animals and mysteries. That is what artist Jenna Barton says she draws.
Top to bottom: Interstate 15; It came through the yard again; Mountain spirits see and love you; Shrine; There was something in the pool last night; Familiar
Her blog:
http://dappermouth.tumblr.com/
Prints and clothing:
http://dappermouth.storenvy.com/
Top to bottom: Interstate 15; It came through the yard again; Mountain spirits see and love you; Shrine; There was something in the pool last night; Familiar
Her blog:
http://dappermouth.tumblr.com/
Prints and clothing:
http://dappermouth.storenvy.com/
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Currently watching...
..."The Magicians" on Syfy while I have had the stomach flu for several days. This bug hit me hard and I was really not in a position to do much of anything but catch up on what's on the DVR in between naps (um, very long naps).
Maybe it's because I have been steeped in that weird, sick, delirium/fever dream way of looking at reality when one is ill but the show just struck me right. Based on author Lev Grossman's Magic Trilogy (THE MAGICIANS, THE MAGICIAN KING and THE MAGICIAN'S LAND), the story could be compared to a cross between the Harry Potter and Narnia books but with clear adult themes. I've not read the books, but I can see the comparison. Yet it feels a little unfair to suggest such an idea because somehow it all seems fresh. Quentin Coldwater (played by Jason Ralph) grew up reading a series of books called "Fillory and Further," about three British siblings who can enter a magical realm through a tall case clock (invoking Narnia) and spends his life longing for a sense of magic here and now. He gets his wish when he is summoned to Brakebills College for Magical Pedagogy where he learns that, indeed, magic is real and that there is a reason he feels a connection to the books he loves.
The story presents the actual practice of magic not in a Harry Potter way, but more in a Harry Dresden way (previously here) in which magic is a physical act that requires energy. To create something, that something must come from something else. And Newton's Third Law plays a big role too: "For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction." It's fun to see "magic" more as science than impossibility. After all, Arthur Clarke himself suggested that "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
Go to the official website at Syfy to watch the first four episodes if your DVR can't find them...
http://www.syfy.com/themagicians
Maybe it's because I have been steeped in that weird, sick, delirium/fever dream way of looking at reality when one is ill but the show just struck me right. Based on author Lev Grossman's Magic Trilogy (THE MAGICIANS, THE MAGICIAN KING and THE MAGICIAN'S LAND), the story could be compared to a cross between the Harry Potter and Narnia books but with clear adult themes. I've not read the books, but I can see the comparison. Yet it feels a little unfair to suggest such an idea because somehow it all seems fresh. Quentin Coldwater (played by Jason Ralph) grew up reading a series of books called "Fillory and Further," about three British siblings who can enter a magical realm through a tall case clock (invoking Narnia) and spends his life longing for a sense of magic here and now. He gets his wish when he is summoned to Brakebills College for Magical Pedagogy where he learns that, indeed, magic is real and that there is a reason he feels a connection to the books he loves.
The story presents the actual practice of magic not in a Harry Potter way, but more in a Harry Dresden way (previously here) in which magic is a physical act that requires energy. To create something, that something must come from something else. And Newton's Third Law plays a big role too: "For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction." It's fun to see "magic" more as science than impossibility. After all, Arthur Clarke himself suggested that "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
Go to the official website at Syfy to watch the first four episodes if your DVR can't find them...
http://www.syfy.com/themagicians
Labels:
book,
books,
currently watching,
episodic,
fantasy,
Jason Ralph,
Lev Grossman,
magic,
magician,
Syfy,
television,
The Magicians,
TV,
video
Friday, October 7, 2011
Just RE-watched...
..."Yeelen", a 1987 film from Mali.
I first saw this film when it was released in 1987 and it has stayed with me all these years. It is a strange, magical tale written, directed, and produced by Malian filmmaker Souleymane Cissé based on an ancient tale told by the Bambara people of west Africa (who live primarily in Mali, but also in Guinea, Burkina Faso and Senegal). We are not exactly sure in what time period the film takes place, but we know it was long before the appearance of any Europeans, but after the development of metal working in Africa, which places the story anywhere from 300 BCE to the 13th century.
Part mythology, part folk tale, we journey with a young man named Niankoro who is running from his father. Magical powers apparently run in this family, as both father and son can make things burst into flames. There is also a magic scepter and a log that works as a divining rod.
According to father, son has stolen some very important spiritual objects that are of value to the tribe. If father finds said son, he intends to kill him.
Son, on the run from murderous father, travels through foreign territory in an effort to escape the relentless hunt. Along the way, he accidentally picks up a wife, and comes into his own as a man.
In the final confrontation between father and son, magical powers fly, and in the resulting yeelen (which means “brightness” in the Bambara tongue), the landscape is changed both figuratively and literally.
Recommend? Yes. It is a special, enchanting film that is worth seeing as a glimpse into cultures and beliefs other than our own.
I first saw this film when it was released in 1987 and it has stayed with me all these years. It is a strange, magical tale written, directed, and produced by Malian filmmaker Souleymane Cissé based on an ancient tale told by the Bambara people of west Africa (who live primarily in Mali, but also in Guinea, Burkina Faso and Senegal). We are not exactly sure in what time period the film takes place, but we know it was long before the appearance of any Europeans, but after the development of metal working in Africa, which places the story anywhere from 300 BCE to the 13th century.Part mythology, part folk tale, we journey with a young man named Niankoro who is running from his father. Magical powers apparently run in this family, as both father and son can make things burst into flames. There is also a magic scepter and a log that works as a divining rod.
According to father, son has stolen some very important spiritual objects that are of value to the tribe. If father finds said son, he intends to kill him.
Son, on the run from murderous father, travels through foreign territory in an effort to escape the relentless hunt. Along the way, he accidentally picks up a wife, and comes into his own as a man.
In the final confrontation between father and son, magical powers fly, and in the resulting yeelen (which means “brightness” in the Bambara tongue), the landscape is changed both figuratively and literally.
Recommend? Yes. It is a special, enchanting film that is worth seeing as a glimpse into cultures and beliefs other than our own.
Labels:
anthropology,
Bambara,
Brightness,
film,
film review,
just RE-watched,
magic,
Mali,
mythology,
South Africa,
Yeelen
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