Monday 29 February 2016

Let me recommend you a book and... come fly with me!

Today I’d like to introduce to you one of my favourite books ever. This is not one of the best ones I’ve ever read but it means a lot to me. My father gave me this book when I was about 15 years old and I’ve loved it ever since. It opened a whole universe where to escape to in those strange teen years. The book is The Dictionary of Imaginary Places by Alberto Manguel and Gianni Guadalupi

The title of the book is pretty self-explanatory: it is a dictionary of imaginary places. Just as a dictionary has a number of entries in alphabetical order with a definition of that entry, this Dictionary contains a long list of places and a description of the place, the people living there (in case somebody lives there), how to get there, the costumes, the traditions, maps, etc., any information that can be retrieved from the sources. Let me explain.

The authors of the Dictionary, Gianni Guadalupi (an Italian historian who has written, mainly, books about travelling and exploring) and Alberto Manguel (a Canadian-Argentinian editor, novelist, essayist, anthologist, translator and author of many non-fiction books) explain in the beautiful foreword why they decided to write this book: one afternoon in 1977, Guadalupi proposed Manguel to write a travel guide for the explorer who wants to visit the ancient (and imaginary) city of Selene, invented by Paul Féval in his novel La Ville Vampire. This idea developed into creating a guide for the explorers interested in other imaginary places. It took them years to gather a list of places and all the existing information about them. The first edition was published in 1980, followed by an extended second edition published in 1987, and an even more extended third edition in 1999 (the version I have, translated into Spanish). 


  

At the end of every description - which is addressed to the explorer, just as if it was a real travel guide, - you can read the name of the creator of that place, the name of all the books you can find that place in, and where/when those books were published (see the photos Leonia vs Leuké). 
Leonia



Leuké

Also, at the end of the book, there is an index of all the places mentioned in the Dictionary classified by their authors, so you can easily find authors such as
 Hans Christian Andersen, Sir James Matthew Barrie, L. Frank Baum, Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer, Jorge Luis Borges, Charlotte Brontë, John Bunyan, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Étienne Cabet, Italo Calvino, Lewis Carroll, Chrétien de Troyes, to mention just a few.


I loved this book when I was a teen because I love travelling; I think I’ve always done so. As a little girl, I would take an atlas and spend hours looking at the maps. But after some time, the world was not big enough and I needed a bigger universe to explore, and this Dictionary was the perfect solution because it gave me a glimpse of all this imaginary places I could visit.

I really hope there is going to be a new extended edition because in the last one, and just to mention a few examples, not a single place imagined by G.R.R. Martin can be found (even though A Game of Thrones was published in 1996 and A Clash of Kings in 1998), and having a detailed description of Westeros and Essos would be absolutely wonderful.  Anselm Audley’s Aquasilva Trilogy - Heresy (2001), Inquisition (2002) and Crusade (2003) – is obviously not included in the Dictionary either; and from all of J.K. Rowling’s imagined places, only Hogwarts and the Forbidden Forest are included, while I’d personally love to read about Hogsmeade, Diagon Alley or the Ministry of Magic as well. 






What about you? Have you read this book? If not, would you like to? What are your favourite imaginary places? Thanks for reading! And remember: Leave a comment and share!

Monday 22 February 2016

10 sci-fi films you need to see... or not.

Dear all, let me apologise, first of all, for not posting in such a long time. In all these months I’ve had lots of ideas but I couldn’t find the will to sit down and write. Fortunately for me and thus for you, in the last month two things happened that pushed me into writing again.

The first thing was attending the presentation of the book Para vos nací. Un mes con Teresa de Jesús by Spanish writer Espido Freire. Everything Miss Freire explained about 16th century’s Spanish writer Teresa de Jesús was so vivid, appealing, interesting, and from such a modern point of view that I felt like she was speaking for and about me. It stirred my emotions and desires so much, that after the conference I approached her and told her: “you’ve made me want to write again”.

The second thing was meeting one of my favourite bloggers/youtubers (not that I follow many, to be fair): La sombra de Nikky Udall, and a friend of hers - now also a friend of mine -  known as Miss Keats. We spent hours talking about books, films, series and so on. When you do that with someone who enjoys those little pleasures even more than yourself, makes you a bit jealous in a good way; and in my case, made me want to definitely bring this blog out of the coma.

So here I am bringing you an update of my old post about films that revolve around the themes of time travel, parallel universes, dystopias, etc. This time, the list is shorter, only 10 films. As usual, I’m giving you a few details about each film but spoiler-free. I hope you find it useful and remember: any comments, suggestions, questions, and/or opinions are very welcome and appreciated, so feel free to post your comment in the box below.


Mr. Nobody (2009)
This is a good film (with a superb Jared Leto leading the cast) but not easy to follow. Nemo Nobody is the last mortal on earth who, before dying, explains his life story to a journalist. However, what he explains is not 1 but 3 different lives. The key to understanding the film is revealed very little by little, mostly in the last 5 minutes. If you have seen Run, Lola, run, you understand what it is about straight away, but if you haven’t... may God have mercy on you, because the scriptwriter didn’t have any. The only thing he did to help you out is to have this poor journalist asking questions who, unfortunately, doesn’t get any straight answer.

Never let me go (2010)
Based on Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel, it couldn’t be a bad film, and certainly it doesn’t disappoint. The film follows the life of a girl called Kathy H and her friends Tommy and Ruth while they all live in a British boarding school during the 70s, and also when they leave the school and go to a farm house to live in cottages during the 80s. I’m afraid that if I explain more about the plot, I’ll be spoiling the fun so you’ll have to trust me: although it may seem a bit slow, it’s worth watching. When I first saw this film I thought I was watching some sort of romantic drama… but I couldn’t be any more wrong. Give it a try!

Safety not guaranteed (2012)
This is a film I categorize as one of those “cute little films”: low budget, no special effects AND with that wonderful indie humorous touch. The film is based on a classified ad that John Silveira wrote as a joke in Backwoods Home Magazine that reads as follows:
WANTED: Somebody to go back in time with me. This is not a joke. P.O. Box 322, Oakview, CA 93022. You’ll get paid after we get back. Must bring your own weapons. Safety not guaranteed. I have only done this once before.
The film is about 3 journalists working for a magazine that are sent to find out who wrote this ad and why. It’s a beautiful little story about characters rather than time travelling itself.

Extracted (2012)
[Known as Extraction in the UK] I watched this film without knowing absolutely anything about it, and I think this is exactly how you want to watch it. It’s one of those really good films that very few people have seen because there are no important actors in it, or because the publicity campaign was tiny. If you don’t care about spoilers, proceed: Tom is a scientist who has invented a machine capable of retrieving a person’s subconscious memories. His objective is to use it in people who suffer from amnesia but he is put under pressure to accept money from an anonymous investor who wants to try the machine before it has been proven to be 100% safe. The investor happens to be an official who wants to use the machine to find if an addict called Anthony really killed his girlfriend, as suspected. When Tom enters Anthony’s mind, something goes wrong and he gets trapped there.

Snowpiercer (2013)
I love this film. In my opinion, it is the best film in this list. Snowpiercer is a South Korean film (filmed mostly in English) based on the French graphic novel Transperceneige. It stars a fantastic Chris Evans (I was gladly surprised by his interpretation), Jamie Bell, John Hurt and an unrecognisable Tilda Swinton. As with Extracted, I watched it knowing nothing about its plot, which made the experience more enjoyable and I recommend you to do the same, but if you don’t want to listen to me, read ahead: Set in a post-apocalyptic frozen planet earth, the only surviving humans live on a train called the Snowpiercer, which travels around the planet without stopping and is the only place where a human can live without freezing to death in a few seconds. The main character, Curtis Everett, lives along with other people in the tail section, the section for low-class humans. They know that the closest to the front of the train, the higher the class of the humans living in it and the better the conditions they live in; so Curtis decides to start a revolution to get to the front of the train. The beginning is intense but it gets more and more intense as the film goes on.

Oblivion (2013)
Joseph Kosinski wrote a graphic novel called Oblivion about a post-apocalyptic planet earth destroyed by aliens. It never got published so he decided to make a film. He is really good at making computer graphics and CGI, and you can tell in the film that its makers really care about making good visuals. The problem with this film is the plot. The plot is rubbish. Kosinski and his mates were too ambitious and they failed. If you are a person who goes to the cinema mainly for the visual effects, watch this film because it is visually stunning. But if you care about a good script, go watch something else. I don’t even care about explaining what the film is about.

Project Almanac (2014)
Primer + Jackass = Project Almanac. This film is produced by the MTV, and they made sure there was a lot of music in it without any logical reason why. Jonny Weston (27 when the film was shot) plays a super intelligent 15 year old boy in a high school who, along with two losers friends, builds a time machine and uses it for… everything an American teenager would use it for.
MTV hasn’t done anything good since Daria.

Edge of tomorrow (2014)
Source Code with Tom Cruise + chicken-aliens + an ending à la Jerry Bruckheimer = Edge of tomorrow. The starting idea is interesting because it is based on Hiroshi Sakurazaka’s novel All you need is kill, but since the film was “Americanised” it ended up being two hours of Tom Cruise showing off. The film is set in the future, when the earth has been invaded by aliens and human armies are fighting to survive and kill these aliens. Bill Cage is an officer, with no combat experience, who is sent to an operation and killed in combat. However, he wakes up and finds out he is in a one-day time loop. He also finds he is not the only one with this ability. Fantastic starting idea, wrongly developed.

Lucy (2014)
If you like this film, please don’t kill me just because I don’t. If you watched /will watch it because it stars Scarlett Johanson, good for you. I watched it because Luc Besson is the director and I was very disappointed. This is the idea: a woman is tricked into working as a drug-mule. She carries the drug in her abdomen but when one of her captors kicks her stomach, the drug is released and gets into her system causing her brain to use more of its capacity, developing abilities in her like telekinesis, super-strength, etc. It sounds really cool, and believe me, it is… but that ending… dear me… I don’t want to spoil you but it’s the most deceiving thing ever.

Transcendence (2014)
Christopher Nolan was the executive producer of this film, and that’s enough to make me want to see it. But… I can’t really tell what I disliked the most about this film. It has Cillian Murphy and Paul Bettany in it, which makes it good straightaway but I´m not sure whether Johnny Depp interprets or not. It seems like he was bored or he didn’t want to be there. It’s so bad, I’m not even going to explain what it is about because I don’t want you to watch it.




So these are the 10 films of the list. Have you seen any of them? What is your opinion? Do you agree with me or not? Are there any other films you want to recommend? Leave a comment.