niedziela, 22 czerwca 2014

149:0

I don't know if anyone of you watches World Cup in Brazil but this year's happen to be the most scoring World Cup in XXI century. While I was watching some of the matches I was wondering what was the highest scoring soccer game ever. I surfed the web and I found it!

In 2002 in Madagascar SO l'Emyrne lost 149:0 to AS Adema. It seems impossible to lost 149 goals in a 90 minutes long game but it turns out that this match was a form of a protest. During their penultimate meeting this two teams drew 2:2 but after the referees had awarded a penalty, SOE lost it and it was no longer possible for them to win the title. When they realised that they won't win the championship anyway and that they don't have anything to lose, the SOE players decided to protest during their next game with AS Adema. They intentionally scored 149 own goals. I can only imagine the look on the spectators faces. By doing that, they broke a Guinness Record previously set in 1885 (36:0).

Penalties are very often disputed. During this World Cup there are some extra cameras that help referees decide whether for example a goal was scored or not but unfair punishments or unacknowledged goals still happen from time to time.

czwartek, 19 czerwca 2014

Film music

Some people say that the best film music is the one you don't even notice during a movie, but I have to say I like to actually hear the music, as some of the pieces are really well-matched and give a scene a whole new meaning. I remeber to this day the scene from The Fountain when Tomas finally found the tree and this beautiful music was playing in the background:

It is called Death is the road to awe and is composed by Hans Zimmer, a German film composer. He has recieved four Grammy Awards, two Golden Globes and an Academy Award. He made music for such films as Gladiator, Inception, The Lion King, The Dark Knight and many many more. He also worked on the film Moonlightning (Fucha) written ad directed by Jerzy Skolimowski.


 There are a lot of other film composers that are worth knowing, some of them as well-known as for example Ennio Morricone and others who aren't so recognized but still very talented.

I think we should all appreciate film music and its makers because I can't even imagine watching a movie without it. It can't be easy composing something that matches so perfectly the images played on screen and gives them such unique atmosphere.


Raymond Maufrais



Recently I've been trying to find some time to read something else than French classics. A friend of mine told me about a book called "Zielone piekło". It is based on a notebook of Raymond Maufrais - a man who had decided to go to Brazil to discover American Indian tribes in Mato Grosso when he was 19. Three years later he set off on a lonely journey through Guyana jungle and he never came back from it. He left his camp and notes on the banks of Tamouri river and that's how we know what was happening to him before his disappearance.

Raymond Maufrais was born in 1926 in Toulon, France. In 1946 he decided to go to Rio de Janeiro where one evening he bet one of his friends that he'll go to the unexplored area of central Brazil. With a lot of luck and help, he achieved his goal. He made notes throughout this journey; he described the ups and downs, the people he met - the prospectors of gold who spends their lifetimes hoping to find yellow glint in the bottom of their pan, a lot of people of questionable morals.

His next journey was supposed to end in the city of Belem but Raymond never got there. When he was leaving, his father promised him that if he's not back in 6 month, he'll look him. After finding out that his son is indeed missing, Edgar Maufrais did everything he could to find him. He traversed Amazon looking for the smallest trace of a white man, unfortunately in vain.











czwartek, 12 czerwca 2014

Armed to the (milk) teeth



In 2010 the number of American kids under 18 who died from gunshot wounds was 1,337. The number of American kids and teens under age 20 who were hospitalized from firearm injuries was 7,391. That means that on average a child or teen is shot almost every hour.

Even though this numbers are terrifying, Americans not only keep on having guns in the home but they also produce little rifles for children. A company in Pensylvania called Keystone Sporting Armes produced in 2008 thousands of rifles in bright colours and advertised them as "My First Rifle". At first sight they look like toys but they do contain little bullets that are able to kill a child. Last year a five-year-old boy accidentally shot and killed his two-year-old sister while playing with one these "toys". The photographer An-Sofie Kesteleyn made a series of portaits that present American kids with their first little guns. I have to say it is quite shocking looking at a 8 year old girl holding a pink rifle that could potentially kill someone. Luckily, I am not the only one who thinks that guns in homes shouldn't be accepted. 





Boyhood


Few days ago I saw a trailer of a movie that I just can't wait to see. It's called "Boyhood" and it tells a story of a boy named Mason as he grows. Whats's so extraordinary about this movie is the fact that it's been filmed over 12 years with the same cast. 6 years old and 18 years old Mason are the same person.

In May 2002 the director of a movie and screenwriter Richard Linklater had decided to do something he has always wanted -  tell the story of a parent-child relationship that follows a boy from the first through the 12th grade and ends with him going off to college. 12 years later, in January 2014 his project "Boyhood" premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in Utah. 

As I'm the same age as Ellar Coltrane (Mason) is, I think it will be fascinating to watch him growing up and changing, becouse I'll probably be able to indentify with his story with one way or another. Even though for a lot of people this movie may seem too long, too slow and too boring I have a feeling that it will be a beautiful timelapse of a young boy's life.