Friday, July 30, 2010

The MONSTERS are coming....to Mexico?

This could be the District 9/Cloverfield sleep hit of the year. The trailer looks like its gonna be a fun ride regardless. According to IMDB the plot is:

Six years ago NASA discovered the possibility of alien life within our solar system. A probe was launched to collect samples, but crashed upon re-entry over Central America. Soon after, new life form began to appear and half of Mexico was quarantined as an INFECTED ZONE. Today, the American and Mexican military still struggle to contain "the creatures"...... Our story begins when a US journalist agrees to escort a shaken tourist through the infected zone in Mexico to the safety of the US border.


Say Hello to SHERLOCK

Is it bad that I'm now jealous of the BBC? Or that upset that it took someone this long to use Sherlock in the modern age. I mean, with all the CSI: anywhere's, and Mentalists and NCIS, you'd think someone would have gone back and revamped the original forensic detective years ago. And while I understand it would seem somewhat disingenuous for America to use Sherlock in a show, we did use Robert Downey Jr. in the movie.


Thursday, July 29, 2010

Asia’s anti-piracy strategy paying dividends

I mean really...somebody call me a damn researcher cause I called this shit years ago.

By Teri Weaver
Stars and Stripes
Published: July 24, 2010

TOKYO — Pirate attacks in the South China Sea have doubled in the first half of this year, according to the United Nations-sanctioned group that monitors attacks at sea worldwide.

But that increase remains relatively small — there were only 13 attacks in the same waters in all of 2009 — especially when compared with the 100 attacks off Somalia in the first half of 2010.

And the attacks in the South China Sea and other Asian waters rarely involve the hijacking and violence seen closer to Africa, where 27 hijackings took place from January to June, according to the International Maritime Bureau, the only group that tracks pirate attacks worldwide.

The stark differences in at-sea crime rates between Africa and Asia are partly due to geography. In Asia, shipping canals flow through straits that prove easier to monitor. Ships sailing around Somalia must make it across a million square miles of ocean where pirates attack more brazenly in plain sight.

But Asia’s anti-piracy strategy is about much more than narrow sea lanes. The region has the political will to work together — and the financial backing of the United States — to go after suspected pirates in the Malacca and Singapore Straits, says Ian Storey, a fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies who studies piracy.

Six years ago, the U.S. military approached Indonesia and Malaysia to offer help at sea. The countries, which border the Strait of Malacca, declined the offer, according to Storey. They worried about sovereignty issues and thought U.S. Navy ships might draw the attention of terrorists as well, Storey wrote last year in the East-West Center’s Asia Pacific Bulletin.

But the countries found another way to accept help and by 2006 were cashing checks from the U.S. Department of State for training, equipment and support to fuel anti-piracy efforts in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. To date, the money has added up to about $50 million in support, according to Storey.

“This has been done very quietly,” Storey said in a phone interview from Singapore earlier this month. “It’s been phenomenally successful.”

Overall, the Straits had only 11 attacks in all of 2009, according to the International Maritime Bureau.

It clearly helps, too, that the Asian countries have working navies and structured governments. Pirates off Somalia find a safe harbor in a land that has no rule of law.

“That’s a big problem,” the bureau’s Noel Choong said earlier this month. “If Somolia had a central government, the pirates wouldn’t be able to spend their money and come back to land.”

Worldwide, pirate attacks are down so far this year, with a total of 196 incidents reported in the first six months of this year, according to the International Maritime Bureau. There were 240 incidents in the same period last year.

The bureau said the South China Sea remains a small sore spot in Asia, in part because no one country has taken the lead in patrolling the larger body of water.

And there may be more attacks than the bureau records. To report a pirate attack, ship crews or governments must contact the bureau on a certain radio frequency and communicate in English, Storey says. It’s unclear if all attacks or attempted attacks get recorded.

Piracy remains a crime of opportunity. As long as Indonesia and others keep up their efforts, Choong said, the criminals will stay away.

“So far, so good,” he said. “As long as they maintain, it will be good.”

weavert@pstripes.osd.mil

Zack Snyder Presents "Sucker Punch"

Yeah I know the title sucks...but everything else looks like a nerdgasm.



Monday, July 12, 2010

New Teaser for The Social Network

The Facebook movie isn't going to be allowed to advertise on Facebook. Why? The new teaser for David Fincher's The Social Network makes all clear. Flattering? Not even a little bit.


New Machete Trailer

All sorts of ape-shit crazy


Tuesday, July 6, 2010

LET ME IN

So Matt Reeves, the director of Cloverfield, felt that the Swedish hit, Let the Right One In deserved an English remake. Judging from the trailer, he was spot on. This looks like a spinal tingling, vampire noir that cannot arrive soon enough.

PS: the creepy Morse Code at the end...HELP ME