Ever wonder where those jets are coming from or going to, the ones you see pass overhead? We are often on the arrival and departure path of many flights out of Detroit airport. Well, now it's easy to find out using a website called flightradar24. The free version is okay, but the silver version (cost $10 per year) is so much better. Flights to Amsterdam (3x daily), London (2x daily), Paris (2x daily), and Frankfurt (1-2x daily) all seem to fly right over our house on departure. The flights to Asia head the opposite direction, so we don't see those. And of course any amount of flights to Mexico, the Caribbean, Canada, and all points US often fly over, too. I just watched the plane to Amsterdam fly over, and as I type I am awaiting the giant Lufthansa plane on its way to Frankfurt. From the moment when it begins to taxi (yup, you can watch that, too) till it arrives over our house is around 4 minutes time. A fun hobby. Typically, around 13-14 thousand planes are in the air at any given time, world wide. That is a lot of jet fuel being burned at any one time.
Syberia 3 is finally complete. Deb gave up on it about halfway through, but I managed to finish it. The worst part of the game, well, there are several big problems, has to be the limited view the player has of his surroundings. It's impossible to look all around without moving the character, and often that is a clumsy process, for example when in a room. And sometimes Kate Walker will get stuck in a loop, and keep marching on the spot. In outdoor environments it is hard to figure out one's surroundings because of the limited viewpoint. If you do make a wrong turn, the game could begin one of its many very long loads for the new environment. then you have to reload the old environment just to get back where you were. And there are serious bugs, and the only solution offered is to download a saved game and jump to that spot. It is a really long game, much of it due to the loading time for adjacent environments. Add to that that the story is simplistic and not at all engaging, and the ending is terrible, and there is very little reason not to replay Syberia 1 instead of this game. The final puzzle (image, below) is also quite silly, and once solved you have to sit through a long concluding movie. And did I mention that you cannot save a game, but must wait for the engine itself to save at its appointed time? This makes the final complex puzzle nearly impossible to solve without putting aside an entire evening. If you stop anywhere, you have to restart the entire thing. There are some lovely environments, but also too many dark, dreary, and dingy ones.
The final puzzle, shown part way through.
Anyway, the game is complete, and I have moved on to a game called Nibiru. Hoping this one has some good qualities to it.
Deb has had her 2nd laser surgery today, and is resting comfortably in her big chair. A few days to recover, and one more session in February, and hopefully her pain and discomfort will be fully alleviated. She also had her RA infusion earlier in the week. Luckily our weather has been calm. No snow is in the forecast, thus it will be a brown Solstice and Christmas. We are both fine with that. Makes driving much less stressful. And we are in for a mild spell. Mid 40s predicted for Solstice on Sunday, making it one of the warmest ones ever. We will likely turn down the furnace that day, as we will have our all-day fire. We've seen a lot of sunsets lately, too, more than usual for this time of year. The Sun is basically at its most southerly right now, and by Monday or Tuesday will slowly begin its journey northwards. I might even enjoy a clear night tomorrow!
Finally, in movie news, my choice of films this week was the 2nd part of Chungking Express, which the director wanted to be part of one long movie. Instead, he was persuaded to make a 2nd film, which also has two weird stories. Whereas the first movie showed Hong Kong in daytime, and sunny, Fallen Angels shows the city at night, and during the rainy season. The 2nd film is darker in many ways, and much more violent. Both films have a kind of unfinished feel to them, with endings that can hardly be called satisfying. Still, the movies are easy to watch, and the characters so bizarre that trying to figure out what is really going on is nearly pointless. Sit back and watch, and hopefully enjoy.
Here is a quote from the director about the two films, which I borrowed from Wikipedia:
...To me, Chungking Express and Fallen Angels are one film that should
be three hours long. I always think these two films should be seen
together as a double bill. In fact, people asked me during an interview
for Chungking Express: "You've made these two stories which have no
relationship at all to each other, how can you connect them?" And I
said, 'The main characters of Chungking Express are not Faye Wong or Takeshi Kaneshiro,
but the city itself, the night and day of Hong Kong. Chungking Express
and Fallen Angels together are the bright and dark of Hong Kong." I see
the films as inter-reversible, the character of Faye Wong could be the
character of Takeshi in Fallen Angels; Brigitte Lin
in Chungking could be Leon Lai in Fallen Angels. All of their
characters are inter-reversible. Also, in Chungking we were shooting
from a very long distance with long lenses, but the characters seem
close to us.
Now showing on Criterion Channel, along with Chungking Express.
Happy Solstice to one and all! Enjoy the dark days as much as possible, and have no fear, despite Trump and Brexit, the light will return, eventually.....
Mapman Mike
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