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	<title>Media Breach &#187; Film Noir</title>
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	<itunes:summary>Here we will discuss subjects involving film, TV, music, video games, gadgets, and occasionally sports.  And mac and cheese!</itunes:summary>
	<itunes:author>Adam and Dustin</itunes:author>
	<itunes:explicit>yes</itunes:explicit>
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		<itunes:name>Adam and Dustin</itunes:name>
		<itunes:email>voltaic@mediabreach.com</itunes:email>
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	<managingEditor>voltaic@mediabreach.com (Adam and Dustin)</managingEditor>
	<copyright>Media Breach</copyright>
	<itunes:subtitle>The official podcast for www.mediabreach.com!</itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:keywords>Media Breach, Film, Television, Gadgets, Music, Food, Podcast</itunes:keywords>
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		<title>Media Breach &#187; Film Noir</title>
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		<link>http://mediabreach.com</link>
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		<title>Heavy Rain (PS3) Demo Impressions</title>
		<link>http://mediabreach.com/2010/02/08/heavy-rain-ps3-demo-impressions/</link>
		<comments>http://mediabreach.com/2010/02/08/heavy-rain-ps3-demo-impressions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Feb 2010 20:00:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Adam</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Preview]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Video Games]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Film Noir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PS3]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Quantic Dream]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sony]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mediabreach.com/?p=2533</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;ve been following Heavy Rain since it was just a tech demo shown on the floor at E3 2006.¬† Then, it was merely a showcase of the PS3&#8242;s graphical and physical power, but developer Quantic Dream took it a step further and molded it into the game it is now.¬† Heavy Rain is an experiment <a href='http://mediabreach.com/2010/02/08/heavy-rain-ps3-demo-impressions/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-2539" title="Heavy_Rain_box_art" src="http://mediabreach.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/Heavy_Rain_box_art-260x300.jpg" alt="Heavy_Rain_box_art" width="260" height="300" />I&#8217;ve been following Heavy Rain since it was just a tech demo shown on the floor at E3 2006.¬† Then, it was merely a showcase of the PS3&#8242;s graphical and physical power, but developer Quantic Dream took it a step further and molded it into the game it is now.¬† Heavy Rain is an experiment in videogame film noir and centers around several playable characters- Ethan Mars the architect, retired detective turned PI Scott Shelby, photojournalist Madison Page, and FBI profiler Norman Jayden.</p>
<p>Plot details have been intentionally vague at this point, but what we do know is that it revolves around &#8216;The Origami Killer&#8217; and developer Quantic Dream has said the game is about unconditional love and choice.¬† The demo in which I played gives you two different scenarios to play through: one being a scene with private dick Scott Shelby and the other being FBI agent Norman Jayden.¬† Shelby&#8217;s scene is basically his attempt to question a prostitute named Lauren who has lost her son.¬† Everything in this game is basically about timed button pressing sequences.¬† On the surface it would appear that it&#8217;s like a really long, drawn out God of War boss fight, but really there is alot more control. From removing your inhaler from your pocket (Shelby is asthmatic) to leaning on a bed frame while talking to Lauren, it&#8217;s all done through contextual button pressing.¬† To walk in the game, you have to hold down R2.¬† It&#8217;s reminiscent of the old tank style controls of Resident Evil but after familiarizing myself with it, I had no problem.¬† I can see this being an issue for some though and it will likely turn people off completely.¬† The fixed camera can get a little wonky at times but is usually fixed by switching angles with R1.</p>
<p>Shelby&#8217;s scene shows off more of the interactive dialogue and what the combat is going to be like in Heavy Rain.¬† After playing through Mass Effect 1 and 2, the conversational flow and options are certainly not as advanced. ¬†But they&#8217;re better than most games.¬† The fight at the end of Shelby&#8217;s scene involving some asshole john was actually really cool and is definitely like a really REALLY long God of War boss ending sequence.¬† From swishing the sticks up and to the left, to mashing the buttons (and in some cases holding them down) it got pretty intense fast. ¬†And to those not familiar with a Playstation controller, this could end up extremely confusing at first.</p>
<p>Norman Jayden&#8217;s scene opens with him driving to a crime scene. ¬†We can see that he&#8217;s clearly struggling with some sort of addiction, although I&#8217;m sure we&#8217;ll get more information when the retail copy is out.¬† This section of the demo detailed the investigative aspect of the game and it is certainly a slick-looking one.¬† Norman has a pair of futuristic shades that he puts on to examine the crime scene. ¬†Tapping R1 will do a pulse scan of a 10 meter radius.¬† If there&#8217;s a clue, an icon will pop up and you can investigate it.¬† There are also options to tap into your inner thought process as well, holding L2 will bring up a list of things that your character is thinking about which you can access at your discretion.</p>
<p>The button pressing can get really complex at times, things as simple as walking up a muddy hill in the rain can require you eventually holding down nearly all the buttons simultaneously.¬† There&#8217;s functionality to it though and it doesn&#8217;t seem unnecessary and didn&#8217;t frustrate me personally.¬† The game looks outstanding on the graphical front.¬† It really showcases the power of the Playstation 3; from the downpour of rain, which is constantly beating down on you, to the fantastic way the environments are lit, and of course the immaculately detailed characters.¬† I was a little disappointed that its native output is 720p and not 1080p, but obviously I can overlook that.¬† Uncharted runs at 720p and looks gorgeous, so no big deal.</p>
<p>The voice acting on the other hand&#8230;not so great.¬† A game like this absolutely needs the voice work to be top notch, especially with games like Uncharted out there destroying the competition on this front.¬† It sounds stilted and you can definitely tell that none of the actors were even near each other when they recorded their dialogue.¬† Quantic Dream should&#8217;ve paid more attention to how Naughty Dog (Uncharted) did things with their actors because I feel like I&#8217;m losing something in the translation when it sounds so canned like this.¬† Some of the cheese that&#8217;s in the lines can be ignored because this is a take on film noir after all.¬† Even with that major gripe, I cannot wait to get my hands on a retail copy of this game.¬† Heavy Rain looks to break new ground by creating something that is truly a marriage between a game and cinema.¬† I&#8217;ve never seen something like this work, and it looks like (spotty voice acting aside) this could be the game that does it.¬† Hopefully this is the game that opens the door to all of those film buffs out there that don&#8217;t play games.¬† Check out the video of the Scott Shelby scene below!</p>
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		<title>Sleeper Cell: Brick</title>
		<link>http://mediabreach.com/2010/01/22/sleeper-cell-brick/</link>
		<comments>http://mediabreach.com/2010/01/22/sleeper-cell-brick/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Jan 2010 20:00:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>James</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sleeper Cell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brick (2005)]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Film Noir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Joseph Gordon-Levitt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lukas Haas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neo Noir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nora Zehetner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rian Johnson]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mediabreach.com/?p=2319</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After seeing 500 Days of Summer this past&#8230;uh&#8230;summer, Joseph Gordon-Levitt being generally bad ass in that movie reminded me that there was another movie of his that I had wanted to see. That movie was Brick, a film from &#8217;05 that I fully intended to go see in theatres but actually didn&#8217;t get around to <a href='http://mediabreach.com/2010/01/22/sleeper-cell-brick/'>[...]</a>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-2440" title="brick" src="http://mediabreach.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/brick-300x160.png" alt="brick" width="300" height="160" />After seeing <em>500 Days of Summer</em> this past&#8230;uh&#8230;summer, Joseph Gordon-Levitt being generally bad ass in that movie reminded me that there was another movie of his that I had wanted to see. That movie was <em>Brick</em>, a film from &#8217;05 that I fully intended to go see in theatres but actually didn&#8217;t get around to seeing until this past November. By that point, I had honestly forgotten what the movie was about and why I had originally wanted to see it 4 years ago, so I fought the urge to Google it and even tried to not read the back of the DVD case after having rented it. Goddammit, I&#8217;m glad I didn&#8217;t Google it. It was like getting something you had forgotten you really wanted for Christmas and at the time you asked for it you were kind of half joking, fully expecting to not get it but then holy crap, somebody actually went out and got it for you. It was that kind awesome.</p>
<p><em>Brick</em> is a detective story written and directed by Rian Johnson, the man responsible for &#8217;09&#8242;s charmingly cool con-artist movie, <em>The Brothers Bloom</em>. However, <em>Brick</em> isn&#8217;t <em>The Brothers Bloom</em>. It&#8217;s not even charming. It&#8217;s as fucked up and as hardboiled as any really good detective story. What sets it apart is that rather than dressing it up like typical film noir, Johnson forgoes the fedoras, the flappers, the black and white film, the 1920&#8242;s through the 1950&#8242;s and instead dresses up his numerous, young costars as modern Californian high school kids. Don&#8217;t sigh. I told you that this movie is super hardboiled. There isn&#8217;t a hint of after school special, I promise.</p>
<p>The film&#8217;s plot centers around Brendan Frye (Joseph Gordon-Levitt), a way too smart for high school loner trying to solve the murder of his ex-girlfriend, Emily (Emilie de Ravin, from <em>Lost</em>) after having found her body keeping a storm drain company during the film&#8217;s opening. Next, the titular brick of heroin is mentioned in a flashback scene by Emily while she&#8217;s on the phone with Brendan scared out of her mind because it turns out that the brick&#8217;s &#8220;bad&#8221; and &#8220;The Pin&#8221; is after her. This of course leads Brendan down the dark and subculture-y back alleys and preppy parties of modern high school, looking for Emily&#8217;s killer. Along the way, he meets jocks, drug addicts, motor heads, geeks, sluts, bloods, wastoids, dweebies, and dickheads with most of them not adoring Brendan or thinking he&#8217;s a righteous dude.</p>
<p>I could probably go more into the story at this point and not even approach spoiler country because it&#8217;s very convoluted. However, it&#8217;s never a convoluted mess. The story here is very well written and even if you don&#8217;t really get all the details straight watching it the first time, I think you&#8217;ll find it engaging and at least get the impression that everything fits together nicely. In that regard, it&#8217;s a credit to its genre. What makes the story work is that the world that Johnson has created gels. Decked out in drab colors, the world is easy to get into in that it&#8217;s great to see all these classic character archetypes thrown into a setting any of us can relate to and see how they might work. He&#8217;s managed to do this without any of the characters seeming too stereotypical all while bringing to the forefront the traits that make those kinds of characters great. There aren&#8217;t any bad one liners or bad cliches.</p>
<p>As far as performances go, they range from great to serviceable. Joseph Gordon-Levitt stands out above the rest as the adult sounding, reluctant detective in this movie. It&#8217;s like he and Johnson took everything that made Humphrey Bogart&#8217;s characters hard and sharp tongued, threw in the mental acumen of Sherlock Holmes, and made him look like a nerd. He&#8217;s not even a cool nerd like his right hand man, The Brain (Matt O&#8217;Leary), who at least looks like a hipster tech geek. Brendan looks like the kind of nerd that let&#8217;s his mom dress him and he&#8217;s wearing dress shoes with jeans the majority of the movie. It&#8217;s like they&#8217;re daring you to not take him seriously much the same way the Cohen brothers dared you to not take Anton Chigurh and his pageboy seriously in <em>No Country for Old Men</em>. But the first few scenes with Brendan leave you with the inability to argue that the kid&#8217;s an intuitive and logistical bad ass. He deals with most aggressors with his quick wit but even the way the Brendan throws down in a fight, which is cheap and balls to the wall, is impressive because you get the impression that he fights like that knowing his opponents don&#8217;t expect it from a scrawny little twerp like him. He&#8217;s cool in spite of himself and when the film ended, I was left knowing that I wouldn&#8217;t mind further adventures with a grown up Brendan Frye.</p>
<p>Probably the next most notable actors would be Lukas Haas (<em>Mars Attacks!</em>) and Nora Zehetner (<em>Heroes</em>, <em>Grey&#8217;s Anatomy</em>) Honestly, I don&#8217;t really want to go into Haas&#8217; role as The Pin too much save for the fact that he&#8217;s aptly named. It&#8217;s best if you meet him with a blank slate. Zehetner&#8230;I don&#8217;t know. At first, part of me wasn&#8217;t buying her in the role of Laura, the femme fatale. She&#8217;s just seemed too young and cutesy, especially when I associate such roles with a young Lauren Bacall or any of Hitchcock&#8217;s blondes. However, then I came to the realization that this was taking place in high school, so she may actually have been perfect for the part. That kind of character demands attention be drawn to them; they&#8217;re always supposed to seem out of place in the world around them. But Laura stands out in that she&#8217;s a high school girl. She&#8217;s cute as hell but not sultry. It&#8217;s just a little weird to have her stand out for reasons that I don&#8217;t normally associate with that archetype, especially when all the male roles don&#8217;t really deviate from their normal conventions in noir. She&#8217;s in contrast with the rest of the cast but because she seems more impish than hot but in retrospect, I think it works really well.</p>
<p>Emilie de Ravin, as previously mentioned and probably the only other noteworthy actress, is in the film and for the role she plays, she does fine. Oh, and Richard &#8220;the original Shaft&#8221; Roundtree makes an appearance in a small role. The rest of the cast reads like a who&#8217;s who of young actors with credentials that consist primarily of Law &amp; Order appearances, sequels that should never have happened and mainstream movie knock offs that make me want to set myself on fire rather than ever walk into a Blockbuster again. Despite this, the rest of the cast manages quite well.</p>
<p><img class="alignright size-full wp-image-2441" title="brick_bw" src="http://mediabreach.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/brick_bw.jpg" alt="brick_bw" width="291" height="222" />While I personally think this movie is the second coming in a lot of ways, I suppose one mark against it could be that for about the first 15-20 minutes, it&#8217;s really easy to get lost in the film&#8217;s terminology and quick dialogue, at least it was for me. Of course, I wouldn&#8217;t have this kind of movie any other way but it might be a turn off for some. Every line of dialogue is delivered in such a way that you feel that it&#8217;s loaded with extra secretive meaning. I&#8217;ll use an example from early on in the movie when Brendan tells The Brain to set up a meeting with someone. As ridiculous as it sounds, the term &#8220;lunch&#8221; is dropped in such a &#8220;hint, hint, wink, wink&#8221; way very early on that when The Brain asks Brendan where he wants to have his meeting and Brendan replies &#8220;you know where I eat lunch,&#8221; I fully expected the next scene to have Brendan and his contact meeting in a back alley, restroom, or hot air balloon. Nope, it&#8217;s the patio area of the school&#8217;s cafeteria. Even my wife said out loud, &#8220;oooohhh&#8230;it is lunch.&#8221; Like I said, this is early on in the movie and it already had us second guessing everything everybody was saying. Other than the getting lost in translation, I can&#8217;t really fault the movie for much else and even that problem can be rectified with an additional viewing. Pacing, acting, cinematography, and score are all either par or top notch.</p>
<p>Now, in the interest of objectivity, I have to tell you that I&#8217;m a whore for noir flicks. Big time. I can watch a film about a smart ass protagonist, a mysterious femme fatale, and a McGuffin that might as well be a rubber duck with a bow tie with the end result having me just as confused as I when I started watching it. But still, if it&#8217;s giving me the impression that I got it overall, call me pleased as punch. That being said, you may not like this movie for those very reasons. But I say give it a go, even if you think it might not be your cup of tea. It oozes style as well as substance but at the very least, you&#8217;ll want to check it out for JG-L getting his acting chops on. He&#8217;s quite impressive in this and has got me excited to see how he&#8217;ll do in Inception. Oh and as far as Rian Johnson goes, this is two for two. I&#8217;ll be there day one for his next flick, <em>Looper</em>, which has a¬† premise that sounds insane.</p>
<p>Brick is officially approved and highly recommended.</p>
<p><em>Sleeper Cell is a weekly column that will reflect movies that you perhaps missed or have always been meaning to watch but are too much of an asshole to place into your Netflix queue. ¬†This could be a movie from 50 years ago or a movie from last year. ¬†Bottom line, these are choice flicks and you missed out so Zack and our other writers are going to tell you what&#8217;s up.</em></p>
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