Thursday, June 16, 2016

My Overview and Reason for Lack of Blog Activity

Whoo! Finally! This is my first blog post since the Academy Awards from this February! I have not even touched Blogger because of my concerns for lack of physical activity at home (such as painting as suggested by my mom and the peers and clients who praises my painting skills) and my full commitment to another blog site called Writing for Designers for my Writing for Artists class with my kind and most understanding teacher Prof. Lynn Constantine. And believe me, I have had a good but difficult and challenging time at George Mason for spring semester this year. I was lucky to get an A in both Writing for Artists (Lynn Constantine) and Co Brand and Design (Jessica Rodriguez) classes, an A+ in Visual Voices Colloquium, and an A- in Paula Crawford's Painting III class. Although I got a B in 3D animation class with Prof. Jesse Cowan, which I thought was the most difficult class of the semester even when I was getting quite good with the tools in the Maya Animation program. But what matters most, is that I did great with that semester, as always, for all of my hard work and effort even when there are times when I kind of prefer to do things I love to do besides painting or working on computer stuff. Like watching movies, that is.



But as I prepare myself for hopefully an exciting summer, I've experienced some surprises and twists and turns that sometimes spawn in a consequential or controversial outcome. For example, Fox's Deadpool was an astounding hit for an R-rated comic book superhero movie, but Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice which is what I thought I was most excited for besides Marvel's Captain America: Civil War, sadly opened to very upsetting results which is not quite what the studio or fans had expected. To begin that subject, the Zack Snyder-directed blockbuster follow-up to Man of Steel is unfortunately filled with extremely out-of-character moments, particularly for the once proud "symbol of hope" Superman, and convoluted subplots that add nothing to what the "Batman v Superman" title really suggests. Why couldn't the trailers and TV spots be true to their word of what the final product will be like when deep down, it's as though they have NO CLUE of how to honor what made Batman, Superman, and all the DC heroes so popular in a comic book studio that must really think that being Batman is all they care about. I wanted to like the new takes on the most popular superheroes of DC Comics, mostly because of the praise on Ben Affleck's take on Batman, but because BvS has instead repeated the same bothersome mistakes found in Man of Steel, like making Superman too scornful and joyless because "dark and gritty works best", I'm not even sure if that means we should treat the Henry Cavill version of Superman as canon and act like the more heroic Superman (mainly Christopher Reeve and the DC Animated Universe counterpart) doesn't exist. They even made Lex Luthor (in name only even if he's "the son of the REAL (but dead... DEAD!?) Lex Luthor)!) a total loony thanks to Jesse Eisenberg! I would think that Captain America is the real Superman we deserve who is at least handled correctly and acted like a true American superhero and is actually willing to help people without any stupid morals. But that doesn't mean that every DC hero like The Flash or Aquaman should "be like Batman" as though DC thinks that darkness is always "fun"! I feel like the animated shows (mostly the '90s) are always gonna be better than the awful live-action movies (Green LanternJonah HexCatwoman, even the DC Extended Universe films like Batman v Superman)! Although there's a 3-hr R-rated Ultimate Edition coming in DVD/Blu-ray that will change our we feel towards the critically-panned theatrical cut, is that going to justify how upset we are with the stuff that we feel didn't need (Justice League teasers, death of Jimmy Olsen, Lois Lane's bullet investigation, nightmares including the Flash, reason that Batman and Superman fight each other is because of "Martha", the Kevin Costner cameo, last minute inclusion of Doomsday and Death of Superman storyline, etc.)? And with Suicide Squad coming this August and the announcement of Geoff Johns and Jon Berg being made as the "Kevin Feiges" of the DC movies, does that mean that there is "hope" for the DC Extended Universe, particularly correcting the way that Superman was terribly handled prior to next year's long-awaited live-action Justice League movie?


Hey, everyone!
On the bright side though, is that after I finally completed my spring semester at GMU, I got the chance to be reunited with my sister Christine Mayuga and see Captain America: Civil War at Tysons Corner! It's a superhero movie that I believe that Batman v Superman should have ended up as instead when pitting two of our favorite heroes for all of the right reasons with no abrupt resolution. But the biggest highlight of all was being impressed with Tom Holland's long-awaited FAITHFUL portrayal of Spider-Man after having to suffer with the awful-to-mediocre, franchise-killing Spider-Man 3 and Amazing Spider-Man 1 & 2! For once, Sony made the right decision to allow Marvel handle everyone's favorite wall-crawler with care and bringing him back from obscurity! I have viewed the first two critically-acclaimed but overrated Sam Raimi films to prepare myself for Spidey's first debut in the Marvel Cinematic Universe since last year. I was glad that my wait for that was worth it. But for now, let's focus with the Captain America vs. Iron Man squabble. While it retains the awesome direction from Phase 2 game-changer Captain America: The Winter Soldier and proved to be a great start for Phase 3, I would think that it felt kinda too long for 145 minutes with all the fun humor and serious action which is sorta hard to balance each other without annoying Marvel and/or non-Marvel fans. Nevertheless, based on the box office research, it is already earning over $1.14 billion worldwide which is amazing! I knew that Civil War would mark a great start for summer 2016!



Now as far as I can tell, I also had a nice trip, albeit with some stressful struggles when it comes to being so far away from my beloved home Virginia while visiting places like Japan and the Philippines. I was excited to have arrived in Japan with my mom is because that Japan is, as I would call it, the birthplace of all of the famous properties that I was mostly familiar with! Godzilla, Power Rangers, Pokémon, Yu-Gi-Oh!, Hello Kitty, Transformers, Sony, you name it! Tokyo, Japan was such a big city! I never thought that I dreamt of coming there! The biggest gripe for coming to Japan though was all of the foods that I'm uncomfortable to eat with, since I am well picky. I still ate some pizza, chicken and burgers, which is a relief. But oh the places and beautiful sights you can find in Japan! And I almost bought many awesome Japanese toys due to how expensive they were! It is kind of fun to wander around, especially when I visit a place like the Tokyo Tower and the Tokyo Disney Resort! My mom and I even got to see Christine again who was already finishing her classes in this country! Onward to the Philippines!
The Philippines, as I know, is a birthplace of my mom and dad since the 1960s. It must be a very long time for them since they moved away to live in the United States to raise me in 1991. But when we got to Manila, I never expected the conditions to be so tightly full of traffic and full of dirty but poor and helpless people loitering in the streets. My family and I had a fun time, however. We moved to an apartment called Victoria Towers where we'll settle there for 2-3 weeks. We also would usually visit each of our closest relative to the Mayuga family, and we would always to special malls like SM Megamall, Robinsons Mall and Green Belt. I also got to see movies with my dad like Angry Birds and X-Men: Apocalypse, which were already out prior to their American dates! The moment that I never expect would happen was coming to the Philippine General Hospital, which is the building that I have seen before in the paintings that I made for my parents and their friends! It was like seeing a painting brought to life, with almost all of the EXACT details that I painted in every specific area of the canvas! My favorite relative that my parents, my sister and I have visited was Uncle Cito, who is of course the BROTHER of my Facebook friend Auntie Melody, and he was a huge fan of superheroes and Transformers! I was so surprised to see what kind of a fan he was! During the times in Manila, Philippines, life can be very stressful since I felt like I miss Virginia so much. Mostly because of all the foods that I had trouble coping with in every restaurant my parents wanted to go to honor their friends. Many times, they would find some helpful alternatives for me to have an effective lunch or dinner. I knew that coming to the Philippines wasn't always a bad place to come, even if there are some places that challenges my taste and views.

By the end of May and the beginning of June, we traveled to the beaches, where we would have a relaxing time splashing ourselves with seawater and explore other exotic islands and life in the Philippine waters. We visited the El Nido resort and stayed there from Thursday to Sunday where would take some special trips to somewhere where we'll snorkel ourselves beneath the salty waters. My sister was like the only one out of our family to have an amazingly fun time! Me? I just go along with how they're enjoying themselves. I even got to kayak with Christine and finally ride the tides on a surfboard along the beach water! Sure feels like summer!


So overall, that's what I was doing and why I haven't touched this blog since the start of GMU spring semester. But that's all I have to recap everything that I've done so far! I wonder what I can expect to see or hear before arriving back in George Mason this fall following my LOOOOONNG break this summer!


Sunday, February 28, 2016

The 2016 Academy Award Winners!

The winners of my "favorite categories" at the 88th Academy Awards ceremony from last night are...!


Best Picture
  • The Big Short
  • Bridge of Spies
  • Brooklyn
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • Room
  • Spotlight


Best Director
  • The Big Short (Adam McKay)
  • Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller)
  • The Revenant (Alejandro G. Iñárritu)
  • Boyhood (Richard Linklater)
  • Room (Lenny Abrahamson)
  • Spotlight (Tom McCarthy)

Best Actor
  • Trumbo (Bryan Cranston)
  • The Martian (Matt Damon)
  • The Revenant (Leonardo DiCaprio)
  • Steve Jobs (Michael Fassbender)
  • The Danish Girl (Eddie Redmayne)

Best Actress
  • Carol (Cate Blanchett)
  • Room (Brie Larson)
  • Joy (Jennifer Lawrence)
  • 45 Years (Charlotte Rampling)
  • Brooklyn (Saoirse Ronan)

Best Supporting Actor
  • The Big Short (Christian Bale)
  • The Revenant (Tom Hardy)
  • Spotlight (Mark Ruffalo)
  • Bridge of Spies (Mark Rylance)
  • Creed (Sylvester Stallone)

Best Supporting Actress
  • The Hateful Eight (Jennifer Jason Leigh)
  • Carol (Rooney Mara)
  • Spotlight (Rachel McAdams)
  • The Danish Girl (Alicia Vikander)
  • Steve Jobs (Kate Winslet)

Best Original Screenplay
  • Bridge of Spies
  • Ex Machina
  • Inside Out
  • Spotlight
  • Straight Outta Compton

Best Adapted Screenplay
  • The Big Short
  • Brooklyn
  • Carol
  • The Martian
  • Room

Best Animated Feature
  • Anomalisa
  • Boy and the World
  • Inside Out
  • Shaun the Sheep Movie
  • When Marnie Was There

Best Production Design
  • Bridge of Spies
  • The Danish Girl
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant

Best Costume Design
  • Carol
  • Cinderella
  • The Danish Girl
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Revenant

Best Cinematography
  • Carol
  • The Hateful Eight
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Revenant
  • Sicario

Best Film Editing
  • The Big Short
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Revenant
  • Spotlight
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Best Makeup and Hairstyling
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared
  • The Revenant

Best Original Score
  • Bridge of Spies (Thomas Newman)
  • Carol (Carter Burwell)
  • The Hateful Eight (Ennio Morricone)
  • Sicario (Jóhann Jóhannsson)
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens (John Williams)

Best Original Song
  • Fifty Shades of Grey ("Earned It")
  • Racing Extinction ("Manta Ray")
  • Youth ("Simple Song #3")
  • The Hunting Ground ("Til It Happens to You")
  • Spectre ("Writing's on the Wall")

Best Visual Effects
  • Ex Machina
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Best Sound Mixing
  • Bridge of Spies
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Best Sound Editing
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • Sicario
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens


Sunday, February 21, 2016

Quick Review of 'Deadpool'


You gotta admit. The long-awaited Deadpool movie was just (language)-ing awesome!!! And they thought that it wasn't gonna be a huge hit 'cause it's an R-rated film (think Dredd or Punisher)! Since 2009, everybody's upset with what Fox did to our favorite Merc with the Mouth! But now, it looks like DP's $130-150 million weekend opening is music to our ears after Fox disappointed us with with their dull-looking "Fantastic" Four last year! Ryan Reynolds may have finally got himself a superhero franchise after the failure that is DC's Green Lantern (please announce the REAL Hal Jordan for the Zack Snyder's Justice League movie, WB)! Everything in Deadpool was just so darn hilarious in a vulgar way, that it really put the Hangover sequels and Ted 2 to shame! It's as though the large amount of comedy found in DP made Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy look like a "b*#*h"! Kudos to the Zombieland writers! If anyone enjoyed the bloody & violent satirical elements of the 1st Kick-Ass, go see this movie instead! I like that the evolution of Wade Wilson to Deadpool (NOT as Weapon XI, with his mouth tightly shut) is a lot more faithful to the comics, particularly his treatment with cancer. That means Fox will have to officially declare that X-Men Origins: Wolverine is NON-CANON with the original X-Men films, even before the timeline wipeout in Days of Future Past. I love how Deadpool is always "breaking the fourth wall" as though he knows he's a part of the movie that we're watching! For example, after the ending credits, Deadpool would see that people at the auditorium theater are still here (obviously) and urged us to go home while hinting of what we might expect in the already-in-development Deadpool sequel (Cable, the time-traveling mutant and future son of Cyclops). Morena Baccarin and Gina Carano are in my opinion the hottest women in the Deadpool movie! I have a feeling that the woman (was very hot in her first scene) who is Wade/Deadpool's girlfriend is now gonna end up completely recognizable after being under the radar even while in TV shows like Homeland and Gotham! My favorite action sequence(s) is/are the car chase and gun fight, which is almost an exact copy of the test footage shown at Comic-Con! The opening credits intro had has laughing big time! But out of all of the entertaining songs in this movie, my favorite is the Salt n Peppa song that I heard in the trailers and during the end credits!
In sharing ties with the X-Men movie universe, even though to me Deadpool is not their type, Colossus is just what he should look like in the comics as opposed to his underdeveloped iteration in the Bryan Singer films. He talks like a true Russian! So funny yet gross when he was disgusted by Deadpool cutting off his own hand-cuffed hand and then vomited when he shot Francis/Ajax in the head while giving a hero doesn't kill speech. The little girl Negasonic Teenage Warhead (Brianna Hildebrand) is pretty cute and definitely the kind of girl most emo and gothic girls should hang out with. Love that Twitter joke before charging in towards Gina Carano!
It's great that Deadpool is finally the movie we've all been waiting for after being let down by the Wolverine prequel spin-off that may as well be treated as a cheap teaser trailer for the potential X-Men spin-offs. If only Venom got the proper movie treatment he deserves if Sony wasn't so greatly focused on letting Marvel use Spider-Man properly while completely in the dark after being upset with Amazing Spider-Man 2. Who needs the Deadpool video game? This movie is worth watching for us fans to entertain ourselves! I had a lot of fun hearing Deadpool joke around with the movie references like the "please don't make the suit green or animated" moment! Surprise that Deadpool is actually more successful than even the previous X-Men films including Days of Future Past. Let's see if this May's X-Men: Apocalypse will try to keep up when delivering a new vision on the new X-Men team's battle with Apocalypse now that Bryan Singer is back at the helm! I don't know what a chimichanga will taste like, but I know it's spicy yet wanting to taste it and feel like I'm now officially pretending to be Deadpool besides Spider-Man or Captain America!

Saturday, January 23, 2016

Regretful Throwback Review of 'The Amazing Spider-Man 2'


Remember when I talked about how I enjoyed The Amazing Spider-Man 2 on the opening day back in May 2014 before I graduated NOVA to participate in George Mason? Forget I ever said that. At least last summer's Avengers: Age of Ultron was way more entertaining than this failure (yeah, I said it) despite being so-so. It was that one time that I thought for sure that we finally have the most definitive movie portrayal of Spider-Man of all time as a way to erase the emo-ness/humorlessness/crybabishness of Tobey Maguire in the depressing (that's right) trilogy closure Spider-Man 3 after seeing the 1st "Amazing" Spider-Man, I thought for sure that the sequel would be any better if not so than Sam Raimi's truly spectacular (no pun intended) Spider-Man 2 (maybe like Godfather 2, it should have been the actual end of Tobey/Peter's story). Even though I enjoyed how Andrew Garfield made his Spider-Man more humorous, by wearing his extremely FLAWLESS costume for a decent amount of time without relying on frequently taking his mask off and act like he was taken straight from the comics and brought to life on the big screen, perhaps it shouldn't be too super corny (unlike the 2012 predecessor) for even the comic book fan audiences to cope with thanks to the INFERIOR and distracting soundtrack by Oscar-winning Hans Zimmer (along with the "Magnificent Six") as opposed to the more memorable and heroic soundtracks by Danny Elfman or the late James Horner in the predecessors. As much as the chemistry between Andrew Garfield and Emma Stone is much more sweeter than Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst, it unfortunately takes up a lot of screentime a little too much with all of the unnecessary breakups and getting back together whatsoever. Almost every character, like Felicity Jones' Felicia Hardy (Black Cat) and Paul Giamatti's over-the-top mechanized Rhino (hilariously only seen at the start and the end of the film), that is "crucial" to this so-called Spider-Man Cinematic Universe that Sony hopes to build were absolutely unnecessary that they just ended up having no payoff. Same thing with the villains, particularly Electro (Academy Award-winner Jamie Foxx) who is of course so uber-cheesy, just like the German-accented mad scientist Dr. Kafka, when he starts off as an electrician nerd who wants to be seen by the public and then have only two major fight scenes in both Times Square and the Oscorp electric power plant grid despite being the "main villain" who sadly has no connection with what Peter Parker has to deal with after battling the Lizard in the first film. That is probably what made the overall ASM2 plot a little confusing. And Dane DeHaan. Oh boy, was I wrong to admit how "great" he is compared to James Franco's whiny counterpart who is clearly not a worthy "Green Goblin" like Norman Osborn wanted him to be in Spider-Man 2. Just like Chris Cooper's Norman Osborn, who is suddenly sick and dying (and then we don't see him being alive in the mid-credits scene as rumored), the new Harry Osborn became the [first] Green Goblin (in order to cure his genetic sickness after his offer to Peter/Spider-Man got turned down (obviously)) and then first attack Spider-Man after Electro's defeat only to end up unconscious after a brief fight in the clocktower. And because we're no longer getting an Amazing Spider-Man 3 as planned, all that Green Goblin nonsense (with all of his attack on Oscorp scenes stupidly cut out after the transformation) is but a tragic waste. Except that kind of nonsense resulted in the death of Gwen Stacy. Yeah, I knew that was gonna happen since it happened before in the comics, but I didn't think it would be handled like this. Though it's too bad that Dane DeHaan's Green Goblin (except too human-like) was just simply there to kill off Gwen. So both his and James Franco's Harry the Green Goblins are officially ruined by becoming cheap afterthoughts like Jean Grey's Dark Phoenix in X-Men 3. Guess the studio interference really did a huge number on this potentially wasted sequel to the unnecessary reboot. Now we will never get to see if the whole Sinister Six plot (regarding the "Gustav Fiers" character, who mysteriously first appeared in Dr. Connors' prison in ASM1) will really came to fruition as hinted by the ego-headed producers. That we probably don't need in Amazing Spider-Man 2 (now one of the biggest failed movie franchise starters since Golden Compass and Green Lantern) if it's not going to be a real thing at all. The same can be said for the underdeveloped Peter Parker parents subplot that was supposed to be "an important thing" (hence, the "untold story" in ASM1). Oh, and for the final battle part, it would be better if we don't have the random near plane double collision and the Aunt May hospital scenes since we DON'T CARE ABOUT THEM and mean nothing to Peter and Gwen's fight with Electro.
No wonder reviews from critics, including Spidey fans, were all as though written by J. Jonah Jameson. This is the Spider-Man movie Sony thinks will "earn $1 billion"? I think not, given that there's like a LOT of mediocrity with the poor script (Roberto Orci & Alex Kurtzman, mind you), the characters, the inconsistent tone, and how everything is too commercial like the Joel Schumacher Batman films were. What a pretty poor gamble they had made. It must be why its $709 million worldwide gross is considered a very low record for Sony, which is apparently due to our lukewarm attention towards the once iconic Marvel superhero in his too-soon-to-be-made reboot prior to the massive popularity of the more bankable Avengers after Spider-Man 3 destroyed our anticipated expectations and our long term interest in the web-slinger back in 2007. That must be how this franchise fatigue thing works whenever you reach up to movie #4 or #5. Thank goodness that Sony agreed to let Marvel borrow the Spider-Man universe to better incorporate it into the Avengers world while still retaining half of their creative and distribution rights.
Even though for some reason after The Amazing Spider-Man 2 got mixed to now more negative reviews, opinions (particularly on YouTube) for Sam Raimi's "awful" mistake that is the laughably-horrendous Spider-Man 3 are starting to change by saying that everything in that X-Men 3-type threequel is "better" than the [more tolerable] Amazing Spider-Man films because the action is "decent" ('cept we actually don't see enough Black-Suited Spider-Man action after the Sandman subway fight like we thought) and that Peter being all emo and dancing like an idiot is "what makes him a nerd" (ugh, but isn't the silly humor feeling MISPLACED and oh, FORCED unlike in 1 & 2!?). Why? If Spider-Man 3 wasn't the worst movie of all time by undermining everything that Spider-Man stood for as Spider-Man 2 had established, then Sony would never have considered rebooting the Spider-Man movie franchise we know is just too good to be immediately remade even if we're in the 2010s when next thing they know, they're only damaging the Spider-Man character even further by retelling the origin story in a more lazier way when you don't have Uncle Ben's death (Martin Sheen specifically) being the main factor for Peter's reason to become a "responsible" hero like how it was successfully handled in the 2002 film. It's precisely why I now like the X-Men movie franchise way more when you have time-travel to fix everything and still bring back old characters from the original 3 without permanently ignoring them and then give them a proper happy ending while paving way for a newer timeline that has James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender, and Jennifer Lawrence. That should have happened to the Sam Raimi films in order to remove the tainted problems from Spidey 3 and give Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst a proper happy ending like what SM2 actually did and accept that the original Spidey films are better off as TWO MOVIES instead of a "trilogy" that we so greedily kept calling them. This way, we'll always honor the "With Great Power, Comes Great Responsibility" message when we DON'T mention the stupid and immature things that Tobey "Crybaby" Maguire had done when wearing the "Dance-Off" Black Suit or the meaningless revelation that Sandman killed Uncle Ben, which were strangely approved by Sam Raimi and Ivan Raimi in the script (even before the studio's behest to include Venom). Why can't the fans understand that and admit that Spider-Man 3 is a 2007 movie that should be wiped off from the face of the Earth?
The way that Amazing Spider-Man 2 ended with a spider symbol appearing after Peter goes back being Spider-Man (which took long enough after "5 months") to save the people of New York from Rhino, it's a shame that we'll no longer be getting an actual ending for Andrew Garfield's time as our favorite future Avenger if the not-as-successful $709 million gross and a 53% fresh rating from Rotten Tomatoes says so. Perhaps the Sony executives should have learned their lesson on how to not mess with the final product of either Spider-Man 3 or Amazing Spider-Man 2, as well as how to not remake something so classic and iconic (like Total Recall or RoboCop) in favor of low-grade "enhancements" that it will only hurt our feelings towards the superior original works. That is why we must not lose our faith and interest in Spider-Man, the most responsible hero of the biggest Marvel universe that he is already a part of. So for me, whether you Spider-Man 3 lovers like it or not, the only Spider-Man movies in existence are Sam Raimi's Spider-Man (2002) and Spider-Man 2 (2004), and finally Marvel's Spider-Man (coming July 7th, 2017) starring our newest member of the Marvel Cinematic Universe who will help redeem your friendly neighborhood hero once again where Andrew Garfield had failed: Tom Holland. I will await the first full look at his Spider-Man character as soon as Captain America: Civil War draws closer to May 6th this year!

Mid-January 2016's Biggest Snowmageddon Ever?



Just when I was starting this year's Spring Semester at George Mason University after my long relaxing winter break, I didn't think that the snowy weather would be such a big "maelstrom" for us to deal with. No wonder my sister Christine is unable to come visit us in Virginia as planned. With that snowy catastrophe happening already, I was hoping that nothing at my house would be all so boring when I have to dealt with things like preparing the class materials for next week (while facing the inevitability of GMU's status quo due to the inclement weather) and then trying to finish up the 16x20 inch Philippine General Hospital painting as soon as possible. I only pray that I have time to do so.
I'm also kinda nervous of how this weather'll affect everything in my home once it subsides around Saturday night. What I do know is no church mass, no swimming practice at GMU on Sunday, and maybe no class/class delayed by 2 hours late next Monday. Even so, the snowstorm might even affect the newly-released movies like The 5th Wave which would surely FLOP pretty hard at the box office big time. That is something that I clearly do not want that. I just believe that we're like gonna be completely buried deep beneath the snow! I hope that we have enough big shovels, snow plows and snow blowers to excavate as much snow as we can.

Thursday, January 14, 2016

The 2016 Oscar Nominations Are In!

While shaking off the losses of both David Bowie and Alan Rickman, here are my favorite Oscar nomination categories announced this week.

Which one of the 2015 movies will win an Academy Award for Best Picture of the Year? Will it be...?
  • The Big Short (5 nominations)
  • Bridge of Spies (5 nominations)
  • Brooklyn (3 nominations)
  • Mad Max: Fury Road (10 nominations)
  • The Martian (7 nominations)
  • The Revenant (12 nominations)
  • Room (4 nominations)
  • Spotlight (6 nominations)


Best Director?
  • The Big Short (Adam McKay)
  • Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller)
  • The Revenant (Alejandro G. Iñárritu)
  • Boyhood (Richard Linklater)
  • Room (Lenny Abrahamson)
  • Spotlight (Tom McCarthy)

Best Actor?
  • Trumbo (Bryan Cranston)
  • The Martian (Matt Damon)
  • The Revenant (Leonardo DiCaprio)
  • Steve Jobs (Michael Fassbender)
  • The Danish Girl (Eddie Redmayne)

Best Actress?
  • Carol (Cate Blanchett)
  • Room (Brie Larson)
  • Joy (Jennifer Lawrence)
  • 45 Years (Charlotte Rampling)
  • Brooklyn (Saoirse Ronan)

Best Supporting Actor?
  • The Big Short (Christian Bale)
  • The Revenant (Tom Hardy)
  • Spotlight (Mark Ruffalo)
  • Bridge of Spies (Mark Rylance)
  • Creed (Sylvester Stallone)

Best Supporting Actress?
  • The Hateful Eight (Jennifer Jason Leigh)
  • Carol (Rooney Mara)
  • Spotlight (Rachel McAdams)
  • The Danish Girl (Alicia Vikander)
  • Steve Jobs (Kate Winslet)

Best Original Screenplay?
  • Bridge of Spies
  • Ex Machina
  • Inside Out
  • Spotlight
  • Straight Outta Compton

Best Adapted Screenplay?
  • The Big Short
  • Brooklyn
  • Carol
  • The Martian
  • Room

Best Animated Feature?
  • Anomalisa
  • Boy and the World
  • Inside Out
  • Shaun the Sheep Movie
  • When Marnie Was There

Best Production Design?
  • Bridge of Spies
  • The Danish Girl
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant

Best Costume Design?
  • Carol
  • Cinderella
  • The Danish Girl
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Revenant

Best Cinematography?
  • Carol
  • The Hateful Eight
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Revenant
  • Sicario

Best Film Editing?
  • The Big Short
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Revenant
  • Spotlight
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Best Makeup and Hairstyling?
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared
  • The Revenant

Best Original Score?
  • Bridge of Spies (Thomas Newman)
  • Carol (Carter Burwell)
  • The Hateful Eight (Ennio Morricone)
  • Sicario (Jóhann Jóhannsson)
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens (John Williams)

Best Original Song?
  • Fifty Shades of Grey ("Earned It")
  • Racing Extinction ("Manta Ray")
  • Youth ("Simple Song #3")
  • The Hunting Ground ("Til It Happens to You")
  • Spectre ("Writing's on the Wall")

Best Visual Effects?
  • Ex Machina
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Best Sound Mixing?
  • Bridge of Spies
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Best Sound Editing?
  • Mad Max: Fury Road
  • The Martian
  • The Revenant
  • Sicario
  • Star Wars: The Force Awakens





Tune in to find out during ABC's 88th Annual Academy Awards ceremony on Sunday, February 28th. Hosted by Chris Rock!

Thursday, December 31, 2015

Gabe Mayuga's Favorite Moments of 2015

Happy New Year's Eve, everyone! So sorry that I haven't written any of my blog articles since this September. But I guess I was... busy with everything that is most important for me and my Mayuga family like completing and preparing my difficult fall semester George Mason University projects. Aside from all of my stressful moments with my own personal family problems and tragic deaths of loved ones (Leonard Nimoy, Christopher Lee, James Horner, Uncle Joseph Bauzon), I recall some of my favorite moments that I will always cherish besides the nostalgic memories I've had years before the year 2015! The year that went through a lot of major changes with some results that don't meet expectations albeit with reasonable purposes.
My favorite part about this was watching some highly-anticipated movies with surprisingly good word of mouth or disappointing box office figures (like Josh Trank's "Fantastic" Four and Brad Bird's underrated Tomorrowland) that leads to unexpected effects to the current movie industry. My favorite films from summer or fall-winter are Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Mad Max: Fury Road, and Disney/Pixar's Inside Out. But my most favorite moment of all time this year was visiting the Children's Museum in Indianapolis to enter the Transformers exhibit, storing all of the Transformers toys from the past and some activities fun for little kids and long-time Transformers fans like me despite the franchise now no longer getting a lot of attention like they used to have since the pre-AOE TF movies (as the 4th one from last year got a paltry $245 million in domestic areas (unlike the 1st three's $300-400 million grosses in the U.S.) despite its massive success in China, totaling up to over $1.1 billion) back from 2007-2012. It was on display until late July during the time when the latest TV show Transformers: Robots in Disguise premiered on Cartoon Network this Spring and can be seen every Saturday morning at 6:30 A.M., while paling in comparison with a much superior Transformers: Prime show. But it was a fun time reliving my obsession with the Autobot/Decepticon warfare after I was drawn to it via watching the very first live-action film 8 years ago. I am hopeful that the new writers hired (by Akiva Goldsman, of course) for this "cinematic universe" will make Transformers relevant again without bringing up things that I fear would cause critics and even the fans to nitpick in a nonstop way like they have with the upsetting TF sequels since Revenge of the Fallen. Autobots, roll out!
I also visited the Star Wars Costume Exhibition in Times Square of New York during one of my artsbus trips last month. Looking at these costumes from the past 6 films was an experience I've ever had, and will surely make me feel totally excited to see The Force Awakens when it comes out on the opening day, which I will watch 3 days later. My dad and I were amazed at how the costumes and props were once used by characters, with names that only I strongly remember, before Lucasfilm was sold to Disney. While the prequel trilogy have actually underwhelmed a lot of fans, their love for the originals that has the Rebellion, Imperial ships, and Darth Vader will never fade away and will be "strong with the Force." Am curious to how the latest J.J. Abrams-directed film is going to change the franchise?
After being so upset with how The Amazing Spider-Man 2 had turned out, in financial terms (only $709 million, as opposed to the $750-$800+ million grosses the previous 4 got), resulting in the cancellation of the threequel and Andrew Garfield's exit after for just TWO Spidey films, I knew that had Sam Rami's Spider-Man 3 not ended up as the WORST movie of all time (for me, if no one agrees), there wouldn't have been a need for Sony to start a reboot from scratch FIVE YEARS LATER with a new origin that proves how inferior it was to the much-better handled one in the 2002 film (minus the retcon that clearly HURT the traditional Spider-Man origin). Around this February, I was shocked to learn that Sony (after the infamous hack) has agreed to allow Marvel incorporate the Spider-Man characters to the Marvel Cinematic Universe (starting with next summer's Captain America: Civil War) while retaining distribution and creative control over the web-slinging hero! With that confirmation, I was curious about who's going to PROPERLY play Peter Parker/Spider-Man to joke around with any of the fellow Avengers and wash away the bad taste of the post-SM 1&2 trilogy (2007-2014). And sure enough 4 months later, Sony/Marvel has picked TOM HOLLAND (The Impossible, In the Heart of the Sea)! Since then, I had complete faith that young Tom Holland will DO GREAT as our most iconic arachnid superhero (now "2nd place" to the Avengers (specifically, the "invincible" Iron Man) without bringing up something that made Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield act almost "out of character". And I have been trying so hard to write comments to SHUT UP those (especially on Facebook) who don't seem to treat Spider-Man 3 the same way they did with Batman & Robin and Indiana Jones 4, by saying that it was "better than Amazing Spider-Man 1-2", as though it is still canon in the Sam Raimi trilogy even though I don't want it to be (some "happy ending") having watched what the time-traveling does to the X-Men movie continuity affected by the disappointing X-Men 3 in Bryan Singer's Days of Future Past. But I am proud that Spider-Man is "back home" with the Avengers. Can't say the same for the Fantastic Four, unfortunately. I pray that the 2017 Spider-Man reboot (without the origin story this time) will prove me right!
Another one of my favorite 2015 moments was going on two Artsbus trips with my mom (along with dad this November) to the Washington, D.C. area. I registered these two Artsbus classes for my fall semester, despite not being graded with As or Bs. It was however a fun experience for me during my time at George Mason while dealing with designing magazines, making motion design videos, and discussing art subjects in aesthetics class. Some of my favorite artworks I've seen are the ones made by Anselm Kiefer or even paintings by painters such as Henri Matisse and Vincent van Gogh (found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art) as well as the war paintings by Italian artist Alberto Burri in the cylindrical Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (motivated by the On Kawara's Silence video in Prof. McCoy's classroom). Although I was more interested in seeing how these contemporary or antique artworks were greatly designed than learning many of the important facts that I'll sometimes have trouble understanding. It was fun going to the museums with just my mom or with mom and dad together.


But my biggest moment in 2015 of all, was getting to see my younger sister Christine Mayuga come back from Notre Dame University (since last August) during each and every holiday weekend. Just like the very touching moment for Riley and her mom and dad in the Inside Out movie, I will not forget how much of a family we truly are despite getting into a lot of fights and suffering from horrible coughing. And watching that Pixar movie with a very original concept since Up reminded me just how much I miss my childhood days when we're not always dealing with a lot of "important" work and that not every movie relies on too much sequels/remakes and "more money" businesses or even TV shows in which cartoons now sadly ended up as nothing more but YouTube parody/poop jokes videos (Teen Titans Go, The Bare Bears, Breadwinners) or "kid-friendly" toy-selling commercials (Avengers Assemble, TMNT 2012 past Season 2-3). No wonder Joy has been trying hard to make Riley be more happy by reliving her favorite moments from Minnesota in a more modern world that always stick with iPhone technology and social networking discussions. Wonder if 2016 will be any better? I hope so. I mean what could happen?