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This blog is a storage space for various thoughts, observations and musings centering on shōjo manga (少女漫画, Japanese comics for girls), josei-oriented manga (Japanese comics for women) and manga created by women (in the widest sense). Topics from other fields of relevance, such as music, art, literature and film may be discussed here as well.

PLEASE NOTE:
For the most part, Japanese names appear in their original order - surname first, followed by the given name.

For more detailed information about this blog, please visit the about clb.org page.

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This blog is run by Dia. Please send any enquiries and comments this way.



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This blog was relaunched recently. Some elements might not be fully working yet while others might be completely missing at the moment but will be added soon. Thank you for your patience!

Match Point, Mushishi & Manga

Have any of you seen Match Point? I have to admit I’m not that much of a Woody Allen fan and I mostly went to see it because of Mr Rhys-Meyers and Miss Johansson but who cares what made me want to watch it in the first place? All that matters is I saw it. And loved it. Every minute of it. It was so intense, so complex, so absolutely convincing ♥

I’m also trying to watch a bit of anime. The new season features so many good series, it’s really hard to keep up with all of them. Mushishi has to be one of my favourites of the season; it’s neo-japanesque (ha!), atmospheric, almost melancholic and natsukashii; and the sceneries are so beautiful, absolutely amazing.

I’m also watching Monster, Garasu no kamen, Eureka seveN, Noein and ParaKisu.

On the manga front, I’ve been reading lots of shoujo classics and newer works by older artists (Kuramochi Fusako, Ikuemi Ryou). I still have subscriptions for Betsuma and Hana to yume so that makes for a nice stack of low quality paper in my apartment and hours of fun for an avid manga reader.

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Categories: Anime, Film/TV, Manga, Various.
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Posted on Jan 9, 2006 (Mon, 6:10 pm).

62nd Venice Film Festival

This year’s Biennale in Venice proved to be quite amazing again, featuring a fantastic line-up that made me feel sad as I couldn’t be there myself :(
(My only solace now is the Berlinale Film Festival which I’ll be able to attend next February.)

Ang Lee’s Brokeback Mountain was awarded the Golden Lion for Best Film. Ang Lee is the man for Westerns with a difference. (Think Ride with the Devil.) And of course, he is a brilliant director in general; The Ice Storm is one of my favourite movies ever made.

Speaking of The Ice Storm, Elijah Wood, who was in that film, also attended the Venice Film Festival to promote Everything Is Illuminated, the movie adaptation of Jonathan Safran Foer’s extremely well-written, hilarious and moving novel of the same title. The few trailers I’ve seen suggest that the film is just as weird and funny as the book and I hope it will find its way to a cinema near me very soon :)

Ang Lee was handed his award by none other than Miyazaki Hayao. If that wasn’t wonderful enough, Miyazaki Hayao received the Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement! I am overjoyed that a European film festival acknowledged again what an outstanding film maker Miyazaki is.

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Categories: European & American Literature, Film/TV, Various.
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Posted on Sep 11, 2005 (Sun, 11:29 pm).

Mathilde

I spent a large part of the last few days watching movies I’ve been wanting to see for a long time. One of them was A Very Long Engagement, which I had missed when it was in theatres half a year ago. The film is the most recent work of director Jean-Pierre Jeunet of Amélie fame and features Audrey Tautou (=Amélie) as female lead Mathilde who is embarking on a long journey to find her fiancé Manech who disappeared in the Great War.

As far as Tautou’s portrayal of a young woman holding on to her dreams, the long list of characters whose lives we get to peek into, the witty dialogues and the inventive twists and turns are concerned, the movie is just as charming as Amélie. However, A Very Long Engagement‘s scope is ultimately much larger, be it in the depressing and disturbing setting of the trenches and the bright, sun-flooded fields of rural France, or in its themes of how inhuman and absurd wars are, how even people who fight on the same side deceive and betray each other, but also how love drives people to do the most irrational, unreasonable things and how hope can motivate you to dedicate your whole life to one thing.

The cinematography, set designs and computer animations are absolutely fantastic. The score is wonderfully moving in a non-pompous way which suits the film perfectly. The narrative is always gripping and keeps a fine balance between its elements of realistic depiction of the war, suspense, light-hearted comedy and romance.
A highly impressive movie! I’m really glad I bought it and urge everyone to do the same :)

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Categories: Film/TV, Various.
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Posted on Jun 26, 2005 (Sun, 2:21 am).


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