* SBS on Demand has the popular New Zealand movie Boy, made by writer/director/actor Taika Waititi, available for viewing at the moment. I had not seen it before. There's a lot to like about: it looks great for a small budget film; the child actors are excellent and quite charming; and it has a real sense of place. On the downside, the story doesn't have much propelling it forward, and a clearer change in Waititi's character by the end might have been welcome. But overall there's something about some of its imagery, scenes and music that made it rattle around in my dreams, and in my mind throughout today, after watching it last night. That's always a sign of a good movie - when it clings to your brain, even if you don't quite understand why.
* Taika Waititi is, presumably, very happy with how many people have seen and liked Thor: Ragnarok. it's been out for all of 16 days and will probably have taken over $700 million internationally. I wonder if he gets a percentage of the take? Incidentally, I was surprised to see in Boy that there is a section where his character talks about the Incredible Hulk, which seems quite prescient.
I am happy to read that he is wanting to make a spinoff to What We Do In the Shadows, concentrating on the werewolves (not swearwolves.) A clip of the vampire/werewolf confrontation, which amuses me more than it probably should, is here:
* Well, that's a bit sad: I see on IMDB that James Rolleston, the lead actor in Boy, made a couple of other movies, but was in a serious car accident in 2016 which involved some pretty major brain injury. New Zealand media says that he has had to undergo a lot of rehabilitation, which sounds like is ongoing. He was only recently sentenced for a dangerous driving charge from the indicent.Sounds unclear as to whether he will make a full recovery.
* On a more serious note, Ed Yong writes at The Atlantic about how New Zealand conservationists who want to try to eradicate all rats and other introduced mammals are very keen on a kind of scary CRISPR technique called gene drives to spread extinction causing genes (for infertility, for example) throughout the rat population.
I don't know: getting rid of stoats I can understand; rats I feel sorry for, even if they like bird eggs. I just can't see that it is worthwhile using gene modification techniques that could risk accidentally eradicating rats worldwide. That would make for some major ecological changes, surely.
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