Friday, February 27, 2015

In Final Defense of Fairy Tales

     


    What I really want to say with all this fairy tale defense is that fairy tales are true. I don't mean that there are dragons and griffons flying around in some magical forest somewhere but magic is real; not in the sense that we have come to know: that there is good and bad magic (its all bad actually) but it did get me thinking: if magic is real what other parts of fairy tales are true? Then I realized something: most of the stories started in everyday life. That may not seem remarkable but it tells the greatest truth about fairy tales: they are just about people that decide to take a stand and when they made that stand they don't give up. And that is why fairy tales get so much hate, because they don't tell a worry free story they tell a give-up free story. And our silver spoon fed society doesn't want to except that things aren't going to be handed to them.
   

     JRR Tolkien was a Soldier in World War I one of the most hellish wars ever fought and he wrote a fairy tale that is loved by even this tech obsessed generation. Albert Eisenstein messed up the proof that eventually became E=MC2, partly because he didn't understand some of the laws that would affect the proof until later but instead of giving up he learned those laws. Both of these men not only read fairy tales but believed them. And I think that is the point of fairy tales: to take a stand, believe in your dreams and don't give up ever.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Random movie and game trivia

     Hello all, I'm writing my final Defense of Fairy Tales post for next week but I didn't want to skip out on this week like I normally do (sorry about that) I'm going to share with you some of my favorite bits of trivia about things so without further ado...

There are actually four "first Pokemon" contenders: Bulbasaur is the first Pokemon in the national Pokedex. Arceus was the first thing to exist (but only took physical form later on.) Mew was the first Pokemon to be defined as a "Pocket Monster." Finally Rhydon was the first Pokemon designed in this world.

Drowzee is thought to be based on a tapir but may actually be based on the Baku, a spirit in Japanese mythology that, granted looks like a giant tapir but according to mythology is actually capable of eating dreams like Drowzee does, which is some thing most tapirs can't do. 

The Physic type in Pokemon is weak to three types which are Bug, Dark, and Ghost, which are also three of the most common human fears, which makes sense since the Physic type is all about brain power and as anyone who has gone into their basement at night knows: fears destroy every bit of reason. 

Since most of the production time was spend on the special effects and not on the script the 2008 Iron Man had only an outline of a script when filming came around, so almost the entirety of the movie is in prov.

The CGI Empire State Building used in Peter Jackon's King Kong  took 18 months to make; the best part: the real Empire State Building was built in 14 months. 

Godzilla's famous (and trademarked) roar used in the original Godzilla was made in a rather awesome way: a resin covered glove was rubbed over the strings of a double bass and the resulting sound was than amplified in an echo chamber. 

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Are Happy Endings Real?

     


     


  Image result for happy endings fairy tales


   Happy endings are used by many people to say that fairy tales are a load of baloney, my theory on this is that in today's culture, especially here in America people confuse happiness with perfection. That joy can only be obtained through getting to goals, or not having any problems, or being the smartest one of your friend group, or something like that. While these are not bad in and of themselves, saying that something like that is the only way to be happy is by those things is where we get into trouble. You see in fairy tales the ending goes: "they lived happily ever after, not: "they lived trouble free ever after", or even: "they live together ever after," it goes: "they lived happily ever after." Let me explain with one of my favorite authors of all time: C.S. Lewis.

Image result for cs lewis
     Like Walt Disney, Clive Staples Lewis lived a sucky life: when he was about three or four his dog, Jacksie, died starting Lewis's life filled with death. On his father, Albert's, birthday in 1908, Lewis's mother, Flora Lewis died of cancer. This same year Lewis's grandfather and great-uncle died and Lewis was sent to a boarding school for two years. After that he was transferred to a different boarding school that he had to quit because of respiratory problems. He was than enrolled in a school near a health resort, it was at this school that Lewis gave up on Christianity. Lewis enlisted in the British army where his college roommate was killed in battle and Lewis was wounded and a year later and discharged. He continued his studies at Oxford University, where he published poems in school magazines and officially published "Death in Battle." Eventually he started teaching at Oxford for many years. Finally in 1929 Lewis's father died and Lewis became a theist and two years later. After a long talk with his friends J.R.R. Tolkien, and Hugo Dyson, Lewis became a Christian again. From that point on C.S. Lewis never had it easy, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. was mocked by his friends, his married life was so stressful he wrote a book about it, and he eventually died on November 22 1963 with his grave reading a favorite Shakespeare quote of his: "men must endure their going hence."
Image result for cs lewis's grave
     C. S. Lewis was a great man, and I have no doubt he died happily. Why? His life was filled with death, doubt, and diseases, these are all things that people use to justify giving up. He never gave up because he never gave in. He never gave in to the idea that to be an adult you have to be a grown up. Never gave in to blaming God for all his problems. And he never gave into the idea that happiness came through anything this world could give him. And that is the happy ending: not one of wealth, sex, power, or fun, but of contentment.

Monday, February 2, 2015

Why Fairy Tales are True

    Image result for walt disneyImage result for cs lewisImage result for jrr tolkien


     Walt Disney, C.S. Lewis, Albert Einstein, and JRR Tolkien, what to they all have in common? Were they all of the same religion? No, C.S was a Christian turned atheist turned Christian, Walt and JRR where Catholic, and Albert was a Jew. Did they have similar personalities? No, Albert was mostly carefree and fun loving, JRR was somewhat of an introvert who wanted only him to work on his books, Walt was hard working and hated anything that didn't live up to his incredibly high standards and C.S was always described as being gruff and sure that he would never be remembered after he died. Then what did they have in common? They all have two things in common: they all went through hard times, and they all believed in fairy tales.
   

     Lets start with Walt Disney. At age 22 Walt started a cartoon company that barely saw any success, causing him to eat dog food just to have money to pay the rent and that went bankrupt after only a few years, leaving Walt to move to L.A. with $40 dollars, a change of clothes, and some drawing tools. After trying to start an acting career he and his brother Roy started the Disney company and received a little bit of fame. However his best selling cartoon series: Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, and all but one of his artists were stolen by Disney's New York distributor: Universal Studios. After designing and making Mickey Mouse famous, Walt suffered anxiety attacks about the profits of cartoons. This caused him to be forced by his coworkers to take a vacation with his wife down the Mississippi River that got canceled and they had to go on a different vacation. After Snow White and the Seven Dwarves gave them enough money, Walt and Roy had a house built for their parents that ended up with Walt's mother dead from Carbon Monoxide poisoning. Right before World War Two Walt's artists went on strike because he refused to be a team player. When America declared war in 1941 Walt Disney Studios was taken over by the army and used for tank and artillery repairs; also most of his artists went to war. In 1942 Walt went to the premiere of Bambi, where during the scene where Bambi's mother was shot Bambi said "Mother, where are you Mother?" to which a teen girl in the audience shouted "Here I am Bambi," causing the audience to burst into laughter, except Walt. After the war the company was $4 million dollars in debts. And finally the day Disneyland opened people got in with forged tickets, the newly pored asphalt melted heeled shoes, and a plummer's strike meant that none of the water fountains worked.
   
     Walt Disney could have quit at any time, heck he could have gotten work at the bank or something and had a pay check every month that he didn't have to divide among anyone. Walt could have quit everything and just drank himself to death. Walt Disney could have done a million things that probably all his family and friends would deem "sensible." But Walt didn't, because he believed in fairy tales. And look where that got him: almost everybody in the free world knows his name and the Disney company, and the company continues to make movies that are genuinely good for all ages and loves by generations.
   

     Fairy tales are seen nowadays as this thing that creates a false hope about what life is, but Walt realized something that I hope we all realize: that Fairy Tales are the truest fiction we have ever had and may ever have. You see people forget that problems in the best of fairy tales aren't solved in a day, a lot actually have the protagonist go through years of hardships before they can live happily ever after.
     As much as I don't want to make this longer then one post it looks like I'll have to. So next time I well go through the life of C. S. Lewis, and reveal some lies about happily ever after.