tallulahgs: (Akira anger)
tallulahgs ([personal profile] tallulahgs) wrote2005-05-19 04:01 pm
Entry tags:

Movies and revision

Just done another hour of revision. Some of it was even quite interesting. I've discovered when I sit down and pick through the vectors, some of it actually makes sense. Even though there are now about five quantities represented by letters (and some of these quantities are letters represented by letters, e.g. a=l/(1-e^2)... and I think it's only going to get worse...



1. Total number of films I own on DVD/video: That I own? I own three DVDs of Akira, and Baz Luhrman's Romeo and Juliet. However, my family own a hell of a lot of Disney videos and stuff recorded off the TV.
2. The last film I bought: Romeo and Juliet. £6.29 in the sale, yay!
3. The last film I watched: Um... well, half of Romeo and Juliet... no, I remember! 10 Things I Hate About You. We were having a girly night in with Chinese food. It's pretty funny.
4. Five films that I watch a lot or that mean a lot to me:
Akira: Well, it's the first actual film I've fangirled! And it's fun comparing the difference between the dub and the sub. And I love the music and the glittering city... *fangirl fangirl*
Donnie Darko: Only seen it once, but I thought it was really good; creepy without being over-the-top.
Baz Luhrman's Romeo and Juliet: This had to go on simply because I fangirl the beginning so incredibly much.
Little Shop Of Horrors: (it's on celluloid, therefore it counts :p) Everything about it is great. It's silly, and yet it has a very good message (do not feed man-eating plants, no matter what they say to you.)
Chicago: Simply because I've seen it three times, which is at least two more times than normal for films (even the ones I own I don't tend to actually watch much unless it's writing a script of the two dubs and comparing them.... anyway...)

Edit: It's official. Not even Weird Al Yankovic could make a good song about the mechanics of Java programming. I mean, "Object behaviour is implemented using member methods. Member methods can access the instance variables of the associated object. This capability enables a constructor to configure the instance varaiables of the object being created..." I know that I can write programs that make use of this fact, but WTF does it actually mean?

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