I’m just watching the Golden Globe Awards ceremony and I can’t stop from thinking about the unbelievable impact information technology has on our lives. And it all happens so fast …
The love story I have with Information Technology officially started in 1988 when I managed to write a BASIC program that displayed the graph of the SIN function. I was 11 years old and I lived under the spell of Star Wars, the fantastic saga of George Lucas. I never would have dreamed that one day I’ll walk into a cinema, watch a movie, and then while leaving the screening room I’ll have the “this was mainly computer generated” revelation. In fact, as recently as 2-3 years ago I did not imagine this will happen in 2009. It seems that every now and then things happen that change dramatically our lives. James' Cameron’s Avatar is one such thing. I dare to say that after Avatar cinematography will never be the same again. The age of immersive, mind blowing, computer generated, three dimensional experiences has truly arrived. Much earlier that one would predict 10 or even 5 years ago. For a pure and natural geek like me this is kind of a dream coming true. I guess the next big bet is how soon will the human race actually reach a planet like Pandora.
To be completely honest, the story behind Avatar didn’t manage to overthrow completely my personal top 3 in science fiction stories. The first two places are still held by George Lucas’s Star Wars and Frank Herbert’s Dune. So, James Cameron’s Avatar has to settle for third place. What did actually leave me speechless is what Cameron did with it to while transforming the story into a movie. Via endless streams of trillions and trillions of calculations and probably petabytes of data, the fantastic world of Pandora moved from our imagination onto the 3D screens of our favorite cinema where we can see it, hear it, and almost touch it. The geek inside asks: how soon will we be able to also feel it? The only serious answer I can give to myself is: sooner than you imagine. Again, it’s not the story that makes me really tick, although it hides some interesting criticism to the American way of life and, to a larger extent, to the Homo Sapiens’s way of life. It’s really the technology behind the movie that lights my imagination. To much of my surprise, we did this in 50 years or so. Wow…
Looks like all my favorite movies from 2009 are on the winners list. Hangover just got the prize for best comedy. I was kind of not really convinced when some friends asked me to watch together with them this one. I laughed my heart out. It made me ask myself when was the last time I had such a good laugh.
Tarantino’s Inglorious Basterds got a prize for Christopher Waltz as best supporting actor. Well, I guess Tarantino is in a league of his own (nota bene, I’m a huge fan of Tarantino; in fact, I have to admit he’s my favorite film director) and Inglorious Basterds is just a new gem following the footsteps of Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction, and Kill Bill. To much of my surprise, Waltz’s performance in the role of SS colonel Hans Landa was a true masterpiece. Combine this with Tarantino’s unmatched talent to create slow-paced chess-mate situations and you get a true masterpiece.
Robert Downey Jr. got the prize for best leading actor in a comedy or musical for his performance in Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes. Before seeing Sherlock Holmes in Downey’s interpretation, I could bet almost anything on the fact that there’s nothing more you can do in yet another movie about the great detective. I was wrong. Plain and simple. And I like this Sherlock Holmes much more than the classic and stiff one.
As I’m wrapping up this post, Avatar is winning the Golden Globe Award. I’m a geek, not a film critic so I’m allowed to cheer, right? Cameron just said that being in the movie-making business is the best job in the world. My take is that the prize belongs equally to Cameron as it belongs to information technology. Which makes our job equally interesting, don’t you think?