My pick of the top films I saw for the first time in 2018 (which may or may not have been released in that year) in no particular order:
(Also please note that I have purposefully not linked any trailers as there's a few of these that are best experienced going in cold.)
Wonder
It is not often that one sees episodes of ones own childhood rendered on the big screen in a full hollywood production and yet here we are. This was one of the first films I saw at the cinema last year and I don't think anything else really topped it, but then like the kid in the film I suffer from Treacher Collins Syndrome, I've never seen the condition in a film before so this film was basically made for me. I loved everything about this, not least that it had my home boy Daveed Diggs of the industrial hip hop crew clipping in it, of whom I've been a fan for quite some time and am enjoying watching him blow up at the minute. As someone with TCS I liked the messaging in this, particularly the scene late on where the kid who is sort of the antagonist is confronted and then you see why he is the way he is. I honestly think everybody should watch this film, the earlier the better, like they really should be showing it in schools.
Spring
I'm not usually one for romantic films about young Americans abroad finding love amidst the beauty of a picturesque town in rural Europe, but this was one of the best written films of any genre I've seen in ages. It is legit a great romance film, a timeless meditation on life and love, men and women, sex and romance, the wisdom and charm of old world vs the optimism and cute naivety of the new, and also a boss monster film with charm, humour, subtle observation, real heart and some pretty solid SFX on what looks like quite a low budget. The lads that did this also did The Endless which is on Netflix at the moment, they are 3 for 3 in terms of making solid good films and I love their style and can't wait to see what they do from here on.
Baskin
I went on a bit of a horror binge after feeling somewhat let down by Hereditary, looking all the time for something genuinely unsettling. I watched a lot of stuff and some of it was good but never quite got what I was after. Then this came on TV one night and delivered in spades. Not a perfect film by any means (doesn't quite stick the mark at the end) but it was a wild ride and got right under my skin as I was watching it and even thinking about the scene: "No, really look and tell me who else is here.... You've seen it. You've always seen it, running in the woods with grandma...." gives me the shivers.
Last Shift
Brought to my attention in a conversation between RedLetterMedia and Max Landis, I was very impressed with this. Proper fucking straight up horror that goes hard in all the ways a horror film should. Lots of nice gotcha moments, slow dread, some really creepy shit and unrelenting escalating intensity. Good stuff.
World of Tomorrow Parts 1 & 2
Two short films from Doug Hertzfeldt, in his typical doodle-esque / line drawing style of animation, now with some beautiful moving colourful backgrounds. With dialogue provided by his 4 then 5 year old neice this weaves some truly dank existential sci-fi with the whimsy and innocent optimism of childhood. Both parts are truly masterful, deep, hilariously funny and profund. This was the highlight of the (generally well curated) Belfast Film Festival this year for me.
The Shape of Water
Okay, it won an oscar and shit but seeing this and Get Out win big at the academy awards and beat off obvious oscar-bait and pseudo-intellectual garbage was for me like seeing my local team bring home the European Championship cup or something. Get the fuck in there Guilermo my son! Personally I'm a sucker for a good monster romance and anything vaguely lefty so this hit a few of my buttons, great central performances all round and a good happy ending. Actually an interesting one to watch in contrast with Spring for various reasons, for both how they are and aren't alike yet are completely brilliant.
Climax
The New European Extremity is still alive and well, one of the most singularly satisfying films I've seen at the cinema this year. It did its bit and did not outstay its welcome, delivering something truly unique along the way. There are no other films like this in the world, and its nice to be able to say that.
A Mother Brings Her Son To Be Shot
There have been some really excellent local documentaries that I would think are sufficiently good as films in their own right that I'd recommend them to anyone: No Stone Unturned, I, Dolores, Unquiet Graves and Massacre At Ballymurphy. No doubt we'll see many more in the near future. One could surmise that since the 30 year rule now extends to the early troubles and we are far enough away from the hot part of the ongoing conflict here (which hasn't gone away you know...) that the immediate physical danger to its protagonists means that certain things are now accessible and can be said in public that we're ripe for a golden age of documentaries and books that actually tell the truth about what happened here. That said the best (or for me at least the most entertaining) of the current crop is this one, which is about what is still going on in the shitty wee estates on the edges of our metropolitan sprawl, the people that live there and how they live with the local 'boys', the paramilitaries that are supposedly staunch defenders of their communities against Them 'Uns but are essentially just the same gangs and hoods that run 'tings on estates all over the western world, but in our unusual context. This was about a notorious incident in the Creggan on the edge of Derry and was tragic, shocking and very very funny in a way that is uniquely Northern Irish. Also a dire warning for the future that nobody else seems to be willing or able to deliver.
Best Worst Movie
Documentary about the legendary Troll 2 and the weird fandom that's grown up around it and the general social phenomenon of getting together with your mates and watching bad movies for the crack. A thoroughly entertaining and well made documentary in its own right worth watching as part of a double bill with the film itself if you've got company and that sort of time to kill.
Annihilation
Dumped unceremoniously on Netflix at the start of the year it kills me that this wasn't watchable on the big screen this side of the Atlantic. Boss special effects, lots of really dark creepy stuff and moments of beauty, in that grey area between art house and schlock that I love. This is everything Sci-fi should be on the big screen. Obvious visual and thematic nods to Tarkovsky, Kubrick and Alan Moore (like if you're going to borrow borrow from the best), yet very much its own thing.
Blindspotting / Sorry To Bother You
Two films. Two passion projects from directors with a background in hip-hop. Both star young upcoming African-American actors whose careers on the small screen in the states are blowing up into super stardom partly through their supporting roles on extremely well received situation comedies. Two films dealing in their own way with race and class, white privilege, gentrification. Both employ elements of satire to get their points across and are both incredibly funny, while being quite serious with some heavy moments. Both are masterpieces of modern cinema. Yet, one landed this side of the Atlantic with the hype and aplomb behind it it rightly deserved and got a wide cinematic release and the other didn't, and I can't for the life of me tell you why. If anyone knows do please fill me in.
A Dark Song
Absolute belter. As someone with a bit of an interest in though not a practitioner of magick this hit a lot of my happy places, like I've never tried doing anything like the stuff in this film myself but I know enough about it and the people who do do this IRL to appreciate that the writer and director knows his shit. Also nice to see some more great cinema coming out of my own country (albeit with and all English cast and pretending to be rural Wales). Does tone and atmosphere masterfully, big surprise for a first time director.
Mom and Dad
Yeah, we all loved Mandy but the Nicholas Cage performance of the year for me was this absolute gem. Picked it up from John Waters end of year list. Definitely one of the funniest films I've seen all year (is it just me or is it hard to find a good comedy these days?) again good sci-fi, nice central pleasingly Ballardian) conceit that's used to the fullest to explore something IRL and milk it for thrills, scares and dark dark humour. I look forwards to watching this with my own parents. (Not to be confused with Mum and Dad which I haven't seen yet but intend to).
The Untamed
Mexican cult cinema is really going off at the minute, in the wake of Guillermo Del Toro there is some really brilliant stuff being done, usually using a genre conceit to explore some IRL horror. Tigers Are Not Afraid was another one which was excellent and worth seeking out. The Untamed gets mad props from me for being an example of using a particularly trashy subgenre of sci-fi / horror with genuine thoughtfulness and seriousness. Would seriously recommend, best watched sight-unseen as its one where the less you know about it going in the better.
Spiderman: Into The Spider Verse
The very last films I saw in a cinema last year. I went in reckoning that it was going to be good. It wasn't long in before I started to feel like it was going to be the comic book adaption of the year, in what was quite a good year for that sort of thing came out thinking that it was the best comic book feature film adaption of the current crop, possibly of all time and one of the best animated films ever full stop. I always say that the mark of a good comic book adaption is if it captures on screen the essence of what makes the comic good, down to the formal conceits employed. This did that like few others I've seen. The whole alternate universes being represented by different art / drawing styles is an old trick on paper (the earliest I remember seeing it was in 2000ADs Hewligans Haircut which is from the 80s but I don't doubt it had been done well before that) but this is the first time I've seen it on screen (aside from a throwaway gag in the otherwise shitty Hitchikers Guide film) and it made it a central plot point. That was cool, as was the brilliantly realised character work, the cutting edge animation, the meta inter-textual referential stuff that was just the right level of nerdy to please the die-hards endlessly while never disturbing the enjoyment of anyone else who wasn't in on it, the humour. Every element popped individually, and yet this managed to be more than the sum of its parts, even as good as those parts were.
Showing posts with label Cartoons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cartoons. Show all posts
Saturday, 5 January 2019
Tuesday, 14 February 2017
Cartoons all Revolutionary Socialists should make their kids watch, Part VI Steven Universe
Welcome back to this occasional series which I haven’t updated for way too long. This installment is a bit of a departure because it doesn’t deal with a series from my childhood or a more recent feature film, but with a series that is currently ongoing and yet to reach its completion, something I hadn’t anticipated doing way back when I started this.
What it’s about:
Thousands of years ago a race of immortal crystalline alien beings from another part of the galaxy (the Gems) came to the planet earth in order to harvest it for its mineral properties. Some of the Gems realised that the merely organic life-forms, the animal and plant life that lived on the planet which would inevitably be exterminated by the harvesting process had intrinsic worth no less than their own and rebelled against their home-world. They succeeded, saving the planet and the life on it but at a cost, all but four of the rebels being destroyed in the final battle. In the centuries and millennia since as human civilisation has grown up around them these surviving crystal gems have been quietly protecting the organic life on this planet from the odd crystalline mutants that occasionally threaten it.
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Steven and his girlfriend Connie training to fight the bad Gems |
Why it’s Good:
I think its easy for our generation to get overly emotionally attached to our childhood memories and easily dismiss any contemporary animated series in favour of nostalgia for the stuff we used to watch when we were wee. This would be a mistake and Steven Universe is but one example of something that is as good as if not better than any of the stuff we used to have. In fact one of the things that makes it good, and I believe should be accessible to people my age who might have kids of their own, is that it is quite clearly the product on one of our generation.
The show is light, funny, full of charm but also has this epic backstory and various arc-plots that run throughout it and lots of big sci-fi concepts that are jut casually implanted into the story in a way that seems perfectly natural and wouldn’t confuse or alienate its younger viewers. Its emotional when it wants to be and when the arc plots kick into gear towards the apex of the seasons it is genuinely exciting.
What the Young ’Uns will hopefully take from it:
The underlying philosophy of the show is intensely humanist. Steven, our hero’s main attribute is his humanity and empathy. he sympathises with the mindless crystal shard creatures which he and the Gems have to hunt down, and this sympathy can be an advantage, something which he has over the Gems.
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Greg with an infant Steven from a recent episode |
In the series the Gems don’t procreate organically and so needn’t have any particular gender but yet are all female. Which essentially means that the characters with Super-Powers are all women. This was a deliberate move on the part of the show’s creator Rebecca Sugar to "tear down and play with the semiotics of gender in cartoons for children”. The show isn’t intended to be an action adventure show for boys or a cutesy show for girls but to break the gendered social norms of the medium and create something genuinely inclusive. There’s implied lesbianism, the show has touched on gender queerness. The one adult male figure in the shows main cast, Greg Universe (Steven’s dad) is kind of a bum, though he is sympathetically realised and still quite a good dad. Basically we are a long long way from He-Man. This is perhaps the main reason that it has the massive multi-generational fanbase that it has.
Labels:
Animé,
Cartoons,
Cultural Theory,
Culture,
Feminism,
Television
Friday, 14 December 2012
Cartoons all Revolutionary Socialists should make their kids watch, Part IV Cities of gold
Mysterious Cities of Gold (TV Series, DiC Entertainment and Studio Pierrot 1983)
What it’s about:
The year is 1532 and we are in the midst of the golden age
of exploration, or to put it another way, the first period of European
colonialist expansion. In the midst of
the Spanish conquest of continental South America three children and three
adults set out to find El Dorado, the Mysterious Cities of Gold in the heart of
the Amazon rainforest. They are
constantly pursued by Spanish conquistadors, who are also looking for the
titular Cities of Gold and get into various adventures along the way.
Why It’s Good:
Out of the various feature length cartoons I have talked
about and will talk about in this series on this blog this is probably my all
time favourite. I have fond memories of
watching this on BBC children’s television when I was a kid myself. The way they had a “previously on” and “next
week on” at the beginning and end of every episode meant that essentially you
got to see everything three times so the complicated episodic plot was relatively
easy to follow for me even at that young age.
Then I read about it as a teen and was pleased to find that this old
favourite was regarded among Animé fans as a classic and although I couldn’t
see it at the time. Then years later
when it was finally released in on DVD 2007/8 after protracted wrangling over
the copyright I bought it, watched it again and marvelled at how good it
actually was.
In the middle of quite a pumpin’ wee adventure story there
are skilfully inserted elements of science fiction (it’s never stated overtly
but the advanced technology of the inhabitants of the Cities of Gold at the end
of the series include nuclear fission) and historic fiction (real world
historic characters are part of the plot and are presented in a way that is easy
to understand and gives you some insight into the era). Also, the little 4 minute mini-documentaries
at the end of each episode where the factual real-world elements are explained
are very well done and informative.
The animation was ground-breaking at the time and still
stands up as a product of the two best cultures as far as animation and
sequential art go both then and now, Japan and France. The music all the way through is pretty immense,
the theme music is catchy enough that it’s indelibly lodged in the back of my
consciousness as a bridge to that time in my youth, as I'm sure it is many other peoples. All together, it’s just a nicely done bit of
work.
What the young ’uns will hopefully take from it:
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Mendoza, brilliantly morally ambiguous |
Well, here’s where it gets interesting. This is pure “baby’s first anti-imperialism”. Rather than glorifying the conquest of the
new world, as some children’s adventure fiction set in that time will do, the
whole process is depicted as a rapacious land grab, a scramble for resources
and specifically gold. The fate of the
Incan and Mayans is presented as tragic.
The three children, who are the unambiguous heros of the story, are all
native Americans. The white European characters
are all either evil and motivated purely by greed (the conquistador characters)
or stupid (Sancho and Pedro, the protagonists comedy sidekicks) and even
Mendoza, the children’s adult protector is at best an anti-hero, a rouge who is
depicted as being on the children’s side out of enlightened self interest and
only comes out as unambiguously heroic in the last couple of episodes. This is powerful stuff and alongside the
factual elements of the story make for quite an education as to what the
conquest of the new world actually was.
Friday, 1 June 2012
Cartoons that all revolutionary socialists should make their kids watch, Part III Flight of Dragons
Flight Of Dragons (Animated feature, Rankin Bass 1982)
What its about:
As the age of magic draws gives way to the age of reason,
the four Wizard brothers who are the guardians of the realm of enchantment meet
to discuss what to do. Carolinus the Green
Wizard (whose domain is nature) argues that if man is to chose logic and reason
over magic then the brothers should gather their magic together to create a
haven for themselves and all the enchanted creatures in another world, away
from the ravages of logic, in a place where they can live on in our imagination
to inspire us. The magic brothers agree
to the plan, except for Ommadon The Red, the wizard of darkness and destruction
who wishes to use the imagination of mankind and his darkest impulses to drive
him towards self destruction, leaving the world free from logic for magic to
rule again. So begins a quest to the
dark depths of Ommadon’s realm to secure his red crown of power and make sure
that his plans don’t come to pass.
Why its Good:
Well, to begin with, for 1980s Rankin Bass the art and
animation is unusually good. The art
work on the dragons in particular is wonderfully detailed, showing the film’s
origins in a book of illustrations of dragons.
The story is good, the plotting is tight and the quest feels suitably
epic. The voice acting is also
brilliant, with James Earl Jones in particular shining as the dark wizard
Ommadon with his deep baritone vocals, possibly projecting even more menace
than he did as the voice of Darth Vader.
It has many moments of escapism and wonder and a good couple of really
dark scenes, Ommadons speech to the wizards council and the Ogre of Gormley
Keep’s attack on the Inn both stand out and definitely left a deep impression
on me at least.
What the Young ’Uns will hopefully take from it:
One of the basic truths of the world that many people,
indeed most adults I know, have trouble getting to grips with is the dialectic
between reason and cold hard logic on the one hand, and the imaginative /
intuitive / creative mode of thinking on the other. This “left brain / right brain” divide
(actually this has no basis in real physiological terms, but I like it because
it’s a handy short hand for describing the relationship between the two) should
be central to our way of understanding the world and the mental processes that
shape us and it is precisely this that the film tackles as its main thematic
material. In the story Carolinus (who
wanted to separate the two spheres) is told by the tree of knowledge to call on
a person from our time (who shares a name with the author of the book the film was based on). He is told to do this
because in order to defeat Ommadon, who represents acquisitive self interest
and nihilistic cynicism, you need someone with a foot in both worlds who can
thereby bridge the gap between the two.
This is a very profound lesson to impart to anyone, especially the young
but including the most hardened activists.
Gramsci talked about the mentality of a good Marxist revolutionary as
“pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will”, and surely that’s more or
less the same message? It’s a good
lesson and in this instance it is charmingly conveyed in a film that is
enjoyable to adults and children.
Sunday, 13 May 2012
Cartoons that all revolutionary socialists should make their kids watch, Part II Princess Mononoke
Now for another of my occasional series on how to get your kids into communism using cartoons (see part 1 for my spurious justifications for such actions).
Princess Mononoke (Studio Ghibli, 1997)
What its about:
Princess Mononoke is a modern legend about man’s
relationship with the environment as told by one of the greatest story tellers
of the age. Basically, in the middle of
the 20th century Japan
went from a fairly agrarian / semi feudalistic society to a fully
industrialised advanced capitalist economy in an incredibly short space of
time. They went from a green country
side still full of the gods and spirits of the Shinto religion to
miles of sprawling suburbs and industrial production zones practically over
night. The environmental pollution that
inevitably came with it meant that what had been almost unheard of as a problem
became a national crisis in a few short years as the Japanese saw their natural
environment ravaged by industrial development.
Also, because of the topography of the country a lot of land was too
mountainous to be built on, so quite close to the cities you have great
towering reminders of everything that was lost.
One of the ways that this has impacted on Japans arts and
culture is that environmental considerations have never been far from the imagination
of its creative community. In Ireland we used
to say that the Banshee had been driven from the countryside by the electric
lighting. In Japan where this process was much
quicker and they still had a much more direct relationship with the gods and
spirits of the land it must have seemed like man kind was at war with the
spirits. Princess Mononoke is a story
about that war and a parable for modern times about its implications.
Why Its Good:
For starters, the animation is absolutely beautiful. The colour and detail shine out from every
frame, the character design is exquisite and the backgrounds are just as
detailed as the foreground. At the very
beginning of the film before anything really happens we see the main character
riding his Elk through a wood in the shade of some branches and the way the
light is picked out and moves is amazing.
It’s not just at the level of Disney but actually better than anything
ever produced in the west. The plot is
well structured and although the characters are essentially mythic archetypes
they still feel real and are capable of inspiring real emotion. Although it doesn’t speak in the entire film,
the Elk thing the main character rides has more soul in one of his antlers than
all the characters in all the Disney animations in the last 20 years put
together. It is an adventure film and
more than satisfies on that level, but it completely runs the gamut of
emotions, there is a very touching love story in it and it has moments of
genuine horror as well.
What the young ’uns will hopefully take from it:
Well, they should certainly take from it a more balanced and
nuanced idea of man kinds position in with regards to the environment than they
would from watching Walt Disney’s Bambi or such other schlock with its trite
black and white morality or even James Cameron’s Avatar. It contrasts nature and the natural environment with all
its violent and brutal inhumanity and the inevitable forces of civilisation
and industry, which are depicted as progressive as well as destructive and
motivated by human greed. Most of all,
the message of the film is that hatred and anger are the most destructive
forces of all, you can draw on your pit of rage for strength but you never let
it consume you. This is a small lesson
that we could all do well to learn, even (indeed especially) those of us on the
revolutionary left.
Thursday, 8 March 2012
Cartoons that all revolutionary socialists should make their kids watch, Part I an Introduction and Avatar: The Last Air-Bender
No two ways about it, indoctrinating your kids isn’t cool. Using your parental authority to shape the psychological makeup of your offspring in a very specific direction is, some would argue, an abuse of that authority. If you truly have the courage of your political convictions then you should also have the confidence that if you instil values and basic decency into your offspring they’ll come around on their own without specific prompting from yourself.
There’s also the possibility that they’ll have picked up your bolshie streak and if you lay it on too thick they’ll become reactionary little bastards just to spite you. Just look at Ralph Milliband FFS. It's natural that teenagers lash out against their parents and they will at times do things just because it’s the very thing in the whole world that would piss you off the most. Drinking, doing hard drugs, becoming Emos or joining the BNP (or Fainna Fail or even the SDLP), nothing should be considered beneath them.
So, politically indoctrinating your offspring, morally dubious and liable to backfire. That said, there is nothing wrong with some gentle nudging in the right direction. This is where the Cartoons come in. As we know, all cultural artefacts are loaded with layers of meaning and the cumulative effect is a subtle form of programming that inputs the cultural and social mores into the individual. If this process is a part of socialisation and going to happen anyway, one might as well have a bit of a hand in it.
It is to this end that I direct friends and comrades towards this occasional series on this Blog relating to some of the animated features and TV shows that I feel will have a positive impact on their young minds and as well as being good entertainment in their own right, the sort of thing that any adults reading this might actually enjoy watching along with their brood, because lets face it, some of the stuff you are going to be obliged to watch is going to be pure gack. Also, it is important that these are good shows from the kids POV because if you melt their little heads with a cartoon diet of hard East-German Socialist realism or those weird depressing Soviet Russian cartoons that used to show up on TV every now and again they will grow up to hate you and your politics, become reactionary enemies of the movement and the people in general and will certainly have to be shot, and we don't want to see that happen now do we?
For each cartoon I will be have a little section explaining what it is about and why it's good before delving into the meaning and messages of the show.
With this in mind we'll start with a personal favourite from not too long ago, or at least recent enough that I was in my 20s when I saw it and managed to really enjoy it.
Avatar: The Legend of Aang The Last Airbender (TV Series, Nickelodeon 2006-8)
What it’s about:
Aang is an adolescent boy, gifted with the power of Air-Bending and destined to become the Avatar, master of the 4 elements (Earth, Air, Fire and Water). After spending 100 years encased in an iceberg, he finds that a war has been launched by the imperialistic Fire Nation to conquer the whole world, and that his own people, the Air Nomads, have been wiped out. He and his small band of companions travel the length and breath of their world (based very loosely on mythic China) so he can learn the ways of the other 3 elements and hopefully stop the Lord of the Fire Nation’s plans for world domination.
Why it's good:
Its works very well in its own right as a cartoon. The animation is extremely well done, it’s a perfect fusion of the expertise of American and Asian animators. The world of Avatar is well constructed, the attention to detail in every aspect of which makes the complete whole something marvellous. A good example would be the different elemental magics which are based on real-world Chinese martial arts which the series writers feel capture the essence of the elements, the smooth flowing Tai Chi style is water bending, the sharp and explosive Northern Shaolin style represents fire bending and so on. It’s obvious that the animators have spent a lot of time studying how the human body moves when performing the various moves.
The story is well told too. There is a good mixture of personal stories relating to each of the well constructed, believable characters and the epic quest with a huge back story in the best traditions of fantasy against a background of war that makes up the story arc. The stories can be by turns, funny, heroic, emotional, exciting, human and in a couple of episodes, really really dark (the story from the third season about the Water-Bender who could use her power over water to control people by manipulating the water in their body seriously creeped me out). The voice cast (mostly quite young themselves, no middle aged women playing adolescent boys here which is usually the case in animation) do a fantastic job, particular props have to go to the, sadly deceased, Asian-American actor Mako for his turn as Uncle Iroh who in some ways provides the emotional and philosophica; heart of the show.
What the young ’uns will hopefully take from it:
Well, the basic thing of exposing small children to concepts and ideas from different culture is, I believe, always generally beneficial to creating open minded and well rounded individuals. The story setting has a definite anti-war theme to it, the degradation of war and the effects on civilian populations are well handled. The main character is the last survivor of what is essentially a holocaust.
There are also a lot of strong female roles in it. For example, the Earth-Bender Toph (pictured), who joins the show in the second season, is both female and disabled (blind) and manages to be a very strong role-model for both in a nicely un-forced way.
So it’s a popular American TV show that is well made and enjoyable, has some good action, well drawn characters (in all senses of the term) and some nice anti-war, pro-diversity and feminist themes that are all handled with a deft touch, i.e. they don’t beat you round the head with “the message”. The only mild criticism I have is that the humour is sometimes a little forced and it doesn’t quite go far enough, but I think that that’s a reasonable trade off.
Next blog I'll be doing at least a small report back from this weekends up coming Revolution 2012 conference in the QUB Student Union. There will be more of these to follow over the coming months and theres a lot happening in and around Belfast.
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