Joss Whedon is My Master Now
Jun. 24th, 2006 01:06 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Things I noticed upon 2nd viewing of "Serenity" (no, I've not had it on constant DVD rotation since September):
Deeply tired and headachey now because I'm up way past my bedtime (such a lightweight, me). Time to snooze.
- The thing about Serenity's costumes isn't in the cut, it's in the detail. The operative's diagonally pieced sleeves, Zoe's weathered side zipped top, and the buttons on Mal's breech hems all serve to make the pieces more than mere "jacket", "vest", "pants", they really do :)
- Summer Glau was excellently cast - graceful AND predatory, vulnerable AND terrifying.
- Is it just me or was Jayne constantly eating something?
- Joss Whedon is a master storyteller, bar none! This is modern mythology, folks!
- Seeing a movie with an audience consisting mostly of fans is just fun on a Rocky-Horror type level - everyone gets the joke :)
Deeply tired and headachey now because I'm up way past my bedtime (such a lightweight, me). Time to snooze.
Re: in which i just go on and on...
Date: 2006-06-25 06:58 am (UTC)Over time the Japanese started using kanji as a phonetic alphabet, to "spell out" the sound of Japanese words. Thankfully someone realized this was nuts, and they invented a new alphabet (aka syllabary), phonetic like ours, called hiragana. For reasons which are not entirely clear to me they also invented a second redundant syllabary, katakana. Every sound in Japanese is represented by 1 hiragana and 1 matching katakana. The 2 scripts are called kana, and there are rules that say when to use one or the other.
Typical Japanese writing combines kanji and hiragana; the kanji represents the stem, root or infinitive, and hiragana are used to add the different endings, as when a verb is conjugated. Hiragana is also used for words which have no kanji, articles and some other parts of speech. Katakana is mostly used to write "loanwords" borrowed from languages other than Chinese, and the names of foreigners.
Anyway. In Serenity there's a bunch of katakana. (I didn't notice any hiragana but it may be there.) Why it is there... I do not know. Whoever wrote it must have known it was Japanese and not Chinese. It just seems like very little in Joss Whedon's work is accidental, so I have to wonder.
Re: see, you already know more about this than I do!
Date: 2006-06-25 05:21 pm (UTC)Again, I would recommend