"For I know the plans I have for you, says the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you...plans to give you hope and a future." Jerimiah 29:11

Friday, June 18, 2010

Killzone Establishes Itself As A Flagship Series For The PS3


KILLZONE 2 is not only fun to play but it is also one of the most polished looking first-person shooters out there. The futuristic, otherworldly setting is one of the things that sets it apart from other equally gorgeous shooters like FARCRY 2 and MODERN WARFARE 2 and fighting the Helghast on their homeworld does make the game intense and adds that extra sense of desperate struggle and conflict. With KILLZONE 3 on the way the series has established itself as one of the main flagship titles for the PS3 along with the RESISTANCE games. If you own a PS3 and are a shooter fan you have probably already played KILLZONE 2. If you haven't playet it yet I highly recommend giving it a whirl. The Helghast may be disappointed that you did but you will not. Trust me.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Completed Greenmen Sculpts


Here is the second greenman I started as a teacher example for my seventh graders.


The completed first greenman after being bisque-fired and partially painted with glaze. One of my students painted the glaze on this one for me.

The second greenman after being bisque-fired, glazed and then fired a second time. I put this up in my boys' room.


This one went up in my daughter's room.




Tuesday, June 8, 2010

McCarthy's THE ROAD Presents A Bleak Future With Little Hope


THE ROAD, starring Viggo Mortenson and Robert Duvall, began as a 2006 novel by the author of NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN, Cormac McCarthy. The story follows the journey of a father and son across a post-apocalyptic America after an unexplained event wipes out all of civilization and, seemingly, nearly all life on earth. Mortenson portrays the desperate father trying to get himself and his son to the ocean after his wife, overcome by despair and grief, selfishly abandons them both and commits suicide. The landscape is utterly desolate and void of any form of order or structure as they make their way through destroyed cities and countrysides. To add to their struggles for food and water in a world where all resources and technology have been completely depleted they also have to deal with groups of cannibalistic nomads. This is a tragic tale to say the least and the father/son relationship is truly heart-breaking in its sincerity and love in the midst of such extreme hardships. Nevertheless, the film is an excellent adaptation of the book and a small nugget of hope is tossed into the viewer's lap in the end. I was still frustrated by the fact that there really is no explanation whatsoever in the book or the movie as to how civilization was destroyed so thoroughly.