Piquet on Mansell – best F1-related news of the day

For those of you who followed F1 since the late 80s, you would be familiar with the titanic battles between the legends of F1 in the 80s/90s: Prost vs Senna vs Mansell vs Piquet. Those were iconic times in F1’s 60 year history. That was the time that real rivalry in F1 was all about. Between them, these four drivers have won 11 F1 World Drivers Championships, and won countless races. By comparison, the now Great Michael Schumacher has won 7 WDCs in is own right… an amazing achievement… but Schumi has been relatively untroubled by others due largely to the dominance of his Ferrari team (and a unthreatening teammate) and due to the uncompetitive position of his championship rivals in a number of years. So many F1 fans who went through the 80s would still look back to the golden rivalry between the fantastic quartet. Till today, the rivalry still burns…

No love lost there then…

21/12/2005

Nelson Piquet never made any secret of his feelings towards drivers he disliked, and there were one or two of them, most notably Ayrton Senna and Nigel Mansell.

Talking to our friend Jorge Girão at Sport Motores, the three-time World Champion made it crystal clear that he remains unimpressed with Mansell, who was his teammate at Williams for two glorious seasons in 1986 and 1987, during which time we witnessed many epic battles, not least the sensational fight at Silverstone in ’87.

“I tried to make a war inside the team to divide it,” admits the Brazilian, “because everything I tested and everything I developed in the car he (Mansell) would pick for himself. It was because of this that I made a war inside the team to try to win the Championship and it worked.

“Nigel was fast,” he added, “but he didn’t know how to set up a car, he wasn’t very clever, was very aggressive. But he was a no-brain.”

And they say that time heals.

Article from Pitpass (http://www.pitpass.com): http://www.pitpass.com/fes_php/pitpass_news_item.php?fes_art_id=26767

Published: 21/12/2005
Copyright © Pitpass 2002 – 2005. All rights reserved.

Seasons greetings!

Seasons Greetings

Another 3 days to Christmas and another 10 days to the New Year. I would like to take this opportunity to wish all my friends a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. We are now approaching the final corner of the year and down to the start/finish straight.

I hope that for many of you 2005 was a great year. It certainly is for me, and many of the ingredients in 2005 would form a nice foundation for 2006: so I am looking forward to better things come end year and the new year 2006. And yeah, 2006 will be World Cup year – so more sleepless nights. As ever, I will be cheering out for Brazil. They are looking strong for retaining the cup. And for the second year running, Brazilian Ronaldinho was recently named FIFA World Player of the Year.

Anyway, back to the seasons’ greetings. Received a card from a celebrity friend today, but I am embarrassed that I do not have her address to reply. Anyway, did a bit of googling to look for any info that could give me her address, but instead found some amusing sites. I thought I should share these sites (not related to my friend, but has her name mentioned somewhere in them) anyway:

  • The four word film review – an interesting concept in having users just give four words as a review of a film. I like films, and often read reviews… this one should save me time in deciding whether to watch a film or not. But I think the novelty will soon wear off.
  • Melayu.com – this site contains a fairly active forum – mainly in Bahasa Malaysia… and mainly topics of Malay interest. Will probably visit in the future to get a feel of the young Malay mind.
  • yikes! chuminskaya.blog – erm… a blog by a Malay dude, I think. The guy seems to travel a bit. Nice places.

Okay – see you later.

Nostalgia Anime! Blocker Corp Machine Blaster

Was watching some cartoons with my kids this evening and the subject of giant robots came up. Told my son that when I was a kid my first giant robot series that I saw was Blocker Corp Machine Blaster (1976). I found the website which brought waves of nostalgia. I was around 8 years old at the time – about the age of my son now. I remembered as a kid and sharing with my friends in school drawings of the giant robots and stories about the latest episode. This was all just before my family moved to Tokyo -thereby unleashing further waves of anime mania. One of the early anime (anime at wikipedia) that my brothers and I enjoyed as kids were the Time Bokan series which includes Yattaman and its various permutations. Those were hilarious slapstick anime which we enjoyed. And then there was the Dr Slump / Arale series.

Philosophy in sci-fi films

Gattaca Poster

Some of you may know that I am a sci-fi buff. I enjoy sci-fi in all forms be it novels, comicbook / graphic novels, TV series, films or even computer / video games.

Sadly sci-fi stuff are often not that great, and not to mention very rare. So looking for a good sci-fi fix is quite difficult. There are a few sci-fi films which I enjoy both from a story (action) perspective as well as a from a philosophical perspective. Most of the time sci-fis are not action driven (except for the Star Wars types), but mainly philosophically driven.

Take Gattaca (1997) for instance: this is a story about a dystopian future whereby society is structured into castes of genetically perfect people and those who were born from natural conception & reproduction (“faith love”). This questions our need for perfections in our present day society.

In addition to this, the film also asks the question about human courage, dreams and overcoming imperfections. Very important questions I believe. Why do we all limit ourselves to the physical and superficial shell that we live in, as opposed to letting our mind, dreams, belief and spirit guide and drive us beyond our physical limits? This is an excellent film to boost spirits.

Blade Runner film poster

Then there is the Ridley Scott directed Blade Runner (1982) which explores the meaning of being human in the context of a future where cyborgs (artificial people) are almost indistinguishable from real humans apart from their physical strength and delibrately limited lifespan. In Blade Runner, the cyborgs -or replicants- emote feelings of love, hate, anger, fear and all very human feelings. Their anger is most directed to their human creators for dictating their 4 year lifespan. On the other side, these replicants question the heartless of their human creators for creating them with all these feelings (some do not even know they are replicants), yet deem them appropriate to be terminated / extinguished. So the question is what really makes us humans? The film was based on Phillip K Dick’s book “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?“. Blade Runner was not a box office success in its time but since then has garnered an important and influential (also visionary) status in the sci-fi & film world.

The theme of humanity also runs through other films such as Steven Spielberg’s “A.I.” and “Bicentennial Man (1999)” starring Robin Williams and based on Isaac Asimov’s novella of the same title. These two films explored the classic story of Pinnochio about the robots’ (in these cases) quests to be more human and loved as a human being. The impact of these films were not that major given that the themes centred around love & (in)animate human creations which has been done several times over. The difference in Blade Runner was that Blade Runner explored a wider range of human emotions and even questions our own humanity. Still, the likes of AI and Bicentennial Man still poses a very interesting question about love and life.

Another twist to computers / robots achieving scentience is in Stanley Kubrick’s film 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). The film was famous for the malfunctioning computer HAL 9000 which decided it was important to kill the human beings in order to protect itself and fulfill its mission directives.

Then there are other types of sci-fi that explores the meaning of life and reality. Films such as Dark City and The Thirteenth Floor (1999) (Rotten Tomato reviews) and to a very small extent, The Truman Show (not sci-fi, though) goes to ask the question whether our lives are a stage show or the real thing (existentialism). These are interesting concepts and allows science to fuse with religion. What is there after the end of our lives? Another film that does this unashamedly is The Matrix trilogy which is littered with religious ideas and terminology. The appeal of these films is that it really asks us the question of what lies beyond the Matrix? The scene in the first Matrix film that explains the reason for deja vu (the cat scene) still gives me goosebumps.

Minority Report movie poster

Another concept most often explored in sci-fi is the idea that humankind cannot help from destroying itself. This was the main theme driving the 2004 film I, Robot starring Will Smith. Are we humans incapable of maintaining peace? Certainly in the current early 2000s period this seems to be the case. Even with Asimov’s famed Laws of Robotics, the robots in I, Robot managed to rationalise that for the protection of the greater human race, robots would need to kill a few bad eggs to restore a utopian peace. Are these the same rules that some of the world’s government use in the name of greater peace?

Another aspect of sci-fi films is questioning human moralities such as in “The Island” featuring Ewan McGregor and Scarlett Johansson and The Steven Spielberg directed “Minority Report” starring Tom Cruise. In The Island, the question is asked about the morality of genetic sciences – which is very much a contemporary issue. In Minority Report the subject of crime prevention is explored to point of asking if somebody is guilty before the crime itself is committed?

As ever, sci-fi is all about philosophical questions that we face everyday. And this is the appeal, in my view.

Comics to films – The Watchmen and others

Watchmen Graphic Novel Cover

Many years ago (in 1987), I picked up a graphic novel (comic book) titled “The Watchmen“. Along with Frank Miller’s intepretation of Batman in “The Dark Knight Returns“, Alan Moore’s The Watchmen led me to an interest in comic collection.

The Watchmen is a dark tale of superheroes, governments, war & conspiracy. In a nutshell, superheroes (ie Watchmen) have been outlawed unless they work for the Government. And as is often the case, power corrupts… and superheroes are not exempt from such temptations. All this in the context of a world run by fascist politicians and morally lost superheroes heading towards apocalypse. To a lesser extent, the themes from The Watchmen were even carried over in the recent Disney / Pixar flick “The Incredibles”.

The news that Warner Bros has now obtained the film rights to the Watchmen is exciting. I hope that the translation of one of the most influential comic books of all time to the silver screen would also become one of the most influential films of all time.

This news also fills me with dread that the silverscreen adaption of what is a great piece of work could bomb spectacularly – both critically and financially. To date, we’ve had mixed outcomes from superhero films. The best ones are clearly the first two Spider-man films, and to a certain extent X-Men. I love the work done on Spider-man and it deserves the best comic book film of all time.

The world’s most well known superheroes, Superman and Batman have had mixed outcomes. The recent Batman Begins, I think was a good outcome. One that I believe had mixed reviews was The Hulk. I thought that Director Ang Lee’s technique on The Hulk had some merits and the story was pretty good. However, it was not for everybody and the storyline was pretty standard comic book story. Then there are the bombs like Capt America, The Punisher, Daredevil etc. Sadly, my favourite comic book character Daredevil had been poorly adapted to the screen.

Daredevil, in my mind has all the ingredients for a great screen character. Miller’s run on the book and especially the “Born Again” saga, the “Elektra” books and subsequent limited issue runs on Daredevil. Then there is also the recent Marvel Knights treatment of Daredevil which I believe is doing fine.

So I look forward to The Watchmen film and hope that it will be a strong critical and box office success.