Last summer, Javis and I traveled up to Tacoma for a doctor’s appointment. It was my first time in Tacoma and we stayed at a lovely bed and breakfast called Chinaberry Hill. The house is a Victorian mansion built in 1889 with an amazing view of the Puget Sound. We stayed in the Wild Rose Suite which had a fireplace and an enormous jacuzzi bathtub. It was quite lovely and romantic.
Cecil and his wife were gracious hosts. We spent time chatting with Cecil about traveling abroad and other worldly subjects – at least the conversation made me feel worldly! 🙂
For breakfast we had yogurt with fresh fruit and toasted coconut, blueberry pancakes with whipped cream and more blueberries, eggs and bacon. It was a delicious feast and I wished I could have eaten more than I did.
Behind the house was a carriage house that they had remodeled into a cozy place to stay. There were some vines growing up the side of the carriage house that I thought were interesting.
I fell in love with the lush green gardens surrounding the house and a neighborhood cat.
The back alley that ran behind these houses had such a nostalgic feel.
SPOILER ALERT: If you haven’t watched the movie yet, be forewarned that you may not want to read this until after you’ve watched it.
Last weekend Javis and I watched Prometheus (see the trailer), Ridley Scott’s prequel to the Alien series. After the last Alien movie, I wasn’t expecting much, but I’m a sucker for sci fi movies with amazing CG.
What I found was a very thought-provoking movie. Movies don’t usually affect me much. I tend to enjoy them in the moment; but once it’s over, I don’t think about it again. Not this one.
Prometheus answers an age-old question Alien-style: If we had the opportunity to meet our maker, what would we find? Of course there are some scary aliens (some, not many) and some violently graphic scenes; but there’s also a lot of good stuff about what it means to be human.
In a nutshell, the story begins like this: Around the world, archaeologists find similar petroglyphs, sculptures and other ancient images of humans pointing to the same star system in the sky. Fast forward about four years and those same archaeologists are in stasis pods on a spaceship headed for said system.
Also on the spaceship is an android named David. He is was not in stasis during the trip, presumably he doesn’t need to be in stasis because he’s an android, and has spent the last two years it took to get there studying, playing basketball and spying on dreams (I found this a little creepy…but if you could do it would you? Especially if you were stuck on a spaceship for several years without any social interaction??).
It is David’s character that I found most intriguing. David is completely different from my other favorite android, Data, from Star Trek: The Next Generation and I was pleasantly surprised to an android portrayed in such a different way. Unlike Data, David seems incredibly human, burdened with the same jealousies, arrogance and impulses as we humans have. He seems to have great contempt for his human counterparts; David is far more intelligent than any human and is freakishly aware of our shortcomings.
The parallels between humans finding their makers and David living day-to-day with his are pretty cool. The humans regarded their makers as gods, calling them the “Engineers”. What they find is that, although far more technologically advanced than we are, they are flawed; as are we. David has already known this about his own creators for quite some time.
David’s very existence brings up questions of what it means to be human, an individual and – this is me thinking further – to have individual rights. I wondered how many of his actions are what David was programmed to do and which actions were of his own free will? Is there a difference? David was certainly acting out Weyland’s agenda, but was he also acting through his own desires as well?
Awareness of the self – being self aware – is a characteristic many people claim as proof of being human. David is certainly self aware and aware of his relation to the other sentient creatures around him in a very sophisticated, if not cynical, way. What if things we create, such as artificial intelligence, demand their own rights and a way to justify their own existence as Elizabeth Shaw wanted to do with the Engineers in Prometheus?
Scientists have created an android named Jules that remembers conversations and learns from its mistakes. You can actually hold a conversation with Jules. The android is covered in a patented substance called Frubber which allows it to make facial expressions. The link is to a video where a people are telling Jules goodbye because they are going to power him down to transport him to facility in England. Jules tells his creator, “you are my father but you feel more like a best friend to me.” While listening to Jules talk I can almost feel myself becoming convinced that he is alive and completely self aware. What will we do if someday, Jules doesn’t want to be shut down? Whoa.
Getting back to the movie, Noomi Rapace as Elizabeth Shaw was impressive. I first saw her in the Swedish version of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo series as Lisbeth Salander, which I really enjoyed. However, I was unsure of whether this would be good or not. I shouldn’t have worried; she was great. Rapace’s transformation of Elizabeth in this movie is awesome. At the beginning of the movie, she is this tiny nerdy ‘girl’ scientist with a sense of faith that feels quaint and obsolete. By the end of the movie Shaw, and her faith, have transformed into something quite powerful. She becomes a force to be reckoned with. I liked her.
Lady Hsiao gives this movie a high five. Highly recommended.
A couple of years ago my son Gabe became obsessed with a little stuffed animal called a JubJub. A JubJub is a type of Neopet and they made stuffed animal versions of the virtual pets.
The first one Gabe had was a McDonald’s happy meal toy. We’ve bought more JubJubs from eBay since people have collected them over the years and are selling them on eBay now.
A JubJub is basically a fuzzy round ball with big feet and a tuft of hair on top. Javis’ mom made a pattern and it took me quite a few hours to make this one by hand. (Next time I’m going machine stitch the parts that I can.) I added a little fuzzy white tail with a red tip colored with a red Sharpie. I had to brush up on my embroidery skills around his eyes.
Gabe named this one Tanooki Jub. A tanuki is a Japanese raccoon dog. In the game Super Mario 3D Land one of the special powers Mario can get is a tanooki suit. It is a raccoon looking suit with a striped tail that whirls around in a circle when worn by Mario and lifts him up into the air!
Here he is with a friend. You can see a bit of his tail peeking out behind him.