Saturday, July 31, 2010

Oh.....Osaka?....and onwards

Start:     Nov 2, '10 2:00p
End:     Nov 16, '10 7:45p
Location:     Osaka to Hokkaido?
tentative for return date to Philippines...

have to plan itinerary out since its just Osaka which would be the arrival place...I would love to go see autumn in Nikko and upwards to the north of Japan...hmm..maybe see Fuji-san too?

*crossing fingers* hope all goes well with my plan to go there for autumn season and pics!

target: AUTUMN!
I'd like to see below eye to eye..or eye to leaf?


picture from internet

Tentative itinerary:

Osaka - 2 days
Dotonbori (Namba)- maybe upon arrival
Bunraku Theater
Shitennoji Temple
tip from a friend on where to stay -> http://amantovillage.multiply.com/

Kyoto - 3 days
Kiyomizudera (will see how it looks in fall)
Eikando
Shugakuin Imperial Villa (missed this last time coz already fully booked, but maybe its too early)

Tokyo - 4 or more days
Nikko - must, must, must
Fuji Five Lakes - I've to see Fuji-san..so all in one trip
Nishizawa Valley - option

Oirase Stream - in Aomori, option

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Abandoned in Batanes

{click on this photo for a larger view}


While most of my companions were turned the other way, I kept on looking in this direction and was focused on the view which greeted me.

The set of buildings seemed lonely somehow - its open spaces between columns and walls like mournful gazes.
Was it a constructed building which was only halfway done?
Was it a school or some facility which was hit by a tsunami which hit SongSong?

Even though it was exposed to the wide, open seas - for long, blissful moments I abandoned myself to an imaginary scene of this site becoming a lush beach resort with discreet multi-colored cabanas strewn carelessly about - not difficult to fantasize on this sunny day with its bracing breeze coming from the sea.

I found out later that was
an old American base, abandoned a long time ago...

Shot on June 26, 2010 with my GE G3WP. Panoramic setup.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The HSBC and Starbucks promo....sadness for me today

Can anybody blame poor little ole me?
Its not very often that I am in the mood for coffee.

And so with much enthusiasm and anticipation, I wanted to use one of my HSBC credit card transaction slips worth more than Php 3K (the minimum is Php 2K) to redeem a tall Starbucks beverage of my choice plus a free add-on. Woohoo!

I had done it previously and was nonplussed to find out today that even though I remember reading it being said that the "Redemption Period is from April 15 to August 30, 2010", there was this other limitation not emphasized nor pointed out very clearly - you must redeem within 60 days from transaction date. That last part I didn't see in HSBC's statement of account where they proudly bannered this particular promo.

Unfortunately, what I wanted to use today was a transaction dated April 15, 2010 and of course it would not be honored anymore according to these "conditions". I called HSBC to confirm as well as give feedback with this particular development.

Not that I was looking for exemption in my case but couldn't they at least have some initiative and put this info out with ALL of their announcements?

First the guy in the call center who was the lucky one to receive my question tells me this came about because the vendor stipulated this 60-day limit due to the promo extension (it now says on their site the redemption period is till October 31...but I'm looking at it with a jaded eye!) Then when I asked when did the extension actually start he backtracks and now tells me it wasn't because of the extension that this 60 day redemption period was added. Bleargh!

If you look at their ads its also a little misleading but hey, thats marketing right? At first glance it makes you think with your Starbucks beverage you have Php 2K worth of groceries...or maybe even a Php 2K dinner. Well, that is somewhat true..in a sense. Except that you are the one paying for the Php2K or more *wink*

*Sigh*

...oh well, at least I have two more slips, both falling as a June transaction. They would still be candidates for that free beverage. And at least it never got to the point that I tried to reach Php 2K by buying more just to get a free Starbucks drink.

*gloomily stirs a cup of 3-in-1 coffee with a over-generous shot of goat's milk and cream*

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Philippine International Cartoon, Comics and Animation Festival 2010 Edition

Start:     Oct 22, '10
End:     Oct 25, '10
Location:     SM CITY NORTH EDSA (The Block, Annex and the Sky Garden), Manila, Philippines
It just keeps on getting bigger and bigger ... and better and better!

For more details please visit www.piccafest.com

PICCA also has a page in Facebook, please 'Like' and link on your wall :-)

Please help spread the word to your friends!

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

this is the longest power outage I've ever experienced ever since I came here in 2004...

Window as pathways...

Today is a melancholy day although it had a cheerful start as I wished one colleague a happy birthday.

Its business as usual, though there's a typhoon coming in to the Philippines and earlier this morning I received a text that my mom's older sister is in the ICU in Davao City and probably not going to last long.

After work and errands, to take my mind off these happenings, I looked at last year's pictures I took in Beijing, which I haven't posted yet.

One made me stop and think idly about the life that comes after death.

Maybe heaven's opening would be like this...an endless array of windows where a soul would pop out from the darkness and fly into one opening and get "processed".  Thoughts have turned Kafkaesque probably due to the animated film I saw this weekend, plus this unfortunate thing happening to my aunt.

Photo taken at one of the rooms of Beijing China's National Center of Performing Arts on August 22, 2009.
Camera used: Kodak V803 Easyshare.

My maternal aunt is brain-dead today. One of the victims again of slipping on the bathroom floor and cracking one's skull. I've only seen her twice in my whole life and she lived in Davao City with her 2nd husband. For those old and not-so-old folks, please be careful of navigating around a tiled wet bathroom floor.

japan-guide.com - Japan Travel and Living Guide

http://www.japan-guide.com/
for reference, if ever I do get to visit Japan again, as I still hold hope dear in my heart of hearts that I can plan a visit from Tokyo going northwards to Hokkaido one of these...days....este..years...

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Kafka Inaka Isha (adaptation of Franz Kafka's "A Country Doctor")

Rating:★★★★★
Category:Movies
Genre: Animation
This animated film is based on famed Jewish-Czech writer Franz Kafka's short prose, "A Country Doctor" from 1919.

ORIGINAL STORY Franz Kafka “Ein Landarzt”
SCRIPT, STORY BOARD, CAMERA & EDITOR Koji Yamamura
MUSIC Hitomi Shimizu(SYZYGYS) / SOUND DESIGN Koji Kasamatsu
DIRECTED BY Koji Yamamura


Being an anime fan for most of my life, I've been subconsciously looking for something to totally blow me away from an ever-increasing ennui when watching films in general and animation in particular.

This film did it.
This film opened my eyes.
This film made me sit up and almost not blink in the 20 minutes that it was dancing and flowing across the theater's screen.

Direct, and yet distorted.. and jaw-droppingly surreal is how I see Kōji Yamamura's short animation of Franz Kafka's tale. The story might be mind-boggling (and gives rise to existentialism thoughts) but since on the heels of that observation, "bizarre" is another word which this time is applicable to the film adaptation...and so they are made for each other.

Truth to tell, I have not read "A Country Doctor" - a writer, not matter how talented he may be - once described as the father of angst - is not something to get me all hot and bothered about pawing through his works - and a German tale? that goes for some more patience on my part...and that is not a virtue I have in spades.

While it may be a German story which is the basis, the director has imaginatively used elements of Noh drama to present his adaptation.

It was my first time to see animated layered textures, all scratch-y and distortion-y..and paired with dramatic narration which I may have seen in other animated films, but never at the same time - and never blended together with seamless ease that the viewer can only be just simply amazed that this kind of work even exists. And in animation!

An excellent review I found just now, which I will direct you to as I don't think I could do justice to Yamamura-san's multi-awarded work (I'm still actually in a kind of daze) is found on this particular link,
please click here.

Of course, credit must be given to Herr Kafka for his short story which has inspired this kind of animation.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Sibonga, Cebu Town fiesta

Start:     Aug 9, '10 1:00p
End:     Aug 10, '10
Location:     Cebu, Philippines
my mom's hometown....

there were a couple of fiestas I experienced when I was a little girl here...one was the barrio where my lola's house belonged in..the other was the town fiesta...




Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Pano 2? on the road to Songsong

June 26, 2010
Batan, Batanes
Philippines


On the road to SongSong...we stopped.

We trampled the grass towards the place where water buffaloes hid from the sun's heat. I overheard (or maybe I was mistaken) thereabouts was where the supposed place where Richard broke up with Dawn in a movie entitled something like "I Shall Wait for You in Heaven" was filmed...

I grumbled to myself - of course he'd break up with her here...its bloody hot! That place was open to the elements.

A little ways down the road, I walked on..and saw a family going leisurely by the same road..seemingly towards infinity...

This was the road we would be passing by later on the way to SongSong which
has a cluster of roofless shells of old stone houses abandoned after a tidal wave that hit the island of Batan in the 1950s.


Monday, July 5, 2010

Brown Terraces

March 14, 2010
On the road back to Baguio City
from Sagada..

Stopped by on the way to take in one lingering last look from whence we came.


Camera used:
Fujifilm Finepix S602Zoom point and shoot.

Effect: cross-processed film

Getting back into his cage for the night

March 14, 2010
On the way back
...to Baguio City..
from Sagada...

All of a sudden I was jolted awake from my half-reclining position in the van...(I surreptitiously checked for drool).

somebody shouted "sunset!"...
others muttered "bathroom break"...

then everybody who had a working camera scrambled out like bees after a succulent flower drooping with golden nectar...while the rest went elsewhere...

I realized later that the electric power lines somewhat added to bondage effect of the sun while jeepneys unconcernedly whizzed on by as I was trying to blink my eyes open to their fullest range...

after a few tries, I caught the sun landing over the edge of the bare bones of a building...

Camera used: Fujifilm Finexpic S602Zoom point and shoot

I can't eat cuy! They are so very much extremely too cute for words..

comfort food for dinner: cream of mushroom (with extra cream and goat's milk) + toasted pancetta tesa + honey oat bread -> *sigh* chewing with my right jaw now...

Sunday, July 4, 2010

There must be something in July/August when it comes to my teeth. Last year before I left for Beijing, my left molar cracked eating chicharon. Yesterday, with just a spicy Indian dish of okra and eggplant, the filling fell out. I wish human teeth could just keep on replacing itself naturally (aren't sharks like that?)...

Looking over an online buddy's post on the pics he shot of the Philippines' pavilion in the Shanghai Expo this year - even if may not have seen it in its entirety and not known the background - I'm just plain disappointed. Well, at least I can blog and share photos of the trips I've taken in my country and hope for the best.

The Twilight Saga: "Eclipse"

Rating:★★★
Category:Movies
Genre: Other
It is lucky for me that out of the 4 books of S. Meyer's "Twilight" series, I happen to have enjoyed "Eclipse" more than the others.

Truth to tell, it was the author's unfinished "Midnight Sun" (as of this time) which I loved most, "New Moon" which just made me sleep (both book and film) and "Breaking Dawn" which just made me shake my head and reach for one of my trusty Tolkien tomes afterwards.

So when I was unable to watch either of the 2 animes in Eiga Sai 2010, I decided on the spot to just try "Eclipse". After all, I knew there was at least going to be more action in it than its predecessor's adaption of the series. Yes, fight-o, blood, gore, and probably some 'off with her head' stuff! Alrighty then.

Those who read books that films are made or based on usually have thorny time sitting through the films, especially if they have a tendency to be semi-purists like me. I vociferously rant (but only internally), how the story line is manipulated to make it fit into whatever the duration of a movie is supposed to be, how actors chosen to bring to life a perfectly good character birthed from the author's creativity and imagination end up on the other side of the world of how the reader envisions them in her mind's eye.

This time, the film wasn't too bad of an adaptation. The previous films have set in me a certain expectation of how a character is now going to be shown on the movies, and it was as I feared. :-)

Edward seemed to be a minor character instead of a major player in the love triangle. Jacob fared better, but then he never got to the level of passion I expected of his character. In the book I didn't like Bella very much at this stage because I felt her to be a teensy bit selfish. But then I think all teenagers at some point or another (or even adults) can be said to be selfish in matters of the heart, so I will be fair and say in the film she turned out more likeable....hmmm...maybe it was the script?

I was a tad resigned when there didn't seem to be any reference to why the third book was actually entitled the way it was. For those who read the books, generally speaking, they could probably be content with the movie. Their minds would automatically fill that part in - but for me it was a pivotal detail especially since I had read how the three major characters developed to that point in the story.

For those who just saw the movie and didn't read the book, they probably wouldn't be also questioning it and would not want to worry their heads anymore on the nuances of certain conversations.

Important scenes like Bella having the power to shield her mind from Jane's power of inflicting mental pain was taken out...I thought this might have at least set the tone for "Breaking Dawn". Charlie was lovable as usual, I thank his character for bringing some honest smiles for those who faithfully (and painfully?) vowed to watch all of the Twilight films.

There was some attempt in bringing out the essence of the third book, but with conflicts here and there, it just was not realistic to expect it to be showcased, but instead dealt with in the best way it could while taking into account the previous film's portrayal of the two first books in the series.

Being a frugal girl, I felt I could have just waited this out on our usual dee-bee-dee here. But then again, a big screen was needed to enjoy all those werewolves (ehem..shapeshifters) in action. Half-clothed hotties...(ehem again) or rather humans who are equally adorable in furry wolfie form! I would say the vampires got "eclipsed" by the big dogs.

Not a big bark of approval from my end, but then again, I should be thankful it saved me from being sad about missing the anime film in the Japanese film festival. Oh, do go on and watch tweenies and my fellow-not-so-tweenies-anymore - only one more film to go and maybe we can drool over Renesmee in the next one...or still just fall back on the wolves...

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Panoramic shot of National Center for Performing Arts (China)

{you can click on the picture to see a larger version}

August 22, 2009
Beijing, China

This is the National Center for the Performing Arts.

Camera used: Kodak V803 Easyshare point and shoot

Manual stitching on the fly for a panoramic shot, no editing except for the name :-)

The Egg: Interior Reflections

August 22, 2009
Beijing, China

Taken at the National Center for the Performing Arts.
Interior.

Camera used: Kodak V803 point and shoot

{click on the photo to see a larger version}

Friday, July 2, 2010

Kurosawa Film Festival (September 2010)

Start:     Sep 14, '10
End:     Sep 30, '10
Location:     Manila, Philippines
Who adores Kurosawa-sama's films like I do?
(lucky I saw most of them already on dee-bee-dee)

here's your chance to see...


September 14, Tuesday; CCP Little Theater

September 15-18, Wednesday to Sunday; CCP Dream Theater

September 19-30, UP Film Institute

In commemoration of the 100th Birth Anniversary of renowned Japanese film director and screenwriter Akira Kurosawa this year, the Japan Foundation, Manila, in cooperation with the Cultural Center of the Philippines and UP Film Institute proudly presents twenty-one (21) films from his award-winning collections this September.

An invitational screening of “Rashomon” will be held on September 14 at the CCP Little Theater to open the week-long festivity. Regular screenings will follow at the CCP Dream Theater from September 15 to 19. The final run will be at the UP Film Institute from September 20 to 30, 2010.

Bak Kut Teh (Pork Rib Soup)

Description:
Last December 2008, I received a special "my kind of book" from Helene when I spent my Christmas holidays with her family in Singapore. She combined two of my loves in it - glorious food and glorious pictures of food - the Singaporean dishes were presented almost like still-life paintings by masters of art.

I would like to share with you some of the simpler dishes (one reason is that at least with these recipes, I can find the ingredients here in my area).

Copied from "Authentic Recipes from Singapore" Wong and Wibisono.

I chose this because I had a sip-pilicious time slurping this soup down with Loo and Helene in Singapore. I remember I bought one pack of the "bak kut teh" spices but since I rarely buy meat while living here in Manila, I don't think I've used it.


A popular late night, or early morning pick-me-up, this flavorful soup can be prepared with various cuts of meat, although this version using ribs is the most popular.

Ingredients:
500 g (1 lb) pork ribs, cleaned, separated and cut into lengths
one 150-g (5-oz) piece lean pork
1 bulb garlic, unpeeled and washed
12 cups (3 liters) water
4 tbsp black soy sauce
2 tbsp soy sauce
2 tsp sugar
1 red finger-length chili, thinly sliced, to serve (optional)
Black soy sauce, to serve (optional)

Seasoning:
1 packet Bak Kut Teh spices (Note: packets of these are sold in supermarkets and food shops in Singapore, Australia and Malaysia. You can also try stopping by a Chinese medicine shop and ask for seasonings to make Bak Kut Teh.)

the packet usually has a combination of cloves, star anise, cinnamon, rock sugar and various Chinese medicinal herbs...


Directions:
1. Place the pork ribs, pork and garlic with the water in a large pot. Wrap the seasonings in a piece of clean cheesecloth and add to the pan. Add the soy sauce and sugar and bring to a boil. Then reduce the heat to low and simmer gently, covered, for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, until the meat is very tender and almost falling off the bones. Discard the cheesecloth filled with the seasonings.

2. To serve, slice the pork meat into smaller pieces. Place a few pieces of meat in individual serving bowls with a few ribs and whole cloves of garlic, and ladle the hot stock over the meat. Serve with a small bowl of sliced fresh red chili in black soy sauce on the side. Serve immediately.



Prep. time: 15 minutes
Cooking time: 1 hour and 45 minutes

Eggplant Masala

Description:
Last December 2008, I received a most wonderful book from Helene when I spent my Christmas holidays with her family in Singapore. She combined 2 of my loves in it - glorious food and glorious pictures of food - the Singaporean dishes were presented almost like still-life paintings by masters of art.

I would like to share with you some of the simpler dishes (one reason is that at least with these recipes, I can find the ingredients here in my area).

For this dish, its because eggplant is one of my favorite ingredients. Many a time there was when I could exist mainly on just eggplant torta. Anyway this is not torta but its still eggplant :-)

Masala or Massala is a term used to descibe any of many blends of spices used in Indian cuisine, most often containing cardamom, coriander, mace together with pepper, nutmeg etc.

Copied from "Authentic Recipes from Singapore" Wong and Wibisono.

Ingredients:
3 tbsp oil
1 tsp mustard seeds
1/2 tsp cumin seeds
1 onion, sliced
4 cloves garlic, sliced
2 slender Asian eggplants (500 g/1 lb total), halved and cut into lengths
1 tsp chilli powder
1 tsp ground coriander
1/2 tsp ground turmeric
1/2 tsp salt
2 tsp tamarind pulp mashed in 4 tbsp of water, squeezed and strained to obtain juice

Directions:
1. Heat the oil in a wok over medium heat and cook the mustard seeds until they pop, about 1 minute. Add the cumin seeds and gently stir-fry for 1 minute. Add the onion and garlic, and stir-fry until light golden-brown, about 5 minutes.

2. Add the eggplants, chilli powder, turmeric, coriander and salt, and stir-fry for 1 minute. Then add the tamarind juice, reduce the heat and simmer until the eggplants are tender, about 7 minutes. Serve immediately with freshly-cooked rice.

Prep. time: 25 minutes
Cooking time: 20 minutes


Picture from the internet.