8/12/2012

Subiaco Railway Station (Subiaco, Perth WA)

Subiaco Square Road
13 62 13
Transperth

Buzzing with activity any time of the day, any day of the week, the Subiaco railway station is the only train station in Subiaco, and part of the Fremantle Railway Line. 

THE GOOD

- Subiaco Train Station is very clean and functional, quite open and luminous but still protected by a contemporary cool metallic structure and good lightning in the evening. 
- There are just two platforms, so it is easy to move around, and they have a simple and effective electronic information system.
- Moreover, the station is in the heart of the shopping and restaurant and café area, with several cafés, restaurants and a shopping centre at barely ten metres from the station. The vibrant Subiaco Street Markets, trendy Rockeby Road and the gorgeous St Joseph's Catholic Church are also a a few minutes walking distance from it.

THE DOWNS
- The multirider tagging machines are located outside, on the ground concourse level over the platforms not in the platforms. This is annoying at peak times, especially if you are tagging on and want to catch a train leaving in a few minutes but find a flood of people tagging off or on in front of you upstairs.
- The number of seating benches is limited. There is room for more.
- There are no public or pay toilets in the station. There is a close unisex public booth toilet very close at the corner between Subiaco Square Road and Brigid Road, but it is not good enough.

- There is no information booth in the premises, just a board with maps and info. 

ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT
- A toilet booth is needed. If people have an emergency, they could not get to the close-by public booth.
- There is space for at least for two more benches on each platform.
- More tagging machines needed, at least one on each platform. So the tagging is more fluid and faster at peak times.
- We like it tidy and clean, but also beautiful. Why not using the large grey ugly walls in the platform area as a canvas and have a mural painted on them?

8/11/2012

"Kirikou and the Sorceress" by Michel Ocelot (1998)

Kirikou et la Sorcière is a delightful French-Belgian traditional animation movie loosely based on a West-African folk tale.

The movie tells the story of newly born Kirikou, a special child who asks his mother to be born, and who, immediately after being born, starts talking, running, and offering a wise practical approach to life to his fellow villagers in their fight against Karaka, the beautiful wicked sorceress who has been impoverishing his village.


The story is entertaining and full  of magic, with great messages for children, but will enchant adults because is unique, it has soul and wit, it is clever and tells a West-African story that is respectful with that culture and philosophy of life. Even the approach to the wickedness of the sorceress is West-African, as Karikou tries to understand why Karaka is so evil to fix her, not to destroy her. Wining over and destroying are two different things, and the first gets better results  is a great message for kids. Even the ending of the movie is unexpected, still in tune with this same approach:  magical and very alien to Western Culture. 

The character of Kirikou is just adorable, a sweet know-it-all boy, and very naughty child at times. The rest of the characters are realistic, a mix of the human types we could find in a small African rural village.

The old-style flat animation is an artistic reinterpretation of the reality, in which landscapes, dresses, hairdos, architecture, and other elements directly mimic those of West Africa. That is, they are not a western modernised interpretation of them despite the movie being European. Ocelot used African Art as a direct and strong inspiration for the drawing of this film.  Especially beautiful is the detailed and artistic drawing of the landscapes -this is one of Ocelot's signature marks- in a naïf precious style, as eye-catching as the bright earthy bold colours of the film.

The English dubbing is lovey, as it was personally supervised by Ocelot. Still, when the characters sing, the wonderful original music and chants get lost a bit. The French original version with English subtitles is truly delightful.

Senegalese Youssou N'Dour and Cameroonian Manu Dibango provide an very cool, catchy and African soundtrack.

The movie being respectful with and true to the West-African reality, it depicts most women with their breasts uncovered, while Kirikou is naked during the whole movie, moving his bum and "willy" cutely. Puritans and morons of the world, especially out of continental Europe, thought that this was an offence and inappropriate for children viewing, and the screening of the film was banned in some countries; even the release of the DVD in the USA and the UK was not exempt from controversy either. Shocking but true. If you cannot explain to your child that mummy has breasts, that they produce milk, that they are a natural part of the human body, and that in some parts of the world they do not cover them, I feel sorry for your child. Children should be protected from this sort of people who try to "protect" them, and not vice versa. Show Kirikou to your kids, and seat side by side with them, to explain them what they are watching instead of parking them in front of a TV, unsupervised.

Seoul BBQ Café (Perth WA) - CLOSED

Shop 2/ 166 Murray St
Forrest Chase
Perth Western Australia 6000
(08) 9221 1862


Seoul BBQ Cafe on Urbanspoon This open Korean barbecue café kiosk is occupying part of Forrest Chase's back corridors, and located in front of Crazy Clark's. There is a little kiosk with the counter and bbq kitchen, while the tables are spread by the wall and along the corridor. There is no waiter; so, once you pay, you get a number and wait for it to be called to go and collect your tray. 

Their meals include the most common Korean fast food specialities:  bibimpap  (bowl with a mix of rice, meat, an egg, some salad, and the very Korean sour cabbage Kimchi); Korean fried chicken ("karaage"), spicy barbecued squid and meats, grilled meat dishes ("bulgogi") etc.. The dishes are tasty, generous in size, and a decent quality for the price you pay. 

A set meal includes the main (tray with rice plus the meat/fish of your selection), plus three small sides (salad, miso soup, and bean sprouts). You can always order individual portions of marinated food, dumplings, or a bibimpap menu (with the rice bowl, miso soup and the chilli paste on the side just if you prefer to adjust the hotness to your palate yourself).

Average price is about 10 bucks, all menus below 15 bucks per meal.

The service is fast, even when the place is flooded with customers, which is most days at lunch time. They clean the place quite fast, and it is very clean and tidy despite the continuous movement of people. The staff are matter of fact, still very friendly and ready to help and explain anything to you.

The two main downs of the place are that they open just for dinner on Fridays, and that the seating area id in the open and, therefore, affected by the changes in temperature and pigeons occasionally wander around. 

This is not a glamorous gourmet place, but they deliver simple tasty Korean food cooked by Koreans at bargain prices in the heart of the city. Most recommended for fast lunches that are consistently good.

UPDATE
This place has closed down.

8/09/2012

1Up Microcinema Cinema (Perth WA) - CLOSED

312B William St
Northbridge Western Australia 6003
(08) 9328 3771
Website
Facebook
Hours:
    Mon-Thu 10:00 - 18:00
    Fri 10:00 - 21:00
    Sat 10:00 - 17:00
    Sun 12:00 - 17:00

1Up Microcinema is one of those innovative and independent businesses that have a holistic approach to vintage. They sell modern nostalgia not granny stuff. They show Indie movies not mainstream stories. They sell clothing for edgy people, not edgy clothing for normal people. 

 
By the day, 1UM is a fashion shop for boys and girls who are cheeky, daring, cool and colourful. 1UMC has a great selection of funky female an male clothing. Cheaper than you can expect and with a mix of styles that go from the hyper-funky to the daring, from the cute to the cool, from the black and white to the super-colourful, from the hyper-sexy to the hyper-comfy. Prices are also cheaper than I expected. A pair of Ziggy jeans for 90 bucks is a good deal, I think. They also sell super-cute nostalgic toys with characters from 1990s cartoons and TV shows.


By the night, 1UM is also a super-cool cute and nostalgic cinema. It mostly shows independent films, documentaries and short films. You can visit on your own or book the whole place for your family and friends and have an unique personalised experience. It is so very cozy. They even have beanbags! Like a home-theatre room, but bigger. Like an underground cinema but smaller and in the heart of Perth. Their candy bar is actually full of candies! You can buy a few of funky sweets, like the colourful pop tarts, plenty of chocolate bars and other pocketable sweets, and take them up to enjoy with your movie. ]

1UM is also a vintage gaming place with two areas devoted to video-games that are already part of video-gaming history. Oh Gosh, I was transported to my young-errrr days and my three brothers competitions on those very games.They regularly organise Mario Kart competition-dating events ,too, for you and your future girl!

Not enough? 1UP has a couple of owners who have created something unique in Perth and, despite so, act like normal people and are lovely. That is super-cool, to me.

JUST A NOTE

The business is changing its name from 1Up Microcinema to Brown Class Cinema. Their Facebook site shows the name name. I love their original name! On the other hand, Brown is never a good colour for a cinema. What about purple! 

8/07/2012

London Court (Perth WA)

647-649 Hay St
Perth Western Australia 6000
(08) 9261 6666
http://www.londoncourt.com.au



Have you ever noticed that Perth has a wonderful Tudor spirit? Yes, Yes Yes. The city is full of buildings and building details that are neo-16th century, hidden in front of your very royal nose.

London Court is one of those places where you truly feel transported in time (no need of drugs), to feel you are walking an old European alley. You could even forget that you are in Australia and think that this is, indeed, London, if it was not for the very Australian shops and the Australian elements on display.

The court has a wonderful mock Tudor style, with its unmistakable architecture and arches, tiled floor, several floor stories with their narrow stairs to the upper shops and workshops, cute little windows, heraldic blazons, gargoyles, iron pikes, shop plaques, pending banners, and two charming knights, perennially armed and standing, tall and proud, awaiting the photo and loving gaze of any passer-by.

T
he thing about London Court is that, despite its "fakeness", it does not feel unauthentic, not even a movie set, and that is what makes the place so special. Some places have magic power, that inexplicable something that, no matter what you build on them or transform them into, makes them special. The place where London Court stands does have it. You just have to feel in your body, the change in energy before entering the Court and when you exit the other end gate. That is what makes London Court what it is, and gives it the atmosphere it has.

The court itself is s a mini-Universe of fine and cheap jewellers, shoe shops, gift and souvenir shops, antiques,
workshops and small cafés piled one on each other with order and cosiness. The renting of the shopping space has become extremely expensive in the last five years and some of my fav places have gone forever, and the ones standing have high prices. Still, you can enjoy some window shopping, shop till you drop, or delight yourself at the micro-climate of the alley in the hot summer months. The shops are not cheap, but walking around is.

You must walk the place slowly, preferably in the early hours of the morning or at dusk, when the shops are still open but there are not many visitors around and you become part of the setting, and the visit is more enjoyable.

Magic wand needed and an extra-tall staircase to kiss the white knights into frogs and take them to my secret pond.

8/06/2012

Nine West (Forrest Chase, Perth WA)

Forrest Chase Shopping Centre
207 Murray St
Perth Western Australia 6000
(08) 9325 5052
http://www.ninewest.com.au
Hours:
    Mon-Thu 9:00 - 17:30
    Fri 9:00 - 21:00
    Sat 9:00 - 17:00
    Sun 11:00 - 17:00
 

The Nine West branch shop on Forrest Chase is an open shop that has always wonderful window displays. The interior has a very classy minimal celled wall showcasing their bags and shoes, and, to top up all, a great lighting that really makes the products on display look their best. In fact, the whole shop has an air of elite and luxury that is, however, very far from what it is. 

 
The design of their pieces is trendy and classy, with a good mix of classy flats and the latest trends in shoes, handbags, wallets and clutches. The pricing is fantastic for the handbags but a bit up for the shoes having into account that the materials and overall quality of the products is  medium in the best cases. Still they look like a million dollar! Kudos to Nine West. Still, plastic is plastic, no matter you call it faux-leather or synthetic. I would not mind the syntheticity of it, if the materials were softer in the shoes and less rigid in the bags.


The shop-attendants are welcoming and helpful, and let you wander around freely or approach you depending on your shopping aura and vibe.

Nine West is a perfect place for decently priced fashion seasonal fixes, especially for those that you do not want to spend much money on as they are not going to be trendy next year. Nine West is also a perfect place for Vegans and animal activists who do not use leather but want to look  "à la mode".

8/05/2012

"Agora" by Alejandro Amenábar (2009)

A biopic loosely based on the story of the great Late-Roman female Philosopher, Astronomer and Mathematician Hypatia of Alexandria.


Most movies about the Roman Empire are unsubstantial, entertaining in the best cases. Have a look at the titles produced in Hollywood recently and you will see what I am talking about. We do not  have many movies that offer an intimate study of a brilliant female intellectual. We do not have many movies in which women are treated with respect or not presented subordinated to men. However, Agora does just that - the contrary.

This is a movie about the decadence of Rome not about the Roman Empire. The movie shows with great easiness and without lecturing, the decadence of the Roman Empire, and the processes of conversion of pagan societies into Christianity.

This is a movie about Early Christians, but not the victimised heroes that we are usually presented with in old Hollywood and European films.

This is a movie about a woman who was intellectually respected and revered by men, a woman who preached by example and was true to herself until the last moments of her life.  

This is a movie about an epic quest for knowledge and understanding, not about epic battles.

This is a movie about ideas not about special effects.

This is a movie against fundamentalism, dogmatism, intolerance, ignorance and irrationality, about the necessity of Philosophy and Science to advance and build a better world. The movie shows that mobs are never right or understanding, just a bunch of stupid animals, even if the principles that brought them together are valid in essence and origin.

Rachel Weiz really shines in this movie, despite the Mathematics of it! She looks beautiful beyond words. Most importantly, she w
holeheartedly embraces her character and portrays Hypatia with talent, class and conviction. Oscar Isaac also offers a heartfelt convincing performance as Prefect Orestes, as well as Michael Lonsdale as Hypatia's father Theon. I had a mix of feelings regarding Max Minghella's performance as freed slave Davus, whose dramatic intensity I considered overbearing at times. The same can be said of some of the actors playing the fanatic Christian characters in the movie.

The digital reconstruction of Alexandria is beautiful and realistic. Malta Landscapes beautiful. The sets, the lighting, the colours, the dresses, the actors' characterisation, the mood and cinematography of the films  are all wonderful.


Agora has also some flaws. 1/ Firstly, that it is a little too long and slow-paced. 2/ Secondly, all the explanatory texts that link different periods in the movie are too long and distracting, and very TV-series-ish; I agree that the viewer needs of some historical  contextualisation, but I am not sure that this was the best way to do it. 3/ Thirdly, although the space-to-earth shots showing the roundness of Earth before falling onto Alexandria are relevant to Hypatia's quest about the shape and movement of Earth, they are unnecessarily repetitive, and a final single scene with this would have sufficed and served as a modern thoughtful epilogue. 4/ Finally, the movie has historical inaccuracies, artistic licences that can be taken by the word by many viewers; still, this happens in almost any American historical movie and nobody seems to care, perhaps because they are sugar-coated and more easily digested. 

The depiction of the Christian mobs made Agora unmarketable in the American market, where Christian fundamentalism has power, and the movie had a very limited release. Christian fundamentalist groups all over the world, infused in their own dogmatism, were unable to see beyond the obvious and publicly complained about the film. 

Agora is, despite its flaws, a great movie with good acting, magnificent atmosphere, a powerful message, and a big heart. If you are looking for just entertainment, battles, action, and erotic moments in the Roman Empire this film  is not for you. Still, there are hundred reasons to watch this movie, especially if you are seeking for something different to feed your mind.