11/24/2012

"Sita Sings the Blues" by Nina Paley (2008)

The movie can be watched online at Nina Paley's website.

Sita Sings the Blues is an animated film based on one of the episodes in the Ramayana, but adapted to modern sensibilities, that has Sita -Rama's wife- as the centre of the story. The movie deals with love, longing, faithfulness, exile, search for love and destiny.

The movie intertwines four different types of 2-D colourful animation, each one offering four different approaches to the same chapter of the Ramayana:
1/ There is the story on how the movie was created and how the author came to think of it, how her personal life got mixed up with the project. 
2/ There is the story of the chapter told straight forward. 
3/ There is a musical version of it in which Sita -the main character- sings some classic blues that convey what is happening in the story, and in which Sita expresses her feelings and mood. 
4/ Finally, there is a review of comment of the story told made by two h-i-l-a-r-i-o-u-s Hindu shadow puppets, who offer a witty interpretation of it expressed in an every-day language. 
5/ There is even an intermission, as still happens in Indian cinemas, with a cute and kitsch show.

The movie can be confusing at the beginning, but once you understand the different parts,  you will immerse yourself in a movie that is original, witty and very entertaining. Something completely different from what you are used to watch in modern animation. 


There are not many independent animation movies being made by women. Just this deserves praise. However, what makes the movie so good is its originality, the concept lying behind, and its wittiness. The music is great, not just because of the blues. 
 
The film has been controversial because Paley was not aware that the Annette Hanshaw's songs used in the film were still under copyright, despite the singer being dead for many years. Hanshaw's heirs sued Paley for an astronomical sum, but they reached an agreement and settled for $50,000, which is a tremendous amount of money for an independent artist who made this film using her own money, donations, and counted with the free help of Indian musicians and actors.

You can donate by visiting Paley's website.

11/18/2012

Carmen Steffens (Perth WA)

93-93 William St
Perth Western Australia 6000
(08) 9324 3556
Website
Hours:
    Mon-Thu 10:00 - 18:00
    Fri 10:00 - 20:00
    Sat 10:00 - 17:00
    Sun 12:00 - 17:00


Carmen Steffens in a Brazilian franchise with hundred of shops overseas that sells both women and men's leather and silicone shoes and bags.

Semi-hidden in the Raine Square, the Perth shop is relatively small, but very spacious, with a nice seating area in the centre. It has a very European feeling. They have a focus on good quality, bright colours, attention to the detail, glitter and sexiness. They only bring a few pairs of each model, so you get a very exclusive thing when you buy one of their products regarding both style and colour.

I especially like their flats and ballerinas, which are not only beautifully designed, but also very comfortable. The silicone flats are beautiful, cute, and comfy, and they are not smelly or sticky on your feet.

Customer service is wonderful, with very warm and accommodating staff. Even if you are just browsing around and do not buy anything, they are extremely friendly and welcoming.

They really put a lot of effort in packing your shoes. They put a big of fancy in their carry bags, provide wonderful satin-red silk dust bags for your shoes, and even give the payment receipt in an elegantly designed paper wallet.

DOWNS
+ Pricing is a bit high. Wait for discounts and sales.
+ The sizing can be a bit awkward sometimes for Australian standards. They have the Brazilian, American and European sizing marked on the shoes, but some of the pairs fit one size and a half, if that makes any sense, so they can be a bit small or loose on your feet, if your feet, like mine are a bit uneven. You might need to buy insoles to find the right fit.

+ Their International website is partially written in Portuguese. 

UPDATE JANUARY 2013
The shop at Wesley has closed down.

11/17/2012

Sayers (Leederville, Perth WA)

Shop 1/ 224 Carr Place
Leederville WA 6007
(08) 9227 0429
Website
Facebook
Hours:
    Mon-Sun 7:00 - 15:00

Sayers on Urbanspoon

Sayers is one of those places that epitomises what a good café and restaurant can be and sets an example for other cafés that aim to get a name amongst foodies without overcharging or hype. Sayers ticks most things that need to be ticked when evaluating a restaurant: good location - good ambience - good food - decent coffee - moderate pricing - decent serves - cozy layout - fresh local produce - and good service. Bingo!
I love the multi-layered and open layout, which goes from the inner place and spreads around the footpath, to the quiet intimate alley beside the building -my fav area-, and to the inner backyard. The space between tables is sometimes very small, but nothing uncomfortable.

The place is fully packed most days, any time, with patrons of all ages and conditions, but the atmosphere is always relaxed and enjoyable, casual, intimate and classy.


I have tried everything at Sayers, breakfast, lunches, after-hour counter lunches, sweets, coffee and teas, and every single thing has been good, very good or outstanding. They seems to succeed at creating dishes that are well textured, with great taste combinations, and beautifully plated.

The croquette breakfast is yummy, filling, and full of flavour and textures. Delicious to the utmost degree. They are a sort of Eggs Benedict with a big croquette, and Bearnaise -sort of Hollandaise sauce-. The best breakfast I have had this year, and I have had plenty!

Despite its simplicity, the Salmon & Orange salad is wonderfully textured, tasty, light and very refreshing. It is perfect if you want a light lunch or want to leave room in your stomach for a dessert.

The pan seared rare tuna salad is a high-cuisine kind of dish, wonderfully plated, fresh, filling, light and very colourful. I missed some type of bread or bread-ish product to accompany the dish, though.

Their selection of savoury tarts is eye-catching, and, to me, much more tempting than their sweets. They are good, very tasty and textured, not just good looking.
 
Their cakes are gorgeous-looking but some of them are overly syrupy and sweet for my taste. However, the Chocolate & Strawberry Cake is divine, rich but not overwhelmingly so, and with the right amount of sugar, so the chocolate flavour stands out. The Orange & Poppy Seed Tart is also great. However, I did not like the Pine Nuts and Apple Cake, which looks wonderful, but was sickly sweet, and the wonderful flavour of the apple was lost in an overwhelming mass of sugar and syrup.

Sayers has a name for their coffee. However, I am very picky with my coffee, and theirs is not among my favourites. It is good and well prepared, but their Five Senses mix is a bit weak and not especially flavoursome to me, and I need to order a long topped-up macchiato to get the flat-white I want. If you are into smooth coffees your will certainly like it. One thing that I love is that they do mugs, yes, actual mugs, because mugs are sexy. They also have a good selection of teas, which they serve in hyper-cute porcelain cups and teacups, which are very good, too.

The service at Sayers is quite fast despite the huge amount of patrons they attend to every day; many times the staff run, literally, all over the place. The staff are very friendly, courteous and smiley. If they are not too busy, they drop by to ask you how things are going and if you are happy with your dish. They are also very accommodating about any requests or adjustments you need.

Price is moderate for the quality of food you get.  If Sayers can do so, why are we being ripped off by most Perth restaurants?


ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT
They should allow payment at the end of your meal, and have one waiter to take orders from tables. At the moment, you have to pay in advance, and get up again and go to the counter to reorder anything else you want. It is not a bad system, it is that they could do better. 
- More self-service water areas could be easily placed in the alley and backyard.
- More magazines and newspapers would be much appreciated.
- Sometimes, food, drinks and bread arrive at different times. That is a problem for dishes that have bread as part of them. Shouldn't be better serving both things together?
- They need to make sure that any change in ingredients in the printed menu is mentioned upfront to patrons, or the menu changed before they change.
- Their toilets need an overhaul. Not bad, but not good either.

MIND
+ They do take-aways!
+ They do cater!
+ You can book by phone weekdays! 


Location: 8/10
Layout: 8.5/10
Ambience 8.5/10
Food: 9/10
Coffee: 6.5/10
Service: 8/10
Pricing: 7/10

11/11/2012

"Waltz with Bashir" by Ari Folman (2008)

Waltz with Bashir is a documentary animation movie that narrates director Ari Folman's personal trip to recover his memory regarding his participation in the invasion of Lebanon and in the massacre of Sabra and Shatila (1982) while he was a soldier in the Israeli Army.

Different elements are shown in the movie, all interconnected.
1/ The story shows how post-traumatic disorder works in soldiers, how tricky and fanciful human memory is, and how memory hides from our conscious anything that causes us pain and shock. The trips and chats Folman had with some of his old Army fellows and one journalist who covered the events helped him to understand what happened to him.

2/ There is a depiction of the reality of war, with its drama, blood, death, fear, and normality. We see young teen soldiers doing a job that overwhelms them, and their fear being the trigger to kill, not hatred. We also see the happy every-day moments lived in their fight idle days and moments: soldiers listening to music, talking about girls, life plans, and  longing for home and a normal life.

3/ There is the narration of the events leading to the massacre of Sabra and Shatila, in which thousands of Muslim civilians (mostly women, children and old people) were pitiless slaughtered by a group called the Christian Phalangists, with the passive connivance of the Israeli Army. We witness with horror the impact that such barbaric acts had on the victims and on those who witnessed the events.

The movie succeeds at presenting such a harsh story by combining different elements in a masterly way.
[1] The movie creates an animated world that is alien and intimate at the same time. This is done by using an unique animation style that is very realistic (very similar to  rotoscopy), by using and odd combination of orange & beige hues, and great chiaroscuro, which create an ominous atmosphere that is surreal at times. The recurring image that Folman remembers -he and two soldiers emerging naked from the beach with a gun (as shown in the movie's poster)- shows very well the sense of spiritual abandonment, alienation and regret that permeates the movie.

[2] The movie paces and presents the research for Folman's memory as if it was a mystery movie. We walk side by side with him while he puts together the pieces of his past; the tempo (and the uneasiness) goes in crescendo and ends in the shocking non-animated final minutes of the movie. They moved me to tears.

[3] The movie uses an impacting and soulful soundtrack that will touch you. It mixes some classical music pieces, well known songs of the 1980s, and some songs and musical pieces specifically written for the movie.

[4] The movie showcases the importance of our oniric world to understand our present and to retrieve pieces of our past that lay dormant in our subconscious;  they are -and were for Folman- a doorway to any locked-in memories. In fact, the movie starts with a dream, and contains several oniric surrealist scenes.

[5] The movie mixes the harsh images and sub-stories with others full of intimacy, lyricism and poetry, and shows different facets of the life of a soldier and of War. 


My main criticism to the movie is that Ari Folman does not explicitly condemn the Israeli involvement in the massacre. He does so implicitly and from a personal point of view, which is full of regret and shame. In a way, the movie is politically correct for the Israelis. To me, the fact that only the Christian Phalangists are depicted as the barbarians and slaughters is a bit washing one's hands. If you see somebody killing frail people and do nothing to stop it or succour them, you are as guilty as the butchers themselves. Most of the victims were women, children and elderly people. How could a soldier do nothing to stop the slaughter? 

***
This is one of this movies that everybody should watch, not only because it is a piece of art, but because it as powerful reminder that War debases us all, destroys the lives of all the parties involved, except of those politicians who started them, and whom we elect.

One of the most amazing films I have seen in the last years. Multi-layered.  Confronting. Lacerating.
Unforgettable.

11/07/2012

Good Service - 3

One of the things I have noticed lately is that, as soon as the staff spot you taking a picture of the food, the staff's behaviour changes dramatically and the service improves remarkably, while the level of "smileness" duplicates. 

It is great, on one hand, and a bit pitiful on the other. 

I have experienced the rudeness of a lady behind a counter being dramatically changed -going from mutant monster to an angora fluffy bird- as soon as my camera was taken out. The lady could change her behaviour while I was there, but the reviews on her restaurant always pinpoint the rudeness of the staff. So you cannot fake what you do not have. 

Angry staff should never be dealing with patrons. 

Any staff member should be genuine and nice to me whether I have a camera or not. Is that too much to ask?

Good Service - 2

"Was everything OK?" "How was everything?" 

Have you ever been asked this sort of question in a restaurant? 

I find them a bit intimidating, and it is never going to work with customers -or at least with me- unless they really-really loved what they had. If it is mediocre or bad, you, like me, won't probably say so.

For example, say that you had an omelette and you thought that you could have prepared it better at home despite you not being a good cook". Would you tell them just that? Of course not. You have manners, and, even if you are not that enthusiastic, you may say, "It was OK" in a languid tone. In these days, reviewing sites allow patrons to spill the beans on what you really-really think about a place without having to deal with a personal reaction that could not be pleasant. Most people asking for your opinion are really expecting you to replay what they want to hear.

I think that it would be great if some restaurants and cafés did what most hotels do - have feedback forms at hand (to be filled in and deposited in a feedback box or posted), asking about the patron's opinion on the ambience, service, food, pricing, serving portions, things that they did not enjoy, and so on. This would help businesses to improve and would prevent unhappy customers from venting their anger or disappointment online.

What about saying "I hope you enjoyed it"? I think I like this more than other open questions. Then, if the business has feedback forms, they could add "please feel free to leave any feedback in the forms provided". I like this the most. What about you?


Good Service - 1

hos·pi·tal·i·ty
1. Cordial and generous reception of or disposition toward guests.
2. An instance of cordial and generous treatment of guests.


How many people, business owners and staff working in the Hospitality sector have forgotten which industry they are part of and what does hospitality mean? Many, unfortunately.

Everything is in the service - to me. You could be serving ambrosia on an Versace plate or a coffee so good that it would make me levitate; still, if the service is lacking or bad, I would not return. 


One of my brothers worked at a restaurant and a bar for many years. It is a very stressful job, not always well-paid, long hours, early mornings, late evenings, little time for eating and going to the toilet, and, sometimes, low salaries. People arrive all at the same time (my brother called it "the big sh*t"), while other hours are so empty that you feel like a day has 48 hours. I know there are many struggling students working in the hospitality industry because it is the only option they have, and you see them struggling at doing their job and keeping up with their assignments. Business owners have it tough in a very competitive industry, high taxes and rental leases (especially in Perth CBD), expensive produce suppliers, expensive transport, difficulty in finding nice staff, among many hurdles. 

Still, patrons pay for what they consume, and they have to earn the money for it. The least we can expect is being treated nicely and having a good experience in our time out. 

Good service makes a business prosper and attracts customers and keeps them. It sounds obvious, no? Unfortunately, many businesses do forget a basic rule - a happy customer is the best ad they will ever have. And they forget it for various reasons: they are just focused on making money or surviving, selling an image, starting before they are ready, attending to more customers than they can attend to, taking for granted that customers will put up with any crap if the setting has hype or it is trendy, among many other reasons. 

To me, there are a list of things that any business in the hospitality industry should be doing to guarantee that the service is decent, good or excellent:
  1.  Choosing waiters/waitresses who are genuinely friendly and sociable, who are energetic and want to be there. They have to deal with all types of people and personalities, and usually work long hours, so they need to have those innate qualities to deliver.
  2. Choosing cooks who can actually cook. I mean, cook something better than the mediocre food that any of us can or could prepare at home. 
  3. Organising the staff effectively. A business can have the best staff around, and still offer a terrible service. If the restaurant, café or bar has good food/coffee/drinks and wants to get a reputation, it needs a plan: a set of rules and procedures to follow, a list of must and must-not, a "serving routine" in which details are given on how to take orders, cue people, serve, attend to, receive payments, and welcome and farewell patrons. Not only that, they need to invest some time in informing the staff about the food they are serving: produce origin, taste of the dishes, gluten free options, type of grapes of a foreign wine, and so on, so they can reply to any query. 
  4. Organising the layout of the restaurant having into account the needs of the staff, especially in the kitchen and serving areas. In fact, many restaurants' layouts prevent the staff from doing their job properly or make difficult their movements. For example, having enough space between tables, not only benefits patrons, it also allows the staff to move easily and avoid hitting patrons with elbows, dishes they are carrying, etc.
  5. A business should never host more patrons than those they can serve at ease and attend to properly with the staff they have. If they do, deficiencies in the service become obvious to visitors and the patron's experience is affected. If the business increases, you need more staff, at least at peak hours.
  6. A business should have EFPTOS. The last two times my wallet was empty of cash and EFPTOS was not available, my transaction cost me two dollars, which had to be added as an extra to the price I was paying.
***
As a patron, these are the things I find indicators of a good service, and that make me return to a business and be merry:
  1. The staff are friendly and respectful, and smile and greet customers.
  2. The staff treat regular customers as individuals, and remember their order preferences and name. This is especially important in cafés and bars where you always order the same. By remembering "the usual" they show their care and appreciation towards you. After all, you could go elsewhere and stop expending your money here.   
  3. The staff attend first to those people who arrive first.
  4. The staff are knowledgeable about their trade. They know their beans, liquors, wines or food. Not only that, they can even advice you if you are not sure about what to order.
  5. The staff leave their personal problems at home, so they attend to customers as fellow-humans not as money-making machines or an annoyance they have to put up with. If you cannot make it, fake it. I have plenty of crappy days, and I do not treat anybody badly when ordering my food or drinks. 
  6. The staff do not have a pose. They are humble and hospitable, and they treat customers without looking down at them. After all, they do not know who they are. I could be Denmark's Prime Minister, a famous Hungarian painter, a renowned German astrophysicist, a popular online site reviewer, or just a human being who has ordered something with courtesy and expects the same in return.
  7. The staff attend arriving customers fast, and serve food, coffee or drinks at a decent speed. Any on-going delays are mentioned upfront.
  8. The staff inform of any amendments, changes or missing elements in the printed menu - upfront. 
  9. The staff apologise for any mistake and mishap and offer a compensation to an unhappy customer who has a reason to be unhappy. 
  10. The staff deal elegantly with customers with foreign accents. They elegantly make you repeat your order if they do not understand, or show you the menu so you point to the item you want, or vocalise what they are saying. This is especially relevant in Perth, where the number of foreign students learning English is considerable and, most importantly, the number of dwellers born overseas is very high. 
***
Good service is what separates a good business from a bad one, and what makes some businesses thrive and others fail. Any business owner and manager wants to have a successful business. However, expecting customers to put up with crap, despite the fact that they pay for what they are consuming, it is not only insulting, it is stupid - like digging up your own grave. 

I am your guest - be hospitable.