Category: EN

  • Rogue One: A Star Wars Story Movie Review

    Rogue One: A Star Wars Story | Hola Darla

    Rogue One hasn’t even been in the cinema for one week and yet I have seen it twice. TWICE! That’s how obsessed I am. That’s how awesome it is. That’s how wonderful it is to be alive in this era; an era in which we get one Star Wars movie each year.

    That’s why no matter how I try, I don’t think this post will be spoiler-free. I’M STILL TOO EXCITED!

    As I said in the previous post, I knew next to nothing about Rogue One before watching it on its premier date. Turns out, it wasn’t a big deal at all. When I went to watch it for the second time, I brought along my little sister who hasn’t watched any Star Wars movie. She asked a few questions during the movie, but overall the story is very easy to follow.

    Rogue One was based on that one line in the crawl at the opening of A New Hope. It tells a story about how the Rebellions get a hold on the Death Star plans. It also explains why Death Star has a ridiculous flaw in its design. One of the scientists who help to build the Death Star is Galen Erso. At the beginning of the movie, he was living in hiding with his family, but he was caught. His wife was killed and his young daughter escaped. He surrendered then agreed to work on the Death Star. He intentionally put that flaw as a revenge. When the Death Star is almost finished, he sends a message to Saw Gerrera and his daughter, Jyn Erso, telling them about the flaw. She then sets off on a mission to steal the plan from the Empire’s data bank (or sort of; I forget the name lol). They successfully get the plan and transmit it to the Rebellions before they… *SPOILER!!!!* are blown up by the Death Star, along with the whole planet. The movie ends with Darth Vader chases after the rebels who retrieve the plans then hand them to (young!) Princess Leia; just a few minutes before the opening scene of A New Hope. (I’m not gonna talk about how I squealed like a little girl when I saw young Princess Leia.)

    Saying this movie is amazing is perhaps a great understatement. Because it’s beyond amazing. I’m mesmerised by how modern technology can make this movie possible, what with Tarkin and Leia, while also maintain silly low-tech things that we can see in the original trilogy, e.g. wired headphones. I also love how they kill everyone while also give each death a meaning. They all die for a better future. That last scene on the beach when Jyn and Cassian hug is so beautifully wrecking. We can see how deep their love for each other is; they just met, then they decided to trust & fight alongside each other.

    Rogue One is 100% heartbreaking, yet you’ll love it. You will absolutely love it.

    Dara | Bloglovin’ | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook

  • Things To Look Forward To For The Rest Of The Year

    Things to Look Forward to for the Rest of the Year | Hola Darla
    Ha! See what I did there with the title? “… For The Rest Of The Year” as if 2016 still had months to go. Well, knock on wood because 2016 has been a wild ride and it feels like the worst, longest year ever, both to the whole world and to me personally. I’m both eager and afraid of what 2017 will become. Part of me wants to be optimistic that 2017 will be a fresh, new start–a chance to correct all the mistakes I made in 2016; the other part of me keeps saying that 2017 is just literally one day after 2016 and I’m sure one whole year of mistakes won’t just change in one day.

    However, December has a lot of good things to offer, apparently. There’s still a chance that 2016 won’t end badly. Perhaps it’ll end with a blast? I don’t know about you, but here are things that I look forward to for the rest of 2016.

    Sing

    Sing Movie Still | Hola Darla
    Sing is an animated movie from the same production house from which Despicable Me and Minions came. It’s a fable of a singing competition. I still haven’t known more information about the storyline, but it has become on my list since the first time I saw the teaser trailer a few months ago.

    Kimi No Na Wa (Your Name)

    Kimi No Na Wa (Your Name) by AssassinWarrior on Deviant Art
    Have you heard about this Japanese animated movie? It has been released for quite some time now, but was just released yesterday in my country. It has been praised by critics and certified fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, and it was also reported to have beaten Moana in the box office. The story is about two high school students who are strangers to each other but suddenly switch places. They have to find a way to adjust to the situation because the switch happens randomly.

    Sense8 Christmas Special

    Lito and Hernando from Sense8 Christmas Special | Hola Darla
    After waiting for more than a year, Sense 8 will finally come back on Netflix this month with a Christmas special on December 23. Read more about Sense8 here.

    Rogue One

    Rogue One: A Star Wars Story | Hola Darla
    We get a Star Wars movie every year. What a time to be alive, huh? Just like any other movies/series in this post, I hardly have a clue about Rogue One other than it’s about rebellion towards the empire. Fantastic Beasts has opened up my eyes about how refreshing it is to watch a movie with little to zero knowledge about the story. Thus I’ve drawn myself from researching before seeing Rogue One. Hahaha!

    Sherlock Series 4

    Sherlock Series 4 | Hola Darla
    I know, I know. Sherlock will technically come back on the New Year’s Day, but like I said above, it’s just one day after December 31 :p

    How about you? Do you have anything to add to my list?

    First image originally from here. Other images from 1/2/3/4/5.

    Dara | Bloglovin’ | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook

  • The Travelling Novel

    The
    Back in June, Anjali from This Splendid Shambles announced her idea of a travelling novel. Curious, I checked her announcement post and instantly became interested. I signed up right away. After waiting for a few months, the novel finally arrived at my doorstep safely.

    So, what’s a travelling novel actually? The Travelling Novel is Anjali’s idea to pass a novel around the globe. This novel, Shirley Jackson’s We Have Always Lived In The Castle has traveled from New Zealand to the UK, then from the UK to Indonesia. After finishing it, I have to pass it on to another person in another part of the Earth.

    I’ve just got this novel yesterday and I haven’t started reading yet (my in-laws are in town, so I’ve been quite busy being a host), but I’m very excited to read it. I like Shirley Jackson’s short story, The Lottery, and from the back cover of this novel I learned that this novel deals with murders, my favourite!

    I still don’t know to whom I will send the novel after I finish it, so if you’re interested in joining The Travelling Novel project, please let me know by mentioning @DarlaOct on Twitter 😉

    Dara | Bloglovin’ | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook

  • Weekend Links

    Weekend Links | Hola Darla
    If you’ve been following me on Twitter and Instagram, you might have known about Jesmin, the little kitten that I’d been fostering for these past three weeks(-ish). She was diganosed with meningitis by the vet on Friday and last night she passed away while I was holding her. Needless to say, this weekend is not as cheerful as usual, but I managed to put together several articles that I’ve found interesting this past week. Here they are:

    Happy weekend 🙂

    Dara | Bloglovin’ | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook

  • Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them Movie Review

    Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them Movie Review | Hola Darla
    Yesterday, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them premiered in my country. As usual, Afief and I went to the premier. We got quite nice seats, and since we went to the earliest show at 11.30 am, there were no noisy school kids. Very nice!

    In case you didn’t know, this movie is based on the Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, a (fictional) school textbook used in the Care for Magical Creatures class in Hogwarts. The book is more like an encyclopedia of magical creatures with their information, such as where to find them (hence the title) and how to take care of them. The book was (fictitiously) written by Newt Scamander. The movie storyline is about Newt Scamander’s journey around the world, researching for the book.

    The story opens with Newt arriving in New York in 1926. He carries a briefcase with him, which contains quite a lot of magical creatures. He meets a male no-maj (ugh what a dreadful word!) named Jacob Kowalski in an incident when a niffler escaped from his briefcase and ran into a bank. Before Newt can obliviate Jacob, he escaped carrying his briefcase. Turns out, their briefcases were accidently switched. When Jacob arrives at home, he notices that there’s something strange with the briefcase and opens it, releasing several of the magical creatures. Meanwhile, Newt is captured and taken by an agent of MACUSA (Magical Congress of the USA), Porpentina “Tina” Goldstein. After realising that the briefcase was switched, Newt and Tina go to Jacob’s apartment but they are too late. Jacob has fainted, his apartment blown apart, and the briefcase has been left opened. Newt and Tina, accompanied by Jacob and Queenie (Tina’s sister), have to find all the escaped beasts while also deal with the growing darkness engulfing New York.

    After the Pottermore-hype a few years back, I felt that JK Rowling was milking money from Harry Potter franchise until the very last drop. Then news came out that Fantastic Beasts was going to be adapted into a movie and I thought “How do you make a movie based on an encyclopedia?” and how greedy JK Rowling had become these past years. Well, let’s just say that I owe Ms Rowling a million apology, because Fantastic Beasts hands down blew my mind!

    Even though the story was set in the past, I feel that it is very refreshing. Along the years, we followed Harry Potter’s growing up from a pre-teen into a young adult. We basically grow up with him. We identified with him. But we’re adults now and Harry will always be 17 (or 36 if we count the epilogue; early 40s if we count The Cursed Child). Fantastic Beasts shows us the wizarding world, though old, from a whole new perspective that we haven’t seen before: the adult world. Here we see adult wizards and witches in their working world: working as aurors, working behind the desk, making coffees, etc. Gone is the teenage world with hormones and angst; it is replaced with the world of adults with responsibilities. Also, the original story also adds up a point. With Harry Potter series, we already knew the stories from the novels, so we compared the films and the books. Fantastic Beasts has an original story, thus it is quite unpredictable. Although I like spoilers, I still think it’s fun to watch unpredictable movies. I didn’t know anything about it before watching besides that Newt Scamander is researching for his book, that he goes to the USA, and that his briefcase starts a disturbance to the wizarding community there. I didn’t know what evil would appear as the ‘bad guy’ in this movie. I left the theater with a smile on my face because I realised how wrong I was to expect less than spectacular.

    In conclusion, it’s a very good movie. It has the witty jokes the Harry Potter series offered, it has interesting female characters (the President is a POC female!), and it shows the other side of the wizarding world we’ve never seen before. I can’t wait for the rest of the series (there’ll be four more films).

    Have you seen Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them? Do you like it? Tell me!

    Second image via.

    Dara | Bloglovin’ | Instagram | Twitter | Facebook