
Spielberg, Steven
Book
Steven Spielberg (USA, b. 1946) was the boy wonder of the new Hollywood of the 1970s. Taking Orson...

Merz to Emigre and Beyond: Avant-Garde Magazine Design of the Twentieth Century
Book
Merz to Emigre and Beyond is an historical survey of avant-garde cultural and political magazines...

Collaborative Product Design: Working Better Together for Better UX
Book
UX designers today can piece together several frameworks and have a new website or app up and...

Modern Linux Administration: How to Become a Cutting-Edge Linux Administrator
Book
If you want to excel in your work as a Linux administrator, or perhaps land a job as one, you need...

SVG Animations: From Common UX Implementations to Complex Responsive Animation
Book
SVG is extremely powerful, with its reduced HTTP requests and crispness on any display. It becomes...
The Virtual and the Real in Planning and Urban Design: Perspectives, Practices and Applications
Claudia Yamu, Alenka Poplin, Oswald Devisch and Gert de Roo
Book
The Virtual and the Real: Perspectives, Practices and Applications explores the merging relationship...

Convergence
Scott Lobdell, Carlo Pagulayan and Tom King
Book
Where do worlds go when they die? The Earthquakes felt round the Multiverse, Superman's lost days...
Regional Industrial Analysis and Development
Book
Originally published in 1977. This book provides an introduction to some of the more important...

KyleQ (267 KP) rated The Host (2006) in Movies
Jul 22, 2020
Directed by Bon Joon Ho (Parasite, Okja, Snowpiercer), The Host blends horror, drama, and comedy seamlessly together.
When it was released in the USA, The Host was dubbed over, oddly enough. Generally, I hate dubbed live-action movies because they're always so cheesy, but the cheese really fits into this movie, making it more fun.
The films lead is Kang-ho Song (Parasite) who does a great job, he is believable, likable, and humorous. I empathized with him, surprisingly.
I did wish that the pace was a little quicker and that the monster would've been in the film more. But in general, I enjoyed the movie. I would recommend it to fans of monster movies, but really I'll recommend it to everyone.

World Beer
Book
A beer bible for the beer connoisseur World Beer gives beer the billing it deserves, proving that...