Solo Tabletop RPG Actual Play – Ironsworn: The City of Eternal Night Part Five

Read Part Four here

Oracle: Reveal Warning

Uram returns to Carver’s lair to find things in chaos. Carver is ranting about Elysia Velasir, an information broker for the Society, who is withholding the date of the heist from him. Only the most elite members of the Society are getting access to when & where the citywide chaos will begin. Early on, the leadership of the Larcenists’ Society realized they were an organization of highly untrustworthy people, so the most vital information was secreted away. Carver believes he deserves to be in the know, so he wants to steal it from Velasir’s office.

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Solo Tabletop RPG Actual Play – Starforged: Wrath of the Vok Act Two

Read Act One here

There is no known origin point for the Vok (translated to the common tongue: Voidforged). The earliest mention of them in the United Planetary Archives is from ancient Sulvu writings. A tribe of Sulvu in the pre-Nevaa period made cave paintings of a shape in the sky that historians now believe was a Vok scout ship. There was no subsequent encounter with the Vok until after the Sulvu became an FTL-level civilization, and those were minor skirmishes. For millennia, no one knew the extent of the Vok, how they were organized, or their ultimate goals.

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Patreon Pick – Gaza mon amour

This special reward is available to Patreon patrons who pledge at the $10 or $20 monthly levels. Each month, those patrons will pick a film for me to review. If they choose, they also get to include some of their thoughts about the movie. This Pick comes from Bekah Lindstrom.

Gaza mon amour (2020)
Written and directed by Tarzan Nasser and Arab Nasser

The popular image of something and reality are often oceans apart, especially when we in the West conceptualize something. At the time of this writing, Gaza is something beyond decency, brutally ravaged by a genocide that just keeps going in broad daylight. That doesn’t mean life has always been like this for the Palestinians. They have had a persistent resiliency, even while walled off and treated in the most subhuman manner. The human spirit is a tough thing to extinguish. It isn’t impossible, but it can happen. Gaza mon amour is a film about the persistence of the heart in the latter years of a person’s life and how the desire for love lives on.

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Movie Review – Moolaadé

Moolaadé (2004)
Written and directed by Ousmane Sembène

This was Ousmane Sembène’s final film. He passed away in Dakar in 2007 at the age of 84. For this last picture, the filmmaker focused his energy on a critique of his own culture. Female genital mutilation or circumcision is a common practice in several African countries. It’s traditionally performed with an iron sheet or knife. An elder will remove part or all of the female genitals with no anesthesia and then suture the wound with a needle or plant thorn. As much as 15% of girls forced to endure the procedure die from excessive blood loss or the infections that follow. Sembène wants to intensely critique his culture and highlight how some traditions must stop.

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Movie Review – Camp de Thiaroye

Camp de Thiaroye (1988)
Written and directed by Ousmane Sembene and Thierno Faty Sow

Few things are accepted as fundamental as a person being paid for their labor. However, it was not that long ago that slavery was an open practice in the West and its colonized territories. Don’t get me wrong. Slavery isn’t gone. The specific Transatlantic slave trade was dissolved, yes, but slavery persists to this day. Prison labor is a form of slavery. Debt of all kinds is used to keep people under the boot. Human trafficking is a rampant problem that sees no end in sight. The Thiaroye massacre should come as no surprise then, yet still, it outrages the decent among us.

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Movie Review – Xala

Xala (1975)
Written and directed by Ousmane Sembène

In the mid-15th century, the Portuguese landed on the shores of Senegal and began a centuries-long occupation that included the British, the Dutch, and the French. It would not be until 1958 that Senegal declared its independence and merged with French Sudan to form the Mali Federation. That would not last long, and by 1960, they went back to their individual states. The process of decolonization is not quick & easy. When the colonizers withdraw, there is still tremendous work to do, a lot of which centers around removing the ideologies & ways of doing imposed on the colonized people by their occupiers. Ousmane Sembène is keenly aware of this, and in his film Xala, he produces an angry screed at how Western capitalism is allowed to fester in the systems of the post-colonial African people.

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TV Review – Irma Vep

Irma Vep (HBO)
Written and directed by Olivier Assayas

I can’t say I have ever been enamored with the work of Olivier Assayas. I’ve seen several of his films: Irma Vep, Summer Hours, and Personal Shopper. They are not bad films by any means, but I never fell in love with his work like I have with other directors. Having just recently watched and reviewed the original Irma Vep, I decided to check out his 2022 television adaptation of the film, wondering why he would choose to revisit this and what the project would add to the original movie. Once again, I walked away, unsure how to feel. I was not unimpressed but certainly not head over heels.

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PopCult Podcast – Seven Samurai/The Hidden Fortress

Akira Kurosawa is one of the greatest filmmakers to ever live and his movies have had a profound influence on the form. Today we talk about a group of ronin defending a village & the story of a princess in peril that should feel familiar.

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Solo Tabletop RPG Actual Play – Ironsworn: The City of Eternal Night Part Four

Read Part Three here

Dreviz had grown up in Kronholm, but as a goblin, his experience of the city was different from that of the humans who dominated. The goblin artificer was born & raised in Grimscrabble’s Roost, a ghetto carved out beneath the city where the city’s rulers mandated all of “that kind” be forced to live. The goblins could only find work doing the most undesirable tasks, often in service to the aristocracy, who were frequently lost in a stupor of narcotics and shadow magic.

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