Category Archives: Movies & TV

Lucid Dream

Netflix, 2017
Korean, excellent subtitles
101 minutes

Rating: 5 out of 5.

This K-Drama is a science fiction thriller. Our hero is Dae-ho, a young investigative reporter and single father whose son is kidnapped from a park when turns his back while son is on the merry go round. No ransom note is received, and three years go by with no leads. Dae-ho learns of a new treatment for mental patients who need to relive important memories through chemical induced lucid dreaming. He knows one of the doctors involved and convinces her to give him the chemical so he can go back to that day and see if he can find the kidnapper. Of course, he goes back many times before he finally gets some solid leads, and one of the leads is dying in a hospital, and he must enter that person’s dream, he must go into the dreams of someone else and convince him to help find his son.

The story moved along quite well, I didn’t get up to do dishes while it was on, and the CGI were wonderful. My brother, Craig, could tell you all about the camera angles, the plot lines, all the things I probably should pay attention to, but if it’s a good story, I get sucked into it and am totally unaware of all that other stuff. My brother, Craig Good, reviews on https://letterboxd.com/clgood/ , if you want to check out his reviews. He’s in the business. He knows more than I do. We watch different movies.

Lucid Dream trailer

Native America

PBS
American, 4-part series on the Natives of the Americas
Closed captioning
Premiered October 2018
About 53 minutes each

Rating: 4 out of 5.

These four episodes looked back as far as 15,000 years to the Indigenous Peoples of the three Americas. It shows the massive cities, built in perfect alignment to the stars. It shows some of the science systems of the early people, and their spirituality, and how 100 million people e connected by social networks spanning two continents. These roads and social connections were good for trade, marriages, and war.

I found all episodes interesting, with episodes 1, 2, & 4 being the best, to my way of thinking. Possibly because a fair portion of the information was new to me, whereas I found 3 lacking in anything truly new. 

The indigenous peoples they featured were from North America, Central America, and South America. And, I believe, dealt with fairly and evenly. If you’re a historian, or a history buff, you might notice they left a lot out. Well, there is only so much that can be done in an hour tv show, and I think they did a pretty good job overall. Of course, I had questions on some of them that were not answered, but that’s ok. I can do some research and look for the answers on my own, if they are that important. 

Episode 1 is from Caves to Cosmos, “Ancient clues and modern science answer the question: who were America’s First Peoples?” https://www.pbs.org/native-america/episodes/caves-cosmos/

Episode 2, Nature to Nations, “Explore the rise of great American nations, from monarchies to democracies.” https://www.pbs.org/native-america/episodes/nature-to-nations/

Episode 3, Cities of the Sky, “Discover the cosmological secrets behind America’s ancient cities.” https://www.pbs.org/native-america/episodes/cities-sky/

Episode 4, New World Rising, “Discover how resistance, survival and revival are revealed.” https://www.pbs.org/native-america/episodes/new-world-rising/

Native Americas trailer