viernes, 11 de mayo de 2012

JGM


Keep walking
If you want to move to any place of the campus, you have to walk. Inside the campus there are a lot of paths to get to any faculty or any place to get rest, to think, to talk with friends, to sleep in grass, etc. Maybe It could be confusing sometimes, but If you use them everyday you will be OK to get everywhere in the campus. Also you can help to other people who is lost in campus and get a new friend perhaps. But the campus is not small. You will have to walk a lot. BUY A CAR. Inside the campus there are car tracks too.

Buying  Movies
Outside  of Faculty of Philosophy you can find a great stock of different movies to a low cost. If they don’t have the film that you want, you can ask the seller if he can search and bring you the movie. 

Tear Gas at Lunch
Sometimes the police get inside of the Campus looking for the hooded classmates. They throw small stones and hide in the Campus. To fight them, the police reply with tear gas. If you are eating, your food is going to taste more salted. When this happens, you dream with one of the few rooms with air conditioning. If you are lucky, you could be under arrest by a sweet police man.

                                                      

viernes, 4 de mayo de 2012

A Western With Katanas


One of the things that I love is watching movies and one of my favorites directors is Akira Kurosawa. He is Japanese, but his work is very special because he mix oriental and occidental things. One film that proves that is Yojimbo. Like many other times, the main role is in the hands of Toshirō Mifune.

 This film is like a western with katanas. This movie is about a rōnin (a samurai without a master) that wander with his sword like a mercenary. He arrives to a town where are two groups that fight each other for the power. Both groups try to make that the samurai fights for their side.

Like other times happens with films of Kurosawa, this movie was remade by the Italian director Sergio Leone in “Per un pugno di dollari” (1964) and by Walter Hill in “Last Man Standing” (1996), but obviously, the mastery of Kurosawa have not equal.