150 Years of Through the Looking-Glass

150 Years of Through the Looking-Glass
Showing posts with label Films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Films. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 August 2022

Guglhupf Geschwader at the Cinema in Munich

 I saw my first film at the cinema in Germany yesterday, This is the latest in a series of crime films set in rural Bavaria. These are based on books by a lady called Rita Falk. Both the films and the books deserve to be better known but I would expect that an English or American version would lose some of the humour.

There is a main character the cop who is Bavarian Bruce Willis and his friend Rudi, they comprise 'the Dream Team'. The other family members, colleagues and friends are always involved in the case or cases as there was a serial murderer in an earlier film. Despite the deaths this is a funny film that celebrates rural Bavaria and its manners and customs.


I saw it at the Sendlinger Tor Cinema which is a great venue and the actors and the writer were there to promote it. There is no way I would have been able to enjoy them talking about working on the film (30 days a year and they produced one during the pandemic) and encouraging people to support local bookshops and not Amazon.

This aspect of Germany is such a revelation. Their vibrant film industry and their humour. Guglhupf Geschwader is doing twice the box office of 'Bullet Train' and I am not surprised. There is no hullabaloo about the promotion of this film, no men dressed in skirts to create attention just hard working actors and writers who enjoy what they are doing.




Tuesday, 13 February 2018

The Fly and Machine Learning

I watched 1986 version of the 'The Fly' last week and realised that the core of the film was about machine learning and it was a good demonstration of how it works and how some limitations. I shan't explain the plot but at one point Jeff Goldblum (playing his familiar role of maverick scientist) realises that the reason his telepods are not teleporting animate objects properly is that they do not understand what organic material is so they create their approximation of it. He proves this by teleporting a piece of steak and cooking it for Geena Davis, his co-star. The steak looks OK but tastes wrong. After he realises this problem he trains the computer by teleporting steak until comes through the other side at a quality that is edible. He then has a workable teleportation machine that successfully transmits live animals and he tests it and it works. 1- 0 to machine learning v human overconfidence.
Alas, when he transmits himself there is a fly in the telepod and the machine hasn't been taught how to deal with two entities and has a guess and decides to fuse them at the DNA level with unfortunate results. The machine could have been taught how to deal with multiple entities but Jeff Goldblum did seem to be a scientist in a hurry with a taste for shortcuts. 1- 1 machine learning v human overconfidence.
Another subtle warning in the film is that the Goldblum character is a scientist/inventor but he does create any of the components. He designs them, other people build them and then send them to him. He puts them together to get the effect he wants without anyone being aware of the objective but he really doesn't know how they are built.
If he had been able to write a few lines of code he could have written something along the lines of:
If NumOf Entities >1 Then
Print "Clean Out The Telepod"
Exit
Endif
Then he would've avoided all the unpleasantness of being turned into a human fly and picked up his Nobel Prize and we would not have overcrowded trains on the way into work.