Sigh. Yes, this really is an R2-D2 Soy Sauce Bottle.

Just another nerd.
Sigh. Yes, this really is an R2-D2 Soy Sauce Bottle.

Unfortunately they don’t have any really good photos of it on their website, but Master Replicas is planning to release this “Studio Scale” model of the Nautilus from Disney’s classic 1954 film 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. This sucker is 6″ x 31″ x 6″ and costs $499.
With more than 19,000 rivets, a removable skiff, and detailed wheelhouse interior, Master Replicas’ Nautilus is the most detailed model available in this scale anywhere in the world.

Charter for Compassion is yet another group of people who for some reason think the Golden Rule (“do unto others as you would have them do unto you” or similar nonsense) should be made the basis for some sort of global morality,
By recognizing that the Golden Rule is fundamental to all world religions, the Charter for Compassion can inspire people to think differently about religion. This Charter is being created in a collaborative project by people from all over the world. It will be completed in 2009. Use this site to offer language you’d like to see included. Or inspire others by sharing your own story of compassion.
Give me a break.
As I’ve said before, the problem with the Golden Rule is that it is simply a check against hypocrisy. Beyond that, however, it is entirely compatible with a long laundry list of immoral acts. There is nothing in the Golden Rule, for example, that would render the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks wrong.
It doesn’t even seem like the organizers of this effort have really thought about the Golden Rule beyond some sort of wishy washy feel good nonsense,
. . . the Golden Rule is our prime duty and cannot be limited to our own political, religious or ethnic group.
Huh? Clearly those religious traditions that the Charter for Compassion cites saw nothing wrong with limiting the Golden Rule to apply only to a relatively circumscribed group of people (i.e., “those who agree with us”). One could adhere to the Golden Rule while slaughtering the non-believers down the street with nary a contradiction.
Consider a call to action such as, “Infidels should be murdered.” All the Golden Rule really ends up saying is that I should only agree with this statement if I too am willing to be murdered if it turns out I am an infidel. Since most religious people generally operate on the principle that someone else is an infidel, there’s not contradiction there at all.
What the Charter for Compassion folks are really doing is outlining a broader moral vision and trying to pass it off as some sort of universal view by repeating “Golden Rule” like some sort of mantra that will smooth things over.
I can’t wait to see how they handle genuine debates such as that surrounding abortion. Should I oppose abortion since clearly I would not have wanted to have been aborted as a fetus, or should I favor abortion because I would not want other people telling me what to do with my body.
That’s a real moral dilemma — and one the Golden Rule pretty much does nothing to help solve.
As George Bernard Shaw put it,
Do not do unto others as you expect they should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the same.
I have a special place in my heart for serial films which had their heyday in the 1930s and 1940s. AMC’s FilmSite.Org has a nice multi-page essay on the history of the serial film, highlighting some of the better ones (which is relative considering the generally low quality of serials) and tracking their eventual decline with the rise of television.
Red November is an amusing concept for a boardgame. The players are onboard an experimental gnomish submarine that has gone haywire and must find a way to stay alive until rescuers can arrive. Cooperative boardgames FTW.

Gollum over at Action-Figure.Com has a so-so review of the Cloverfield monster action figure,
So, bottom line..on the positive side: It’s a cool monster with lots of articulation and is loads of fun. On the negative: It’s a little more expensive than it should be, and is probably coming out a little late since the movie isn’t fresh on people’s minds anymore.
Yeah, and since the movie barely cleared $80 million domestic it wasn’t really on too many people’s minds to begin with. I assume all of the (unwarranted as it turned out) secrecy over the movie prevented doing toys in time for the movie’s release.
