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Bang The Machine

riiv writes "I saw the premiere of Bang The Machine tonight at SXSW 2002. The film is a documentary of the Street Fighter tournament scene. There's another screening March 15 so if you are near the Austin area, it is your moral obligation to watch it. I asked director Tamara Katepoo if they had a distributor lined up, unfortunely they don't. If you're looking for a film to distribute please get in touch with the film creators. The movie rocked and validated my wasted life ever since the purchase of Street Fighter 2 Japanese for SNES."

12 of 219 comments (clear)

  1. And in other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Hey Slashdot, someone's flying an amazing kite over Kalamazoo, MI! If you don't live there, then suck it! At least you know what you're missing! Hahaha.

  2. What about other games? by Ferox · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I have spent many an hour on the SF series. But what about other games that suck away at our precious time. Warcraft, Mortal Combat, GT. etc.. ( my roommates were addicted to TheSims, so at least I wasnt totally alone with my obsession) Those games helped lower my GPA in college. Is there something that just makes the SF series more addicting?

    --
    I drive WAY too fast to worry about cholesterol!
  3. Im gonna go for a sex change by atari2600 · · Score: -1, Offtopic



    Me Me Me - eeeeem immah gonna become Chun Li

    and ask papa Neal to buy me some of those magic
    balls so i can hit Bad man Bill
    immah gonna make Windoze OpenSource
    Immah gonna have breakfast with Tux
    Imm gonna do this and that
    Bah im awake - back to IDEA :|

  4. Re:Bang this page widening post up your ass! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Try harder, you aren't making my page any wider (Mozilla 0.9.5 on Linux).

  5. Katepoo? by napa1m · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    ABahahahahah... Katepoo... bahaha.. oooh man.. sorry, i really have nothing to say.

  6. /. isn't that new by the_march_hare · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ok i know this is SOS but /. isn't that "on the ball anymore"
    just my NSHO

  7. I saw this documentary years ago! by Nathdot · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I would've picked that Jean Claude Van Damme was involved in the Street Fighting scene at some time or another, but it was a true revelation to find that Kylie Minogue wasn't averse to the odd urban brawl.

    Before that I thought she was a little bit soft, what with that whole "Do The Locomotion" song and all, but like, WHOAH! my eyes were opened!

  8. Re:Osama is banging your sister right now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Troll?!?! Are you nuts? Moderate +5 "Insightful"

  9. Re:Bang it, baby! by geeky-troll · · Score: -1, Offtopic
    Linux: the hype is over

    According to the latest Gartner group research report, the Linux hype is finally over. Research shows that market share of linux-driven production servers on the internet has finally declined to a single-digit number. The reasons for this are clear:

    * Linux is unstable
    * Linux has an unreliable filesystem
    * Everybody uses Windows or BSD, nowadays

    Research has clearly pointed out, that although there are still hordes of pinguin-dressed geeks running around MIS departments, management has grown wise (or gone out of business) and doesn't even allow Linux workstations anymore, since the costs in maintaining these machines turned out to be astronomically high. The reasons for this are clear as well.

    * Installation is a pain in the ass
    1. it usually takes a whole support team to install a geeks' workstation

    * Bandwidth
    1. Installation and maintenance requires 4-5 times the bandwidth a 'normal' OS would require

    * Integration and connectivity
    1. Linux was deliberately made completely incompatible and inoperatible with turnkey solutions like
    2. MS Exchange or MS SQL server. Investments in these products are therefore voided the minute you start rolling out Linux.

    * Complexity
    1. Applications developed in Perl or C, the languages of the linux community have proven to be slow, unreliable, insecure and headaching complicated. Once developed and debugged, nobody is able to understand the code.


    Therefore, it has been statistically proven that most companies have already moved away from Linux. This can be concluded from the following signs:

    • All the 'geeks' wearing tux t-shirts are actually MIS support guys who are still studying for their MCSE exam.
    • 'The screaming fast linux machines at work' are actually refurbished workstations at a separated network segment, not allowed on the production network since every linux (l)user seems to need nmap [insecure.org] to perform normal work-related computer operations.
    • All the 'cool' Apache web servers are actually IIS machines with forged host headers. (yes, you can do that in IIS without recompiling anything. Heck, I lived for years without a C compiler and still do. )

    • For the rare instance where a free UNIX is actually used in a production environment, management has smartened up and BSD is usually installed.



  10. just checking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    testing stuff out

  11. Re:Get some priorities by colmore · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    if i were posting this on September 11th, i'd be worried about me, but anniversaries are meaningless aside from symbolism.

    I *live* in New York City, and this evening I took a walk downtown, saw the Tribute in Light (it's amazing, you should try to see it before April) and had quiet personal reflection time.

    Slashdot isn't very quiet or personal. I post about video games on Slashdot, and reserve other things for the serenity afforded by real life.

    You, sir, are a troll.

    --
    In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
  12. A long-term Austinite's view of SXSW... by Loligo · · Score: 2, Offtopic


    I've lived in Austin for 27 years, and I've been watching SXSW since it started.

    Unfortunately, SXSW (the music part, anyway) is somewhat of a local joke for longterm residents and some local musicians.

    When SXSW started out, it was a great way to get some exposure for a struggling local band. I imagine Sundance was originally the same way for smaller indy film makers.

    Now, however, if you don't already HAVE a name, you can't play SXSW. And since it pretty much takes over the Sixth Street scene, your ability to play down there is very very limited during the "festival" as well.

    I've seen a number of local indy musicians wearing "SXSW SUX" shirts, and I think that sums it up pretty well. It's become too big, too commercial, and a waste of time for people that want to PARTICIPATE in the music side. The old Austin Aquafest went the same way in the last years before it went belly-up.

    I haven't attended the Multimedia Conferences or the movie part of things, but I hear they're still worth doing. I'm not sure how the dot-scam bust will affect the multimedia stuff, but it still should produce some interesting stuff.

    -l

    (flame on...)