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George shows off skill, juggles emotions in Indiana return

LOS ANGELES — Russell Westbrook recorded his ninth triple double of the season and Paul George made a successful return to Indiana as the Oklahoma City Thunder edged the Pacers, 100-95, on Wednesday.

The four-time all-star George was booed loudly whenever he touched the ball in his first return to the Bankers Life Fieldhouse arena since being traded five months ago.

But George’s return went off without a hitch as he scored 12 points and backed up Westbrook’s 10-point, 17-rebound and 12-assist performance in front of the hostile crowd of 17,900.

George was traded to Oklahoma City in exchange for Victor Oladipo and Domantas Sabonis after he told the Pacers he didn’t plan to re-sign with the club at the end of this NBA season.

“He had incredible poise,” Thunder coach Billy Donovan said of George. “He didn’t shoot well, but I thought his defence was critical.”

George knew the environment would be a physical and mental test.

“I’m glad the circus is over with and now everybody can move on,” George said. “I’m not sure what they (fans) wanted me to be, a circus act or some kind of show.

“I played my hardest. I thought I took what the city is about and that’s being blue collar.”

Steven Adams scored 23 points on 11-of-16 shooting and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead the Thunder.

The Thunder improved to 13-14 on the season as they registered their first two-game season sweep of Indiana since 2012-2013 and snapped the Pacers’ four-game winning streak.

Oladipo led the Pacers with 19 points, but had a rough shooting night, going nine of 26 from the floor.

Bojan Bogdanovic added 15 for the Pacers and Thaddeus Young had 11 points, 10 rebounds and seven steals.

Elsewhere, Kyrie Irving returned from a one-game injury absence and scored 33 points as the Boston Celtics shot a season-high 59.5% from the floor en route to a 124-118 win over Denver.

“That was the only way we were going to win tonight, the way we were guarding and rebounding,” said coach Brad Stevens of the strong shooting performance.

Jaylen Brown added 26 points and Aron Baynes had 17 as the Celtics overcame a career-high 36 points by Nuggets guard Gary Harris and 28 by Jamal Murray.

Denver, finishing a six-game road trip, were missing three key players with injuries, Paul Millsap (wrist), Nikola Jokic (ankle) and Will Barton (back).

In New Orleans, DeMarcus Cousins nailed a clutch three pointer from the left side with 22 seconds remaining as the New Orleans Pelicans powered past the Milwaukee Bucks, 115-108.

Cousins scored a team-high 26 points and Anthony Davis chipped in 25.

The Pelicans trailed 94-87 early in the fourth quarter but outscored the Bucks 28-14 in the final 10 minutes.

Cousins added 13 boards and Davis tallied 10 rebounds. E’Twaun Moore had 21 points for New Orleans.

Greek forward Giannis Antetokounmpo led Milwaukee with a game-high 32 points. — AFP

Motherhood statements

By Menchu Aquino Sarmiento, Contributor

THE RAMONA DIAZ documentary Motherland: Bayang Ina Mo, about the Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Sta. Cruz, Manila, has been a long time coming to the Philippines, Diaz’s own motherland. Meanwhile, it has been winning awards in international film festivals worldwide, including the 2017 Sundance World Cinema Documentary Special Jury Award for Commanding Vision. Diaz points out that the film fest crowd is self-selecting but Motherland is actually readily available through the American Public Broadcasting System’s educational POV platform with a lesson plan and study guide for Grades 9 to 12. There has been blowback from the US Bible Belt. One imagines how a broader Filipino audience might react.

Diaz is better known in the Philippines for her 2003 documentary Imelda. During the Q&A after a rare Philippine public screening of Motherland, one man in the audience remarked that Filipino men should take more responsibility for reproductive health by using condoms or getting vasectomies. That may be wishful thinking as most of the fathers in the film were unable to even be responsible for themselves or their families, being jobless and poorly educated. The women may not be up to it either. There were several scenes of young mothers gingerly handling IUDs, then politely declining their insertion, or backing out right at the operating room doors for a more permanent tubal ligation. They seemed less fazed at the prospect of more mouths to feed and perpetuating their family history of insurmountable poverty. The film’s sympathetic yet unflinching depictions of the irrational dissonance between healthy sexuality and social control made us laugh and weep.

A woman lumad leader told us of how in public hospitals and lying-in centers, women like her were often doubly marginalized and discriminated against, first by poverty, then by ethnicity. She decried the recently enacted punitive rules which forbade traditional midwives or hilot to deliver their babies at home. “For the lumad and katutubo, women’s bodies are sacred,” she plaintively declared.

A seasoned female OB-GYN gently affirmed that all women’s bodies are sacred. She explained that the new rules on delivery in accredited medical facilities are intended to protect mothers against complications during delivery. The Millennium Development Goal which the Philippines signed on to was to lower maternal mortality rates (MMR) to 52 per 100,000 births. We aren’t even close, as the Philippine MMR averages 162. Thus the Fabella hospital statistics on the whiteboard show fewer babies than mothers in the ward.

Not that the Fabella Hospital team are slackers. They are dedicated professionals with an average job term of 25 years. They work under daunting conditions: 60 to 100 deliveries a day; two mothers to a bed in poorly ventilated wards; not enough incubators for preemies which means conscripting the parents as human incubators in the delightful innovation known as KMC (Kangaroo Mother Care). The World Health Organization (WHO) recognizes Fabella as a role model hospital “for its essential newborn care programs, which have been proven to reduce infant morbidity and mortality.” The good doctora who had reassured the woman lumad leader also announced to the audience that implants are free at the Friendly Care clinics, and reminded us that reproductive health encompasses so much more than just pregnancy. Diaz’s co-emcee Red Tani of the Filipino Free Thinkers echoed this, adding that we must also advocate for reproductive health justice as well as RH rights — another of the many types of justice and rights more evident in the breach than in their implementation or observation.

An NGO worker observed that the film was anthropological. The world of Filipinos so poor and disempowered that they cannot afford modest medical fees equivalent to a low-end cell phone or even jeepney fare, is far removed from the relatively comfortable middle-class lifestyle of your film festivalgoer, or of the development workers and medical professionals who are well-represented at the Motherland screenings.

Diaz’s film-making style is “immersive.” The subject largely tells the story. Admittedly it is not an entirely objective telling, being mediated by the filmmaker’s own experiences. Her inclinations did inform the cutting of the film.

Another female OB-GYN waxed nostalgic about her residency at the Philippine General Hospital maternity ward, which virtually replicates the Fabella Hospital albeit slightly scaled down.

“Our government officials should watch this film,” she said with a sense of urgency, as the so-called pro-lifers are appealing the recent SC decision lifting the ban on 51 hormonal contraceptives. “They should bring it to the Senate, and make Sen. Tito Sotto watch it.”

GBPC sees possible impact on operation with PECO franchise quandary

GLOBAL BUSINESS Power Corp. (GBPC), the largest energy producer in Iloilo City, is bracing for the possible impact on its operations should Congress decide not to renew distributor Panay Electric Company’s (PECO) franchise, which is due to expire in 2019. “Of course we will be affected. It’s a sensitive issue that we hope that Congress will be able to resolve soon,” GBPC President Jaime T. Azurin told the local media during a thanksgiving party at Richmonde Hotel Iloilo on Dec. 12. Mr. Azurin said the proposal for the local government to take over the power distribution in Iloilo City should Congress disapprove PECO’s franchise renewal would be a particularly challenging situation. — Louine Hope U. Conserva

Dirt poor

By Noel Vera

Video
Mudbound
Directed by Dees Rees

DEES REES’s Mudbound (2017), adapted from the novel by Hillary Jordan, tells the story of two families — one white the other black — scratching out a living on the Mississippi Delta. Two soldiers come home, one a white officer (captain of a bomber crew), the other a black officer (sergeant and tank commander).

The film has its problems. Rees uses voice-overs to convey inner meditations, a valid enough approach until the umpteenth time you hear them musing Terence Malick-style and you wonder if perhaps the film could have done without; the thoughts are lyrically written but a touch too explicit where a little mystery might have helped draw us in.

This is only Rees’s fourth feature — her first was a documentary on her grandmother, her second a fictionalized autobiography, her third a biopic of singer Bessie Smith — and already you notice two things: 1.) she apparently dislikes repeating herself, not just on subject matter but form and genre, and 2.) she has extended the scope of her work each time by leaps and bounds.

Mudbound is easily her most intimidatingly intricate project yet; two families made up of seven major characters over what seems like the space of five or six years (from 1939 to after World War 2), the setting ranging everywhere from Southern farmland to the skies above Germany — a sprawling ambitious narrative that needs a sure touch, a deft touch, a touch Rees doesn’t quite possess at this moment.

A more serious flaw: I have not read Jordan’s novel and I am not sure if this comes from the source or was imposed on the material by Rees and co-writer Virgil Williams, but while the white family’s troubles are dwarfed by those of the black (this is the Jim Crow South after all), there’s more complexity to the portrayal of the white characters, more ambiguity and shading. Front and center in the drama are the two handsomest: Laura (Carey Mulligan) and Jamie (Garrett Hedlund).

Laura quietly states that she’s a virgin; all the more shocking when she’s married and brought from a comfortable middle class neighborhood to the muddy terrain of Mississippi. We’re constantly inside Laura’s skin; we feel her flinch in horror at the poverty surrounding her, at the cruelty meted out to tenant farmers black and white; we empathize with her angry insistence in hauling in her piano from the rain (they had just arrived at their little shack of a home) — the only “civilized” object in that godforsaken landscape (Jane Campion’s The Piano much?). As Mulligan plays her, she’s a pale palimpsest on which soil and wind and the men in her life leave their mark.

Jamie, like Laura, is a constant witness to the film’s swerves and twists; he’s the first to really notice Ronsel (Jason Mitchell) not as a black man wearing a uniform (an affront to most Southern gentlemen), but a former soldier unsure of his footing in the alien world he’s landed on. Jamie and Laura develop a tentative attraction, but it’s Jamie’s budding friendship with Ronsel that matters — two men wary at first, then comfortable enough to share vulnerabilities, finally willing to lay one’s life (or more) for the other.

We see through Ronsel’s eyes almost as often as we see through Jamie’s — the difference is where Jamie gazes at a subtle palette of hues, Ronsel squints at dramatic black and white, white being the more threatening color. It’s not the actor’s fault; Mitchell, Florence (Mary J. Bilge) his mother, and Hap (Rob Morgan) his father pose against the desolate landscape more like monuments to endurance and suffering than flawed human beings. They wear their nobility lightly about their shoulders, but fail to really come to life.

That said, it is odd that the most egregious example of undercharacterization happens to be Henry, Laura’s husband. As incarnated by Jason Clarke he’s more lump than a man, oblivious of everything including his wife’s pain and his brother’s flickering attraction for her, and so inert he has to be shunted out of town to allow the more dramatic scenes to take place (at least it feels that way).

Jonathan Banks doesn’t play Henry’s Pappy with any more nuance than Clarke does Henry, yet the actor that burned a hole in the small screen in shows like Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul — though I really first noticed him in Wiseguy — can’t help but make Pappy a charismatic if cartoonish monster, like the wizened version of Dennis Hopper in an episode of The Twilight Zone.

All of which seems strangely irrelevant towards film’s end, when narrative strands have fully unraveled and the different people blindly following have tangled — some fatally — with each other. Mudbound ends in melodrama but not quite cheap melodrama; you do develop feelings for the characters, even the ones wrapped in virtuous garb, and you do feel compelled to learn of their respective fates. It is a powerful film when all is said and done, and Rees does show skill in weaving the strands into a strong unslippable noose. If I’m left more moved than admiring — well I’m reminded of another World War 2 film done by a woman, Janice O’Hara’s Sundalong Kanin (Rice Soldiers): she had the opportunity and only limited time and she struck; better a flawed work done in haste and the heat of passion (she must have reasoned) than a cold lifeless piece of unfinished perfection — at least that’s how it played out in this case.

Argentina’s Farmesa to set up plant in PHL

AN Argentinian food processing company is planning to establish a seaweeds processing plant in the Philippines, according to the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).

In a statement, the DTI said Trade Secretary Ramon M. Lopez recently met with Farmesa International Group head Agustin Perez to discuss how the company can expand its sourcing of local seaweeds. The meeting took place on the sidelines of the 11th Ministerial Conference of the World Trade Organization in Buenos Aires.

Mr. Lopez in a message to reporters said Farmesa’s investment in the seaweeds processing plant would be worth around P300 million.

“The availability of raw materials plus the strategic location of the country factored highly in the country’s evaluation,” Mr. Lopez said.

“They currently had to source seaweeds from several Asian countries and bring it to Argentina for processing. Now they can focus their sourcing in the Philippines and do the processing right in the country,” he added.

Farmesa is an Argentinian company that develops and manufactures ingredients and specialties for the food industry. Its products, such as emulsifiers, antioxidants, textured soy protein, are mostly derived from soya, carrageenan and other natural sources.

The DTI quoted Farmesa’s Mr. Perez as saying the Philippines would be its first manufacturing operations outside of Argentina.

“Aside from the big potential of sourcing seaweeds, (Mr. Perez) finds the Philippines business environment stable and the economy very dynamic,” the DTI said.

Farmesa is already registered under the Philippines Economic Zone Authority (PEZA) last August 2016, for processing seaweeds into alkaline-treated chips or semi-refined carrageenan for export purposes at the Light Industry & Science Park IV in Malvar, Batangas.

PEZA Director General Charito B. Plaza told BusinessWorld in a text message said there are many areas in Visayas and Mindanao where Farmesa can establish a seaweeds processing plant.

PEZA is planning to fully utilize aquamarine economic zones in the two regions. — Anna Gabriela A. Mogato

Cars and gigantes: the making of a Pinoy Christmas

FILIPINOS take pride in having the world’s longest observance of the Christmas season, generally stretching from the beginning of the so-called “ber months” (September, October…) and peaking with the Simbang Gabi, the stretch of dawn masses that start on Dec. 16 and culminate on Christmas Eve.

Adding to the color of the season is the first Christmas by Manila Bay Celebration on Dec. 15-17, a project of the Department of Tourism (DoT), the Automobile Association of the Philippines (AAP), the National Auto Club, and the International School of Sustainable Tourism (ISST).

Inspired by the Tournament of Roses of Pasadena, California and the Rio de Janeiro Carnival in Brazil which draw thousands of visitors, Christmas by Manila Bay Celebration opens on Dec. 15 with the Christmas Market at the Fort Santiago, Intramuros which will also showcase a refurbished historical shrine.

The bazaar will be showcasing native delicacies, novelty items and crafts, useful daily items, and Christmas goodies.

The country’s top bamboo ensemble, Banda Kawayan Pilipinas, will serenade the crowd with beloved Filipino carols, while acoustic duo Peter and Vangie will keep shoppers company at night.

An evening mass at the Manila Cathedral Basilica will kick off the traditional nine-day Simbang Gabi.

Pinoy Christmas 2
Vintage Car Association parade

A highlight of the festival on Dec. 17 is the turnover of the gifts by the Tourism and Social Welfare departments for the children of Marawi City, Yolanda victims, Hospicio de San Jose, and children of soldiers who died in Marawi. The gifts will be airlifted to Marawi and Leyte by Philippine Airlines.

This will be followed by a Christmas Parade by the Bay at 4:30 p.m. which will stretch from the Cultural Center of the Philippines Complex to the Quirino Grandstand.

The parade will feature 30 vintage and classic cars from Vintage Cars Philippines, with celebrity race driver Marlon Stockinger riding the AAP float.

Also participating are contingents from the Municipality of Angono, Rizal with their famed “Higantes” giant papier maches puppets, the Municipality of Pulilan, Bulacan which is noted for its kneeling carabaos, and the Province of Negros Occidental which will bring its winning Masskara Festival dancers to the parade.

Adding to the colors and sounds of the season are the Philippine Dragon and Lion Dance Sports Association, the dancing Robots, as well as various marching bands from government agencies, local governments, and private groups.

The event draws to a close with a concert at Fort Santiago in Intramuros.

Hedcor breaks ground on Bineng hydro project

ABOITIZ POWER Corp. on Thursday said its subsidiary recently broke ground for the 19-megawatt (MW) Bineng Combination Hydro project in La Trinidad, Benguet.

In a statement, Hedcor, Inc., which operates and manages run-of-river hydropower plants, construction of the P1.7-billion hydropower project began on Dec. 5. It is expected to be completed in June 2019.

The Bineng Combination Hydro was approved by the municipality of La Trinidad and host barangays Bineng, Alapang, and Alno earlier this year.

The project is expected to generate 62 million kilowatt hours annually.

Pendon Thompson, the indigenous peoples’ (IP) representative of the municipality, said the communities are supportive of the project.

“Hedcor has respected our rights as indigenous people despite the absence of IPRA Law (Indigenous Peoples’ Rights Act) before. Since then, Hedcor hydro plants were built on trust. We fully support this Bineng Combination Hydro project which will greatly benefit our community,” he said.

Chris Sangster, AboitizPower executive director, said the company is committed to helping the IP communities “through corporate social responsibility focused on three core areas: education, enterprise development, and the environment.”

Hedcor currently has 22 hydropower plants in the provinces of Benguet, Ilocos Sur, Mt. Province, and Davao. It is now in the process of commissioning its 69-MW Manolo Fortich project in Bukidnon, which will increase its total capacity of 185 MW upon completion.

AboitizPower is the holding company for the Aboitiz Group’s investments in power generation, distribution, and retail electricity services.

China, South Korea leaders to discuss Pyongyang nukes

BEIJING — South Korean President Moon Jae-In will meet with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in Beijing Thursday amid mixed US signals about potential talks to resolve the North Korean nuclear crisis.

Relations between Beijing and Seoul have encountered their own rough patch over the US military’s deployment of a powerful anti-missile defense system in the South to counter the North’s threats.

Mr. Moon hopes to “normalize” ties during the visit, his office has said, after Beijing imposed economic measures against South Korean companies, a move seen as retaliation to the installation of the THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense) system.

China sees the deployment as a threat to its own security.

Moving past the disagreement has become increasingly important amid growing concern that bellicose rhetoric between Washington and Pyongyang could spark war on the Korean peninsula.

“The highlights to watch of the visit would be whether the two sides (Seoul and Beijing) can start a dialogue and cooperation mechanism on the DPRK (North Korea) nuclear issue,” said Zhu Feng, international studies professor at Peking University.

China has long refused to countenance the possibility that the North’s Communist regime could collapse.

But a series of nuclear and missile tests combined with pressure from US President Donald J. Trump has pushed Beijing to reconsider its position and prioritize improving relations with Seoul.

“It is a very uncertain period,” Mr. Zhu said. “The two sides need high-level dialogues and dialogues between militaries. These dialogues cannot really start without the normalization of the bilateral relations.”

POSSIBLE TALKS?
Mr. Moon’s visit comes after US Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson said Washington was ready to talk to North Korea “without preconditions,” though it remains determined to force Pyongyang to give up its nuclear arsenal.

China and Russia responded positively to Mr. Tillerson’s remarks, even after the White House appeared to put his proposal in question by saying Mr. Trump’s “views on North Korea have not changed.”

Beijing has pressed for talks to peacefully resolve the crisis, but there are signals that it has begun to prepare for the possibility of the North’s collapse.

Mr. Tillerson said Tuesday that US and Chinese officials have discussed scenarios in case the North Korean regime falls, including steps to deal with refugees crossing the border, and how to secure Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons.

Washington’s top diplomat said these discussions involved him, the US defense secretary and military chief, and senior Chinese officials.

Such discussions were unthinkable just a few months ago.

But China’s priority has been to convince the United States and North Korea to hold talks.

Beijing has also urged the US, Japan and South Korea to suspend joint military drills in the region in return for North Korea to halt its nuclear activities — an idea consistently rejected by Washington and Seoul.

But “Pyongyang can’t have its cake and eat it, too,” the state-run China Daily warned in an editorial Thursday.

“It cannot expect Washington to engage in direct peace talks with it, while at the same time making such talks more difficult by continuing with its missile launches and nuclear tests.”

In Tokyo, UN chief Antonio Guterres warned that the worst outcome would be for the world to “sleepwalk into a war that might have very dramatic circumstances.”

With concerns about the peninsula’s stability mounting, South Korea and China issued identically-worded statements last month on their mutual desire to improve relations.

They did not state any specifics, but Beijing has demanded that Seoul formally promise not to deploy any more THAAD launchers and not to join any regional US missile defense system.

On Tuesday, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang said Beijing had reached “some consensus” with Seoul on THAAD. — AFP

Los Angeles Angels optimistic about prize acquisition Ohtani’s health

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Angels say they are confident in the health of prized acquisition Shohei Ohtani, despite a report that he has ligament damage in his pitching elbow.

“Shohei underwent a thorough physical with MRI scans to both his elbow and his shoulder,” Angels general manager Billy Eppler said in a statement after the story broke on Tuesday night.

“Those are scans we conduct whenever we sign a pitcher. Based on the readings of those MRIs, there are not signs of acute trauma in the elbow. It looks consistent with players his age. We are pleased with the results of the physical and we are very happy to have the player.”

Ohtani, a two-way talent whose 100 mph (160 km/h) fastball and explosive presence at the plate made him a target of myriad Major League Baseball clubs, opted for the Angels last week and agreed to a deal worth some $2.3 million.

The Angels will also pay a $20-million posting fee to the Nippon-Ham Fighters.

Eppler said the Angels, like the other Major League teams wooing him, were aware of the fact that Ohtani received a platelet-rich plasma injection in his right elbow in October.

Eppler called it a “preventative” measure taken by his Japanese club.

And Angels manager Mike Scioscia reiterated at the winter meetings in Florida on Wednesday that the team feels no cause for concern. — AFP

Waste-to-energy project for Davao City too costly for local budget

THE PROPOSED waste-to-energy (WTE) project for Davao City is now being considered for funding at the national level as the cost is too high for the local government’s budget. “The initial discussion was for the city government to participate in the WTE project but when I saw the numbers, it was very expensive for the city to get a loan for the WTE considering we have other priority projects as a developing city,” Mayor Sara Duterte-Carpio said, but did not give an estimated cost. The mayor recently led a delegation to Japan to see solid waste management programs and other facilities such as the Hiagari Recycling Center, Kougasaki WTE Plant, Hibikinada Sanitary Landfill, and Kitakyushu Eco-farm and Wind Town. “Initially I declined the project but the discussion is now between Japan Prime Minister (Shinzō) Abe and President (Rodrigo R.) Duterte, so while the city will continue with its participation the money will now come from the country’s private sector and the Japanese government,” she said. The city has been considering WTE as one of the long-term solid waste management solutions. A study conducted by the University of Mindanao shows that the city’s waste materials, including plastics and paper, have a calorific value of 1372 kcal or heat unit. In 2015, the city produced 916 tons of waste daily and this is expected to rise to 1,053 tons daily by 2021 as a result of an increase in the city’s population and economic activities. The city’s landfill is expected to be filled up in the next three years. The WTE project was met with skepticism by environmental groups, noting that it was not only very expensive but harmful to the environment. — Carmencita A. Carillo

Philippine K-pop Convention this weekend

THE BIGGEST annual K-pop event, the K-pop Convention, is now on its ninth year. The convention will be held on Dec. 17, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., at the Philippine Trade Training Center in Pasay City.

With this year’s Carnival theme, visitors can expect festival-like fanclub activities as roam around the convention to complete their K-pop Bingo cards and shop at the participating merchandise booths.

Fans can support their favorite artists at the cosplay, singing, and dancing contests, and root for their bets in the K-pop Look-A-Like tilt.

Korean guest performers including “I Love OPM” contestant Sandra Jung and Kim Jae Gul. Idol School trainee, Jessica Lee and dance diva, Dasuri Choi, round up the list.

The event is organized by the Philippine Kpop Convention, Inc. and the affiliated K-pop fan clubs.

Admission is P350 and proceeds will go to Gawad Kalinga and the Philippine Animal Welfare Society.

Recommended for first-timers

By Alexander O. Cuaycong and Anthony L. Cuaycong

AT FIRST GLANCE, it’s not wrong to think of L.A. Noire as a spin-off of Rockstar Games’ Grand Theft Auto series. Developed by Team Bondi and also published by Rockstar, the action-adventure detective game feels like a GTA release, thrusting the player into the shoes of budding detective Cole Phelps as he drives around the city of Los Angeles and engages in chases, gunfights, and interrogations to solve cases to the best of his abilities.

L. A. Noire 1

That said, L.A. Noire stands very well on its own, as evidenced by the favorable reviews it received back in 2011, when it was originally launched on the PlayStation 3, the Xbox 360, and the PC. Now, having found its way to current-generation consoles such as the PlayStation 4 and the Switch, its re-release features enhanced textures and updated graphics, as well as bundles all its accompanying downloadable content into one neat little package.

To recap, L.A. Noire follows the story of Phelps, an officer of the L.A. Police Department who, after solving a high-profile murder case, is promoted to the role of detective, finds himself embroiled in a scheme seemingly far bigger than he can handle, and works to find the mastermind of the crime.

The setting and atmosphere are where L.A. Noire truly shines. Cut scenes set the tone for each particular case, with the narration an absolute must to establish the story. Character depth and interaction are outstandingly presented through both the dialogue and the action. And with Phelps able to check crime scenes, the player is treated to an immersive experience. He searches for evidence, examines blood spatter and discarded cigarettes, explores dark alleyways, climbs up metal pipes to reach rooftops — all in an effort to move forward and see how everything ties up.

Not surprisingly, L.A. Noire is best appreciated the first time around, with the player having absolutely no idea what to expect, what trails to follow, or what questions to ask. While frustrating at the outset, there’s something particularly thrilling about making mistakes and acting accordingly — not unlike, well, real life.

Significantly, L.A. Noire focuses on the process more than on the outcome. When seeming dead ends pan out and trails are found, suspects tend to either keel over or fight it out — exposing the game’s weaker aspects. Hand-to-hand combat can be dull and boring, and shootouts, while heavy on the adrenaline, suffer from stiff and occasionally unresponsive controls both on the PS4 and the Switch. The thrill of seeing the hat on Cole’s head fly off with a gunshot, or of villains go ragdoll after being hit, gives way to annoyance, even irritation. And the action never seems to encourage the type of run-and-go-wild feeling other Rockstar games engender.

Meanwhile, the fun derived from tooting the police siren as Phelps go places, or from interviewing suspects and taking their statements, gives way to monotony after the fifth or sixth case of the same old, same old. While the set pieces provide diversity, there’s a distinct lack of things to do outside of the main tasks of each case. L.A. Noire can thus feel barren and lifeless, a surprising turn considering how much effort was made to induce realism.

L. A. Noire 2

Which, in the final analysis, isn’t necessarily a bad thing. L.A. Noire has never touted itself as an open-world title, and while it does have its flaws, it’s a refreshing treat, with its 20 or so hours of playtime filled not with padding, but with actual attention to detail and story. While it’s not overly amazing, with some audio equalization issues coming up now and then on the PS4 and the Switch, it’s certainly an experience to be had. It figures to be particularly compelling for players who have never tried it before. If nothing else, it deserves praise for lasting just long enough to engross players without overstaying its welcome.

In sum, fans of the open-world genre or previous owners of L.A. Noire may find its second run-through a miss as very little has been changed and most of its value comes from the main storyline, which, when finished, leaves very little left to do. On the other hand, it’s a hearty recommend for gamers who have never played it before and are on the lookout for a story-driven release. It’s got all the trappings of a cop/detective drama and plays well enough to justify its asking price.


Video Game Review

L. A. Noire
Sony PlayStation 4/Nintendo Switch

THE GOOD:

• Engrossing storyline coupled with an immersive environment

• Outstanding set pieces

• Superb voice acting and narration, adding to the innate pull of investigation and interrogation sequences

THE BAD:

• Controls are a mixed bag and hover between clunky to unresponsive at times

• Very little to do after the main story has been finished

• Sound equalization issues detract from the overall experience

RATING: 8.5/10