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Posts Tagged ‘ Culture ’

The Avengers sequel gets green light from Disney

May 9, 2012

The Avengers 008 The Avengers sequel gets green light from Disney

I have not seen the Avengers yet but all reviews give high ratings to the is film. A great cast and marvel comics makes for an exciting  time at the movies…so make plans with family and friends this weekend!

That’s my comment…pass it on…

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com


poweredbyguardianREV The Avengers sequel gets green light from DisneyThis article titled “The Avengers sequel gets green light from Disney” was written by Ben Child, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 9th May 2012 14.11 UTC

A sequel to superhero blockbuster The Avengers has been officially greenlit after Joss Whedon’s film racked up a staggering $700m at the global box office in just two weeks.

Disney chief executive Bob Iger made the announcement yesterday as the studio admitted that its earnings for the first quarter of 2012 dropped 12% to $1.2bn compared to the same period last year. The film unit’s $84m operating loss for the quarter was blamed largely on the box-office failure of $275m fantasy epic John Carter earlier this year.

Iger also confirmed that Iron Man 3, Thor 2 (both set for 2013) and Captain America 2 (due in 2014) will all be heading to cinemas through Marvel studios, which Disney bought for $4bn in 2009. He did not give a date or other details for the sequel to The Avengers (known as Avengers Assemble in the UK).

Meanwhile it has been revealed that The Avengers helped boost revenues for the $220m film via product placement for at least 18 companies. The luxury car manufacturer Acura was most prominent, having secured a multi-picture deal with Marvel, according to Brand Channel. The company developed a special supercar especially for the movie, Tony Stark’s NX Roadster, and also provided a number of other vehicles for key scenes. Other featured brands included ABC, aussieBum, Bose, CNN, Dr Pepper, Harley-Davidson and Southwest Airlines.

The Hollywood Reporter revealed yesterday that British actor Rebecca Hall is in talks to appear opposite Robert Downey Jr in Iron Man 3, following Jessica Chastain’s decision to pass on the film due to scheduling issues. Shane Black, director of Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang, will take the reins on the third instalment.

 The Avengers sequel gets green light from Disney

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How will India design its new identity?

March 17, 2012

Tata Nano 007 How will India design its new identity?

Smaller car are getting more efficient by the minute.India is on the right track….it makes sense to drive a smaller car…want to make an impact on our environmental problems? Are you concerned about the ozone layer? Has global warming gotten to you yet? Make a statement to your community,family,and friends….make your next car a smaller and economical chioce…Hey I am not just talking…I am myself a small car driver…and enjoying the substantial savings at the pumps…”Go Greener…Go Smaller”

That’s my comment…pass it on..

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com

Ask the Doctor a question..  


poweredbyguardianREV How will India design its new identity?This article titled “How will India design its new identity?” was written by Justin McGuirk, for guardian.co.uk on Thursday 15th March 2012 10.47 UTC

However you look at it, India is likely to have a significant impact on design in the 21st century. For one thing, this vast market of one billion people is busy being courted by western businesses whose own economies are contracting. But India is not just out to consume western products and lifestyles – it is looking to design as a force for change. There is much debate in India about how to live up to its growing status in the world. Design is being touted both as a tool of economic development and as a means of lifting millions of people out of poverty. So it was with great curiosity that I went to Delhi last week to take part in the India Design Forum, one of the first major conferences there on the subject.

The ambition was clear from the outset. “India has already unleashed its entrepreneurial ability, now it needs to unleash its creative ability. We need design,” said Kamal Nath, the minister for urban development in a country with more cities of over a million people than the whole of Europe. This is the same message coming from China, as the two nations look beyond being manufacturing powerhouses and aspire to the creative capital of the west.

The problem here is that “design”, that most expansive of disciplines, means everything from infrastructure and housing to products and branding. And in India, the frames of reference can veer wildly between the design of luxury hotels and solutions to slum housing. At the IDF, there was rather less of the latter. Instead, the main question preoccupying the local speakers was this: how can India draw on its venerable traditions to forge a distinct design identity?

Design, it should be said, has not had long to thrive in India. It was only in 1991 that the country liberalised its economy and opened up to global imports. For decades prior to that, you could only buy two types of car: the Ambassador (an old Morris Oxford) and the Premier Padmini (an old Fiat). During this period, known as “the licence permit quota raj”, manufacturing was in the hands of a select few who operated as monopolies. After liberalisation, India started to market its goods globally, but everything looked derivative.

“Products were designed as if they were from everywhere and nowhere, they were acultural,” says Bangalore-based graphic designer Sujata Keshavan. “They couldn’t look Indian because Indian products were associated with poor quality.” In 1989, she co-founded Ray and Keshavan, the first company in India calling itself a design agency. Best known for designing the corporate identities of technology services giant Infosys and no less than four Indian airports, the company was so successful that it was bought by WPP, the world’s largest advertising group.

Yet, as Indian design agencies grow, there remains a hang-up over the issue of identity. On the one hand, this might have something to do with the fact that so much of India’s cultural identity comes from its craft traditions, which do not translate naturally into a western, predominantly modernist concept of design. But numerous speakers also argued that in fact India’s innate design culture is one of anonymity. The names of the architects and master craftsmen behind such masterpieces as the Red Fort in Old Delhi are rarely known. “Design is perceived as a single act of genius, and that’s alien to our culture,” says Ambrish Arora of architecture and interiors firm Lotus. His response is to relinquish the intellectual property rights on his designs, making them all available on an open source basis. It’s a marked contrast from most designers, who fight to protect their ideas from being copied, and it’s exactly the kind of structural influence (rather than merely aesthetic) that India has the potential to start exercising on global design culture.

Dharmalingam Udaya Kumar faced the question of identity head on when he entered a competition in 2010 to design the symbol of the rupee (only the fifth currency to get its own symbol). How do you represent a nation with 16 different languages in a way that’s universally recognisable? His winning design uses a Hindi script that hangs from the line instead of sitting on it as most alphabets do, so he turned the top crossbar into the country’s flag. The result not only works locally but sits comfortably next to the dollar and euro symbols.

But there are also native talents that are less visible. Keshavan suggests that one of India’s great strengths is in system design. This is evident not just in the efficiencies of scale achieved by manufacturers such as Tata Motors, the producer of the world’s cheapest car, the Tata Nano. Take the Aravind Eye Care system, which runs surgeries 24 hours a day. The process is so streamlined that the Aravind hospitals treated 2.5 million patients in 2009 alone. Similarly, the dabbawala system in Bombay ensures that millions of home-cooked lunches are delivered in tiffins (lunch boxes) to workers across the city. There’s no product, just a delivery system so effective that meals are almost never late or lost.

Fashion is another sector that is strong in India, partly because the government invested in fashion education to support the huge textile industry. Indeed, the government is looking at building four new design academies, but it’s not clear if or when these will materialise. Some feel the government should do more, others feel that private enterprise should step up. “India needs to start thinking of manufacturing as a cultural act,” says Satyendra Pakhale, an Indian product designer based in Amsterdam. It’s a point well made, as that is exactly the attitude that turned Italy, another country with a fine craft heritage, into one of the world’s great design cultures.

“There’s still so little understanding of design in India,” says Keshavan. “Right now it’s become fashionable, partly because of the market success of Apple – so ‘design’ is the new buzzword.” She feels that it will take time and, inevitably, education. But for me the real question that needs resolving in India is about what design is for. There was a tension at the IDF between design as a force for systemic change and “design” as the provider of luxury lifestyles for India’s new elite. The hottest ticket in New Delhi last week was the launch of the local Architecture Digest, the magazine that specialises in the flamboyantly decorated interiors of the rich. It’s not that design needs to be treated with a hair-shirted seriousness, but the sooner the conversation moves beyond the thrill of this new found glamour, the more powerful it will be.

 How will India design its new identity?

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Ben Gazzara obituary

February 4, 2012

Ben Gazzara in 2011 008 Ben Gazzara obituary

We will miss Ben Gazzara….a great actor…thank you for the memories..

Pass it on,

http://www.yepod.com/?p=31340

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com 


poweredbyguardianREV Ben Gazzara obituaryThis article titled “Ben Gazzara obituary” was written by Brian Baxter, for guardian.co.uk on Saturday 4th February 2012 03.42 UTC

Few screen debuts have equalled the searing malevolence of Ben Gazzara’s Iago-inspired Jocko de Paris in The Strange One (1957). The role, which he had created on stage, became forever associated with this intense graduate of New York’s method school of acting.

Gazzara, who has died aged 81, continued his stage career in modern classics including Epitaph for George Dillon and as the humiliated and vengeful George in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? He also achieved popular acclaim through television series – notably Run for Your Life – and in movies for his friend John Cassavetes and other directors including Otto Preminger, Peter Bogdanovich, David Mamet, Todd Solandz and the Coen brothers.

Gazzara was born to Sicilian immigrants and grew up on Manhattan’s lower east side. He began acting at the Madison Square Boy’s Club and made a teenage debut in a TV dramatisation of a short play by Tennessee Williams. After gaining a scholarship to Erwin Piscator’s drama workshop, he eventually moved to the equally legendary Actor’s Studio headed by Lee Strasberg.

His stage debut was in Pennsylvania, then on tour, in Jezebel’s Husband but his career took off when – aged 23 – he created Jocko in Calder Willingham’s adaptation of his own novel End as a Man. When a revised version of the play transferred to the Vanderbilt Theatre, Gazzara received the New York critics’ award as “most promising young actor”.

Its director, Jack Garfein, an assistant to Elia Kazan, took four years to get the movie version financed and in the interim Gazzara gained experience as the original Brick in Williams’s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and as the drug-addicted Johnny in A Hatful of Rain, where his darkly handsome features and forceful acting were distinct assets.

Although The Strange One looked overly theatrical, Gazzara’s pared-down performance survived the lumpen direction, revealing a natural screen presence. The sombre work about a duplicitous cadet leader, who manipulates an army camp in the deep south, was not a popular success and Gazzara returned to the stage until cast as the equally venal, though more enigmatic, soldier Lieutenant Manion in Preminger’s courtroom masterpiece Anatomy of a Murder (1959).

These movies were hard acts to follow and Gazzara, who spoke Italian before he learned English, returned to his roots to star opposite Anna Magnani in The Passionate Thief (1960). It was the start of a lifetime affair with Italy, where he was to work and live for many months each year and where he eventually bought a villa in Umbria.

The following year Gazzara married Janice Rule (having divorced his first wife in 1957) and took the role of the idealistic pathologist in The Young Doctors. He then co-starred opposite David Niven in The Captive City, a lacklustre war movie set in Athens. A challenging role as the convicted murderer turned painter John Resko better reflected Gazzara’s ambitions, but Convicts Four was not a hit and he moved into television, first as the detective in Arrest and Trial and then as the dying Paul Bryan in Run For Your Life (1965-68).

Gazzara was one of several stars coaxed into a cameo role in If It’s Tuesday, This Must be Belgium (1969). Fortuitously, another was Cassavetes and, after working on the liberal documentary King: A Filmed Record … Montgomery to Memphis, Gazzara joined Peter Falk and Cassavetes as the eponymous Husbands in the latter’s improvised study of marital discord.

Gazzara took a decidedly less comedic role as the murderous stripclub owner Cosmo Vitelli in Cassavetes’s edgy thriller The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976) and a year later played Manny Victor in the director’s masterpiece Opening Night. After the director’s untimely death, Gazzara appeared in several documentaries about his friend, notably Anything for John (1995), which reflected the admiration felt by his peers for that maverick filmmaker.

Gazzara had established a willingness to work outside the commercial mainstream, specialising in anti-social characters including a plumply brutish Al Capone, but his career wavered between quality and dross, film and television and work in the US, Italy and a few other countries, notching up over 80 movies in the years following his initial collaboration with Cassavetes.

These included the free-spirited Saint Jack (1979) in Peter Bogdanovich’s elegant rendition of Paul Theroux’s novel and – two years later, also for Bogdanovich – a co-starring role opposite Audrey Hepburn in They All Laughed, an underrated but commercially disastrous variation on love’s roundabout.

Following a second divorce Gazzara worked for a decade in Italy, returning to the US only for lucrative TV movies, including A Question of Honour (1982), A Letter to Three Wives and the Aids drama An Early Frost (both 1985), Road House (1989) and Blindsided (1993).

In Europe he portrayed the disillusioned beat poet Charles Bukowski in Tales of Ordinary Madness (1981), was a professor in Il Camorrista (1985) and a less amiable Don in Don Bosco (1988). Although he had directed episodes of Columbo for his friend Peter Falk, he only graduated to the big screen in 1990 with the little-seen Beyond the Ocean, shot in Bali.

Soon after that Italian-financed movie he again concentrated on work in America, averaging five films or TV movies each year, while dividing his time between homes in Umbria, New York City, and Sag Harbor, New York state.

Highlights of this busy period included Mamet’s The Spanish Prisoner (1997), where he played the mysterious Mr Klein; cult success Buffalo ’66; the black comedy The Big Lebowski; and the controversial Happiness (all 1988). He was well cast as a gang leader in Spike Lee’s Summer of Sam and moved to the other side of the fence as a smooth lawyer in the glossy The Thomas Crown Affair (1999).

Dozens of other films were routine and he freely admitted that “these days I turn nothing down in order to maintain a comfortable and happy life with my third and last wife”.

Despite debilitating treatment for throat cancer, in 1999 he published an autobiography and worked steadily for the next decade, notching up over 30 credits, from television series to leading roles in features, many made in Europe, often in his beloved Italy. There he worked in TV, was on location in Calabria for Secret Heart (2003), in Umbria for a brilliant cameo in Christophe Roth and moved to Spain for Schubert, to Belgium for Chez Nico and for the title role in Godbye Michel. In 2008 he took the name role in Looking for Palladin, about a former Hollywood star who hides from fame in Guatemala.

He enjoyed his role as the Vatican’s banker in Holy Money, but most rewarding of the many films were a short, Eve, cleverly directed by Natalie Portman, with Lauren Bacall, and the two films with Gena Rowlands, echoing their John Cassavetes days. He took a supporting cameo to her lead in the superior television movie Hysterical Blindness (2002), and four years later they played a two-hander as part of the portmanteau film Paris, Je t’aime, in a bittersweet episode where, as in later works, a recent stroke affected his speech, though never his courage or professionalism.

Ben Gazzara: born Biagio Anthony Gazzara, 28 August 1930, New York City; died Friday 3 February 2012, New York City.

Married Louise Erickson (1951-1957); Janice Rule (1961-1979); Elke Krivat (1982)

 Ben Gazzara obituary

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The Grey – review

January 26, 2012

The Grey 007 The Grey – review

Sounds like this movie will deliver a lot of excitement on the big screen…I really enjoy watching movies about a man trying to survive the wilderness and the wild-life that inhabits it’s surroundings. Liam Neeson is an outstanding actor who is join by great actors and actresses in supporting roles…let’s not forget about the grey wolves…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony 


poweredbyguardianREV The Grey – reviewThis article titled “The Grey – review” was written by Peter Bradshaw, for The Guardian on Thursday 26th January 2012 21.40 UTC

It may sound like a horror film about Davina McCall’s ads for Garnier Nutrice hair products, but this is actually a wintry survivalist thriller produced by Tony Scott, and directed by Joe Carnahan, he of The A-Team and Smokin’ Aces. The star is Liam Neeson, whose great, weatherbeaten, manly, dignified face looms out of the poster, promising an intravenous infusion of testosterone thrills. And it’s not too bad, socking over the story with enthusiasm and displaying some robust storytelling skills. Neeson plays an oil-rigger in the freezing wastes with the specialist task of shooting the Alaskan wolves who occasionally menace the area. A plane he’s on, along with a group of other boozy and cynical roughnecks, goes down with engine failure in the snowy middle of nowhere, and Neeson has to lead the survivors in a desperate trek across bitter terrain, menaced by the wolves, whose intentions and strategy are the subject of much Zulu-Dawn-type speculation. There’s a cracking scene in which the wolves’ eyes appear, pair by pair, in the darkness … a little broad, perhaps, but good stuff. Neeson confers weight and muscle on the movie, and endows it with a kind of emotional dignity it would not otherwise have.

 The Grey – review

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Rapper Heavy D died from pulmonary embolism caused by DVT

December 29, 2011

Dwight Arrington Myers ak 006 Rapper Heavy D died from pulmonary embolism caused by DVT

Deep vein thrombosis is primarily a blood clot in a deep vein…think of a blood clot as a piece of tissue in your vein…it shouldn’t be there …but it is..now if it dislodges from its location, it becomes a piece of scab traveling in your vein and if it travels to the lungs…it becomes known as a pulmonary embolism. In either case, a very serious condition requiring emergency medical care. Certain diseases,life choices, trauma,infection,hospilizations,or pregnancy can increase the risks of deep vein thrombosis(DVT). So ask your family physician if you are at risk!

Pass it on and save a life…

http://www.yepod.com/?p=25541

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com   


poweredbyguardianREV Rapper Heavy D died from pulmonary embolism caused by DVTThis article titled “Rapper Heavy D died from pulmonary embolism caused by DVT” was written by Sean Michaels, for guardian.co.uk on Thursday 29th December 2011 10.57 UTC

The sudden death of Heavy D was down to a pulmonary embolism caused by deep vein thrombosis, coroners have announced. The rapper was killed by a blood clot that probably formed in his leg during a flight from London to Los Angeles, and which made its way fatally to his lung.

Although Heavy D’s autopsy was initially inconclusive, the Los Angeles county department of coroner have now completed their investigation into the 44-year-old’s cause of death. When Heavy D was found outside his home on 8 November, collapsed but conscious, the clot in his lungs was likely restricting blood flow and putting severe pressure on his heart. He died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre.

Heavy D’s flight “is the connection”, Craig Harvey, chief coroner investigator, told the New York Daily News. “He had reportedly been in London for about six weeks and had returned to LA within the preceding week or so.” The 344lb (26 stone) rapper was found to have deep leg vein thrombosis, pointing to the formation of a clot during the long flight. Air travel, as well as obesity, are common causes of thrombosis.

A pulmonary embolism occurs when a blood clot formed in another part of the body migrates to the lungs and blocks an artery.

Despite early reports, pneumonia has been ruled out as a cause of death. So have drugs, despite a toxicology report that found medication in Heavy D’s system. “He was treating himself with cough syrup,” Harvey told the LA Times, “but it was not contributory.”

Born Dwight Arrington Myers, Heavy D was one of hip-hop’s leading voices in the late 80s and 90s. As leader of Heavy D & the Boyz, he released five top 40 albums in the US and the international hit single Now That We Found Love in 1991. Before returning to the stage in October 2011, Heavy D had not performed live in 15 years.

 Rapper Heavy D died from pulmonary embolism caused by DVT

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Sherlock Holmes is back … again

December 17, 2011

Sherlock Holmes 2 A Game  007 Sherlock Holmes is back … again

If you enjoy the story of Sherlock Holmes…then younwill be happy to know the next installment of movies is here again with  actor Robert Downey Jr and Jude Law. So get ready for some action and another mystery to solve…it should prove to be very entertaining…

http://www.yepod.com/?p=23585

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com   


poweredbyguardian Sherlock Holmes is back … againThis article titled “Sherlock Holmes is back … again” was written by John Patterson, for The Guardian on Saturday 17th December 2011 00.05 UTC

The Christmas Franchise Frenzy gets under way this week, a steady, unceasing carpet-bombardment of the world’s multiplexes starting with an epic face-off – at the box-office, at least – between the oddly archaic figure of Sherlock Holmes, and Mission: Impossible’s Ethan Hunt, now only slightly less retro, give or take eight decades, than Holmes himself. One retooled franchise from yesteryear versus another, with the similarly aged Alvin And The Chipmunks: Chipwrecked nibbling up the crumbs, perhaps hoping in vain to avenge the box-office spanking that Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Squeakwel suffered at the hands of the first Sherlock Holmes movie over Christmas 2009.

Funny to notice it’s all non-superhero action movies for Christmas this year; I guess superheroes, given all their testosterone, are a spring and summer phenomenon, what with Thor, Captain America, X-Men: First Class and Green Lantern all rolling out early on to their diverse fates under bursting buds and bright sunlight. Holmes and Tintin, evidently more wintry figures, seem destined, or doomed, to be reconfigured as superheroes by default, or perhaps just as Ethan Hunt-style action-hero exaggerations of themselves.

For better or worse, Holmes and Watson, as embodied in Guy Ritchie’s Sherlock Holmes 2: A Game Of Shadows by Robert Downey Jr and Jude Law, are the Holmes and Watson we have to live with now; there’s no going back to Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce. That ship has sailed, and sunk.

Now, I’m no Conan Doyle purist (or, to be honest, even a fan), and I’ve always preferred the movies that made fun of Holmes, like Herbert Ross’s The Seven-Per-Cent Solution and Gene Wilder’s The Adventure Of Sherlock Holmes’ Smarter Brother, or Benedict Cumberbatch’s fantastic TV reimagining of Holmes as a straight-up weirdo. The more Jeremy Brett they make it, the less I like it (though I do firmly believe you can never have too much of Nigel Bruce slapping his ample stomach and saying, “Bit of a bay window, what, Holmes, old man?”).

You’d think that might better dispose me to enjoy Ritchie’s irreverent tweaking of the character, but there’s your problem: he lets Downey wear more disguises and drag outfits than Marlon Brando in The Missouri Breaks, and brings home half the movie Arthur Penn did.

Next year we’ll see that the next ancient franchise figure due to rejoin us is the lately moribund James Bond, himself created some 68 years ago. There’s obviously something in the air. Who could be next for a retro action franchise of his own? Bulldog Drummond? Fu Manchu? Richard Hannay? Biggles? Churchill? The mind reels.

 Sherlock Holmes is back … again

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Sir Isaac Newton’s own annotated Principia Mathematica goes online

December 12, 2011

Newton manuscript publish 007 Sir Isaac Newtons own annotated Principia Mathematica goes online

Wow…Sir Isaac Newton’s notes are now online..! All due the efforts of Cambridge University’s desire to preserve and share Newton’s writing with the world. We surely live in a special time where technology has given us the ability to reach out and share knowledge with one another…a special thank you and Merry Christmas to Cambridge University…I look forward to reading the papers of Sir Isaac Newton..!

http://www.yepod.com/?p=22716

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

logo smaller with star Sir Isaac Newtons own annotated Principia Mathematica goes online 


poweredbyguardian Sir Isaac Newtons own annotated Principia Mathematica goes onlineThis article titled “Sir Isaac Newton’s own annotated Principia Mathematica goes online” was written by Stephen Bates, for The Guardian on Monday 12th December 2011 00.05 UTC

Cambridge University is putting the papers of Sir Isaac Newton online for the first time, including his own annotated copy of his greatest work, Principia Mathematica, with notes and calculations in his handwriting revising the book and answering critics.

So far, more than 4,000 pages, about 20% of the university’s Newton archive, have been put into digital form as part of a programme that will eventually give the public access to the papers of other famous scientists, ranging from Darwin to Ernest Rutherford. Included in the papers are the handwritten notes made after Newton’s death, in 1727, by his colleague Thomas Pellet, who was asked by relatives of the great scientist to examine the papers with a view to publication.

Pellet’s dismissive note, saying “Not fit to be printed”, can be seen on some pages – which are now, inevitably, among those most closely studied. It is thought Pellet was attempting to censor some of Newton’s more juvenile calculations and, more urgently, stifle his unorthodox religious views.

Grant Young, the university library’s digitisation manager, said: “You can see Newton’s mind at work in the calculations and how his thinking was developing. His copy of the Principia contains pages interleaved with the printed text with his notes.

“The book has suffered much, pages are badly burned or water-stained, so it is very delicate and rarely put on show. Before today anyone who wanted to see these things had to come to Cambridge and get permission to see them, but we are now bringing Cambridge University library to the world at the click of a mouse.”

Other papers now released come from Newton’s notebooks and the “waste book” he carried with him to continue his work while the university was closed down during the Plague in 1665.

These documents show his initial work in understanding calculus.

Among the next papers to be released will be those of the 18th-century Board of Longitude, which was charged with securing a more accurate method of navigation at sea.

The records of the early astronomers royal, including Edmund Halley and John Flamsteed, will also be put online. Charles Darwin’s papers are already being published separately online but eventually will be incorporated into the digital project.

The science papers project has received an initial grant of £1.5m from the Polonsky charitable foundation, which supports research and higher education.

 Sir Isaac Newtons own annotated Principia Mathematica goes online

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Batman to move towards twilight years in The Dark Knight Rises

November 27, 2011

The Dark Knight Rises wil 007 Batman to move towards twilight years in The Dark Knight Rises

Are you ready for another infusion of the Dark Crusader? I am…hope its exciting and full of special effects…I enjoy watching Batman use high tech weapons against the criminals of Gotham City…lets not forget his side-kick Robin! Sure he’s costume looks a little silly…but you can count him when the going gets tough….”To the Bat-Mobile Robin!”………

http://www.yepod.com/?p=20217

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony 


poweredbyguardian Batman to move towards twilight years in The Dark Knight RisesThis article titled “Batman to move towards twilight years in The Dark Knight Rises” was written by Ben Child, for guardian.co.uk on Thursday 24th November 2011 17.02 UTC

Seeking information about Christopher Nolan Batman movies is, if not like waiting for buses, perhaps like watching volcanoes. You wait for an age for anything at all, then everything explodes at once.

If you’re aiming to go into The Dark Knight Rises next summer without any preconceptions, the time to turn away is now. That said, Nolan has been known to drop decoys and blatant misinformation in the past, so his comments about the third and final instalment of the caped crusader’s current big-screen iteration this week may be rather more disengenuous than they first appear.

The most startling new snippet, revealed in a bumper Empire magazine special (on sale now), is that The Dark Knight Rises takes place a full eight years after the events of the previous film. “It’s really all about finishing Batman and Bruce Wayne’s story,” Nolan tells the mag. “We left him in a very precarious place. Perhaps surprisingly for some people, our story picks up quite a bit later – eight years after The Dark Knight. So he’s an older Bruce Wayne; he’s not in a great state.”

Such an approach tallies rather well with Christian Bale’s portrayal of Batman/Bruce Wayne over Nolan’s trilogy. If Wayne was in his 20s during the events of Batman Begins, his early 30s in The Dark Knight and will be in his late 30s in this episode, Bale (37) is finally playing him at around the right age. I’d be surprised if the character is intended to be any older in The Dark Knight Rises, despite the apparent time gap since The Dark Knight.

Exactly how badly off is Batman in the new film? Might he be returning after a lengthy lay-off? Or is he injured early on in the movie? Gary Oldman, who plays Commissioner Gordon, described the film this week as “epic”, so it’s possible the movie takes place over a number of years, or utilises flashback sequences to show us what’s been happening since the last time we saw Batman on screen. We know that Liam Neeson has shot scenes for the film as the supposedly dead Ra’s al Ghul from Batman Begins, so such an approach doesn’t sound too far out.

That brings us to Marion Cotillard, ostensibly down to play Wayne Enterprises board member Miranda Tate, though that has long been rumoured to be a decoy. This new snap of the Oscar-winning French actor on set shows her in an outfit that looks pretty unsuitable for a high-powered businesswoman, but eminently fitting for Talia al Ghul, Ra’s’ daughter. Cotillard, of course, has denied that Tate is based on any character from the comics (which would rule out Al Ghul), but might she be telling porkies?

Tom Hardy’s Bane, who seems to be the main villain in TDKR, also spoke to Empire this week about his character. Bane in the comics is best known as a hulking yet intelligent villain most famous for breaking Batman’s back.

“He’s brutal – brutal,” Hardy said. “He’s expedient delivery of brutality. And you know, he’s a big dude. He’s a big dude who’s incredibly clinical, in the fact that he has a result-based and orientated fighting style. It’s just about carnage with Bane. He’s a smashing machine. He’s a wrecking ball. The style is heavy-handed, heavy-footed, it’s nasty. Anything from small joint manipulation to crushing skulls, crushing rib cages, stamping on shins and knees and necks and collarbones and snapping heads off and tearing his fists through chests, ripping out spinal columns. It’s anything he can get away with.”

Hardy says the film will push its hoped-for 12 certificate as far as possible: “I’m not approaching it with a 12-certificate attitude,” he said. “If we’re going to shoot somebody, shoot the pregnant woman or the old lady first. Make sure everybody stands up and listens. He is a terrorist in his mentality as well as brutal action. So he’s horrible. A really horrible piece of work.”

Batman didn’t really have to face a physically superior opponent during the first two films, so Bane was an obvious choice of villain, says Nolan. ‘With Bane, we’re looking to give Batman a challenge he hasn’t had before,” he says. “With our choice of villain and with our choice of story we’re testing Batman both physically as well as mentally.’”

Hardy certainly has the chops to play a big man with a brain. He proved his mettle in Nicolas Winding Refn’s Bronson as the famously dangerous British prisoner Charles Bronson. In fact I can’t remember seeing the British actor in anything where he’s been anything less than incendiary. Apart from the fact that it looks like being a rather crowded landscape in Gotham City this time around – I haven’t even mentioned Anne Hathaway as Selina Kyle/Catwoman, Matthew Modine as the villain Nixon or Joseph Gordon-Levitt as city cop John Blake so far – The Dark Knight Rises seems to have everything going for it. Roll on 20 July.

 

 Batman to move towards twilight years in The Dark Knight Rises

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My favourite film: The Thing

November 22, 2011

Kurt Russell in The Thing 001 My favourite film: The Thing

I also loved watching this film starring Kurt Russell…so if you like science fiction, I recommend you get a copy of this movie,invite some friends,make some popcorn, and enjoy. Stay tune for the Thing 2011..see which one is better..

http://www.yepod.com/?p=19953

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony


poweredbyguardian My favourite film: The ThingThis article titled “My favourite film: The Thing” was written by Dave Turner, for guardian.co.uk on Tuesday 22nd November 2011 12.10 UTC

I was 15 when I first saw John Carpenter’s The Thing. It was a night of firsts: my first 18 certificate movie on the big screen, and my first date with the wonderful Morag. The night started well when my much-maligned bum-fluff moustache didn’t so much as raise a titter at the ticket kiosk, though I personally think it was my Simon Le Bon-inspired spiky mullet that gave me that wee bit of extra gravitas. Or perhaps it was the leg warmers. Either way, Morag was clearly impressed, and that was before I ordered the large Kia-Ora and the wine gums. A fiver went a long way back then.

The Thing came out in 1982, a few years after Alien had changed the horror landscape forever. While they are thematically similar, Carpenter’s masterpiece is in fact a reimagining of the 1951 B-movie The Thing From Another World, in which an alien creature is discovered in the ice, thaws out, and then runs amok in an Arctic military base. While the central conceit remains, the earlier movie imagines a lumbering Frankenstein-monster clone, while Carpenter’s is a shape-shifting chimera whose every cell is a living creature, and is truer to the source material, a short story by John W Campbell.

The Thing starts with a lone dog being pursued through the icy wasteland by a couple of enraged Norwegians in a helicopter who, in one of the movie’s few comedy moments, are shot and blown–up respectively. The dog is then taken in by the staff of a nearby Antarctic survey base, the stock-in-trade disparate bunch of American character actors, soon to be monster-fodder. Plus Kurt Russell who, as chess-playing, whisky drinking, cowboy-hatted helicopter pilot RJ MacReady has never been better. He is the original cowboy versus alien, and is far too cool even for the Antarctic winter.

So far, so good: Morag and I are holding hands and slurping loudly on our Kia-Ora – and then the dog erupts into a jaw-dropping myriad of tentacles, slime, mangled body parts and huge teeth, unlike anything I had seen in The Hammer House of Horror. I was petrified.

From then on Carpenter masterfully orchestrates proceedings. The menace of the dark polar night and the claustrophobic confines of the base are utilised to raise the fear, tension and paranoia to unbearable heights. This is a creature that doesn’t just hide in the dark, but could be your friend, your colleague, or the girl beside you whose hand you are breaking in a terrified vice-like grip.

The movie is about the creature, which means characterisation and plot become secondary – but who cares? A man’s chest becomes huge jaws that bite off a doctor’s arms; a head disengages from a torso, sprouts legs and eyes on stalks, and then scurries off; a hairless, slimy dog head explodes from a man’s chest. Throughout The Thing, man and creature merge in horrific, bloody contortions that would give Hieronymus Bosch nightmares, and almost everyone dies horribly. Brilliant.

By the end I was a quivering, sweat-drenched wreck, and soon afterwards was single once more. On the screen the two survivors sit and drink, and wait for the end, or for the sequel that never came. Until now. Strictly speaking The Thing 2011 is a prequel, and without Carpenter and Russell it has its job cut out as nothing can have the same impact as The Thing did over 30 years ago. Though I can’t wait.

Morag, wherever you are, I forgive you. I’m not sure if you can still get Kia-Ora, but give me a call if you fancy some wine gums.

 

 My favourite film: The Thing

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The Brain is Wider Than the Sky by Bryan Appleyard – review

November 18, 2011

EEG 007 The Brain is Wider Than the Sky by Bryan Appleyard – review 

Perhaps IT technology can never replace the power of our minds …but one day it can come very close. I believe  there is a fear that IT technology will take away much of what is accomplished by us and could further obselete more people from current responsiblities. I am an optimist, and whatever advances we make in any field, one thing is constant…the human brain will always be required to control and maintain all technology…now and into the future. How widw is your brain?

http://www.yepod.com/?p=19308

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Dr Anthony   


poweredbyguardian The Brain is Wider Than the Sky by Bryan Appleyard – reviewThis article titled “The Brain is Wider Than the Sky by Bryan Appleyard – review” was written by Simon Ings, for The Observer on Thursday 17th November 2011 11.00 UTC

In 1610 Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei published Starry Messenger, a book of telescopic observations of the night sky, and opened the heavens to busy and ambitious imaginations. Johannes Kepler imagined a manned voyage to the moon in The Dream (1634). Galileo gave us much to look forward to. But the world never turns out to be what we expected.

Award-winning feature writer Bryan Appleyard reckons today’s neuroscientists are like Galileo. The images they pull from their fMRI scanners, tracing blood-flow in the living brain, are the equivalent of Galileo’s drawings of moon mountains. They are magnificent achievements – but they are the beginning of the story, not its end.

The Brain is Wider Than the Sky is not about the sciences of the mind. It’s about how ideas from those sciences are playing out in the culture at large. Appleyard is scientifically literate, rigorous and intelligent. He is also very good at tracing that perilously faint line where the science of consciousness leaves off and the moonshine begins. Not all moonshine is bad for us. Kepler’s Dream was and is a delight. But a culture cannot live on moonshine alone, and Appleyard reckons we’re consuming more of it than is good for us.

The human brain is the most complex object we know. To describe it, thinkers and writers quite understandably reach for the most complicated thing they can imagine. Four centuries ago the brain was considered a particularly fiendish plumbing problem; later it turned into a steam engine; then a telegraph office. Now it’s “like the internet”. The brain is no more a computer network than it is a heating system. Proper neuroscientists know this. The baseless assumption that the brain is some sort of meat computer has combined oddly with the IT revolution, giving many otherwise rational people the idea that our computers will someday soon acquire consciousness. If mere computational power were enough, of course, then any complex system would be conscious. The weather would be conscious. The oceans would think as they turned.

A new and powerful religion holds sway: a belief in the wisdom of the digital collective. To be saved, we must plug in. Plugging in leads, inevitably, to disenchantment. As humourist Alice Kahn has it: “For a list of all the ways technology has failed to improve the quality of life, please press three.” Call trees are the least of it. Appleyard gives a voice to the victims, from the tearful teenager drowning in the flood of his own social media, to Cheryl Cole, whose every action is so thoroughly mediated and syndicated, she spends her life patiently explaining to journalists that she is actually a human being.

Appleyard’s central point is that, in our desire to think great things about our IT “cloud”, we’re deliberately oversimplifying ourselves. We’re hammering ourselves into ridiculously reductive boxes. In our desire to be part of something greater, we’re making ourselves small.

Appleyard is not alone, but, philosophically, this book is not quite on the same level as last year’s You Are Not a Gadget, a work of staggering apostasy by one of cyberspace’s founding fathers, Jaron Lanier. A couple of things make Appleyard’s work a valuable companion to the debate, rather than a latecomer to the party. First, his breadth of reference. He’s interviewed actors in his time, and celebrities, as well as geeks and gurus and scientists, and he treats all his subjects with a critical sympathy that looks easy but takes a career to acquire.

Second, he manages to distinguish between the work of individual scientists and the broader philosophical questions science raises. An early highlight is a vivid, concise, down-to-earth description of the workings of an fMRI scanner – a machine that can create maps of the functioning brain. Not many pages later, Appleyard turns philosopher, and offers an excellent explanation of what reductionism is, and why a science that simply anatomises phenomena into smaller and smaller parts misses a vast portion of scientifically explorable reality.

Poor thinking around digital technology is certainly damaging what is human in us, but not completely, and not for ever. Appleyard has a refreshing belief in a culture’s ability to laugh off its absurdities, eventually. He reminds us of one of the finer jokes in US sitcom Friends. Chandler shows off his new laptop, crowing about its staggering speed, immense processing power and gigantic memory. When asked what he’s going to do with it, he sheepishly admits that he might play a few games.

If only we were less gullible, this excellent joke would have lost its currency years ago, and this book need not have been written. As it is, Appleyard’s meditation is essential reading. We’re all Chandler now. And the joke – that a holy Father-figure may be lurking somewhere in the iCloud – is wearing very thin indeed.

Simon Ings’s new novel is Dead Water (Corvus)

 

 The Brain is Wider Than the Sky by Bryan Appleyard – review

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The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 – review

November 16, 2011

The Twilight Saga Breakin 007 The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 – review

The drama series Twilight continues to capture the imagination of its audience. I must say that I am also caught up in it’s drama. Many of my students taking English as a second language make comments about this story in our classroom. It makes for good conversation and does provide some motivaion to my students to practice their English. Of course, there are some scenes which I may not approve,  but society is changing every day, and what was considered inappropriate is now acceptable to view. So I give the Twilight Saga a big thumbs up!

http://www.yepod.com/?p=19181

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Dr Anthony

logo smaller with star The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 – review


poweredbyguardian The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 – reviewThis article titled “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 – review” was written by Peter Bradshaw, for guardian.co.uk on Tuesday 15th November 2011 18.20 UTC

Ohmigodohmigodohmigod. Just when we thought the Brokeback-style drama of Jacob and Edward couldn’t get any more intense – they decide to have a child together! With Bella as the surrogate! This new ultra-emotional episode of the Twilight drama turned some Twihards into Twisofts at the screening I attended, and the person next to me was openly sniffling. So was I. For different reasons. The ongoing emo-operetta of this drama now sweeps us away on a new riptide of mawkish euphoria.

The deal is that Edward and Bella, played of course by Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart, have decided to get married. It’s happening. It’s on. And so, at first glance, the agonised abstinence debate would finally – finally – appear to be over. Bella has made her decision. She will go into the bridal ceremony as the most obviously sacrificial victim since Diana Spencer in 1981.

The wedding reaches a fever pitch of romance when Jacob (Taylor Lautner) shows up secretly at the ceremony and he and Edward have one of their burning-eyed confrontations on the subject of Bella’s wellbeing. But the bride and groom head off happily enough for their honeymoon, in what appears to be a luxury hotel bungalow near Rio. Then, incredibly, the angstiness continues. The couple appear not to have considered the matters of condoms and birth control. Soon Bella is pregnant with a baby girl, and inevitably this brings Jacob and Edward closer together. Bella sweetly says she’ll mix their moms’ names to call her Renesmee. But Jacobward is the real story here.

Jacobward gets more and more stressy as the demi-vampire inside Bella grows at an alarming rate. Bella gets thin and gaunt, her poor little limbs like matchsticks; she makes Mia Farrow in Rosemary’s Baby look like Popeye after a spinach brunch. And the wolf pack decide this vampire child is an intolerable future threat, sort of like when their ancestors cast out Mowgli from the pack because Shere Khan had arrived in their part of the jungle and they knew a man-child would attract danger.

Fundamentally, this Twilight movie is yet another fantastically trying drama on the now very boring subject of wolves v vampires and the consequent crisis of identity, which I can only describe as nuanced. In High School Musical, Zac Efron’s Troy had to decide whether he was a basketball person or a showtune person. In the Twilight movies, poor Jacob has to decide if his loyalties are with the wolves, or if he is prepared to sell them out for someone who has thrown in her lot with the vampires. It’s a facer. The vampire drama of Twilight is all about the romantic agony of eternity, and this franchise feels like it’s going on for ever.

 The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 – review

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Robert Pattinson interview: Reality bites

November 6, 2011

robert pattinson and kirs 007 Robert Pattinson interview: Reality bites

Many of my students enjoy watching “Twilight”…they know all the names of the characters and the plot of the drama series…when I was in middle school…I would rush home to watch “Dark Shadows” every afternoon with my mom. Television today is not shy about showing more skin or violence…nor is the audience complainting.

http://www.yepod.com/?p=17944

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Dr Anthony


poweredbyguardian Robert Pattinson interview: Reality bitesThis article titled “Robert Pattinson interview: Reality bites” was written by Sanjiv Bhattacharya, for The Observer on Sunday 6th November 2011 00.04 UTC

When asked about the pressures of fame, Emma Watson (Hermione in the Harry Potter series) said she was thankful she wasn’t Robert Pattinson. “I can’t even imagine what that kind of fame must be like,” she said. “So many people must wish they were in his position and think he has the best life, but actually there are prices you pay. Don’t interpret that from my perspective. It’s not so bad for me. I’m not in Rob’s position: I don’t have people screaming and crying and clawing at me. I’m so grateful for that.”

It says something when the star of Harry Potter thinks that you’re the one who’s too famous. But Pattinson – aka R Patz – seems to have taken it in his stride. He greets the screaming hordes with humour and charm and a willingness to pose for pictures. There have been no drugs or fights with paparazzi. Even the romance he struck up with Twilight co-star Kristen Stewart two years ago has survived breathless coverage in the gossip magazines, a testament to the 25-year-old’s sangfroid.

So today ought to be a breeze. He’s at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills to talk about Breaking Dawn – Part 1, the fourth instalment of the Twilight franchise that has been his life for the past four years. When he shows up, however, he’s a mess. His famous hair is ungroomed and his T-shirt has a gaping hole all down one side. It’s not even a fashionable tear – the stitching has just gone. He looks as though he’s just been mobbed by a gang of rabid Twihards.

Happily, Pattinson doesn’t seem to care. In the twilight years of the Twilight juggernaut, his thoughts have turned to what life might be like afterwards. “It’s like being compared to people who’ve been in massive movies who just sort of disappear afterwards, even though they probably had incredibly fulfilling and successful lives,” he says, nibbling on a fingernail. “Like Luke Skywalker.” He scratches his head. “What the fuck’s his name?”

Mark Hamill.

“Yes! People are like: ‘Oh, the Mark Hamill curse.’ And poor Mark Hamill. Jesus Christ.” He tilts back in the chair and laughs, apparently oblivious to the state of his T-shirt. “I mean, I’m sure he did fine.”

It’s easy to forget that this charming shambles of a man commands at least $12m a movie. The cheekbones are a clue, but his eyes seem further apart than you expect – it’s a model’s face, more attractive in 2D. And Pattinson doesn’t have any swagger or strut about him. As tall as he is, he doesn’t impose. His body language is loose, approachable, self-effacing. He’s not at the summit admiring the view so much as peering down and hoping he doesn’t fall off. “I think of impending doom all the time,” he says with a shrug.

This apocalyptic fear stems from the way his career started. One minute he was a complete unknown. And then, out of a clear blue sky, Twilight happened, and he turned into Elvis. Girls on every continent went bananas, as did their mothers. In 2010 Time magazine declared Pattinson one of the World’s Most Influential People. And now the end is nigh.

Breaking Dawn is the last book of the series, but Summit Entertainment, determined to milk the fans down to their last shrieking dollar, has pulled the Harry Potter trick and split it into two parts (the second instalment comes out next year). How they manage to get two movies out of the final book will be interesting to see. The plot of Breaking Dawn, in which the vampire-human romance between Edward [Pattinson] and Bella [Stewart] finally reaches the marriage altar, doesn’t offer quite the all-out action climax of, say, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

“In career terms Twilight was like a security blanket,” Pattinson continues. Then he furrows his brow for a moment and corrects himself. “Not a blanket – a safety net. I had a three- or four-month window between each one during which I could do another job. But whatever I did I knew that I’d have another Twilight movie on the way, which is theoretically guaranteed to make a lot of money. So I could always afford to fail.”

Now the net is gone. The stakes have been raised. He once described choosing roles as “crippling”.

“After the last one comes out, you can kind of have two failures – and they’d better be low-budget failures. Because if you have one big-budget failure you’re pretty much done in this environment.”

It’s an odd thing to say, given the circumstances. After all, he’s the second-richest actor in Britain behind Daniel Radcliffe, with a fortune of some £32m. He’s an international sex symbol who need never work again, yet he’s leading the charge of a young Hollywood Brit pack that includes Andrew Garfield, Tom Sturridge, Henry Cavill and Alex Pettyfer. If there’s anyone who should not be nervous about the future, it’s Robert Pattinson. And yet he is.

“It’s different for Kristen, for example,” he continues, warming to his theme. “She doesn’t think about it like that at all, because she grew up gradually, doing independent movies and stepping up the ladder, whereas I was doing progressively smaller movies in England, after Harry Potter… to the point where I was doing nine-day shoots for, like, 20p and a packet of Space Invaders. And then this happened. So I’m not just another actor who’s around and jobbing. When you hire me for a job, you’re hiring…”

Twilight guy?

“Yeah. I’m now this ‘thing’ that’s supposed to be something. And if you then don’t fulfil that expectation, what the fuck are you?”

It’s a fair QUESTION. In some respects, he’s just a nice middle-class boy from a vaguely bohemian household in Barnes, west London. His father imported vintage cars from America and his mother was a booker at a model agency. He had two older sisters, who would dress him up as a doll and call him Claudia (Pattinson has always been subject to the madness of young girls). He started modelling at the age of 12, putting those cheekbones to use – shortly after he was expelled from school for being a bit of a truant. But Pattinson never thought of acting back then. His passion was music, and still is. Those scenes in Twilight where he’s playing the piano? They’re actually Pattinson’s hands.

Then his father persuaded him to join the local amateur dramatic society. A casting agent happened to see him in a production of Tess of the D’Urbervilles, and before long he was screen testing as Reese Witherspoon’s son in Vanity Fair (the scenes never made it into the movie). Pattinson, however, wanted to finish school and go to university to do a degree in international relations – he’d toyed with the idea of becoming a political speechwriter – until he landed the part of Cedric Diggory in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which came out in 2005.

It was a huge break in a global movie franchise, but even though he shone in the role, it didn’t pave the way for better things: the parts he was offered afterwards were smaller; his career went into reverse. There were a few minor indies and made-for-TV features – a shell-shocked war pilot in The Haunted Airman and a depressed musician in How To Be, not to mention an abysmal Catherine Tate vehicle, The Bad Mother’s Handbook, in which the future Sexiest Man in the Cosmos tried to pass himself off as a nerd in bottle glasses and tank tops.

By now Pattinson was living with a friend in Soho, and a career in music had started to seem more likely. He had a rock band called Bad Girls, then started playing solo acoustic guitar gigs under the stage name Bobby Dupea. When he did fly out to LA, to give Hollywood a shot, he spent his days playing music in bars or going to the movies; his agent, Stephanie Ritz, let him sleep on her couch. He felt bad that Ritz had represented him for three years but he’d never nailed an audition. Then the part of Edward Cullen came up. Director Catherine Hardwicke was having a hard time filling the role. She’d tried Orlando Bloom and Hayden Christiansen. She liked Henry Cavill for the role, but he looked too old. She’d auditioned 5,000 boys for the part before Pattinson.

“The audition was at Catherine’s house in Venice,” he recalls of the moment that was to change his life, and his lifestyle, forever – which involved messing about on Catherine’s bed with Kristen, to see if they had any chemistry. “It was me, her and Kristen, and her assistant videotaping it. I was the last one of the day and I was in there for four hours, which was longer than anyone else before me. So I kind of knew. I was like: ‘Hmmm, something’s happened.’

“And it was the first time I’d ever sent an email afterwards, as well. Like: ‘I had a really great experience in the audition.’ You know, kissing the director’s arse. I always thought that was, like, the cheesiest, most pathetic thing to do. But it worked!”

Apparently he had the X-factor Hardwicke was looking for: as far as Pattinson was concerned, that X stood for Xanax. “I’d never had a Xanax before,” he says, looking guilty for a moment. “But I’d started getting so paranoid about messing up auditions all the time that I would actually mess them up. So I took like half a Xanax. And it went really well, so when I had to go and meet the producers I thought: I’m just going to take another Xanax!” He laughs and rocks his chair. “And then I went in and almost fell asleep.”

The producers were not impressed. They thought Pattinson looked scruffy and too old for the part. But Hardwicke pleaded and got him another meeting – this time minus the pharmaceuticals.

“I shaved, like, 50 times before I showed up,” says Pattinson. “I made myself look all neat and tidy, wearing a white crew-neck T-shirt. It was almost not to be. Not a single person wanted me at that thing, only Catherine and Kristen.”

He’s said that he expected Twilight to be a “really serious” indie film – “I had no idea it was going to be this big thing you’d get on Burger King hats” – and as well as mass acclaim, it has, of course, had its critics. (A quote attributed to Stephen King says it best: “Harry Potter is about confronting fears, finding strength and doing what is right in the face of adversity. Twilight is about how important it is to have a  boyfriend.”) But you suspect that Pattinson recognised the limits of Twilight long ago. The director of Breaking Dawn, Bill Condon, describes him as supersmart: “That’s the first thing you notice. He’s very thoughtful and analytical. And he’s a cineaste, you know? He loves a lot of genres and actors, so he seems like someone who can’t wait to go explore.”

His choice of roles in the past year bears this out. In May he starred in the Depression-era romance Water for Elephants, as a dashing vet who joins a circus after his parents die. Next year he’ll appear in an adaptation of Guy de Maupassant’s Bel Ami, which will involve him being a thoroughly bad egg and sleeping with Christina Ricci, Uma Thurman and Kristin Scott Thomas. And then there’s David Cronenberg’s adaptation of the Don Delillo novel Cosmopolis, a Joycean story about a cheating Manhattan billionaire who loses his fortune in a single day. He has described the script as “insane and difficult”; the cast includes Samantha Morton, Paul Giamatti and Juliette Binoche. It’s the big league, by any standard. More the choice of an actor seeking a challenge than a pretty boy looking for safe harbour.

“I think he’s made really smart choices,” says Twilight producer Wyck Godfrey. “He has a deep desire to earn the status he has, and those films both have hardcore directors and quality material. I think it speaks more to who Rob is than the Twilight series, because he comes from a literary background. He shows up to set reading Molière.”

Godfrey has also seen Pattinson’s “crafty and determined” side. During one typically crazed week he had to shoot two days on Water for Elephants prior to the Golden Globes and then return to shooting Twilight. The trouble was, his hair needed to be a lot shorter for Water for Elephants. “I said, you’re going to need a hairpiece [for the 1930s film],” says Godfrey. “You can’t come back with completely different hair. And both he and his agent said: ‘OK, I get it.’ But then he had it cut short anyway. And when he saw me, he said: ‘Oh my gosh, I don’t know what happened!’ It was pretty infuriating, but it tells you about the kind of dedication he brings to the movies he works on.”

He inspires affection and admiration among co-stars, who marvel at the way he has handled his sudden superstardom. “He comes to set with no expectations or attitude,” Ricci said after shooting Bel Ami, “none of those things you worry someone of his level of fame is going to have.” Michael Sheen, who stars with him in the Twilight movies, has offered the avuncular verdict that he “seems to have a good head on his shoulders”.

Pattinson has always said he admires Leonardo DiCaprio’s career – he’s even asked DiCaprio for advice on career longevity. At the Four Seasons, his eyes remain fixed on that horizon. “If I do decide one day to stop acting, I just hate the idea of people going: ‘Oh, did you ever do anything else besides that Twilight thing?’”

Breaking Dawn – Part 1 is released on 18 November

 

 Robert Pattinson interview: Reality bites

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The best of times to write

November 2, 2011

Charles Dickens 007 The best of times to write

Perhaps the best time to write is any time you have a thought that appears interesting enough. Rarely do I ever have moments where I can splash down pages and pages of writing. I suppose you can train yourself to set aside a special time each day, away from distractions to complete that novel…sure…anything is possible as long as you have a plan and stick to it…

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Dr Anthony

  100 yepod logo size The best of times to write


poweredbyguardian The best of times to writeThis article titled “The best of times to write” was written by Robert McCrum, for guardian.co.uk on Thursday 27th October 2011 11.40 UTC

I have been reading Claire Tomalin’s bicentennial biography of Charles Dickens – the latest in a long line that begins with The Life of Charles Dickens by the novelist’s friend and adviser John Forster, and includes important studies by Peter Ackroyd, Michael Slater and, most recently, Becoming Dickens by Robert Douglas Fairhurst.

The thing I always take away from reading about the Inimitable, as he styled himself (half-joking), is his prodigious energy and his Victorian capacity for sheer hard work. Reviews, letters, petitions, journalism, stories, plays, scraps of poetry, more letters on myriad topics (from interior decor to prison reform), and finally of course the 14 great novels themselves.

But then, as you go deeper into Tomalin, you discover that Dickens, in his prime, used to compress his literary energies into five hours, roughly 9am to 2pm, after which he would walk incessantly, and put his mind into neutral. He might return to what he’d written in the morning later in the evening, but those five hours held the key to his output. Which raises the question: what’s the best time of day to write? and its corollary: how many hours are necessary?

Some writers (Dickens among them) are larks. Others – more nocturnal – are owls. Robert Frost, whose remote Vermont cabin I visited recently in company with his biographer Jay Parini, never started work till the afternoon, and often stayed up till two or three in the morning, not rising until midday, or even later. Proust, famously, worked night and day in a cork-lined room. I remember reading somewhere that Raymond Chandler observed that it was impossible to write well for more than four hours a day. What do you do in the afternoon?

There’s also the question of how long it might take to complete a novel. Here, you encounter literary legends. Faulkner claimed to have completed As I Lay Dying in six weeks. In the mid-1930s, PG Wodehouse, who wrote fast once he had the mechanics of his plots straight, polished off the last 10,000 words of Very Good, Jeeves! in a single day. In his autobiography, A Sort of Life, Graham Greene describes writing Stamboul Train on benzedrine, to pay the bills, working against the clock. Further back, Samuel Johnson wrote Rasselas, which is short, in a fortnight to defray the expenses of his mother’s funeral. Or so it’s said.

More usually, a 60-70,000 word novel seems to take at least a year to complete, allowing for two or three drafts, although often the first, rough outline can get written in a matter of weeks. The strange truth about a lot of fiction is that the dominant moments that animate an entire novel can occur to the writer in a matter of minutes. After that, in the words of one New Zealand writer I recall with affection, “it’s just typing”.

Dickens, of course, lived in the golden age of the typesetter. His strong, decisive manuscripts (he boasted a very clear hand) were swiftly transformed into galley proofs, for endless re-writing, the really time-consuming part of the process. The revision is the bit that many writers really enjoy, once the heavy lifting of the first draft is done.

 

 The best of times to write

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Halloween film specials

October 22, 2011

Alice Cooper 007 Halloween film specials

There’s more to do than just going door to door collecting candy on  Halloween. I have always enjoyed visiting the local haunted house with friends to get spooked by zombies. So how are you going to dress up this year for Halloween? Once a year we get to show off our weirdness and creativity. How about as a blood thirsty monster,Dracula,Frankenstein,a witch,Harry Potter,Spiderman,a ghost,Jason, or Freddy Kruger on Halloween night. Remember one thing! Be sure to exercise safety first! Happy Halloween Everyone….

Pass it on,

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Dr Anthony

logo smaller with star Halloween film specials          


poweredbyguardian Halloween film specialsThis article titled “Halloween film specials” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 21st October 2011 23.04 UTC

There’s so much good horror being made these days, it’s scary, but if you’re terrified of missing out, Halloween is the time to catch up. In the week long build-up to next Saturday, cinemas are serving up a putrefying, maggot-infested smorgasbord of filmic fear – should you tire of pumpkin carving.

Rising to the occasion, the BFI has rolled out the black carpet and reanimated the corpse of Alice Cooper for a special horror evening (BFI Southbank, SE1, Fri, bfi.org.uk). The cadaverous rocker interrupts his tour to give an annotated talk on the “Nightmare Movies” that have mis-shaped his life, music and make-up strategy, including Nightmare On Elm Street (Cooper played Freddy Krueger’s daddy), Vincent Price (did voiceovers for his album), and Tim Burton (Cooper’s in his next movie). Old skull-face also holds a Q&A and introduces John Carpenter’s Halloween. Another atmospheric one-off (alright, two-off) is the Jameson Cult Film Club, which decks out London’s Union Chapel accordingly for screenings of The Blair Witch Project and Invasion Of The Body Snatchers (29 & 30 Oct, jamesoncultfilmclub.com). Watch out for related tricks and treats: spooky forest decor for the former; uncanny extras for the latter.

As for dedicated festivals, Nottingham’s Mayhem (Broadway, Thu to 30 Oct, mayhemhorrorfest.co.uk) includes new Brit horror The Awakening, with Rebecca Hall as a 1920s ghostbuster, and the Japanese apocalyptic zombie flick Helldriver, plus a host of other global gore oddities as well as the BBC’s notorious 1990s reality TV hoax Ghostwatch, starring Michael Parkinson and Sarah Greene. Whitby’s Bram Stoker Horror Film Festival (Fri to 31 Oct, bramstokerfilmfestival.com) has untested horror indies such as timely downsizing horror Axed (“First he lost his job, then he lost his mind”), as well as live entertainment in the form of a lavish Vampire’s Ball (dress code: smart gothic), a Victorian séance and even a Twilight-style dance opera. You could also try Sheffield’s Celluloid Screams (Showroom, Sat & Sun, celluloidscreams.co.uk), including Argentina’s Cold Sweat, described as “Hostel meets The Wages Of Fear”.

Looking ahead to Halloween itself, you’ve got a host of all-nighters. Frightfest offers two (Vue West End, WC2, 29 Oct; Bristol Watershed, 4 Nov, frightfest.co.uk), which include the disgustingly splattery Bad Meat and the premiere of soft-centred romantic comedy Human Centipede II: Full Sequence. Dead And Breakfast III in Derby (Quad, 29 Oct, derbyquad.co.uk) serves up classics old and new, from Evil Dead to Tucker & Dale Vs Evil, plus breakfast, of course. The BFI IMAX goes for a riskier Final Destination marathon (SE1, Fri, bfi.org.uk), while London’s Portobello Electric opts for a John Carpenter all-nighter. The Fog, Escape From New York, They Live and, of course, Halloween (29 Oct, electriccinema.co.uk) should go down like fresh brain terrine at a zombie picnic.

 

 Halloween film specials

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This week’s new games

October 15, 2011

RAGE 007 This weeks new games

I know a lot of my readers love playing computer games…so here is a list of this week’s recently created games.  RAGE looks like an interesting one …waking up to a new world of mutated creatures roaming about the face of the earth. You just want to survive and with each new challenge, you need to eliminate the infected.

http://www.yepod.com/?p=15006

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony 


poweredbyguardian This weeks new gamesThis article titled “This week’s new games” was written by Nick Gillett, for The Guardian on Friday 14th October 2011 23.06 UTC

RAGE, PC, PS3 & Xbox

Waking up from cryogenic stasis, you’re ejected into what’s left of the Earth: a Mad Max-style, mutant-infested wasteland.

Saved from death at the hands of horribly agile, scythe-wielding monstrosities, you repay the kindness by undertaking a succession of jobs. While these never go much beyond fetching things and eradicating baddies, the action is fierce enough and the dusty wild west aesthetic never less than gorgeous. The game all ends rather abruptly, but the journey to that point is a raucous and wildly engaging ride.

Bethesda, £34.99-£49.99

Forza Motorsport 4, Xbox

Along with 500 upgradeable cars, a globe-spanning collection of tracks and entirely superfluous Kinect integration, Forza’s fourth iteration arrives infused with Top Gear, from its Clarkson-intoned introduction to regular visits to the series’ test track. Looking absolutely staggering and supplying a palpable sense of the weight, momentum and handling characteristics of each car, its AI racers are no longer infallible and can often be seen slipping from the track in a doomed bid to stop you overtaking. Conceived as Xbox’s answer to Gran Turismo, this surpasses its inspiration. Best racing game ever.

Microsoft, £49.99

Dark Souls, PS3 & Xbox

Where modern games are easy, Dark Souls’ predecessor – Demon’s Souls – was difficult to the point of abject brutality, teaching you repeated lessons in survival, all of which ended with a view of your character’s broken corpse and the loss of appallingly hard-won equipment and experience. Dark Souls manages to be even harder, but somewhere in the endless dance of death amid the dank, vast network of subterranean corridors and tunnels, there’s an experience of stunning, almost cathartic beauty for those masochistic enough to discover it.

Namco Bandai, £49.99

Games news

Other games out now include Ace Combat: Assault Horizon, which adds helicopters and AC-130 gunships to its wafer-thin fighter plane thrills …

Kinectimals Now With Bears brings lots of cute fluffy pandas and koalas to one of the highlights of Xbox’s Kinect lineup …

Just Dance 3 lets up to four players get their simultaneous grooves on with a wedding-style soundtrack of songs and a flashmob mode for up to eight Wii remotes …

Dead Rising 2: Off The Record places you back among the undead for more zombie massacres using amusing improvised weapons …

Might & Magic: Heroes VI refreshes its strategic, turn-based combat for a a new outing …

Cursed Crusade is a hilariously poor, holy crusaders hack and slash ‘em-up that you should do your best to avoid …

Finally Farming Simulator 2011: Platinum Edition now features animal husbandry and an extended range of tractors along with the “Bergmann Shuttle 900K large silage wagon”.

 

 This weeks new games

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Michael Jackson tribute show to take place in Tokyo

October 11, 2011

Michael Forever tribute c 007 Michael Jackson tribute show to take place in Tokyo

The fever is just starting up again…Michael Jackson tributes will start popping up around the world..this time in Tokyo..people miss Michael..so the Jackson family will ensure that Michael is back in spirit …performing through all artists who participate.

http://www.yepod.com/?p=14679 

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony  


poweredbyguardian Michael Jackson tribute show to take place in TokyoThis article titled “Michael Jackson tribute show to take place in Tokyo” was written by Sean Michaels, for guardian.co.uk on Tuesday 11th October 2011 10.00 UTC

Following the tribute concert in Wales, Michael Jackson’s family have announced their next big-budget tribute show, to take place in Tokyo. Several of Jackson’s brothers will perform at the two-day concert, which will benefit children affected by Japan’s March earthquakes. “[I'm] glad to see them back on stage,” admitted Michael’s mother.

“If Michael was alive, he would definitely have done something to help the victims of the earthquake in Japan,” Katherine Jackson declared at a London press conference. “[He] loved children [and] he would have felt for those children who lost parents or homes.”

Jackie, Marlon and Tito Jackson – without Randy, according to his Twitter account – will perform as the Jacksons, singing “around 15 songs”. It’s not clear whether these will be drawn exclusively from the siblings’ old repertoire, or also from Michael’s solo hits. At Saturday’s Michael Forever bonanza, the three brothers joined JLS for a rendition of Blame it on the Boogie. JLS are hoping to release that team-up as a single. “We discussed some things backstage about the future and they want to take us out for dinner to talk further,” Oritsé Williams told The Sun. “It would be amazing.”

In addition to the performance by the Jacksons, the Tokyo gigs will include numerous as-yet unnamed Japanese acts. All merchandising profits would go to Ashinaga, a charity that benefits children who lost their homes or families during this year’s earthquakes.

Thus far, the Jackson family have been split on the matter of tribute concerts. In particular, Randy and Jermaine have expressed their concern about drawing attention away from the trial of Conrad Murray, Michael’s former doctor. Janet Jackson also refused to perform at the Cardiff show. While Murray’s trial is expected to be completed before the 13-14 December concerts, Randy, Jermaine and Janet have not offered their support for the Tokyo event.

 

 Michael Jackson tribute show to take place in Tokyo

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Robert Downey Jr eyeing third franchise with Perry Mason film

October 7, 2011

Robert Downey Jr left and 006 Robert Downey Jr eyeing third franchise with Perry Mason film

Sounds like we might get to see an updated version of Perry Mason films…sure would be nice to see a new series…but can Mr. Downey Jr fill the shoes of the late actor Raymond Burr?

http://www.yepod.com/?p=14256

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony


poweredbyguardian Robert Downey Jr eyeing third franchise with Perry Mason filmThis article titled “Robert Downey Jr eyeing third franchise with Perry Mason film” was written by Ben Child, for guardian.co.uk on Thursday 6th October 2011 11.50 UTC

He’s already flying through the skies on a regular basis as Iron Man, and is due to appear in a second Sherlock Holmes film for director Guy Ritchie next year. But Robert Downey Jr reportedly wants a third high-profile Hollywood franchise and is eyeing a starring turn as the detective Perry Mason in the first big-screen outing for the unflappable Los Angeles defence lawyer since 1937.

Variety reports that Downey Jr and his wife, producer Susan Downey, are putting the project together at their production company, Team Downey, as a potential starring vehicle for the actor. The film looks likely to be a period piece set in 1930s LA, a fertile era and location for Hollywood over the years. Erle Stanley Gardner wrote more than 80 novels featuring Mason between 1933 and his death in 1970, and there have also been two TV series and dozens of TV movies about the lawyer. Many starred Raymond Burr, who played the character between 1957 and 1966 in the series Perry Mason and reprised the role between 1985 and his death in 1993 in 26 feature-length episodes.

Gardner was a mentor to both Raymond Chandler, creator of the noir stalwart Philip Marlowe, and Dashiell Hammett, who wrote the novels upon which both The Maltese Falcon and The Thin Man were based. He was more popular than both writers combined, with more than 425m books sold.

Mason was also the subject of six films between 1934 and 1937. Warren William starred as the lawyer in the first four movies, with Ricardo Cortez and Donald Woods taking over for the final two.

For a film star to appear in three successful movie franchises at the same time is almost unheard of, and Downey Jr’s position is all the more remarkable because it is only just over a decade since his last arrest on drugs charges in April 2001. In the intervening period, the actor has transformed himself from a talented actor who struggled with substance abuse into one of the most high-profile figures in Hollywood, picking up a Golden Globe for his turn in Sherlock Holmes and receiving a second Oscar nomination for his work in the comedy Tropic Thunder.

 

 Robert Downey Jr eyeing third franchise with Perry Mason film

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Michael Holden’s All ears

September 10, 2011

All ears taxi  008 Michael Holdens All ears


poweredbyguardian Michael Holdens All earsThis article titled “Michael Holden’s All ears” was written by Michael Holden, for The Guardian on Friday 9th September 2011 23.06 UTC

It takes discipline when drunk and hungry to order takeaway food that requires preparation as opposed to the meat that’s been spinning in the window all night. The resulting “shish hiatus”, though, can be intriguing, as long as it doesn’t end in violence, and the two nocturnal connoisseurs beside me didn’t seem that way inclined.

Man 1 “Rang me up at five in the morning, outside my house. Been drinking since one in the afternoon.”

Man 2 “Can’t believe you answered the phone.”

Man 1 “Well it was an emergency. I said to him, ‘It’s 5am.’ He goes, ‘I know. I’ve been kidnapped by a taxi driver. He’s trying to take me to a brothel. I don’t want to go.’”

Man 2 “How’s that work, then?”

Man 1 “He got in the cab and the bloke won’t take him home, starts heading off in the other direction, talking about a brothel. So as they get near my place, he phones me, so I can hear it all unfolding. Live.”

Man 2 “Breaking news.”

Man 1 “Very much so. He says, ‘He’s showed me a picture of a woman saying she’ll do anything I want. But I’ve looked a bit closer and it’s Sarah Harding out of Girls Aloud.”

Man 2 “Wow!”

Man 1 “I can hear the driver going, ‘You don’t like woman? She famous – she just make extra money.’ Then he goes, ‘That’s Sarah Harding out of Girl’s Aloud. I don’t believe you.’ The driver’s going, ‘Come and see for yourself.’”

Man 2 “He didn’t fancy it, then?”

Man 1 “No. He was at the door two minutes later saying, ‘It got a bit ugly. I’ve had to give him £40 to fuck off. I hope I’m right.’”

Holden on Twitter: @thewrongwriter

 

 Michael Holdens All ears Michael Holdens All ears

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Rise of the Planet of the Apes goes box office bananas in first weekend

August 10, 2011

Rise of the Planet of the 007 Rise of the Planet of the Apes goes box office bananas in first weekend

The first time I ever saw “Planet of the Apes” it was with the actor Charlton Heston and that film was made in 1968. In 1970 we had “Benealth the Panet of the Apes” and again in 2001 there was a remake of this movie. Now we have arrived to the making of the “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” and I am sure it will be entertaining.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

yepodcom2Logo1 150x150 Rise of the Planet of the Apes goes box office bananas in first weekend  


poweredbyguardian Rise of the Planet of the Apes goes box office bananas in first weekendThis article titled “Rise of the Planet of the Apes goes box office bananas in first weekend” was written by Jeremy Kay, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 8th August 2011 14.53 UTC

Peter Chernin must be grinning from ear to ear. The former second in command to Rupert Murdoch left News Corp two and a half years ago to try his hand at being an entertainment producer and it looks like he made the right choice. While Murdoch suffers the slings and foam pies of outrageous misfortune, Chernin Entertainment’s first feature, Rise of the Planet of the Apes, stormed to the top of the US charts on a terrific $54m over the weekend, according to Fox estimates.

Doubtless Chernin received a golden handshake from News Corp that would put Apes’ opening weekend in the shade, but he’s got to be excited about his future in entertainment and can look forward to developing a big franchise with Fox. The sequel will be a big deal because of that $54m opener, plus the movie’s obvious pedigree as a smart popcorn movie and a ton of enthusiastic reviews bode well.

James Franco and Freida Pinto (she of Slumdog Millionaire and the forthcoming sword-and-sandals epic Immortals) are the headline stars, but I would suggest the real gems here are the wizards at Weta Digital and the motion-capture technology that created apes that are not only extraordinarily lifelike but actually managed to please Peta, to boot. Andy Serkis is involved, of course, lending his abilities to the character of the simian leader Ceasar.

I reckon Apes is a shoo-in for the visual effects Oscar race and, who knows, it might even earn an Academy Award best picture nomination. It’s possible; after all, this is arguably the best studio release of the summer and summer blockbusters such as Inception and Avatar have earned best picture nominations, which was the point of expanding the number of slots. I won’t go into the maths on how many nominees there could be next year. It’s an overly complicated formula that generates between five and 10. We cool?

As summer winds down, as always the studios will be talking up the pyrotechnics of Apes and the extraordinary performances of the Harry Potter finale (now the biggest worldwide release of the year to date, on $1.13bn) and its billion-dollar-club buddy Transformers: Dark of the Moon. However, as I’ve said before, audiences are dwindling – and admissions are the bellwether of a film’s wellbeing. Don’t put too much faith in those weekend gross figures I and dozens of other trade reporters write about each week.

Inflation is the studios’ best friend: big opening weekend numbers make everything look rosy, but the reality is that consumers today are faced with more entertainment choices than ever before, and the role of cinema in selling a movie is diminishing, particularly at the US box office. For some time now, international box office has been the key driver for the blockbuster business. For example, nearly $800m of Harry Potter’s $1.13bn global score comes from outside North America (and almost $100m of that comes from the UK). Harry Potter opened in China over the weekend and Warner Bros estimates it generated $25.5m – a record for that territory. Within five years China could overtake the US as the world’s single biggest theatrical market.

Returning to Rise of the Planet of the Apes, Fox used opening-weekend screenings to show trailers for The Sitter, in which Jonah Hill, the Superbad star and sidekick to Russell Brand in the truly horrendous Get Him to the Greek, plays a terrible babysitter. The Sitter will open in December in the US and is the latest of this year’s bumper crop of R-rated comedies. There’s nothing wrong with crass humour, but what never ceases to amaze and depress in equal measure are Hollywood’s demonstrable paucity of imagination and the suffocating control by the studios’ risk-averse conglomerations. Hollywood’s corporate paymasters demand copycat behavior, so we’ve had a year of big R-rated hits led by The Hangover Part II, Bad Teacher, Bridesmaids (easily the best of the crop) and Horrible Bosses. You can trace the development roots of movies such as these and The Sitter back to the success of The Hangover in 2009. Still, I’m a fan of Hill, who stars opposite Brad Pitt in Sony’s Oscar hopeful, Moneyball, due out later this year, and I hope The Sitter turns out well.

North American top 10, 5-7 August 2011

1 Rise of the Planet of the Apes, $54m

2 The Smurfs, $21m. Total: $76.2m

3 Cowboys & Aliens, $15.7m. Total: $67.4m

4 The Change-Up, $13.5m

5 Captain America: The First Avenger, $13m. Total: $143.2m

6 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, $12.2m. Total: $342.8m

7 Crazy, Stupid, Love. $12.1m. Total: $42.2m

8 Friends With Benefits, $4.7m. Total: $48.5m

9 Horrible Bosses, $4.6m. Total: $105.2m

10 Transformers: Dark of the Moon, $3m. Total: $344.2m

 Rise of the Planet of the Apes goes box office bananas in first weekend Rise of the Planet of the Apes goes box office bananas in first weekend

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This week’s new films

July 30, 2011

Captain America The First 007 This weeks new films

Here’s your list of movies this week…I saw Captain America and I thought the director did a good job with this film..so if you haven’t seen it …go ahead..watch all the films.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

yepodcom2Logo 150x150 This weeks new films  


poweredbyguardian This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 29th July 2011 23.09 UTC

Captain America: The First Avenger (12)
(Joe Johnston, 2011, US) Chris Evans, Tommy Lee Jones, Hayley Atwell, Hugo Weaving, Sebastian Stan. 124 mins

Unsurprisingly, this is the most patriotic of the summer’s superhero movies, but there are few surprises all round. The story is largely what you’d imagine from the trailer: wimpy 1940s do-gooder undergoes a fast-track Charles Atlas course, then socks it to the evil über-Nazis. It’s like Inglourious Basterds meets Indiana Jones, although the wholesome tone and white-bread heroism diminish the effects-driven spectacle, and the real second world war is reduced to mere set dressing.

Our Day Will Come (18)
(Romain Gavras, 2010, Fra) Vincent Cassel, Olivier Barthelemy, Justine Lerooy. 83 mins

Edgy provocateur alert! Expanding on the redhead persecution theme he developed in his MIA video, Gavras’s debut follows ginger alienation to its conclusion, as Cassel and Barthelemy head out on the highway to oblivion, without a map or a ferry timetable.

Arrietty (U)
(Hiromasa Yonebayashi, 2010, Jap) Saoirse Ronan, Mark Strong, Tom Holland. 94 mins

Delightful old-school Japanese animated take on Mary Norton’s Borrowers, with colourful detail and miniature-scaled adventure to recommend. It’s aimed at kids, but deals with some pretty grown-up life issues.

Horrid Henry: The Movie (U)
(Nick Moore, 2011, UK) Theo Stevenson, Anjelica Huston, Richard E Grant. 93 mins

The mischievous schoolboy gets into scrapes but strikes a blow for state education in this juvenile crowd-pleaser. There’s less for adults, though Huston and co are game, and Noel Fielding is a wildcard cameo.

Poetry (12A)
(Lee Chang-dong, 2010, S Kor) Yun Jeong-hie, Ahn Nae-sang, Hira Kim. 139 mins

Expertly made, unexpectedly powerful, and multi-award-winning, the simple story of a Korean grandmother’s determination to embrace life in the face of multiple challenges, with some help from her poetry class.

The Light Thief (15)
(Aktan Arym Kubat, 2010, Fra/Kyr/Ger/Neth) Aktan Arym Kubat, Taalaikan Abazova, Askat Sulaimanov. 78 mins

Set in remote Kyrgyzstan, there’s local flavour and gentle comedy to this fable of a Robin Hood-like technician with eco values.

A Better Life (12A)
(Chris Weitz, 2011, US) Demián Bichir, José Julián, Eddie Sotelo. 97 mins

The uphill struggle of a Mexican gardener and his son in Los Angeles is done justice in a compassionate immigrant drama that could be an update of De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves.

Zookeeper (PG)
(Frank Coraci, 2011, US) Kevin James, Rosario Dawson, Leslie Bibb. 102 mins

Celebrity-voiced talking animals sort out the love life of their slapstick-prone carer in a clumsy comedy that could be seen as payback for humanity’s history of animal cruelty.

Whisky Galore! (U)
(Alexander Mackendrick, 1949, UK) Basil Radford, Bruce Seton, Joan Greenwood. 84 mins

Restored version of the Ealing favourite, in which a shipwrecked cargo of Scotch restores the depleted spirits of a dry Hebridean island.

Out from Friday

The Tree

Charlotte Gainsbourg heads an Australian family hit by tragedy.

Sarah’s Key

Kristin Scott Thomas excavates painful French wartime memories.

Knuckle

Revealing doc on the dynamics of Irish bare-knuckle fighting.

Mr Popper’s Penguins

Hilarity ensues as Jim Carrey inherits some penguins.

The Referees

The whistleblowers explain their side of the beautiful game.

French Cancan

Jean Renoir’s 1954 spectacular on the Moulin Rouge.

Super 8

Small-town kids and fugitive aliens in JJ Abram’s 1980s Spielberg homage.

Do Aur Do Paanch

Hindi kidnapping comedy with Salman Khan.

Coming soon

In two weeks … Double monkey trouble with chimp doc Project Nim and prequel The Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes

In three weeks … Daniel Craig and Harrison Ford lead genre mashup Cowboys & Aliens … The TV teens hit Crete for The Inbetweeners Movie

In a month … Almodóvar’s surgical thriller The Skin I Live In … The rebooted Conan The Barbarian

 This weeks new films This weeks new films

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Tom Hardy takes on Al Capone in Cicero

July 18, 2011

Tom Hardy 007 Tom Hardy takes on Al Capone in Cicero

Keep an eye out for hollywood to pull resources together for the production of  “Al Capone in Cecero”. The movie will focus on Al Capone’s life beginning from his chilhood years in Chicago.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

yepodcomLogo 150x150 Tom Hardy takes on Al Capone in Cicero


poweredbyguardian Tom Hardy takes on Al Capone in CiceroThis article titled “Tom Hardy takes on Al Capone in Cicero” was written by Henry Barnes, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 18th July 2011 11.51 UTC

Bronson and Inception actor, Tom Hardy, will play Al Capone in Cicero, an origins story on the Chicago crime boss’s rise to power, according to New York magazine’s Vulture blog.

Harry Potter director David Yates is set to direct the film for Warner Bros, which is rumoured to be the first of a franchise. If so, it will likely cover Capone’s childhood in New York, his teenage years as a member of the infamous Five Points Gang and his move to the southside Chicago suburb of Cicero, where he made millions running illegal speakeasies during Prohibition.

Capone’s life story has already inspired a number of Hollywood adaptations. Rod Steiger took a pop at the role in Richard Wilson’s 1959 biopic, Robert De Niro gathered his guns for 1987′s The Untouchables, Howard Hughes’s Scarface (1932) was loosely based on Capone’s life and was later adapted by Brian De Palma for his 1983 re-make, starring Al Pacino.

 Tom Hardy takes on Al Capone in Cicero

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This week’s new films

July 16, 2011

Cell 211 007 This weeks new films

Here is this week’s films ….my movie pick is Harry Potter’s Deathly Hallows Part 2…get out…go to the movies…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

yepodcomLogo 150x150 This weeks new films


poweredbyguardian This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 15th July 2011 23.06 UTC

Cell 211 (18)
(Daniel Monzón, 2009, Spa/Fr) Luis Tosar, Alberto Ammann, Antonio Resines. 113 mins

Sometimes all you need is a great set-up: a prison guard, first day on the job, gets trapped in a cell just as a riot breaks out, and must therefore pose as an inmate to survive. It’s better not to know where this tough Spanish thriller goes from there, but rest assured you’re in very good hands. There’s tightrope tension and breakneck pace, but wider questions of honour and justice unfold, too – everything you could ask for, in fact.

Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (12A)
(David Yates, 2011, UK/US) Daniel Radcliffe, Ralph Fiennes, Emma Watson. 130 mins

Having sat through the deathly dullness of Part 1, here’s our reward: a rousing finale that strikes all the right notes, ties up 10 years’ worth of loose ends, plunges you into 3D battle, and perhaps even wrings the odd tear – all without inducing effects fatigue. Great sequel, when’s Part 3?

Bal (PG)
(Semih Kaplanoglu, 2010, Tur) Bora Altas, Erdal Besikçioglu, Tülin Özen. 105 mins

Basking in the lush Turkish countryside, but by no means oversweetening the mix, this tender drama follows a painfully shy boy forced out of his shell when his honey-gatherer father disappears in the forest. It’s a little slow, but often wondrous to look at.

Treacle Jr (15)
(Jamie Thraves, 2001, UK) Aidan Gillen, Tom Fisher, Riann Steele. 80 mins

Fisher plays a man who walks out on his family, but his introspective solo odyssey is hijacked by an overbearing Irish misfit (Gillen), and becomes an eccentric odd-couple drama instead – which is refreshing.

Hobo With A Shotgun (18)
(Jason Eisener, 2011, Can/US) Rutger Hauer, Molly Dunsworth, Brian Downey. 86 mins

Truer to its faux grindhouse trailer roots than Machete, this trashy 1980s-style street justice thriller maintains an admirably straight face. Hauer’s face, on the other hand, has seen better days, but he’s commendably game for an entrail-strewn shoot-up.

Bobby Fischer Against The World (12A)
(Liz Garbus, 2011, US/UK/Ice) 93 mins

The life of the troubled chess champion rendered through oral history and lively graphics, with the focus on his big cold war showdown with Boris Spassky in 1972. That leaves little time to go into Fischer’s later psychological problems, but his complex personality emerges all the same.

Just Do It (12A)
(Emily James, 2011, UK) 90 mins

Putting faces to anonymous direct-action groups, this documentary follows British environmental activists such as Plane Stupid on their imaginatively risky direct action campaigns, and hears their justifications. Being on the inside, it’s far from a neutral account, but the access is illuminating.

Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara (NC)
(Zoya Akhtar, 2011, Ind) Hrithik Roshan, Farhan Akhtar, Katrina Kaif. 154 mins

Three buddies bond and bicker on an expensive road-trip holiday in this Hindi dramedy.

Out from Friday

Break My Fall

East London hipsters trawl the night.

Beginners

Ewan McGregor in a downbeat LA drama.

Horrible Bosses

Jason Bateman and friends plot workplace vengeance.

Cars 2

Spy thriller for junior petrolheads.

The Big Picture

Romain Duris leads a Tell No One-like French thriller.

One Life

Daniel Craig narrates a BBC wildlife doc.

The Violent Kind

Biker teens face demonic evil in this lo-fi horror.

Gilda

Rita Hayworth burns up the screen in the immortal 1940s noir.

The Lavender Hill Mob

Reissue for the lovable Ealing crime caper.

Singham

Ajay Devgan leads an Indian action thriller.

Coming soon

In two weeks … Here comes Captain America: The First Avenger … Studio Ghibli’s take on The Borrowers, Arrietty

In three weeks … JJ Abrams’s Spielbergian monster movie Super 8 … Charlotte Gainsbourg leads family drama The Tree

In a month … Double monkey trouble with chimp doc Project Nim and prequel The Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes

 

 This weeks new films

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This week’s new films

July 9, 2011

The Tree Of Life 007 This weeks new films

Here is you list of new films for this week….the list covers a wide variety of subjects for the entire family….this weekend I will be watching “The Tree of Life”.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 8th July 2011 23.07 UTC

The Tree Of Life (12A)
(Terrence Malick, 2011, US) Brad Pitt, Jessica Chastain, Hunter McCracken, Laramie Eppler, Sean Penn, Tye Sheridan. 139 mins

Successor to Kubrick’s 2001 or extended perfume ad? Either way, Malick’s macro/microcosmic take on life, the universe and family life makes most films look unadventurous. Beyond the head-trip “creation of the universe” sequences, it’s largely Sean Penn’s impressionistic reminiscence of his conflicted childhood, rendered in gorgeous imagery, with introspective voiceovers and a dreamy intensity.

The Princess Of Montpensier (15)
(Bertrand Tavernier, 2010, Fra) Mélanie Thierry, Gaspard Ulliel, Lambert Wilson. 140 mins

There’s costumes and courtliness, but this 16th-century saga remains unstuffy. Sought-after Thierry’s quest for self-determination is the focus, and the treatment is modern and immediate.

Trust (15)
(David Schwimmer, 2010, US) Liana Liberato, Clive Owen, Catherine Keener. 106 mins

Those who saw Catfish will know where this teen’s online relationship with an apparently nice boy is headed. But what follows is an exercise in parent-worrying technophobia.

Super (18)
(James Gunn, 2010, US) Rainn Wilson, Ellen Page, Kevin Bacon. 96 mins

Unlike the similar-sounding Kick-Ass, this everyday superhero comedy lurches from farce to gruesome violence, viewing vigilantism as a mental condition.

Film Socialisme (PG)
(Jean-Luc Godard, 2010, Swi/Fra) Catherine Tanvier, Christian Sinniger, Patti Smith. 102 mins

Verging closer on incomprehensibility, Godard’s latest film essay combines images beautiful and ugly, music, subtitles and an intellectual span huge enough to make everyone feel stupid.

Holy Rollers (15)
(Kevin Asch, 2010, US) Jesse Eisenberg, Justin Bartha, Danny A Abeckaser. 89 mins

Hasidic Jewish teen turns ecstasy smuggler – it sounds like the set-up for a wacky comedy, but this is a rather straight character drama, albeit with an interesting setting.

Huge (15)
(Ben Miller, 2010, UK) Noel Clarke, Johnny Harris, Thandie Newton. 78 mins

Armstrong-less Miller is still thinking of comedy duos here, in a story of an unfunny double act aiming for the big time that’s, er, not very funny.

The Devil’s Rock (18)
(Paul Campion, 2011, NZ) Craig Hall, Matthew Sunderland, Gina Varela. 83 mins

Two Kiwi soldiers discover more than Nazi evil when they take a Channel Island bunker in this refreshingly odd wartime horror.

Sawako Decides (12A)
(Yûya Ishii, 2010, Jap) Hikari Mitsushima, Kotaro Shiga, Ryô Iwamatsu. 112 mins

Atypical comic character study of a modern Japanese woman struggling to get a better job, boyfriend, life, etc, in the face of mediocrity.

Last Year In Marienbad (U)
(Jean Resnais, 1961, Fra) Delphine Seyrig, Giorgio Albertazzi. 93 mins

Still defying interpretation, Resnais’s influential modernist brainmelt unfurls its ambiguities with captivating elegance.

Breath Made Visible (NC)
(Ruedi Gerber, 2009, US) 80 mins

Documentary on American dancer Anna Halprin, mixing clips from her works with talk on her career.

Murder 2 (NC)
(Mohit Suri, 2011, Ind) Emraan Hashmi, Jacqueline Fernandes

Racy thriller by Bollywood standards, promising “erotic” undertones and Saw-like horror.

Out from Friday

Bal (Honey)

Prize-winning Turkish hymn to rural life, and a son’s love for his father.

Cell 211

A prison guard gets trapped with the inmates in this Spanish thriller.

Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2

Daniel Radcliffe waves his last wand in the series climax.

Treacle Jr

A man walks out on his family to live the London low life.

Hobo With A Shotgun

Rutger Hauer gets trigger-happy in a gory grindhouse homage.

Bobby Fischer Against The World

Documentary on the all-conquering cold war chess champ.

Just Do It

Behind the scenes with the direct-action protest movement.

Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara

Three Indian buddies take a life-changing European vacation.

Coming soon

In two weeks … Ewan McGregor copes with his gay father in Beginners … Jason Bateman schemes against Horrible Bosses

In three weeks … Here comes Captain America: The First Avenger … Studio Ghibli’s take on The Borrowers, Arrietty

In a month … JJ Abrams’s Spielbergian monster movie Super 8

 This weeks new films

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Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possession

July 6, 2011

Willie Nelson  007 Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possession

Isn’t that a lot of marijuana on Willie’s table…the issue of legalizing marijuana continues to be an issue getting front page news…especially when celebrities are routinely being caught with it ….more than their share…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possessionThis article titled “Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possession” was written by Sean Michaels, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 6th July 2011 11.53 UTC

Willie Nelson’s bag of marijuana just won’t go away. A Texas judge has said she won’t accept a plea deal relating to Nelson’s drug bust in 2010, rejecting a proposal that would have had the country singer pay a fine of less than $1,000. “If Willie Nelson gets off with nothing, I’m not going to be part of it,” judge Becky Dean-Walker told the New York Times.

Nelson was caught with marijuana during a 26 November traffic stop in Sierra Blanca, Texas. Although the singer faced up to six months in jail, a sympathetic prosecutor proposed he could be let off for just $378 (£236) and joked about a court-room performance of Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain. “You bet your ass I ain’t gonna be mean to Willie Nelson,” Hudspeth county attorney Kit Bramblett told the Big Bend Sentinel. Judge Dean-Walker later intervened, calling this “a joke that got out of hand”. At the time, she seemed lenient, with reports that Nelson could simply pay a $500 fine, plus court costs, by post. But Dean-Walker now insists she was misunderstood. “[Bramblett] has made a habit of speaking with the press before anything has been resolved,” she explained.

Bramblett, Dean-Walker claims, is trying to go easy on “his favourite singer”. Whereas agents originally recorded that they found six ounces of marijuana on Nelson’s tour bus, Bramblett said the actual figure was about three ounces, plus “containers and paraphernalia”. The prosecutor allegedly asked Dean-Walker to reduce Nelson’s charge to a class C misdemeanor, which she refused to do. “If you’re not going to do it for the guy in the corner, why do it for a celebrity?” she said.

Bramblett and Nelson have yet to respond to Dean-Walker’s decision, but the judge doesn’t seem to be in a hurry. “At no point,” she said, “do I have to let [Nelson] off.”

 Judge rejects Willie Nelson plea deal for marijuana possession

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This week’s new films

July 2, 2011

Transformers Dark of the  007 This weeks new films

Another week for new films….an impressive line-up of stories to watch on the big screen.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

Yepod.com  


poweredbyguardian This weeks new filmsThis article titled “This week’s new films” was written by Steve Rose, for The Guardian on Friday 1st July 2011 23.07 UTC

Transformers: Dark Of The Moon (12A)
(Michael Bay, 2011, US) Shia Labeouf, Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, Josh Duhamel, Frances McDormand, John Turturro, Josh Dempsey, John Malkovich. 155 mins

Despite the bombastic patriotism, drooling machine porn, all-round political dodginess, atrocious comedy, antiquated alien-invasion plot, etc, there’s something oddly compelling about metropolitan destruction and high-tech combat rendered on this scale. If only there weren’t those irritating humans getting in the way. It’s an improvement on the last one, but this is so defiantly crass, it’s almost admirable. Best watched with a 10-year-old boy, a hangover, or a cultural historian by your side to tell you how wrong it all is.

A Separation (PG)
(Asghar Farhadi, 2011, Iran) Peyman Moaadi, Leila Hatami. 123 mins

The complete opposite of Transformers: a complex, intricate and deeply satisfying study of Iranian society. Built around a divorcing couple, but ranging far wider, it’s a web of social taboos, domestic clashes and building tension. You’ll have to pay attention, though.

As If I Am Not There (18)
(Juanita Wilson, 2010, Ire) Natasa Petrovic, Fedja Stukan. 110 mins

The harrowing experience of a Bosnian teacher forced into sexual slavery by Serbian soldiers is relayed with horrifying conviction but a sensitive intelligence, too. Based on actual testimony, the story never feels like a mere dramatisation.

The Conspirator (12A)
(Robert Redford, 2010, US) James McAvoy, Robin Wright, Kevin Kline. 123 mins

Redford gives a history lesson and a lecture on civil liberties, as Wright goes on trial for aiding the assassination of Abraham Lincoln and McAvoy’s northern lawyer strives to defend both her and good old American justice.

Larry Crowne (12A)
(Tom Hanks, 2011, US) Tom Hanks, Julia Roberts, Bryan Cranston. 99 mins

A feel-nice self-help tale from the same box of chocolates as Forrest Gump. Hanks’s downsized employee goes back to college and develops a crush on his teacher (Roberts). Will he get a second chance? Will Roberts learn a lesson from him? The suspense must be killing you.

Delhi Belly (15)
(Abhiney Deo, 2011, Ind) Imran Khan, Vir Das, Kunaal Roy Kapur. 102 mins

Indian cinema takes a leap westwards, if not exactly forwards, with this Guy Ritchie-styled caper comedy – mainly in English. Concerning three Delhi slackers who find themselves wanted by gangsters, it’s a riot of guns, gags, girlfriend phobias and dodgy toilets.

Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo (U)
(Jessica Oreck, 2009, US/Jap) 91 mins

Japan’s obsession with insects is used to put our own species under a magnifying glass in this free-associative documentary, which flits from the niche world of bug-hunters and insect collectors to cultural staples like haiku and zen.

The Merry Wives Of Windsor (12A)
(Christopher Luscombe, 2011, UK) Christopher Benjamin, Serena Evans, Sarah Woodward. 140 mins

Filmed stage play of Shakespeare’s romantic farce, recorded at London’s Globe Theatre.

Out from Friday

The Princess Of Montpensier

French 16th-century passion and intrigue in Bertrand Tavernier’s epic.

The Tree Of Life

Life, the universe and everything in Terrence Malick’s latest.

Trust

Social networking paranoia thriller to keep teens awake at night.

Film Socialisme

Jean-Luc Godard’s latest (final?) impenetrable film essay.

Super

Rainn Wilson and Ellen Page lead a costumed vigilante comedy.

Holy Rollers

Jesse Eisenberg plays an Orthodox Jew turned drug smuggler.

Huge

Two stand-ups shoot for the very big time in Ben Miller’s comedy.

The Devil’s Rock

Occult Nazi devil-women in the Channel Islands!

Breath Made Visible

Documentary on US choreographer Anna Halprin.

Murder 2

“Erotic” Bollywood serial killer thriller set in Goa.

Sawako Decides

A Japanese underachiever tries to get her life together.

Last Year In Marienbad

Reissue for Alan Resnais’s quintessential 1961 arthouse head-scratcher.

Coming soon

In two weeks … School’s out forever in Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 … Spanish prison riot thriller Cell 211

In three weeks … Ewan McGregor copes with his gay father in Beginners … Jason Bateman schemes against Horrible Bosses

In a month … If we need another hero, here comes Captain America: The First Avenger … Brit bad boy goes big screen in Horrid Henry: The Movie

 This weeks new films This weeks new films

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Frank Miller’s Holy Terror sends superhero to battle al-Qaida

June 29, 2011

Frank Millers Holy Terror 007 Frank Millers Holy Terror sends superhero to battle al Qaida

Move over Batman,Superman,Hulk…there’s a new superhero in town…and he’s taking out the garbage…al-Qaida garbage that is….introducing “The Fixer” …a comic book creation by Frank Miller ….should be interesting to see when it hits the news-stand….The Fixer will show no mercy…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Frank Millers Holy Terror sends superhero to battle al QaidaThis article titled “Frank Miller’s Holy Terror sends superhero to battle al-Qaida” was written by Alison Flood, for guardian.co.uk on Wednesday 29th June 2011 15.08 UTC

A “hard-edged” new superhero, The Fixer, is set to take on al-Qaida in acclaimed comic book author Frank Miller’s latest outing, the “gut-wrenching” graphic novel Holy Terror.

Set for release around the tenth anniversary of 9/11, the long-awaited comic – “a dark, uncompromising superhero tale for the modern era”, according to its publisher – was originally intended to feature Batman taking on the terrorist group, and was called Holy Terror, Batman! “Superman punched out Hitler. So did Captain America. That’s one of the things they’re there for … It is, not to put too fine a point on it, a piece of propaganda,” Miller said in 2006 at a comic convention where he described the book as “a reminder to people who seem to have forgotten who we’re up against”.

But the author of The Dark Knight Returns and 300 told the LA Times’s Hero Complex blog last year that he had “decided partway through” that the graphic novel was not a Batman story. “The hero is much closer to ‘Dirty Harry’ than Batman. It’s a new hero that I’ve made up that fights al-Qaida,” he said. Told in the author’s iconic black-and-white style made famous by his Sin City series, Holy Terror “seizes the political zeitgeist by the throat and doesn’t let go until the last page”, according to its publisher Legendary Comics , a subsidiary of Legendary Films.

Miller said The Fixer was “very much an adventurer who’s been essentially searching for a mission”. He told the LA Times that he was “very different than Batman in that he’s not a tortured soul”. Instead, “he’s a much more well-adjusted creature even though he happens to shoot 100 people in the course of the story”.

“He’s been trained as special ops and when his city is attacked all of a sudden all the pieces fall into place and all this training comes into play. He’s been out there fighting crime without really having his heart in it – he does it to keep in shape,” said Miller. “It began as my reaction to 9/11 and it was an extremely angry piece of work and as the years have passed by I’ve done movies and I’ve done other things and time has provided some good distance, so it becomes more of a cohesive story as it progresses. The Fixer has also become his own character in a way I’ve really enjoyed. No one will read this and think, ‘Where’s Batman?’ … My guy carries a couple of guns and is up against an existential threat. He’s not just up against a goofy villain. Ignoring an enemy that’s committed to our annihilation is kind of silly. It just seems that chasing the Riddler around seems silly compared to what’s going on out there. I’ve taken Batman as far as he can go.”

The 120-page Holy Terror is due out on 14 September.

 Frank Millers Holy Terror sends superhero to battle al Qaida Frank Millers Holy Terror sends superhero to battle al Qaida

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Final hours of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca revealed

June 26, 2011

Museum dedicated to Feder 007 Final hours of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca revealed

The thought that a poet would be among those executed by firing squad makes me sick to the stomach. But its refreshing to know that after so much time, there are those motivated enough to uncover the truth behind this unnecessary killing of a great poet.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Final hours of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca revealedThis article titled “Final hours of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca revealed” was written by Giles Tremlett in Madrid, for The Observer on Saturday 25th June 2011 20.19 UTC

One of the great mysteries of Spain’s recent history may have been solved by a local historian from the southern city of Granada, who claims to have found the real grave of the executed playwright and poet Federico García Lorca.

Miguel Caballero Pérez spent three years sifting through police and military archives to piece together the last 13 hours of the life of the author of Blood Wedding, Yerma and The House of Bernarda Alba, who was shot by a right-wing firing squad early in the Spanish civil war.

He now claims to have identified the half-dozen career policemen and volunteers who formed the firing squad that shot Lorca and three other prisoners, as well as the burial site. And he blames Lorca’s death on the long-running political and business rivalry between some of Granada’s wealthiest families – including his father’s own García clan.

“I decided to research archive material rather than gather more oral testimony because that is where the existing confusion comes from – with so many supposed witnesses inventing things,” explained Caballero, who has published his results in a Spanish book called The Last 13 Hours of García Lorca.

Caballero said his original intention had been to verify information gathered in the 1960s by a Spanish journalist, Eduardo Molina Fajardo, who was also a member of the far-right Falange organisation that supported the dictator General Francisco Franco.

“Because of his own political stance, Molina Fajardo had access to people who were happy to tell him the truth,” said Caballero. “The archives bear out most of what he said, so it is reasonable to suppose he was also right about the place Lorca was buried.”

That spot was said to be a trench dug by someone seeking water in an area of open countryside near a farm called Cortijo de Gazpacho, between the villages of Viznar and Alfacar. The zone is only half a kilometre from the spot identified by historian Ian Gibson in 1971 – which was controversially dug up in 2009, but where no bones were found.

“The new place makes sense because it is far enough from the villages to be out of eyesight and earshot, but you can also get there by car – as they would have needed headlights to shoot people at night,” said Caballero. Caballero took a water diviner to the area, who employed the same divining technique using a twig that was common in Lorca’s time. He detected a possible underwater stream. “It is reasonable, then, to suppose that someone might have dug a trench here looking for streams just below the surface,” said Caballero.

An archaeologist, Javier Navarro, has identified a dip in the ground that could indicate a grave. “It is by no means unreasonable to think there is a grave there,” said Navarro, who has found half a dozen civil war mass graves in other parts of Spain. “It would be very easy to find out. You only have to scrape away about 40cm of topsoil for an experienced archaeologist to say if the earth has been dug up before.”

The half dozen men who formed the firing squad shot hundreds of suspected leftwingers in the summer of 1936, with Lorca just one of them. They were given a bonus of 500 pesetas and promoted as a reward for carrying out the dirty work of the nationalist forces of the future dictator, Franco. “I call them the ‘executioners’ rather than the ‘murderers’ because, while some were volunteers, others were career policemen who risked being shot themselves if they refused,” said Caballero. One was said to have complained that the job “was driving him mad”. Some of the squad probably did not even know who Lorca was. “These were not the sort of people who read poetry. Lorca’s work was largely read by the elites,” he said. “They would have been more interested in the two anarchists shot with him, who had a reputation for being very dangerous.” But both the firing squad commander, a stern 53-year-old policeman called Mariano Ajenjo, and a volunteer member called Antonio Benavides – who was a relative of the first wife of Lorca’s father – would have known who he was. “I gave that fat-head a shot in the head,” Benavides reportedly boasted later.

The rightwing Roldán family, political rivals of Lorca’s father, had persuaded the city’s pro-Franco authorities to arrest and shoot the poet. A member of the Roldán clan, Benavides, formed part of the firing squad. One of his cousins was the model for a rogue character in The House of Bernardo Alba, finished a few months earlier, in which Lorca deliberately took aim at the rival Alba family. “They were angry with the father and took their revenge on the son,” said Caballero.

Apart from Benavides, none of the firing squad seemed proud of what they had done. “They didn’t speak to their families about all this. They are remembered as loving grandfathers who were silent about the civil war,” said Caballero.

 Final hours of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca revealed Final hours of Spanish poet Federico García Lorca revealed

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Peter Falk obituary

June 25, 2011

US Actor Peter Falk dies  007 Peter Falk obituary

I say good-bye to another “Kid from the Bronx” …I enjoyed watching his television series “Columbo”….he was destined to cast this character…he also went on to have a productive life in the film industry..there will never again be another Peter Falk…

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardian Peter Falk obituaryThis article titled “Peter Falk obituary” was written by Brian Baxter, for The Guardian on Sunday 26th June 2011 17.18 UTC

Show-business history records that the American actor Peter Falk, who has died aged 83, made his stage debut the year before he left high school, presciently cast as a detective. Despite the 17-year-old’s fleeting success, he had no thoughts of pursuing acting as a career – if only because tough kids from t

Portrait of the artist: Alice Cooper, musician

June 21, 2011

Alice Cooperat the Leonar 005 Portrait of the artist: Alice Cooper, musician

Take away Alice Cooper’s crazy make-up and costume, what you have is a normal looking guy with a passion for making great music. Having his share of demons and angels, Mr. Cooper continues creating and performing on tour to huge crowds.

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardianREV Portrait of the artist: Alice Cooper, musicianThis article titled “Portrait of the artist: Alice Cooper, musician” was written by Interview by Laura Barnett, for The Guardian on Monday 20th June 2011 21.01 UTC

What got you started?

I was at that perfect age: I was 15 when the Beatles came out in the US; then the Rolling Stones, the Kinks and the Animals. I said to my friends in my high-school track team, “Why don’t we just kind of learn to play guitars and bass? We don’t have to be great, we’ll play parties.” So that’s what we did. We just kept playing and playing, and getting bigger and bigger.

What was your big breakthrough?

Meeting Frank Zappa in LA. We were the best band in Phoenix, but that was a small market. So we went to LA, where we had to compete with the Doors, Love and Buffalo Springfield. We got turned down by every record label; Zappa was the only guy who would look at us. He said, “I love you guys, because everybody else hates you so much.”

What have you sacrificed for your art?

In the early days, I was literally starving: whatever we made at a club would feed the band for a week. We spent one Christmas in a five-dollar hotel room in Albuquerque. Our only celebration was decorating a tumbleweed.

You’ve been credited with creating “shock rock”. Was this your intention?

It was my intention to let music be something more than just music: to introduce a theatrical, visual element. That got us into trouble at the beginning: other bands and press came to the logical conclusion that if you were doing theatrics, that meant you weren’t very good. But that wasn’t true at all.

What’s the inspiration behind your lavish costumes?

Wondering where all the rock villains were: we had Paul McCartney and Mick Jagger as heroes, but no villains – all these Sherlock Holmeses, and no Moriarty. I said, “I will gladly be the Darth Vader, the Captain Hook, as long as we still get played on the radio.”

Complete this sentence: At heart I’m just a frustrated . . .

Busby Berkeley.

What’s your favourite museum?

The Salvador Dalí museum in Figueres, Spain. Five of the original band members were art majors, and we worshipped Dalí: we thought of ourselves as surrealists. I worked with Dalí for four days in New York in 1974. He did a sculpture of my brain. It’s a brain with a chocolate eclair running down the back, and ants climbing all over it and spelling out “Dalí and Alice”.

What advice would you give a young musician?

Take all your energy and vehemence and listen to Burt Bacharach.

Who is the new you?

A combination of Lady Gaga, Rob Zombie and Pee Wee Herman.

What’s the secret to maintaining a long career in music?

Be professional. Don’t be late for an interview; don’t go on stage with the attitude: “I’m a drunk rock star, I can make them wait, I’m king of the world.”

Is there anything you regret?

A black-out period, between 1978 and 1982, when I was drinking so much that there are three albums I don’t remember writing, recording or touring. I wish I could go back and redo those albums.

What’s the worst thing anyone ever said about you?

Our first album was reviewed as a “tragic waste of plastic”. I laughed so hard; it was so creative.

In Short

Born: Detroit, 1948.

Career: Has released more than 30 albums. He performs in Alice Cooper’s Halloween Night of Fear at the City Hall, Sheffield, on 25 October, then tours. Details: livenation.co.uk.

Low point: “At the end of the Welcome to my Nightmare tour [in 1975], I would look at my stage outfit and almost start crying: to get into it, I knew I’d have to drink a half-bottle of whiskey.”

High point: “That same tour.”

 Portrait of the artist: Alice Cooper, musician

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The Beaver shows that the movies can’t cope with depression

June 20, 2011

Mel Gibson in The Beaver 007 The Beaver shows that the movies cant cope with depression

To truly understand depression you must research and ask qalified doctors questions. I didn’t expect The Beaver to teach me anything about depression,simply I wanted to be entertained…that is what a movie does..if I wanted to watch a documentary…I would watch a documentary….if there was anything to learn from this movie…it was that depression can have a tramatic effect on our lives…but we can overcome it,control it, and be happy with our lives again…consult your physician on the proper treatment for depression..

Pass it on,

Dr Anthony

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poweredbyguardianREV The Beaver shows that the movies cant cope with depressionThis article titled “The Beaver shows that the movies can’t cope with depression” was written by David Cox, for guardian.co.uk on Monday 20th June 2011 10.35 UTC

Is it faintly conceivable that “a hopelessly depressed individual” would outsource his psyche to a garrulous glove puppet to distance himself from “the negative aspects of his personality”? Not really. Depression isn’t like that.

The Beaver gets it right in its first few minutes, when Mel Gibson’s Walter has yet to place his trust in rodent therapy. Then, all he does is stare vacantly at the ceiling from the marital bed or lie comatose on a lilo or a couch. That’s pretty convincing. For depression doesn’t prompt weird and imaginative behaviour; its manifestations are as dreary as its impact on the lives of its victims.

We frequently hear the complaint that cinema perpetuates “myths and stereotypes” about mental illness. Its “pervasive negative portrayals” are accused of having “harmful effects”. Well, the movies are indeed misleading; yet it’s often their positivity that’s ill-founded.

Clearly no one could call Psycho, Apocalypse Now or Silence of the Lambs great PR for what Walter’s son terms nut-jobs. Yet overall, the latter’s portrayal on the big screen has become more and more supportive, particularly since One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest demonstrated that an affirmative approach could garner both Oscars and big bucks.

Schizophrenics have become the lovable flakies of Shine, Donny Darko and A Beautiful Mind. Autistic people like Rain Man’s Raymond can be mathematical geniuses. Sufferers from learning difficulties are inspiring idiot savants like Chauncey Gardner, Forrest Gump or Simple Jack. Obsessives like Black Swan’s Nina can be thrilling, and the deluded, like Shutter Island’s Teddy, can be charismatic. Even psychotics like the Joker in The Dark Knight are allotted wit and charm.

However, most of the mentally challenged aren’t suffering from conditions like these. The prevalence of all other afflictions of the mind is dwarfed by that of depression. Worldwide, it’s expected to become the world’s second most disabling disease by 2020. In Britain, it strikes one in six of us at some point in our lives. Unfortunately, the opportunities it offers for upbeat representation on screen don’t quite match its ubiquity.

That, presumably, is why The Beaver tries to invigorate its worthily selected subject matter with a miracle ingredient. Walter’s outlandish alter ego was originally conceived by writer Kyle Killen as one of his hero’s number twos; it was dubbed Barry by its begetter and carried round by him in a Tupperware box. This perhaps hints at a more light-hearted approach to the material than director Jodie Foster seems to have felt appropriate.

Apparently, Barry wasn’t turned into a puppet with a voice modelled on Ray Winstone’s simply to make him a little bit more endearing. Foster maintains that medical authenticity was also a factor. “It’s not unheard of to use puppets in therapy,” she’s informed a sceptical world. “It’s done all the time.” There’s also a bit of symbolism in play that might have escaped some filmgoers: “The beaver, I think, was the perfect metaphor for somebody who builds and destroys at the same time.”

Walter is supposed to embrace his furry doppelganger as a “survival tool” that will somehow enable him to get the better of “a painful life and death situation”. Regrettably, it’s not easy to see how that would work. It’s even harder to believe that Walter’s chosen spokescreature would provide him with an effective “way to connect” with his all too convincingly alienated family. Still, the narrative arc requires “healing” and “reconciliation”, so the film’s contrivance must deliver them. In the process, credibility is destroyed rather than built.

If The Beaver’s box office performance is anything to go by, it’s failed to invest depression with the kind of buzz for which Foster seems to have been hoping. It would be easy to blame this on the film’s eccentric choice of catalytic instrument, or even the transgressions of its star. Yet that may be unfair. Perhaps there’s nothing that could ever have made Walter’s story soar.

In future, maybe cinema should leave depression to Scandinavian art house. It’s far better off with the condition’s more glamorous sibling, bipolar disorder, of whose dramatic possibilities Gibson may have given us a glimpse through his own real-life behaviour. Bipolar offers plenty of scope for awards-oriented displays of desolation, but these can be immediately offset by ecstasy, extravagance and mayhem. The silver screen can therefore thank bipolar for everything from Mr Jones, Mad Love, Lust for Life, Sylvia and Michael Clayton to The Devil and Daniel Johnston, Blue Sky, Bulworth, Frances, Biutiful and A Fine Madness.

Yet 24-carat depression? Perhaps it’s just too much of a downer.

 The Beaver shows that the movies cant cope with depression

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

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