Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Movie Review People Will Talk (1951)

This is such a curious and astonishing film that it's hard to decide whether it's a classic gem or a bungled effort to deliver a number of political messages through the motion picture format.

Directed and written by Joseph L. Mankiewicz (adapted from a play by Curt Goetz), the film features the university doctor Prof. Noah Praetorius (played by the eternally suave and smooth Cary Grant), a mysterious, mischievous and mystical doctor who not only cures his patients through unorthodox means (which would perhaps be called Human-Centered New Age Approach in 2006) but apparently even brings them back from the dead!

This of course does not sit well by his insanely jealous colleague Professor Elwell who tries to debunk Praetorius's credentials throughout the movie and thus provides the classic Protagonist-Antagonist dramatic tension line. But that's only one of the plot lines running from one end of this multi-tasking plot to the other.

The other plot line is the interaction of Dr. Praetorius with Deborah Higgins (Jeanne Crain), a student auditing his anatomy class, who later on becomes his wife. Higgins becomes pregnant from a lover who is no longer with her. Thus she is scared to death that her father will have a hard attack and die the minute he hears the bad news (this is the 50s). So Praetorius changes his story and tells her that a mistake was made during the pregnancy test.

But Praetorius is not the only character in this movie who is not what he or she seems to be on the surface. Deborah's father Arthur (played by Sidney Blackmer), for example, who is a world-traveled man of far-flung ambitions turns out to be a total failure in worldly terms, living hand to mouth on his brother John's farm.

Another most memorable character is Mr. Shunderson (Finlay Currie), a white-haired and silent elderly man who shadows Praetorius as his side-kick and servant wherever they go. He is like Praetorius's shadow and Professor Elwell is pretty sure he is a screen hiding something unsavory in Praetorius's past.

At every opportunity throughout the film we are treated to a lecture by Praetorius on how misdirected the modern science has become by forgetting the human essence of medicine and instead focusing on methods, measurements and machines. His symbolic act of pressing a candy into the palm of everyone he meets is a visual reminder of the role of kindness, human touch and plain sweetness play in his approach to curing others. He is the kind of handsome and optimistic doctor that most patients fall in love with, some, like Higgins, literally.

After Praetorius and Higgins marry, she discovers that she is carrying a child that predates their marriage. So did Praetorius marry her out of love or pity? Is he using marriage as yet another tool to help one of his patients Higgins wants to know. Praetorius assures her that it is genuine love and not a sense of charity which drove him to the ir marriage... but as viewers we are not totally convinced.

The last long sequence of the movie (Act Three) is devoted to the trial of Praetorius by a university committee to see if the rumors are true and if he has violated any academic rules by hiding any sordid details of his past. The discipline committee hearing takes place while the university orchestra is waiting in the jam-packed concert hall for Praetorius to show up at the podium and pick up his baton. Yes -- the multi talented Praetorius happens to be the conductor of the university's symphony orchestra as well.

The hearing comes to a conclusion with Shunderson showing up in person and spoiling Prof. Rodney Elwell's character assassination by telling his story. It turns out he has spent 15 years in jail for being falsely accused of killing his best friend who, while he was in prison, had a good time with Shunderson's girlfriend.

So when Shunderson meets his old friend at a restaurant after he get s out of jail, he really kills him thinking he has already paid his dues for that specific crime. But the state prosecutor sentences him to death by hanging.

After going to the gallows and dying at the end of a rope, Shunderson's corpse is donated by the hangman to a young Praetorius who was a medical student back then and dating the hangman's daughter. Shunderson's body is given to him to further his anatomy studies by experimenting on the corpse. Instead, Shunderson is revived by Praetorius miraculously and since then the two never went anywhere without one another.

At that scene we finally understand the tremendous devotion of Shunderson to Praetorius yet we are still a bit puzzled by the true identity of Praetorius. Who is this man who enjoys a Jesus-like power to bring the dead back to life and yet shrugs it away in extreme modesty whenever his exploits are mentioned?

In the very last scene, we watch an over-the-top Shunderson conducting a Brahms sy mphony to its triumphant conclusion while grinning ear to ear to Deborah who is marveling him from the very first row sitting right next to her father.

An unusual film with several creative but somewhat unconnected subplots and frequent monologues on serious topics. Yet you end up watching it with interest partly due to Cary Grant's flawless performance in an odd role and partly just out of sheer curiosity to see where will all this lead.

A 7 out of 10 for its courage to take on some heavy duty topics back in 1951. You'll even find a mini-lecture tucked away there against the government policy of paying the American farmers for not cultivating certain crops. Such lecturing would not fly today but back in 1951 it obviously did.

Ugur Akinci, Ph.D. is a Creative CopyWriter, Editor, an exper ienced and award-winning Senior Technical Communicator specializing in fundraising packages, direct sales copy, web content, press releases, movie reviews and hi-tech documentation. He has worked as a Technical Writer for Fortune 100 corporations since 1999. He is the Editor of PRIVATE TUTOR FOR SAT MATH SUCCESS web site http://www.privatetutor.us

In addition to being an Ezine Articles Expert Author, he is also a Senior Member of the Society for Technical Communication (STC), and a Member of American Writers and Artists Institute (AWAI).

A true movie fan since he was a child, Akinci provides FREE MOVIE PLOT IDEAS every day of the year at SCRIPT BOILER. Visit http://scriptboiler.blogspot.com today.

You are most welcomed to visit his COPYWRITING WEB SITE http://www.Writer111.com for more inf ormation on his multidisciplinary background, writing career, and client testimonials.


Author:: Ugur Akinci
Keywords:: Hollywood,Movies,movie plots,Films,ugur akinci,Writer,Editor,People Will Talk,Joseph L. Mankiewicz
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Whale Rider

My view of the Movie The Whale Rider is a very personal one. I am indeed giving it all the meaning it has for me. As a New Zealander living in the heart of America, the home of patriotism, I am going to indulge myself for a moment and put on my patriotic hat. The Whale Rider is pure New Zealand. If you are willing to let it in, and yes, it is very deep you will recognize it is also pure Jesus. Its so simple you could miss it, but then so is A Course In Miracles until you experience the purity of its message. They are one and the same.

Having lived on the ocean in New Zealand I have spent hours upon hours playing with the dolphins, admiring the regal Orcas, and just once I got to cradle a baby pilot whale for a whole evening as its entire pod of 100 whales beached near my home. I havent swum in the oc ean with a whale but I have heard their call and witnessed their magnificence with my own eyes. Someone once told me that swimming with dolphins is like dancing with angels (believe me it is); swimming with a whale, they tell me, is like meeting God. I can say that having experienced the grace of God through my own awakening, I believe that this Movie is a rare gift. It takes place in a small village on the eastern most point of New Zealand, the first place on earth to see the light of day, and its essence is my gift to you, just as its a gift to me, because it reflects my own awakening, and my own call to play my part as Savior of the world.

Keisha Castle-Hughes, the young 12 year-old Maori girl with who plays the part of Pai was discovered at a school audition. Her debut performance is breath taking. Her devastation is heart wrenching and her determination, perseverance, forgiveness and unshakeable trust in the communication she receives from the whales (the Holy Spirit, her own Whole Mind) is nothing short of unconditional love. She is the Christ. She knows she IS the one. Her strength comes from within and she shines with an innocence that is irresistible. At the same time she demonstrates through her own individual responsibility the shear brilliance of the simplicity of the second coming of Christ, in each of us.

Pai stands up to her grandfather with all the intensity of St. Francis walking barefoot into the Vatican and challenging the Pope. In her grandfather Koro, I recognize my own righteousness in holding onto MY plan and my own unwillingness to recognize my Savior. Pai can see, but he is blind. She never gives up on him no matter how many times he pushes her away. She cannot NOT be herself. I shared with Koro the devastation of failure that we all try to avoid, because it is the end of me, the death of my ego. When he is ready to know the truth it is revealed to him. But only when he is ready. He is reborn through her.

The message for me is clear dont let the world tell you who you are. As I listen to the voice for God; I stand in my own certainty of who I am. That is my declaration as Savior of the world. Like Pai, as I go home, I do indeed take everyone with me because having made my world I need only change my mind about the world, and everything goes home with me in my resurrection. A glorious ending inspires a new beginning.

I loved it. You will too. Watch it...now out on video or DVD.

Sue Maybury is the co-creator of The Miracle Times a spiritual Ezine inspired by teachers of God who are dedicated to sharing the experience of joyous awakening through A Course In Miracles. The Miracle Times: http://www.themiracletimes.com


Author:: Sue Maybury
Keywords:: Whale Rider the Movie, Whalerider, the Whalerider, keisha castle-hughes, new zealand Movies, Movie
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MASH (Season 8) DVD Review

Based on a Richard Hooker novel of the same name, MASH was released in 1970 as a full-length feature film by 20th Century Fox before experiencing widespread success as a groundbreaking television sitcom in the Fall of 1972. The show's brilliant integration of drama and comedy made it one of the most celebrated shows in TV history, culminating in an eleven year prime time series stint. The 1983 series finale of MASH made history as the program with the single largest audience in television history, beating out several SuperBowls and the fabled Who Shot J.R. episode of Dallas. With the proliferation of new television mediums, it's a record likely to never be broken

The sitcom is set in South Korea during American involvement in the Korea War (with M*A*S*H standing for Mobile Army Surgical Hospital). Buffered from the front lines by a mountain range and a minefield, the men and women of MASH were tasked with patching up wounded American soldiers. Unique to its genre, th e cast of MASH was unusually large. Surgeons Dr. Benjamin Pierce (Alan Alda) and Dr. Trapper John McIntyre (Wayne Rogers) play the roles of excellent doctors who enjoy women and booze, while Dr. Frank Burns (Larry Linville) and Nurse Practitioner Margaret Hot Lips Houlihan (Loretta Swit) play foil to the two men's shenanigans (due to a contract dispute, Rogers' character was later replaced by Dr. B.J. Hunnicutt - played by Mike Farrell). The character of Frank Burns was also later replaced by Dr. Charles Emerson Winchester (David Ogden Stiers)

Corporal Max Klinger (Jamie Farr) provides comic relief with his early attempts to procure a discharge by dressing in women's clothing, and Father Francis Mulcahy (William Christopher) adds flavor to a diverse cast of characters. Also rounding out the cast are Lt. Col. Henry Blake (McLean Stevenson), Corporal Walter Radar O'Reilly (Gary Burghoff), and Col. Sherman Potter (Harry Morgan)

The MASH (Season 8) DVD features a num ber of hilarious episodes including the season premiere Too Many Cooks in which Private Paul Conway boosts the morale of the MASH unit by whipping up gourmet meals in the mess hall. Only Colonel Potter, beset by his own personal problems, fails to enjoy the new atmosphere Other notable episodes from Season 8 include Private Finance in which a South Korean mother misinterprets Klinger's true intentions toward her daughter when he offers her financial aid, and Stars and Stripes in which conflict comes between B.J. and Charles when they're tasked with writing an article on patient they recently saved

Below is a list of episodes included on the MASH (Season 8) DVD:

Episode 170 (Too Many Cooks) Air Date: 09-17-1979
Episode 171 (Are You Now, Margaret?) Air Date: 09-24-1979
Episode 172 (Guerilla My Dreams) Air Date: 10-01-1979
Episode 173 (Good-Bye Radar: Part 1) Air Date: 10-08-1979
Episode 174 (Good-Bye Radar: Part 2) Air Date: 10-15-1979
Episode 1 75 (Period of Adjustment) Air Date: 10-22-1979
Episode 176 (Nurse Doctor) Air Date: 10-29-1979
Episode 177 (Private Finance) Air Date: 11-05-1979
Episode 178 (Mr. and Mrs. Who?) Air Date: 11-12-1979
Episode 179 (The Yalu Brick Road) Air Date: 11-19-1979
Episode 180 (Life Time) Air Date: 11-26-1979
Episode 181 (Dear Uncle Abdul) Air Date: 12-03-1979
Episode 182 (Captain's Outrageous) Air Date: 12-10-1979
Episode 183 (Stars and Stripes) Air Date: 12-17-1979
Episode 184 (Yessir, That's Our Baby) Air Date: 12-31-1979
Episode 185 (Bottle Fatigue) Air Date: 01-07-1980
Episode 186 (Heal Thyself) Air Date: 01-14-1980
Episode 187 (Old Soldiers) Air Date: 01-21-1980
Episode 188 (Morale Victory) Air Date: 01-28-1980
Episode 189 (Lend a Hand) Air Date: 02-04-1980
Episode 190 (Goodbye, Cruel World) Air Date: 02-11-1980
Episode 191 (Dreams) Air Date: 02-18-1980
Episode 192 (War Co-Respondent) Air Date: 03-03-1980
Epis ode 193 (Back Pay) Air Date: 03-10-1980
Episode 194 (April Fools) Air Date: 03-24-1980

About the Author

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of the MASH (Season 8) DVD.


Author:: Britt Gillette
Keywords:: mash season 8 dvd review
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The Dick Van Dyke Show (Season 3) DVD Review

In the Fall of 1961, CBS first aired The Dick Van Dyke Show, one of funniest sitcoms in television history. Similar to I Love Lucy, but featuring more docile and less eccentric characters, the show became a mainstay in the top 10 Nielsen ratings for its first four seasons. When the show's ratings slipped in the fifth season, the network cancelled the show. But in the four decades since, The Dick Van Dyke Show has continued to entertain its fans and their children (and their children's children) via syndicated re-runs

The Dick Van Dyke Show is centered around the life of Rob Petrie (Dick Van Dyke), a family man living in suburban New York. As the head writer for the fictional Alan Brady Show, he works with co-writers Buddy Sorrell (Morey Amsterdam) and Sally Rogers (Rose Marie). Rob's work life is always interesting given Buddy's constant wisecracks, Sally's never-ending search for a husband, and the trio's unified harassment of Alan Brady's brother-in-law, Mel Cooley (Richard Deacon). At home, Rob's loving yet overly-nervous wife Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) stays at home with the couple's son Ritchie (Larry Mathews). Surrounded by all these unique characters, Rob is always embroiled in someone's scheme, fantasy, or shenanigan

The Dick Van Dyke Show (Season 3) DVD features a number of hilarious episodes including the season premiere That's My Boy??? in which Rob recounts the story of Ritchie's birth. When he and Laura brought Ritchie home from the hospital, they thought he looked different so they began to believe they brought home the wrong baby. After putting their heads together with another couple, they determine that the baby they brought home is theirs after all Other notable episodes from Season 3 include The Third One from the Left in which Rob tries to prevent a guest star from falling in love with him, and My Part-Time Wife in which Laura drives Rob crazy while filling in at his office

Below is a list of episodes inclu ded on The Dick Van Dyke Show (Season 3) DVD:

Episode 64 (That's My Boy???) Air Date: 09-25-1963
Episode 65 (The Masterpiece) Air Date: 10-02-1963
Episode 66 (Laura's Little Lie) Air Date: 10-09-1963
Episode 67 (Very Old Shoes, Very Old Rice) Air Date: 10-16-1963
Episode 68 (Uncle George) Air Date: 10-23-1963
Episode 69 (Too Many Stars) Air Date: 10-30-1963
Episode 70 (Who and Where Was Antonio Stradivarius?) Air Date: 11-06-1963
Episode 71 (Big Max Calvada) Air Date: 11-20-1963
Episode 72 (The Ballad of the Betty Lou) Air Date: 11-27-1963
Episode 73 (Turtles, Ties, and Toreadors) Air Date: 12-04-1963
Episode 74 (The Sound of Trumpets of Conscience Falls Deafly on a Brain That Holds Its Ears) Air Date: 12-11-1963
Episode 75 (The Third One from the Left) Air Date: 12-18-1963
Episode 76 (The Alan Brady Show Presents) Air Date: 01-01-1964
Episode 77 (My Husband is the Best One) Air Date: 01-08-1964
Episode 78 (Happy Birthday and Too Many More) Air Date: 02-05-1964
Episode 79 (The Lady and the Tiger and the Lawyer) Air Date: 01-15-1964
Episode 80 (The Life and Love of Joe Coogan) Air Date: 01-22-1964
Episode 81 (A Nice, Friendly Game of Cards) Air Date: 01-29-1964
Episode 82 (The Brave and the Backache) Air Date: 02-12-1964
Episode 83 (The Pen is Mightier Than the Mouth) Air Date: 02-19-1964
Episode 84 (My Part-Time Wife) Air Date: 02-26-1964
Episode 85 (Honeymoons are for the Lucky) Air Date: 03-04-1964
Episode 86 (How to Spank a Star) Air Date: 03-11-1964
Episode 87 (The Plots Thicken) Air Date: 03-18-1964
Episode 88 (Scratch My Car and Die) Air Date: 03-25-1964
Episode 89 (The Return of Edwin Carp) Air Date: 04-01-1964
Episode 90 (October Eve) Air Date: 04-08-1964
Episode 91 (Dear Mrs. Petrie, Your Husband is in Jail) Air Date: 04-15-1964
Episode 92 (My Neighbor's Husband's Other Life) Air Date: 04-22-1964
Episode 93 (I'd Rat her Be Bald Than Have No Head At All) Air Date: 04-29-1964
Episode 94 (Teacher's Petrie) Air Date: 05-13-1964

About the Author

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of The Dick Van Dyke Show (Season 3) DVD.


Author:: Britt Gillette
Keywords:: dick van dyke show season 3 dvd review
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

X Factor 3 Preview Kerry McGregor

Kerry McGregor
Manager Sharon Osbourne
Odds 28/1 (Outright), 10/1 (25 & Over Winner)

Kerry McGregor is 31 years old, from West Lothian and is a full time single mother to 18 month year old Joshua. She is a paraplegic and uses a wheelchair and crutches after breaking her back at the age of 13 after falling out of a tree.

She is very close to her mother who she describes as her backbone'. Her father was run over and killed by a drink driver when she was six years old. Her experiences and courage was rewarded with a Child of Achievement Award in 1988.

Kerry comes from a musical background and is no stranger to the music industry. Her grandfather was known as the Scottish Bing Crosby and she entered the Song for Europe, coming second. Her entry Yodel In The Canyon Of Love, lost out to Katrina And The Waves.

Kerry has also had a record deal in the past and reached number 21 in the charts with a song called Freedom. She has also had some acting experience and played Carol-Ann in the Channel 4 show The Book Group in 2003 and featured in a Radio 3 play called Peeling which was about disabilities.

Kerry auditioned for the X Factor in Glasgow and sung Maria McKee's Show Me Heaven. All three judges were impressed by her with Simon Cowell complimenting her with: good voice, good song choice - yes. Louis Walsh was also convinced and said: good voice sounds like you mean it. Yes and Sharon Osbourne made it three in a row with: great voice, great face. Yes.

At bootcamp Kerry sang Something by The Beatles and You Don't Have To Say You Love Me by Dusty Springfield. Judge Mark Hudson described her as beautiful inside and out but fellow critic Adrian Williams did not think she was as good as the contestants. Sharon agreed with this sentiment but argued she had a great aura about her.

The performance that convinced the judges that Kerry was worthy of inclusion in the final 12 was at the judge's house where she sang You've Got A Friend by Carole King.

Adrian said that he had been negative about her during the bootcamp but this this performance had persuaded him she was finals material. He felt this was the best he'd seen her perform and while he still thought she was not as good a singer as some of the other female contestants he liked her. Sharon said Kerry's eyes sparkled while she sang and she was won over by her lust for life.

David Walker runs Kerry McGregor and free bets websites.


Author:: David Walker
Keywords:: x factor, free x factor bets, x factor betting, x factor odds
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Monday, July 30, 2012

Cartoons Superman

The Superman character was probably one of the most famous creations in history. Superman first appeared in comic books. But it wasn't until Superman Cartoons were made that people really got the chance to see the man of steel in action. We're going to briefly review the history and characters of the Superman cartoon.

It wasn't until 1941 that the first Superman cartoon came to be. Paramount pictures, that year, released a series of animated Cartoons that were based on the Superman comic book that was already so popular. The first nine of these Cartoons were produced by Fleischer Studios. But they didn't last long. In 1942 Fleischer Studios bit the dust and became Famous Studios which went on to produce eight more of these Cartoons. At the time, these were the biggest budgeted Cartoons around. This was during what was called the Golden Age of American Animation.

The Fleischer brothers originally tried to discourage Paramount from doing the Cartoons by telling them that it would cost over $100,000 per episode. At the time, that was an amazing amount of money that was about four times the cost of a typical cartoon for the times. But Paramount wasn't about to be scared off. They saw something big here and agree to the budget. The Fleischer brothers were now committed to the project.

The first cartoon in the series, which was simply called Superman, was first shown on September 26, 1941. That year it was nominated for an Oscar for best animated short subject. It did not win, however, losing to Lend A Paw, which was a Walt Disney cartoon. But it didn't matter. Superman had left his mark on the cartoon world.

Unfortunately for Max and Dave Fleischer, after the first nine Cartoons< /a>, Paramount took over production and tossed the brothers out into the street. These were very brutal times. The look of the cartoon itself didn't change but the stories did. The first nine Cartoons had a more science fiction feel to them as Superman was seen battling robots, creatures from outer space and a number of other things you don't normally find walking around our planet. After the change, however, Superman started to focus on what was called World War II Propaganda.

The first nine Cartoons also used the classic opening lines from the Superman radio series that we all came to know and love. The last eight chan ged these lines drastically until they were no longer recognizable. But the Cartoons themselves were still very entertaining.

The early voice of Superman was supplied by Bud Collyer. He also was the voice of Superman during the radio series. The voice of Lois Lane was supplied by Joan Alexander who also played the same role in the radio series along side of Collyer.

After the 17 shorts, the series was cancelled, but that wasn't the end of Superman. Other Cartoons featuring the man of steel were to come, which included the 1990s animated Superman series and the feature length cartoon, Sky Captain and the World Of Tom orrow.

Michael Russell
Your Independent guide to Cartoons


Author:: Michael Russell
Keywords:: Cartoons
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Movie Review Bishop's Wife (1947)

BISHOP'S WIFE turned out to be the opposite of everything that I thought the title implied.

Honestly, I thought this would be a movie in which Cary Grant character would be falling in love with a bishop's wife and creating untold complications along the way. Not quite.

In this very romantic Christmas film directed by Henry Koster, Cary Grant actually plays Dudley, an angel on earth and a creature far removed from carnal desires and preoccupations. He materializes as a response to the deepest prayers of the episcopal Bishop Henry Brougham (David Niven) who begs for some divine guidance to solve his vexing problem and perhaps he gets more guidance than he ever wished for.

Bishop Brougham's problem is a self-created one -- and isn't that the case for most of our problems anyway? The Bishop is determined to build a cathedral but he is far short of the money required to start and finish the imposing edifice.

One wealthy widow who could help him is Mrs. H amilton (Gladys Cooper), a super rich matron living in a marble mansion as opulent as a national museum. However, the hard-as-nails Mrs. Hamilton would give the money if and only if her late husband is immortalized by a gilded and oversized inscription at the cathedral and a portrayal of his likeness on a glass window, him posing as St. George.

Descending to earth just before Christmas, on a snowy night filled with good cheer and Christmas carols, angel Dudley helps a blind man cross the street by stopping the oncoming cars mysteriously within inches of hitting them.

He helps everyone he meets in unexpected ways. After Dudley shares the amazing story of an ancient Roman coin with a non-believer professor who gave it to the Bishop as a worthless piece, the aging academic starts writing the history book of his life.

Dudley helps Bishop's wife Julia (Loretta Young) lighten up and start enjoying life without pretense. He even teaches the taxi cab driver Sylvest er how to pick up ice skating and welcome such unexpected moment of recreation.

Soon Dudley becomes friends with and a source of inspiration for everyone in Bishop's household, including the maids, Bishop's assistant and his little girl except, that is, Bishop himself.

Bishop has initially even doubts believing that Dudley is a real angel. But after a visually arresting scene at the library, a scene that involves opening and closing of the entrance door, Bishop is stunned by the unequivocal realization that, yes, Dudley is indeed an angel.

Yet the sour and somber Bishop still cares more about his grandiose plans to build a cathedral than opening his heart to the love and adoration of his wife and others around him. He is scared that the angel is there not to help but to steal his wife and perhaps his job as well. That is, although a pure man of God, Bishop is the last one to enjoy the fruits of this miraculous response to his own prayers.

In a climat ic scene, Dudley manages to thaw the ice sheath around Mrs. Hamilton's heart and transform her from a cold woman who cares only about the pride of her family legacy to a genuinely warm and repentant woman who decides to donate her wealth not to build a cathedral but to feed the poor and tend to their needs.

Christmas night arrives and the Bishop wants Dudley to get out of his life for good. Film ends with Bishop delivering not the sermon he had prepared for the occasion but the one Dudley had the typeWriter wrote automatically after sending Bishop's assistant to her home early on Christmas Eve.

As the Christmas night sermon at the church envelopes the parishioners (including the non-believer Professor) with its magic, Dudley walks away in the snow, leaving behind a world in which a lot of people have realized the love that they were missing in their lives and appreciated the value of immaterial things like courage, joy and compassion.

A very delightful film with a few tear-jerker scenes where you'd better have your handkerchief or box of Kleenexes somewhere close by. The ever-handsome Grant proves that he can be as captivating playing an angel as when he is playing a cat burglar (To Catch a Thief), a CIA agent (Notorious) or a submarine captain (Operation Petticoat).

An 8 out of 10.

OTHER NOTES:

> The genius non-trailer trailer that comes with the DVD is a smart delightful surprise you should not miss.

> Written by Leonardo Bercovici and Robert E. Sherwood

> Originally David Niven was going to play the angel and Grant the Bishop. Upon Grant's suggestion, the two male leads switched roles before the shooting began.

Ugur Akinci, Ph.D. is a Creative CopyWriter, Editor, an experienced and award-winning Senior Technical Commu nicator specializing in fundraising packages, direct sales copy, web content, press releases, movie reviews and hi-tech documentation. He has worked as a Technical Writer for Fortune 100 corporations since 1999.

He is the Editor of PRIVATE TUTOR FOR SAT MATH SUCCESS web site http://www.privatetutor.us

In addition to being an Ezine Articles Expert Author, he is also a Senior Member of the Society for Technical Communication (STC), and a Member of American Writers and Artists Institute (AWAI).

A true movie fan since he was a child, Akinci provides FREE MOVIE PLOT IDEAS every day of the year at SCRIPT BOILER. Visit http://scriptboiler.blogspot.com today.

You are most welcomed to visit his COPYWRITING WEB SITE http://www.Writer111.com for more information on his multidisciplinary backgro und, writing career, and client testimonials.


Author:: Ugur Akinci
Keywords:: Hollywood,Movies,movie plots,Films,ugur akinci,Writer,Editor,bishop's wife,cary grant
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

The All American Idol

Who is Simon Phillip Cowell? What does American Idol and Nasty have in common?

Brutal honesty comes to mind.

He is known as Mr. Nasty or Judge Dread in England. Mr. Cowell was born in Brighton, England. He is as short as you have heard it. It is true he stands only 5' 9 (1.75 m) tall as so many contestants have said on Americas American Idol.

For a high school drop out at the age of 16 he sure learned some smarts in the business savvy sectors of the Entertainment industry. Working his way up the latter as a mail boy at EMI.

He is most recently noticed as one of the judges on American Idol and is quoted after being asked if he feels guilty about his harsh criticisms towards the contestants? Conwell said, No, what I am doing is kind by telling people who are useless 'Do some thing that you're good at'. So I would only feel guilt if I misled somebody who was terrible. We've done three seasons of American Idol and by now it is safe to assume that most people know that you have to be able to sing.

But people turn up who can't sing a note and yet they believe they are the Second Coming. Sit in these auditions for three weeks and hear I Believe I Can Fly out of tune for the millionth time, YOU try and be nice

When I first saw Mr. Foul on American Idol I had the same perception of his demeanor at first glance as well but lets be honesty here for a moment; do you remember the iniquitous Keith who sang the dreadful depiction of 'Like a Virgin' last year?

Well Mr. Cowell said, Keith, last year I described someone as being the worst singer in America. I think you're possibly the worst singer in the world ... I've never, ever heard anything like that in my life, ever.

True, and true again. So what does this say when shows like American Idol make unTalented nobodys into somebodys?

Just imagine as a judge you are induced by unTalented, fashion victims, make-up whores, and those working straight out of a vacuum bag sing a song that needs a serious tune-up. I get why he is short tempered and caste as the Meany, but if you want to be taking seriously these contestants need to really work on presenting themselves as a serious artist. Most of them are really in denial and deluding themselves.

With that said, still over exposed contestants unTalented and Talented gather their sleep bags and head back for more and more mockery. Last weeks episode in Chicago took a spin for some unleashing diabolical, explosive attitudes on the judges.

Whats worse is the unTalented nobody turned somebody Keith (the Like a Virgin singer last year) and William Hung is only sending a message to Limelight the unTalented. This will do nothing and you are only destined to open more doors and statements by Mr. Cowell.

He said, When you celebrate awfulness it puts you in a slightly uncomfortable position, then, adding he was nervous that we're going to get people coming on the show next year that want to be bad.

Yes Mr. Cowell, you are right, and right on! Perhaps a bit presumptuous but again I pegged that his demeanor won him a spot on American Idol for mere Entertainment. It is as sad as that sounds, because Americans love to watch those plummet down the drain. Absolutely yes, that is TV, and that is Entertainment today; but isnt that sad? Isnt it sad that we seek entertainment by someone elses demise, embarrassment, hurt, and ridicule?

In last week's Chicago audition, a BBW (Big Beautiful Woman) with an outstanding voice got a thumbs-up from the judges and then the paramount provocateur Simon Cowell suggested the show might consider a bigger stage. Shame on you Simon! She had the looks but some deem she needed a total body work-out for this industry. Mr. Cowell have you heard of Aretha Franklin? Would he have said the same insult behind her back only to be aired and seen by millions? Is this the industries perception of being All Over Talented?

Also in Chicago, a man with a girly type voice got Conwells vicious recommendation: Cowell said, Shave your beard and try wearing a dress . Sorry, but I really have to agree with Cowell again. What the heck was he thinking, this show is American Idol, meaning must sell records to those tinny boppers, and I am sorry but I seriously doubt that a cross dresser would be the next American Idol. To add insult to injury his voice needed some seriou s tweaking, and I am being nice. My advice to him is doing drag, you can make money and not let your Talent go to waste, but for the next American IdolNOT!

Lets be fair and give Mr. Nasty, I mean Mr. Cowell the benefit of the doubt. American Idol is pure entertainment. To sit and judge Talent takes patience and juicy bias. Its obvious that many couch potatoes gulp down the idiotic stratagem.

VRONIQUE MARIE KETTLER` is Editor-in-Chief for She Unlimited Magazine. http://www.sheunlimited.com and heads up the community at http://www.sheunlimited.com/forums

Marie also contributes to various magazines and newspapers.

MARIE VRONIQUE is committed to making a difference. Making a difference in the Women sectors online, media and print.


Author:: Veronica Kettler
Keywords:: American Idol. Paula Abdul, Idol, Chicago, Women, Talent, sing. entertainment, Mr. Nasty, Simon
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Munich The Movie

During the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, eleven Israeli athletes are taken hostage and murdered by a Palestinian terrorist group known as Black September. In retaliation, the Israeli government recruits a group of Mossad agents to track down and execute those responsible for the attack. The movie recounts their brutal acts, but much more important, their Jewish ambivalence toward these acts. Some general reflections are in order.

First, Golda Meir, former Israeli Prime Minister, once said to Egyptian President Anwar Saddat just before Israeli-Egyptian peace talks: We can forgive you Arabs for killing our sons. But we will never forgive you for making us kill yours. That is the crux of the movie. Five Israelis volunteer to avenge the murder of their fellow Israelis, but some of them quickly begin to feel a sense of moral repugnance at having to take the life of another human being, even an enemy. Munich presents us with their differing views of Retribution, allowing u s to make up our own minds while we watch their human struggles at what they are called upon to do. You can see them develop as moral actors who are confronted with their consciences before each and every murder. In a movie review last December in the New York Times, Manohla Dargis opines: they are never more human than when faced with the killing of another person.

Second, the Talmud talks a lot about an eye for an eye, and there are those who use this phrase as a justification for all acts of revenge. In fact, the modern State of Israel was created precisely so that we Jews would always have a homeland with an army, so that no one ever again could spill the blood of Jews with impunity. Before the Hoocaust (Shoah), Jewish blood was cheap and could be shed by Nazis and Arabs without their worrying about being hunted down and punished. Now, thank God, that is no longer true. The enemies of the Jewish State now know that they will be hunted down and held accountable for each and every murderous action or suicide bombing anywhere in the world. Now that we have the State of Israel, Jewish blood is no longer cheap. But please note, the Rabbis of the Talmud never interpreted this text as meaning precise retributive justice, rather they understood the punishment for blinding someone to be a monetary one instead. Many pages in the Talmud explicate how exactly we estimate the value of an eye or a leg or a limb that is destroyed by an enemy, and what needs to be done to rectify the damage. Interpreting this text in a much different way, Rev. Martin Luther King once said: a world which carries out literally the doctrine of an eye for an eye will lead to a world with no eyes, and no vision. And of course he is right.

Finally, at our Passover seder, during the recitation of the Ten Plagues, we dip out ten drops of wine from our cups. We do this to echo this Rabbinic conversation between God and the Heavenly Angels who were singing and dancing af ter the Egyptians were killed at the Red Sea: God: why are you rejoicing? Angels: because the Egyptian enemies of the Israelites have been killed, that is why we are singinging dancing. God: But how can you rejoice? These Egyptians too are My creatures! And so, we spill out sweet wine, in memory of our enemies, for they too are Gods creations. We are the only people I know that marks the death of enemies with a special ritual. No other nation in the world is as sensitive as we Jews are to the pain that we are sometimes forced to inflict on those who would try to destroy us, and to the value of human life. I have a friend who is extremely close with the Head of the Israeli Air Force. The general said to my friend last week that many of his pilots categorically refuse to kill innocent civilians, rather they must have irrefutable evidence that their bombs will fall on adult combatants or they will stay home. Whatever your opinions on this may be, you cannot help but be impress ed as I am by the moral vigor with which they approach their military service.

I cannot help but wonderwhere are others with this same attitude and respect for human life? Where are the other mothers and fathers whose sons feel the same ambiguity as our Israelis do? How long will it take before Israel can talk with neighbors who will share their concerns about the fragility and the sacredness of human life? I believe that there must be a sense of fear and trembling when we talk about the killing of another human being, and it is this precise feeling which comes across loudly and clearly in Spielbergs movie. Go see it and decide for yourself. It is a hard movie to watch, and well worth it.

Dr. Mel Glazer is a Grief Recovery Specialist working in private practice with grievers all across America. You can visit his website at http://www.yourgriefmatters.com. Dr. Glazer has been a Rabbi, Author, and Speaker for over thirty years, he is recognized as a pioneer in the art of using our life-losses to help us learn life-lessons.

We only uncover what is truly important about ourselves by how we respond to the losses in our lives, and so each loss becomes our cherished teacher. Some examples of loss include:the death of a loved one, or a less-than-loved-one; divorce; serious physical, mental or emotional illness; financial distress; the end of a serious relationship; when a child leaves home for college; and even the death of a pet. Each loss creates a grief reaction, and we must be able to complete our relationship with our loss before we can move past it. He is widely published: When Death Visits A Jewish Home: 99 Actions For Mourners (2006), and his upcoming book, And God Created Hope: How Our Favorite Bible Stories Lead Us From Mourning To Morning (2007).


Author:: Dr. Mel Glazer
Keywords:: Spielberg, Munich, Holocaust, State of Israel, Retribution, Vengeance
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Review of Hells Kitchen

Hells Kitchen, a cooking-based reality television show, is most known for its crass and cacophonous British chef Gordon Ramsay. The US version of Hell's Kitchen follows in the footsteps of the UK television series, the original Hells Kitchen,which was broadcast in the UK in 2004. The first American season (the show is now in its second season) premiered on FOX in 2005, with Season Two premiering in June of 2006. It has since been announced that a third season of the show will air on FOX in the Summer of 2007.

The premise of the show features twelve contestants (with restaurant experience ranging from executive chef to waiter) who are competing to own their own million dollar restaurant. The contestant group features men and women of all ages, some who have been cooking in top American restaurants and others who have been cooking only for their families. Friction and drama occurs largely based upon this wide range of experience and dueling egos, but is also exacerbate d by the rages and incessant insults doled out by head chef Ramsay.

As with the British show, the contestants are divided up into a red team and the blue team and compete in a series of cooking challenges, ranging from creating a five-course meal from last evenings leftovers to setting the perfect five-star restaurant table in the smallest amount of time. Each week, the best member from the losing team during the latest service period (best as determined by Ramsay) is asked to nominate two of their fellow teammates for elimination; one of these two is sent home by Gordon Ramsay.

The second season of Hells Kitchen featured two teams divided by gender. The winner was promised an executive chef position at the billion dollar Red Rock Resort Spa and Casino, as well as a financial interest in the restaurant.

Despite its popularity, critics and audiences alike have panned the show, citing that the drama is based solely on Ramsay's insults and his ability to humi liate both contestants and restaurant patrons.

Find more out about Hell's Kitchen and the entire reality t.v. world at http://www.new-reality-Tv.com.


Author:: Edward Charkow
Keywords:: Hells Kitchen
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Courage on United Flight 93

Ive read various theories about the final minutes of United Flight 93. But for me there is only one certain truth. The courageous actions of its passengers.

Whether or not we think a Movie should have been made about this flight doesnt change the fact that its part of our American history. Our national narrative. The unfolding saga in the war against terrorism. A war that often seems without obvious rules and clearly against an enemy without country or ethical boundaries.

Its certainly not the first time that Hollywood made a Movie depicting a national tragedy. The same could be said for numerous books and songs. We seem t o be a people who like to record our events and feelings about those events.

Without question the actual details of those final minutes can only be guessed. Phone conversations between passengers and relatives tell us passengers became aware their hijacked plane was likely to be used as a terrorists weapon. And . . . that they must do something.

So, the courage of everyday people is told in a Movie some refuse to see, some feel they must see, some criticize, some praise.

And what of courage?

While there are numerous stories of courage described in the Bible, the one which comes to my thought first is David battling and conquering Goliath. David was a shepherd-boy who volunteered to do what trained soldiers feared they couldnt.

Ive always loved this story. The setting was army against army. An enormous and frightful soldier from the enemys camp, Goliath, made a challenge for one man to fight him. David wasnt in the army. But his brothers were. Their father had sent David to his brothers army camp to bring food.

He was obedient. He wasnt looking for fame and glory. Davids noble desire was to help and he believed with all his heart he could.

At first the army leader questioned Davids ability to face such an experienced soldier since David was a mere boy. He said, You cant go and fight this Philistine. Youre too young and inexperienced and hes been at this fighting business since before you were born. Yet leading spirituality author, Mary Baker Eddy wrote, individuals strength is in proportion to their courage.

What kind of courage did this young boy have, which I believe was also the kind of courage Eddy was speaking of? Not animal courage often flaunted by impetuosity, brashness or daring. But moral courage, exhibited by Davids fortitude, determination, and undaunted spirit.

And its these qualities of moral courage that I have no doubt strengthened the hearts and emboldened the actions of passengers on United Flight 93. Qualities that must surely be part of the foundation of all right thinking and acting.

What greater actions are there than to do what is right? Actions impelled by pure and selfless motives. Not prompted by ego or inspired by grandeur of self.

Do you think such qualities are reserved for the few?

With God the Father-Mother of all, my hope and expectation is that surely all of His children have all they need at every moment. Would not this include moral courage as an ability that is instilled in each of us by God? Completely independent of and unlimited by physical prowess.

Moral courage guiding our thoughts, decisions, and actions shows us how to be better men and women. Gives us the strength to overcome seemingly overwhelming human odds . Enables us to fight the good fight.

I have no doubt the passengers on Flight 93 fought the good fight. Theres no question their actions were compelled by moral courage. I deeply wish the outcome of their success could have resulted in their lives continuing with their loved ones. But their example of courage lives on.

Their example assures you and me that we are also armored in the strength of moral courage. That we can go forward through our lives prepared to battle and disarm any Goliath.

Whether or not everyone goes to see the Movie of United 93 doesnt stop us all from honoring and remembering its passengers. Everyday people with moral courage. Courage we can discover within ourselves. Courage of better men and women who people a better world.

Copyright 2006 Annette Bridge s

Annette Bridges is a freelance writer and Religion & Spirituality Forum columnist for United Press International. http://www.upi.com She lives in Tioga, Texas with her husband, John. Visit her website at http://www.annettebridges.com and send her an email at txfsm1@gte.net copyright 2006 by Annette Bridges.


Author:: Annette Bridges
Keywords:: moral courage, United Flight 93, selfless motives, right acting
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Matrix Revolutions Eats Its Own Fans

Don't get me wrong: I really like Matrix Revolutions for its powerful scenes and its dialogue and never-seen-before battles. It's one of the finest pieces of film history.

But what's wrong with Matrix Revolutions then?

I reproach the Movie for its lack of answers. Answers to questions that Matrix Reloaded raised (and seemed to promise to answer in Revolutions). Dude, where is my matrix?

Imagine you make a Movie and suddenly your hero has telekinetic powers: He stops 4 incoming war machines just by thinking it. Wow, that is a twist.

Matrix fans around the globe discussed for MONTHS how this was possible and what would the twists be that the Wachowski brothers had up their sleeves for Revolutions?. Fans were looking for the same kind of twists we loved in Matrix 1 and Matrix 2.

The brothers created one of the biggest cliffhangers of Movie history. I think it was meant to electrify and I think the Wachowskis wanted to raise these forum discussions (they are computer fans themselves).

And how did the Wachowskis decide to resolve this riddle in Matrix Revolutions?

The fans expected something.....BIG.

But they got....Hollywood:

Neo: Tell me how I stopped 4 sentinels by thinking it...
Oracle: The power of the One extends beyond this world. It reaches from here all the way back to where it came from: The Source.

Ahem, excuse me?

THIS IS THE WHOLE ANSWER TO THE BIGGEST RIDDLE OF THE T RILOGY?

Even a third-rate scriptwriter could come up with something more intelligent after 5 minutes in the toilet (I am talking about the solution to the riddle here, not about the Movie as a whole.)

Shall the Oracle's words really explain why Neo is blind and can see everything in gold code? His ability to feel and to burst the sentinels? How he can be in the Matrix while not jacked-in?

No, the Oracle doesn't answer ANYTHING. She merely restates the question. She gives an answer like Why do you ask? or Because you are the One.

Now it seems that the Wachowskis were powerless against the united creativity of the Matrix community. This cliffhanger hanged the brothers. Victims of their own riddles. Discredited by the words of their own heroes.

More info about Matrix and others Movie you find at: http://www.infofilmes.com

Owner of http://www.infofilmes.com site.


Author:: Joel Alexandre
Keywords:: filmes matrix
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

The Death of G4

Id imagine it takes talent to ruin not one but two television networks at the same time, but the assholes at Comcast found a way to destroy both G4 and TechTV. After merging them together last year the network is now to be revamped to the point where fellow people like me who used to like the channel will now have to find something else to watch.

Over the years there was a slight connection between G4 and TechTV. ScreenSavers host Kevin Pereira made cameo appearances on Arena and TechTVs biggest show X-Play was video game related. When the two merged in Fall 2004 they formed G4TechTV. And I loved it.

Truth be told, both networks had serious gaps in their lineups that were now taken care of. The idea of two channels uniting as one was a fantasy for someone like me who could now watch virtually all of their programming. 5 months later it was still sweet. My new favorite show Judgment Day was on thrice a day and the channel still had the blend of half/technology h alf/video games working for them. Then something bad happened in March 2005TechTV went away.

G4 clung to TechTV to get their more viewed TV slot and then pushed them aside. It was just G4 again in March, and the executives started to butcher both TechTV and G4 programming. Filter, which at one point was on par with the best the channel had to offer, suffered the most. They stopped being a top-10 video game show and became a product show as well, enticing Movies, DVDs and music into the list. They fell so hard that on one episode I watched they were using quotes from IMDB that some user had written about some movie.

And they werent the only show to plummet in quality. X-Play had always pieced in a little comedy into their reviews. But away from TechTV on G4, it was too much to bear. They tried so damn hard to be funny that they werent actually reviewing games anymore as much as they were mocking themselves. Usually they would only preview a game if it was coming out months later. But on G4, previews became so abundant that they were literally previewing games that theyd review days later.

The ScreenSavers didnt resemble the technology-based show it once was and was easy to avoid for most people. A couple months later it became Attack of the Show, which was a better thought-out version of the ScreenSavers. However when Kevin Rose left, all the technology was completely void from the show and it was back to the old dribble.

There were several bright spots of the network that were shattered as well. Real Time presented by Coca-Cola was a Sunday block that would be based on a game franchise like Need For Speed or Metroid Prime. Then some of their shows like X-Play, Cinematech, Filter and Judgment Day would all have at least one appearance of that game in it. This was great since it was a chance to see vintage episodes of G4 shows. That too was taken away last year.

And while these half-assed ruined TV shows were sub par from where they once were, it was still a video game network. Or at least it was. The change began when the old digitized G4 logo became the graffiti-ish one we see today. It symbolized that the network was making even more changes that would inevitably screw with my life. One change that happened was the in-show popup adds for other G4 programming. In the old days they were practically subliminal and wouldnt actually affect my viewing of the show. Nowadays they take up 1/3 of the screen and make a loud screech sound each time the add appears and disappears.

In June they fell to the bottom of the television barrel- partial nudity. By that Im talking about the Whip Set, a block of lame car TV shows that not even Satan could condone. These lame shows were not only aimed at a completely different demogr aphic than every other G4 show but were worse than any of them. A similarity found in all the shows is that theres always a myriad of women in the picture who cant wait to get paid for what theyre doing. I had to watch in disappointment as I saw my favorite network slowly become MTV.

Another folly was Video Game Vixens, which was canceled in a heartbeat because even the morons running the channel knew they had created a disaster. The show was pretty much a beauty pageant of 3D women that appeared in video games. Just the idea was enough to make me want to vomit. Hosted by Hal Sparks (AKA the really not-funny annoying guy from I Love The 80s) the show may have not been on for long, but the sheer fact that it even existed was bad enough.

And dont get me started on Barbed Wire Biscuit. To truly signify their insanity, the network has gone after [adult swim with a late-night block that sucks more ass than a toilet seat. Aside from Brainiac (a quirky British science s how that picks up on the TechTV vibe) all the Barbed Wire shows blow. Happy-tree Friends is the worst collection of cartoons Ive ever seen- Id even take 12 .Oz Mouse (the worst [adult swim show ever) over this pile. Anime Unleashed has survived simply because anime works on Cartoon Network. And while CN may have the biggest anime titles on it, Anime Unleashed has some of the worst. To be fair Anime Unleashed has sucked going back to the TechTV days. Its too bad thats the one G4 show not affected by change.

The worst is yet to come. Long-time shows G4tv.com and Filter have been canceled, never to see a new episode again. At first I was shocked and wondered what was going to take over their old time slots. Then I learned that Star Trek Next Generation, which has been syndicated more times than Law and Order, would be coming to G4. This was baffling to me since it appeared that G4 was trying to shed its geeky image. But then I remembered that Star Trek is on SpikeTV and i t all became clear.

G4 is now trying to become a mans network, which explains why the Man Show and Whip Set have made their way onto the channel. Its no longer a network for games: its a network for crap. Even if you like the Man Show, you have to agree that it just doesnt belong. The higher powers at G4 also confessed that another name change for the network is likely in order and that G4 will become a thing of the past.

Folks, Star Trek isnt on G4 for one hour of the day or two. In a four-hour span in-between AOTS, the show will run for three hours. Shoot me now. Also Judgment Day seems to be getting the boot (I long feared this). After an episode airs on Sunday: January 8th at 1PM Eastern Time, the show will cease to exist on the TV schedule. Maybe it will return in the future, maybe not. Until then, G4 is dead to me.

David Pincus normally writes about Free Basketball Picks NBA.


Author:: David Pincus
Keywords:: G4,Techtv,G4 technology,Nba,bas ketball review,entertainment trend,Movies,tv productions
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Movie Review The Night of the Iguana (1964)

A timeless classic directed and co-written by John Houston from another great stage play by Tennessee Williams. Anthony Veiller was Houston's co-Writer. An unqualified 10 out of 10 despite the fact that it won no Oscars except for the Best Costume Design, Black-and-White for Dorothy Jeakins. Good for Jeakins. But the absence of Oscars for this film in the Best Acting, Best Writing and Best Directing categories is nothing short of a joke for the rest of us movie fans.

I'm aware that it is not polite to watch Movies for messages. (Use the Western Union instead! as the old joke goes.)

But I still think this one has a very clear core concept which is expressed by Deborah Kerr (playing Hannah Jelkes, a sensitive painter travelling the world with her poet grandfather and earning whatever she can by doing quick live sketches) towards the end of the Second Act:

Acceptance of life is surely the first requisite of living it.

The volatile trio of Richard Burto n (Rev. Dr. T. Lawrence Shannon), Deborah Kerr and Ava Gardner (Maxine Faulk) weave fiber by fiber this very humane and touching story of the fall and redemption of an Episcopalian pastor, of his desperate struggle to save his soul and find some solace other than alcohol.

By peeling off one layer of a man's soul after another, Tennessee Williams and John Houston treat us to the agony of Rev. Dr. T. Lawrence Shannon, a man caught in between the strict demands of his vocation as a man of God and the temptations of his flesh and mind as just an average creation of the same power. His unexpected deliverance is provided by Hannah Jelkes and Maxine Faulk whom he tries to control like all the others but fails -- for his own good.

The movie starts off with the motif of captivity at all levels. Parishioners are imprisoned by their blindness and rigidity. Rev. Shannon imprisoned by his own volcanic desires and disillusionment with his parish. And a wild iguana is forced to live a captive life, tethered to a wooden deck by the tight rope around its neck.

When that night of the iguana is over, they are all freed from their leashes and fears and limitations, including the iguana. That's the kind of life-altering night Tennessee Williams has brought to life for us. It is still jolting and liberating 42 years after the movie was released.

The story, at a realistic level (one of the two levels of existence brought up in the film), is not complicated at all. It is at the other and fantastic level that its time-release magic slowly unfolds like an intoxicating rose.

Rev. Shannon loses his job after accusing his parishioners with insincerity and shallowness and chasing them out of his church.

A few years later we see him as a tour guide down in Puerta Vallarta, Mexico, taking a group of elderly ladies on a sightseeing tour, to show them the wonders of God as explained by a man of God. However, he certainly is not fond of the o pen advances of one of the tour participants, the 17 year old Charlotte Goodall. That's after all how he got into trouble back home when another young amorous parishioner visited him at his church office. Although the Reverend first suggested they pray together by kneeling down, it soon led to other things that ended his church career.

The Reverend Shannon does whatever her can to keep Charlotte at an arms distance but she is the spoiled daughter of a very successful and rich man and she won't take no for an answer. As she pushes herself on the alcoholic Shannon, her secret admirer and tour leader Judith Fellowes (played like a hot knife through butter by Grayson Hall) throws a jealous fit and makes life sheer misery for the vulnerable Shannon.

Shannon is still trying to put his life together although he is firmly on the bottle, His internal circuitry is just too damaged to bear the high voltage of Fellowes's cruel attacks -- she threatens to have him arrested fo r seducing a minor as soon as they return to the USA. Unable to face the reality of her own attraction to the pretty dove Charlotte, Fellowes promises to destroy Shannon's second career and livelihood and looks like she is capable of carrying out her threat.

To make sure no such career-altering development takes place, Shannon hijacks the whole group to a mountain top vacation resort run by his old flame Maxine Faulk (Ava Gardner) who is a diamond in the rough, a vivacious woman with a coarse exterior but a lonely interior landscape. By stealing the distributor cap of the bus, he makes sure they won't be able to turn back but stay there with him for a while until perhaps Fellowes's ire is diminished to a more manageable level.

Shortly after, the group is joined by a travelling sketch artist Hannah Jelkes (Deborah Kerr) and her wheelchair-bound poet grandfather. They provide the gentle but solid ballast to balance the mercurial outbursts of Rev. Shannon and the e qually explosive Faulk.

The decisive scene arrives in the Second Act when Rev. Shannon is hog-tied to a hammock to help him overcome his alcohol withdrawal symptoms. Playing his redeeming angel, Hannah helps Shannon exorcise his devils by giving him an unforgettable lesson about love.

The scene starts with Rev. Shannon, very sure of the superiority of his own life exploits and experiences and still struggling to free himself from his hammock-jail, asks Hannah if she had ever in her life had any kind of love affair.

Two, she admits, to Shannon's surprise, and proceeds to recount the story of her two experiences both of which do not even remotely resemble what the earthy Shannon would normally define as a love affair.

In her first love experience Hannah was only sixteen. When a young man pressed his knee against hers in a Nantucket movie theater she screamed aloud and had the young man arrested. Later, she regretted and took her complaint back and said that since it was a Greta Garbo movie she was just excited and that's why she overreacted and created such a scene.

Her second love affair, which took place only 4 years earlier, is even more curious an episode. An Aussie underwear salesman whose sketch she drew at a Hong Kong hotel, asked her to join him for a ride in a sampan. She accepted the offer because he was such a gentle man and he tipped her very well for the sketch. In the boat the Aussie salesman got more agitated and asked her if she would do him a favor. He said he would turn his back to her if she would hand him her articles of clothing, which Hannah did.

At this point Shannon asks her what the salesman did with her clothing. Hannah says she has no idea because she also turned her back to him. And that was that. The end of the story.

Rev. Shannon is flabbergasted one more time, And here follows their unforgettable exchange:

Rev. Shannon: And that experience, you call it a...

Hann ah: Love experience. Yes I do Mr. Shannon.

Rev. Shannon: That sad little dirty little episode, you call a ...

Hannah: Sad, it certainly was for the poor little man but why you call it dirty?

Rev. Shannon: You mean you weren't disgusted by it?

Hannah: Nothing human disgusts me Mr. Shannon unless is is unkind or violent. And I told you how gentle he was. Apologetic. Shy. Really, very, well... delicate about it.

Then she cuts him loose, telling him that by listening to her story he is now exorcised from all the agitation in his heart. Why? Because now he is in a frame of mind where he is not just reacting to life but also accepting it. And she delivers yet another unforgettable line: Acceptance of life is surely the first requisite of living it.

Another development -- Hannah's grandfather dies after composing his best poem ever on the night of the iguana.

The next day, the group of traveling ladies leave Shannon with Faulk who offers hi m the management of the resort and the restaurant since she is so sick and tired of running the whole show on her own. For the first time she is enjoying the freedom of letting go of her control on her own affairs and livelihood and sharing it all with someone she loves. Besides, the presence of a man will help her business by making it attractive for female tourists, she figures.

Hannah is made the same offer but she prefers to move as the independent spirit that she is. She has liberated Shannon from his own devastating bonds, and her work is done. She moves on like the summer wind, with her drawing pad under her arm. We are pretty sure the elements will take care of her.

The last scene shows Shannon and Faulk resolving to start a new life together at the resort, hopefully a new life propelled with self-understanding, graced by tolerance, and illuminated with truth, a life of liberation where even the iguanas live free.

A must see for all movie lovers. It should be an indispensable item on every cinema fan's school curriculum.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ugur Akinci, Ph.D. is a Creative CopyWriter, Editor, an experienced and award-winning Senior Technical Communicator specializing in fundraising packages, direct sales copy, web content, press releases, movie reviews and hi-tech documentation. He has worked as a Technical Writer for Fortune 100 corporations since 1999.

He is the Editor of PRIVATE TUTOR FOR SAT MATH SUCCESS web site http://www.privatetutor.us

In addition to being an Ezine Articles Ex pert Author, he is also a Senior Member of the Society for Technical Communication (STC), and a Member of American Writers and Artists Institute (AWAI).

A true movie fan since he was a child, Akinci provides FREE MOVIE PLOT IDEAS every day of the year at SCRIPT BOILER. Visit http://scriptboiler.blogspot.com today.

You are most welcomed to visit his COPYWRITING WEB SITE http://www.Writer111.com for more information on his multidisciplinary background, writing career, and client testimonials.


Author:: Ugur Akinci
Keywords:: Hollywood,Movies,movie plots,Films,ugur akinci,Writer,Editor,the night of the iguana,john houston
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Jarhead DVD Review

Available in standard, HD DVD, and Collectors Editions, Jarhead brings the Gulf War to your living room. Although commonly compared to Movies such as Full Metal Jacket, Jarhead, placed in the genre of War, really doesnt compare simply due to the fact that the Movie is more of a telling of the life of a soldier rather than consisting of any action or actual battle scenes. Although true to the book and the source material, Jarheads advertising itself as a war flick turned off critics and Movie-goers who found the Movie to be quite different than expected.

However, Jarhead has still found its niche of fans. The Movie, if it had not wrongly been classified as a war Film, probably could have fared much better in theatres. Jake Gyllenhaal stars as a Marine from a long-standing Marine family who joins up to serve in the Gulf War. Opening with boot camp, the Movie depicts the life of a Marine as he goes through the verbal, mental, and physical punishment that is laid onto Ma rines in an attempt to properly prepare them for war. The Movie, as it intends to do, brings to life a side of the military that photojournalism, documentaries, and feature Films often fail to grasp.

Most war Films involve a character or characters triumphing over certain conflicts. They involve action, epic scenes of battle. But Jarhead contains no such scenes. There are no epic battles in the Film, but rather the story focuses more on the inner struggles of Jake and other Marines in his troop and tells the story of their experiences in the Gulf War. Not one shot is taken at an enemy by any in the troop in the entire Movie, but that doesnt stop the Movie from successfully developing a plot and delivering it in a interesting and engaging fashion.

However, a common criticism of the Movie is the way the plot ends. The way it unfolds is properly done and is very engaging, but the climax of the Movie is almost non-existant and there is virtually no resolution. The Mo vie has a sudden ending that results after a series of build-ups with no final conflict and resolution. This experience tends to leave viewers a bit disappointed.

The extras in the standard DVD edition tend to be pretty sparse. The Collectors Edition contains quite a few fantasy and deleted scenes along with interviews and documentaries. Overall, those who were dissatisfied with the Movie in theatres wont be tempted by the DVD, but those who enjoyed the Movie should still have enough reason to consider picking it up.

Jarhead DVD Review


Author:: Chris Shelton
Keywords:: Jarhead Dvd REVIEW, Dvd review, Movie review, Dvd, Movie, Film, Cinema,
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Saturday, July 28, 2012

Six Feet Under (Season 4) DVD Review

Nominated for 39 Emmys and 8 Golden Globes, including 3 (and one win) for Best TV Series - Drama, Six Feet Under is widely considered one of the best dramas currently on television. Creator Alan Ball, Oscar-winning screenwriter for American Beauty, introduces a series known for its darkly comical portrayal of a typical dysfunctional American family attempting to live their lives while running a business that thrives on death. Boasting a catchy main title theme song composed by Thomas Newman (brains behind the scores of Real Genius, Shawshank Redemption, American Beauty, Finding Nemo, and many others), Six Feet Under continues the long-running string of critically and popularly acclaimed original drama series created by HBO, following in the footsteps of Oz (1997), Sex And The City (1998), and The Sopranos (1999). Premiering in mid-summer 2001, the series takes a unique look at the highs and lows of life and death, sporting the tagline, Your whole life is leading up to this

Six Feet Under follows the lives of a hardworking American family in Pasadena, California as they deal with the everyday rigors of running their family business - an independent funeral home. Nate and Ruth Fisher (Frances Conroy of The Aviator) operate the business on a daily basis with the aid of their youngest son David (Michael C. Hall), while their daughter Claire (Lauren Ambrose) deals the tribulations of high school life and their eldest son Nate Jr. (Peter Krause) works in an organic grocery store in Seattle. But family affairs take a turn for the worse when Nate Jr.'s latest visit is marked by the tragic death of his father. With the family in mourning, it's soon revealed that the late patriarch left the funeral home to be owned and run jointly by David and Nate Jr. With a massive corporation hounding the family to sell out, coupled with their own personal problems, the Fishers must learn to deal with their grief as well as each other. Well-written and well-ca st, Six Feet Under continues to offer some of the most entertaining drama on TV today

The Six Feet Under (Season 4) DVD features a number of dramatic episodes including the season premiere Falling Into Place in which Nate is having a difficult time dealing with Lisa's death. To further complicate matters, he gets in an argument with Lisa's mother over what to do with her body. Nate wants to respect Lisa's wishes to be buried, while Lisa's mother wants her cremated and placed in the family mausoleum. In the end, a compromise is in order Other notable episodes from Season 4 include That's My Dog in which David picks up the wrong hitchhiker and ends regretting it, and The Bomb Shelter in which George is enthusiastic when he discovers an old bomb shelter on the Fisher property built long ago by Nathaniel's parents

Below is a list of episodes included on the Six Feet Under (Season 4) DVD:

Episode 40 (Falling Into Place) Air Date: 06-13-2004
Episode 41 (In Ca se of Rapture) Air Date: 06-20-2004
Episode 42 (Parallel Play) Air Date: 06-27-2004
Episode 43 (Can I Come Up Now?) Air Date: 07-11-2004
Episode 44 (That's My Dog) Air Date: 07-18-2004
Episode 45 (Terror Starts at Home) Air Date: 07-25-2004
Episode 46 (The Dare) Air Date: 08-01-2004
Episode 47 (Coming and Going) Air Date: 08-08-2004
Episode 48 (Grinding the Corn) Air Date: 08-15-2004
Episode 49 (The Black Forest) Air Date: 08-22-2004
Episode 50 (The Bomb Shelter) Air Date: 08-29-2004
Episode 51 (Untitled) Air Date: 09-12-2004

About the Author

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of the Six Feet Under (Season 4) DVD.


Author:: Britt Gillette
Keywords:: six feet under season 4 dvd review
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Meet The Parents (Movie Review)

Arguably the best comedy of 2000, Meet The Parents is one of the best-written, humor-filled laughers since Caddyshack (1980). Screenwriters Greg Glienna and Mary Ruth Clarke should have received Oscars for their flawless presentation of a string of ironic gaffes and hilarious antics. But Meet The Parents wouldn't be the comedy masterpiece it is without the onscreen chemistry of Ben Stiller and Robert De Niro.

Stiller, son of comedian Jerry Stiller (Seinfeld & King Of Queens), is a comic genius in his own right and has recently dominated the Hollywood box office with a string of smash spoof comedies such as There's Something About Mary (1998), Zoolander (2001), Along Came Polly (2004), and Dodgeball (2004). De Niro, on the other hand, moves from the less serious roles of his early career into the comedy genre with an ease fully indicative of his enormous talent. Earlier comic roles in Wag The Dog (1997) and Analyze This (1999) prepared Movie-goers for the veteran actor's zinging one-liners. Overall, the cast is superb, and Meet The Parents excels in the realm of over-the-top humor

Meet The Parents follows the hardship of Gaylord Greg Focker (Ben Stiller), a male nurse who travels with his fiance, Pam Byrnes (Teri Polo), to meet his future in-laws. Pam's mother (Blythe Danner) seems alright enough, but her father, Jack (Robert De Niro), is a never-ending source of torment for the easy-going, bridge-building Greg. A retired CIA operative, Jack is paranoid and suspicious of the man who aspires to be his son-in-law, and he goes to great lengths to uncover skeletons in Greg's closet or otherwise drive a divide between his daughter and her future husband.

Along the way, Greg must not only contend with the prying eyes of Jack Byrnes, but his hellacious feline compani on Jinxie, Pam's perfect ex-boyfriend Kevin Rawley (Owen Wilson), and the infamous Jack-mandated, Byrne family circle of trust. When Greg accidentally loses Jinxie, it sets off a chain of events that is so hilarious, most people will have to watch the segment multiple times in order to catch everything. Ultimately, Jack and Greg rectify their circle of trust issues when Jack does a background check on Greg that returns little info, prompting Greg to reveal that his full name is Gaylord - yes, his name is really Gay Focker!

Meet The Parents takes advantage of a common experience shared by its audience members and transforms this recurrent rite of passage into a truly hilarious night of entertainment. It is, quite simply, one of the funniest Movies ever made. Directed by Jay Roach (director of the Austin Powers franchise), Meet The Parents is a true modern day comedy classic that, like a fine wine, only tastes better with the passage of time. It's one of those rare cinematic gems that can be watched over and over, yet still provoke shrieking laughter with relative ease. Successful enough to spawn a sequel, Meet The Fockers (which is in-and-of itself a memorable comedy), Meet The Parents is a definite must-see Movie that you won't want to miss

About the Author

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of the Meet The Parents (DVD).


Author:: Britt Gillette
Keywords:: meet the parents Movie review
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Ever Wanted to be a TV Star?

Well, its not easy, but you can become a star. At least a local one.

The secret is using your local Cable Public Access. The bottom line is this: Cable operators are required by law to provide Public Access television for their franchises. Public Access is usually provided to individuals or non-profit organizations. Which means, of course, that you cant come on as a blatantly commercial program, but will need to remember our rule of thumb: you are there to provide information, and not to get sales.

None of which means you have to turn away business if it comes to you because you were on TV last week. It just means that your primary focus on your program must be informational and non-commercial.

One of the best things about doing a local Public Access program is that you will be seen as an authority on whatever subject you bring to the table. Theres also nothing that says you cant tout your program in your brochures, website, business cards, and the re -- if you have one -- in an office or retail location.

Lets consider an example. Lets say youre a lawyer, and you specialize in bankruptcy cases. Do you think you could come up with a 15 minute informational program every week, dealing with different aspects of the bankruptcy code and laws? Or if youre a nurse who specializes in foot care? Could you provide 15 minutes worth of educational programming dealing with foot pain, foot care, and therapies for the feet?

Of course you can. The reality is that most professionals imagine that the Public knows as much as the professional does about his area of expertise. But they dont. And this is your chance to educate them, as well as letting your name and face get better known to the Public. Youll also want to have a well-done website to provide further information. Mention the URL for your site whenever you can work it in.

TV is different from Radio, of course. You can do Radio interviews in your pajamas. I dont recommend that for TV.

You will want to be well-dressed, preferably (and this depends on the nature of what youre teaching about) in a dark suit. Dark because TV will tend to make you look 10 pounds heavier than what you are. Also because a dark suit -- for men or women -- gives an air of authority. Because of the weight issue, you may also want to lose a few pounds before you begin recording.

Most local Cable authorities provide orientation sessions for prospective broadcasters, and most of them require your attendance. But whether they require it or not, you will definitely want to go, so you can become familiar w ith the process. You should know, as well, that most local Cable systems require that you live within the Cable area they cover.

Cable TV Public Access provides a means of reaching a targeted local audience at very minimal cost. In fact, youll find that the smaller your Cable company, the more they want and need local programmers. Call your local Cable provider today, and find out the details.

Jim Huffman, RN specializes in natural and alternative healing therapies. His first book is 'Dare to Be Free: How to Get Control of Your Time, Your Life, and Your Nursing Career,' and is aimed at helping other nurses find satisfying, dynamic careers. His website is http://www.NetworkForNurses.com and his arthritis News blog is at http://www.TipsAboutArthritis.blogspot.com


Author:: Jim Huffman
Keywords:: News,Release,Press,Publicity,TV,Cable,Access,Public,Radio
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Little House On The Prairie (Season 6) DVD Review

Nominated for 17 Emmys, including one Golden Globe for Best TV Series - Drama, Little House On The Prairie is one of the most popular shows in television history. Based on the autobiographical series of Little House books written by Laura Ingalls Wilder, the show explores the inner-workings of a small town and family on the 19th Century American frontier. Director/Co-Executive Producer Michael Landon (of Bonanza and Highway to Heaven fame) also wrote one-third of the episodes (in addition to playing a lead role as the family's father, Charles, when the actor originally cast for the part failed to show). Charles would go on to become one of the show's most popular characters, and Little House On The Prairie would become an American favorite, boasting ten successful seasons to its credit

Little House On The Prairie follows the lives of the Ingalls family as they settle on the banks of Plum Creek in the township of Walnut Grove, Kansas during the 1870's. A true pioneer family, the story is seen through the eyes of the Ingalls' middle-daughter, Laura (Melissa Gilbert), who experiences all the normal growing pains and emotions of a young girl growing up on the prairie. Carpenter Charles Ingalls (Michael Landon) and his former school teacher wife, Caroline (Karen Grassle), head up a family of three that includes two additional daughters, Mary (Melissa Sue Anderson) and Carrie (Lindsay & Sidney Greenbush). The town also includes a loveable cast of supporting characters, such as Walnut Grove School teacher Eva Beadle (Charlotte Stewart), town doctor Hiram Baker (Kevin Hagen), pastor Robert Alden (Dabbs Greer), family friend Isaiah Edwards (Victor French), the wealthy Oleson family, and a host of other characters

The Little House On The Prairie (Season 6) DVD features a number of dramatic episodes including the season premiere Back to School in which Walnut Grove gets a new schoolteacher named Eliza Wilder. Laura falls in love with her bro ther Almanzo, but is devastated when Nellie invites him over for dinner. Desperate, Laura volunteers to cook the dinner, adding extra spices, and when Nellie takes credit for cooking the dinner, Almanzo ignores her from then on Other notable episodes from Season 6 include The Preacher Takes a Wife in which Mrs. Craig and Reverend Alden get married despite the protests of Mrs. Oleson, and Sweet Sixteen in which Laura and Almanzo strike up a romance when Almanzo drives her to a nearby town where she is temporarily teaching school

Below is a list of episodes included on the Little House On The Prairie (Season 6) DVD:

Episode 113 (Back to School: Part 1) Air Date: 09-17-1979
Episode 114 (Back to School: Part 2) Air Date: 09-24-1979
Episode 115 (The Family Tree) Air Date: 10-01-1979
Episode 116 (The Third Miracle) Air Date: 10-08-1979
Episode 117 (Annabelle) Air Date: 10-15-1979
Episode 118 (The Preacher Takes a Wife) Air Date: 10-22-1979
Episo de 119 (The Halloween Dream) Air Date: 10-29-1979
Episode 120 (The Little House Years: Part 1) Air Date: 11-15-1979
Episode 121 (The Little House Years: Part 2) Air Date: 11-15-1979
Episode 122 (The Little House Years: Part 3) Air Date: 11-15-1979
Episode 123 (The Return of Mr. Edwards) Air Date: 11-05-1979
Episode 124 (The King is Dead) Air Date: 11-12-1979
Episode 125 (The Faith Healer) Air Date: 11-19-1979
Episode 126 (Author, Author) Air Date: 11-26-1979
Episode 127 (Crossed Connections) Air Date: 12-10-1979
Episode 128 (The Angry Heart) Air Date: 12-17-1979
Episode 129 (The Werewolf of Walnut Grove) Air Date: 01-07-1980
Episode 130 (What Ever Happened to the Class of '56?) Air Date: 01-14-1980
Episode 131 (Darkness is My Friend) Air Date: 01-21-1980
Episode 132 (Silent Promises) Air Date: 01-28-1980
Episode 133 (May We Make Them Proud) Air Date: 02-04-1980
Episode 134 (Wilder and Wilder) Air Date: 02-11-1980
Episode 135 (Second Spring) Air Date: 02-18-1980
Episode 136 (Sweet Sixteen) Air Date: 02-25-1980
Episode 137 (He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not: Part 1) Air Date: 05-05-1980
Episode 138 (He Loves Me, He Loves Me Not: Part 2) Air Date: 05-12-1980

About the Author

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of the Little House On The Prairie (Season 6) DVD.


Author:: Britt Gillette
Keywords:: little house on the prairie season 6 dvd review
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Direct TV HBO Channels: HBO Boxing Show's Fights Worth Fighting For

Most people know the basic concept of one of todays most violent sports, boxing, but contrary to popular belief, boxing is one of the oldest competitive sports still enjoyed today. Boxing has been around for so long, it has even been depicted on the walls of tombs in Egypt, dating from around 2000 to 1500 B.C. Boxing was also practiced by the empires of Ancient Rome and Greece. While the Greek fought with leather straps wrapped around their fists, the Romans used gloves wound with metal strips which promised a much more interesting show. Todays boxing is of coarse much more civilized but it still carries on the tradition of heart pounding adrenaline that its ancient counterpart began.

One of the most popular and comprehensive ways to watch boxing at its best, is HBO Boxing. HBO Boxing has brought to us some of the greatest fights of modern history. Even though the roots of boxing sink thousands of years deep, there are still legends made in this spectacular sport all of the time. HBO Boxings first official event pitted George Foreman against the great Joe Frazier for only two rounds naming George Foreman the World Heavyweight Champion.

Since HBO Boxings first fight, there has been many great bouts such as The rumble in the Jungle where the legendary Muhammad Ali defeated George Foreman, and the more recent Bite Fight which featured Iron Mike Tyson devouring the ear of Evander Holyfield, which in turn, will forever remind us that this great sport is still packed full of as many surprises as adrenaline.

If you are interested in subscribing to HBO Boxing you can add 7 channels of HBO movies and Sports to your Direct TV total choice package for $12 or less. If you order the Total Choice Premier package, you will receive HBO and many other premium channels at no extra cost.

If you would like to order a Direct TV Satellite system, you may go to rapidSatellite.com for Free Direct TV information.


Author:: Jay Carmichael
Keywords:: HBO Boxing, HBO Channels, Direct TV, Directv, Satellite, Free,
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Friday, July 27, 2012

Analysis of the True Meaning of Magnolia

Warning: This article is an analysis of the movie Magnolia and contains many spoilers.

Everyone who has watched the much-praised film Magnolia undoubtedly walked out of the theater with maybe a feeling of awe, but most likely an overwhelming confusion over its ending, especially the scene with the shower of Frogs.

A key aspect to interpreting the true meaning of this film lies in its many references of Exodus 8:2 from the bible. The most obvious reference was in the scene right before the start of the Quiz show. A woman is seen holding a sign that clearly has the words Exodus 8:2 written on it, but is promptly escorted out of the audience by security.

Below are other examples of references to the numbers 8 and 2 in the movie, as listed in the trivia section of imdb.com

weather forecast : 82% chance of rain

a gambler needs a 2 in blackjack but gets an 8

the coil of rope when the boy commits suicide

the first temperature reading

the movie poster at the bus stop on Magnolia Blvd

the placard on the hanged convicts

Jim Kurrings box number at the date hotline

Sydney Barringers mother and fathers apartment number is 682

the forensic science convention starts at 8:20

Delmer Darion flips over a stack of cards to reveal the 8 through 2 of diamonds

right after Jim Kurring sees Donnie Smith climbing up the building, you can see a flash of a sign on the side of the road that says Exodus 8:2″ (its visible again when the Frogs fall and hit Kurrings car)

the number on the firefighters plane.

in Marcys mugshots, her criminal record number is 82082082082

in the bar scene there is a chalkboard with two teams, the Frog and the clouds, the score is 8 to 2

spray painted on the cement as graffiti next to the boy.

member of the game show crowd holds a placard with Exodus 8:2 written on it

the kids were two days away from entering their eighth week as champions.

Quiz Kid Donnie Smith won his 100 000 dollars on 28 April 1968

The first two numbers of the Seduce and Destroy Hotline (1-877-TAME-HER) are 82.

one of the hanged men has the 82 on his clothes

Jim says he gets off work at 8:00, and Claudia suggests they meet 2 hours later for a date

And here is Exodus 8:2 -

And the Lord spake unto Moses, Go unto Pharaoh, and say unto him, Thus saith the Lord, Let my people go, that they may serve me. And if thou refuse to let them go, behold, I will smite all thy borders with Frogs.

Another important piece of the puzzle comes from Dixon, the young boy who raps to Jim after his discovery of the murders. The following is an excerpt from Dixons rap:

Check that ego, come off it, Im the Prophet,
Youre living to get older with a chip on your shoulder.
Hes running from the devil, but the debt is always gaining,
When the sunshine dont work, the good Lord bring the rain in.

Dixon calls himself the Prophet but he could be interpreted an extension of god. He takes Jims gun after it was lost, yet during the Frog shower, t he gun falls from the sky along with the Frogs - a sign that the boy had some control over the events.

The second and third lines of the rap are warning Jim that hes living to move higher (to get older) yet there is something burdening him. Dixon is telling Jim that what he is doing isnt right and warning him to stop. However, Jim doesnt listen to the rapper just like how the Pharaoh of Egypt did not listen to Moses. This message is not only meant for Jim, but it also symbolizes the wrongness in the lives of all the other characters. The last line warns that if God is ignored, he will bring on the rain.

An important key note is that the characters all admit their wrongs but cant seem to get past them. Claudia, for example, is addicted to cocaine but can do nothing to stop, Linda feels terrible guilt for cheating on Earl and attempts to take her name off his will but cant, and even Earl uses his final breaths to admit his mistreatment of his son and wife and pleads for forgiveness from Frank but he does not receive one.

The rain of Frogs signifies Gods wake-up call to everyone. The rain of Frogs - the extremely strange, almost absurd situation - was a way for God to tell everyone that they have done wrong and sinned. However, the shower is his message that he is always watching over the world and can intervene to help when help is needed. After the rain of Frogs, the characters appear to either make peace with their problems and have succeeded or, in the example of Jimmy Gators death, failed. This shows that although god is there to help, not everything always works out perfectly and there are always the ones who are punished instead of saved.

Please note that this is not an official interpretation and the scene of the Frog shower is among the most debated topic in the movie world. Accept my interpretation at your own discretion and form your own opinions on the matter, which is most likely what the writer P. T. Anderson had intended.

Dayu Yang is the owner of the website The 250, a blog that follows his journey through IMDB.com's top 250 list.


Author:: Dayu Yang
Keywords:: Magnolia,Frog,Magnolia analysis
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