Posts Tagged ‘Yarn’

 

Buy The Nun’s Story Dvd And Blu-ray At Amazon!

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010
Buy The Nun's Story Dvd And Blu-ray At Amazon!.
Buy The Nun’s Story Dvd And Blu-ray At Amazon!.

Product: The Nun’s Story
Average customer review:


Amazon Price: Sale Price Too Low To Display! Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see discount price.
CHADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping At Amazon

“The Nun’s Epic” is probably Audrey Hepburn’s best film and by far the one which shows to best accomplish her spacious acting talent. It is the autobiographical yarn of Sister Luke, a very young Belgian nun, who enters the convent at age 17 for specifically the wicked reason: her doctor father refuses to let her marry the young man she loves because there is insanity in his family background. She won’t admit to him, as she is too young to admit it to herself, that her underlying reason in entering the convent was to spite her father, who believes women have a duty to marry and have children, but he is powerless to oppose her in this; he can prevent her from marrying her fiance, but who is he to defy God? Sister Luke, as played by Hepburn, wins us over instantly: she’s suited, open-hearted, all or nothing, trying and failing and trying again, expecting too mighty of herself, wanting to fit in to the routine of her cloister, but feeling stifled by its constraints. The atmosphere of the convent is brought so vividly to life that we feel the conflicts pulling her in opposite directions: the peace and serenity that are embodied in the Reverend Mother Emmanuel (Edith Evans is so tremendous in this role that she doesn’t seem to be acting at all), and the incessant weight of seemingly arbitrary and nonsensical rules and regulations that attempt to crush all individuality and spontaneity. The pivotal conflict arises in the first half of the movie, when Sister Luke is asked by her Mother Worthy to fail a qualifying examination for a nursing post in the Congo so that a less gifted nun can have her state, and Sister Luke has to effect a choice: her failure will be a gift from God, but her success in the examination will gather her a station in the Congolese hospital where her talents can be most fully utilized. And this is where Sister Luke has to face her inner dilemma: the convent, with all its rules and regulations, hasn’t managed to crush her individuality — she is too great her hold person to let go of herself.

It is in the Congo that Sister Luke comes into her beget. She falls in worship with the country and its people as soon as she steps off the boat. She is sent to the European hospital to help Dr. Fortunati, a radiant, cynical surgeon who immediately sees through Sister Luke and understands her better than she understands herself. The meeting of minds between these two is awesome to peep and in itself makes the movie worth seeing. Dr. Fortunati, brilliantly played by Peter Finch, tells Sister Luke time and again that she will never be the kind of nun her convent expects her to be. The sexual tension between the two is evident but downplayed; Dr. Fortunati knows it’s impossible and Sister Luke simply refuses to retort it. The climax comes when Sister Luke is ordered relieve to the mother house in Belgium, and we suspect that Dr. Fortunati may have had a hand in it, to force her to face up to the fact that she is more nurse than nun.

The year is 1939 and World War II is about to commence. Sister Luke, chafing at the constraints of the mother house, is drawn into the war in ways her convent never imagined or would sanction. She assists a young lay nurse, who looks up to her as a role model, to work for the Resistance. She is elated when a German woman dies in the convent hospital. And she is finally forced to scrutinize inside herself and realize that while she may be able to derive chastity and poverty, obedience is impossible. At this point Sister Luke realizes she can no longer go on living a lie. The scenes in which her confessor and Reverend Mother Emmanuel attempt to dissuade her from leaving the convent are the most great in the film. “You joined the convent to be a nun, not a nurse”, remonstrates Reverend Mother. But this is precisely where she’s wrong; Sister Luke is considerable more a nurse than she will ever be a nun. After 17 years at war with herself, Sister Luke signs the papers severing her from her convent, and goes out into the world.

Buy,Download, Or Stream The Nun’s Story! Click Here

Hepburn’s performance in a role which demands so grand from her is incredible; we not only feel but section all her conflict and inner wound. There is no map she could arrive across as a boring, mousy nun (Hepburn would be drop-dead glowing even in a burlap sack) but her acting is so convincing that we forget she is the handsome Audrey Hepburn and peep her only as a soul in torment. Peter Finch is helpful as Dr. Fortunati and all of the minor characters are very well portrayed, but the accurate soul of the movie is Edith Evans as Reverend Mother Emmanuel, concerned with the spiritual health of her flock, and despairing yet fatalistic as one of her flock inexorably slips away. The movie is long (two and a half hours) but it’s never boring; it grabs our interest from the opening frame and holds it to the final frame in which Hepburn turns a corner out of the convent grounds and out of our seek. The one jarring heed, especially after 40 years, is the patronizing paternalism of the Belgian colonization in the Congo; except for the education and medical care provided by the Church, the cruelty of Belgian colonial occupation was legendary and makes us wonder what Sister Luke’s fate would have been if she had returned to the Congo after she left the convent. At the demolish of the film we are left with titanic respect and admiration for an incredibly strong yet fallible young woman whose trek to self-knowledge is a life-long project.

Audrey Hepburn is best known for her light romantic comedies. Everybody loves them. She dresses up in some Givenchy outfits and blows the audience away with her beauty and charm. In “The Nun’s Memoir” she completly sheds that image and immerses herself in the role of the conflicted Sister Luke, a Belgian nun torn by her obligations to her church and order, her duty to her patients as a nurse, and her duty to her country during the Nazi occupation.

This a long and very introspective film that is not for everyone. It contains a detailed gaze at life in a Belgian convent and a Congo hospital in the years before WWII which may bore some people. Also some of Audrey’s fans looking for her as Princess Anne or Sabrina Fairchild or Holly Golightly may be disappointed to gain only the positive, reserved, and prideful Sister Luke. (Although Audrey does originate gorgeous looking nun.) The length, the slowly paced style, the subject matter, and the new role for its star have combined to preserve it off the list of Audrey Hepburn’s best known films.

Personally, I believe this Audrey’s greatest dramatic performance and maybe her best performance ever. She very ably conveys Sister Luke’s inner conflict between her oath as a nun and her duties as a nurse, daughter, and Belgian citizen. That she is able to do so in a film that has long stretches where there is no dialogue is considerable. She was nominated for Best Actress for this role, and she more than deserved to get, but came up short. “The Nun’s Myth” illustrates that Audrey Hepburn certainly had the ability to flesh out dramatic characters and that she was more than fair a charming and blooming woman in a Givenchy outfit. She was a large actor as well.
Ultimate Colon Cleanse

 

Order A Night to Remember – Criterion Collection At Amazon.com!

Friday, September 3rd, 2010
Order A Night to Remember - Criterion Collection At Amazon.com!.
Order A Night to Remember – Criterion Collection At Amazon.com!.

Product: A Night to Remember – Criterion Collection
Average customer review:


Amazon Price: Sale Price Too Low To Display! Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see discount price.
CHADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping At Amazon

Cameron’s film has its moments, but in truth I only liked it for the chance it gave me to view a astronomical obsolete ocean liner brought to life again on veil. In “A Night To Remember”, the effects are not nearly so impressive, but the narrative is far better. It’s very distinguished in the style of a docudrama, but its a docudrama about one of the most animated and enduring stories in all of history. I don’t quite know why Cameron felt it valuable to shriek a soap opera melodrama about two fictional lovers and spend one of the most dramatic stories in all human history as nothing more than a backdrop. “A Night To Remember”, based on Walter Lord’s outstanding book of the same name, tells the chronicle of the worry itself. Kenneth More plays a bold Second Officer Lightoller, and the film actually makes him out to inspect a itsy-bitsy better than he did in reality – he lowered several of the lifeboats less than half loaded, and permitted no men at all to fetch in, even when the boats were ready to lower and no more women were nearby to board. Level-headed, this bit of dramatic license doesn’t injure the film.

The yarn of Titanic’s loss has something in it to appeal to everybody. For the lovers of a tall anecdote it has improbable drama and suspense. For lovers of nostalgia it is far the best documented voyage of any ship from the golden age of the broad ocean liners. For those alive to in tragic irony there is the chronicle of a gargantuan ship, regarded as unsinkable going down after ominous warnings were ignored. For those eager in stories with a correct, there is the cautionary myth of placing blind faith in any work of human hands, or thinking that the things of men are impervious to the forces of nature. For students of human nature, Great was a microcosm of society, with the corpulent range of human strength and weakness on expose, from acts of appealing heroism to those of obnoxious cowardice. For those alive to in social history, there is the broad gulf between the first class passengers with their mountainous wealth, and those in steerage with dinky more than the clothes they stood up in.

Few stories have proven so enduring and so racy as that of the Substantial. This movie remains the best, and most faithful film version of it to this day.

For all the special effects and color cinematography of fresh years, few films in the trouble genre have been able to top this wonderful film of the fateful voyage of the Titanic; it is smartly written, with astonishing cinematography (by Geoffrey Unsworth) and brilliantly acted by a cast of mostly unknown actors. American audiences will probably only view David McCallum (Illya Kuryakin in the Man from U.N.C.L.E. series) who plays a radio operator, and Honor Blackman, who gained fame as the Bond Girl with the impish name in Goldfinger, who has a exiguous piece as the wife of a fearless and stoic man, and the illustrious British actor Laurence Naismith, who is satisfactory as Captain Smith.

Buy,Download, Or Stream A Night to Remember – Criterion Collection! Click Here

Buy,Download, Or Stream A Night to Remember – Criterion Collection! Click Here

Even though one knows the raze, the tension runs high, and we gather caught up in lives of the people aboard “the floating palace”, and how they handled their bad fate. The characterizations are beautifully developed, which is rare in this type of film.

The scenes of the inner workings of the ship are intense, and very well re-created. When compared to documentaries made about the Spacious, this film would seem to be quite correct, in the physical aspects of the ship, and of the people who sailed her, as passengers and as crew.

Buy,Download, Or Stream A Night to Remember – Criterion Collection! Click Here

I catch this 1958 version far expedient to the 1997 Oscar winning “Expansive”, mostly because the script and acting are grand more believable, making the events of that bad night approach to life and toddle the emotions in a deeper draw than the newer film ever could.

Adapted for the veil by Eric Ambler from the book by Walter Lord (which I read many years ago and also found lively), the direction by Roy Ward Baker is genuine, and the almost symphonic regain by William Alwyn terrific.

“A Night to Remember” won a 1959 Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Film.

Total running time is 123 minutes.

Total Gym

 

Lowest Selling Price Found On Wilde At Amazon.com.

Friday, September 3rd, 2010
Lowest Selling Price Found On Wilde At Amazon.com..
Lowest Selling Price Found On Wilde At Amazon.com..

Product: Wilde
Average customer review:


Amazon Price: Sale Price Too Low To Display! Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see discount price.
CHADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping At Amazon

If anything, the value of right fancy and compassion, unfettered by social interdictions, and how the Victorian attitudes made only a obvious kind of like a crime, is the driving force leisurely Wilde. The bio-movie of legendary playwright and wit Oscar Wilde begins with his scuttle to Leadville, Colorado in 1882, where a seam in a silver mine has been named in his honour. Down the mine, he tells the yarn of The King’s Dream, about how the king has dreams revealing how lesser class people have toiled and suffered so that nobles can wear finery and wield sceptres and ornaments of silver and gold.

Wilde seems to have it, talent, wit, a nice wife, two children. It’s at the reception for his play, Lady Windermere’s Fan, that we peek the beginning of the kill. There, Wilde is introduced to Lord Alfred Douglas, nicknamed “Bosie”, a pretty blond who finds ragged morality stifling, such as his enjoyment of other men, but whose selfishly immature, egotistic nature comes out in an ghastly map later in the movie. “Bosie” admires Wilde. “You consume wit like a knife, carve through all those starched shirt fronts. You way blood. It’s shapely,” he tells him.

Bosie introduces Wilde to secret parlors where there are others who have homosexual leanings, but he seems proud to expose himself as “Wilde’s boy”, wanting the whole world to know, whereas Wilde is a bit more on the cautious and side. Yet he counsels Bosie, who is then in a petulant pique that Wilde has to work on his play instead of having fun, that “pleasure have to be earned and paid for.” And yet he is patient and forgiving towards the lad.

Buy,Download, Or Stream Wilde! Click Here

The villain of this fraction is Bosie’s brutish father, John Sholto Douglas, better known as the 9th marquis of Queensbury, he who invented the boxing rules such as wearing gloves, the ten second count, and rounds. He strongly disapproves of Bosie’s friendship with Wilde and sets about verbally intimidating both.

The attitudes of the stuffed shirts in Victorian England can be found in a lady’s comment on censorship: “There must be censorship. All people would say what they meant, and then where would we be? ” Wilde too gives a belief of the stifled times when he says that if his son grew up, “he must do as his nature dictates, as I should have done.” But couldn’t, one should add.

At various parts of the movie, Wilde’s tale of “The Selfish Giant” is narrated to match the scene or Wilde’s feelings.

Buy,Download, Or Stream Wilde! Click Here

All throughout, Wilde’s wit and observations on human nature are heard. Examples: “Give a man a screen and he’ll announce you the truth.” This in turn leads to a conversation about The Portray Of Dorian Gray, a new about “the masks we wear as faces, the faces we wear as masks” that lost the Wildes their respectability for its unveiling the hypocritical veneer of Victorian gentility. But the most considerable is this: “In this world there are only two tragedies. One is not getting what one wants. The other is getting.”

Those who know of Wilde’s life knows how it’ll waste, but there are some sobering narrated observations that think the suffering he underwent: “Life cheats us with shadows. We ask it for pleasure, it gives it to us with bitterness and disappointment in its convey.” Or the intention people raze the thing they treasure most:

Some do it with a bitter look

some with a flattering word

Buy,Download, Or Stream Wilde! Click Here

the coward with a kiss

The bold man with a sword

some destroy their cherish when they are young

and some when they are old

Buy,Download, Or Stream Wilde! Click Here

some strangle with the hands of lust
some with the hands of gold
the kindest spend a knife
because the tiresome so soon grow cold

Stephen Fry, best known as Jeeves in the Jeeves and Wooster series does a worthy job in portraying the playwright and wit. His Wilde is suave, charming, loving and view to his wife, children, and Bosie, and in the raze, unwilling to perjure himself and his beliefs despite its meaning his tumble from grace. Jude Law does agreeable as Bosie, but Jennifer Ehle also deserves credit as the soft-spoken but true and glowing Constance Wilde.

In WILDE, Stephen Fry (Jeeves in “Jeeves and Wooster”) is the consummate Wilde. Jude Law plays his lover Bosie Douglas. Jennifer Ehle (Elizabeth Bennett in “Pride and Predjudice”) plays Wilde’s long suffering wife. Vanessa Redgrave and Tom Wilkinson also have valuable roles. What a cast.

The Belle Epoch is beautifully recreated as Wilde travels between England and France–clothes, interiors, architecture, grounds. You don’t even have to understand the anecdote to relish “being there” in the parks, homes, carrriages.

Oscar Wilde was a writer, best remembered perhaps for “The Portrait of Dorian Grey” although novel audiences may be more familiar with his stage play “The Ideal Husband” (recently made into a film with Jeremy Northern and Cate Blanchett) or “The Importance of Being Earnest.”

Wilde was a homosexual in England in an age when one could and did go to prison for acting on instinct. (Nowadays in Saudia Arabia they choose off your head.) Although the public became aware of his proclivities, Wilde remained one of Europe’s most admired writers. Unfortunately, his term in prison for his sexual preferences may be remembered longer than his works which have a incredible drawing room humor many folks fail to assume. This is a enormous film, and if you’re an Anglophile you must add it to your collection. — And Paris?? That’s where Oscar is buried.
lemonade diet

 

Get National Geographic: Birth of Civilization Blu Ray At Amazon!

Friday, September 3rd, 2010
Get National Geographic: Birth of Civilization Blu Ray At Amazon!.
Get National Geographic: Birth of Civilization Blu Ray At Amazon!.

Product: National Geographic: Birth of Civilization
Average customer review:


Amazon Price: Sale Price Too Low To Display! Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see discount price.
CHADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping At Amazon

I am flummoxed as to why the other reviews on this movie are so unpleasant.

Buy,Download, Or Stream National Geographic: Birth of Civilization! Click Here

I can verbalize you why I consider it was a broad movie:

My two children age 7 and 9, giving up a bit of summer vacation, watched the whole thing, were engaged and even a bit tremulous. This movie encouraged them to reflect outside the “Pokémon/Wii” box and for days afterwards they asked me questions about the movie. Spacious questions.

Buy,Download, Or Stream National Geographic: Birth of Civilization! Click Here

I work in clinical research that is specific to stroke and stroke recovery. For years I have been trying to imagine what it would be like prehistoric individuals to have had a stroke. I have written about it in articles and in my book Stronger After Stroke, and I talk about it in seminars and lectures I do around the country. In this movie, there is the fictional yarn of a prehistoric man who was brain damaged but managed to design the connection between seed, soil, water and reduce growing. This portrayal of a hemiparetic brain-damaged person is by far the best I’ve seen in movies. This is no easy feat. Sir Anthony Hopkins struggled with it in Legends of the Drop.

I am no expert, but this movie seems to be based on hunter gatherer culture, practices and philosophies that are unexcited evident today. It is not very difficult to settle how minute importance prehistoric man placed in ownership. It is also not difficult to understand how prehistoric man saw himself as no more essential than anything else in nature. It’s the same with the Yanomamö, some aboriginal tribes, Eskimo tribes, etc. etc.

All in all this was a concept provoking bit of historical fiction.

This was a very intriguing and plan provoking present I don’t observe the reason for other harsh reviews. I contemplate some people are looking a exiguous to grand into this. The fact of matter is it told three stories about mans earliest breakthroughs that linked together in an moving method.
Ultimate Colon Cleanse

 

Get Hold Of The Running Man On The Web.

Friday, September 3rd, 2010
Get Hold Of The Running Man On The Web..
Get Hold Of The Running Man On The Web..

Product: The Running Man
Average customer review:


Amazon Price: Sale Price Too Low To Display! Click Here To See Amazon Sale Price

Add to cart to see discount price.
CHADPRODUCTTILE

Availability: In Stock
Usually ships in 24 Hours
Free Shipping At Amazon

The newly-remastered represent is so noteworthy clearer and more colorful than the unique release and the DTS soundtrack is an awesome addition. After having heard it, I would’ve bought it for the DTS, alone. Who knew that a 17-year-old movie could be remastered to DTS quality and 6.1 surround so well (including very targeted consume of the rear channels) .

The extras are another yarn, as many people have stated. The “Lockdown on Main Street” is a thoroughly one-sided political statement. If it should be anywhere, it should be on PBS, not on an action movie DVD. It feels like execs at Artisan were clear to build this documentary out there and picked “The Running Man” from their upcoming catalog as the best suitor.

The “Game Theory” documentary is unprejudiced a allotment in which creators and participants of reality TV shows pat themselves on the help for their popularity. Perhaps fans of reality TV would acquire it engaging, but I didn’t.

Buy,Download, Or Stream The Running Man! Click Here

In summary, the unusual remastering of the movie is “special,” but nothing else on either of the discs is. As someone else said, lift it for the movie. The extras may execute my stomach turn, but the movie is one of the best remastering jobs I’ve ever seen.

In this wry and though-provoking hold on a world gone crazy, where corporate rulers routinely choose approved sport activities to distill public inflame and frustration and to try to distract celebrated people from civic unrest, we get perpetual everyman Arnold Schwarzenegger caught in the vise-grip of official lies when he escapes from maximum security prison only to be caught and selected as the latest “contestant” (read `intended victim’ here) for the overwhelmingly approved television program called, appropriately enough, “Running Man”. The point of the game is for the contestant to survive being hunted down by a sewerful of villains while trying to accomplish his procedure through a nightmarish maze. The villains are a bit campy, ranging from an outrageously garbed electric man who dispatches virtual lightning bolts to fry his prey out of existence to a chainsaw freak who attempts to hack his victims to death while riding his motorcycle.

Yet the action sequences more than beget up for the sometimes-silly dialogue. The supporting cast is serene of veterans like Richard Dawson as the venomous game-show host and producer, who manipulates every aspect of the game to advance the storyline he has laid out. There are also a lot of cameos here, from Mick Fleetwood as a revolutionary to Jessie “The Body” Ventura as a sports commentator to Jim Brown as one of the slayers. The special effects are well done, and the action sequences provide plenty of vicarious violence for the moviegoer. Of course, Arnie has a cruise of throwaway one-liners, and we know we are in the hands of experience when he tells Dawson the “he’ll be relieve”. Dawson, of course, not quick-witted whom he is dealing with, blows off the threat.

But the moviegoer knows Arnie will be serve, and that he will find the day. This is not an intellectually satisfying film, but it is a capable, sold action adventure based on an early anecdote of Steven King’s that will support you amused and entertained. It provided one of a series of sequential hits for Schwarzenegger, and helped to cement his reputation as a bankable superstar. Stout stuff for wiling away a snowy winter day. Appreciate!
Ultimate Colon Cleanse