Monday, October 21, 2013

Yoga accessible for the blind with new Microsoft Kinect-based program

Yoga accessible for the blind with new Microsoft Kinect-based program


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Public release date: 17-Oct-2013
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Contact: Michelle Ma
mcma@uw.edu
206-543-2580
University of Washington







In a typical yoga class, students watch an instructor to learn how to properly hold a position. But for people who are blind or can't see well, it can be frustrating to participate in these types of exercises.


Now, a team of University of Washington computer scientists has created a software program that watches a user's movements and gives spoken feedback on what to change to accurately complete a yoga pose.


"My hope for this technology is for people who are blind or low-vision to be able to try it out, and help give a basic understanding of yoga in a more comfortable setting," said project lead Kyle Rector, a UW doctoral student in computer science and engineering.


The program, called Eyes-Free Yoga, uses Microsoft Kinect software to track body movements and offer auditory feedback in real time for six yoga poses, including Warrior I and II, Tree and Chair poses. Rector and her collaborators published their methodology in the conference proceedings of the Association for Computing Machinery's SIGACCESS International Conference on Computers and Accessibility in Bellevue, Wash., Oct. 21-23.


Rector wrote programming code that instructs the Kinect to read a user's body angles, then gives verbal feedback on how to adjust his or her arms, legs, neck or back to complete the pose. For example, the program might say: "Rotate your shoulders left," or "Lean sideways toward your left."


The result is an accessible yoga "exergame" a video game used for exercise that allows people without sight to interact verbally with a simulated yoga instructor. Rector and collaborators Julie Kientz, a UW assistant professor in Computer Science & Engineering and in Human Centered Design & Engineering, and Cynthia Bennett, a research assistant in computer science and engineering, believe this can transform a typically visual activity into something that blind people can also enjoy.


"I see this as a good way of helping people who may not know much about yoga to try something on their own and feel comfortable and confident doing it," Kientz said. "We hope this acts as a gateway to encouraging people with visual impairments to try exercise on a broader scale."



Each of the six poses has about 30 different commands for improvement based on a dozen rules deemed essential for each yoga position. Rector worked with a number of yoga instructors to put together the criteria for reaching the correct alignment in each pose. The Kinect first checks a person's core and suggests alignment changes, then moves to the head and neck area, and finally the arms and legs. It also gives positive feedback when a person is holding a pose correctly.


Rector practiced a lot of yoga as she developed this technology. She tested and tweaked each aspect by deliberately making mistakes while performing the exercises. The result is a program that she believes is robust and useful for people who are blind.


"I tested it all on myself so I felt comfortable having someone else try it," she said.


Rector worked with 16 blind and low-vision people around Washington to test the program and get feedback. Several of the participants had never done yoga before, while others had tried it a few times or took yoga classes regularly. Thirteen of the 16 people said they would recommend the program and nearly everyone would use it again.


The technology uses simple geometry and the law of cosines to calculate angles created during yoga. For example, in some poses a bent leg must be at a 90-degree angle, while the arm spread must form a 160-degree angle. The Kinect reads the angle of the pose using cameras and skeletal-tracking technology, then tells the user how to move to reach the desired angle.


Rector opted to use Kinect software because it's open source and easily accessible on the market, but she said it does have some limitations in the level of detail with which it tracks movement.


Rector and collaborators plan to make this technology available online so users could download the program, plug in their Kinect and start doing yoga. The team also is pursuing other projects that help with fitness.


###


The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, a Kynamatrix Innovation through Collaboration grant and the Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Foundation.



For more information, contact Rector at rectorky@cs.washington.edu or 503-449-1736.


Posted with video and photos: http://www.washington.edu/news/2013/10/17/yoga-accessible-for-the-blind-with-new-microsoft-kinect-based-program/



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Yoga accessible for the blind with new Microsoft Kinect-based program


[ Back to EurekAlert! ]
Public release date: 17-Oct-2013
[


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| Share Share

]

Contact: Michelle Ma
mcma@uw.edu
206-543-2580
University of Washington







In a typical yoga class, students watch an instructor to learn how to properly hold a position. But for people who are blind or can't see well, it can be frustrating to participate in these types of exercises.


Now, a team of University of Washington computer scientists has created a software program that watches a user's movements and gives spoken feedback on what to change to accurately complete a yoga pose.


"My hope for this technology is for people who are blind or low-vision to be able to try it out, and help give a basic understanding of yoga in a more comfortable setting," said project lead Kyle Rector, a UW doctoral student in computer science and engineering.


The program, called Eyes-Free Yoga, uses Microsoft Kinect software to track body movements and offer auditory feedback in real time for six yoga poses, including Warrior I and II, Tree and Chair poses. Rector and her collaborators published their methodology in the conference proceedings of the Association for Computing Machinery's SIGACCESS International Conference on Computers and Accessibility in Bellevue, Wash., Oct. 21-23.


Rector wrote programming code that instructs the Kinect to read a user's body angles, then gives verbal feedback on how to adjust his or her arms, legs, neck or back to complete the pose. For example, the program might say: "Rotate your shoulders left," or "Lean sideways toward your left."


The result is an accessible yoga "exergame" a video game used for exercise that allows people without sight to interact verbally with a simulated yoga instructor. Rector and collaborators Julie Kientz, a UW assistant professor in Computer Science & Engineering and in Human Centered Design & Engineering, and Cynthia Bennett, a research assistant in computer science and engineering, believe this can transform a typically visual activity into something that blind people can also enjoy.


"I see this as a good way of helping people who may not know much about yoga to try something on their own and feel comfortable and confident doing it," Kientz said. "We hope this acts as a gateway to encouraging people with visual impairments to try exercise on a broader scale."



Each of the six poses has about 30 different commands for improvement based on a dozen rules deemed essential for each yoga position. Rector worked with a number of yoga instructors to put together the criteria for reaching the correct alignment in each pose. The Kinect first checks a person's core and suggests alignment changes, then moves to the head and neck area, and finally the arms and legs. It also gives positive feedback when a person is holding a pose correctly.


Rector practiced a lot of yoga as she developed this technology. She tested and tweaked each aspect by deliberately making mistakes while performing the exercises. The result is a program that she believes is robust and useful for people who are blind.


"I tested it all on myself so I felt comfortable having someone else try it," she said.


Rector worked with 16 blind and low-vision people around Washington to test the program and get feedback. Several of the participants had never done yoga before, while others had tried it a few times or took yoga classes regularly. Thirteen of the 16 people said they would recommend the program and nearly everyone would use it again.


The technology uses simple geometry and the law of cosines to calculate angles created during yoga. For example, in some poses a bent leg must be at a 90-degree angle, while the arm spread must form a 160-degree angle. The Kinect reads the angle of the pose using cameras and skeletal-tracking technology, then tells the user how to move to reach the desired angle.


Rector opted to use Kinect software because it's open source and easily accessible on the market, but she said it does have some limitations in the level of detail with which it tracks movement.


Rector and collaborators plan to make this technology available online so users could download the program, plug in their Kinect and start doing yoga. The team also is pursuing other projects that help with fitness.


###


The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, a Kynamatrix Innovation through Collaboration grant and the Achievement Rewards for College Scientists Foundation.



For more information, contact Rector at rectorky@cs.washington.edu or 503-449-1736.


Posted with video and photos: http://www.washington.edu/news/2013/10/17/yoga-accessible-for-the-blind-with-new-microsoft-kinect-based-program/



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Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-10/uow-yaf101713.php
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Here's Why the iPhone 5S Accelerometer Is So Screwed Up

Here's Why the iPhone 5S Accelerometer Is So Screwed Up

A few weeks ago we confirmed reports that the iPhone 5S motion sensors were embarrassingly off. Some enterprising devs have investigated the problem, and figured out that at its root, it's indeed a hardware design issue that Apple either overlooked or ignored. The good news is that there's a fix coming—but not from Apple.

Read more...

Source: http://gizmodo.com/heres-why-the-iphone-5s-accelerometer-is-so-screwed-up-1445966306
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5G will have to do more than just speed up your phone, Ericsson says






For consumers looking forward to 5G mobile technology for super-high speed, network giant Ericsson says there will be more to it than that—and less.


A 5G mobile standard isn’t in formal development yet and isn’t likely to be in commercial networks until 2020, according to Vish Nandlall, Ericsson’s CTO and senior vice president of strategy, who spoke at the GigaOm Mobilize conference Wednesday. Even then, 5G won’t be totally at consumers’ beck and call to deliver their cat videos and social network feeds.


More so than any previous generation of cellular gear, 5G will have to serve two masters, Nandlall said. With wireless sensors, industrial equipment, and an array of consumer gadgets, in a few years there are likely to be 10 mobile connections per person. If 5 billion humans join the mobile world, that’s 50 billion connections that 5G networks will need to serve.


Not all of those devices will be hungry for megabits per second, Nandlall said. For example, remote sensors may need slow connections to achieve decades of battery life, while other pieces of the so-called Internet of Things may have to have much higher reliability than consumers get when they’re just making phone calls.


“Every now and then, those calls drop, and that’s probably not something that we want if I’m putting an industrial application on it,” Nandlall said. For example, a device that turns the floodgates on a dam had better work correctly and at the right time, he said.


5G flexibility


Bandwidth-hungry consumers won’t get left behind, Nandlall said: As the next major step in the standards process, 5G should deliver 10 times the speed of 4G, putting a theoretical maximum of 10Gbps (bits per second) on the books. But with many more uses of wireless emerging, service providers may carve up their 5G networks and dedicate only part of that capacity to what we think of today as the mobile Internet, he said.


In an example of software’s growing role in networks, 5G should be flexible enough that carriers can reprogram and reconfigure their networks to accommodate different applications, according to Nandlall.


“Those will actually get different slices of the network with different technologies,” including modulation schemes and levels of capacity, Nandlall said. He compared the future architecture to cloud computing with multiple tenants each running their own applications.


Meanwhile, 4G will coexist with 5G, along with Wi-Fi and other technologies, which may include a future lightweight protocol specially designed for machine-to-machine communications, he said.


By moving to 5G, carriers should be able to keep cutting the price of mobile data, Nandlall said. Most consumers haven’t recognized falling prices because their consumption continues to rise, he said. Network efficiencies have slashed the cost of delivering a megabyte of data by about 50 percent per year, from about 46 cents in 2008 to between 1 cent and 3 cents now. That hasn’t lowered subscribers’ bills at the end of the month because average data consumption has been doubling or more each year, he said.


Those looking at requirements for future 5G networks want them to be able to support 50GB of data consumption per subscriber, per month.




Stephen Lawson, IDG News Service , IDG News Service


Stephen Lawson covers mobile, storage and networking technologies for the IDG News Service.
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APNewsBreak: New charges in Blackwater shootings

FILE - In this Sept. 25, 2007 file photo, an Iraqi traffic policeman inspects a car destroyed by a Blackwater security detail in al-Nisoor Square in Baghdad, Iraq. The U.S. Justice Department has brought fresh charges against former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad. The jury indictment announced Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 charges four men with voluntary manslaughter and other crimes. The case stems from the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians. Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when they opened fire at an intersection. Their lawyers have said the insurgents ambushed the guards. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed, File)







FILE - In this Sept. 25, 2007 file photo, an Iraqi traffic policeman inspects a car destroyed by a Blackwater security detail in al-Nisoor Square in Baghdad, Iraq. The U.S. Justice Department has brought fresh charges against former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad. The jury indictment announced Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 charges four men with voluntary manslaughter and other crimes. The case stems from the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians. Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when they opened fire at an intersection. Their lawyers have said the insurgents ambushed the guards. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed, File)







FILE - In this Thursday, Sept. 20, 2007, file photo, Hassan Jabir lies in a hospital bed after he was wounded when guards employed by security company Blackwater opened fire at Nisoor Square in 2007, in Baghdad, Iraq. The U.S. Justice Department has brought fresh charges against former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad. The jury indictment announced Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 charges four men with voluntary manslaughter and other crimes. The case stems from the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians. Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when they opened fire at an intersection. Their lawyers have said the insurgents ambushed the guards. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed, File)







FILE -In this Sept. 20, 2007, file photo Hassan Jabir, 37, recovers from gunshot wounds in a hospital in Baghdad, Iraq, received in his car in the Mansour neighborhood when guards in a U.S. State Department convoy opened fire, shooting him four times. The U.S. Justice Department has brought fresh charges against former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad. The jury indictment announced Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 charges four men with voluntary manslaughter and other crimes. The case stems from the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians. Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when they opened fire at an intersection. Their lawyers have said the insurgents ambushed the guards. (AP Photo/ Khalid Mohammed/File)







WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department on Thursday brought fresh charges against four former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors, resurrecting an internationally charged case over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad.

A new grand jury indictment charges the men in a shooting that inflamed anti-American sentiment in Iraq and heightened diplomatic sensitivities amid an ongoing war. The men were hired to guard U.S. diplomats.

The guards are accused of opening fire in busy Nisoor Square on Sept. 16, 2007. Seventeen Iraqi civilians died, including women and children. Prosecutors say the heavily armed Blackwater convoy used machine guns and grenades in an unprovoked attack. Defense lawyers argue their clients are innocent men who were ambushed by Iraqi insurgents.

The guards were charged with manslaughter and weapons violations in 2008, but a federal judge the following year dismissed the case, ruling the Justice Department withheld evidence from a grand jury and violated the guards' constitutional rights. The dismissal outraged many Iraqis, who said it showed Americans consider themselves above the law. Vice President Joe Biden, speaking in Baghdad in 2010, expressed his "personal regret" for the shootings.

A federal appeals court reinstated the case in 2011, saying now-retired Judge Ricardo Urbina had wrongly interpreted the law.

Prosecutors again presented evidence before a grand jury, and U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth gave the Justice Department until Monday to decide what to do with the case.

The defendants include Dustin Heard, a retired U.S. Marine from Knoxville, Tenn.; Evan Liberty, a retired U.S. Marine from Rochester, N.H.; Nick Slatten, a former U.S. Army sergeant from Sparta, Tenn., and Paul Slough, a U.S. Army veteran from Keller, Texas.

Slatten is charged with 14 counts of voluntary manslaughter and 16 counts of attempt to commit manslaughter; Liberty and Heard are charged with 13 counts of voluntary manslaughter and 16 counts of attempt to commit manslaughter; and Slough is charged with 13 counts of voluntary manslaughter and 18 counts of attempt to commit manslaughter. All four were also charged with one count of using and discharging a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence.

They were charged under the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act, a statute that allows the government to prosecute certain government employees and contractors for crimes committed overseas. Defense lawyers have argued that statute does not apply in this case since the guards were working as State Department contractors, not for the military.

Heard's lawyer, David Schertler, said in an email he was disappointed with the prosecution, which he believes has no merit.

"We will continue to fight and defend Dustin Heard's innocence and honor until he is fully exonerated," he said.

Lawyers for Slough and Slatten declined to comment. Liberty's lawyer did not respond to requests for comment.

In a statement, U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. said the prosecution "demonstrates our commitment to upholding the rule of law even in times of war and to bringing justice to the memories of those innocent men, women and children who were gunned down in Baghdad more than six years ago."

Prosecutors last month agreed to dismiss their case against a fifth guard, Donald Ball, a retired Marine from West Valley City, Utah. A sixth guard, Jeremy Ridgeway of California, pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing.

The Justice Department had earlier dropped Slatten from the case, but after the appeals court decision reinstated the prosecution, the government said he remained a defendant.

The company formerly known as Blackwater Worldwide is under new ownership and is now headquartered in Virginia. It had changed its name to Xe Services, but the company was sold to a group of investors who then changed the name to Academi.

Blackwater founder Erik Prince is no longer affiliated with the company.

In moving forward with the case, the government will seek to overcome some of the legal problems that have dogged the prosecution. The case ran into trouble because the State Department promised the guards that their statements explaining what happened would not be used for criminal prosecution. The guards told investigators that they fired their weapons, a crucial admission. Because of a limited immunity deal, prosecutors had to build their case without those statements, a high legal hurdle. In dismissing the case, Urbina said prosecutors had read the statements, reviewed them in the investigation and used them to question witnesses and get search warrants.

Court documents also reveal conflicting evidence, with some witnesses saying the Blackwater convoy was under fire and others saying it was not.

___

Follow Fred Frommer on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ffrommer and Eric Tucker at https://twitter.com/etuckerAP

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-10-17-Blackwater%20Prosecution/id-90840361ffc2491f9aa926cd0ceb8ae6
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Sunday, October 20, 2013

'Gravity' holds atop box office for 3rd week


NEW YORK (AP) — Star power and Oscar aspirations are reigning at the box office, where the space adventure "Gravity" and the Somali pirate docudrama "Captain Phillips" are holding off all comers.

With $31 million over the weekend according to studio estimates Sunday, "Gravity" topped the box office for the third straight week, cementing its status as the juggernaut of the fall movie-going season. It also took in another $33.5 million overseas.

The 3-D Warner Bros. movie, staring Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, has now made more than $170 million in three weeks. The film's groundbreaking visuals have been particularly popular on IMAX screens, where it made an "Avatar"-like $7.4 million on the weekend.

"Captain Phillips," starring Tom Hanks and directed by Paul Greengrass, also held in second place, taking in $17.3 million in its second week. The Sony film slid only 33 percent from its debut last weekend of $25.7 million.

The two movies and their veteran stars were able to keep three new wide releases at bay: the horror remake "Carrie" ($17 million for Sony and MGM), the Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarzenegger action flick "Escape Plan" ($9.8 million for Lionsgate), and the WikiLeaks drama "The Fifth Estate."

The last utterly flopped — a fate predicted by its subject, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange — taking in a paltry $1.7 million for Disney. It's the worst debut this year for a film in such wide release (1,769 theaters).

"It's a very strong lineup that is not budging," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for box-office tracker Rentrak, who noted the primary family choice, "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2," is also holding steady with $10.1 million in its fourth week. "'Carrie' came into a very competitive marketplace."

In a limited release of just 19 theaters, Steve McQueen's highly-anticipated slavery epic "12 Years a Slave," starring Chiwetel Ejiofor, opened with $960,000. The exceptionally high theater average of $50,000 suggested considerable audience eagerness for the already much-lauded film.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Rentrak. Where available, latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. "Gravity," $30 million ($33.5 million international).

2. "Captain Phillips," $17.3 million ($9.1 million international).

3. "Carrie," $17 million.

4. "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs," $10.1 million ($5.1 million international).

5. "Escape Plan," $9.8 million ($9.4 million international).

6. "Prisoners," $2.1 million ($7.3 million international).

7. "Enough Said," $1.8 million.

8. "Fifth Estate," $1.7 million.

9. "Runner Runner," $1.6 million ($4.2 million international).

10. "Insidious Chapter 2," $1.5 million ($6.4 million international).

___

Estimated weekend ticket sales Friday through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada) for films distributed overseas by Hollywood studios, according to Rentrak:

1. "Gravity," $33.5 million.

2. "Turbo," $16 million.

3. "The Wolverine," $13.6 million.

4. "Special ID," $12.5 million.

5. "Stalingrad," $12.2 million.

6. "Escape Plan," $9.4 million.

7. "Captain Phillips," $9.1 million.

8. "Prisoners," $7.3 million.

9. "Despicable Me 2," $7.1 million.

10. "Insidious Chapter 2," $6.4 million.

___

Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle

___

Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by News Corp.; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/gravity-holds-atop-box-office-3rd-week-160257421--finance.html
Category: Susan Bennett   derek hough   Emmys 2013   Mayweather vs Canelo   Six Flags  

Obamacare is Punishment for Slavery? (Balloon Juice)

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Get the No. 1 Android app that Apple refuses to approve!

Android Central App

We've had more than a few folks ask us to bring the official Android Central App to iOS. And, frankly, we'd be happy to do it. Unfortunately, any attempts to do so have been thwarted. And, so, we're Android-only ... for now. We've got a few ideas, though, and maybe iOS isn't the only other route to go. More on that later, though.

For now, be sure to check out the latest version of the official Android Central App. And swing by our downloads section for more ways to keep up with the latest Android news while you're at it!


    






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Haves And Have-Nots

"We really are living in a time of a disparity of fortune, which is greater than ever before." — Chrystia Freeland
Enlarge Thinkstock

"We really are living in a time of a disparity of fortune, which is greater than ever before." — Chrystia Freeland




Thinkstock

"We really are living in a time of a disparity of fortune, which is greater than ever before." — Chrystia Freeland







The solutions will come from more of a quest rather than a pre-packaged set of ideas. — Jacqueline Novogratz



Income inequality is at an all-time high between the haves and the have-nots. But does the poverty gap have to be so wide, and can it potentially be eliminated altogether? In this hour, TED speakers share some big ideas about inequality and new ways we might achieve prosperity for all.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/16/235781665/haves-and-have-nots?ft=1&f=1019
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Amat Escalante's 'Heli' Wins Top Jury Prize at Montreal Film Fest


TORONTO - Amat Escalante's brutal Mexican drug war drama Heli on Saturday was named the best international feature at the Festival du Nouveau Cinema in Montreal.



The Canadian festival gave its top jury prize, the Louve d'Or, to Mexico's foreign-language Oscar submission, which earlier won the best director prize at Cannes, followed by a raft of other festival trophies.


PHOTOS: 10 Hollywood Films Tweaked for International Release


In the same category, the Montreal jury gave a special jury prize to Simon Gross and Nana Ekvtimishvili's In Bloom, a coming-of-age drama set during Georgia's civil war.


And the best actor/actress award at the Festival du Nouveau Cinema went to Samantha Castillo for her star-turn in Bad Hair (Pelo Malo), Venezuelan writer-director Mariana Rondon's drama about a preteen boy whose obsession with his hair causes friction with his widowed mother.


The Montreal festival is to wrap Sunday after screening 273 films from 47 countries.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/film/~3/FQxvl4s5oU4/story01.htm
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Texas student dies of self-inflicted gunshot wound at high school


By Karen Brooks


AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - A Texas high school student shot himself to death in the courtyard of his public school during the lunch hour on Tuesday, school officials said.


The student, whose name and age were not released, died at 12:04 p.m. local time (5:04 p.m. GMT) after shooting himself at Lanier High School in Austin, said Tiffany Young, a spokeswoman for the Austin Independent School District.


No other students were harmed, officials said.


"We are saddened by this tragic loss," Young said. "Our thoughts are with the family."


The school was placed on lockdown briefly following the incident, and students were released for the day soon afterward, Young said. Counseling will be offered to students and their families on a continuing basis, she said.


Officials declined to comment on the gun involved in the shooting, including how the student obtained it and was able to bring it onto campus.


Many Austin schools were built in the 1970s, and most of the structures are not equipped with metal detectors, Young said. After Tuesday's incident, the school may reconsider its approach to security, Young said.


"We look at any incident like this and see if there's anything that we should put in place for safety measures," Young said.


(Reporting by Karen Brooks; Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Alden Bentley)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/texas-student-dies-self-inflicted-gunshot-wound-high-205417696.html
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

The Greatest Living Figure Of Chasidic Music

[unable to retrieve full-text content]The Modzitzer sect of Chasidic Judaism, which originated in the Polish town of Modzitz, is known for its beautiful melodies. Among the most emblematic and prolific composers in this tradition is Brooklynite Ben Zion Shenker — who, at 88, continues to create new works.Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NprProgramsATC/~3/vLNvdTfgh_E/the-greatest-living-figure-of-chasidic-music
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Ken Cuccinelli: Obamacare debut a "national embarrassment" (cbsnews)

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Bon Jovi walks super fan down the aisle

Celebs











52 minutes ago

Gonzalo Cladera was in on the fun as his bride Branka Delic's rock idol Jon Bon Jovi joined them at their wedding (along, of course, with Elvis).

David Bergman via Bon Jovi

Gonzalo Cladera was in on the fun as his bride Branka Delic's rock idol Jon Bon Jovi joined them at their Las Vegas wedding (along, of course, with Elvis).

On Saturday, Branka Delic no longer had to be "livin' on a prayer." She was livin' the dream, as her musical idol Jon Bon Jovi ushered her down the aisle at the Graceland Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas.

No, she and Bon Jovi weren't getting married — he was just fulfilling the traditional "father of the bride" function, bringing her to her (clearly very understanding) husband-to-be Gonzalo Cladera for their nuptials. 

The ceremony was the culmination of a successful web campaign by the Australian bride, who solicited the New Jersey rocker (who happened to be playing a show that night in Vegas as part of his "Because We Can" tour) via a web page: BonJoviWalkMeDownTheAisle.com and Facebook page. 

Delic's web page plea indicated that the 34-year-old had given up on her childhood dream of actually marrying Bon Jovi himself, but ended, "We're begging you ... make this wedding happen. There is plenty of time in the afternoon for you to come and walk her down the aisle before the show. We’re living on a prayer and we want you to come lay your hands on me and walk me down the aisle!"

Jon Bon Jovi posed for photos with Branka Delic and Gonzalo Cladera before the ceremony.

David Bergman via Bon Jovi

Jon Bon Jovi posed for photos with Branka Delic and Gonzalo Cladera before the ceremony.

The chapel has particular significance for Bon Jovi: It was where he got married in 1989. 

Still, Delic had no idea he was going to show up to fulfill her dream on the day of the wedding; Bon Jovi surprised her with his appearance. He posed for some pictures with the grinning bride, then did what he had been asked to do. And it turned out he wasn't the only rocker present — this being the Graceland Chapel, and in Las Vegas, of course "Elvis" was also in the building.

Afterward, ever classy, Bon Jovi also took time to tweet out the image of the two of them in the chapel; the expression on Delic's face is priceless:

And Delic was, as expected, very grateful, too:

Congrats to the couple — and a salute to a rock star who really knew how to step up to the plate.








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/jon-bon-jovi-walks-super-fan-down-aisle-las-vegas-8C11388648
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Is Selena Gomez Dating Union J's George Shelley?

Despite rumors that she is romantically involved with Union J singer, George Shelley, jealous boys around the nation can breathe easy: Selena Gomez is still single.


Asked if she’s “starting to become friends” with the Union J singer on the U.K.’s “Daybreak,” Gomez replied, “I wish! He has not hit me up… he’s kinda slacking.”


The rumors of the reported romance most likely stems from a video message the 21-year-old songstress left for Shelley, saying "Hey, George, it's Selena," she said in August. "I was in London for a bit and I'm actually bummed I missed you, so next time maybe give me a call."


However, 20-year-old George did tell "The Mirror" that he is more than a bit interested. "Selena's one of those massive celebrities who doesn't even know you exist, so I was gob-smacked," he said. "I thought it was a lookalike at first. I could feel my cheeks going red and the lads laughed at me."



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'Grey's Anatomy' Recap: Love's Divide?




ABC


"Grey's Anatomy's" Tessa Ferrer, left, Jessica Capshaw and Sara Ramirez



[Warning: This story contains spoilers from the "I Bet It Stung" episode of Grey's Anatomy.]



Meredith returned to work on Thursday's episode of ABC's Grey's Anatomy, but the mother of two found that juggling a demanding career and young children isn't easy when your husband has a position that's just as pressing.


Meanwhile, Arizona and Leah rang the potential new couple alert as Callie learned it was finally time to put herself first and reclaim her life. Here's a look at how everyone fared during "I Bet It Stung."


Alex and Jimmy
Alex (Justin Chambers), worried that he'll resort to fighting with his father Jimmy (James Remar), reveals he took his mother's last name, and still refuses to speak with him. Jo (Camilla Luddington), meanwhile, pushes Jimmy to check into recovery. After Jo successfully gets Jimmy into rehab, he reveals he doesn't want to let her down -- just like he did with his family. In the closing moments, Jimmy fails to recognize Alex, who seemed poised to break the silence with his father. 


PHOTOS: On the Set of 'Grey's Anatomy's' 200th Episode


Arizona, Leah, and Callie
Arizona (Jessica Capshaw), who got hammered at the hospital after the gala, thinks she slept with Leah (Tessa Ferrer). After noting that she won't tell anyone about "the other night," Leah attempts to take Arizona up on her offer to join one of her surgeries. Leah instead is asked (politely) to leave because it's too crowded in the OR. Arizona and Callie, meanwhile, are still on the outs. For her part, Callie jokes that she's rebounding with Derek and Meredith. "I rebounded to the McDreamys," she says to Owen in one of the episode's best moments. At the end of the hour, Callie tells Arizona she needs her place back and that Arizona needs to move out as she has to start taking care of herself. "I need my life back. I need me back," Callie says, noting that she's having an intern pack up Arizona's belongings. Leah overhears the entire conversation at the bar and offers to have Arizona stay at her place. Turns out Leah helped a drunken Arizona inside her apartment after the gala, and they shared a dance party and grilled cheese, while watching films of Derek to prep for the surgery the intern was booted out of. "It was the first time I felt like I had someone around here who got me," Leah explains to a clueless Arizona, who had assumed they slept together. After setting the record straight, Leah flirts with Arizona, going back to a compliment the separated doc just handed out. "Let's go back to the part where you said I was pretty," Leah tells her. Callie winds up taking advantage of her newly empty house for a one-woman dance party, as she enjoys being back at home. It's a long overdue (and great) moment for Callie. 


Owen
Owen, meanwhile, is rebounding, too, with the doc he met at the gala, Emma, who is behaving in a very un-Cristina-like fashion and baking bread for him.


Meredith and Cristina
Meredith is back at work, but quickly finds that Cristina -- and Shane -- both seem to think that she can't juggle her career with being a mother of two. Almost immediately, she discovers that she has childcare issues and a case of bad timing when she needs to go pump in the middle of a moment with Cris. Mer's bad timing continues after Zola cuts her head and needs stitches, which forces Cris to bump her off her big surgery, thus opening the door for the BFFs to begin their potential separation as star Sandra Oh prepares to exit the long-running drama. The sting is much more brutal for Meredith, who left Zola with Alex and a nurse in a move she feared was something her mother would have done. "You have different priorities now," Cris says, noting she doesn't do research, and is logging fewer hours in her effort to be a good mom. "Bailey never let up, she lives here; Callie never let up; Ellis Grey never let up; and I know you don't want to be your mother. I'm saying you and I started running down the same road at the same time and at a certain point, you let up, you slowed down … but don't pretend [your priorities] don't affect your skills. You are a very good surgeon, but we're in different places now -- and that's OK." Mer takes out her frustrations with Derek, clashing with her husband about not being there, as she claims that she's being forced to pick between being a good mother and a good surgeon.


PHOTOS: 'Grey's Anatomy's' Famous Departures


Jackson and Stephanie
The Chief (James Pickens Jr.) is recovering quickly with Catherine Avery (Debbie Allen) around to see his progression. She tells him that everyone is coddling him and, at that rate, his recovery will take forever. Meanwhile, Mama Avery meets her son's new girlfriend, Stephanie (Jerrika Hinton), in the worst way possible: walking in on her with Jackson in the on-call room. Stephanie and Catherine continue to clash as Mama Avery believes the intern is beneath her son, though the latter winds up coming around after the intern finally stands up for herself.


What did you think of Grey's Anatomy? How do you feel about Arizona and Leah as a potential pairing? Hit the comments below with your thoughts. Grey's airs Thursdays at 9 p.m. on ABC.


E-mail: Lesley.Goldberg@THR.com
Twitter: @Snoodit



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Mumbai Film Festival: Costa Gavras Honored With Lifetime Achievement Award



Mumbai Film Festival


Costa Gavras presented with the Lifetime Achievement Award by Mumbai Academy of Moving Images chairman Shyam Benegal



MUMBAI -- The 15th Mumbai Film Festival opened Thursday evening with an opening ceremony that saw lifetime achievement awards being presented to Costa Gavras and Indian film icon Kamal Haasan. The ceremony also included the traditional lighting of a lamp, which was done by top Bollywood actress Sonakshi Sinha. She was accompanied by the Mumbai Academy of Moving Images chairman and veteran director Shyam Benegal and MAMI trustee Amit Khanna, among other dignitaries.



“I’m happy to receive the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Mumbai Film Festival,” said Gavras who was presented the award by Benegal. “It is wonderful to see Indian cinema has a large local audience watching their films. I wish the festival best of luck.” The festival's program includes a retrospective of Gavras' works including his acclaimed political thriller Z.


PHOTOS: Indian Talent Going Global


Leading actor-director-producer Kamal Haasan was bestowed with the Indian Lifetime Achievement Award, which was presented by the chief minister of Maharashtra state (of which Mumbai is the capital), Prithviraj Chavan.


“There never was a method to my acting. I simply had great teachers, some of whom are present here tonight -- I respect them a lot,” said Haasan in his acceptance speech. “Festivals have also taught me a lot and I am humbled to have received this honor.”


“The state of Maharashtra supports and will continue to support this festival. I have been a huge fan of Mr. Gavras and Kamal Haasan,” Chavan remarked, adding that he saw Z "when I was in college and it had an impact on me." While referring to himself as "the odd man out in this gathering of great film-makers and artists," Chavan said that among other pressing issues faced by the film industry, the government would be considering the long-discussed proposal of establishing a Bollywood museum in Mumbai's Film City studio complex.


The opening ceremony was held at the festival's main venue, Liberty Theatre in south Mumbai, an art deco cinema with old world charm. The cinema was built in 1947, the year of India's independence from British rule. MFF has been moving from one venue to another in the absence of a permanent site, something that Benegal asked government for in his opening address.


STORY: 'The Butler' to Open Mumbai Film Festival


MFF is presented by Reliance Entertainment with MAMI, an industry body featuring leading Indian film figures, founded in 1997 by the late filmmaker Hrishikesh Mukherjee.


This year's festival competition jury is presided over by Driving Miss Daisy director Bruce Beresford, with fellow members including French actress Nathalie Baye, Japanese film-maker Masato Harada, Indian actress Konkona Sen Sharma and Canada-based Indian director Deepa Mehta.


The India Gold competition jury is headed by Oscar winning Iranian director Asghar Farhadi (A Separation) while fellow jurists include Australian film editor Jill Bilcock (Moulin Rouge), British actor-director Waris Hussein (Passage to India), Afghan director Siddiq Barmak (Osama) and Hong Kong International Film Festival director and film critic, Roger Garcia.


The festival opened with a screening of Lee Daniels' The Butler starring Forest Whitaker. The festival's closing film is The Fifth Estate, which will screen after the awards ceremony on Oct. 24.


MFF will feature more than 200 films from 65 countries, including spotlights on Spanish, French and Cambodian cinema. The festival will also pay tribute to the late Bollywood icon Yash Chopra (who passed away last October), the late Bengali director Rituparno Ghosh and the late Bollywood actor Pran.


Running alongside the festival will be the three-day Mumbai Film Mart which opens Friday.


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Kris Jenner & Ross Mathews Have A Delish Sushi Date In Hollywood!





krisrosssushi


Looks like these two are fast friends!


After appearing on the E! show Hello Ross, Kris Jenner urged Ross Mathews to be her gal-pal guy-pal, exclaiming:




"It's about time you started hanging out with me!"



And so they did!


Kris walked arm-in-arm with Ross as they left the divine sushi joint Katsuya in Hollywood on Thursday night—and the momager looked happier than ever!


Perhaps she's keeping the funny man around to help her forget about personal drama!


Either way, we're happy to see the both of you smiling!


[Image via ROLO/AKM-GSI.]



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Source: http://perezhilton.com/2013-10-18-kris-jenner-ross-mathews-dinner-sushi-katsuya-hollywood
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Friday, October 18, 2013

SoftBank to take over mobile distributor Brightstar for $1.26 billion


Fresh from its acquisition of Sprint, Japan's SoftBank plans to take control of Brightstar, the dominant distributor of mobile devices in the U.S. and a global player serving more than 200 carriers.


SoftBank has reached a definitive agreement to invest $1.26 billion in Brightstar and immediately gain a 57 percent stake in the company. It will have the option later to raise its ownership to 70 percent. The cash transaction, which SoftBank announced on Friday, will be carried out through a U.S. subsidiary.


[ Get expert advice about planning and implementing your BYOD strategy with InfoWorld's 29-page "Mobile and BYOD Deep Dive" PDF special report. | Keep up on key mobile developments and insights with the Mobilize newsletter. ]


Privately held Brightstar, based in Miami, is not a well-known name but plays a key role in the mobile phone business in the U.S. and other countries. It works between carriers and device manufacturers, providing a range of services for distribution, retailing, device insurance, buy-back and other functions. At CES in January, the company announced a partnership with singer and actress Jennifer Lopez and a major Verizon Wireless retailer to set up Viva Movil, a chain of Latino-focused Verizon stores across the U.S.


The company calls itself the world's largest mobile device distributor, with annual revenue above $7 billion and operations in more than 50 countries. The SoftBank deal values Brightstar at $2.2 billion, including its outstanding debt.


After the SoftBank takeover, which is expected to take place by the end of this year, Brightstar says it will continue to serve its customers. Marcelo Claure, who founded the company in 1997, will hand over chairmanship to SoftBank chief Masayoshi Son but will remain president and CEO. He will own 43 percent of Brightstar, which will remain in Miami.


The Brightstar takeover could add to SoftBank's and Sprint's clout in acquiring handsets, according to analyst Chetan Sharma, of Chetan Sharma Consulting. "It just makes Sprint more competitive with pricing in the U.S.," he said in an email interview.


However, Brightstar's customers include some of Sprint's biggest competitors, who might be wary of working with a distributor controlled by a rival carrier, some observers said.


Stephen Lawson covers mobile, storage and networking technologies for The IDG News Service. Follow Stephen on Twitter at @sdlawsonmedia. Stephen's e-mail address is stephen_lawson@idg.com


Source: http://www.infoworld.com/t/mobile-technology/softbank-take-over-mobile-distributor-brightstar-126-billion-229103
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Ivanka Trump Brings Her Baby Bundle to the Doctor's Office

Holding her little bundle of joy close in her arms, Ivanka Trump took baby boy Joseph Frederick to the doctor's office in New York City this morning (October 18).


Already in pre-baby form, the Trump princess had her blonde hair down, wearing large shades and heels as she held Joseph in her arms while making her way into the office.


Joseph Frederick was absolutely precious, no more than the size of a loaf of bread in his mother's arms, wrapped in a cream blanket. Looking close enough at the pictures, little Joseph's tiny feet also stuck out from underneath his warm shell.


His 31-year-old mommy explained the meaning behind her son's name, writing on Tumblr, "Joseph Frederick Kushner, named after each of our paternal grandfathers, both master builders of their generation and inspiring patriarchs of their families."


Source: http://celebrity-gossip.net/ivanka-trump/ivanka-trump-brings-her-baby-bundle-doctors-office-945573
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13 streaming nightmares on Netflix






It’s only a matter of days before Halloween, and time to really start packing in those scary movies to set the mood. Last time, we got the ball rolling with a selection of recommended movies from Hulu, and here’s an additional thirteen (!)—in honor of the witching hour—from Netflix. Like our last batch, this selection ranges from moody and spooky to gory and funny. They include zombies, vampires, piranha, giant bugs, and wurdalaks. Light up your jack-o-lantern and press play.


Nosferatu



★★★★★


Widely considered one of the greatest directors in history, F.W. Murnau was one of the original German Expressionists, using extraordinary sets and angles to illuminate the moods of his stories. For Nosferatu (1922), he adapted Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula, but failed to secure the rights. Stoker’s family tried to sue, and we almost lost this amazing film to history. The incredible, creepy Max Schreck stars as the ratlike Count Orlok, who rises out of his coffin, stiff as a board, not moving a muscle. For further research, see Shadow of the Vampire (2000), a fiction film that imagines what this movie might have been like if Schreck were a real vampire.


Black Sabbath



★★★★☆


The great Italian horror director Mario Bava made the full-color Black Sabbath (1963) with three separate stories, and it’s one of the greatest horror anthologies ever made, alongside Dead of Night (1945) and Kwaidan (1964). The first spooky story, “The Telephone” takes place entirely in a basement apartment, about a call girl terrorized by a series of mysterious phone calls. Horror legend Boris Karloff—who also “hosts” the movie—stars in the Russian story “The Wurdalak,” about a dead creature that stalks the living. And finally, there’s “The Drop of Water,” about a dishonest nurse hired to prepare a corpse for burial. Netflix has the English-language version, which was edited and is significantly different from the Italian version available on DVD. Bava’s original title was I tre volti della paura (The Three Faces of Fear), but the distributor changed it to cash on in the success of Bava’s Black Sunday (1960). However, the famous band borrowed their name from this movie, so it all worked out.


Rosemary’s Baby



★★★★★


Director Roman Polanski adapted Ira Levin’s novel to make his first Hollywood hit, Rosemary’s Baby (1968). A short-haired Mia Farrow stars as Rosemary, who moves with her actor husband Guy (John Cassavetes) into a New York apartment building. Their neighbors (Ruth Gordon and Sidney Blackmer) are slightly odd, and strange things begin happening. When Rosemary finds herself pregnant, things turn downright sinister. Polanski is a master of paranoia, and especially the paranoia of being trapped and alone in an unwelcome place; and yet his movie was so classy that it earned a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for Gordon, as well as a Best Screenplay nomination for Polanski.


Piranha



★★★★☆


Joe Dante was among the first generation of filmmakers that had been raised watching movies. Landing a job with producer Roger Corman, he worked his way through the ranks until he became a director, making his solo feature debut with Piranha (1978), a quasi-parody of Jaws. A pair of hikers breaks into a military installation for a swim, and accidentally release genetically engineered piranha into the nearby rivers and streams. The nasty little biters eventually make their way to a summer camp filled with kids. Dante’s low-budget effects are still pretty snappy, and though his usual level of satire hadn’t quite evolved yet, he at least pays homage to some of his favorite old movies by casting Barbara Steele and Kevin McCarthy in small parts. A sequel was made, and a newcomer named James Cameron was hired to direct it.


Re-Animator



★★★★★


Chicago native Stuart Gordon was involved in a fringe theater troupe before he turned filmmaker with this incredible adaptation of an H.P. Lovecraft story. Not reverent in the slightest, Re-Animator (1985) goes off in its own hilarious, bizarre directions, starting when young scientist Herbert West (Jeffrey Combs) rents a room with University student Dan Cain (Bruce Abbott). West creates a glowing green formula that resurrects dead tissue, and he does not hesitate to use it. One character, a menacing professor named “Dr. Hans Gruber” (Al Berry) becomes separated from his head and still manages to cause trouble. The lovely Barbara Crampton co-stars as Dan’s girlfriend, and also the dean’s daughter. Composer Richard Band blatantly steals music from Psycho, and it still works.


Scream



★★★★★


A decade after Wes Craven made one of the great slasher movies, A Nightmare on Elm Street, the genre had been played out. So Craven and screenwriter Kevin Williamson teamed up for Scream (1996), a movie about characters that were actually aware of slasher movies and knew all the rules. This clever premise somehow pays off as characters end up breaking the rules in spite of themselves, or even inventing new ones. Craven’s direction is crisply paced, using available spaces to spooky effect and allowing for welcome moments of levity. Drew Barrymore appears in the famous prologue (“What’s your favorite scary movie?”), and Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, David Arquette, Matthew Lillard, Rose McGowan, and Skeet Ulrich fill out the rest.


Bride of Chucky



★★★☆☆


The talking doll Chucky, voiced by Brad Dourif, was the killer in the Child’s Play slasher series, one of many that ran out of steam. But in the late 1990s the series became more playful with Bride of Chucky (1998). Oscar-nominee Jennifer Tilly plays Tiffany, an ex-girlfriend of Chucky’s former human self, who tries to resurrect her lover (“Well, hello… dolly!”), but winds up turned into another doll. Chucky and Tiffany hit the road with a young couple, hoping to take over their human bodies, and wind up on another bloody killing spree. Amazingly, Hong Kong action director Ronny Yu (The Bride with White Hair) was hired to direct this, and he brings a slick, kinetic, cartoonish energy to the proceedings.


Mimic



★★★★☆


One of the most fascinating and visionary directors working today, Guillermo Del Toro came to Hollywood after his memorable Spanish debut, Cronos. His sophomore effort, Mimic (1997), is fairly silly, but strikes just the right tone. Oscar-winner Mira Sorvino plays entomologist Dr. Susan Tyler, who saved the city from a rampaging disease by inventing a new breed of insect. Three years later, strange attacks begin occurring and it seems that they have something to do with Susan’s creation. It’s not long before a ragtag band of misfits end up in a strange underground world of broken subway trains and sewer drains to save the city again. Del Toro has a genuine enthusiasm for monsters, as well as labyrinthian spaces, and despite some short cuts and drawbacks, the movie is very entertaining. Sadly, Netflix is showing the original 105-minute theatrical cut and not Del Toro’s much-improved 112-minute director’s cut.


Land of the Dead



★★★★★


Twenty years after making the third part of his “Living Dead” trilogy, George A. Romero made part four, Land of the Dead (2005). In it, bands of outsiders have set up systems to stay safe from zombie attacks. One of them, Riley (Simon Baker) dreams of heading north, and another, Cholo (John Leguizamo) hopes to raise enough cash to buy a luxury apartment in a gated high-rise run by entrepreneur Kaufman (Dennis Hopper). Unfortunately, one of the zombies has begun to show indications of intelligence—and leadership. Some critics remarked that this was one of the first Hollywood movies to take on the moods and themes of 9/11, albeit indirectly. Romero is also interested in the imbalance of class systems, which has only become more of an issue. Asia Argento, the daughter of Romero’s pal, director Dario Argento, co-stars. Reportedly, the creators of Shaun of the Dead were given parts as zombies.


The Cabin in the Woods



★★★★☆


Taking the idea of the post-modern, self-aware horror film to an entirely new level, The Cabin in the Woods (2012), written by Joss Whedon and directed by Drew Goddard, begins like a typical “cabin in the woods” movie. A group of friends, who don’t look as if they’d be friends in real life, drive to the woods to spend the weekend partying and having sex in a cabin. Strangely, this cabin appears to be monitored by two guys (Bradley Whitford and Richard Jenkins) in a computer lab. And things just continue to escalate, getting weirder and more mythic. Of course, it’s all a massive deconstruction of the genre itself, and many horror buffs can’t stand this movie for that reason, but it does have an equal number of passionate fans on the other side. Star Chris Hemsworth, of course, played Thor in Whedon’s The Avengers later the same year.


Tucker and Dale vs. Evil



★★★★☆


Here’s the movie that detractors of The Cabin in the Woods cite as being a true work of genius. Eli Craig’s Tucker and Dale vs. Evil (2011) also begins with the same cliché: a group of teens head to a cabin in the woods, but detours into another cliché, when the teens stop at a gas station for maps and beer, and pick up creepy vibes from the hillbilly locals. This time, however, the hillbillies are Tucker (Alan Tudyk) and Dale (Tyler Labine) and the twist is that they’re super nice! When the gory slayings start, it looks like Tucker and Dale are to blame, but the truth is more bizarre and hilarious. This movie doesn’t have the scale of The Cabin in the Woods, but it still goes to unexpected, and perhaps warmer, places; by the end, we grow to genuinely care for our hapless hillbillies.


Pulse



★★★★☆


Now for a couple of imports: Japan became well-known for a little while for creepy and innovative ghost stories (as well as girls with stringy hair), but Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s Pulse (2001) gets points for being one of the most genuinely frightening movies of its decade. A man hasn’t turned up to work in a few days. One of his co-workers visits his apartment, speaks to him, turns his back for a moment, and discovers the man’s corpse. He checks the man’s computer. The screen is telescoped into infinity and weird figures are appearing in the corners. Another man sets up a new computer, plugs in the internet cable, and is asked, “Do you want to see a ghost?” Things get stranger and more unsettling, with very little chance of predicting where they’ll end up. Kurosawa’s frequent leading man Koji Yakusho appears in a small part. A 2006 American remake, starring Kristen Bell, should be avoided.


Let the Right One In



★★★★★


Adapted from the novel by John Ajvide Lindqvist, the Swedish import Let the Right One In (2008) was the best vampire movie in many a moon. (Ironically, it opened in theaters the same day as the far more popular and far less interesting Twilight.) Director Tomas Alfredson brings an unusually quiet, moody quality, using cold weather and muted colors to enhance the story. A shy, outcast boy, Oskar (with a bad haircut), is bullied at school and lives alone with his single mother. One day a strange girl shows up. Called Eli, the two strike up a friendship, although she keeps saying cryptic things like “I’m twelve. But I’ve been twelve for a long time.” Eventually, he learns that she’s a vampire, and the film reveals what happens to vampires who enter a dwelling without being invited. The climactic showdown with the bullies is absolutely heart-stopping. A surprisingly good American remake, Let Me In (2010), is also worth seeing.


What’s new on Netflix


  • American Gigolo

  • As Good as It Gets

  • A Band Called Death

  • Blood and Wine

  • Breaking Away

  • The Central Park Five

  • Citizen’s Band

  • Confessions of a Dangerous Mind

  • Congo

  • Evil Dead 2

  • Fargo

  • Forrest Gump

  • The Gambler

  • Ghostbusters

  • Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer

  • The House of the Devil

  • The Italian Job

  • Jeffrey

  • Joe Kidd

  • King of New York

  • The Last Days of Disco

  • Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels

  • Mansfield Park

  • The Painting

  • The Rabbi’s Cat

  • Return to Me

  • Road House

  • The Sand Pebbles

  • Timeline

  • Troll 2

  • Twilight (1998)

  • Two Mules for Sister Sara

  • Wake in Fright



Jeffrey M. Anderson , TechHive


Jeffrey has been a working film critic for more than 14 years. He first fell in love with the movies at age six while watching "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein" and served as staff critic for the San Francisco Examiner from 2000 through 2003.
More by Jeffrey M. Anderson









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