Tag Archives: adventure

Safari Boot Camp: How To Become A Wildlife Guide, For Real! (Part 1)

Award-winning writer and photographer Stuart Butler recently spent some time as a “fly on the wall” at a wildlife guide training camp in Tanzania. Here’s Part One of his adventure.

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Safari Boot Camp: How To Become A Wildlife Guide, For Real! (Part 1)

Pee Wee’s Big Adventure is not orver – Hollywood.TV

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Click to Subscribe! – http://bit.ly/SubHTV Hollywood.TV is your source for daily celebrity news and gossip! Pee Wee’s Big Adventure is not over. Paul Reubens confirmed that another Pee-wee…

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Pee Wee’s Big Adventure is not orver – Hollywood.TV

My Awkward Sexual Adventure and More: Nudeworthy on Netflix 7.31.13 [PICS]

It’s a gorgeous summer day, the sun is shining, the birds are singing, but let’s get down to the things that really matter: nudes on Netflix! First up the Canadian comedy My Awkward Sexual Adventure (2012) brings us a plethora of pussy-eating scenes featuring the likes of Laura Olafson and Emily Hampshire ! The WWII drama Lore (2013) has an uplifting bush-only scene from Ursina Lardi , and Home Before Midnight (1979) has a skintastic shower scene with Alison Elliott and Debbie Linden . It’s equal parts silly and sexy on Dinosaur Island (1994) thanks to B-movie bombshell Michelle Bauer , and The Broken (2008) brings us tasty T&A from Game of Thrones star Lena Headey . See pics after the jump!

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My Awkward Sexual Adventure and More: Nudeworthy on Netflix 7.31.13 [PICS]

REVIEW: ‘The Croods’ Can’t Get Its Knuckles Off The Ground Thanks To Primitive Storytelling

Although state-of-the-art in its rendering of textures, movement and stereography, DreamWorks’ latest 3D toon,  The Croods , adopts a relatively primitive approach to storytelling with its Flintstonian construction of stock, ill-fitting narrative elements. Part family adventure story, part romance and part eye-popping thrill ride, this tale of a prehistoric family seeking a new home in a dangerous and geologically volatile environment won’t have the broad appeal of DreamWorks’ Shrek and Kung Fu Panda pics, or Fox’s own B.C.-era Ice Age  franchise. But it should prove a solid earner after its March 22 release in a frame relatively free of rival predators. Conceived in 2005 under the catchier title Crood Awakening , with John Cleese and trade journo-turned-agent-turned-screenwriter Kirk DeMicco ( Racing Stripes ) set to script, The Croods  was intended to further DreamWorks’ collaboration with Aardman Animation ( Chicken Run , Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit , Flushed Away ) before the two companies parted ways in 2006. DeMicco and animation vet Chris Sanders ( Lilo & Stitch ) share scripting and directing duties, with Cleese co-credited for the story. The main element from Crood Awakening  that seems to have survived the transition to the screen is the premise of brutish cavepeople who meet a more evolved humanoid with clever ideas up his fur sleeve, like how to make fire. But instead of the original project’s quasi-Neanderthal community, the core characters here are a frightened family of six called the Croods, seemingly the last of their species after natural selection has chewed its way through their neighbors. Enjoined by patriarch Grug (voiced by Nicolas Cage ) to “never not be afraid,” the Croods hunt as a pack by day and huddle in a cave by night to hide from a delightfully designed bestiary of made-up monsters, such as the self-explanatory Bear Owl and the Macawnivore, a colorful saber-toothed tiger variant roughly the size of a rhino. Grug’s wife, Ugga ( Catherine Keener ); doltish son, Thunk ( Clark Duke ); tart-tongued mother-in-law, Gran ( Cloris Leachman ); and ferociously belligerent toddler daughter, Sandy (“Release the baby!” is one of the pic’s funnier catchphrases), are all content to stick to the routine. But teenage daughter Eep ( Emma Stone ) longs for broader horizons and a literally brighter view of the world. Enter Guy ( Ryan Reynolds ), the only survivor of a family that, judging by his svelter frame, more erect posture and higher forehead, must have been a bit further up the evolutionary ladder. Although most of the Croods are impressed with Guy’s innovations, like fire and shoes, Grug wants no truck with this young hotshot who’s winning Eep’s heart, or any of his newfangled ideas. However, when it starts to look like Guy may be right about the world breaking up, they have no choice but to seek greener pastures. The main problem with the film is that the script simply isn’t very funny, and its various subplots never quite mesh satisfyingly together; apart from Grug, Eep and Guy, the other characters add little to the proceedings apart from a few feeble jokes. Yet these story deficiencies are fairly well papered over by the pacey, smoothly animated action scenes, delivered at regular intervals. Highlights include an early hunt, with a football-like egg passed from character to character, that gains much from well-timed, Wile E. Coyote-style slapstick; and a nifty escape sequence involving volcanic eruptions, sticky tar and, of all things, makeshift puppets. Younger auds will be hypnotized by the pic’s scorching color palette, particularly in the Avatar -like jungle setting, and throughout the animators have lavished loving attention on how different kinds of light (moon, sun, fire) play on the surfaces of skin, fur and landscape. Presumably, it’s in this area that ace lenser Roger Deakins lent his services as a visual consultant, as he did on DreamWorks’ How to Train Your Dragon . Character design, however, is less adroit, although the Croods’ stocky, simplistic figures will lend themselves well enough to merchandising. Onscreen, they’re not terribly appealing, and Eep’s helmet-like hair and East German weightlifter physique make her a somewhat awkward match with the spindly Guy, even if it’s laudable for the animators to have designed a young heroine who doesn’t fit the usual Barbie-doll proportions. Follow Movieline on  Twitter. 

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REVIEW: ‘The Croods’ Can’t Get Its Knuckles Off The Ground Thanks To Primitive Storytelling

WATCH: ‘The Kings of Summer’ Will Make Moises Arias An Actor To Watch

One of my favorite Sundance Film Festival  movies has gotten a name change and a May 31 release date, and you should see it for a lot of reasons, the primary one being 18-year-old Moises Arias’ breakout performance.  He’s the kid dancing on the pipe in this teaser trailer for The Kings of Summer — previously Toy’s House — and he had me and a lot of other audience members laughing out loud at the Park City screening I saw in January. Arias plays Biaggio, one of three kids who escape their homes and frustrating families for a makeshift house they build from scavenged materials in a secluded forest in their hometown.  He’s not the star of Jordan Vogt-Roberts coming-of-age comedy — he’s actually the extremely odd classmate who invites himself along for the adventure — but he gets a lot of the best laughs. That has a lot to do with Arias’memorable face and his deer-in-the-headlights stare, which he uses to great advantage. I hope we’re going to be seeing a lot more of this kid, who’s also playing Bonzo in one of the fall’s hotly anticipated films, Gavin Hood’s adaptation of Orson Scott Card’s Hugo Award-winning science-fiction novel,  Ender’s Game . Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter. Follow Movieline on  Twitter. 

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WATCH: ‘The Kings of Summer’ Will Make Moises Arias An Actor To Watch

Where the Hell is Matt? Still Dancing All Over the World!

Where the Hell is Matt? Still doing his thing! You may very well recall the 2008 viral video in which video game designer Matt Harding quit his job, traveled around planet earth and performing his signature dance move in the most far-flung and unlikeliest of places. Well, four years later … Matt’s back with a sequel! Where the Hell is Matt (2012) If it’s possible, Harding’s travelogue is even more impressive in 2012, with him dancing up a storm in locations ranging from Kabul, Afghanistan to Kigali, Rwanda, Damascus, Syria, Poria, Papua New Guinea and even the rarely seen Pyongyang, North Korea. Not every place even made the video, either, but Matt, who released the 2012 video yesterday, promises to add them to a special outtakes video soon. To compare the two and see the adventure that gained Harding his first 15 minutes, check out the 2008 “Where the Hell is Matt” video after the jump: Where the Hell is Matt (2008)

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Where the Hell is Matt? Still Dancing All Over the World!

Midday Motivation | Reaching Your Goals

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The tragedy in life doesn’t lie in not reaching your goal. The tragedy lies in having no goal to reach. – Benjamin Mays The first step to achieving success is knowing what you want. So many of us are randomly traveling through life, not living our purpose and not moving towards a real goal. The reason most people never reach their goals is that they don’t define them, learn about them or even seriously consider them as believable or achievable. Winners can tell you where they are going, what they plan to do along the way, and who will be sharing the adventure with them – Denis Waitley Define your goals, don’t waste time wandering…

Midday Motivation | Reaching Your Goals

9 Suggested New Titles for Will Ferrell’s Dubious New Comedy Casa de mi Padre

Maybe I’m still annoyed nearly ten years after I saw Anchorman in theaters and was so angry with its juvenile, unfunny, dude-baiting humor that I’m sour to any movie whose theme is ” Will Ferrell is a hilariously alpha dimwit!” — but I’m pretty sure Ferrell’s new jam Casa de mi Padre with Gael Garcia Bernal and Diego Luna is downright moronic for real. In fact, the sophisticated-sounding title isn’t a good fit for the film (though it is written entirely in Spanish) and ought to be replaced. Here are nine titles we’d consider, along with the movie’s new teaser trailer.

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9 Suggested New Titles for Will Ferrell’s Dubious New Comedy Casa de mi Padre

Notes from the Magical, Inspired LACMA Live-Read of The Princess Bride

“Inconceivable!” With a single word, unveiled at the close of last month’s live-read of The Apartment , Jason Reitman launched AOUS (that’s Anticipation of Unusual Size) for the December 15 installment in his brilliant LACMA /Film Independent series. Few films are so magical, so beloved, so instantly and indelibly quotable as The Princess Bride , Rob Reiner’s 1987 fantasy-comedy, written by William Goldman, about a princess and her pirate and those involved in and affected by their adventure. And few live-read casting choices could be as inspired as Reitman’s: Paul Rudd in the Westley role originated by Cary Elwes, Cary Elwes in the Humperdinck role originated by Chris Sarandon, and, performing the part of the Grandson first portrayed by Fred Savage over two decades ago… Fred Savage.

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Notes from the Magical, Inspired LACMA Live-Read of The Princess Bride

Ohio Wal-Marts Have Carefully Segregated Book Departments [We Hate Your State]

Ah, another adventure into Race In America. And into Ohio. According to an Akron Beacon Journal columnist , many of the Wal-Mart superstores in the area have a specific section to which all books by and about black people are relegated. More