Tag Archives: digital-camera

REVIEW: Visually Stunning ‘Oblivion’ Looks Like A Live-Action ‘Wall-E’

Although Universal’s publicity department has asked that journalists refrain from spilling the secrets of Oblivion , the major revelations, once they arrive, will hardly surprise anyone familiar with Total Recall , The Matrix  and the countless other sci-fi touchstones hovering over this striking, visually resplendent adventure. Pitting the latest action-hero incarnation of Tom Cruise against an army of alien marauders, director Joseph Kosinski’s follow-up to Tron: Legacy  is a moderately clever dystopian mindbender with a gratifying human pulse, despite some questionable narrative developments along the way. The less-than-airtight construction and conventional resolution may rankle genre devotees, though hardly to the detriment of robust overall B.O. Getting the blockbuster season off to an early start on April 19, when it opens Stateside in wide release and in Imax theaters, Oblivion  reps the latest test of Cruise’s bankability, coming mere months after he tried on a new ass-kicking persona with Jack Reacher . This time he’s Jack Harper, and without giving too much away, there’s an amusing, perhaps unintended existential subtext here about the somewhat interchangeable men of action Cruise has played over the course of his career. Still, the actor’s first foray into science fiction in eight years (if you don’t count Rock of Ages ) comes with a more intriguing backstory than most. It’s the year 2077, six decades after the people of Earth fought and vanquished an evil race of space invaders called Scavengers . But victory has come at a great cost. The planet is now an uninhabitable post-nuclear wasteland, and Jack (Cruise) is one of the last men still stationed on Earth, a fighter pilot/technician assigned to fend off stray Scavengers and repair the powerful drones overseeing a massive hydroelectric energy project necessary for the survival of the human species. It all looks and sounds a bit like a live-action remake of Wall-E , right down to the way the protagonist, spurred by natural curiosity and an unexpected love interest, finds himself on a dangerous unauthorized mission. Until now, Jack has worked effectively enough with Vika ( Andrea Riseborough ), who guides his repair jobs with cool, formidable efficiency from the glassy confines of their high-tech home base (referred to as the Skytower, though it might as well be called the iPad ). But unlike his partner, Jack is a dreamer and a bit of a poet, someone who can’t help reminiscing about the past or questioning everyone’s future. Haunted by pre-apocalyptic visions of a beautiful mystery woman ( Olga Kurylenko ), he can’t quite grasp why humanity, having won the war, has decided to permanently abandon its native planet for an uncertain future in space. As he steers his sleek, pod-like aircraft over a landscape of eerie, desolate beauty, dotted with craters and radiation zones as well as lush, unspoiled lakes and valleys, Jack can’t quite shake the feeling that all is not as it appears to be, despite the chipper directives coming from the mothership (represented by a crackling TV image of Melissa Leo , boasting a deceptively sweet Southern drawl). Indeed, the audience will likely have a clear sense of what’s going on long before scribes Karl Gajdusek and Michael DeBruyn (working from a 2005 short story that Kosinski later developed into a graphic novel) get around to spelling things out; suffice to say the title refers to more than just the physical aftermath of Earth’s cataclysmic destruction. Apart from an initial burst of neo-noir narration and a few moderately pulse-quickening action sequences, one of them set in the impressively imagined ruins of the New York Public Library, the first half of Oblivion  adopts a spare, unhurried approach that conveys a powerfully enveloping sense of Jack’s isolation. Kosinski wastes no opportunity to linger — and you can’t blame him — on his alternately seductive and staggering visuals, richly conceived by production designer Darren Gilford and filmed with marvelous fluidity on the new Sony F65 digital camera by Claudio Miranda (following his Oscar-winning work on Life of Pi  with another accomplished integration of cinematography and visual effects). This patient narrative strategy works well enough until Jack’s big questions finally start to yield answers – many of them delivered, as answers so often are, by the sage presence of Morgan Freeman – and the story’s underlying thinness and predictability gradually become apparent. The superficial cleverness of the plotting, with its elements of amnesia, self-delusion and impossible yearning, at times gestures in the direction of a Christopher Nolan brainteaser (as does the surging score by French band M83 , which sounds like electronified Hans Zimmer ). But the lack of comparable rigor, ingenuity and procedural detail is naggingly evident, as is the almost feel-good manner in which the story explains away some of its morally troubling implications. If Tron: Legacy  offered up an eye-popping playground with more videogame potential than human interest, Oblivion , despite similarly immersive environs, provides greater moment-to-moment dramatic involvement. Cruise combines his usual physical agility and daredevil stuntwork with one of his more affable characters in a while, a high-flying dreamer trying to figure out mankind’s place in this brave new world. Although much of the picture is essentially a one-man show, Riseborough locates the blood and passion beneath Vika’s icy surface, while Kurylenko brings flickers of feeling to an underwritten role. Kosinski’s architectural background is apparent in the picture’s suave, rounded design concepts and clean, coherent compositions, the effect of which is gloriously enveloping in Imax. Insofar as Oblivion  is first and foremost a visual experience, a movie to be seen rather than a puzzle to be deciphered, its chief pleasures are essentially spoiler-proof. Follow Movieline on  Twitter.

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REVIEW: Visually Stunning ‘Oblivion’ Looks Like A Live-Action ‘Wall-E’

REVIEW: Jafar Panahi’s This Is Not a Film Is a Potent Message in a Bottle

The annals of filmmaking are filled with stories of people who managed to make movies against all odds, without money, without shooting permits, without proper professional equipment. This Is Not a Film, the 75-minute film directed by Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi and Mojtaba Mirtahmasb that made its debut at Cannes last spring and is now, thankfully, arriving in theaters Stateside, may be the ultimate achievement in stealth filmmaking, considering that Panahi is currently serving a six-year jail sentence and has been banned by the Iranian government from making films for 20 years. And yet somehow he has made a movie that found its way first to one of the world’s major film festivals, and now to other parts of the world: This Is Not a Film is a small but extremely significant message in a bottle. That metaphor is almost literal: The picture made its way to Cannes via a USB drive — which was smuggled in a cake. The movie covers a day in Panahi’s life as he’s waiting to hear the results of his appeal. It was shot with a digital camera (manned by Mirtahmasb, a documentary filmmaker, who is also heard asking Panahi questions off-camera) and an iPhone (wielded, slyly, by Panahi, because how much harm can a little home movie do?). Mirtahmasb’s camera captures the mundane details of Panahi’s life as he makes and takes calls on his cell phone (including one from his lawyer), answers the door for the food-delivery guy, feeds some greens to his daughter’s large, and surprisingly personable, pet iguana. From these mundane details spring all sorts of provocative, frustrated conversations about the nature of filmmaking under a repressive regime. At one point, Panahi reveals that he’s going to tell the story of a script that he wrote before his arrest, which the authorities had refused to approve. With masking tape, he marks off a corner of his nicely furnished living room to serve as a makeshift set; he describes the actions of his main character, a suicidal young woman. Then he stops abruptly, realizing the futility of the enterprise: “If we could tell a film, then why make a film?” The moment is piercing for the way it cuts to the heart of Panahi’s plight: Here we have a gifted, dedicated filmmaker being kept from doing the thing he lives for. You may as well cut off his right arm – though Panahi himself is too optimistic for that, never resorting to self-pity, at least here. And the fact that Asghar Farhadi’s A Separation managed to win an Oscar this past weekend – something Panahi couldn’t have known, of course, while this Not a Film was being made – does raise the visibility of the restrictions and outright danger Iranian filmmakers face. In that context, seeing This Is Not a Film today is a slightly more hopeful experience than it was last May. Still, Panahi’s house arrest is cause for no one’s joy. (No one outside the Iranian government, that is.) In the course of the day, we hear fireworks outside that sound like gunshots, part of a Persian New Year’s celebration known as “Fireworks Wednesday” that’s supposedly benign and celebratory but which, under current conditions, has the capacity to turn violent. A neighbor rings the doorbell of Panahi’s apartment: She wonders if he’ll watch her small, noisy dog for a few hours while she goes off to the fireworks, and though Panahi at first agrees, he calls her back just seconds later when the dog launches into a barking tirade. Panahi goes online, noting that his access to sites he might like to visit has been seriously curtailed. He turns on the television to catch news of the earthquake in Japan. In the film’s final section, filmed by Panahi himself (now manning the professional camera and not the iPhone), an impromptu encounter with a young man who’s filling in for the building’s superintendent becomes a kind of mini-Panahi film. Earlier Panahi pictures like The Circle and Offside are deeply political movies that derive all their meaning from depictions of people’s everyday lives, rather than from any contrived arrangement of abstract ideas. By the end of This Is Not a Film Panahi, going from floor to floor with this affable, photogenic guy (he’s also a student) as he collects the residents’ garbage, has turned the camera away from himself and out toward the world, even if that world is only an elevator and, later, a courtyard beyond which lies a blazing bonfire that may or may not be celebratory. This Is Not a Film is so technically modest that it almost isn’t a film. Yet in its simplicity it’s as direct as a laser beam, underscoring why Panahi is considered so dangerous by his country’s government: The difference between just looking and really seeing is second nature to him. Editor’s note: Portions of this review appeared earlier, in a slightly different form, in Stephanie Zacharek’s Cannes Film Festival coverage. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Jafar Panahi’s This Is Not a Film Is a Potent Message in a Bottle

Interview with Digital Camera Inventor, Making Game Boy Music

http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=22180298

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Here are a few of the other noteworthy things we saw today on our never-ending journey through the wild, wild Web. Read: Research In Motion Eyes a Rebound “They’ve been caught flat-footed,” said Jean-Louis Gassée, a former Apple executive, the former chairman of Palm’s software spinoff and a partner at Allegis Capital in Palo Alto, Calif. “They’ve built a tremendous company; they are people with distinguished… Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Switched Discovery Date : 12/04/2011 01:15 Number of articles : 2

Interview with Digital Camera Inventor, Making Game Boy Music

Target After Christmas Sale 2010

Here are some of the items that will be on special at Target’s Day After Christmas Sale. * 50 percent off more than 100 DVD and Blu-ray movies * Video game titles such as Just Dance 2, Donkey Kong Country Returns, Disney Epic Mickey and more * Vizio 32” LED HDTV * Nikon Coolpix S3000 12-megapixel digital camera * 30 percent or more off favorite children’s toys like: Lego® City, Star Wars and Kingdom Building NERF® N-Strike Alpha Trooper CS-18, Deploy CS-6, Recon CS-6 and Magstrike AS-10 V

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Target After Christmas Sale 2010

Samsung NX100 hands-on video at Photokina 2010

Samsung NX100 hands-on video at Photokina 2010 – Engadget September 20, 2010 Cologne, Germany By engadget Tags : camera , digital camera , engadget , engadget video , mirrorless , nx100 , photokina , photokina 2010 , samsung , video

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Samsung NX100 hands-on video at Photokina 2010

BET Awards Fashion Face-Off: Fergie vs. Cassie

While Chris Brown’s BET Awards performance gets much of the attention, we can’t forget about the obligatory, morning-after-awards-show tradition at THG: Picking apart the night’s ridiculous fashion choices! Below, Fergie and Cassie go head-to-head in a clash of single-named titans. The Black Eyed Pea’s tailcoat dress raised some eyebrows, for better or worse. Cassie’s ensemble, meanwhile, defies description. Is that an ace bandage around her chest? That and the pleated pants really accentuate the half-shaved head, we have to admit. This could become a trend. Whose outfit looked better, fashion fanatics? Vote: Who looked better at the 2010 BET Awards?

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BET Awards Fashion Face-Off: Fergie vs. Cassie

Kim Kardashian Wins Website Award. Seriously.

Chris Brown may have pretended to cry hysterically over Michael Jackson at the BET Awards last night, but that despicable attempt at career revival was actually NOT the most absurd event to take take place over the weekend. Instead, that dishonor falls upon the entire concept of the Digital Supernova Award. The first of its kind was handed out to Kim Kardashian on Saturday night, as she was feted by Sony Ericsson and Buzzmedia for having the top celebrity website on the planet. (Tough break, Spencer Pratt. Better luck next tear!) Said Kim: “I’m so proud of my new site and it’s an honor to be recognized for doing something that I love.

iphone 4g announcement

“The iPhone 4G catches up to the best Android devices, such as the HTC Incredible or EVO, but in Apple#39;s true style, doing it their way,” said Gerry Purdy of MobilTrax. “The camera is now almost good enough to make it your standard digital camera with five megapixels, 5x digital zoom, flash and HD video, but no optical zoom.” Purdy said the more significant news is in the operating system, which Jobs said Monday would be rebranded iOS4. Apple launched its newest iPhone handset Monday, and a

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iphone 4g announcement

CoolPix S1000PJ: Nikon’s first projector camera

Nikon CoolPix S1000PJ Camera is the first digital camera with a built-in projector. The projector’s brightness goes up to 10 lumens with an optimal projection distance of 2 meters and battery life of 1 hour. A digital camera with project makes sense — that means you can project your images and videos into a screen/wall on-the-go. It will retail for about $430 when it comes out. This is endorsed by Fighter of the Decade Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao, a Filipino professional boxer – the first in history to win seven world titles in seven different weight divisions. It comes with its own stand and remote control. Here are the main specifications of Nikon CoolPix S1000PJ 12.1 megapixel 5x zoom Nikkor lens 2.7 inch high-resolution LCD monitor 36MB internal memory with SD/SDHC card ISO 80 to 6400 CoolPix S1000PJ: Nikon’s first projector camera is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Nikon Camera With Projector

Nikon CoolPix S1000pj Camera is the first digital camera with a built-in projector. It comes with its own stand and remote control. Its features are: 12.1 megapixel 5x zoom Nikkor lens 2.7 inch high-resolution LCD monitor 36MB internal memory with SD/SDHC card ISO 80 to 6400 The projector’s brightness goes up to 10 lumens with an optimal projection distance of 2 meters and battery life of 1 hour. A digital camera with project makes sense — that means you can project your images and videos into a screen/wall on-the-go. It will retail for about $430 when it comes out. This is endorsed by Fighter of the Decade Manny “Pacman” Pacquiao, a Filipino professional boxer – the first in history to win seven world titles in seven different weight divisions. Nikon Camera With Projector is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading