Tag Archives: samaritan

Back To School Events – Just in time!

Here are a few Back To School Events in Atlanta! Monday 7:45 a.m. Monday, Aug. 3, 2015 Where Good Samaritan Health Center 1015 Donald Lee…

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Back To School Events – Just in time!

Erica Morales cause of death

Erica Morales was initially hospitalized for high blood pressure. Complications ensued before Morales was taken into surgery, Todman said. She does not know what led to her passing. Erica Morales died hours after giving birth to quadruplets at a Phoenix hospital, a close friend of the family said Saturday. Erica Morales, 36, never got to hold her newborns before she passed away early Friday morning after a C-section surgery at Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center, Nicole Todman said. “They we

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Erica Morales cause of death

Where’s Your Parents?: Toddler Spotted Walking In Middle Of The Street With No Clothes On! [Video]

What the hell? Talk about good timing. A good Samaritan driving down Brewton Street in Montgomery, Alabama, could very well have saved a little boy’s life. The child was wandering the street alone in a diaper — with no parents in sight. On “Raising America,” you’ll see the heartbreaking video the Samaritan recorded of his encounters with the two-year-old, the neighbors and (eventually) the mother. And you’ll see how this story could easily have ended in tragedy. hln youtube Continue reading

The Possession Trailer: What’s In the Box?

Signs that your precious little girl may be inhabited by a malicious demon, according to this first trailer for the Sam Raimi-produced The Possession : She eats her pancakes at abnormal speeds (watch out for that fork), cradles an ancient wooden puzzle box in her bed at night, has a horde of insects living inside her mouth. What are desperate parents Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Kyra Sedgwick to do? Get a peek at the latest in dybbuk horror — so hot right now! — after the jump. Produced by Raimi’s Ghost House Pictures, August 31’s The Possession stars Morgan and Sedgwick as estranged parents of two girls, one of whom makes the best-worst yard sale find ever: A dybbuk box housing an assortment of tokens and pieces of hair, which appear to possess her, effectively combining the Jewish horror and scary child genres in one convenient movie! (A dybbuk, in Jewish mythology, is a malevolent possessing spirit; also see: 2009’s The Unborn .) What makes this movie slightly more interesting is that it’s based on a true story — at least, on the 2004 L.A. Times article ” Jinx in a Box ” that documented the allegedly cursed item known as the Dybbuk Box, an antique wine box found by one unlucky owner at a yard sale that went on to curse subsequent owners and even has its own Wikipedia page . Another fun fact: The Possession features Jewish rap sensation Matisyahu in a supporting role! Plan your summer viewing accordingly. [ Yahoo ]

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The Possession Trailer: What’s In the Box?

REVIEW: Samuel L. Jackson Makes an Unconvincing Con Man in The Samaritan

A former grifter gets out of prison after serving 25 years for killing his partner in  The Samaritan,  and in a tale as old as time (or at least as old as the movies), tries to go straight, only to get pulled in for one last job. His name is Foley, and he’s played by Samuel L. Jackson, and this film from Canadian director David Weaver is svelte enough in its reassembling of familiar elements to be, for a while, as comfortably pleasant as sipping on what once used to be your go-to drink — until  The Samaritan takes a jarring turn right out of Park Chan-wook, and from there takes a tumble into ludicrousness from which it doesn’t recover. The opening, at least, is stagey but solid. Foley is world-weary and jaded, and leaves prison expecting and getting nothing from the outside. Everyone he knows is either dead or would rather not be reminded of the past he represents, and any money he lent out is long gone. Foley is left to rattle around the Toronto he no longer knows, a city portrayed with self-conscious chiaroscuro to emphasize the story’s noir qualities. The only person interested in Foley is Ethan (Luke Kirby), the son of his old partner and a real piece of work. He has a grift and he has a target in mind — the dangerous but wealthy Xavier (Tom Wilkinson) — and while Foley wants nothing to do with the kid (who initially claims no resentment for what happened to his dad), Ethan keeps after him, taking him out for a drink and dropping a girl, Iris (Ruth Negga), into his lap like it’s another option on offer at the bar. Negga’s an interesting actress — her most prominent role to reach US screens so far has been as the best friend of the protagonist in Neil Jordan’s  Breakfast on Pluto , and here she gets a solid showcase for her very modern, Asia Argento-ish fierceness. Iris is both femme fatale and gamine in need of rescue, the product of an unhappy orphaned upbringing, a smack addict bearing scars from suicide attempts. She pursues Foley with a single-mindedness that he seems to find quietly alarming, and not just because he has his doubts about her motivations — she wields her disastrousness like a club, as if inviting victimization were part of her appeal, as though being self-aware were enough to address her many problems. The relationship that develops between her and Foley doesn’t crackle with chemistry and gets partially smooshed into a montage, but it does have some edgily interesting moments, as when he tells her she doesn’t need to shut the door when she goes into the bathroom to shoot up, and keeps her company when she does it. Being a con man is so much more a movie profession than any kind of tangibly real-life one that to say someone is unconvincing at it feels a little silly. But Foley just doesn’t make a believable grifter. He’s meant to have once been legendary (Ethan says he was the “best in the city, according to a lot of the old timers”), though we don’t see those days other than in a brief flashback to the murder. In the present, Samuel L. Jackson is so intrinsically Samuel L. Jackson that the idea of his slipping into a role to loosen someone of his or her cash is amusing — he makes a believable tough guy when he beats someone up in the bathroom of a dive bar, but he doesn’t give off the air of a smooth talker. When we do finally get Foley in action, his technique seems to be acting badly, woodenly talking about offshore accounts in a way that blatantly signals he’s here to gyp his target out of something despite his earlier advice that the trick of the game is that “the mark gets to act like he’s doing me a favor.” Jackson doesn’t so much act as appear in films these days, and while he does some initial modulating of his on-screen persona for the role of Foley, it starts to fall away — the way he delivers the line “Rip that shit off this wall and throw it away!” is so close to the rhythms of “Yes, they deserved to die and I hope they burn in hell!” it’s worthy of a giggle. But he makes a good former convict because he seems too together to wallow in the fact that the world has passed him by. As a mood piece, at least, the film’s introduction is mournfully interesting.  The Samaritan  is best when it’s letting Foley drink alone at his shadowy, empty bar of choice after the bartender has asked permission to ignore him and watch the hockey game, as he tries to decide whether or not to join the girl in the corner, a girl who’s promising trouble but also redemption. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Samuel L. Jackson Makes an Unconvincing Con Man in The Samaritan

An ‘Embarrassed’ Ryan Gosling Explains How He Came to Stop That NYC Street Fight

“I’m embarrassed,” explains Ryan Gosling of the infamous street fight he stopped in New York that eventually went viral. “I think that guy really was stealing that other guy’s painting, so I should have just kept my nose out of it.” The good Samaritan has clearly put a lot of thought into what went down that day when he sprang into action while casually strolling through the street in a striped tank and capris, satchel in hand. Watch Gosling relive that harrowing day on video after the jump.

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An ‘Embarrassed’ Ryan Gosling Explains How He Came to Stop That NYC Street Fight

Katie Couric Drunk Dancing

Aye yaye yaye, the CBS Evening News anchor and hot mom had too much wine or something at some event in 2006, and so we get these. It's comforting to know that even America's hard-hitting journalists can barely handle The Electric Slide

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Katie Couric Drunk Dancing

Goodnight Keith Moon

Your favorite childhood book takes a turn for the sinister when eccentric The Who drummer Keith Moon shows up. When it comes to comforting memories, we'll stick with Mary Poppins, the lady who carries wall-length mirrors in her purse and flies with a talking umbrella, thank you very much. Contribute: Add an image, link, video or comment

The Local News Takes On ‘Kick A Ginger Day’

A 12-year-old boy was beaten up for having red hair on this year's annual 'Kick A Ginger Day.' That part isn't funny, but hearing news anchors talk about 'Gingers' and 'Gingervitis' is priceless.

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The Local News Takes On ‘Kick A Ginger Day’

Psycho Girlfriend Destroys Xbox

A girl is upset that her boyfriend does not pay enough attention to her because of gaming. She decides to teach him a lesson by destroying his Xbox. The lesson he learned, should be not to have a psycho girlfriend.

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Psycho Girlfriend Destroys Xbox