Tag Archives: side-effects

Hmmm: Las Vegas Approves Installation Of Syringe Vending Machines To Combat Opioid Addiction

Las Vegas To Install Syringe Vending Machines To Fight HIV/Opioid Addiction The government damn sure wasn’t thinking about taking these advanced measures when brothas and sistas were hooked on heroin and crack, but we digress. According to NBCNews Las Vegas aka “Sin City” has approved a program that will install syringe vending machines in order to help fight opioid addiction and HIV. But you can’t just be any ol’ geeker off the street, you gotta join the program called Trac-B Exchange. “This is a harm reduction approach,” said Chelsi Cheatom, program manager for Trac-B Exchange, in an interview with NBC Las Vegas affiliate KSNV. “People are already exchanging in these behaviors, and anytime someone’s engaging in a behavior that could cause them some potential health side effects, we want to encourage them to reduce their risk of harm.” Hopefully, for the sake of the addicts, this program works. But it looks like it could left in a million different ways. Godspeed. Image via Getty

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Hmmm: Las Vegas Approves Installation Of Syringe Vending Machines To Combat Opioid Addiction

Selena Gomez Is Taking A Break From Music To Recover From Anxiety And Depression

Selena Gomez has announced she’s taking time off to focus on her health after suffering side effects from Lupus.

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Selena Gomez Is Taking A Break From Music To Recover From Anxiety And Depression

Fred Thompson death of cause

On November 1, 2015, Fred Thompson died from a recurrence of lymphoma at the age of 73. Thompson had non-Hodgkin#39;s lymphoma #x0028;NHL#x0029;, a form of cancer, since around 2005. “I have had no illness from it, or even any symptoms. My life expectancy should not be affected. I am in remission, and it is very treatable with drugs if treatment is needed in the future — and with no debilitating side effects,” Thompson said. Thompson#39;s cancer, was reportedly indolent, the lowest of three

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Fred Thompson death of cause

Side Effects and More: Nudeworthy on Netflix 9.25.13 [PICS]

Netflix is filling our prescription for skin this week, with Rooney Mara ’s bare boobs in the drug drama Side Effects (2013). You might experience some side effects of stiffness and swelling! Then it’s back to the ‘70s where the skin classic Blood for Dracula (1974) has full frontal from Stefania Casini and a house full of virgins, and the soft-core sex comedy Blue Summer (1973) has hot naked hitchhikers Any Mathieu and Shana McGran. The fright flick Dread (2009) has horror hoots from Zoe Stollery , Erin Gavin , and Laura Donnelly , and Chicago Overcoat (2009) brings us the stripping talents of Jill Sandmire . See pics after the jump!

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Side Effects and More: Nudeworthy on Netflix 9.25.13 [PICS]

REVIEW: Rooney Mara Will Hold You Shrink-Rapt In Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Side Effects’

What begins as a barbed satire of our pill-popping, self-medicating society morphs into something intriguingly different in Side Effects . Steven Soderbergh’s elegantly coiled puzzler spins a tale of clinical depression and psychiatric malpractice into an absorbing, cunningly unpredictable entertainment that, like much of his recent work, closely observes how a particular subset of American society operates in a needy, greedy, paranoid and duplicitous age. Discriminating arthouse audiences not turned off by the antidepressant-heavy subject matter should be held shrink-rapt by what Soderbergh, after years of flirting with retirement, has said will be his last picture “for a long time.” Establishing a mood of grim foreboding with a brief glimpse of a blood-spattered domestic scene, the film rewinds three months to the incident that sets things in motion. Emily Taylor ( Rooney Mara ), a New Yorker in her mid-20s, awaits the prison release of her husband, Martin ( Channing Tatum ), a former business exec who has just finished serving four years for his involvement in an insider-trading scheme. But the couple’s happy reunion is complicated not only by Martin’s period of readjustment and unemployment, but also by Emily’s ongoing struggles with anxiety and depression. The story is thus immediately rooted in an easily recognizable and, for some, relatable world of financial difficulty and pharmaceutical overreliance. After Emily’s condition declines to the point of attempting self-harm, she sees a psychiatrist, Dr. Jonathan Banks ( Jude Law) , who puts her on a try-this-try-that regimen of drugs that include Prozac, Zoloft and Ablixa. The names of these antidepressants and their assorted side effects are rattled off with cheeky proficiency in the well-researched script by Scott Z. Burns (“Contagion,” “The Informant!”), and soon Emily starts to manifest the byproducts of so much medication, including nausea, a heightened libido and a disturbing habit of sleepwalking. Soderbergh’s sinuous HD camerawork (done under his usual pseudonym, Peter Andrews) maintains an unnervingly intimate focus on Emily in these early passages, dominated by breakdowns and consulting sessions. Yet even in intense closeups that enable Mara to vividly register Emily’s panic, fear and vaguely suicidal impulses, the direction has a certain cool-toned detachment that keeps the film from becoming a wholly subjective portrait of mental instability. That distanced quality persists even when Emily’s behavior, under the influence of Ablixa, takes a shocking turn for the worst. At this point, the dramatic perspective shifts to Banks, who suddenly finds himself professionally compromised as a provocative question comes to the fore: If a patient is not responsible for actions taken under the influence of a powerful drug, does the liability shift to the doctor who prescribed it? But as Banks launches himself into an increasingly obsessive quest to clear his name, leading him into private conversations with Emily’s former therapist, Dr. Victoria Siebel ( Catherine Zeta-Jones ), the peculiar feeling persists that not everything about the case may be what it seems. The very title of Side Effects — a suggestion of unintended, undesired consequences that distract from the matter at hand — provides a clue as to the level of narrative misdirection Soderbergh and Burns are up to. Suffice to say that what the film is actually about, and the specific social malaise being diagnosed, suddenly seem to shift beneath the characters’ feet, as the story turns its attention from chemical dependencies and shaky medical ethics to the dark recesses of the human mind. The rapid-fire twists, reversals and flashbacks that crowd the third act may strain plausibility to the breaking point, but by the end, viewers are likely to feel as though they’ve been craftily but not unfairly manipulated. The casting of Soderbergh alums Law, Zeta-Jones and Tatum lends the picture a somewhat valedictory feel, and if Side Effects is indeed the final chapter of at least one phase of the director’s career, it gets the job done in modest but assured fashion. Thematically, this efficient genre piece feels entirely of a piece with Soderbergh’s prior work; no less than Magic Mike and The Girlfriend Experience , it’s keenly invested in the material question of how individuals operate in an economy that leaves them with fewer and fewer honest options. The film’s careful attention to the details of its psychiatric milieu compels fascination above and beyond the characters, and indeed, Soderbergh’s typical disinterest in conventional audience identification has rarely been more pronounced. Mara’s chilly yet vulnerable quality, exploited so effectively in her films with David Fincher, keeps the viewer at a sympathetic distance; Law makes Banks seem weaselly and pompous even when he assumes the role of protagonist; and Zeta-Jones, as usual, plays her part with a slyly seductive allure. Of all the actors, Ann Dowd ( Compliance ) rings the sole notes of earnest emotion in a small role as Emily’s mother-in-law. Editing is sharp and precise, and Thomas Newman’s churning score amps up the story’s intensity. Expertly chosen locations and Howard Cummings’ production design create an offhandedly diverse snapshot of New York, ranging from a high-security mental institution to a table at Le Cirque where Dr. Banks and his colleagues talk shop. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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REVIEW: Rooney Mara Will Hold You Shrink-Rapt In Steven Soderbergh’s ‘Side Effects’

You Know, That Guy In ‘Lincoln’….Hugh Jackman ‘Forgets’ The Name Of His Best Actor Rival

Here’s a novel way to keep from getting worked up about your main Oscar rival: forget his name entirely. For Time magazine’s Great Performances video feature  on this year’s Oscar nominees,  Les Miserables co-stars and Oscar nominees Anne Hathaway  and Hugh Jackman spend some time lauding their competition. Hathaway even praises the computer-generated tiger in Life of Pi . But watch what happens around the 2:09 when Jackman slyly raises the topic of Lincoln . If you need any further proof that Wolverine a) can act and b) possesses a wit that’s as well-developed as his pecs, keep a close eye on his poker face as he claims not to remember the name of Daniel Day-Lewis , who, according to conventional wisdom, will emerge the victor when the Best Actor Oscar is handed out on Feb. 24. ” Lincoln is the movie, but the lead guy who I always forget…,” Jackman says to Hathaway without any hint that he’s having a bit of fun. In fact, it’s Hathaway who can’t keep a straight face as she jogs Jackman’s memory and he refers to Day-Lewis as simply “Lewis” — in case, I guess, any Academy voters will be deciding how to cast their Best Actor vote after watching this video.  Jackman does admit that the actor whose name he can’t seem to remember is “awesome” in Lincoln though, and he also waxes enthusiastic about Joaquin Phoenix’s  performance in The Master.  You can also access video interviews with Amy Adams, Jessica Chastain, Sally Field, John Goodman, John Hawkes, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Quvenzhané Wallis, Christoph Waltz and  Naomi Watts at the Great Performances link above. In the meantime, here’s a compilation clip.  Oh yeah, and take a close look at the photo of Hathaway  resting on Jackman’s buff torso with her thumb in her mouth. Saucy. Featured Photo Photo by Paola Kudacki for Time [ Time] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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You Know, That Guy In ‘Lincoln’….Hugh Jackman ‘Forgets’ The Name Of His Best Actor Rival

‘Side Effects’ Contest: Win A Poster Signed By Cast Members With An Ode To Your Fave Pharmaceutical

Calling all Steven Soderbergh  fans and movie-loving hypochondriacs . Time to cue up Pink’s “Just Like A Pill” on Spotify and get your haiku mojo working. Movieline will give away a Side Effects poster signed by  cast members Rooney Mara , Channing Tatum , Jude Law , Vinessa Shaw and Dr. Sasha Bardey to the armchair bard who, in our opinion, writes the most addictive haiku inspired by his or her favorite pharmaceutical or the movie itself.  Here are the rules: Submit an original haiku (using the 5-7-5 format) inspired by Side Effects or the prescription — as in legal — drug of your choice, in the comments section below. The contest is open to ages 18 and up and the winner must be a U.S. resident.  Deadline for entries is noon Pacific Standard Time on Feb. 20.  Now, get popping. We’re expecting lots of odes to Adderall. And for additional inspiration, here’s the Side Effects guerrilla marketing Ablixa video. Side Effects opens nationwide on Feb. 8

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‘Side Effects’ Contest: Win A Poster Signed By Cast Members With An Ode To Your Fave Pharmaceutical

WATCH: Play Doctor With Jude Law Via Viral Ad For Soderbergh’s ‘Side Effects’

As ads for pharmaceuticals go, this clip for the anti-depression drug Ablixa is textbook perfect. Wooden actors progress from sad to happy with the help of digital dark clouds, sun rays, and, presumably, the being advertised. And there’s the de rigueur reading of possible side effects. Ablixa is not an actual prescription drug, however, and the video, which I’ve posted below is actually a viral ad for Steven Soderbergh’s upcoming Side Effects , in which Rooney Mara plays a woman who turns to prescription drugs to battle her anxiety when her husband ( Channing Tatum ) is released from prison. The weird thing is that the Ablixa ad is so pitch perfect that I’m not sure why I should be watching it. As far as I can tell, the spot leaves nothing in the way of clues to the movie other than that Ablixa will probably figure into the plot and that some of the more serious side effects that the drug can cause may come into play. If you follow the prompt at the end of the ad and head to the Ablixa website , things do become more amusing.  You can participate in a video analysis with Dr. Jonathan Banks, who’s played by Jude Law,  and is a character in the movie. Even if you answer ‘No’ to Banks’ questions about whether you suffer from feelings of helplessness, suicidal thoughts and a lack of appetite or sex drive, the good doctor still suggests you may be a candidate for Ablixa. Somehow, I don’t think that’s a good thing, but we’ll find out when the movie opens on Feb. 8 Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter. 

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WATCH: Play Doctor With Jude Law Via Viral Ad For Soderbergh’s ‘Side Effects’

Corey Harrison weight loss

“I was watching this lawyer#39;s commercial and it was talking about the side effects of this drug, and I was on that medication because of my weight,” the star of the hit History Channel show Pawn Stars tells us. “I went and got a Lap-Band put in and the weight just started falling off. It was like someone took a backpack full of rocks off of you.” It was one night a year ago when he was lying in his bed, all 365 lbs. of him, when Corey “Big Hoss” Harrison realized his weight was out of contro

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Corey Harrison weight loss

January Jones baby bump picture

“I feel great. I haven#39;t had any weird physical side effects,” January Jones, 33, told us at Wednesday’s New York press conference for her new movie X-Men: First Class. “I feel pretty lucky so far.” Expecting her first child in the fall, mom-to-be January Jones is experiencing a pain-free pregnancy. Without any physical discomforts or any mood swings, the Mad Men star says she’s also not dealing with any odd cravings. “Everybody is asking that. I haven’t yet,” she says. “It#39;s a bummer.

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January Jones baby bump picture