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‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’: Big Fun, By Kurt Loder

Michael Cera crushes the competition in Edgar Wright’s fantasy epic. Michael Cera in “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” Photo: Universal Pictures “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” is the first movie to bring us, among many other things, on-screen battle-scoring, a visit from the Vegetarian Police, and a really cute kickass girl named Knives. For most of its modest run-time (112 minutes), Edgar Wright’s new comedy lays persuasive claim to being the year’s most blazingly imaginative film. Well, okay, along with “Inception.” But Wright’s movie is also blazingly funny, something no one has yet attempted to assert about the Christopher Nolan blockbuster. The picture is a dizzying creative leap for Wright, the giddy parodist behind “Shaun of the Dead” and “Hot Fuzz.” Bryan Lee O’Malley’s Scott Pilgrim comics began appearing in 2004, and the director latched onto them almost immediately. One understands why it has taken him so long to bring O’Malley’s fantastical stories to the screen — the cast, which is deep in talented young actors, must have been difficult to align. Michael Cera plays Scott Pilgrim, mild-mannered bass player in a Toronto punk band called the Sex Bob-Omb. Ellen Wong is Knives Chau, his underage girlfriend, and Mary Elizabeth Winstead is Ramona, the mysterious Amazon delivery girl for whom he truly yearns. Then there’s Anna Kendrick as Scott’s sister, Stacey, who can’t believe her 22-year-old brother is dating a high-school girl (“Scandal!”); and Kieran Culkin as Scott’s gay roommate, Wallace, whose specialty is stealing Stacey’s boyfriends; and Alison Pill as Kim, the monumentally hostile drummer in Scott’s band. The plot, unlike the movie itself, is simple: In order to win the elusive Ramona, Scott must first do battle with her seven former lovers — the Evil Exes. The picture is constructed like a vintage video-arcade game, and these contests have a wild, psychedelic propulsion. One of the Exes, Lucas Lee (Chris Evans in a winningly self-deprecating performance), is a movie star of explosive non-cinematic skills (he flings Scott through the air with such force that the skinny suitor lands on a faraway tower). Another, Todd Ingram (Brandon Routh in a blindingly blond wig), is the vegan bass player in a rival band, the Clash at Demonhead, and he engages Scott in a withering battle-of-the-basses. The bisexual Roxy Richter (Mae Whitman) is a kickboxing tornado; the Katanayagi twins (Keita Saitou and Shota Saito) are star DJs armed with wall-shaking amplification; and Matthew Patel (Satya Bhabha) is a heavily-mascara’d fop who comes flying into a concert to perform a quick dance number with a crew of demon backup chicks and then give Scott a very hard martial-artsy time. Scott dispatches these characters with some ace moves of his own (“I kicked him so hard that he saw the curvature of the Earth!”). But waiting at the end of this line of antagonists is snaky club-owner Gideon Gordon Graves (a preening Jason Schwartzman), the most formidable Ex of all. Much of the movie’s whacked-out humor is the work of the director. Wright’s facility with eccentric ornamentation — bursts of canned laugh-track laughter, proudly cartoonish graphics, dreamscape enchantments and sudden split-screenery — is irresistibly endearing; and his whiz-bang editing is a marvel throughout. (He’s always one step ahead of the viewer, suddenly taking us places we didn’t realize we were ready to go to yet.) And the script, which he co-wrote, is a feast of deadpan throwaways. (“I’ve dabbled with being a bitch,” says Ramona. “My brother is permanently enfeebled,” notes Stacey.) It’s a bit of a letdown, then, that the movie loses its witty focus toward the end and descends into familiar CGI uproar (the concluding faceoff with Gideon goes on much too long). But any movie that can sell us Michael Cera as a hard-hitting hero has already accomplished something remarkable (as has Cera himself, of course). And the entrancingly bizarre world into which Scott’s adventures have been set summons that rarest of responses: It feels like something new. Check out everything we’ve got on “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World.” For breaking news and previews of the latest comic book movies — updated around the clock — visit SplashPage.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’

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‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’: Big Fun, By Kurt Loder

Scientists Discover New Bearded Monkey

Photo by Javier García Scientists Thomas Defler, Marta Bueno and Javier García have discovered a new species of monkey in the Caquetá region of southern Colombia. The region, which is part of the Amazon rainforest, had been inaccessible for years due to a violent insurgence. The violence subsided three year… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Scientists Discover New Bearded Monkey

How a US Ghost Town Got in the Heart of the Amazon

Photo: Carol Laiate Traveling through the heart of the Brazilian Amazon , one might expect to run across many strange and fascinating things — but an American ghost town probably wouldn’t be one of them. Yet deep in the world’s largest rainforest lies the abandoned remnants of Fordlândia , a remote US-style factory… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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How a US Ghost Town Got in the Heart of the Amazon

Jon Voight on His New Fox Show Lone Star and His Reaction to Salt

Jon Voight’s new turn on the Fox drama Lone Star as the oil tycoon father of a young con-man (James Wolk) will likely establish him as a TV mainstay, substantiating a streak that began with his recent stint on 24 . We caught up with the 71-year-old legend at Fox’s “All-Star” party in Santa Monica to discuss the new series, his daughter Angelina’s new film, and his favorite film scene of all time.

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Jon Voight on His New Fox Show Lone Star and His Reaction to Salt

Check Out Michael Atkinson’s New Novel — Available Now!

Big props to Michael Atkinson, an esteemed critic who, when not wearing his DVD – and cable-connoisseur hat for Movieline, also happens to write the occasional mystery novel about Ernest Hemingway. Yes, that Ernest Hemingway. You’ll love it. His latest, Hemingway Cutthroat , is just out on bookshelves, and I am pleased to urge you: Pick it up! It’s a sequel to Mr. Atkinson’s Hemingway Deadlights ; both are available at Amazon and would make splendid additions to your summer reading list. Enjoy!

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Check Out Michael Atkinson’s New Novel — Available Now!

TreeHugger Reports From the Heart of the Amazon

Perhaps the most striking thing about flying over the Amazon rainforest is how untouched it looks; there’s no checkered quilt of farmland or veins of highway. From horizon to horizon it’s nothing but an impossibly vast sea of green , inspiring the same sense of minuteness one might feel gazing at the Milky Way. At that height, the Amazon is as impressive and humbling as anything I’ve seen, seeming to be one giant breathing thing, untouched. Yet deep within this forest

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TreeHugger Reports From the Heart of the Amazon

Amazon Storm Killed Half a Billion Trees

A violent storm ripped through the Amazon forest in 2005 and single-handedly killed half a billion trees, a new study reveals. The study is the first to produce an actual tree body count after an Amazon storm. An estimated 441 million to 663 million trees were destroyed across the whole Amazon basin during the 2005 storm, a much greater number than previously suspected. In some areas of the forest, up to 80 percent of the trees were killed by the storm. A severe drought was previously blamed for the region's tree loss in 2005. “We can't attribute [the increased] mortality to just drought in certain parts of the basin — we have solid evidence that there was a strong storm that killed a lot of trees over a large part of the Amazon,” said forest ecologist and study researcher Jeffrey Chambers of Tulane University in New Orleans, La. From Jan. 16 to Jan. 18, 2005, a squall line — a long line of severe thunderstorms — 620 miles (1,000 kilometers) long and 124 miles (200 km) wide crossed the whole Amazon basin. The storm's strong winds, with speeds of up to 90 mph (145 kph), uprooted or snapped trees in half. When trees die, they release their stored carbon into the atmosphere, which contributes to climate change. In a vicious cycle, these storms could become more frequent in the future due to climate change. To calculate the number of trees killed by the storm, the researchers used satellite images, field studies and computer models. They looked for patches of wind-toppled trees, which allowed them to distinguish from trees killed by the drought. “If a tree dies from a drought, it generally dies standing. It looks very different from trees that die snapped by a storm,” Chambers said. The storm wiped out between 300,000 and 500,000 trees in the area of Manaus, Brazil, alone. The number of trees killed by the 2005 storm was equal to 30 percent of the total human-caused deforestation in that same year for the Manaus region. The researchers used the tree loss in Manaus to estimate the tree loss across the entire Amazon basin. “It's very important that when we collect data in the field we do forensics on tree mortality,” Chambers said. “Under a changing climate, some forecasts say that storms will increase in intensity. If we start seeing increases in tree mortality, we need to be able to say what's killing the trees.” The study, funded by NASA and Tulane University, will be detailed in a future edition of the journal Geophysical Research Letters. added by: JanforGore

Secret Garden of Corals Discovered in Virgin Islands

Image Credit: Caroline Rogers/USGS, via Our Amazing Planet A scientists snorkeling in the Virgin Islands Coral Reef National Monument, in St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands made an unexpected discovery — a mangrove harboring a rich and vibrant coral reef. According to the US Geological Survey (USGS), as many as 30 different species of coral are living happily among the roots in a “secret garden” of sort. Such a well protected and untouched coral ecosystem is a rare find in the Virgin Islands. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Secret Garden of Corals Discovered in Virgin Islands

E-ink Reveals Flexible, Extra-Tough e-Paper Display

Image via ARMdevices video E-ink, a company hard at work on perfecting electronic paper technology, has revealed a new flexible e-paper display that is intended to help get more e-readers into schools. The classroom is an ideal setting for e-readers — they hold hundreds of books and images, allow note-taking and other necessary features students need, and may one day soon even be able to play video, all on a low-power device. Companies from Sony to Amazon are vying to make the perfect device for students, but what they’ll all need is a displa… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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E-ink Reveals Flexible, Extra-Tough e-Paper Display

Brazil’s Lula Slams "Gringo" Protests of Amazon Dam

Photo via EyeBrazil Brazil’s proposed construction of what would be the third largest hydroelectric dam on the planet has drawn ire from environmental groups the world over. The planned dam at Belo Monte , protestors say, will flood and destroy much of the region’s plant and animal life, as well as displace the indigenous peoples there. So contentious ha… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Brazil’s Lula Slams "Gringo" Protests of Amazon Dam