Tag Archives: nostalgic

REVIEW: Lion King 3D Makes Refreshing Use of Extra Dimension

The Disney Digital 3D™ification of The Lion King for its theatrical re-release, a limited run meant to herald the arrival of new Blu-ray and 3-D Blu-ray editions like a baboon waving a newborn lion cub around at the top of a cliff, has prompted at least one blogger to suggest that this is an instance of the company “trying to ruin” her childhood. And while childhoods are very fragile things in the Internet age, prone to explode with the merest hint of contact with George Lucas’s latest doings or a Point Break remake or a Monopoly movie, I suspect in this case the outrage is as manufactured as the demand for these animated classics that are always being jerked back into the Disney Vault to be kept fresh for the next generation of susceptible children and their nostalgic parents. For most of the young audience members getting their first exposure to The Lion King , any theatrical experience, 3-D or not, is going to be dwarfed by repeated home viewings on TVs and smaller screens, again and again until the very cadences of the lines are etched permanently into their grey matter (“When he was a young warthog–” “When I was a young warthooooooooog!”).

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REVIEW: Lion King 3D Makes Refreshing Use of Extra Dimension

Nostalgia: Upgrading Through Every Version of Internet Explorer [Video]

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You may remember the nostalgic look back at the different versions of the Windows operating system, a video by Andrew Tait which chronicled the upgrade processes from the first version of Microsoft Windows to the latest. Well, Tait is back again, this time detailing the install processes and features of each version of Internet Explorer, Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Next Web Discovery Date : 17/03/2011 17:20 Number of articles : 2

Nostalgia: Upgrading Through Every Version of Internet Explorer [Video]

Jagged Edge’s The Remedy ‘Trying To Bring Back Black Love’

Group’s first Slip-N-Slide Records release will feature ‘Lay You Down.’ By Jayson Rodriguez Jagged Edge Photo: MTV News When Jagged Edge decided to name their new album — their seventh overall as a group — The Remedy , the four-man collective definitely had the idea of repairing relationships in mind. “We’re trying to bring back black love,” group member Richard Wingo told MTV News. “That’s what sets us apart from a lot of the music: It’s not just sex, it’s love involved. That’s what people need more of today. They need to put down their guns a little more.” Their forthcoming LP, due in March from their new recording home , hip-hop label Slip-N-Slide Records (Trina, Plies), features Jagged Edge (Wingo, Kyle Norman, and Brian and Brandon Casey) returning to their roots. “Lay You Down,” a mid-tempo number they’ve released, proves it’s been easy for them to come home musically. The album’s title is derived from a track on their standout third album, 2001’s Jagged Little Thrill . That set included the hit “Where the Party At,” featuring Nelly, and “Goodbye.” “Remedy,” although not a single from that album, like “Driving Me to Drink,” was a fan favorite and classic Jagged Edge ballad. “We wanted to go back and touch on it a little bit,” Wingo said about the nostalgic title. “It’s just fun: We always been big on titles. If you go back throughout our albums, we have songs like ‘Head of the Household’ and ‘Respect,’ just a bunch of great titles for songs. We put a lot of thought into the titles, and at the end of the day, it was a perfect title for the album.” What is your favorite Jagged Edge title? Tell us in the comments below! Related Artists Jagged Edge

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Jagged Edge’s The Remedy ‘Trying To Bring Back Black Love’

Roger Deakins on His True Grit Oscar Nod and the End of Film: ‘Next Year Will Be It’

The startling beauty of Joel and Ethan Coen’s Oscar-nominated True Grit — and in most Coen brothers films, for that matter — owes to frequent collaborator and award-winning cinematographer Roger Deakins, who’s lensed all but one of their films since 1991’s Barton Fink . But as much as the nostalgic Western serves as a throwback to simpler times, simpler heroes (and heroines), and a yearning to stick to one’s principles in the face of obsolescence, True Grit could also mark a wistful point in Deakins career — his last film shot on film.

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Roger Deakins on His True Grit Oscar Nod and the End of Film: ‘Next Year Will Be It’

Roger Deakins on His True Grit Oscar Nod and the End of Film: ‘Next Year Will Be It’

The startling beauty of Joel and Ethan Coen’s Oscar-nominated True Grit — and in most Coen brothers films, for that matter — owes to frequent collaborator and award-winning cinematographer Roger Deakins, who’s lensed all but one of their films since 1991’s Barton Fink . But as much as the nostalgic Western serves as a throwback to simpler times, simpler heroes (and heroines), and a yearning to stick to one’s principles in the face of obsolescence, True Grit could also mark a wistful point in Deakins career — his last film shot on film.

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Roger Deakins on His True Grit Oscar Nod and the End of Film: ‘Next Year Will Be It’

Greed is Good: 5 More Characters from the 80s Which Should Be Dusted Off Again

This weekend, Gordon Gekko returns to theaters in Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps , a prospect that a few years ago, you probably never thought would happen. If Gekko, really the epitome of 1980s culture, can come back for another adventure, why not some of other nostalgic favorites? Ahead, Movieline presents the five characters from the ’80s that have yet to be resurrected, but really should. (Don’t get your hopes up, Ferris Bueller fans: Your boy hero was already resurrected for an early 1990s television show.)

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Greed is Good: 5 More Characters from the 80s Which Should Be Dusted Off Again