Tag Archives: review

REVIEW: Garden of Eden Isn’t Just Lesser Hemingway; It’s the Worst of Him

Though based on the Hemingway novel published 25 years after his death, Hemingway’s Garden of Eden feels more like the result of an ungodly alliance between Harlequin house writers and the cut-and-paste masterminds at A&E Biography . Hemingway worked on the novel from 1946 until his death, leaving its 200,000 words unpublished. The story is roughly autobiographical, derived in part from to his second marriage (to wealthy Pauline Pfeiffer), but allusions to Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda, whom Hemingway reviled, seem to figure as well. As adapted by former Paris Review editor James Scott Linville and directed by John Irwin, The Garden of Eden suggests the bad first novel that Hemingway never wrote. There’s a reason This Side Of Paradise never made it to the screen.

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REVIEW: Garden of Eden Isn’t Just Lesser Hemingway; It’s the Worst of Him

Animal Camp Rallies for Abused Animals and Veganism (Book Review)

Photo via sneakerdog Animal sanctuaries are like home base, a safe zone for animals that have been abused or displaced where, with luck, they can live the rest of their lives in happy, loving situations. From neglected pets to lab animals, from non-releasable wild animals to farm animals that narrowly escape the slaughter house, these sanctuaries will take in the worst off animals — as many as facilities can accommodate — and either house them or find suitable homes for them. Along with a safe place for animals, sanctuaries typically work … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Animal Camp Rallies for Abused Animals and Veganism (Book Review)

German Charged With Shipping Tarantulas

LOS ANGELES — Unlike many of the thousands of people who smuggle wildlife into Los Angeles every year, the authorities say, Sven Koppler chose not to conceal his exotic tarantulas under his clothing. They say he bundled them in multicolored straws or plastic containers and sent them in boxes through the United States Postal Service. Mr. Koppler, 37, arrived in Los Angeles from his native Germany on Wednesday intending to meet an associate in the tarantula trade, said Mark Williams, an assistant United States attorney here with the environmental crimes section. Agents from the United States Fish and Wildlife Service took him into custody as he left the airport. “This will definitely have a significant impact on the tarantula trade, given the volume of tarantulas this guy was selling,” Mr. Williams said. Tarantulas can fetch up to $1,000 each for females of breeding age. Mr. Koppler was charged Thursday morning with one count of illegally importing wildlife into the United States, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in federal prison and a $250,000 fine. Mr. Koppler remained in federal custody, and a public defender was assigned to him. The tarantulas that were confiscated — more than 1,000 of them — remained in federal custody as well, designated as evidence for the remainder of the investigation, said Mr. Williams. Their next stop will be local zoos. The investigation into Mr. Koppler began in March when postal workers conducting a routine inspection found the fuzzy, wiggling limbs of 300 live tarantulas tapping against small plastic containers stacked tightly together inside a package being shipped to Los Angeles. Fish and Wildlife Service agents found out about another box of live tarantulas making its way from Germany through the Postal Service. They intercepted that package at a postal location near Los Angeles International Airport and found 250 baby tarantulas squirming inside bundles of colorful plastic straws. Nearly two dozen were Brachypelma smithi, known as Mexican red-kneed tarantulas. The Brachypelma genus is protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, said Mr. Williams, and may be sold legally only if an exporting company obtains permits under the treaty. Fish and Wildlife Service agents and postal investigators posed as buyers and contacted Mr. Koppler at his home in Wachtberg, Germany, to request tarantula shipments in the spring and summer. Mr. Koppler complied, federal agents said, sending a package in April of about 71 tarantulas (one was dead). In November, he sent four more batches with a mix of live and dead cargo, they said, adding that each purchase included Mexican red-kneed tarantulas. Federal agents said their review of records of Mr. Koppler’s transactions show he had earned about $300,000 selling tarantulas to people in more than 40 countries, including nine buyers in the United States. Tarantulas, especially endangered ones, are “highly sought after by collectors,” said Mr. Williams, because they “make good pets,” and can live for up to 30 years. “He made really good money doing that,” Mr. Williams said of Mr. Koppler. “He had clients in every continent in the world and several states. He was a prolific wildlife smuggler.” http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/04/us/04spiderman.html?_r=1&ref=us http://www.copyright-free-pictures.org.uk/insects/red-kneed-tarantula.jpg added by: ThatCrazyLibertarian

REVIEW: Ewan McGregor and Jim Carrey Are Prisoners of Love in I Love You Phillip Morris

There’s plenty of sweetness at the core of Glenn Ficarra and John Requa’s bold, bleak little comedy I Love You Phillip Morris, in which Jim Carrey plays a gay con man who meets and falls in love with a sweet Southern boy played by Ewan McGregor — while the two are in prison, no less. Ficarra and Requa — the writers of Bad Santa , making their directorial debut — set an ambitious mark for themselves and don’t quite hit it. This is a love story in which one of the partners repeatedly does some really bad stuff, and while it’s easy enough to admire him for his ability to get away with it all, it’s harder to square the way he so cheerfully dupes innocent people, including his beloved. Posing as a lawyer when you’ve never even been to college? Bilking the company you work for (and whose employ you entered under false pretenses) out of millions? Whatever happened to just sending flowers?

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REVIEW: Ewan McGregor and Jim Carrey Are Prisoners of Love in I Love You Phillip Morris

REVIEW: Black Swan Takes Its Own Hifalutin’ Hokum Way Too Seriously

Darren Aronofsky’s ballerina-crackup drama Black Swan opens with a dream sequence in which a wispy-boned young woman twirls and flutters to the strains of Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake. She dabs at the stage with her dainty pink shoes, the stage lights shining through her all-too-translucent tutu. Suddenly, a figure appears from the darkness — why, it’s a handsome male dancer dressed all in black! He looks really nice, not scary at all, but wouldn’t you know it? Suddenly, he turns into a swaggering black swan, flapping his arms all masculine-like and threatening to take our little cygnet — who we now can see is Natalie Portman — doggy-style. What ever could this dream mean? One thing’s for sure: It ain’t about dancing poultry.

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REVIEW: Black Swan Takes Its Own Hifalutin’ Hokum Way Too Seriously

Covert Hypnosis Techniques

Covert Hypnosis Techniques Site was created to give you the reader our review of what we think are the Top 3 Covert Hypnosis products available on the internet. We have assessed the majority of programs currently on the market and after hours of research and feedback we have our Top 3 to present to you. http://www.coverthypnosistechniquessite.com added by: hypnosiss

REVIEW: For Better and Worse, Night Catches Us Lives a Little Too Much in the Past

Set in Philadelphia’s summer of 1976, Night Catches Us opens with the sound of Jimmy Carter’s voice wending through an urban neighborhood, planting the usual, soft promises as it passes. His vow to give power back to the people is, I imagine, why first-time writer and director Tanya Hamilton pulled that particular clip from the teeming archives: It adds a layer of situational resonance to her story of the last days of the Black Panther movement, before that story even begins.

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REVIEW: For Better and Worse, Night Catches Us Lives a Little Too Much in the Past

Rebranding Poop as a Resource – The Poop Project

Image credit: The Poop Project Whether looking at the selective flush and letting it mellow or recycling our poop for sustainable farming , it’s no secret that I believe rethinking the way we handle our bodily waste—both human and animal—is one of the most urgent tasks facing humankind. So when commenter The Puru left a note on my review about

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Rebranding Poop as a Resource – The Poop Project

Does Latest 3-D TV Rival the Movies? Movieline Takes It For a Test Spin

The 3-D explosion of the 1950s — and its re-emergence in the 21st century – had a very specific economic agenda in mind; namely, to get people to stop watching their TVs and to drag themselves out to the movies. But will the new 3-D TVs take away the last special perk that movie theaters have to offer?

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Does Latest 3-D TV Rival the Movies? Movieline Takes It For a Test Spin

My Chemical Romance Call Danger Days ‘A Missile Directed At Rock And Roll’

‘The best way to love rock and roll is to shoot it in the head,’ band says. By James Montgomery My Chemical Romance Photo: MTV News In the four years between The Black Parade and Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys, My Chemical Romance were no strangers to the grandiose statement. It seems that, in every interview they gave, the band found a new way to describe their (then upcoming) album, calling it everything from a “very pure” bit of punk rock to — most famously — “a love letter to rock and roll” . The end result, of course, was Danger Days, an album that is both of those things (and neither), often at the same time. And yet, it has basically been defined within those parameters. So, looking back on it now, do MCR regret anything they said in the lead-up to the album? Not really. “It makes me laugh when I [read it now],” frontman Gerard Way said, smiling. “Part of the problem was: We tried to define the record before we made the record. And it’s not all our fault,” guitarist Frank Iero added, “because everyone kept asking us, ‘Oh, what’s it going to be?’ And when we said, ‘Oh, we don’t know,’ they’re like, ‘Well, whadaya mean? What’s it going to be? Can you speculate?’ And it’s like, ‘Well, it’s going to be this,’ and when we found out what that is, it changed.” And that change was, of course, necessary. Both for the band’s survival and the scope of the new album. In retrospect, MCR stand by everything they said about Danger Days, because, really, deep down in its chrome-plated heart, it still is “a love letter” to American rock and roll . It’s just written from My Chemical Romance’s rather-unique perspective. “At first, we said, ‘It’s a love letter to rock and roll,’ and we found out that the best way to love rock and roll is to shoot it in the head,” Iero said. “So we made a record that was like a missile directed at rock and roll. “It just started to change and evolve, and then the band evolved at the same time. And I think that’s the way you have to make a record: in a very organic way.” What do you think of Danger Days ? Give us your review in the comments! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: My Chemical Romance Related Photos Live In LA: My Chemical Romance Related Artists My Chemical Romance

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My Chemical Romance Call Danger Days ‘A Missile Directed At Rock And Roll’