Tag Archives: review

REVIEW: Fascinating, Frustrating Cyrus Loses Its Nerve

The Duplass brothers (co-writers and -directors Jay and Mark) are devout practitioners of something I’ll call moment-based filmmaking. Graduates of both the Mumblecore school and its ambient hype, they have coaxed a more palatable style from that movement’s core of strident naturalism. They build self-effacing stories from off-handedly naturalistic moments, the assembly of which serves an organizing theme. Tough to pull off and magical when it works, moment-based filmmaking is intrinsically opposed to plot — to machinations of any order — and aggressively favors the spontaneous over the crafted, evoking the narrative satisfactions of a three-act structure as if by a sort of ingenious accident. The Duplass brothers are determined to remain true to their eccentricities and equally bent on breaking into the big time, and their struggle manifests itself quite nakedly in the curious case of Cyrus, their third film and also first to feature a cast of well-known actors.

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REVIEW: Fascinating, Frustrating Cyrus Loses Its Nerve

REVIEW: Emotions Get the Better of 8: The Mormon Proposition

Scheduled to be released on the second anniversary of California’s legislation of gay marriage, 8: The Mormon Proposition marks the occasion with a furious requiem. Mournful and righteous in its retracing of the months between the bill’s passage and election night in November 2008, the film assembles a damning case against the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (LDS), which spearheaded a massive campaign to revoke gay marriage rights. Directors Reed Cowan and Steven Greenstreet make their agenda clear from the first frames, which depict a Mormon “prophet” calmly denouncing gay marriage in extreme close-up, his face distorted with scary, Poltergeist -style pixilation. The opening impression — that the LDS acted villainously with regard to Prop 8 — will soon be supported by a raft of facts; that the Mormon church couldn’t have done it alone is a complication the film sidesteps almost completely.

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REVIEW: Emotions Get the Better of 8: The Mormon Proposition

Kourtney and Khloe Take Miami: Season Two Premiere Review

We make fun of Kourtney and Khloe Kardashian. A lot. Often. Pretty much every chance we get. But what kind of credibility would we have if we simply bashed these talentless celebrities from afar? Hilarious clips that showcase clearly scripted fights and arguments might be worthy of our mockery, but readers have told us to give full episodes a shot. Therefore, we’ve assigned an intern this nauseating task. She suffered in front of her TV on Sunday night and filed this report on the season premiere of Kourtney and Khloe Take Miami … If anyone knows how to rock reality TV, it’s the Kardashians.

Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 2)

Author: truthdig Added: Sun, 27 Jul 2008 20:34:03 -0800 Duration: 545 Iconic author Ray Bradbury speaks with Truthdig literary editor Steve Wasserman about books and ideas. Part 2: The Book Review

http://flash.revver.com/player/1.0/player.swf?mediaId=1068758

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Ray Bradbury in Conversation with Steve Wasserman (part 2)

The We(a)k in Review Season 1

Check out the first season of Indie MTV's “We(a)k in Review” now on MySpace, iTunes, Blip.tv, Facebook and @ IndieMTV.com http://www.blip.tv/file/2563930/ added by: IndieMTV

Classic Game Room HD – 2010 FIFA WORLD CUP SOUTH AFRICA review!

Grab a Molson, St. Pauli Girl and Chimay and sing along.. CGR! CGR! CGR! Classic Game Room HD reviews EA Sports 2010 FIFA WORLD CUP of FOSTERS SOUTH AFRICA!!!!! It’s the new soccer…. football, I mean football video game from EA. It’s like FIFA 10 except better because in this review Tahiti wrecks sh-t and representz (with a Z). 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa is awesome and you know it. I don’t need to say it, because you knew it 20 seconds ago before you even read this. You know it now and you knew it then, therefore you know it’s the money in stereo. EA Sports kicks the soccer… um, football out of the baseball court with this video game where you push buttons and people do things like real people without buttons. Incredible! This CGR review of 2010 FIFA WORLD CUP SOUTH AFRICA has gameplay from Fifa World Cup South Africa showing football game play in HD awesome action! Go Pens!!!!!

http://www.youtube.com/v/q5IUx29ICNo?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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Classic Game Room HD – 2010 FIFA WORLD CUP SOUTH AFRICA review!

2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa: Video Game Review – Rob Smith (9/10) S02E28

www.youtube.com Click above to watch Super Street Fighter IV: Video Game Review – Justin Fassino (9/10) S02E27! 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa: Video Game Review – Rob Smith (9/10) S02E28 This week on the VGR our editor-in-chief Rob Smith will be giving us the low-down on FIFA World Cup South Africa 2010. Is this one a must-have? Time to find out. – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Follow Machinima on Twitter! Machinima twitter.com Inside Gaming twitter.com Machinima Respawn twitter.com Machinima Entertainment, Technology, Culture twitter.com FOR MORE MACHINIMA, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com FOR MORE SPORTS GAMEPLAY, GO TO: www.youtube.com TAGS: yt:quality=high 2010 fifa world cup south africa machinima review video game lionel messi diego maradona hand of god incident rob smith 014633194128 yt:quality=high 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa EA Canada SPorts Playstation 3 PS3 Xbox360 Xbox 360 Wii Nintendo iPhone OS Portable PSP Online Network Competition Competitive Gaming Game UPC 014633194104 014633194128

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2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa: Video Game Review – Rob Smith (9/10) S02E28

Sociological Study Reveals High Financial Malfeasance Rates in Largest U.S. Corporations

WASHINGTON, DC, June 2, 2010 — The need to “fix” or restate financial statements is an admission by corporate management that these reports (prior to their being corrected) to the government and the investing public misrepresented the corporations' financial positions, Texas A&M University sociology professor Harland Prechel reports in a research paper published in the June 2010 issue of the American Sociological Review (ASR). Prechel and Theresa Morris of Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, examined the revised statements from hundreds of the largest U.S. companies between 1995 and 2004, then co-authored the paper, titled “The Effects of Organizational and Political Embeddedness on Financial Malfeasance in the Largest U.S. Corporations: Dependence, Incentives, and Opportunities.” The researchers' analysis examines restatements that occurred after Congress passed the 2001 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which held chief financial officers (CFOs) and chief executive officers (CEOs) personally responsible for corporate violations of security and exchange laws. Soon after this legislation was passed, the number of financial restatements rapidly increased. After eliminating the legitimate reasons for financial restatements such as accounting rule changes, their analysis shows that over 21 percent of the corporations in their study group restated their finances at least once, and some as many as seven times, during the study period. more at the link http://www.asanet.org/press/financial_malfeasance.cfm added by: Incredulous

A Return For Better Off Ted?

Don’t get your hopes up, Better off Ted fans, but there is a chance that ABC will air two previously unseen episodes of the canceled series. The network has scheduled Game Seven of the NBA Finals on June 17, but if the game is not necessary, ABC will fill the 8pm time slot with the Better Off Ted installments “It’s My Party and I’ll Lie If I Want To” and “Swag the Dog.” The underappreciated series starring Jay Harrington was officially canceled last month. [ HitFix ]

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A Return For Better Off Ted?

REVIEW: Jackie Chan, Karate Kid Offer Hit-Or-Miss Summer Treat

For those weaned on the original, watching The Karate Kid ‘s franchise reboot is a little like running into your old crush at a middle-school reunion: Warmly familiar and yet altered enough to warrant a second look, the raw material’s all there, it’s just been moved around a bit. OK, more than a bit: The Sex and the City ladies follow the money to Abu Dhabi; the Karate kid and his widowed mom follow the jobs — to China. This necessitates one of the film’s most conspicuous and yet least noted swap-outs: In China one practices kung fu, but karate is Japanese, as was the original film’s instructor, Mr. Miyagi (Pat Morita). And yet the title remains, asserting allegiance to brand over narrative logic. It’s all the same crap anyway, right?

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REVIEW: Jackie Chan, Karate Kid Offer Hit-Or-Miss Summer Treat