Tag Archives: review

Pokemon Black and White Revealed for DS

Pokemon lovers will surely be very excited with this new 5th generation Pokemon adventure game for DS called “Pokemon Black and White”. To know more informations about Pokemon Black and White, watch the review on Japanese TV channel this weekend. Pokemon Black and White Revealed for DS is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

In Theaters: Date Night

Date Night succeeds chiefly in making the work that its two stars do on the same major television network seem anything but mainstream. NBC’ s primetime wonder twins Tina Fey and Steve Carell face a strange, almost quaint crossroads in their career: Having conquered the small screen, the received show biz wisdom would demand they dominate the big one. It may be time to call that model of stardom outmoded, especially if these are the paces they must be put through. I’m not sure what other explanation would account for their agreeing to headline such a straight shot up the middle; it’s a little discomfiting to watch, even as their presence adds a sizable compensation to this broad, hectic and occasionally endearing take on the screwball set-up.

View original post here:
In Theaters: Date Night

Review: Again

Usually I’m the one talking about other people’s reviews. In this case, I decided to take on a review and tackled CiNG’s Again , which could be the last American-released title from the now-bankrupt development team. If you’ve never heard of them, you might have heard of Hotel Dusk:

In Theaters: The Square

A sun-burnt addition to the growing line of distant noir descendants, The Square is more of a red-faced hustle through the genre’s tropes than a cool-cheeked embodiment of the thing itself. The strain is certainly palpable in the script, a collaboration between actor Joel Edgerton and Matthew Dabner, and direction that veers in its examination of infidelity gone nastily awry between over-excited and overly deliberate. Director and former Australian stuntman Nash Edgerton (Joel’s brother) makes a tense and yet drearily unsuspenseful mash of this domestic horror story, piling bad decisions and bad luck onto a body count and pressing out something he hopes will be accepted as a modern or meta- or maybe just mega-take on the old Postman Always Rings Twice paradigm.

Read more from the original source:
In Theaters: The Square

Tech Review: Apple iPad

Watch Larger Version | Watch HD Version Some say it’s revolutionary, others say it’s pure magic. Could it be both? Chris Hardwick and Kevin Pereira give their official take on the Apple iPad, with its 9.7″ multi touch display, web browsing, iWorks productivity software and more, all starting at $500. Find the full review from Gadget Pron on Attack of the Show after the cut. What You Need To Know Compared to other devices, the iPad is extremely unique and unlike anything else we’ve used. It’s about the size of a piece of paper (8″ x 10″) and measures half an inch thick. It’s heavier than you might expect. This might make it too heavy or awkward when you’re using the tablet for long periods of time. It’s a good size but you can’t hold it up forever. You have to put it on a desk and hover over it, or balance it on your knees. The touch screen is the most striking feature of the iPad. It’s huge at 9.7″ and LED backlit, so it’s everything you’d expect from a touch screen Apple device. If you’ve used an iPhone before, you’ll know how to use this. Even if you have no experience with an iPhone, it’s immediately intuitive. The screen is multi-touch, which means you can pinch and zoom. The keyboard works well but you’ll have to hover over the iPad to type on it. It has the OLEOPhobic screen but you’ll still get your fingerprints all over it. Overall, we love the iPhone touch experience and this is even better because the screen is huge! For the most part, the iPad experience translated well to the primary features, like web browsing, checking email and watching Youtube videos. The iPad makes browsing the web on Safari exactly the way you want to. Pinch and zoom, large screen and easy keyboard makes this the killer app (though without the Flash support). Lots of other apps like email and YouTube have been redesigned to work and look better on the iPad, and it makes a huge difference because of all the screen real estate. The iWorks apps like Pages and iBooks work extremely well. The battery life so far is great. Other apps available include the NetFlix app, which gives you access to your instant queue and looks amazing on the screen. There’s also Real Racing GTI which is easier to play than on an iPhone, because you don’t over correct on the iPad as much and it doesnt look bad when you scale it. Evernote has been redesigned for the iPad and is more fun to use. Command and Conquer Red Alert is amazing, and is just as easy to play as on a computer. The only problem is that the apps are expensive. Price $500.00 for the 16g Wi-Fi version. Rating 4 Seals of Approval out of 5. ( How do we rate gadgets? ) This won’t replace your laptop and you may need to buy other accessories, like a keyboard. Want something reviewed on Gadget Pr0n? Email us your suggestions to gadgetpron@g4tv.com . Did you see our behind-the-scenes photos of this iPad Review? Plus, death-glam-metal band Distended Warranty released their new music video, ‘iHate, Therefore iPad.’ iPhone – Apple – IPad – NetFlix – YouTube

Go here to read the rest:
Tech Review: Apple iPad

Spring Fever

Whether you’re awaiting a visit from Peter Cottontail or sleeping in a Best Buy parking lot ahead of tomorrow’s big iPad debut, Movieline’s Week in Review is here to keep you company. Click through for any important developments you might have missed — or just to relive the glory all over again — and have a great weekend!

Read the original here:
Spring Fever

In Theaters: The Last Song

“I did not come here for some stupid summer romance,” Miley Cyrus croaks at the midway point of The Last Song , “with some stupid local boy who’s done this a thousand times before.” Sister, I’ve got at least three kinds of bad news for you. In the second Nicholas Sparks adaptation in as many months ( Dear John has the sole distinction of knocking Avatar from its first-place perch), another young lady finds herself on Georgia’s powdery beaches for the summer, balancing a shirtless suitor with hackneyed class conflicts and a passage to adulthood via untimely death. Luckily both the audiences for Sparks’s corn pone weepers and Cyrus’s Liquid Drano rasp don’t share her character’s distaste for cliché: whether they can overlook The Last Song ‘s sucking charm and chemistry voids is another story.

Read more here:
In Theaters: The Last Song

People Are Strange [The Clip Show]

Defamer’s Week In Review : Paradise was lost, gained, auctioned and recycled in front of our very eyes. Reflect with us after the jump, and we’ll see you back here Sunday night for our Oscar liveblog ! More

Lady Gaga Copying Kelis Leaves Us Speechless

  There are many rumors flying around that R&B singer Kelis is ripping off  Lady Gaga’s signature style.  After further review  it appears that Gaga and not Kelis may be the copy cat. Kelis has been dressing in her avant garde garments since her first album, Kalieiscope  in 1999 compared to the recent world wind popularity of Lady Gaga who first rose to fame in 2008. From the looks this fan made photo it looks like Gaga might have some explaining to do. Continue reading

"Pop Stars Should Not Eat": The 10 Strangest Lady Gaga Quotes from That New … – Vanity Fair

MTV UK “Pop Stars Should Not Eat”: The 10 Strangest Lady Gaga Quotes from That New … Vanity Fair Vanity Fair contributing editor Vanessa Grigoriadis has a giant profile of Lady Gaga in this week’s New York magazine. In the spirit of the Internet, though, we’ve condensed the piece into a series of infinitely Tweet-able and away … How Lady Gaga Became Lady Gaga New York Magazine Lady Gaga — Let Her Eat Birthday Cake TMZ.com (blog) Lady GaGa Goes Topless For 24th Birthday MTV UK California Chronicle Continue reading