Tag Archives: video-games

Colossal "rape mine" where more than 300,000 women and girls have been brutalised

Hundreds of women and children were raped over and over during 3 days in July, another incident reported in August… estimates indicate many thousands of women and girls are brutalized each year on a gross scale …for the creature comforts of civilized society. Efforts to combat illicit mining of coltan and other minerals are gaining traction, as politicians in Canada and other Western governments look to establish tough penalties against the practice. When we glance at the holocaust in Congo, with about 7 million dead, the clich

Black Heaven Trailer: Could This be Tron’s Evil Sibling?

If Tron leaves you wanting something a little darker, sexier and more twisted from from the newbie-trapped-in-a-video-game genre, it looks like the French went ahead and took care of that. The Black Heaven trailer centers around a game called Black Hole which involves an often-undressed femme fatale, long jumps off of buildings and crappy graphics. And like all of the best video games, this one can possibly kill the player in real life.

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Black Heaven Trailer: Could This be Tron’s Evil Sibling?

Steven Antin On Burlesque, Wooing Cher, and Discovering Ian Somerhalder

Writer-director Steven Antin would like to set a few stories straight. First, he wasn’t born in Portland. He’s a native New Yorker who grew up in Los Angeles, where he and his now-famous siblings — stylist Jonathan, Pussycat Dolls founder Robin, actor Neil — all wound up working in showbiz. Antin barely knew Cher before she agreed to star in his new film, Burlesque , though they both reportedly dated music mogul David Geffen at different times, years ago. And contrary to the notion that he’s come out of nowhere to direct the razzle-dazzliest film of the holiday season, Antin’s an industry veteran who’s spent a lot of time hustling to bring his passion project to the big screen after a career in which he’s gone from teen movie actor to indie filmmaker to television producer and beyond.

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Steven Antin On Burlesque, Wooing Cher, and Discovering Ian Somerhalder

Gift Guide: Give in the Form of a Question With Jeopardy! For Wii

For the first time in years, Jeopardy! is back as a great console game. Alex Trebek is re-imagined as a snarkly little Mii in this game for the trivia lover, and you’re allowed to answer questions in multiple-choice or in voice-assisted auto-complete format. Fabulous and educational. All your tech-savvy geek kids will appreciate it.

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Gift Guide: Give in the Form of a Question With Jeopardy! For Wii

Author Richard Epstein Renounces Gray Lady: ‘She’s Become a Bit…of a Slut’

Richard Epstein disowned the New York Times today. ” Adios, Gray Lady ,” he proclaimed at the Weekly Standard’s website. “She’s become a bit – perhaps more than a bit – of a slut,” Epstein claimed, “whoring after youth through pretending to be with-it.” Epstein, a prominent libertarian author and law school professor, hysterically decried the Times’s ongoing descent into pomposity and cultural irrelevance. And Epstein would know – he claims he’s been a subscriber for 50 years. Chief among Epstein’s grievances was the contents of the Times’s opinion pages. Though he praised David Brooks, longtime token conservative of the Times’s commentators (and by many measures hardly a conservative at all), as not being “locked into a Pavlovian political response,” Epstein claimed that “I find no need to read any of the Times’s regular columnists.” Every so often I check to remind myself that Maureen Dowd isn’t amusing, though she is an improvement, I suppose, over the termagantial Anna Quindlen, whom I used to read with the trepidation of a drunken husband mounting the stairs knowing his wife awaits with a rolling pin. I’d sooner read the fine print in my insurance policies than the paper’s perfectly predictable editorials. Laughter, an elegant phrase, a surprising sentiment-the New York Times op-ed and editorial pages are the last place to look for any of these things…. I could go on about the artificial rage of Frank Rich-the liberals’ Glenn Beck-or the forced gaiety of “Sunday Styles,” but the main feeling I have as I rise from having wasted an hour or so with the Sunday New York Times is of what wretched shape the country is in if it is engaged in such boringly trivial pursuits, elevating to eminence such dim cultural and political figures, writing so muddledly about ostensibly significant subjects. Ouch. Epstein’s grievances, though, went far beyond the paper’s columnists, to other, less ostensibly political sections. I sometimes glimpse the Arts section to see which wrong people are being praised or have been awarded large cash prizes or recognized for years of mediocre achievement by election to the American Academy of Arts & Letters. Arts, of course, are no longer quite The Arts, at least in the New York Times, which features hard rock and rap music and video games and graphic novels under the rubric The Arts. Only the photographs of dancers lend an aesthetic dimension to the shabby section. I lift the Sunday New York Times from the hallway outside our apartment with a heart twice the weight of the hefty paper itself. From it I extract the Book Review, the magazine, “Sunday Styles,” the “Week in Review.” For decades now the New York Times Book Review has been devoted to reinforcing received (and mostly wrong) literary opinions and doing so in impressively undistinguished prose. The New York Times Magazine has always been dull, but earlier it erred on the side of seriousness. Now it is dull on the side of ersatz hipness. The other Sunday I put myself through a long article on the dangers of leaving a record of one’s minor misdeeds on the Internet. The article’s last sentence instructed that “we need to learn new forms of empathy, new ways of defining ourselves without reference to what others say about us and new ways of forgiving one another for the digital trails that will follow us forever.” Yes, I thought, and wet birds never fly at night. Epstein ends his jeremiad with a simple request: “Cancel my subscription, please.”

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Author Richard Epstein Renounces Gray Lady: ‘She’s Become a Bit…of a Slut’

‘Expendables’ Prove Dependable At Weekend Box Office

Sylvester Stallone’s throwback action flick takes #1 spot over ‘Eat Pray Love,’ ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World.’ By Josh Wigler Jason Statham, Sylvester Stallone and Randy Couture in “The Expendables” Photo: Lionsgate #1 “The Expendables” ($35 million) #2 “Eat Pray Love” ($23.7 million) #3 “The Other Guys” ($18 million) #4 “Inception” ($11.4 million) #5 “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” ($10.5 million) Sylvester Stallone has still got it. The aging actor and filmmaker, most popular for his starring roles in the “Rocky” and “Rambo” franchises, brought the pedal-to-the-metal, blood-pumping (and spewing) antics of 1980s action cinema back to theaters this past weekend with “The Expendables,” taking home first place during a very crowded box-office session. A star-studded affair featuring various macho men from Jason Statham to Dolph Lundgren, “The Expendables” won over audiences nationwide for a grand total of $35 million in its opening weekend. Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter, Stallone described the success of “The Expendables” as the “proudest moment” of his career, second only to “Rocky Balboa” in 2006 — and with box-office success currently in the palm of his hand, Stallone is using that energy to dream up an “Expendables” sequel. “It’s plotted out in my mind’s eye,” the “Expendables” actor/director/writer told THR. “I believe this group has to continue to evolve; it just can’t become the same people. So how do you get new people introduced into the group, and how do you have some of the other people leaving? Those are the challenges.” Landing in second place was “Eat Pray Love,” the Julia Roberts-starring flick with a target audience considerably less bloodthirsty than those who saw “The Expendables.” Directed by “Glee” creator Ryan Murphy and with an all-star cast that includes James Franco and Javier Bardem, Roberts’ latest earned $23.7 million over the weekend, a modest success given the film’s tough competition and relatively lackluster reviews . Indeed, reviews weren’t too important for this most recent box-office frame as the critically acclaimed “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” premiered in fifth place with only $10.5 million to its name. Based on the widely adored comic book series created by Bryan Lee O’Malley, “Scott Pilgrim” draws inspiration from various areas of popular culture — video games especially — to create a hilarious and action-packed tale of a young misguided soul’s quest to win his dream girl’s heart. Some fans have argued that numerous free screeners prior to the film’s release assisted in “Scott Pilgrim” ‘s box-office demise, though it’s very likely that the comic book adaptation will have a long life on DVD, Blu-ray and other formats, thanks to its cultish fanbase. Upcoming Releases : Another crowded weekend looms with the Ice Cube-starring “Lottery Ticket” and blood-soaked “Piranha 3D” leading the pack. Jason Bateman and Jennifer Aniston try their luck at love in “The Switch,” while Emma Thompson returns as “Nanny McPhee.” On Wednesday, the “Twilight” franchise gets a stake in the heart from parody flick “Vampires Suck.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Expendables,” “Eat Pray Love” and “The Other Guys.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos Opening Night: Summer Movie Premieres Related Photos ‘Eat, Pray, Love’ Premieres In New York

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‘Expendables’ Prove Dependable At Weekend Box Office

‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’: The Reviews Are In!

One critic hails a ‘more heroic’ portrayal by star Michael Cera, while another calls the comic book flick ‘one long, sneering in-joke.’ By Eric Ditzian Michael Cera in “Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World” Depending on who you hang out with and what websites you frequent, “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” is either the most authentic coming-of-age love story that’s ever been told about kids who grew up with 8-bit video games or a movie that will leave you screaming, “Death to hipsters!” What else is there to say? To read through reviews of Edgar Wright’s film is to understand how fully a critic’s biography and aesthetic vision influence his or her writing. We bring our own personal baggage to the cinema, even if we all feed from the same bin of stale popcorn. We’ve gathered together a few of these wildly divergent reviews. Before making up your mind about whether you’re a “Scott Pilgrim” fan or hater, you can check out what the critics are saying. Or better yet, see the movie yourself, and then make up your mind. The Story “Over-explaining Scott Pilgrim’s plot would take away from the Pop Rocks-exploding fun. Scott (Michael Cera) is the 22-year-old bassist for a mediocre Toronto punk band called Sex Bob-Omb. (Their songs, which I found a bit too realistically mediocre, were written by Beck.) Scott has a sassy gay roommate (Kieran Culkin), a meddling sister (Anna Kendrick), and a girlfriend, Knives Chau (Ellen Wong), a Sex Bob-Omb superfan who’s still in high school. But Scott falls hard when the purple-haired, poker-faced Ramona Flowers (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) moves to town. To win her, he must not only summon the courage to break up with Knives; he must defeat an evil legion of Ramona’s seven exes, who include a vegan rock star (Brandon Routh), a Bollywood-dancing Goth (Satya Bhabha), and twin Japanese DJs (Shota and Keita Saito).” — Dana Stevens, Slate . The Visuals “The movie does everything its makers can dream up to imitate a manga: Screens split in half and then in half again. Action speeds up or slows down. Comic book word sounds — ‘whoosh,’ ‘r-i-i-i-i-n-g,’ ‘thud’ and the like — pepper the screen. Backstories about exes are told in rudimentary sketches. The movie frame becomes a graffiti zone where the filmmakers can insert all sorts of written commentary including the fact that a character has to pee.” — Kirk Honeycutt, The Hollywood Reporter. Michael Cera “As Pilgrim, Cera is more assertive and, yes, heroic than he has been in most of his work (though there is ‘Youth in Revolt’ to bear in mind). He’s gone past the stammering gawkiness of his early work into something less adolescent, if not fully mature. The transformation hasn’t reached a conclusion yet, but it’s interesting to watch.” — Shawn Levy, The Oregonian. The Director “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.)” — Kurt Loder, MTV News . The Dissenters “The story and characters of ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World,’ then, are negligible. But fans of the novel aren’t likely to care, reserving their most passionate interest for how director Edgar Wright has brought their precious antihero to the screen … He dials ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’ up to 11 within minutes, leaving him nowhere to take the narrative energy. Trippy onscreen titles (‘Riiiing!’ when a telephone rings, ‘Dddddd’ when someone plays the bass), Super Mario Bros. graphics, light saber duels, jump cuts, screen wipes, zingers, quips and doggerel — it’s all played with the same emphasis and knowing insularity. Unless you can hear its particular whistle, ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’ is a grind, as monotonous and enervating as one long, sneering in-joke.” — Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post. The Final Word “There is plenty of [visual wit] in ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’ — fast cuts, off-kilter puns, sight gags and sound effects in such profusion that you may want to see it again as soon as it’s over. But underneath is a disarming sincerity and a remarkable willingness to acknowledge ambivalence, self-doubt, hurt feelings and all the other complications of youth. At the end, the movie comes home to the well-known territory of the coming-of-age story, with an account of lessons learned and conflicts resolved. But you’ll swear you’ve never seen anything like it before.” — A.O. Scott, The New York Times. What did you think of Michael Cera’s latest flick? Share your reviews in the comments! 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’ ‘Scott Pilgrim’ Takes Over The World ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ Clips Related Photos ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ Premieres In Los Angeles ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World’ Exclusive Clip Highlights

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‘Scott Pilgrim vs. the World’: The Reviews Are In!

Attacks on Business Fill Newsweek’s List of ‘Best Business Literature’

If Newsweek magazine isn’t anti-business enough for you, perhaps their list of ” Business Books You Need to Read Now ” will satisfy. On July 14, Newsweek published a list of ten books they described as “best business literature out there.” The list of ten current titles was decidedly anti-business. Newsweek included an interview with each book’s author. The list included: “War at the Wall Street Journal: Inside the Struggle to Control an American Business Empire,” by Sarah Ellison. The book detailed Rupert Murdoch’s purchase of the Wall Street Journal in 2003. Newsweek couldn’t help but highlight Murdoch’s “obsession” at competing with the liberal darling New York Times . “Money for Nothing: How the Failure of Corporate Boards is Ruining American Business and Costing Us Trillions,” by John Gillespie and David Zweig. Gillespie and Zweig examined how the boards of directors at companies such as Lehman Brothers and General Motors were “paid handsome sums to oversee the activity of the executives and protect shareholders’ interest” while the “CEOs ran the companies into the ground.” In their interview with Newsweek, the authors criticized former General Motors CEO Rich Wagoner for the company’s “disastrous strategy” but didn’t mention the unions’ role in GM’s demise . “Extra Lives: Why Video Games Matter,” by Tom Bissell . Bissell’s book argues that video games are a “legitimate creative medium” and in his interview, Newsweek’s Nick Summers wondered: “Is one problem that games make too much money? That it’s so easy to make millions with crap that no one takes time to make quality stuff?” Newsweek’s list also included books investigating everything from the oil industry to hedge funds and ignored a number of pro-businesses books for sale on bookstore shelves. Some of the titles Newsweek failed to mention are  ” Return to Prosperity: How America Can Regain its Economic Superpower Status ,” by Arthur B. Laffer, ” Freedomnomics: Why the Free Market Works and Other Half Baked Theories Don’t,” by John Lott, and ” Applied Economics: Thinking Beyond Stage One ,” by Thomas Sowell. Newsweek has a history of championing liberal ideas and criticizing capitalism , so perhaps this latest list is simply Newsweek’s background reading. Like this article?  Sign up  for “The Balance Sheet,” BMI’s weekly e-mail newsletter.

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Attacks on Business Fill Newsweek’s List of ‘Best Business Literature’

New Video Game "Privates" is making safe sex education Fun!

Attention video games lovers! New game “Privates” is coming to the market and will teach you everything about STDs and their remedies by making your learning process FUN! The best part – PC version will be FREE to load! http://condomelite.com/condoms/2010/06/14/video-game-pc-safe-sex-education-xbox-… added by: condomelite1

Nickelodeon Game Site Lets Kids Play at Trying to Look Up Skirt of ‘Naughty’ Cartoon Teachers

Parents who assume the Nickelodeon website is kid-friendly should think again – its homepage links to a sister website called AddictingGames.com that features racy, sex-focused video games like “Naughty Babysitter,” “Booty Rider,” and “You da Sperm!” AddictingGames.com is owned by Nickelodeon’s parent company, Viacom, but can be accessed directly from the Nick.com homepage. On AddictingGames.com, the “Nickelodeon” logo is featured prominently on the upper right corner of the screen – suggesting that the site is appropriate for a young demographic. Nick.com describes itself as “THE place for kids to play games online!” There will even be an entire show devoted to promoting an AddictingGames.com contest airing on Nickelodeon’s TV station on June 19. But with videogames starring busty, panty-clad cartoon characters, AddictingGames.com seems more suitable for the MTV crowd than Nickelodeon’s gradeschool-aged fans.