Audio:
Link:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macrocosm_and_microcosm
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
We Need to Talk about Kevin
It must be something like this to have a nervous breakdown. We find ourselves inside the mind of a woman whose psychopathic son has driven her over the edge. This is not entirely his fault. We gather she didn't want to get pregnant, isn't sure why she's married, is a mother who tries to mask hostility with superficial kindness. If she had her way, she would put her life on rewind and start all over again — maybe even as somebody else, since she's not very fond of herself.Continue Reading on RogerEbert.com
Audio:
A Separation
"A Separation" is a film in which every important character tries to live a good life within the boundaries of the same religion. That this leads them into disharmony and brings them up before a judge is because no list of rules can account for human feelings. The film involves its audience in an unusually direct way, because although we can see the logic of everyone's position, our emotions often disagree.Continue Reading on RogerEbert.com
Audio:
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Rampart
Woody Harrelson is leaner in "Rampart," the skin tight over the skull, the jawline defiant. His eyes are busy. He is a cop in the Los Angeles police district that became notorious in 1999 as a cesspool of corruption, but this man takes corruption with him wherever he goes. The movie is co-written by the unsurpassed crime writer James Ellroy, who no doubt knows enough stories about Rampart to write a dozen movies, but his inspiration here is to make this cop a stand-alone character study, isolated within himself. He doesn't require the reprehensible environment of Rampart. He's self-fueled.Continue Reading on RogerEbert.com
Audio:
"The Artist" and "Hugo": A very French Oscars
It was like an episode from "The Twilight Zone." The Academy Award for best picture went to a silent film in black and white. The unstoppable "The Artist," which had nothing going for it but boundless joy, defeated big-budgeted competitors loaded with expensive stars because … well, because it was so darned much fun. Its victory will send Hollywood back to its think-tanks.Continue Reading on RogerEbert.com
Audio:
Doodle Unto Others
Audio:
Artist:
David Shrigley (Wikipedia, Official)
Link:
http://www.artnews.com/2012/02/23/doodle-unto-others/
Artist:
David Shrigley (Wikipedia, Official)
Link:
http://www.artnews.com/2012/02/23/doodle-unto-others/
Monday, February 27, 2012
Chinese-English Bilinguals Are 'Automatic' Translators
This might change how you learn second language.
Audio:
Link:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/08/110802113321.htm
Audio:
Link:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/08/110802113321.htm
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