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Desember 8th, 2009 .

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Tobey and Natalie are just acting

Last Updated: 8:49 AM, November 27, 2009

Posted: 1:39 AM, November 27, 2009

Don't ask

Tobey Maguire's wife about his love scenes with gorgeous

Natalie Portman. At hot restaurant Abe & Arthur's the other night after the Skyy Vodka-sponsored screening of “Brothers,” a spy tells us that

Jennifer Meyer(pictured with Maguire) “seemed upset as she was getting bombarded with questions about how she felt about her hubby's intimate role with Natalie. She finally said something to her husband, and he assured her that she had nothing to worry about.”

PHOTOS: “BROTHERS” NYC PREMIERE

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Desember 8th, 2009 .

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Now, more than ever, comic books are a huge part of our society. Ever since the 1930s we’ve been snatching the books of the shelves to read about our favorite heroes, but today, with the ever growing galaxy of comic book movies on the shelf, a whole new audience has been introduced to the great heroes of Marvel, DC, and Dark Horse. You don’t have to be a nerd to like Spider Man anymore, and in the years to come, there will be even more superhero glory hit the big screen, including another Batman film as a follow up to Batman Begins, first movies for Wonder Woman and Captain America, the fifth Superman film, and part 3s to Spider Man and X-Men. In the next few months you can catch Batman Begins and The Fantastic Four in theaters, and all your favorites are available on video and DVD. What follows here is a look at the most significant comic books films that got us to the point, the films that cemented the genre into the movie industry through their amazing cavalcades of heroes, villains, and special effects. I’d like to apologize in advance if I’ve left your favorite hero or favorite flick out, but I couldn’t do them all. These are just the biggies, and this is just the overview. If you really want to know the heroes, go see the flicks and buy the books. SUPERMAN (1978): The film that launched comic book movies as a viable force in Hollywood, Superman was an adaptation of Joe Siegel and Jerry Shuster’s legendary DC comics character done by Godfather writer Mario Puzo and directed by Marathon Man’s Richard Donner. The film star’s Christopher Reeve as Superman and his alter ego Clark Kent, Margot Kidder as his friend and colleague Lois Lane, and Gene Hackman as criminal genius Lex Luthor. The first thing that strikes you about Superman is John Williams theme music that plays over the opening credits. It prepares you for adventure and excitement. From there Donner takes us to Krypton, Superman’s home world, where Superman’s father Jor-El (the great Marlon Brando) convicts a group of criminals for spreading chaos on the planet, and sentences them to imprisonment in The Phantom Zone, a floating prism in which they will be eternally trapped in sheer nothingness. From there we find out that Krypton is about to self-destruct due the gravitational pull of its two sons. Fearing for his family, Jor-El sends his son, Kal-El away in a special pod to Earth. On the way he is given immense knowledge of the planet. He crashes and is raised by the Kents, hiding his abilities from all but his adopted parents. When he reaches his teens, Clark Kent witnesses the death of his father, and embarks on a journey with a mysterious green crystal.It leads him far into the North, where he finds his fortress of solitude; there he is instructed by a projected image of his father. Fully grown, Clark Kent gets a job as a reporter for the Daily Planet, where he meets Lois Lane. Over the weeks, Superman becomes a prominent hero figure as he saves kittens in trees and falling helicopters, as well as Air Force One. Finally, Superman must combat Lex Luthor’s plan to sink California into the Pacific in order to increase the value of the desert land he has bought by making it oceanfront property. Superman must also stop a nuclear warhead from destroying a major part of New York and New Jersey. The film’s finale is astonishingly tense as Superman flies back and forth stopping disaster after disaster, until finally he can’t stop Lois from behind buried alive in her own car. To save her, Superman flies around the world so fast that he reverses time, then sets it back to the moment before Lois is buried alive, and therein lies the only problem with the film’s story. The disaster doesn’t continue after the time is wound back like it should, it just completely stops as though it never happened. Other than that, Superman is great fun. Reeve is a remarkable portrayal of the Man of Steel, and Hackman is delightfully diabolical as Luthor. The film is a little campy, but after all, it’s a comic book. This one you should definitely see. Superman was a blockbuster hit that spawned three sequels, and the fourth, Superman Returns, is currently in the works. BATMAN (1989) The first foray of the Dark Knight onto the big screen, Tim Burton’s gothic adaptation of Bob Kane’s legendary comic book stars Michael Keaton as Batman, Jack Nicholson as The Joker, and Kim Basinger as photojournalist Vicky Vale. Burton’s film is definitely one of the most believable comic book films ever made, due to the fact that there really isn’t anything supernatural about it and it’s set against the gloomy noir background of Gotham City. In this initial film in the Batman saga a relatively green Batman is up against a newly created Joker who launches a plan to destroy Gotham by means of his “Smiley” laughing gas. Filled with oddball black comedy and memorable dramatic moments, this is a definite film for the ages. Burton’s directing elevates the comic book genre to the stuff of great action drama, and his design team creates a Gotham for the ages and a Batmobile that anyone would want to drive. Nicholson, although he isn’t the proper build or leanness to play the Joker, captures the feel of the Bat’s arch nemesis like no one else ever can. His sadistic silliness is unbelievably potent, and Keaton is equally adept at playing the fierce warrior Batman and the uncertain, withdrawn Bruce Wayne. Add in Kim Basinger’s sex appeal and outstanding talent for playing ambitious photographer Vicky Vale, and you’ve got a brilliant portrayal of the Caped Crusader in action. X-MEN (2000) After DC Comics long running domination of comic cinema, Marvel finally decided the time was right to step up to the plate with their own fantastically successful run of comic book movies that began in 2000 with the release of Bryan Singer’s film X-Men. Based on Stan Lee’s 1963 creation that has evolved over 40 years of writers and artists, it is the story of two renegade mutants, Anna Paquin as Rogue and Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, who find their way to a school for mutants in upstate New York after they are attacked by a mutant in Canada. There they meet the X-Men, led by Professor Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart), and featuring Jean Grey (Famke Jannsen), Storm (Halle Berry), and Cyclops (James Marsden). The X-Men are facing off against a brotherhood of mutants, led by Magneto (Ian McKellen) and his trusted infiltrator Mystique (Rebecca Romijn). Magneto has devised a machine that will use mutant energy to transform all of humanity into mutants in response to the hostility against mutants led by Senator Kelly (Bruce Davison). The film is marvelously rich in character development, such as Wolverine’s search to find his identity, Rogue’s quest for acceptance, and the love triangle between Jean, Cyclops, and Wolverine. Combined with Singer’s knack for finding the humanity in the supernatural, X-Men is a much more human journey than comic book films past, and it also has the action kick to make it cool. SPIDER-MAN (2002) Sam Raimi’s colorful and furious adaptation of Stan Lee’s most memorable creation stars Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker aka Spider-Man, Kirsten Dunst as his love Mary Jane Watson, James Franco as his best friend Harry Osborn, and Willem Dafoe as Harry’s driven scientist father Norman Osborn. After bitten by a genetically engineered super spider, super geek Peter Parker is transformed into the wall climbing, web shooting, super strong Spider-Man. He enters an amateur wrestling competition and is not paid the full amount he was promised, so when the place is robbed he lets the burglar pass, only to find out that the same burglar shot and killed his Uncle Ben shortly thereafter. Now faced with guilt and responsibility, he begins fighting crime and comes into contact with the mysterious and menacing Green Goblin, who is actually Norman Osborn gone schizophrenic after taking a super soldier serum that enhanced his physical strength and agility and made him into a murderous madman. The most striking thing about the film is it doesn’t involve a master plot by the villain, it is simply The Goblin trying to kill Spider Man in any way he can. Maguire’s performance is just a little bit wooden (well, more than a little), but the rest of the cast is unbelievable. Raimi’s sensibilities are perfect for the sometimes comic; sometimes touching world of America’s favorite web slinger, and Spider Man is without a doubt one of the best comic book films of our time. HULK (2003) Ang Lee’s odd and surprisingly actionless adaptation of Stan Lee’s comic, Hulk is the story of Bruce Banner (Eric Bana), a scientist who comes into contact with gamma radiation during a failed experiment that allows him to transform into a giant green monster with superhuman strength. In Lee’s film, much emphasis is given to Banner’s childhood, and how his father injected him with hormones as a child that set the process in motion. This seems like a healthy attempt at intrigue, but in the end it’s boring and serves no purpose other than to facilitate the appearance of Bruce’s father, David (Nick Nolte), who tries to coax his son into permanent hulktitude and attacks Bruce’s girlfriend Betty (Jennifer Connelly) with a trio of hulk dogs. The main problem with Hulk is there is not much development. Dialogue only comes in tiny snippets, coupled with incoherent flashbacks and dream sequences and Lee’s endless split screens, screen wipes, and all sorts of CGI transitions. Connelly and Nolte work hard and deliver good performances, but in the end it all comes down to the Hulk itself, and in the end he is nothing but a giant green computer thing that we can’t relate to. Plus, the Hulk is given far too much power. Nothing seems to be able to beat him, so we aren’t worried when he’s in danger. Overall, a poor attempt at a comic book movie, I’m sorry to say, but still worth seeing so you’ll understand what I mean. DAREDEVIL (2003) Written and directed by Mark Steven Johnson, this adaptation of the legendary Man Without Fear stars Ben Affleck as Matt Murdock/Daredevil, Jennifer Garner as the mysterious Elektra Natchios, Michael Clarke Duncan as the Kingpin, and Collin Farrell as deadly Irish assassin Bullseye. Matt Murdock was blinded in his youth by a vat of toxic waste, but somehow sound and touch are able to create a mental image in his brain, allowing him to maneuver almost as well as any normal person. The death of his father at the hand of mobsters motivated him to train and prepare himself to fight evil. Now grown, Matt is a struggling attorney by day and a crime fighting mystery by night. One day he meets the lovely Elektra and they immediately strike up a relationship until her father is murder by the Kingpin by Bullseye hand and Daredevil is framed. Elektra immediately sets out to kill Daredevil, until she discovers its Matt. They both face off against Bullseye, resulting in Elektra’s death, and then Daredevil takes down the Kingpin. Daredevil is a well-made journey, following Murdock through his days as a merciless killer through to his emergence as a bringer of justice. This film is also done with very little CG, giving it a gritty crime movie film that is reminiscent of the original Batman. THE PUNISHER (2004) Written and directed by Jonathan Hensleigh, the writer of Die Hard: With a Vengeance, the Punisher is by far the most gritty and brutal film in the Marvel canon, starring Tom Jane as Frank Castle/The Punisher and John Travolta as Howard Saint. After an undercover police bust turns up a dead Saint son, Howard Saint and his wife order the death of FBI operative Frank Castle and his whole family at a family reunion in the tropics, but one thing goes wrong; Frank doesn’t die. Instead, he embarks on a rage filled quest for vengeance. While some people criticize the Punisher for its graphic violence, it is all done through the eyes of a man pushed to the edge, a man who has lost everything and wants nothing more than to put his family to rest. This film is very different from the rest of the Marvel Universe because nothing supernatural is going on here. The Punisher plays like a spaghetti western with machine guns, shot in a comic book frame style that gives it a wonderfully artistic look, combined with a savagery that makes it intensely believable. Jane brilliantly portrays Castle’s inner conflict, while Travolta brings a wonderful practical villainy to Howard Saint. The film also brings in comic relief in the form of Castle’s three housemates, led by Rebecca Romijn Stamos. Overall, this film is brilliant, a fantastic shoot em up with a heart that is a welcome difference from the usual spandex clad heroes in comic book films. HELLBOY (2004) Dark Horse Comics first triumphant foray into comic cinema, Hellboy is Guillermo del Toro’s film about a demon raised from hell by Nazis as a baby and raised under American supervision to fight the supernatural threat to humanity. It stars Ron Perlman as Hellboy, Selma Blair as pyrokinetic Liz Sherman, Doug Jones and David Hyde Pierce as the body and voice of fishlike Abe Sapien, Rupert Evans as agent John Myers, and John Hurt as Hellboy’s earthly father Dr. Broom. When a demon called Sammael is raised in a museum, Hellboy and his crew find that it is the beginning of something much bigger. The evil Grigori Rasputin (Karel Roden) has risen from the netherworld to bring about the coming of the seven gods of chaos and end the world. Meanwhile, Hellboy has to deal with his love for the human Liz as well as her developing relationship with Agent Myers and the sudden death of Dr. Broom at the hands of an assassin named Kroenen. The film is a wonderful exploration of Nazi occultism and the supernatural, prompting inner questions about the netherworld, and the world of ancient beings and good versus evil provides an epic background to the surprisingly human story. Hellboy may be a giant demon with a stone hand, but on the whole he is just a regular cigar-smoking working stiff with a thing for cats. The cast gives stellar performances while Del Toro works hard to make this odd world seem real, and succeeds. With many more comic book adaptations to come, it is certain that the genre is now a major player in Hollywood and shouldn’t be treated as though it’s a trifle. Comic book movies have now become works of art tended to by hard working artists who wish to give a human face to the superhuman characters created in the books. Most importantly, comics are to us what the gods were to the Greeks, supreme beings to rule us and teach us, and give us hope, and that’s why we still go to the movies to see them; hope.

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Now, more than ever, comic books are a huge part of our society. Ever since the 1930s we’ve been snatching the books of the shelves to read about our favorite heroes, but today, with the ever growing galaxy of comic book movies on the shelf, a whole new audience has been introduced to the great heroes of Marvel, DC, and Dark Horse. You don’t have to be a nerd to like Spider Man anymore, and in the years to come, there will be even more superhero glory hit the big screen, including another Batman film as a follow up to Batman Begins, first movies for Wonder Woman and Captain America, the fifth Superman film, and part 3s to Spider Man and X-Men. In the next few months you can catch Batman Begins and The Fantastic Four in theaters, and all your favorites are available on video and DVD. What follows here is a look at the most significant comic books films that got us to the point, the films that cemented the genre into the movie industry through their amazing cavalcades of heroes, villains, and special effects. I’d like to apologize in advance if I’ve left your favorite hero or favorite flick out, but I couldn’t do them all. These are just the biggies, and this is just the overview. If you really want to know the heroes, go see the flicks and buy the books. SUPERMAN (1978): The film that launched comic book movies as a viable force in Hollywood, Superman was an adaptation of Joe Siegel and Jerry Shuster’s legendary DC comics character done by Godfather writer Mario Puzo and directed by Marathon Man’s Richard Donner. The film star’s Christopher Reeve as Superman and his alter ego Clark Kent, Margot Kidder as his friend and colleague Lois Lane, and Gene Hackman as criminal genius Lex Luthor. The first thing that strikes you about Superman is John Williams theme music that plays over the opening credits. It prepares you for adventure and excitement. From there Donner takes us to Krypton, Superman’s home world, where Superman’s father Jor-El (the great Marlon Brando) convicts a group of criminals for spreading chaos on the planet, and sentences them to imprisonment in The Phantom Zone, a floating prism in which they will be eternally trapped in sheer nothingness. From there we find out that Krypton is about to self-destruct due the gravitational pull of its two sons. Fearing for his family, Jor-El sends his son, Kal-El away in a special pod to Earth. On the way he is given immense knowledge of the planet. He crashes and is raised by the Kents, hiding his abilities from all but his adopted parents. When he reaches his teens, Clark Kent witnesses the death of his father, and embarks on a journey with a mysterious green crystal.It leads him far into the North, where he finds his fortress of solitude; there he is instructed by a projected image of his father. Fully grown, Clark Kent gets a job as a reporter for the Daily Planet, where he meets Lois Lane. Over the weeks, Superman becomes a prominent hero figure as he saves kittens in trees and falling helicopters, as well as Air Force One. Finally, Superman must combat Lex Luthor’s plan to sink California into the Pacific in order to increase the value of the desert land he has bought by making it oceanfront property. Superman must also stop a nuclear warhead from destroying a major part of New York and New Jersey. The film’s finale is astonishingly tense as Superman flies back and forth stopping disaster after disaster, until finally he can’t stop Lois from behind buried alive in her own car. To save her, Superman flies around the world so fast that he reverses time, then sets it back to the moment before Lois is buried alive, and therein lies the only problem with the film’s story. The disaster doesn’t continue after the time is wound back like it should, it just completely stops as though it never happened. Other than that, Superman is great fun. Reeve is a remarkable portrayal of the Man of Steel, and Hackman is delightfully diabolical as Luthor. The film is a little campy, but after all, it’s a comic book. This one you should definitely see. Superman was a blockbuster hit that spawned three sequels, and the fourth, Superman Returns, is currently in the works. BATMAN (1989) The first foray of the Dark Knight onto the big screen, Tim Burton’s gothic adaptation of Bob Kane’s legendary comic book stars Michael Keaton as Batman, Jack Nicholson as The Joker, and Kim Basinger as photojournalist Vicky Vale. Burton’s film is definitely one of the most believable comic book films ever made, due to the fact that there really isn’t anything supernatural about it and it’s set against the gloomy noir background of Gotham City. In this initial film in the Batman saga a relatively green Batman is up against a newly created Joker who launches a plan to destroy Gotham by means of his “Smiley” laughing gas. Filled with oddball black comedy and memorable dramatic moments, this is a definite film for the ages. Burton’s directing elevates the comic book genre to the stuff of great action drama, and his design team creates a Gotham for the ages and a Batmobile that anyone would want to drive. Nicholson, although he isn’t the proper build or leanness to play the Joker, captures the feel of the Bat’s arch nemesis like no one else ever can. His sadistic silliness is unbelievably potent, and Keaton is equally adept at playing the fierce warrior Batman and the uncertain, withdrawn Bruce Wayne. Add in Kim Basinger’s sex appeal and outstanding talent for playing ambitious photographer Vicky Vale, and you’ve got a brilliant portrayal of the Caped Crusader in action. X-MEN (2000) After DC Comics long running domination of comic cinema, Marvel finally decided the time was right to step up to the plate with their own fantastically successful run of comic book movies that began in 2000 with the release of Bryan Singer’s film X-Men. Based on Stan Lee’s 1963 creation that has evolved over 40 years of writers and artists, it is the story of two renegade mutants, Anna Paquin as Rogue and Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, who find their way to a school for mutants in upstate New York after they are attacked by a mutant in Canada. There they meet the X-Men, led by Professor Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart), and featuring Jean Grey (Famke Jannsen), Storm (Halle Berry), and Cyclops (James Marsden). The X-Men are facing off against a brotherhood of mutants, led by Magneto (Ian McKellen) and his trusted infiltrator Mystique (Rebecca Romijn). Magneto has devised a machine that will use mutant energy to transform all of humanity into mutants in response to the hostility against mutants led by Senator Kelly (Bruce Davison). The film is marvelously rich in character development, such as Wolverine’s search to find his identity, Rogue’s quest for acceptance, and the love triangle between Jean, Cyclops, and Wolverine. Combined with Singer’s knack for finding the humanity in the supernatural, X-Men is a much more human journey than comic book films past, and it also has the action kick to make it cool. SPIDER-MAN (2002) Sam Raimi’s colorful and furious adaptation of Stan Lee’s most memorable creation stars Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker aka Spider-Man, Kirsten Dunst as his love Mary Jane Watson, James Franco as his best friend Harry Osborn, and Willem Dafoe as Harry’s driven scientist father Norman Osborn. After bitten by a genetically engineered super spider, super geek Peter Parker is transformed into the wall climbing, web shooting, super strong Spider-Man. He enters an amateur wrestling competition and is not paid the full amount he was promised, so when the place is robbed he lets the burglar pass, only to find out that the same burglar shot and killed his Uncle Ben shortly thereafter. Now faced with guilt and responsibility, he begins fighting crime and comes into contact with the mysterious and menacing Green Goblin, who is actually Norman Osborn gone schizophrenic after taking a super soldier serum that enhanced his physical strength and agility and made him into a murderous madman. The most striking thing about the film is it doesn’t involve a master plot by the villain, it is simply The Goblin trying to kill Spider Man in any way he can. Maguire’s performance is just a little bit wooden (well, more than a little), but the rest of the cast is unbelievable. Raimi’s sensibilities are perfect for the sometimes comic; sometimes touching world of America’s favorite web slinger, and Spider Man is without a doubt one of the best comic book films of our time. HULK (2003) Ang Lee’s odd and surprisingly actionless adaptation of Stan Lee’s comic, Hulk is the story of Bruce Banner (Eric Bana), a scientist who comes into contact with gamma radiation during a failed experiment that allows him to transform into a giant green monster with superhuman strength. In Lee’s film, much emphasis is given to Banner’s childhood, and how his father injected him with hormones as a child that set the process in motion. This seems like a healthy attempt at intrigue, but in the end it’s boring and serves no purpose other than to facilitate the appearance of Bruce’s father, David (Nick Nolte), who tries to coax his son into permanent hulktitude and attacks Bruce’s girlfriend Betty (Jennifer Connelly) with a trio of hulk dogs. The main problem with Hulk is there is not much development. Dialogue only comes in tiny snippets, coupled with incoherent flashbacks and dream sequences and Lee’s endless split screens, screen wipes, and all sorts of CGI transitions. Connelly and Nolte work hard and deliver good performances, but in the end it all comes down to the Hulk itself, and in the end he is nothing but a giant green computer thing that we can’t relate to. Plus, the Hulk is given far too much power. Nothing seems to be able to beat him, so we aren’t worried when he’s in danger. Overall, a poor attempt at a comic book movie, I’m sorry to say, but still worth seeing so you’ll understand what I mean. DAREDEVIL (2003) Written and directed by Mark Steven Johnson, this adaptation of the legendary Man Without Fear stars Ben Affleck as Matt Murdock/Daredevil, Jennifer Garner as the mysterious Elektra Natchios, Michael Clarke Duncan as the Kingpin, and Collin Farrell as deadly Irish assassin Bullseye. Matt Murdock was blinded in his youth by a vat of toxic waste, but somehow sound and touch are able to create a mental image in his brain, allowing him to maneuver almost as well as any normal person. The death of his father at the hand of mobsters motivated him to train and prepare himself to fight evil. Now grown, Matt is a struggling attorney by day and a crime fighting mystery by night. One day he meets the lovely Elektra and they immediately strike up a relationship until her father is murder by the Kingpin by Bullseye hand and Daredevil is framed. Elektra immediately sets out to kill Daredevil, until she discovers its Matt. They both face off against Bullseye, resulting in Elektra’s death, and then Daredevil takes down the Kingpin. Daredevil is a well-made journey, following Murdock through his days as a merciless killer through to his emergence as a bringer of justice. This film is also done with very little CG, giving it a gritty crime movie film that is reminiscent of the original Batman. THE PUNISHER (2004) Written and directed by Jonathan Hensleigh, the writer of Die Hard: With a Vengeance, the Punisher is by far the most gritty and brutal film in the Marvel canon, starring Tom Jane as Frank Castle/The Punisher and John Travolta as Howard Saint. After an undercover police bust turns up a dead Saint son, Howard Saint and his wife order the death of FBI operative Frank Castle and his whole family at a family reunion in the tropics, but one thing goes wrong; Frank doesn’t die. Instead, he embarks on a rage filled quest for vengeance. While some people criticize the Punisher for its graphic violence, it is all done through the eyes of a man pushed to the edge, a man who has lost everything and wants nothing more than to put his family to rest. This film is very different from the rest of the Marvel Universe because nothing supernatural is going on here. The Punisher plays like a spaghetti western with machine guns, shot in a comic book frame style that gives it a wonderfully artistic look, combined with a savagery that makes it intensely believable. Jane brilliantly portrays Castle’s inner conflict, while Travolta brings a wonderful practical villainy to Howard Saint. The film also brings in comic relief in the form of Castle’s three housemates, led by Rebecca Romijn Stamos. Overall, this film is brilliant, a fantastic shoot em up with a heart that is a welcome difference from the usual spandex clad heroes in comic book films. HELLBOY (2004) Dark Horse Comics first triumphant foray into comic cinema, Hellboy is Guillermo del Toro’s film about a demon raised from hell by Nazis as a baby and raised under American supervision to fight the supernatural threat to humanity. It stars Ron Perlman as Hellboy, Selma Blair as pyrokinetic Liz Sherman, Doug Jones and David Hyde Pierce as the body and voice of fishlike Abe Sapien, Rupert Evans as agent John Myers, and John Hurt as Hellboy’s earthly father Dr. Broom. When a demon called Sammael is raised in a museum, Hellboy and his crew find that it is the beginning of something much bigger. The evil Grigori Rasputin (Karel Roden) has risen from the netherworld to bring about the coming of the seven gods of chaos and end the world. Meanwhile, Hellboy has to deal with his love for the human Liz as well as her developing relationship with Agent Myers and the sudden death of Dr. Broom at the hands of an assassin named Kroenen. The film is a wonderful exploration of Nazi occultism and the supernatural, prompting inner questions about the netherworld, and the world of ancient beings and good versus evil provides an epic background to the surprisingly human story. Hellboy may be a giant demon with a stone hand, but on the whole he is just a regular cigar-smoking working stiff with a thing for cats. The cast gives stellar performances while Del Toro works hard to make this odd world seem real, and succeeds. With many more comic book adaptations to come, it is certain that the genre is now a major player in Hollywood and shouldn’t be treated as though it’s a trifle. Comic book movies have now become works of art tended to by hard working artists who wish to give a human face to the superhuman characters created in the books. Most importantly, comics are to us what the gods were to the Greeks, supreme beings to rule us and teach us, and give us hope, and that’s why we still go to the movies to see them; hope.

Watch Brothers
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Watch A Christmas Carol

Watch 2012
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Now, more than ever, comic books are a huge part of our society. Ever since the 1930s we’ve been snatching the books of the shelves to read about our favorite heroes, but today, with the ever growing galaxy of comic book movies on the shelf, a whole new audience has been introduced to the great heroes of Marvel, DC, and Dark Horse. You don’t have to be a nerd to like Spider Man anymore, and in the years to come, there will be even more superhero glory hit the big screen, including another Batman film as a follow up to Batman Begins, first movies for Wonder Woman and Captain America, the fifth Superman film, and part 3s to Spider Man and X-Men. In the next few months you can catch Batman Begins and The Fantastic Four in theaters, and all your favorites are available on video and DVD. What follows here is a look at the most significant comic books films that got us to the point, the films that cemented the genre into the movie industry through their amazing cavalcades of heroes, villains, and special effects. I’d like to apologize in advance if I’ve left your favorite hero or favorite flick out, but I couldn’t do them all. These are just the biggies, and this is just the overview. If you really want to know the heroes, go see the flicks and buy the books. SUPERMAN (1978): The film that launched comic book movies as a viable force in Hollywood, Superman was an adaptation of Joe Siegel and Jerry Shuster’s legendary DC comics character done by Godfather writer Mario Puzo and directed by Marathon Man’s Richard Donner. The film star’s Christopher Reeve as Superman and his alter ego Clark Kent, Margot Kidder as his friend and colleague Lois Lane, and Gene Hackman as criminal genius Lex Luthor. The first thing that strikes you about Superman is John Williams theme music that plays over the opening credits. It prepares you for adventure and excitement. From there Donner takes us to Krypton, Superman’s home world, where Superman’s father Jor-El (the great Marlon Brando) convicts a group of criminals for spreading chaos on the planet, and sentences them to imprisonment in The Phantom Zone, a floating prism in which they will be eternally trapped in sheer nothingness. From there we find out that Krypton is about to self-destruct due the gravitational pull of its two sons. Fearing for his family, Jor-El sends his son, Kal-El away in a special pod to Earth. On the way he is given immense knowledge of the planet. He crashes and is raised by the Kents, hiding his abilities from all but his adopted parents. When he reaches his teens, Clark Kent witnesses the death of his father, and embarks on a journey with a mysterious green crystal.It leads him far into the North, where he finds his fortress of solitude; there he is instructed by a projected image of his father. Fully grown, Clark Kent gets a job as a reporter for the Daily Planet, where he meets Lois Lane. Over the weeks, Superman becomes a prominent hero figure as he saves kittens in trees and falling helicopters, as well as Air Force One. Finally, Superman must combat Lex Luthor’s plan to sink California into the Pacific in order to increase the value of the desert land he has bought by making it oceanfront property. Superman must also stop a nuclear warhead from destroying a major part of New York and New Jersey. The film’s finale is astonishingly tense as Superman flies back and forth stopping disaster after disaster, until finally he can’t stop Lois from behind buried alive in her own car. To save her, Superman flies around the world so fast that he reverses time, then sets it back to the moment before Lois is buried alive, and therein lies the only problem with the film’s story. The disaster doesn’t continue after the time is wound back like it should, it just completely stops as though it never happened. Other than that, Superman is great fun. Reeve is a remarkable portrayal of the Man of Steel, and Hackman is delightfully diabolical as Luthor. The film is a little campy, but after all, it’s a comic book. This one you should definitely see. Superman was a blockbuster hit that spawned three sequels, and the fourth, Superman Returns, is currently in the works. BATMAN (1989) The first foray of the Dark Knight onto the big screen, Tim Burton’s gothic adaptation of Bob Kane’s legendary comic book stars Michael Keaton as Batman, Jack Nicholson as The Joker, and Kim Basinger as photojournalist Vicky Vale. Burton’s film is definitely one of the most believable comic book films ever made, due to the fact that there really isn’t anything supernatural about it and it’s set against the gloomy noir background of Gotham City. In this initial film in the Batman saga a relatively green Batman is up against a newly created Joker who launches a plan to destroy Gotham by means of his “Smiley” laughing gas. Filled with oddball black comedy and memorable dramatic moments, this is a definite film for the ages. Burton’s directing elevates the comic book genre to the stuff of great action drama, and his design team creates a Gotham for the ages and a Batmobile that anyone would want to drive. Nicholson, although he isn’t the proper build or leanness to play the Joker, captures the feel of the Bat’s arch nemesis like no one else ever can. His sadistic silliness is unbelievably potent, and Keaton is equally adept at playing the fierce warrior Batman and the uncertain, withdrawn Bruce Wayne. Add in Kim Basinger’s sex appeal and outstanding talent for playing ambitious photographer Vicky Vale, and you’ve got a brilliant portrayal of the Caped Crusader in action. X-MEN (2000) After DC Comics long running domination of comic cinema, Marvel finally decided the time was right to step up to the plate with their own fantastically successful run of comic book movies that began in 2000 with the release of Bryan Singer’s film X-Men. Based on Stan Lee’s 1963 creation that has evolved over 40 years of writers and artists, it is the story of two renegade mutants, Anna Paquin as Rogue and Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, who find their way to a school for mutants in upstate New York after they are attacked by a mutant in Canada. There they meet the X-Men, led by Professor Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart), and featuring Jean Grey (Famke Jannsen), Storm (Halle Berry), and Cyclops (James Marsden). The X-Men are facing off against a brotherhood of mutants, led by Magneto (Ian McKellen) and his trusted infiltrator Mystique (Rebecca Romijn). Magneto has devised a machine that will use mutant energy to transform all of humanity into mutants in response to the hostility against mutants led by Senator Kelly (Bruce Davison). The film is marvelously rich in character development, such as Wolverine’s search to find his identity, Rogue’s quest for acceptance, and the love triangle between Jean, Cyclops, and Wolverine. Combined with Singer’s knack for finding the humanity in the supernatural, X-Men is a much more human journey than comic book films past, and it also has the action kick to make it cool. SPIDER-MAN (2002) Sam Raimi’s colorful and furious adaptation of Stan Lee’s most memorable creation stars Tobey Maguire as Peter Parker aka Spider-Man, Kirsten Dunst as his love Mary Jane Watson, James Franco as his best friend Harry Osborn, and Willem Dafoe as Harry’s driven scientist father Norman Osborn. After bitten by a genetically engineered super spider, super geek Peter Parker is transformed into the wall climbing, web shooting, super strong Spider-Man. He enters an amateur wrestling competition and is not paid the full amount he was promised, so when the place is robbed he lets the burglar pass, only to find out that the same burglar shot and killed his Uncle Ben shortly thereafter. Now faced with guilt and responsibility, he begins fighting crime and comes into contact with the mysterious and menacing Green Goblin, who is actually Norman Osborn gone schizophrenic after taking a super soldier serum that enhanced his physical strength and agility and made him into a murderous madman. The most striking thing about the film is it doesn’t involve a master plot by the villain, it is simply The Goblin trying to kill Spider Man in any way he can. Maguire’s performance is just a little bit wooden (well, more than a little), but the rest of the cast is unbelievable. Raimi’s sensibilities are perfect for the sometimes comic; sometimes touching world of America’s favorite web slinger, and Spider Man is without a doubt one of the best comic book films of our time. HULK (2003) Ang Lee’s odd and surprisingly actionless adaptation of Stan Lee’s comic, Hulk is the story of Bruce Banner (Eric Bana), a scientist who comes into contact with gamma radiation during a failed experiment that allows him to transform into a giant green monster with superhuman strength. In Lee’s film, much emphasis is given to Banner’s childhood, and how his father injected him with hormones as a child that set the process in motion. This seems like a healthy attempt at intrigue, but in the end it’s boring and serves no purpose other than to facilitate the appearance of Bruce’s father, David (Nick Nolte), who tries to coax his son into permanent hulktitude and attacks Bruce’s girlfriend Betty (Jennifer Connelly) with a trio of hulk dogs. The main problem with Hulk is there is not much development. Dialogue only comes in tiny snippets, coupled with incoherent flashbacks and dream sequences and Lee’s endless split screens, screen wipes, and all sorts of CGI transitions. Connelly and Nolte work hard and deliver good performances, but in the end it all comes down to the Hulk itself, and in the end he is nothing but a giant green computer thing that we can’t relate to. Plus, the Hulk is given far too much power. Nothing seems to be able to beat him, so we aren’t worried when he’s in danger. Overall, a poor attempt at a comic book movie, I’m sorry to say, but still worth seeing so you’ll understand what I mean. DAREDEVIL (2003) Written and directed by Mark Steven Johnson, this adaptation of the legendary Man Without Fear stars Ben Affleck as Matt Murdock/Daredevil, Jennifer Garner as the mysterious Elektra Natchios, Michael Clarke Duncan as the Kingpin, and Collin Farrell as deadly Irish assassin Bullseye. Matt Murdock was blinded in his youth by a vat of toxic waste, but somehow sound and touch are able to create a mental image in his brain, allowing him to maneuver almost as well as any normal person. The death of his father at the hand of mobsters motivated him to train and prepare himself to fight evil. Now grown, Matt is a struggling attorney by day and a crime fighting mystery by night. One day he meets the lovely Elektra and they immediately strike up a relationship until her father is murder by the Kingpin by Bullseye hand and Daredevil is framed. Elektra immediately sets out to kill Daredevil, until she discovers its Matt. They both face off against Bullseye, resulting in Elektra’s death, and then Daredevil takes down the Kingpin. Daredevil is a well-made journey, following Murdock through his days as a merciless killer through to his emergence as a bringer of justice. This film is also done with very little CG, giving it a gritty crime movie film that is reminiscent of the original Batman. THE PUNISHER (2004) Written and directed by Jonathan Hensleigh, the writer of Die Hard: With a Vengeance, the Punisher is by far the most gritty and brutal film in the Marvel canon, starring Tom Jane as Frank Castle/The Punisher and John Travolta as Howard Saint. After an undercover police bust turns up a dead Saint son, Howard Saint and his wife order the death of FBI operative Frank Castle and his whole family at a family reunion in the tropics, but one thing goes wrong; Frank doesn’t die. Instead, he embarks on a rage filled quest for vengeance. While some people criticize the Punisher for its graphic violence, it is all done through the eyes of a man pushed to the edge, a man who has lost everything and wants nothing more than to put his family to rest. This film is very different from the rest of the Marvel Universe because nothing supernatural is going on here. The Punisher plays like a spaghetti western with machine guns, shot in a comic book frame style that gives it a wonderfully artistic look, combined with a savagery that makes it intensely believable. Jane brilliantly portrays Castle’s inner conflict, while Travolta brings a wonderful practical villainy to Howard Saint. The film also brings in comic relief in the form of Castle’s three housemates, led by Rebecca Romijn Stamos. Overall, this film is brilliant, a fantastic shoot em up with a heart that is a welcome difference from the usual spandex clad heroes in comic book films. HELLBOY (2004) Dark Horse Comics first triumphant foray into comic cinema, Hellboy is Guillermo del Toro’s film about a demon raised from hell by Nazis as a baby and raised under American supervision to fight the supernatural threat to humanity. It stars Ron Perlman as Hellboy, Selma Blair as pyrokinetic Liz Sherman, Doug Jones and David Hyde Pierce as the body and voice of fishlike Abe Sapien, Rupert Evans as agent John Myers, and John Hurt as Hellboy’s earthly father Dr. Broom. When a demon called Sammael is raised in a museum, Hellboy and his crew find that it is the beginning of something much bigger. The evil Grigori Rasputin (Karel Roden) has risen from the netherworld to bring about the coming of the seven gods of chaos and end the world. Meanwhile, Hellboy has to deal with his love for the human Liz as well as her developing relationship with Agent Myers and the sudden death of Dr. Broom at the hands of an assassin named Kroenen. The film is a wonderful exploration of Nazi occultism and the supernatural, prompting inner questions about the netherworld, and the world of ancient beings and good versus evil provides an epic background to the surprisingly human story. Hellboy may be a giant demon with a stone hand, but on the whole he is just a regular cigar-smoking working stiff with a thing for cats. The cast gives stellar performances while Del Toro works hard to make this odd world seem real, and succeeds. With many more comic book adaptations to come, it is certain that the genre is now a major player in Hollywood and shouldn’t be treated as though it’s a trifle. Comic book movies have now become works of art tended to by hard working artists who wish to give a human face to the superhuman characters created in the books. Most importantly, comics are to us what the gods were to the Greeks, supreme beings to rule us and teach us, and give us hope, and that’s why we still go to the movies to see them; hope.

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Desember 8th, 2009 .

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First: Twilight New Moon, Robert Pattinson, Bella, Twilight pics, are Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart engaged, Twilight slash fanfic. Muggles?

Now that I’ve gotten that off my chest, have you noticed that in the wake of Twilight: New Moon’s premiere, there are an awful lot of Twilight-related articles gumming up the Internet lately? Is it possible that accomplished journalists are writing about Twilight not because they are deeply interested in it, but because they are trying to get traffic to their websites?

Bonnie Fuller’s HollywoodLife.com launched today. According to the press release, “HollywoodLife.com’s digital conversationality also provides a richer take on lifestyle and beauty as always-updated, style-sensible women across the country will be able to respond, giving approval of the latest trends in beauty, weighing in on fashion, or revealing their own secrets of shopping.” Yet the lead story is a wallpaper-sized graphic of Taylor Lautner, Kristen Stewart, and Robert Pattinson proclaiming “New Moon Mania!” below which is a link that says “Everything New Moon, All The Time!” and blanket coverage of the premiere.

Why is an accomplished journalist like Bonnie Fuller, who was born in 1956, so into the tweenish vampire saga? A hypothesis: Twilight has a rabid fan base who tend to travel in packs, and getting some of them via Google search and cross-promotion with her parent site Mail.com could not only give her strong first-day traffic, but could grab for the longer term some of that coveted eighteen-to-thirty-five female demo that her site is after.

And it’s not just HollywoodLife: Fuller’s Mail.com colleague Nikki Finke, hailed by this very site as “a one-woman trade publication whose tenacity has landed her scoop after scoop,” routinely posts about Twilight, though she often prefaces with a wry aside like “Yes, this is another in my shameless plugs for Twilight fan traffic.”

This is to say nothing of Entertainment Weekly, whose PopWatch blog sees fit to Twilight it up, or Cinematical, with their ”Fan Made: Raunchy, Vampiric ‘Twilight’ Underoos:” (image via Twitarded)

 

Or Mediaite, which took a break from their probing, insightful media coverage to note that Geraldo Rivera looks like Charlie Swan.

In less than four years, Meyer, a Mormon mother of three from Arizona, has become one of the world's bestselling authors, despite Stephen King saying she “can't write”.

Every two seconds this year, someone in the UK has bought one of her books. Since her first novel, Twilight, was plucked out of an agent's slush pile and published in 2005, Meyer has sold more than 85m copies worldwide. Almost 5m of those were snapped up in the UK.

Twilight the film, released last year, took £11m in the UK, and its soundtrack sold more than 200,000 copies. If advance ticket sales are anything to go by, New Moon, the second book in the four-strong saga to be filmed, will surpass box office figures for the last Harry Potter film.

It is no exaggeration to say that Meyer has sparked an entire Twilight industry, not to mention a dubiously titled literary genre called Fang Bang fiction.

When she decided to set her books in the town of Forks (population 3,120) on the basis that it is one of the rainiest places in America, she inadvertently changed the town's fortunes. Last month 16,000 Twilight tourists alighted on the Washington state town, twice as many visitors than it received the entire previous year. Fans eat at Twilight restaurants, drink at Twilight bars and can have their photographs taken by a truck purporting to belong to the novels' heroine, Bella.

On the internet, you can buy Twilight jewellery, clothing, board games and even contact lenses. But it is the book world that has been the biggest beneficiary of Meyer's success.

Neil Denny, the editor-in-chief of the Bookseller, said: “The Twilight saga is the most successful series for young adults since Harry Potter. It's even spawned its own genre. It has been great for the publishing industry and has transformed Meyer's publisher, Little, Brown. They are sitting on the hottest property in publishing. The recession isn't hitting them.”

Meyer's success has had a positive knock-on effect on the rest of the market, said Sarah Clarke, Waterstones' children's buyer. “Twilight is the most exciting new children's property this decade,” she said. “Vampires, werewolves and the like now dominate teen publishing and authors such as PC Cast, Alyson Noel and LJ Smith have benefited enormously from the interest in Twilight. One unlikely beneficiary has been Emily Brontë – a paperback edition of Wuthering Heights with a Twilight-themed cover was been Waterstones' bestselling classic for months.”

There is one more sign Meyer really has arrived: she's been spoofed. Nightlight, by The Harvard Lampoon, tells the story of Belle Goose, a vampire-obsessed girl who looks for love in all the wrong places.

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Watch UFC 107

Desember 6th, 2009 .

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With Todd Duffee (5-0 MMA, 1-0 UFC) mistaken the card due to injury, UFC rookie Stefan Struve (18-3 MMA, 2-1 UFC) has been tapped as a replacement and meets Paul Buentello (27-10 MMA, 3-1 UFC) next month at UFC 107.

 

 

 

Despite the perdition of Duffee, who posted the fastest knockout in UFC memoirs during his promotional debut in August, Buentello vs. Struve remains on the televised conduit card.

 

UFC 107 gets place Dec. 12 at the FedExForum in Memphis, Tenn., and airs on pay-per-view.

 

Buentello, whose Aug. 1 pugnacity by Gilbert Yvel was scratched due to the promotional demise of “Affliction: Entertainment,” returns to the UFC for the original time since his TKO victory on the former Gilbert Aldana at UFC 57 in 2006. Buentello suffered a perdition to then-champ Andrei Arlovski in his previous contest and then left the organization beyond rebounding for the sway over Aldana.

 

Buentello has strung together a solid proceed since that perdition to Arlovski; he's 6-1 (with five stoppages) alongside the solitary perdition coming to Alistair Overeem in a November 2007 pugnacity for Strikeforce's first-ever heavyweight title. Buentello greatest recently defeated Kirill “Baby Fedor” Sidelnikov at “Affliction: Day of Reckoning” in January.

 

 

 

Struve, despite being in his first twelvemonth in the UFC, by now have his fourth appearance for the promotion. The Dutch bruiser and veteran of the European pugnacity circuit entered the UFC with a five-fight beat streak in February and suffered a first-round TKO perdition to Junior Dos Santos at UFC 95 in London.

 

Struve then headed to Cologne, Germany, for a second-round submission success on Denis Stojnic at UFC 99 before coming to the U.S. to score a first-round submission beat over Chase Gormley at UFC 104.

 

 

 

 

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– The weigh-ins for UFC 107: Penn vs. Sanchez would get place beside Friday, Dec. 11, at the FedExForum in Memphis, TN at 4 PM ET . As always, FightLine.com would stream the weigh-ins live.

 

 

 

– Speaking of UFC 107: Penn vs. Sanchez, the Countdown display airs after Tuesday, Dec. 8, at 11 PM ET/PT on Spike TV. The replay would air on Dec. 9 at 8 PM ET/PT on MTV2.

 

– Sherdog.com is reporting that Benji Radach will not be able to face Robbie Lawler at Strikeforce: Evolution. Radach's agent, Ken Pavia, said Radach has still to be medically cleared to start training again after having surgery on his proper helper endure April. Lawler is still expected to compete at the event, and Strikeforce CEO Scott Coker said that Lawler's opponent might be announced in the beside couple of days.

 

 

 

– In our recent poll at FightLine.com on who need to obtain the beside shot at GSP's welterweight title, 42% of you felt that Josh Koscheck need to comprehend the beside break at GSP. 37% of you supposed the next shot need to leave to Dan Hardy, 12% believed it have to go to the winner of the Jon Fitch – Mike Pierce contest and the remaining 8% said it have to succeed to somebody else.

 

– Fans eagerly awaiting seeing of Quinton “Rampage” Jackson on the massive screen might catch the former UFC light heavyweight champion in Death Warrior, which releases recently on DVD.

 

 

 


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MMA is one of the fastest growing sports today, specifically outside the younger generation. UFC and its promotional contrivance are mostly trustworthy for its popularity.

 

They have made the sport really visible and its athletes appear to be more approachable than their boxing counterparts. Also, MMA pay-per-view fights regularly draw numbers that simply a couple of boxers such as Manny Pacquiao, Floyd Mayweather, and Oscar De la Hoya may match.

 

HBO and some could know a couple of stuffs on how UFC produces their shows. Boxing promoters also need improve the quality of their undercards since standard UFC order per view cards are usually stacked out of top to bottom.

 

 

 

As a result of MMA's accomplishment Many of its fans have been actually quick to lawsuit boxing as a dying sport. They say MMA is on its method to replace boxing as the conduit entertainment fighting. But MMA is still youthful and there are by this time signs that it could suffer the same destiny as boxing.

 

Many MMA fans often cite that boxing promoters only care approximately the finance and not the sport. But that might also be said for MMA or UFC. Why do you ponder Fedor Emelianenko has not fought in a UFC card? It's by reason of he does not need to sign an exclusive contract alongside UFC. Dana White does not desire to co-promote a Fedor affray and share any profit. Just like in boxing, many fights could nevermore happen due to politics and assets.

 

When a fresh MMA association pops up, Dana White is at all times therefore quick to criticize or threaten it. Remember White's reaction when Affliction first started? When Strikeforce signed Fedor, Dana White basically questioned Fedor's immensity and mocked Strikeforce. He is no unique than the promoters in boxing.

 

Sooner or later Many of the enormous fights will be wealth more tedious to set higher. In boxing, a number of fights frequently tumble short during negotiations because of finance or promotional problems. UFC would quickly front those problems. Their fighters are grossly underpaid considering the achievement of their purchase per vista cards.

 

Do you think MMA fighters might continue to sacrifice their health without getting proper compensation for their services? I ignoble Lyoto Machida only got paid 0,000 for UFC 104 and he is one of their biggest stars. That's chump change compared to what Pacquiao and Mayweather create.

 

Fighters in UFC likewise ought sign a licensing accordance alongside Zuffa Inc, where they basically provide up their opportunities to make money on their hold picture. In boxing, the fighters don't possess to sign whatever licensing accordance. Floyd and Pacquiao prepare tons of money exterior the sport via endorsements because they hold control over the utilize of their own picture.

 

 

 

Critics of boxing also point out the certainity that boxing frequently lacks a proper champion in its heaviness classes, which is true by reason of of the number of politics governing bodies. What is worse is there might be multiple champions in a certain tonnage class just from one governing body. In the WBA solely you could hold a “champion in recess”, “interim champion,” “regular champion,” and “superchampion.”

 

But MMA also has the similar trouble. Of course almost anyone considers Fedor the unparalleled Heavyweight in MMA, nonetheless how may we distinguish for sure when he hasn't fought the likes of Brock Lesnar, Randy Couture, or Shane Carwin.

 

How could MMA fans surely discern who the best in each one division is, when fighters out of different companies do not affray each other? What supposing Lesnar moves to a new association before fighting Velasquez or Carwin? Can we still proclaim him the unequaled in his division?

 

 

 

MMA fans also point out the corruption in boxing including controversial decisions such as the Juan Diaz Vs Paul Malignaggi affray. But what about the Lyoto Machida Vs Shogun Rua fight?

 

The same problems in boxing likewise exist in the sport of MMA. The distinct fighting organizations such as UFC and Strikeforce are the counterparts of the governing bodies in boxing. They each one possess their hold agenda and it can not continually be for the greater of the sport and fans. MMA is a huge sport yet its fans need to not count out boxing just still.

 

 

 

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With UFC 107 just around the corner, fans are flocking to the World Wide Web to obtain the scoop on their favorite fighters. Well I have pleasant information for you! There's not need to look whatever additional.

 

 

 

This was supposed to be the UFC event that “The Ultimate Fighter” coaches Rashad Evans and Quinton “Rampage” Jackson duked it out at. That was until Rampage turned Hollywood on us, and quit Dana White's association (BOO!).

 

Now for the conduit event, we have Penn (14-5-1) vs. Sanchez (21-2). So, by none means am I complaining, by reason of this would be a heck of a battle to watch.

 

Let's get a behold at the rest of the UFC 107 fight card.

 

Frank Mir (12-4) vs. Cheick Kongo (14-5-1) – Heavyweight

Kenny Florian (13-4) vs. Clay Guida (25-7-1) – Lightweight

Todd Duffee (6-0) vs Paul Buentello (27-10) – Heavyweight

 

Preliminary bouts:

 

Alan Belcher (13-5) vs. Wilson Gouveia (12-6) – Middleweight

Matt Wiman (10-5) vs. Shane Nelson (13-4) – Lightweight

Johny Hendricks (6-0) vs. Ricardo Funch – Welterweight

Rousimar Palhares (18-2) vs. Lucio Linhares – Middleweight

DeMarques Johnson (14-7) vs. Edgar Garcia (7-1) – Welterweight

Kevin Burns (8-3) vs. TJ Grant (14-3) – Welterweight

 

 

 

The extremely anticipated event will be held on December 12, 2009 at the FedEx Forum in Memphis, Tennessee.

 

Which bout on the UFC 107 Fight Card do you ponder will be the greatest exciting? Tell us your response in our comment section. You'll also look for pictures and a television under.

 

 

 

 

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Not knowing what my schedule would be characteristic over the after few weeks, I chose to leave before and share my brilliance by complete of you a scrap earlier than usual.

 

UFC 107, which will be held December 12 at the Fed Ex Forum in Memphis. will be the second UFC even in the state of Tennessee. In April, UFC Fight Night: Condit vs.Kampmann drew on 10,000 fans to the Sommet Center in Nashville.

 

The main event of UFC 107 was originally scheduled to be a stint fit among two quondam UFC light heavyweight champions-Rashad Evans and Quinton “Rampage” Jackson, who were chosen as opposing coaches on the last down payment of The Ultimate Fighter.

 

The UFC chose Memphis by reason of Rampage is out of the territory and particularly asked for a affray in face of his hometown fans. Unfortunately for all involved, Jackson is mistaken filming movies.

 

As has been the situation Numerous times before, the UFC stepped higher enormous time. Now occupying the conduit event slot will be a battle for the UFC impotent championship.

 

Champion BJ Penn would square away opposition to Diego “Nightmare” Sanchez in what have to be an exciting match to determine impotent supremacy.

 

On to my predictions:

 

Paul Buentello vs. Stefan Struve -Heavyweights

 

Struve is filling in for an injured Todd Duffee. Struve was last seen submitting Chase Gormley at UFC 104.

 

Standing at 6' 11″ tall, he is the tallest fighter in the UFC.  Struve applies those long legs to catch his opponents in submissions. In fact, fourteen of his 21 victories hold come beside tapout. Eleven of those submission has been either a triangle choke or rear naked choke.

 

 

 

Buentello have his return to the UFC beyond a three and half twelvemonth lacuna. Buentello is alongside the widely the wealth added polished striker of the two, having won sixteen times beside knockout.

 

There is a nine creep prominence profit here. If Buentello may get dear enough, he might simply knockout Struve. If this pugnacity goes to the ground, I may easily get Struve slapping on another triangle.

 

At only twenty one days old, Struve has by now had 24 career bouts. I really characteristic how he handled himself whilst on his behind. I get another choke out hereabouts for the “Skyscraper.”

 

Stefan Struve via second round submission.

 

 

 

Kenny Florian vs. Clay Guida -Lightweights

 

Both males are coming off of losses. Florian squandered his second opportunity at the UFC weak championship, while Guida came higher short contrary to Diego Sanchez in what can be the fight of the fiscal year.

 

 

 

This is going to be an entire out warfare in my theory. Florian has the edge in striking and submissions, Guida has the edge in wrestling.

 

Look for Florian to follow the same strategy that Sanchez had contrary to Guida when he was on his rear. Kenflo has some of the nastiest elbows in whole of MMA.

 

There is no problem that Guida could lynch by anybody in the impotent division, nonetheless could he beat the elite?

 

I don't think he might. The affray would definitely be competitive and really close, however Florian just has method actually Many tools.

 

Kenny Florian through unanimous choice.

 

 

 

Jon Fitch vs. Mike Pierce -Welterweights

 

A combat among two whilom collegiate wrestlers. Pierce was slated to take on Fitch's teammate, Josh Koscheck and Fitch was set to rematch by Thiago Alves. With entire the injuries that have occurred, the UFC did numerous reshuffling and matched these two aloft.

 

Fitch is the more knowledgable of the two and has faced stiffer competition. He is riding a three affray win streak since losing to Georges St-Pierre at UFC 87 endure August.

 

 

 

Pierce had an majestic UFC debut at UFC Fight Night 19. He defeated UFC & WEC patriarch Brock Larson in what Numerous people considered an upset

 

Pierce has  knockouts (5) in ten career bouts, during Fitch simply has four.

 

Fitch is one of the toughest fighters in the UFC, as evidenced beside the beating at the hands of GSP. Fitch does not discern the sense of the word quit.

 

I consider Fitch's experience and tenacity will be actually wealth to surmount for Pierce, who has the possible to be a actually good combatant. Fitch is not a finisher, therefore I think it's safe to say the judges will be involved in this one.

 

 

 

Jon Fitch by way of unanimous choice.

 

 

 

Frank Mir vs. Cheick Kongo – Heavyweights

 

Mir is looking to recoil back after having a aureate horseshoe removed out of his a** courtesy of Brock Lesnar

 

 

 

UFC 107 Stream Live Stream UFC 107 UFC 107 Live
UFC 107 Live

Watch Armored Online – Watch Brothers Online – 12/4

Desember 4th, 2009 .

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Some like it pot! 'Lost' home movie shows Marilyn Monroe smoking joint

The silent colour film was recently bought by collector Keya Morgan for $275,000 from the cameraman, who has asked to remain anonymous. The photographer confirmed the cigarette contained marijuana

As I am typing this, I am five hours and 25 minutes into a 15+ hour trip on a slow train to Baltimore. I'm en route to D.C. to interview sociologist and author Dr. James Loewen for my documentary film, A Past, Denied: The Invisible History of Slavery in Canada. This interview is two years in the making. In late 2007 when I originally conceived the idea to make a feature documentary on how Canada's over 200 years of institutionalized slavery of indigenous and African people is constantly escaping mention in our history books, James Loewen was one of the very first names that entered my head for interview candidates. His book, Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong (1995) was one of the biggest inspirations for me to start thinking about making documentaries in the first place — an inspiration possibly rivaled only by Errol Morris' (2004) documentary film, The Fog of War.

Lies My Teacher Told Me is the result of Loewen's research into the 12 most popular history textbooks used in American schools (circa 1996). He explores the common threads of what/who is given coverage, how much coverage is given, and in what lights that coverage is made. He also looks into what is conspicuously absent, what is biased, and, finally, what is flat out false. More than myth-busting, Loewen examines the far-reaching social consequences of the history of teaching practices, a history that he finds has served more as jingoistic propaganda than scholarly discourse. At its heart, this book (and the follow-up Lies Across America: What Our Historic Sights Get Wrong) is about why the way in which history is disseminated matters; and how society could benefit from a curriculum that is unafraid to look deeply into the dark side of Canada's past as opposed to the feel-good bits. (Both Lies My Teacher Told Me and Lies Across America as well as Loewen's Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism are required reading, especially for those in the US. Get your hands on them now or turn in your “progressive” card.)

Loewen demonstrates how the bland, celebratory versions of history found throughout the pages of various Canadian textbooks serve as a form of boosterism catering specifically to a white, middle- and upper-class audience. In essence, stories about white people written by and for white people. Page after page, Europeans are exalted for their great achievements while non-Europeans, if mentioned at all, are painted as people in need of European help. This feel-good bias doesn't feel right, however, and worse, it goes beyond the classroom, visible in pop culture and everyday discussions about historical events.

The film and television equivalent of this form of boosterism comes in the Hollywood archetype of the white savior — a white, typically middle- or upper-class, usually male and almost exclusively heterosexual character through whom the life of a person of color (or persons of color) is dramatically improved. The basic formula goes like this: through the white protagonist's selfless deeds the helpless, downtrodden victim of circumstance is rescued from the cycle of poverty and violence, changing both their lives forever. One gains new opportunities that would otherwise never be afforded to them, while the other gains redemption and a well-deserved personal sense of piety. Most importantly, the white audience gets to feel good about themselves.

White Man's Burden: The Movie

One problem with white savior films is that they perpetuate the archaic paradigm of the white man's burden. They tell stories of white people going outside of their privilege to help people of color who ultimately can't or won't help themselves. Whether it's Uncle Sam bringing “civility, education and religion” to the Philippines or Clint Eastwood teaching his young Hmong neighbor how to be a “real man,” it's the same old story being played out again and again. It's been colonialism's best justification since Manifest Destiny in real life, as well as the template plot for movies like To Kill a Mockingbird, Finding Forrester, Gran Torino, Freedom Writers, The Blind Side

Another problem with stories focusing on white heroes is that the reality of people of color working hard to improve their communities goes largely ignored. Just like the selective telling of history in textbooks, the audiences of white savior films walk away with the message that it is only white people that are doing anything to change things for the better. While there are films telling the stories of some of these individuals striving to improve the lives of the underprivileged, they are a disproportionate exception. For every Lean On Me (1989) there are at least three or four Dangerous Minds, a film which also exemplifies yet another issue.

“Destroyers and usurpers, curse them.”

The movie Dangerous Minds (1995), which purports to be based on a true story, stars Michelle Pfieffer as a LouAnne Johnson, a white English teacher who tries to help her inner-city high school students learn an appreciation for poetry through the lyrics of Bob Dylan. The “based on a true story” isn't entirely dishonest. There really was a woman named LouAnne Johnson who used musical lyricism to connect with her underfunded inner-city high school students; in fact, it was her book, My Posse Don't Do Homework (1993) that was the inspiration for the film. The betrayal in the movie adaptation is that the real LouAnne Johnson was Latina and used rap music.

The filmmakers had a profound opportunity to tell the story of a non-white person inspiring a group of inner-city Black and Latino students, who had been otherwise written off, to become engaged with their own destiny. Instead, they chose to usurp LouAnne Johnson, while the movie tirelessly extols the virtues of being white.

(And if that doesn't churn your stomach just a little bit, wait until next summer's release about the true story of the Black Panther's Free Breakfast for School Children Program, starring Tom Cruise. (I'm kidding))

What are students supposed to make of such history? What is an audience supposed to make of such movies? The constant message is that white people shape the world; non-white people are passive participants merely benefiting from those efforts. White people are the only ones with the faculty to improve anyone's situation; non-whites are unorganized, hapless people, doomed until saved by the good will of their white saviors. Moreover, the white protagonist is usually the only character to have any depth or character development, while non-white supporting characters are foils to the white protagonist, and largely without history. The million-dollar film budget question is, why are white people the only ones deserving of inspiration?

The fact that none of these movies even mention, much less try to really address, the issue of systemic racism, is an appalling failure. The tragedy of over-crowded and under-funded inner city classrooms is never explained. It's never explained why these under privileged people are under-privileged to begin with. The situation is presented without any nuance, save for the givenness of white privilege.

White savior movies, like their history text counterparts, are designed to reinforce and perpetuate white privilege. White audiences get to walk away from these films feeling good about being white, and they are never prompted to empathize with supporting non-white characters. Furthermore, white audience members are never confronted with their own privilege or internalized racism. They are let completely off the hook for their own roles and responsibilities in the perpetuation of a racist power structure.

Since more whites than non-whites are shown throughout our pop culture as the people effecting change, the lesson inferred is that these individual cases we see in movies and on TV are the rule, when they are really the exception. This leads to a false sense of racial justice in the minds of all audience members. Just as the election of Barack Obama led some white Americans to actually believe that the West was entering a “post-racial” state [*insert bellowing gut laugh here*], white savior films give white audience members the notion that they don't have to do anything about racism themselves because, look, there are plenty of examples of white people out there doing good!

Back to the history question, Loewen deftly points out that “the Eurocentric history in our textbooks amounts to psychotherapy for whites.” To run with this simile, I would liken these white savior films to psychotherapy for whites with a bonus happy ending. But like the history behind them, there is much therapy needed to right the normalization of whiteness, which is plainly wrong.

Cross-posted from Race-Talk.

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Like most people, I have watched dozens of movies (probably even hundreds), but I've noticed that of the movies I own, I tend to watch the same ones over and over again. That got me thinking: if I had to go the rest of my life with only ten movies to watch, what would they be?

1. Cannibal!: The Musical: This movie, written and directed by Trey Parker (who also plays the lead role) years before South Park came along, has been my favorite movie for years. The movie tells the story of Alferd Packer, one of the few men ever convicted of cannibalism in America, and it is hilarious. The songs are so catchy that I can't help but sing along every time I watch the movie…and I've watched the movie at least twenty or thirty times! Cannibal!: the Musical is simply brilliant – definitely a must for anyone who is a fan of South Park or any of Trey Parker and Matt Stone's other work! 

2. Almost Famous: Music has always been an important part of my life, so this is a movie that I can really identify with. When Sapphire (Fairuza Balk) says of some groupies, “They don't know what it is to be a fan…to truly love some silly little piece of music or some band so much that it hurts,” I know exactly what she means because I have had that kind of love for a band for more than ten years now. Everything about Almost Famous is absolutely perfect: all of the performances are great, the soundtrack is wonderful, and the story is one you'll never forget! 

3. Run Ronnie Run: David Cross (of my favorite show Arrested Development) stars as Ronnie Dobbs, a white-trash Southerner who is constantly getting arrested. Bob Odenkirk plays an inventor whose latest invention almost killed a 
woman during the taping of an infomercial; when he is down on his luck, he discovers Ronnie and decides to take Ronnie to Hollywood and pitch a reality show where Ronnie gets arrested every week. Run Ronnie Run is one of the funniest movies I've ever seen, and I would recommend it to anyone who has ever lived in the South or is a fan of David Cross and Bob Odenkirk! 

4. Anchorman: This is one of those movies that I end up watching every time it's on HBO, even though I have the DVD. Will Ferrell is hilarious as anchorman Ron Burgundy, and everyone else in the movie is great as well, but it's Steve Carell who steals the show. As dimwitted weatherman Brick Tamland, every line Carell utters gets a laugh in both Anchorman and  Wake Up, Ron Burgundy, the other Anchorman movie: from “I love lamp” to “Loud noises!” or “I don't know what we're yelling about,” every word that comes out of Brick's mouth is a delight.  However, my favorite Brick moment is in Wake Up,

Ron Burgundy when the news team gets lost in the woods and immediately decides that they'll have to eat someone; they settle on Brian Fantana (Paul Rudd), who says “Eat Brick, he won't care,” to which Brick replies, “Yeah, that's fine!” 

5. School of Rock: Jack Black teaches ridiculously talented kids how to rock; it's a movie that people of all ages can enjoy, and Black is amazing in it. 

6. The Jerk: Though it was filmed over twenty-five years ago, there haven't been many comedies since that can surpass the genius of The Jerk. The movie tells the story of Navin Johnson, a white man who “was born a poor black child” and doesn't realize he's adopted until he is in his twenties and his family finally tells him. Navin Johnson was Steve Martin's first big role, and it's his best! 

7. Old School: I didn't realize how funny Vince Vaughn is until I saw this movie; his performance during the wedding of Will Ferrell's character is priceless. Of course, Will Ferrell is the best part of the movie: my favorite Frank the Tank moments are when Frank's wife and her friends catch him streaking down the street, and when they make him get in the car, he nonchalantly asks “Do you think KFC is still open?” and when Frank is trying decide what outfit to put on his blow-up doll, Ellen Pompeo's character says that she likes his doll and he replies, “Yeah, she's okay.” 

8. Monty Python and the Holy Grail: There is so much I love about this movie that I hardly know where to begin, so I'll just say that the French knight (John Cleese) who taunts King Arthur's men is one of the funniest characters of all time! His lines are probably some of the most quoted lines in movie history: “I fart in your general direction,” “go away or I shall taunt you a second time,” “I'm French, why do you think I have this outrageous accent?” Who hasn't used at least one these at some point in their life? 

9. The Break-Up: While I do like this movie, it is not one of my ten favorite movies. However, I wouldn't be able to go the rest of my life without watching John Michael Higgins' performance of “Owner of a Lonely Heart” again, so The Break-Up makes the list. 

10. Dumb and Dumber: Jim Carrey has never been funnier than he was as Lloyd Christmas. The scene in which Lloyd and Harry (Jeff Daniels) try to get the taste of hot pepper out of their mouths by squeezing ketchup and mustard bottles until the condiments are spraying into the air, then try to catch some of it with their tongues may just be the funniest thing I've ever seen!

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Desember 4th, 2009 .

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Some like it pot! 'Lost' home movie shows Marilyn Monroe smoking joint

The silent colour film was recently bought by collector Keya Morgan for $275,000 from the cameraman, who has asked to remain anonymous. The photographer confirmed the cigarette contained marijuana

As I am typing this, I am five hours and 25 minutes into a 15+ hour trip on a slow train to Baltimore. I'm en route to D.C. to interview sociologist and author Dr. James Loewen for my documentary film, A Past, Denied: The Invisible History of Slavery in Canada. This interview is two years in the making. In late 2007 when I originally conceived the idea to make a feature documentary on how Canada's over 200 years of institutionalized slavery of indigenous and African people is constantly escaping mention in our history books, James Loewen was one of the very first names that entered my head for interview candidates. His book, Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong (1995) was one of the biggest inspirations for me to start thinking about making documentaries in the first place — an inspiration possibly rivaled only by Errol Morris' (2004) documentary film, The Fog of War.

Lies My Teacher Told Me is the result of Loewen's research into the 12 most popular history textbooks used in American schools (circa 1996). He explores the common threads of what/who is given coverage, how much coverage is given, and in what lights that coverage is made. He also looks into what is conspicuously absent, what is biased, and, finally, what is flat out false. More than myth-busting, Loewen examines the far-reaching social consequences of the history of teaching practices, a history that he finds has served more as jingoistic propaganda than scholarly discourse. At its heart, this book (and the follow-up Lies Across America: What Our Historic Sights Get Wrong) is about why the way in which history is disseminated matters; and how society could benefit from a curriculum that is unafraid to look deeply into the dark side of Canada's past as opposed to the feel-good bits. (Both Lies My Teacher Told Me and Lies Across America as well as Loewen's Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism are required reading, especially for those in the US. Get your hands on them now or turn in your “progressive” card.)

Loewen demonstrates how the bland, celebratory versions of history found throughout the pages of various Canadian textbooks serve as a form of boosterism catering specifically to a white, middle- and upper-class audience. In essence, stories about white people written by and for white people. Page after page, Europeans are exalted for their great achievements while non-Europeans, if mentioned at all, are painted as people in need of European help. This feel-good bias doesn't feel right, however, and worse, it goes beyond the classroom, visible in pop culture and everyday discussions about historical events.

The film and television equivalent of this form of boosterism comes in the Hollywood archetype of the white savior — a white, typically middle- or upper-class, usually male and almost exclusively heterosexual character through whom the life of a person of color (or persons of color) is dramatically improved. The basic formula goes like this: through the white protagonist's selfless deeds the helpless, downtrodden victim of circumstance is rescued from the cycle of poverty and violence, changing both their lives forever. One gains new opportunities that would otherwise never be afforded to them, while the other gains redemption and a well-deserved personal sense of piety. Most importantly, the white audience gets to feel good about themselves.

White Man's Burden: The Movie

One problem with white savior films is that they perpetuate the archaic paradigm of the white man's burden. They tell stories of white people going outside of their privilege to help people of color who ultimately can't or won't help themselves. Whether it's Uncle Sam bringing “civility, education and religion” to the Philippines or Clint Eastwood teaching his young Hmong neighbor how to be a “real man,” it's the same old story being played out again and again. It's been colonialism's best justification since Manifest Destiny in real life, as well as the template plot for movies like To Kill a Mockingbird, Finding Forrester, Gran Torino, Freedom Writers, The Blind Side

Another problem with stories focusing on white heroes is that the reality of people of color working hard to improve their communities goes largely ignored. Just like the selective telling of history in textbooks, the audiences of white savior films walk away with the message that it is only white people that are doing anything to change things for the better. While there are films telling the stories of some of these individuals striving to improve the lives of the underprivileged, they are a disproportionate exception. For every Lean On Me (1989) there are at least three or four Dangerous Minds, a film which also exemplifies yet another issue.

“Destroyers and usurpers, curse them.”

The movie Dangerous Minds (1995), which purports to be based on a true story, stars Michelle Pfieffer as a LouAnne Johnson, a white English teacher who tries to help her inner-city high school students learn an appreciation for poetry through the lyrics of Bob Dylan. The “based on a true story” isn't entirely dishonest. There really was a woman named LouAnne Johnson who used musical lyricism to connect with her underfunded inner-city high school students; in fact, it was her book, My Posse Don't Do Homework (1993) that was the inspiration for the film. The betrayal in the movie adaptation is that the real LouAnne Johnson was Latina and used rap music.

The filmmakers had a profound opportunity to tell the story of a non-white person inspiring a group of inner-city Black and Latino students, who had been otherwise written off, to become engaged with their own destiny. Instead, they chose to usurp LouAnne Johnson, while the movie tirelessly extols the virtues of being white.

(And if that doesn't churn your stomach just a little bit, wait until next summer's release about the true story of the Black Panther's Free Breakfast for School Children Program, starring Tom Cruise. (I'm kidding))

What are students supposed to make of such history? What is an audience supposed to make of such movies? The constant message is that white people shape the world; non-white people are passive participants merely benefiting from those efforts. White people are the only ones with the faculty to improve anyone's situation; non-whites are unorganized, hapless people, doomed until saved by the good will of their white saviors. Moreover, the white protagonist is usually the only character to have any depth or character development, while non-white supporting characters are foils to the white protagonist, and largely without history. The million-dollar film budget question is, why are white people the only ones deserving of inspiration?

The fact that none of these movies even mention, much less try to really address, the issue of systemic racism, is an appalling failure. The tragedy of over-crowded and under-funded inner city classrooms is never explained. It's never explained why these under privileged people are under-privileged to begin with. The situation is presented without any nuance, save for the givenness of white privilege.

White savior movies, like their history text counterparts, are designed to reinforce and perpetuate white privilege. White audiences get to walk away from these films feeling good about being white, and they are never prompted to empathize with supporting non-white characters. Furthermore, white audience members are never confronted with their own privilege or internalized racism. They are let completely off the hook for their own roles and responsibilities in the perpetuation of a racist power structure.

Since more whites than non-whites are shown throughout our pop culture as the people effecting change, the lesson inferred is that these individual cases we see in movies and on TV are the rule, when they are really the exception. This leads to a false sense of racial justice in the minds of all audience members. Just as the election of Barack Obama led some white Americans to actually believe that the West was entering a “post-racial” state [*insert bellowing gut laugh here*], white savior films give white audience members the notion that they don't have to do anything about racism themselves because, look, there are plenty of examples of white people out there doing good!

Back to the history question, Loewen deftly points out that “the Eurocentric history in our textbooks amounts to psychotherapy for whites.” To run with this simile, I would liken these white savior films to psychotherapy for whites with a bonus happy ending. But like the history behind them, there is much therapy needed to right the normalization of whiteness, which is plainly wrong.

Cross-posted from Race-Talk.

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If you live in the USA and have been charmed by the season highlights of Britain's Got Talent 2009, you aren't alone. Internet visitors all over the world are enthralled with the vocal talents of Susan Boyle. Stavros Flatley, Julian Smith, and Shaheen Jafargholi have also captured the attention of people worldwide. Many of us who don't live in the UK want to follow Britain's Got Talent 2009 and see the full BGT 2009 episodes to enjoy all the sensations and strike-outs, but according to the ITV website (ITV is the broadcast station showing Britain's Got Talent 2009 in the UK), anyone outside of the United Kingdom will be unable to view the full episodes via their online video player. Why??

According to the ITV website, it is because “we do not hold international rights to all of our programming so video content is supplied only to users with IP addresses in the UK.” Does this mean international viewers, including those of us in the United States of America, are reduced to scouring youtube.com for as many clips as possible? While that is one option for USA viewers who wish to see Britain's Got Talent 2009, it isn't the only one. There is one place I've found so far that offers USA viewers full episodes so we can watch Britain's Got Talent 2009 online.

You can find the website here, but read further for viewing instructions before going to the CastTV website.

There are two ways you can watch Britain's Got Talent 2009 full episodes on the CastTV website. If you click the red button in the center of the video console after it turns green, you will first be redirected to sign up on the site. If you prefer not to sign up, simply click the back button on your browser and click the start button again. The full episode of Britain's Got Talent 2009 should start for you this time, regardless of whether you've signed up or not.

Another option is to click on the very small “view at source” button. The button is located underneath the video console, on the right side. It is gray button underneath a bright yellow button labeled “FREE”, which makes it easy to miss. This button will open another screen on the MegaVideo website, which has an identical video console with a start button in the center. When that button turns green, click on it and you'll be watching episode 1 of Britain's Got Talent 2009 online.

There is a limit to the amount of free video you can watch of videos contributed to CastTV from other websites. You may need to purchase a membership from the contributing site to see all the episodes.

As of the published date of this article, the CastTV website has both BGT2009 Ep1 & BGT2009 Ep2 (Episode 1 & Episode 2) of Britain's Got Talent 2009 available to watch online. Hopefully more episodes will appear in the future, particularly when Susan Boyle makes her next appearance. Cross your fingers, and enjoy the show!

Please leave a comment or send a message to this writer if you know of other places non-UK viewers are able to watch Britain's Got Talent 2009 online!

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Desember 4th, 2009 .

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As I am typing this, I am five hours and 25 minutes into a 15+ hour trip on a slow train to Baltimore. I'm en route to D.C. to interview sociologist and author Dr. James Loewen for my documentary film, A Past, Denied: The Invisible History of Slavery in Canada. This interview is two years in the making. In late 2007 when I originally conceived the idea to make a feature documentary on how Canada's over 200 years of institutionalized slavery of indigenous and African people is constantly escaping mention in our history books, James Loewen was one of the very first names that entered my head for interview candidates. His book, Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong (1995) was one of the biggest inspirations for me to start thinking about making documentaries in the first place — an inspiration possibly rivaled only by Errol Morris' (2004) documentary film, The Fog of War.

Lies My Teacher Told Me is the result of Loewen's research into the 12 most popular history textbooks used in American schools (circa 1996). He explores the common threads of what/who is given coverage, how much coverage is given, and in what lights that coverage is made. He also looks into what is conspicuously absent, what is biased, and, finally, what is flat out false. More than myth-busting, Loewen examines the far-reaching social consequences of the history of teaching practices, a history that he finds has served more as jingoistic propaganda than scholarly discourse. At its heart, this book (and the follow-up Lies Across America: What Our Historic Sights Get Wrong) is about why the way in which history is disseminated matters; and how society could benefit from a curriculum that is unafraid to look deeply into the dark side of Canada's past as opposed to the feel-good bits. (Both Lies My Teacher Told Me and Lies Across America as well as Loewen's Sundown Towns: A Hidden Dimension of American Racism are required reading, especially for those in the US. Get your hands on them now or turn in your “progressive” card.)

Loewen demonstrates how the bland, celebratory versions of history found throughout the pages of various Canadian textbooks serve as a form of boosterism catering specifically to a white, middle- and upper-class audience. In essence, stories about white people written by and for white people. Page after page, Europeans are exalted for their great achievements while non-Europeans, if mentioned at all, are painted as people in need of European help. This feel-good bias doesn't feel right, however, and worse, it goes beyond the classroom, visible in pop culture and everyday discussions about historical events.

The film and television equivalent of this form of boosterism comes in the Hollywood archetype of the white savior — a white, typically middle- or upper-class, usually male and almost exclusively heterosexual character through whom the life of a person of color (or persons of color) is dramatically improved. The basic formula goes like this: through the white protagonist's selfless deeds the helpless, downtrodden victim of circumstance is rescued from the cycle of poverty and violence, changing both their lives forever. One gains new opportunities that would otherwise never be afforded to them, while the other gains redemption and a well-deserved personal sense of piety. Most importantly, the white audience gets to feel good about themselves.

White Man's Burden: The Movie

One problem with white savior films is that they perpetuate the archaic paradigm of the white man's burden. They tell stories of white people going outside of their privilege to help people of color who ultimately can't or won't help themselves. Whether it's Uncle Sam bringing “civility, education and religion” to the Philippines or Clint Eastwood teaching his young Hmong neighbor how to be a “real man,” it's the same old story being played out again and again. It's been colonialism's best justification since Manifest Destiny in real life, as well as the template plot for movies like To Kill a Mockingbird, Finding Forrester, Gran Torino, Freedom Writers, The Blind Side

Another problem with stories focusing on white heroes is that the reality of people of color working hard to improve their communities goes largely ignored. Just like the selective telling of history in textbooks, the audiences of white savior films walk away with the message that it is only white people that are doing anything to change things for the better. While there are films telling the stories of some of these individuals striving to improve the lives of the underprivileged, they are a disproportionate exception. For every Lean On Me (1989) there are at least three or four Dangerous Minds, a film which also exemplifies yet another issue.

“Destroyers and usurpers, curse them.”

The movie Dangerous Minds (1995), which purports to be based on a true story, stars Michelle Pfieffer as a LouAnne Johnson, a white English teacher who tries to help her inner-city high school students learn an appreciation for poetry through the lyrics of Bob Dylan. The “based on a true story” isn't entirely dishonest. There really was a woman named LouAnne Johnson who used musical lyricism to connect with her underfunded inner-city high school students; in fact, it was her book, My Posse Don't Do Homework (1993) that was the inspiration for the film. The betrayal in the movie adaptation is that the real LouAnne Johnson was Latina and used rap music.

The filmmakers had a profound opportunity to tell the story of a non-white person inspiring a group of inner-city Black and Latino students, who had been otherwise written off, to become engaged with their own destiny. Instead, they chose to usurp LouAnne Johnson, while the movie tirelessly extols the virtues of being white.

(And if that doesn't churn your stomach just a little bit, wait until next summer's release about the true story of the Black Panther's Free Breakfast for School Children Program, starring Tom Cruise. (I'm kidding))

What are students supposed to make of such history? What is an audience supposed to make of such movies? The constant message is that white people shape the world; non-white people are passive participants merely benefiting from those efforts. White people are the only ones with the faculty to improve anyone's situation; non-whites are unorganized, hapless people, doomed until saved by the good will of their white saviors. Moreover, the white protagonist is usually the only character to have any depth or character development, while non-white supporting characters are foils to the white protagonist, and largely without history. The million-dollar film budget question is, why are white people the only ones deserving of inspiration?

The fact that none of these movies even mention, much less try to really address, the issue of systemic racism, is an appalling failure. The tragedy of over-crowded and under-funded inner city classrooms is never explained. It's never explained why these under privileged people are under-privileged to begin with. The situation is presented without any nuance, save for the givenness of white privilege.

White savior movies, like their history text counterparts, are designed to reinforce and perpetuate white privilege. White audiences get to walk away from these films feeling good about being white, and they are never prompted to empathize with supporting non-white characters. Furthermore, white audience members are never confronted with their own privilege or internalized racism. They are let completely off the hook for their own roles and responsibilities in the perpetuation of a racist power structure.

Since more whites than non-whites are shown throughout our pop culture as the people effecting change, the lesson inferred is that these individual cases we see in movies and on TV are the rule, when they are really the exception. This leads to a false sense of racial justice in the minds of all audience members. Just as the election of Barack Obama led some white Americans to actually believe that the West was entering a “post-racial” state [*insert bellowing gut laugh here*], white savior films give white audience members the notion that they don't have to do anything about racism themselves because, look, there are plenty of examples of white people out there doing good!

Back to the history question, Loewen deftly points out that “the Eurocentric history in our textbooks amounts to psychotherapy for whites.” To run with this simile, I would liken these white savior films to psychotherapy for whites with a bonus happy ending. But like the history behind them, there is much therapy needed to right the normalization of whiteness, which is plainly wrong.

Cross-posted from Race-Talk.

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Surf Photography – CLARKOGRAPHY

Desember 3rd, 2009 .

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Scan through the crowd at the endure calling fair at Hofstra University and chances are you won't search Matt Clark chatting higher any of the recruiters. That's probably by reason of he was on his way rear away his second trip to Hawaii, stoked on the barrels he scored and constantly reminded of the thief who stole additional than $4000 merit of his equipment. Shrugging off the theft as a reality of life, Matt might probably tell you that what bothers him the most is that some guy is looking at pictures of his girlfriend. Not one to dwell in the past, one quickly gets the sense that he is occupied scouring the on the cyberspace classifieds and auctions for fresh equipment, whilst at the similar time quietly plotting his after surf trip. Today there is no room in Corporate America for Matt Clark.

“I loved surfing Hawaii but I really went on that trip as a photographer additional than a surfer. I had some sick discrete tubes one morning at Ehukai. I also got two tubes at Pipe that were rad,” Matt recalls. “Overall the trip was therefore much fun. The abide time I went to the North Shore we got a solid 4-8ft Hawaiian swell, which was probably about 12-15 hoof faces, but top to base barrels. That was pretty amazing, but this time, wow!

“The sickest memory I will ever have is of waves that I didn't surf while on this trip. We had been doing something else in the middle of the afternoon – can't recall what exactly because my mind melted by what I experienced on the beach. I pulled up to Pipe and ran from the car to the beach because there was only about forty-five minutes of sunlight left. I hurried up the path and saw the most messed up, epic, scary, perfect thing I have ever seen. Honestly, I can't really explain it. It was as if every other time I had seen Pipe in person it was real heavy and spitting and just sick. But this time, minutes lasted forever. Everything just slowed down, and everyone on the beach just sat there, in awe. Hardly anyone clapped at the end of people’s rides. It was as if a light switch turned on and I finally saw why the North Shore was so special. Aside from that there were plenty of crazy stories as there usually are with the crew I travel with.”

In addition to his two trips to Hawaii, Matt has likewise surfed and shot Puerto Rico, Mexico, Costa Rica and higher and down the East Coast. “I love Puerto Rico, that place is a bullion mine for the legitimate surfer, not for people who want to suspend out in Rincon, drink beers in the middle of the day, and surf crowded Domes. There is a whole Island by epic surf. I've surfed some places completely alone that were simply going off. Shooting photos there – not as easy. I ponder by a water-housing that place must be immense. Mexico is pretty gnarly and not actually tedious to shoot. It's difficult to surf supposing you are scared of double capital monsters. Costa Rica…well I simply had a crap 50mm eyeglass or something and I only left the place we stayed.”

Flash Back a couple of months prior to his “moment at Pipe”, as he was wrapping higher his ultimate semester at Hofstra, and one may just imagine the dinner time conversations in the Clark establishment. The son of a Con Ed couple (and grandson of a Con Ed employee), Matt Clark was born in Elmhurst, NY, and divided his early childhood and adolescent days among Astoria and Merrick. His parents divorced when he was 8 seasons old, and his Mom eventually remarried (another Con Ed guy) and moved into a small suburban house by “mustard walls and a pink rug.” With one brother, one half-brother away his mother's second marriage, and a step-brother and step-sister away his step-father's previous marriage, space got a small tight out of time to time. “For a whilst we have to sleep in the cellar of my mom's house. There were two bunk beds for us, and my half-brother have to really sleep in a closet converted to room beside to my parents room,” Matt recalls. “I swear, that closet was not bigger than six bottom beside six bottom.”

Spending much of his teenage seasons traveling behind and forth from Long Island to Queens in buy to consume time by his father brought a outlook of isolation to Matt, who considered himself a loner through almost all of teenage years. Through that isolation he developed a burning ambition to excel at each endeavor, meeting his challenges head-on still remaining ever-mindful and appreciative of whatever succor he received altogether the way. He was the first in his family to know to surf and, perhaps even added impressive, the original in his household to beaker college – and with that degree, the first to uphold the enormous hindrance to thrive in the corporate world. Although he's not immune to the casual “get a genuine job” jab, he remains focused on his errand to flourish and committed to developing his skills as a multifaceted photographer.

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