Sunday, September 30, 2012

93% Farewell, My Queen

If you are expecting a French film chronicling the last days of Marie Antoinette, then you may be in for a slight disappointment. Brilliantly directed by the Benoit Jacquot (who also co-wrote the much less impressive script) and starring Diane Kruger as Marie Antoinette and Lea Seydoux, who plays one of the Queen's readers named Sidonie Laborde, and is also the protagonist of this film (for some reason) "Farewell, My Queen" is advertised as the story of the last days of Marie Antoinette, but it's more like the somewhat muted story of the two months before the "last days" of Marie Antoinette. So, even though "Farewell, My Queen" is a better movie than Sofia Coppola's ill advised, indie rock inspired, "Marie Antoinette", due to the faux-final-days story structure, in conjunction with the fact that "Farewell, My Queen" uses Marie Antoinette as a side character, telling the story from the point of view of Sidonie Laborde (a nobody) this is a film which may have many audiences scratching their heads as to why the need to show this particular moment in the life of Marie Antoinette. As I alluded to above, "Farewell My Queen" chronicles a miniscule portion in time during the last months of Marie Antoinette's reign. However, audiences are not treated to "the good part", or the part they undoubtedly came to see. What I mean by this is there are almost no visuals of the actual Revolution, plus (and more importantly) we don't actually get to witness the final days of Marie Antoinette's life simply because "Farewell, My Queen" curiously plays out through the eyes of one of her ladies-in-waiting. Instead, audiences are forced to sit through a pseudo-love story that focuses not on the very interesting end of Marie Antoinette's reign, but on the minutiae right before it! This film is the equivalent of sitting through the love story of Jack and Rose, with the movie ending just before the Titanic strikes the iceberg. Yes, I am aware that this is a script which was adapted from a critically acclaimed novel by Chantal Thomas, BUT it still doesn't make the story's focus any less misguided. I mean, there are some scenes which do attempt to create a somewhat intriguing love story, an aspect which must be fully accredited to some fantastic mood setting by Jacquot, but in the same vein, this film never rises above said simplistic love story. Side Note: Another issue many audiences will likely come across is how frivolously "Farewell, My Queen" throws its viewers right into the deep end of this story, with little exposition. In fact, the greatest individual flaw which hinders "Farewell, My Queen" will be seen in the audiences immediate realization that neither Jacquot's visuals or the engaging performances (which I will speak about later) are going to give those not formally versed in the players of the French Revolution and the fall of Versailles, the background information they may desperately desire, as this film half-introduces more and more characters of seeming importance. So, do yourself a favor, if you are going to see "Farewell, My Queen" (at the very least) peruse the Marie Antoinette Wiki page before going to see this film. With that said, the visuals (the set design in conjunction with the director) are somewhat breathtaking at times, due to Jacquot making some very brave directorial choices, including tons of long takes which trail behind characters as they weave in and out of crowds, giving audiences an intimate feeling of the atmosphere of late 1700's France, and a few beautifully constructed shots of the landscapes. And I guess it doesn't hurt that the two female leads, Seydoux and Kruger, both give engaging performances. But even if Kruger's interpretation of Antoinette is one of the best I've ever seen and Seydoux is so captivating to watch as she effortlessly takes control of the movie every time she is on screen, there is simply not enough in the story or the writing to give reasoning to the eccentric behavior or motives behind the actions of Marie Antoinette or (more importantly) give a reason as to why Sidonie is so infatuated with her. So, even though, in the latter half of the film (more than an hour in) Jacquot does create an atmosphere which allows these characters to somewhat blossom, many will find it hard to care about a Marie Antoinette story that contains no beheadings. Final Thought: Based on a "last days" plot which attempts to imitate a much better film like "Downfall", even with some spectacular direction and two engaging female performances, "Farewell, My Queen" is nothing more than this year's "My Week With Marilyn", telling a story which focuses on characters nobody really cares about, rather than simply creating a storyline around the life/last days of (in this case) Marie Antoinette. So, even if you are a Marie Antoinette fan, with the overall structure the way it is, "Farewell, My Queen" is nothing more than DVD worthy at best. Follow me on Twitter @moviesmarkus Find more reviews at: movieswithmarkusonline.blogspot.com

August 2, 2012

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/farewell_my_queen/

new edition austerity rihanna and chris brown back together bobbi kristina brown keanu reeves pebble beach clive davis

Suspicious fire at Vallejo mayor's law office being investigated as arson

VALLEJO -- Someone appears to have torched the law offices of Vallejo Mayor Osby Davis, fire and police officials said Saturday.

A fire that gutted the Davis' front office on Tuolumne Street across from the Solano County Superior Court early Saturday is considered suspicious, police and fire officials said.

"We're investigating it as arson at this time," Vallejo police Lt. Sid De Jesus said. "We don't know for sure, but we suspect it's an arson case ... The cause and origin is yet to be determined, but because it's an office occupied by the mayor, we're looking at this from every investigative aspect that we can."

Reached by phone, Davis said that to describe himself as "upset, is an understatement."

He said he was awakened at about 1:30 a.m. by a phone call from Fire Chief Paige Meyer and knew it was going to be bad news.

"Any time the mayor gets a phone call in the wee hours of the morning, it's never good," Davis said. "I really don't know what to say right now."

Davis said he will carry on.

"This is a bump in the road, a temporary hurdle," he said. "And we'll get past it and continue to do what we need to do."

It's too early to name a potential motive for the suspected arson, De Jesus said.

"We're not jumping to conclusions," the lieutenant said. "Both (Davis and Micheal Thompson) are high profile people. It could be a disgruntled client of either attorney that occupied that office." Thompson shares the

office with Davis, and has been a judicial candidate.

Calling the blaze, which appears to have started in the front waiting room area, "very suspicious," Meyer said the single-story office building in the 400 block of Tuolumne Street, was about 50 percent involved when crews arrived shortly after 1:30 a.m. Saturday.

"We knocked it down within about 15 minutes, but the building looks like nearly a total loss," Meyer said. The contents, however, were mostly salvageable, he said.

This is the second incident in recent months in which the mayor has been the victim of a possible crime. On May 18, Davis' 11-year-old motorcycle was stolen from the City Hall parking lot.

De Jesus said police are asking anyone who may have been in the area at the time of the fire and think they may have seen something suspicious, to call the Vallejo police nonemergency number, 707-552-3285.

Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_21661462/suspicious-fire-at-vallejo-mayors-law-office-being?source=rss

tracy morgan Chase.com Talk Like a Pirate Day raiders Demi Lovato iOS 6 Features lindsay lohan

Music review: Third Angle opens season with John Luther Adams ...

How does sound evoke a sense of place? If the titles didn't tip you off, would you know that Ottorino Respighi's Roman triptych was about Rome, or that the honks and beeps of George Gershwin's "An American in Paris" were meant to evoke specifically Parisian traffic? Would commentators consistently identify northern imagery in Jean Sibelius' music if they didn't know he was Finnish?

The idea is central to John Luther Adams' "Earth and the Great Weather," with which Third Angle opened its season Friday night at Lewis & Clark College's Agnes Flanagan Chapel. In an epic piece of what he calls "sonic geography," Adams -- the Mississippi-born Alaskan composer, not to be confused with John Adams, the Massachusetts-born Californian composer -- aimed to create a landscape in sound drawn from the real landscape of northeastern Alaska, the location of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

Like the place, the music was vast and austere. Forces were relatively few, with four strings (one each of violin, viola, cello and bass), four voices, and four percussionists, plus tape and electronic effects. The taped portion included texts in Inupiaq and Gwich'in with English translation, most of them descriptive of the environment, along with sounds of nature -- water, wind, birdsong. At times, delayed playback created a sort of electronic shimmer throughout the room, like the sonic equivalent of the aurora borealis.

The 10 movements progressed slowly and with a sort of organic grandeur, in long breathing arcs echoing the taped sound of wind that opened the piece. The three treble voices lent attenuated luminous dissonances; strings contributed eerie, glassy harmonics. Shivering bows in "The Circle of Winds" suggested both wind and the relentless mosquitoes of an Alaskan summer. Punctuating the structure were three movements of hard-driving, viscerally gripping percussion, reflecting Adams' early experience as a rock drummer.

In remarks before the concert, Third Angle violinist and artistic director Ron Blessinger said the ensemble liked to stretch itself, and that "Earth and the Great Weather" required a lot of stretching -- "it's musical yoga." For the audience, too, it was a stretch, though not in the way that modern music is often said to be. Extended over an uninterrupted hour and a half, Adams' simple, often atmospheric sonic geography both centered listeners in a sound environment and transported them to a remote place, part real, part imaginary and thoroughly distinct.

-- James McQuillen, Special to The Oregonian

?

Source: http://www.oregonlive.com/performance/index.ssf/2012/09/music_review_third_angle_opens.html

bruce arians the misfits hook troy miracle andy whitfield kennedy

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Battleground Virginia: Romney and Obama woo military veterans (+video)

Mitt Romney holds the advantage over Obama in key battleground states with voters who are veterans. In Virginia Thursday, Romney denounced planned cuts in military spending. Obama stressed duty to care for service members returned from war.

By David Grant,?Staff writer / September 27, 2012

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speaks at American Legion Post 176 in Springfield, Va., Thursday, Sept. 27.

Brian Snyder/Reuters

Enlarge

Mitt Romney and President Obama stormed through the key battleground state of Virginia Thursday with their eyes on a politically prized group of voters: veterans.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

Mr. Romney, the GOP?s presidential nominee, gave a speech to some 200 people at an American Legion post in Springfield, Va., a city that sits at the heart of the commonwealth?s booming suburban corridor with deep connections to the military and defense contractors.

At the same time, Mr. Obama addressed some 7,000 in Virginia Beach, Va., home to the congressional district with the highest percentage of veterans and studded with military installations from edge to edge.

Recent polls indicate that Romney has a double-digit lead among veteran voters in the key swing states of Ohio, Florida, and Colorado ? and a similar 12-point advantage in Virginia, 52 percent to 40 percent, in one recent poll. More than?1 in 10 Virginia voters (12.8 percent) are veterans, according to the 2010 Census figures and the US Department of Veterans Affairs.

The two candidates took different paths toward addressing defense, services for veterans, and foreign policy before ultimately arguing that their respective economic plans offer a better way to ensure America?s strength.

In Springfield, Romney characterized defense spending cuts slated for next year as ?unthinkable and devastating? reductions that he never would have agreed to in the first place.

He critiqued the president in a sweep of foreign affairs ? concerns about nuclear arsenals in North Korea and Iran, a ?highly tumultuous? Pakistan, the slaughter of civilians in Syria, and an Egypt headed by a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, among other issues. ?If you keep going around the world, it is still a troubling and dangerous world,? Romney said.

Romney also implied that he would break up jams in the veterans benefits system, calling mental health issues, in particular, a "crisis."
"We have huge numbers of our men and women returning from conflict that are seeking counseling, psychological counseling, and can?t find that counseling within our system," Romney said. "And, of course, record numbers of suicides."

In Virginia Beach, Obama let Sen. Jim Webb (D) of Virginia torch Romney on issues directly relating to veterans.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ziibrmqj7KI/Battleground-Virginia-Romney-and-Obama-woo-military-veterans-video

james randi wargames blake griffin dunk florida primary full force odd fellows eli whitney

Living a Goddess Life: Environmental Issues Infographic

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://artemishi.blogspot.com/2012/09/environmental-issues-infographic.html

dst friends with kids pacific standard time northern mariana islands summer time coolio daylight savings time 2012

timdahlberg: You know you're at a golf event when the shuttle driver has NPR on the radio #rydercup