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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Recipe : Gado-gado (Cooked mixed vegetables with peanut sauce)



Sambal Kacang (Peanut Sauce)

Makes about 280 ml / 1/2 pint / 1-1/4 cups of sauce

112 ml / 4 fl oz / 1/2 cup vegetable oil
225 g / 8 oz / 1-1/3 cups raw peanuts
2 cloves garlic, chopped
4 shallots, chopped
A thin slice of shrimp paste (optional)
Salt to taste
1/2 tsp chilli powder
1/2 tsp brown sugar
1 tbsp dark soy sauce
450 ml / 16 fl oz / 2 cups water
1 tbsp tamarind water or juice of a lemon

Stir-fry the peanuts for 4 minutes. Remove with a slotted spoon to drain in a colander, and leave to cool. Then pound or grind the nuts into a fine powder, using a blender, coffee grinder, or pestle and mortar. Discard the oil, except for 1 tablespoonful.

Crush the garlic, shallots and shrimp paste in a mortar with a little salt, and fry in the remaining oil for 1 minute. Add the chilli powder, sugar, soy sauce and water. Bring this to the boil, then add the ground peanuts. Simmer, stirring occasionally, until the sauce becomes thick; this should take about 8-10 minutes. Add the tamarind water or lemon juice and more salt if needed.

The vegetables:

112 g / 4 oz / l cup cabbage or spring greens, shredded
225 g / 8 oz / 2 cups French beans, cut into 1-cm / 1/2-inch lengths
4 medium carrots, peeled and sliced thinly
112 g / 4 oz /1 cup cauliflower florets
112 g / 4 oz / 1 cup beansprouts, washed

For the garnish:

Some lettuce leaves and watercress
2 hard-boiled eggs, quartered
1 medium-size potato, boiled in its skin, then peeled and sliced;
or 225 g / 8 oz of slices of lontong (optional)
1/2 cucumber, thinly sliced
1 tbsp crisp-fried onions
2 large krupuk, or a handful of fried emping, broken up into small pieces (optional)

Boil the vegetables separately in slightly salted water, for 3-4 minutes, except the beansprouts which only need 2 minutes. Drain each vegetable separately in a colander.

To serve, arrange the lettuce and watercress around the edge of a serving dish. Then pile the vegetables in the middle of the dish. Arrange the eggs, sliced potatoes or lontong, and sliced cucumber on top.

Heat the peanut sauce in a small saucepan until hot; add more water if it is too thick. Adjust the seasoning, and pour the sauce over the vegetables. Sprinkle the fried onions on top. Serve warm or cold. If you want to serve hot gado-gado, it can be reheated in a microwave oven. When reheating, however, do not include the lettuce and watercress, cucumber slices, fried onions, krupuk or emping. Add these garnishes immediately before serving.

Taken From : http://www.globalgourmet.com



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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Recipe : Banana Crumb Muffins












SUBMITTED BY: Lisa Kreft
PHOTO BY: PIKOGIRL82

PREP TIME 15 Min
COOK TIME 20 Min
READY IN 35 Min
SERVINGS & SCALING

Original recipe yield: 10 muffins




INGREDIENTS

* 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
* 1 teaspoon baking soda
* 1 teaspoon baking powder
* 1/2 teaspoon salt
* 3 bananas, mashed
* 3/4 cup white sugar
* 1 egg, lightly beaten
* 1/3 cup butter, melted
* 1/3 cup packed brown sugar
* 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
* 1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon
* 1 tablespoon butter

DIRECTIONS
  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C). Lightly grease 10 muffin cups, or line with muffin papers.
  2. In a large bowl, mix together 1 1/2 cups flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt. In another bowl, beat together bananas, sugar, egg and melted butter. Stir the banana mixture into the flour mixture just until moistened. Spoon batter into prepared muffin cups.
  3. In a small bowl, mix together brown sugar, 2 tablespoons flour and cinnamon. Cut in 1 tablespoon butter until mixture resembles coarse cornmeal. Sprinkle topping over muffins.
  4. Bake in preheated oven for 18 to 20 minutes, until a toothpick inserted into center of a muffin comes out clean.

Taken From :http://allrecipes.com

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Games : Resident Evil 5




Resident Evil 5 is the forthcoming seventh installment (including Zero and Code: Veronica) in the Resident Evil survival horror series for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, and was first announced on July 20, 2005. The official release dates are to be announced. According to Capcom's fiscal year report at Jeux-France, both Resident Evil 5 and Devil May Cry 4 are expected be released before March 31, 2007 which ends their current fiscal year for the PlayStation 3. It is noteworthy that their was no news on a possible release date for the Xbox 360 version of the title during the report


Taking over producer duties from Hiroyuki Kobayashi is Jun Takeuchi (director of Onimusha, character designer for the original Resident Evil and animator for Resident Evil 2). Several staff members who also worked on the original Resident Evil are involved in development. According to Takeuchi, the game will utilize the same gameplay model introduced in Resident Evil 4, while implementing thematics from the original Resident Evil into the game. The game will be a full-fledged sequel taking place after the events in Resident Evil 4, and is said to be a major turning point in the series', overall storyline.


No official release date has been announced. In an interview with executive producer Keiji Inafune published in the Japanese publication Xbox 360ism states that both versions of the game will be released simultaneously if possible, depending on the launch date of the PlayStation 3, which has now been confirmed as early November 2006. The game will have online features that have yet to be disclosed.


It is noted that Resident Evil 5 and Devil May Cry 4 were not shown at E3 2006. Capcom supposingly reasoned that the company doesn't want to unveil the titles until they are available in a playable form. This could mean that it will be sometime before any new information will be released although it is speculated that the titles will make a appearance at the upcoming Tokyo Game Show later this year prior to the Japanese launch of the PlayStation 3. According to the fiscal year report at Jeux-France, RE5 is expected to be released sometime before March 31, 2007.

No details have been released about the game's storyline other than the fact that it is set after the events of Resident Evil 4 and that it will take place in a desert setting (an idea inspired by the movie Black Hawk Down).



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Music : Jordin Sparks ft. Chris Brown "No Air "




Jordin Sparks may have been the youngest American Idol when she won the title on the reality show's sixth season, but the Glendale, AZ, resident had already packed plenty of accomplishments into 17 years. The daughter of Phillippi Sparks, former left cornerback for the Dallas Cowboys and former defensive back for the New York Giants, Sparks had no formal vocal training, but showed a flair for singing while still a toddler and was drawn to performing of all kinds at an early age. By her early teens, Sparks was singing, acting in plays and modeling, and already winning acclaim for her talents.

Along with performing with Alice Cooper and Michael W. Smith, she was Coca Cola's Rising Star in 2002 and made her recording debut with 2003's For Now EP with CCM artist Matthew Ward and engineer Gary Leach. The following year, she won two awards at the 2004 Gospel Music Association Academy, placed second overall in that year's Music in the Rockies competition, and appeared on America's Most Talented Kids twice. In 2006, she won a plus-size model search held by the Torrid clothing line and appeared in an ad for Torrid in the December issue of Seventeen magazine.

That year, Sparks also auditioned for American Idol, performing in the Los Angeles tryouts; while she didn't make the cut, she later won the American Idol-affiliated contest Arizona Idol, which allowed her to audition again for the show in Seattle. She made it through to Hollywood on the strength of her rendition of Celine Dion's "Because You Loved Me" and found a place among the 12 American Idol finalists early in 2007. Her performances of songs such as "I (Who Have Nothing)" and "Hey Baby" showed her charm and versatility, and soon made her a fan favorite.

Like fellow American Idols Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood, and Taylor Hicks, Sparks was never in the bottom two or three performers throughout the entire competition. Ultimately, Sparks beat out Blake Lewis and Melinda Doolittle to become the sixth American Idol on May 23, 2007. Her debut single, "This Is My Now," was released soon after the show's May finale, and Sparks spent that summer appearing on the American Idol tour. She also began working on material for her album, reteaming with Leach on songs that were previewed on her website. ~ Heather Phares, All Music Guide





NO AIR LYRICS by JORDIN SPARKS:


(feat. Chris Brown)


Tell me how I'm supposed 2 breathe with no air?

[Jordin Sparks:]
If I should die before I wake
It's cause you took my breath away
Losing you is like living in a world with no air
Oh

[Chris Brown:]
I'm here alone didn't wanna leave
My heart won't move it's incomplete
If there was a way that I could make you understand

[Hook: Jordin Sparks]
But how do you expect me to live alone with just me? cause my world revolves around you it's so hard for me to breathe

[Chrous: Jordin Sparks & Chris Brown]
Tell me how I'm supposed to breathe with no air?
Can't live, can't breathe with no air
It's how I feel whenever you ain't there
It's no air, no air
Got me out here in the water so deep
Tell me how you gon breathe without me?
[No Air Lyrics on
If you ain't here I just can't breathe
It's no air, no air

No air, air [x4]

[Chris Brown:]
I walk, I ran, I jump, I flew
Right off the ground to float to you
WIth no gravity to hold me down forreal

[Jordin Sparks:]
But somehow I'm still alive inside
You took my breathe but I survived
I don't how but I don't even care

[Hook: Jordin Sparks & Chris Brown]
So how do you expect me to live alone with just me? cause my world revolves around you it's so hard for me to breathe

[Chrous: Jordin Sparks & Chris Brown]
[ No Air song text brought to you by LyricsYouLove ]
Tell me how I'm supposed 2 breathe with no air?
Can't live, can't breathe with no air
It's how I feel whenever you ain't there
It's no air, no air
Got me out here in the water so deep
Tell me how you gon breathe without me?
If you ain't here I just can't breathe
It's no air, no air

No air, air [x4]
No more
It's no air, no air

[Jordin Sparks & Chris Brown:] OH

[Chrous: Jordin Sparks&Chris Brown]
Tell me how I'm supposed 2 breathe with no air?
Can't live, can't breathe with no air
It's how I feel whenever you ain't there
It's no air, no air
Got me out here in the water so deep
Tell me how you gon breathe without me?
If you ain't here I just can't breathe
It's no air, no air

No air, no air [x4]
[faded]
So how do you expect me to live alone with just me? cause my world revolves around you it's so hard for me to breathe

Tell me how I'm supposed 2 breathe with no air?
Can't live, can't breathe with no air
It's how I feel whenever you ain't there
It's no air, no air

[Jordin Sparks:] Got me out here in the water so deep
[Chris Brown:] Tell me how you gon breathe without me?
[Jordin Sparks:] If you ain't here I just can't breathe
[Jordin Sparks & Chris Brown:] It's no air, no air

No air, air [x3]

No air



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Music : Natasha Bedingfield "Pocketful of Sunshine"




Originally from New Zealand, Natasha Bedingfield grew up in southeast London, where she and her siblings were raised around music. By their teens, Natasha, brother Daniel, and sister Nikola had formed an R&B-based singing group. It didn't last, but the experience encouraged the Bedingfields to keep pursuing music. In 2001 and 2002 Daniel Bedingfield scored a hit with the single "Gotta Get Through This," and the following year it was Natasha's turn. Leaving university to sign with BMG, Natasha immediately started working on her first record. Buoyed by advance singles like "These Words" and "Single," Unwritten debuted at number one on the British charts.


The golden reception for Bedingfield's rhythmic pop sound netted her platinum record sales and numerous BRIT awards. It also set up her assault on the American pop charts, which began in July 2005 with Unwritten's domestic release. In 2007 the single "I Wanna Have Your Babies" announced the coming of her sophomore effort, N.B. That album, however, was never released in the U.S. Instead, a reworked version -- half of N.B. plus six new songs -- found its way onto American shores as Pocketful of Sunshine in early 2008. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide

Taken From : http://www.billboard.com




Pocketful of Sunshine Lyric

I got a pocket, got a pocketful of sunshine.
I got a love, and I know that it's all mine.
Oh, ooh oh oh.

Do what you want, but you're never gonna break me.
Sticks and stones are never gonna shake me.
No.
I got a pocket, gota poketful of sunshine
I got a love, and I know that its all mine, oh, ooh oh oh.

Wish that you could, but you ain't gonna ownn me
do anything you want, you can't slow me down, no oh.

Take me away: A secret place.
A sweet escape: Take me away.

Take me away to better days.
Take me away: A hiding place.

I got a pocket, got a pocketful of sunshine.
I got a love, and I know that it's all mine.
Oh, ooh oh oh.

Do what you want, but you're never gonna break me.
Sticks and stones are never gonna shake me.
No.

I got a pocket, got a pocketful of sunshine.
I got a love, and I know that it's all mine.
Oh ooh oh oh.

Take me away: A secret place.
A sweet escape: Take me away.

Take me away to better days.
Take me away: A hiding place.

There's a place that I go,
But nobody knows.
Where the rivers flow,
And I call it home.

And there's no more lies.
In the darkness, there's light.
And nobody cries.
There's only butterflies.

Take me away: A secret place.
A sweet escape: Take me away.

Take me away to better days.
Take me away: A hiding place.

Take me away: A secret place.
A sweet escape: Take me away.

Take me away to better days.
Take me away: A hiding place.

Take me away: A secret place.
To better days take me away.

Take me away to better days.
Take me away: A hiding place.

The sun is on my side.
Take me for a ride.
I smile up to the sky.
I know I'll be all right.

The sun is on my side.
Take me for a ride.
I smile up to the sky.
I know I'll be all right.


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Music : Jay Sean My Own Way


Released: 12 May 2008

by Paul Clarke

From one angle Ride It – Jay Sean's comeback single from last year – saw the Hounslow-born artist in exactly the same place as he was when he broke through in 2003 with Dance With You: Talking about cruising the clubs and making eyes at the ladies. Yet from others he couldn’t be more different, for where Dance With You bumped along on producer Rishi Rich's Desi beats the only obvious Asian influences in Ride It are the Eastern-tinged strings in this smooth r 'n' b groove, whilst cocksure confidence in the lyrical chat-up lines has been replaced by words and delivery that seem more wavering and vulnerable. Indeed, on the evidence of new single Maybe and plenty of other tracks on his second album Jay hasn't spent the four years since his debut Me Against Myself LP fighting off the hordes of females he's charmed with his moves, but rather disconsolately checking his mobile and Facebook for messages from that 'special someone' after she's stood him up agai! n.

The truth is actually rather different of course, for Jay has been building up his fanbase in the UK and India, racking up platinum sales many times over. Not that this was enough for his former record label Relentless, who were apparently unhappy with his new album, My Own Way, now being released on Jay's own label. For if Relentless thought they'd bagged themselves the first UK Asian rap and r 'n' b crossover star with his debut album, the follow-up suggests he's actually transformed into the Asian Craig David instead.

Recorded in New York and London with producers J-Remy and Duro, My Own Way contains not a single nod towards hip-hop save for I Won't Tell, and instead finds Jay singing in a voice so syrupy you could make a cake with it. Individually there's nothing wrong with the songwriting of tracks like Stay, but when everything becomes stuck around the same midtempo bump 'n' grind rhythm whilst Jay warbles about his women woes you might begin to suspect that the reason some girls seem to keep leaving him is simply because he's become a little bit dull.

Taken From : http://www.bbc.co.uk



TRACKLISTING:
1. Ride it
2. Maybe (JRemy&BobbyBass Album Version)
3. I Wont Tell
4. Stay
5. Stuck In The Middle (Feat. Jared Cotter)
6. Good Enough
7. Cry
8. All or Nothing
9. Runaway 10. Waiting
11. Used To Love Her 12. Just A Friend
13. Murder (Feat. Thara Prashad)
14. Easy As 1,2,3


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Music Jazz : Michael Buble: Everything (single)










Editorial Review

Release date: 28 April 2007

The musician of choice for outer-suburban fashionistas (assuming Kath and Kim is an accurate portrayal of outer-suburban culture) returns doing what he does best with this melange of easy-listening, adult contemporary motifs.

Considering 'Buble has become a kind of adjective for all things kinda-not-that-cool, we'll try position this within the context of his other work. Produced by Metallica producer Bob Rock, of all people, this could represent the crooner's transition into MOR pop. Evoking the hook from Kenny Rogers and Dolly Parton's hit Islands in the Stream, this is sure to strike a chord with lovers of inoffensive schamltz.


To be honest, I preferred it when the bloke was a Sinatra wannabe. At least he had a canon of tried-and-true croon classics to work with. Everything, which Buble co-wrote with Alan Chang and Amy Foster-Gillies is, well, kinda nothing really. It starts at a pace, stays at that pace and ends at that pace, with an arrangement that allows little room for dynamic movement in the vocal line. It probably doesn't matter, though - your mum will still want to shag him.
Track listing
1. Everything
2. These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)
3. Everything (Alternate Mix)

Juan-Pablo Chavez, May 2007

Taken From : http://sydney.citysearch.com.au





"Everything" Lyric

You're a falling star, you're the get away car.
You're the line in the sand when I go too far.
You're the swimming pool, on an August day.
And you're the perfect thing to say.

And you play it coy but it's kinda cute.
Ah, when you smile at me you know exactly what you do.
Baby don't pretend that you don't know it's true.
'cause you can see it when I look at you.

[Chorus:]
And in this crazy life, and through these crazy times
It's you, it's you, you make me sing.
You're every line, you're every word, you're everything.

You're a carousel, you're a wishing well,
And you light me up, when you ring my bell.
You're a mystery, you're from outer space,
You're every minute of my everyday.

And I can't believe, uh that I'm your man,
And I get to kiss you baby just because I can.
Whatever comes our way, ah we'll see it through,
And you know that's what our love can do.

[Chorus]

So, la, la, la, la, la, la, la
So, la, la, la, la, la, la, la

[Chorus:]
And in this crazy life, and through these crazy times
It's you, it's you, you make me sing.
You're every line, you're every word, you're everything.
You're every song, and I sing along.
'Cause you're my everything.
Yeah, yeah

So, la, la, la, la, la, la, la
So, la, la, la, la, la, la, la




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Monday, June 23, 2008

Music : Judas Priest - Nostradamus (2008)


Nostradamus is a forthcoming concept album by English heavy metal band Judas Priest, focusing on the 16th century prophet Nostradamus. The band’s first concept album, it was originally intended to be released in late 2006 before being pushed to a 2007 release, and now,according to the official website, is set to be released on June 16th 2008 on Epic records.

Musically, the album will contain symphonic orchestrations including the use of keyboards and choirs which will be unlike anything the band have previously attempted before. Nostradamus centers around the life and times of the prophet. The first disc details various prophecies he has about the future and the end of the world. This leads to him being exiled. Later on, after his death, the world realizes just how right he was.


TRACKLISTING:

Disc 1

1. “Dawn of Creation” - 2:31
2. “Prophecy” - 5:26
3. “Awakening” - 0:52
4. “Revelations” - 7:05
5. “The Four Horsemen” - 1:35
6. “War” - 5:04
7. “Sands of Time” - 2:36
8. “Pestilence and Plague” - 5:08
9. “Death” - 7:33
10. “Peace” - 2:21
11. “Conquest” - 4:42
12. “Lost Love” - 4:28
13. “Persecution” - 6:34

Disc 2

1. “Solitude” * - 1:22
2. “Exiled” - 6:32
3. “Alone” - 7:50
4. “Shadows in the Flame” * - 1:10
5. “Visions” - 5:28
6. “Hope” * - 2:09
7. “New Beginnings” - 4:56
8. “Calm Before the Storm” * - 2:05
9. “Nostradamus” - 6:46
10. “Future of Mankind” - 8:29


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Recipe : Chocolate Chip Meringue Cookies















Prep Time 30 min.
Serves 30

Recipe Provided By: Martha Stewart

Ingridients :

1. 4 whole eggs
2. 1/4 teaspoon salt
3. 1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar
4. 1/4 teaspoon vanilla
5. 1 cup sugar
6. 12 ounces chocolate chips

Cooking Directions :

  1. Preheat oven to 225 degrees F. Warm eggs in bowl of hot water, 5 minutes. Separate whites; reserve yolks for another use.
  2. In bowl of electric mixer, beat whites with salt, cream of tartar, and vanilla to soft peaks. Add sugar by the tablespoon, beating until stiff, 2 minutes more. Fold in chocolate chips.
  3. Drop scant 1/4 cups of meringue onto parchment-lined baking sheets. Bake until dry, about 1 hour. Let cool.




Nutrition info Per Serving :

* Calories: 89 kcal
* Carbohydrates: 13 g
* Dietary Fiber: 0 g
* Fat: 4 g
* Protein: 1 g
* Sugars: 13 g

About: Nutrition Info

Powered by: ESHA Nutrient Database

Taken From : http://food.yahoo.com/



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Movie : Hellboy II: The Golden Army

























In theaters Friday, July 11th 2008,

After an ancient truce existing between humankind and the invisible realm of the fantastic is broken, hell on Earth is ready to erupt. A ruthless leader who treads the world above and the one below defies his bloodline and awakens an unstoppable army of creatures. Now, it's up to the planet's toughest, roughest superhero to battle the merciless dictator and his marauders. He may be red. He may be horned. He may be misunderstood. But when you need the job done right, it's time to call in Hellboy (Ron Perlman).

Along with his expanding team in the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Development--pyrokinetic girlfriend Liz (Selma Blair), aquatic empath Abe (Doug Jones) and protoplasmic mystic Johann--the BPRD will travel between the surface strata and the unseen magical one, where creatures of fantasy become corporeal. And Hellboy, a creature of two worlds who's accepted by neither, must choose between the life he knows and an unknown destiny that beckons him.

Director: Guillermo Del Toro
Cast: Ron Perlman, Selma Blair, Doug Jones

Taken From : http://www.moviesonline.ca

THE WIZARD REVIEW: 'HELLBOY II: THE GOLDEN ARMY'
Guillermo del Toro scores a monster hit with feature film sequel starring Mike Mignola's signature creation

By Andy Serwin

When it comes to recent comic book movie franchises, two seems to have usurped three as the magic number.

"Spider-Man 2" and "X2" far surpassed the installments that launched each of their respective franchises, and now, with "Hellboy II: The Golden Army," (opening everywhere on Friday, July 11), Academy Award-nominated director Guillermo del Toro ("Pan's Labyrinth") continues that trend, and does so in "hella" fine fashion.

"Hellboy II" is bigger and better in every single regard from the original pic: The story's meatier and more developed, the characters more fully fleshed out and realized, the effects look better, the creatures come in more astoundingly monstrous shapes and sizes, and the laughs and action have increased exponentially. Hell—it even qualifies as a legitimate "date movie" (provided your girlfriend is cool enough to like Hellboy in the first place).

"Hellboy II: The Golden Army" opens up with a flashback to an adolescent Hellboy and Professor Broome celebrating Christmas on the Army base where the titular hero was raised. That night, Broome recounts a legend to HB regarding the Golden Army, a weapon of mass destruction built and designed by the under-kingdoms of elves, goblins and trolls to use in their war against mankind. The army is never activated, a truce is struck and the mystical crown needed to bring the Golden Army to life is divided up into three parts and scattered among the elves and humanity. However, that seemingly harmless bedtime story lays the groundwork for what will eventually be Hellboy's biggest adventure—and most difficult challenge—to date.

Flash forward to present day, some time after the events of the first "Hellboy" movie (the original was produced and distributed by Revolution Studios and Sony, whereas Universal Pictures provides backing for the sequel): Hellboy (Ron Perlman) and Liz Sherman (Selma Blair) are now a full-on couple living together (albeit tumultuously) at the Bureau for Paranormal Research and Defense headquarters. Their other teammate, Abe Sapien (Doug Jones) is also on hand once again, this time bonding with BPRD Director Tom Manning (Jeffrey Tambor, in perfect comic relief) over Hellboy's penchant for trying to make the top-secret project a mass media phenomenon. Agent John Myers, the human POV character from the first movie, is out of the picture—literally—having been transferred to Antarctica ("He said he loved the cold," quips Hellboy of his former handler).

Into this somewhat domestic bliss comes a monkey wrench: Prince Nuada (Luke Goss) is the exiled son of the king of the elves, returned to claim the throne from his ailing father and take control of the Golden Army to use against mankind and restore the under-kingdoms to prominence. He embarks on a campaign to unite the mystical crown that will allow him to activate the Golden Army, and after securing two of the pieces, he only needs the last one—which just happens to be in the clutches of his twin sister, Princess Nuala (Anna Walton), who shares both a psychic and physical bond with brother (a twist that comes into play on two different occasions when Hellboy must throw down with Nuada). She flees their kingdom, and falls under the protection of the BPRD after meeting them in the legendary Troll Marketplace (a set piece that rivals the Mos Eisley Cantina scene from "Star Wars—A New Hope" in terms of setting and bizarre creatures).

From there on out, it's a race to stop Nuada from locating the third portion of the crown and the location of the Golden Army, 4,900 indestructible mechanical soldiers that "know no pity, mercy or loyalty." That simple mission becomes complicated by a variety of factors, including Abe's complicated feelings toward his royal charge, the media fallout from the BPRD going public, Liz and Hellboy's topsy-turny love life, and the introduction of new BPRD member Johann Krauss (voiced by "Family Guy" creator Seth MacFarlane), whose management style—and German lineage—rankles Hellboy to no end.

"Hellboy II: The Golden Army" stands as a true testament to del Toro's abilities as a filmmaker. He knows how to use CGI (he enhances scenes rather than overpowering them), he gets the most out of his actors (there isn't a weak performance to be found here) and his visual sensibility, from the sets to the choreography to the special effects, far outshines most other mainstream directors. He even manages to make a musical interlude in a "superhero" movie work (unlike Peter Parker's ludicrous dance number in "Spider-Man 3").

As we learn in this installment, the Big Red One is one day fated to rule the world—whether he wants to or not. Consider "Hellboy II: The Golden Army" his first step toward world domination.

















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Movie : Hancock (2008)








Starring: Jason Bateman, Eddie Marsan, Will Smith, Charlize Theron
Screenplay: Vince Gilligan, Vincent Ngo
Director(s): Peter Berg

MPAA Rating: PG-13 for intense sequences, sci-fi action and violence and language.

Rating:C+

Reviewed by: El Mayimbe - 05.09.07

TONIGHT HE COMES
By Vincent Ngo and Vincent Gilligan

El Mayimbe here with a look at Sony’s Will Smith superhero movie which comes out next summer. And you all thought I’d be tackling Iron Man this week…for shame.

“Tonight, He Comes”, is one of those movies titles that made me laugh. The title makes you immediately think of a porn film. Unfortunately Sony doesn’t do porn unless you count having to sit in the movie theater for 2 ½ hours as Sam Raimi ass fucks you with his stupid Spider-Man 3 script. [El Guapo here. Sorry, I had to get my two cents in. —Ed.] Speaking of comic book movies, Tonight, He Comes may seem like a comic book hero story but do not be mistaken, this is not your ordinary superhero.

The story takes place in present day Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn NY. The story opens up to three of the several main characters: HORUS (30 something, unhappy man, mild and quiet), MARY
(30, married to Horus, vibrant and full of spunk in search of something to liven her life with), she is also the mother to AARON (8 – good kid but very witty). The marriage between Mary & Horus is questionable. Horus is a man who gets up everyday for his nightshift to work as a security guard. He’s a pained man due to his lack of feeling to fulfill his life and those of his family. Mary longs to get close to Horus but he just shuts her out. Aaron on the other hand is smart but not tough. His father Horus hadn’t been much help telling him violence wasn’t the way. But living in Brooklyn as a kid you have to be tough; this is something Aaron lacked. Everyday Aaron would go to school and get bullied…

Next we jump to the crucial character. We’ll call him HANCOCK; like John Hancock. His character at the beginning opens up to showing a man who looks lonely. He goes to differently slimy hotels (the kind where you can hear the ladies of the night doing their thing).
He even takes his shot at getting prostitutes but he can’t get his “best friend” below up for that. You see Hancock is not your Superman, with the nice hair, gentleman like. He’s maybe like many guys you see and know except he has exceptional abilities such as super strength, but he’s also ill inside. He’s quick with his words so much he sounds like an adult version of Dr Seuss. Shoot, he can even fly!

The story continues onto Mary. She takes her kid to school. She ends up doing
her daily duties which takes her to the bank. However, Mary’s fate is somewhat twisted. While inside, little does Mary know the bank is about to be robbed. Thugs come into the bank and try to take over. However not for long. Hancock comes to the rescue. This superhero is actually checking out the chicks during the bank robbery. One in particular that catches his eye is Mary. Mary is in awe with a real life superhero. Meanwhile the day is passing Aaron is waiting for Mary to pick him up from school. However he runs into his daily problems of bullies. He gets into fights and because he is taught not to fight he gets a nice shiner to match with his passiveness.

We now see scenes of Hancock running around town saving cats, stopping fights, robberies, you
name it. He definitely has thing for the ladies or maybe that’s just a cover-up for his real loneliness. I mean it can’t be easy to have a girlfriend if you’re a superhero (chuckle). One night, as one of Hancock’s abilities or flaws for him sometimes is his hearing. It’s impeccable. One night out on the prowl he nears Mary’s building (coincidence we do not know). She is singing a lullaby to her son..This is a start of something interesting. Mary ends up inviting Hancock into her apt. Meanwhile her husband a night security guard for a large store is not there that night. Aaron can’t sleep neither. Instead Mary & Aaron entertain Hancock. They’re in love with this hero. He’s witty…he’s strong. He’s everything her husband isn’t. Flash-forward a few scenes, Hancock, Mary, and Aaron all become close. Even coming over for dinner while her husband is there. Horus can only stand there and watch as his wife has an emotional fling with this man. And as his son looks with admiration to this hero Hancock. Hancock takes it upon himself to teach Aaron about being a man & stepping up to bullies in school. Within time the hero becomes a fixture in the house and all Horus can do as he does every night; go to his job.

Now things get a little interesting. Horus comes off as this passive man and as some may call un “pariguayo”. He has one partner at work named Roheim. Roheim always tries to play it off as this old man that’s always tired. Horus is actually a real sympathetic man and always took Roheim for nothing else but old. Little did Horus know what was about to happen. One night Roheim claims he locked himself out. As he appears at work he looks all beat up. Supposedly the neighborhood gangs caught him outside. What we don’t know till later but I’ll spare you the way too many scenes that Roheim has a son named Scarpo that’s the leader of this alleged gang. On the same day weirdly enough Horus gets a warning from local cops that there has been a string a burglaries to be careful and not too brazen. Well what really happened is Roheim had his son Scarpo beat him up on purpose. Roheim would take the day off and tell Horus that he wouldn’t be able to make it in the next day because of his pains. Little do we know this is a plot by Roheim to have his son rob the department store on the day that Horus is the only one covering.

Meanwhile, back in la-la land… Hancock, although he is superhero, he is not all there. Perhaps it’s the years of being a superhero. All the crimes, the loneliness, but also the abilities he has can be an impairment. But Mary has a thing for Hancock. And why not? Her husband ignores her like’s tomorrow utility bill payment. One night, Hancock flies to her window. He asks her to go with him.. He whisks her to some deserted area in Brooklyn, He has food, lights (well they’re flares) and music (really a boom box; this is NYC you know!) She doesn’t know what to think. She does like him, but inside she loves her husband. She tells Hancock she cannot accept his advances. But he is having a hard time accepting and this is where Mary gets nervous. What they both don’t know. The police have been searching for Hancock. Why? Well we see him as a superhero but you know cops siempre metido en what they don’t need to be. In minutes we now see SWAT team closing in. And Hancock starts to feel anxiety!?

We go back to the large department store. Night of the robbery attempt. Horus is doing his usual surveillance. Just when it seems quiet. BAM! Comes in several thugs including SCARPO. They
start taking stuff ransom. Horus doesn’t know what to do. Remember he is the passive type. What we don’t know till later is one of reasons Horus’s issues is that he went to the police academy and failed. This has stood with him since. The thugs start to careen the area. Taking whatever. Horus gets the opportunity to run. He actually leaves. But something inside him builds up. At the very same time Roheim who said he was hurt is waiting in the getaway car. Horus goes back in with all his anger, is it towards Mary and her flirtations with Hancock? His son not respecting him? Or is it the respect he lost in himself? With all that inside he takes on the gang…including taking down Scarpo. Roheim can tell by the clock something is not going right and decides to check it out. He gets in and to find his son Scarpo is dead. At the same time not faraway is Aaron in his house. Aaron realizes his Mom has left with Hancock. But where can his Dad be? Well Aaron decides to get his dad to tell him what’s happened. He makes it to his Dad’s job but before his dad can find him, Roheim does first. Roheim is pissed his son is dead. Roheim takes Aaron hostage. Right then Horus comes and this starts the struggle to save Aaron.

Back to SWAT picnic scene with Hancock & Mary. Mary can tell he’s not all there. Hancock can hear voices from afar which are why he is able to know when people are in distress because of their cries and his innate ability to hear things from far away. The SWAT team moves in and tells Hancock this is it. Mary can only console him and tell him things to make him strong as he had told others he’s saved in the past. With that he tells Mary he can hear a cry. Trying to break through his nervosa, he can tell its Aaron and find the strength to fly off into the night right there an then the cops start their bullet thrash. But bullets are no match for Hancock. Right there in the dead of the night he goes. Mary can only imagine and she follows him.

We arrive to the rooftop to where Horus works. Roheim is holding little Aaron on the roof tying
him up and getting him ready to hang and die from the rooftop. Mary arrives to the building. Hancock’s gets to the top. Roheim hangs Aaron off the side of the building with the rope but doesn’t kill Aaron just yet. Horus with all his might fights Roheim. Right there in darkness like a shadow, Hancock SWOOPS Aaron off and puts him into Mary’s arms. What a day!With that, Hancock flies off….

Horus, Mary, and Aaron happy to be home. Sometimes in life it takes a tragedy or something bad to happen to realize what you have as it did in the end for this family. Even when they thought all their love for each other was gone, itcomes back like it never left. Go to the next scene at night on a dark street in Brooklyn… we see Hancock alone again. Right back where he started.

The story is definitely filled with action scenes and never boring. Sure to be interesting, the only thing I hope is they don’t put some corny ass shiny suit on this superhero because he is almost like every other man; human.


So ya’ll think big Willie got a shot at next summer’s crowded superhero slate? You think he got a shot against Batman, Iron Man, and The Incredible Hulk? As long as Will don’t come out with a rap album to accompany the movie it’s all good!

HASTA EL PROXIMO CAPITULO…


…YO SOY EL MAYIMBE!

Taken From : http://www.latinoreview.com























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Big premiere for Prince Caspian

Stars of the film

Prince Caspian, the latest instalment in the Narnia series, has premiered in London at a HUGE event.

Ten thousand fans gathered at the 02 Arena to catch a sneak preview of the movie on what's said to be the biggest screen ever constructed in Europe.



Kids dressed as lions, witches and Telmarine soldiers trekked down the red and green carpet, along with the stars of the film and other famous faces.

The glamorous event is thought to be the UK's biggest-ever film premiere.

Ben Barnes, who plays Prince Caspian, said he was so excited he was "babbling like an idiot".

He said: "Despite all the people behind me I can guarantee I'm the most excited person here."

 Georgie Henley
The young stars were excited!
And Anna Popplewell who plays Susan Pevensie, said: "It's mental, mental, chicken oriental is what I think.

"It's really nice to bring the film home for us British actors and to be with a home crowd."

The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian is released in UK cinemas on 26 June.


Taken From : http://news.bbc.co.uk



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Music : Leona Lewis - Bleeding Love




Producer(s): Ryan "Alias" Tedder
Label: Syco/J

Perhaps it seems premature to crown 2008's best new artist, but Leona Lewis arrives on U.S. shores with plenty of jewels in her tiara. In November, debut disc "Spirit" debuted at No. 1 in the United Kingdom—selling the equivalent of 200 albums per minute on release day—and has since become the fastest-selling debut of all time, while launch single "Bleeding Love" topped the singles chart for four weeks.

It's tough to fathom that so many melody-free gimmick jams continue to junk up the stateside airwaves, but Lewis' bow is not only a one-listen harmonic show-stopper, it is also hip, soulful, beat-rippling and an undeniable vocal tour de force.

And that's all before adding the visual: Lewis is simply stunning. Not since a youngster named Whitney Houston arrived has Clive Davis had so much to work with. The gorgeous "Spirit"—A&R'd at home by Simon Cowell—arrives March 18 in the United States. By then, "Leona" should be working its way to household-name status. A colossal and timeless debut. —Chuck Taylor

Taken From : http://www.billboard.com



Bleeding Love lyrics

Closed off from love
I didn't need the pain
Once or twice was enough
And it was all in vain
Time starts to pass
Before you know it you're frozen

But something happened
For the very first time with you
My heart melts into the ground
Found something true
And everyone's looking round
Thinking I'm going crazy

But I don't care what they say
I'm in love with you
They try to pull me away
But they don't know the truth
My heart's crippled by the vein
That I keep on closing
You cut me open and I

Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love
I keep bleeding
I keep, keep bleeding love
Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love
You cut me open

Trying hard not to hear
But they talk so loud
Their piercing sounds fill my ears
Try to fill me with doubt
Yet I know that the goal
Is to keep me from falling

But nothing's greater
Than the rush that comes with your embrace
And in this world of loneliness
I see your face
Yet everyone around me
Thinks that I'm going crazy, maybe, maybe

But I don't care what they say
[ Bleeding Love lyrics found on http://www.completealbumlyrics.com ]
I'm in love with you
They try to pull me away
But they don't know the truth
My heart's crippled by the vein
That I keep on closing
You cut me open and I

Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love
I keep bleeding
I keep, keep bleeding love
Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love
You cut me open

And it's draining all of me
Oh they find it hard to believe
I'll be wearing these scars
For everyone to see

But I don't care what they say
I'm in love with you
They try to pull me away
But they don't know the truth
My heart's crippled by the vein
That I keep on closing
You cut me open and I

Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love
I keep bleeding
I keep, keep bleeding love
Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love
You cut me open and I

Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love
I keep bleeding
I keep, keep bleeding love
Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love
You cut me open and I
Keep bleeding
Keep, keep bleeding love




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Vatican Premieres Musical on Life of Virgin Mary

By Sabina Castelfranco
Rome

A unique musical about the life of the Virgin Mary will premiere at the Vatican Tuesday evening. Mary of Nazareth - An Ongoing Story is the first musical to be made of the life of Mary. It traces the battle between good and evil, God and the devil, in Mary's life. For VOA, Sabina Castelfranco reports from Rome.

Italian soprano Alma Manera, left, performs during rehearsals of
Italian soprano Alma Manera, left, performs during rehearsals of "Mary of Nazareth - A Continuing Story" musical in Paul VI hall at the Vatican, 17 Jun 2008
Mary of Nazareth - An Ongoing Story is an Italian production sponsored by the Vatican's Pontifical Council for Social Communications.

The story chronicles Mary's life - from her Jewish childhood, the Annunciation, her marriage to Joseph, the birth of Jesus and her Assumption*. It traces the battle between good and evil - God and the devil - in Mary's life as she grows up.

The producers say the goal of the musical is "to narrate the most extraordinary story that ever occurred, giving pride of place to the figure of Mary." They add that the musical seeks to show Mary as "an ideal bridge between yesterday, today and always: a story that continues."

The musical stems from an idea by writer and director Maria Pia Liotta who says it's the first time in history that a musical has been made about the life of the Virgin Mary.

Liotta says the musical is a very effective instrument to tell the story because it can reach everyone's heart, especially because it is made up of words, notes, melodies, dance and gestures."

Actress and soprano Alma Manera, who is Liotta's daughter, plays Mary. She says that she took the role of starring in her mother's musical with "responsibility, happiness and joy."

Manera adds she tried to interpret her role in the most natural, spontaneous and simplest way - first, as a young woman, then as a mother who is aware of her choice and whose 'yes' changed the history of humanity.

Well-known Italian composer Stelvio Cipriani, wrote the music. He says he tried to make it both spiritual and modern.

Cipriani says he tried to respect the spirituality and sacredness of this work while at the same time keeping it up to date.

Show organizers are hoping to schedule an international tour of the musical in Europe, Latin America and the Middle East.

* - clarified 19 Jun 2008. The word initially used was ascension.

Taken From : http://www.voanews.com


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Sunday, June 22, 2008

Movie : Wanted (2008)



Plot Summary :

25-year-old Wes was the most disaffected, cube-dwelling drone the planet had ever known. His boss chewed him out hourly, his girlfriend ignored him routinely and his life plodded on interminably. Everyone was certain this disengaged slacker would amount to nothing. There was little else for Wes to do but wile away the days and die in his slow, clock-punching rut. Until he met a woman named Fox. After his estranged father is murdered, the deadly sexy Fox recruits Wes into the Fraternity, a secret society that trains Wes to avenge his dad's death by unlocking his dormant powers.

As she teaches him how to develop lightning-quick reflexes and phenomenal agility, Wes discovers this team lives by an ancient, unbreakable code: carry out the death orders given by fate itself. With wickedly brilliant tutors—including the Fraternity's enigmatic leader, Sloan—Wes grows to enjoy all the strength he ever wanted. But, slowly, he begins to realize there is more to his dangerous associates than meets the eye. And as he wavers between newfound heroism and vengeance, Wes will come to learn what no one could ever teach him: he alone controls his destiny.

Year of U.S. Release: 2008
Starring: Angelina Jolie, James McAvoy, Morgan Freeman, Terence Stamp, Kristen Hager.
Director: Timur Bekmambetov
Screenwriter(s): Derek Haas, Michael Brandt
Producer(s): Marc Platt, Jason Netter, Jim Lemley
Ex. Producer(s): Marc Silvestri
Distributor: Universal Pictures
Prod. Company: Kickstart Productions, Marc Platt Productions, Platinum Studios, Top Cow Entertainment
Genre(s): Action, Adventure, Drama, Crime, Gangster
U.S. Release Date: June 27, 2008 (Wide)
U.S. Box Office Total:
Rated Restricted for strong bloody violence throughout, pervasive language and some sexuality.




Wanted Movie Review
9 out of 10 Stars
By: moviemaven

Think this is just another Summer action popcorn flick? Think the trailer gave away all the juicy parts? Think you wanna wait to see this one on video? Think again! Wanted defies the rules of gravity, the rules of physics and the rules of probability. And I defy you to say it's not entertaining.

Wesley Gibson is a meek, mild mannered office guy who spends his time contemplating his existence and why he has one. His girlfriend is cheating on him and with his best friend to make things worse. He also hates his boss. Sounds pretty normal right? It may start more like Office Space, but things are about to change for him in a big way.

Out of nowhere, Fox (Angelina Jolie) comes in and saves him from a would-be assassin so he can then learn that his destiny is not at all what he thought it was. In fact, it isn't what anyone would think it was.

James McAvoy is perfect as a wimp and stellar as a badass. Then we get Morgan Freeman, Terence Stamp, Common, and of course Angelina. At first I thought she was looking a little too skinny, but her hotness is alive and well.

I have mentioned many times in the past how I was getting tired of the editing trend that was hitting us again and again. You know the one where it seemed that the director really didn't want you to know what was going on. I am happy to say that this film seemed to have dodged that bullet rather easily. The action scenes are nothing but pure adrenaline and balls to the wall fun. Whether you are witnessing cars flying sideways over traffic or bullets telling trajectory to kiss it, you get to see every bit of it. And you will love it. If you don't, then why are you watching an action film?

I am not familiar with the series of comics this is based on but I can tell you that I will be after this. I am also really,really hoping there is a video game companion to this film. The action sequences would translate so well and if being it is even a fraction of the fun of watching it, I can imagine I would get nothing else done.

And I haven't even talked about the score yet. Danny Elfman rocks it again and the pay off is more than worth it.

You will of course think that half of this stuff is not humanly possible. But then you will find yourself thinking you just don't care. I mean how often do you watch action films and think "Oh yeah, I did that yesterday?" It stretches disbelief to the limits of suspension and then pushes it even farther over the edge. But if you have a pulse at all, you will leave the theater feeling pumped and adrenaline charged and ready to kick some ass. The worst thing to come out of it may be that you will drive a little more recklessly or attempt to scale some buildings on your way home.

To put it bluntly, I want to see it again. Right now.

Taken From : http://www.moviesonline.ca


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Movie : Wall-E


Movie Preview

Pixar has never had a flop. Since 1995, the animation studio has released eight consecutive hits, racking up $4.3 billion in worldwide grosses. Now comes opus 9, perhaps the riskiest yet: a nearly photorealistic, almost dialogue-free love story set in 2805, about a lonely garbage-compacting robot, WALL-E. Left behind on a refuse-covered, water-depleted Earth after mankind evacuates to giant spaceships orbiting the planet, WALL-E (short for Waste Allocation Load Lifter, Earth class) has toiled for 700 years, making cubes of compacted trash. When the story opens, he has only a cockroach for company, though an exceedingly cute cockroach. (''It's our version of Jiminy Cricket,'' says director Andrew Stanton.) Then a sleek, white-shelled probe droid called EVE shows up, and WALL-E is smitten. He courts her incessantly, following her when she's recalled to the human race's mother ship, where a mystery unfolds about her mission.

As for that dialogue-free thing, there's a huge asterisk involved. There's actually plenty of talking — it's just not always in recognizable language. WALL-E, EVE, and the group of misfit bots they encounter on the spaceship communicate mostly in beeps and boops concocted by Oscar-winning sound designer Ben Burtt, who devised the ''voice'' of Star Wars' R2-D2. (There are also animated human characters, including a ship captain voiced by Curb Your Enthusiasm's Jeff Garlin.) While it may seem like a gamble to expect kids to sit through such an unorthodox feature, Stanton knows a thing or two about holding the audience's attention. His last film, 2003's Finding Nemo, is the
highest grosser in Pixar history. So far, early WALL-E footage has some online commenters carping that the lead character looks too much like that little robot from 1986's Short Circuit. But Stanton swears the inspiration came from a pair of binoculars he was playing with at a baseball game. ''It didn't dawn on me until later that there are other robots that have binocular eyes,'' he says. And they can see a hit coming a mile away. (June 27)
























Taken From : http://www.ew.com




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Movie : Batman The Dark Knight (2008)




As far as movie trailers go, usually they over promise while the movie under delivers. There are a few exceptions: Transformers, Cloverfield, and most recently Iron Man. And then, occasionally, and I mean very occasionally, there is an awesome trailer that gives way to a movie that flat out blows you away.

Check out the newest Dark Knight trailer if you don't believe me.

The second full length preview we get for TDK is better than any other I've seen for a summer blockbuster. That even goes for Indiana Jones and the Quest for Medicade. Chen at the Giz says it might be the best movie of the summer period. I think he might be right. Just check out the few tantalizing glimpses of Heath Ledger's already eerie performance. Armed only with mental instability, knives, and small arms (well except for that missile launcher), Joker seems to be getting the best of The Batman's repertoire of high tech gadgetry in every scene.

Oh and pay careful attention to Aaron Eckart's doomed Harvey Dent, especially around at the 1:53 mark.

The Dark Knight hits theaters on July 18th. And here we...go.

Plot summary for The Dark Knight (2008)

Batman raises the stakes in his war on crime. With the help of Lieutenant Jim Gordon and District Attorney Harvey Dent, Batman sets out to dismantle the remaining criminal organizations that plague the city streets. The partnership proves to be effective, but they soon find themselves prey to a reign of chaos unleashed by a rising criminal mastermind known to the terrified citizens of Gotham as The Joker. Written by Peteagassi
Right after taking out Ra's Al Ghul's plan and the mysterious disappearance of Dr. Jonathan Crane AKA Scarecrow, Batman continues his seemingly-endless effort to bring justice to Gotham's crime and corrupt with the help of Lt. James Gordon and new appointed District Attorney Harvey Dent. But this time, The Dark Knight faces a rising psychopathic criminal called The Joker, who's eerie grin makes him more dangerous than what he has yet to unleash. It becomes an agenda to both enemies that only one of them remains and are willing to break every part of what they believe in to stop the other. Written by Anonymous

Set within a year after the events of Batman Begins, Batman, Lieutenant James Gordon, and new district attorney Harvey Dent successfully begin to round up the criminals that plague Gotham City until a mysterious and sadistic criminal mastermind known only as the Joker appears in Gotham, creating a new wave of chaos. Batman's struggle against the Joker becomes deeply personal, forcing him to "confront everything he believes" and improve his technology to stop him. A love triangle develops between Bruce Wayne, Dent and Rachel Dawes. Written by Leon Lombardi









Taken From : http://www.imdb.com & http://blog.wired.com.

Dark Knight Review: Nolan Talks Sequel Inflation
by Michael Bay

Darkknightbalebatman09halb600Finally, I would have preferred to see The Dark Knight in 35 mm, not IMAX. (I will go see it again when it opens July 18.) While the sequences that were shot with giant cameras were stunning at the IMAX venue--especially the deep detailed helicopter shots over Gotham and the amazing car/truck chase filmed in Chicago's freeway tunnels--I found the movie overwhelming. My brain starts to shut down when it gets over-pixillated, and this film goes on for two and a half hours. (Here's Justin Chang's review.)

My instincts told me when I first saw The Dark Knight trailer: Christopher Nolan's Batman Begins follow-up would fall into the trap of the summer tentpole sequel. It's not entirely his fault. The studio gives him his marching orders: top the last one. Make it bigger, better, bolder, more FX, more action, more scale and scope and characters (read toys). What else should a poor boy to do with $180 million?

Nolan delivered on the first Batman reboot and he does it again here. The Dark Knight will work at the boxoffice and keep the franchise alive.

In many ways, this movie functions as a western, with an honorable sheriff (Gary Oldman's lovable police detective Gordon), a nasty outlaw (Heath Ledger's extraordinary, anarchistic Joker), a lone gunman hero operating outside the law (Christian Bale's Batman) with loyal veteran sidekick (Michael Caine as Alfred), and the lovely lass that the outsider cannot have (Rachel Dawes, the delightful and wily Maggie Gyllenhaal).

And then--here's where the movie starts to go off the tracks--we have Aaron Eckhart's Harvey Dent, the too-virtuous-to-be-true D.A. who is in love with Gyllenhaal, thus forming a love triangle, as well as another Batman accomplice, inventor Lucius Fox (read James Bond's Q), played by the over-exposed Morgan Freeman. Then add a bunch of mafia guys led by deliciously wicked Eric Roberts.

Darkknight

Somehow, David S. Goyer (who wrote the story), and screenwriter Nolan brothers Chris and Jonathan manage to play out all these plot strands. But they wind up with a half-hour finale on top of the two hour main movie, which is really about Batman vs. Joker, who wind up in an iconic face-off on a main street in Gotham. (Ledger dominates Dark Knight news coverage, natch. The LAT addresses the movie from that angle, while EW goes way overboard. Clearly, Warners is making an Oscar push for the film. Ledger's acting nomination is inevitable; while James Dean and others have been nominated after their deaths, only Network's Peter Finch has won a posthumous Oscar.)

Oddly, because The Dark Knight is busy servicing all these other characters, the movie doesn't spend enough time with its leading man, Bruce Wayne/Batman (BTW, Batman's basso-growly voice is silly).

Darkknight02_l

After twists and turns aplenty, some more satisfying than others, the movie comes to a gratifying conclusion (setting up the next sequel). But while Eckhart is winning as Dent, his character detour as Two-Face does not pay off.

I suspect that the filmmakers should have figured out the shorter version of this movie before they shot it, not after, because by then they couldn't cut it, according to Nolan (the full Q & A from one of my Guild spies is on the jump). Nolan shot The Prestige before he came back to work on the final drafts of the script. And by then he was locked into studio-mandated start and delivery and release dates.

My fantasy of the ideal version of this movie doesn't matter a whit, because it will play. The complexities of the plot are more fun to talk about than anything since Wall-E or Iron Man, and that makes Dark Knight one of the best movies of the summer. Maybe some dark over-nourishment is better than a simpler, structurally perfect masterpiece, after all.

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The PGA hosted a special IMAX screening of WB's "The Dark Knight," which flies into theaters on July 18. Following the screening, IT Pro editor Chris Green moderated a Q+A with co-writer-producer-director Christopher Nolan and producers Charles Roven and Emma Thomas.

Nolan on the challenge of topping "Batman Begins":

"Emma and I had never done a sequel so for us, the main challenge was to continue the story appropriately and keep it stylistically and tonally consistent. You want to move the story forward and make it somehow larger or more important without losing what worked in the first one."

Nolan on retaining the darkness and ambiguity of the characters:

"As co-writer-director, I was very involved with script, which I began working on at the story stage with David S. Goyer. We wanted to push these characters and test them in new ways. We wanted to use The Joker as a catalyst, not as someone who has an arc or learns anything in the story. I like to say that he cuts through the film like the shark in "Jaws." He's a force the other characters have to react to so he helped us push our returning characters forward and fortunately we were able to bring most of the cast back. Gary Oldman is an incredible actor who we first met with to play a villain in "Batman Begins." But we found that he's very unlike the characters he normally plays so we were lucky to get him to play Gordon who is a good man with a great sense of integrity. He had to be very restricted and subtle in "Batman Begins" and he enjoyed that challenge but at times it was like watching a Ferrari in traffic. It was fun to bring him back and have him tested and pushed further. The whole ensemble was prepared to push those characters and advance the story."

Like Javier Bardem's Anton Chigurh in "No Country for Old Men," The Joker comes with no real back story, and over the course of the film gives several different explanations of how his face was scarred. Here Nolan emphasizes the old adage that sometimes "less is more":

"It's quite a familiar trope, really, if you look at Hannibal Lecter or one of these movie monsters like Darth Vader in the first "Star Wars." The more you find out about those fictional characters the less threatening they really are. Our decision with The Joker was to not deal with the origin story and to laugh at that convention. We wanted him to be absolutely threatening in what he represents as a force of anarchy and chaos," says Nolan. "That’s really the reason for Harvey Dent's prominence in the film. It's his story that has to provide the emotional backbone of the film. He's the character with an arc, with a rise and fall, who the audience hopefully connects with and follows."

Nolan on the screenwriting process:

"We did it the same way we wrote "Batman Begins." David S. Goyer and I spent 2-3 months working on the story, working out the main beats on index cards. We sent Jonah [Nolan, Christopher's brother] off to work on his own because I was working on another film so he had 6 months to do that first draft and he would show me stuff as he did it and I would look at it before he shared it with anyone else including Chuck [Roven] and the studio. After the studio read the first draft Jonah spent another couple months working on it and then I took it over when I finished the other film and over the course of 6 months in pre-production, Jonah and I still worked heavily on it through that time. One of the reasons the film is 2-and-a-half hours long is because we tried everything we could on paper to make the story shorter but that was the story we had. In the end we compressed it to the point where it was dizzying so then we had to flesh it out a little bit. We tried different versions and pulling out different story elements so we probably spent a year and a half working on the script.

Nolan on shooting in Chicago:

"One of the fun things about shooting in Chicago, where I grew up partly and have a great love for, is that it's not as instantly recognizable as New York but it has this great architecture and all kinds of great geographical features in terms of underground streets and all kinds of amazing skyscrapers. When you see Christian Bale on top of a tall building, that’s really him. It's an amazing helicopter shot with a great view and particularly for the IMAX presentation we wanted to use the original camera negative shot. I didn’t want the visual effects guys to change a couple buildings to try to pretend it's a different city. That seemed pointless, really. A lot of people prefer that technological approach but I prefer to think 'Well what would you have done 20 years ago? Does it really matter?' It’s a great big city and we wanted it to feel very real and in doing that you're naturally going to expose more of the location so the people who know the city will recognize it but people seem to enjoy that, particularly people from Chicago. Hopefully Roger Ebert will."

Nolan on the film's political relevance to today's world and Batman reflecting the rule of law and order vs. chaos:

"We try not to be particularly conscious of what we're doing. We try to write the story within this world and these characters and in the process, try to do something that affects us and the world we live in. When we look back at the finished product we see various parallels and relevancies but we try and just let that be a product of writing what moves us, what frightens and excites us. We trust that that will have some reality or some relevance but it would violate the terms of storytelling and the terms of the genre if you're too conscious of trying to make particular political points. I don’t think that’s what you're selling the audience I don’t think that’s what the ride is. I think ultimately if the film has relevance it's actually going to be more interesting to an audience but we like it to be subtext.

Nolan on Maggie Gyllenhaal replacing Katie Holmes as ADA Rachel Dawes:

"Katie couldn’t do the film. She was unavailable. We offered it to her and very much wanted to bring her back but Maggie was someone I'd wanted to work with for years so when she offered to take on the role that was just delightful because I knew story-wise we needed the character to continue from "Batman Begins." We very much needed that connection with Bruce Wayne that we could tie to the Harvey Dent story and as Paul Levitz, who is the head of DC Comics said over dinner one night, 'With Batman, it’s a question of what's the tragedy? What is it that moves Batman?' Obviously in the first film we were able to rely on his origin story which is the greatest tragedy for him, the death of his parents. But with a new tale you need new fuel for that character who does deal in angst and whose story does rest on tragedy, so we were always looking to her character and that relationship to give us a different take on that."

Nolan on the influence of Alan Moore's "The Killing Joke":

"When I read "The Killing Joke" I don’t read it as unrealistic. Everything we did in "Batman Begins" and tried to push further in this film is based on the principle that you don’t worry about the medium. I'm not attempting to represent the medium of comic books on screen here anymore than I would a novel that I was adapting or a stage play. It’s a different medium and when I read a comic book I'm able to interpolate a real world from the drawings, and particularly works like "The Killing Joke" which are more stylistically contemporary to the time they were written and speak a little more directly to my generation. As far as the specific influence of "The Killing Joke," really we looked at the whole history of the comics and tried to absorb the highlights and commonalities from the evolutionary pool of artists and writers who've worked on the character for so long, looking at the common threads there. But I definitely feel the influence of "The Killing Joke," not so much in the specifics as in constructing some sense of purpose for an inherently purposeless character. That is to say The Joker is an anarchist. He's dedicated to chaos. He should really have no purpose but I think the underlying belief that Alan Moore got across very clearly is that on some level The Joker wants to pull everybody down to his level and show that he's not an unusual monster and that everyone else can be debased and corrupted like he is. If you look at the first two appearances of The Joker ever in the "Batman" comics, we were quite startled to look back at those and realize how close that character is to what Heath's done and what our story is. I think it's very close to the original incarnation of the character some 65 years ago."


Taken From : http://weblogs.variety.com/







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