A Taste of Fine Dining
34th Street Magazine - Food & Drink - Little Chef, Big Appetite - Rachel Pattison from Dan Higgins on Vimeo.
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34th Street Magazine - Food & Drink - Little Chef, Big Appetite - Rachel Pattison from Dan Higgins on Vimeo.
Name and Year: Alexa DePasquale, 2012 Hometown: Locust Valley, New York School: College Place of Employment: Mr. Youth Social Media Agency
Street: What school are you in at Penn? (Wharton, College, Engineering, Nursing) Talia Goldberg: I individualized a major that combines various classes from departments in the College and Wharton to explore how emerging technology and marketing strategies impact business models and communities.
Street: Scream 4 features a new generation of young actors. What do you and your co–stars bring to the film that is different from the originals? Hayden Panettiere: There is a lot of modern stuff that comes into the film — much more technology and how that plays into horror movies now, like the filming of murders, such as the sort of thing you see in3. And the rules have changed. The audience has evolved and has gotten harder and harder to scare, and therefore the rules and clichés have had to change and evolve and adapt as well. But it’s a group of young people who are much more modern for our audience today.
With the new decade comes new rules for the Scream franchise. In an effort to revamp the horror movie experience, director Wes Craven toys with everything we thought we knew about fear–inducing flicks in Scream 4. The resulting movie will keep audiences on the edge of their seats while still engaging in the Scream films' patented tongue–in–cheek humor.
Expectations for director Julian Schnabel are high after the success of his 2007 experimental drama, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly. His follow–up film Miral, based on a semi–autobiographical novel by Rula Jebreal, is a portrayal of the Israel–Palestine conflict from the perspectives of four women tied together in a disjointed narrative. Fitting with Schnabel’s existing oeuvre, each scene is thought–provoking and visually captivating, but ultimately the script tries and fails to cover an issue far too complex and layered to be encapsulated in one single cinematic sitting.
A blackout swallows the city of Detroit, opening Vanishing on 7th Street and consuming the city in a darkness so ravenous that it swallows nearly the entire population. All that’s left behind are a few seemingly random individuals and a lot of questions.
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