Don't Panic
Fish that steal walls, horses that drive trucks and a neighbor who always SPEAKS LIKE THIS are some of the many characters inhabiting the bizarrely funny world of A Town Called Panic.
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Fish that steal walls, horses that drive trucks and a neighbor who always SPEAKS LIKE THIS are some of the many characters inhabiting the bizarrely funny world of A Town Called Panic.
Based on Giuseppe Tornatore’s 1990 Italian film Stanno Tutti Bene, Kirk Jones’s Everybody’s Fine presents a traditional holiday story told from a slightly different perspective — that of the middle-aged parent.
Daredevil follows the life of Matt Murdock, a blind lawyer by day and superhero by night. Clad in a tight red suit and a mask for good measure, Affleck uses a deadly baton to beat away naughty criminals. In the middle of what can only be called a career rough patch, Affleck seems more set to play a funky dominatrix than an action hero. Jennifer Garner's clumsy role as Daredevil's love interest Elektra doesn't help either. The actors approach their roles with an almost embarrassing conviction that renders the conventional plot trajectory nearly unnoticeable, but there's something about superhero drama that keeps us coming back. The film's redeeming factor arrives with Colin Farrell's portrayal of an Irish badass called Bullseye (does he even have to act?). Farrell’s playful villain shines through the otherwise clunky script, a reminder that bad guys can be funny too.
One of the most important relationships on a film set is between the actor and the director. Actors depend on directors to portray their characters with insight, while directors rely on actors to convert their creative visions into a reality. Yet some actors tire of being the instrument and decide to take a crack at directing.
Organic fanatics no longer have to fret about finding quality produce from nearby markets. Foodies who scour the aisles of FroGro and travel downtown to Whole Foods now have an organic oasis only a few blocks from Beige. Milk & Honey, a new local organic market and café located at 44th and Baltimore, provides a new place to shop (and study!) for this growing niche of students.
It’s hard to imagine Marlon Brando as anyone other than the notorious Godfather. But before he was Don Corleone, Brando turned in a riveting performance as Stanley in Elia Kazan’s A Streetcar Named Desire, based on the play by Tennessee Williams.
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