Acer, China Hualu Group join Blu – Ray Disc Association
Be it data management problems or innovations in virtualization or cloud security, this newsletter offers in-depth articles and guest columns and … More
Be it data management problems or innovations in virtualization or cloud security, this newsletter offers in-depth articles and guest columns and … More
CyberTimes Developers Newsletter, sent out to 51043 subscribers on every Thursday, caters to the… More
I admired rather than enjoyed Paul Thomas Anderson’s demanding drama on first viewing, but in the four months since then it’s refused to leave my head.
Two poor, plucky teenagers (Lynne Frederick and Garry Miller) are visited by a mysterious 19th-century lawyer, Mr Blunden (Laurence Naismith), who, straight off the bat, asks the duo if they’d “be afraid to see a ghostâ€.
Wayne Blair’s needy musical comedy is desperate to be liked and it should, on paper, work as this true story’s an interesting one: four young Aborigine women in 1960s Australia form an all-girl soul group, managed by their muddled Irish manager (Chris O’Dowd), and are asked to entertain American troops fighting in the Vietnam war.
As an unabashed child of the 1980s, I am eager to defend the decade against a lot of unwarranted s
Jeanine Basinger discusses her book “I Do and I Don’t,” a history of Hollywood’s portrayal of marriage.
Which movies to see this weekend, March 8 Beautiful Creatures This story of a mortal boy and the witch girl he loves, based on the popular novel, presses all the teenage-angst buttons that would seem to guarantee commercial success. Side Effects Steven Soderbergh’s well-acted, nicely plotted thriller tells the story of a young woman (Rooney Mara) whose psychiatrist (Jude Law) prescribes a mood …
Last November’s box-office rivals “Wreck-It Ralph†and the final “Twilight†film are doing…
Though a tireless promoter of the film industry in the city, Mayor Michael R.
