Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy play mismatched would-be thieves in a comedic caper for the Madoff era
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Ben Stiller and Eddie Murphy play mismatched would-be thieves in a comedic caper for the Madoff era
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Enlarge Mark Valesella/IFC Films Herzog was only permitted to enter the caves for one week of filming.
Mark Valesella/IFC Films Herzog was only permitted to enter the caves for one week of filming.
This interview was originally broadcast on April 20, 2011. The Cave of Forgotten Dreams is now available on DVD and Blu-ray. In 1994, three French cave explorers discovered hundreds of prehistoric paintings and engravings on the walls of the Chauvet Cave in southern France. Carbon dating has since shown that the depictions of rhinoceroses, lions, cave bears, horses, bison, mammoths and other animals are between 30,000 and 32,000 years old. That doesn’t mean the ancient drawings are any less sophisticated than what artists create today, says filmmaker Werner Herzog. “Art … as it bursts on the scene 32,000 years ago, is fully accomplished. It doesn’t start with ‘primitive scribblings’ and first attempts like children would make drawings,” Herzog says. “It’s absolutely and fully accomplished.” The acclaimed German director, who has produced, written and directed more than 40 films, gained exclusive access to the Chauvet caves. He tells their story and the story of the world’s oldest cave paintings in The Cave of Forgotten Dreams, a 3-D documentary film. “Since early adolescence, I have been fascinated by cave paintings,” Herzog tells Fresh Air’s Terry Gross. “It actually was my personal intellectual awakening … and shook me to the core — seeing an image of a horse [from the] prehistoric Stone Age. I couldn’t believe it.” Part of Herzog’s interest in the paintings, he says, is the knowledge that tens of thousands of years ago, humans had the instinct to make art in order to represent the world around them. “It is strange and very significant that all of a sudden, we have the presence of what I would call ‘the modern human soul,’ ” he says. “Neanderthal man actually did not have all of this, and other civilizations did not have it. And earlier human beings did not represent the world in figurative means — paintings and sculptures and so on.”
Enlarge Mark Valesella/IFC Films Anthropologist Nicholas Conard (left) and filmmaker Werner Herzog examine artifacts from the Chauvet caves in southern France.
Mark Valesella/IFC Films Anthropologist Nicholas Conard (left) and filmmaker Werner Herzog examine artifacts from the Chauvet caves in southern France.
Filming Inside The Chauvet Caves Making a documentary inside the Chauvet caves was a difficult endeavor — in part because the cave has so many restrictions. All visitors are required to obtain permission from the regional French government and wear protective body suits to prevent the spread of bacteria and biological growth within the cave. Herzog had to convince both government officials and scientists that he would film inside the cave for only one week. “I was only allowed [in the cave] for four hours a day,” Herzog recalls. “I was only allowed three men with me. I was only allowed to carry along what we could in our hands. So we couldn’t move heavy equipment in there. [I could only bring] lights that would emit light without any temperature. And, of course, you never step off the metal walkway.” The men who accompanied Herzog into the cave are frequently seen in the film’s final footage, mainly because they could never leave the metal walkway. But seeing the drawings inside the cave, Herzog says, made all of the restrictions worthwhile. “[The first time I saw the drawings], it was just a moment of complete awe,” he says. “I was not prepared for the fact that the cave was so beautiful. It’s like crystal cathedrals and stalactites and stalagmites and just like a fairy tale universe down there, and I was not prepared. … Facing the paintings, it’s just sheer awe how beautiful and how accomplished they are.”
Interview Highlights On what the cave smelled and felt like “It’s slightly humid. … There is a plan to re-create the cave outside in some sort of what I called the Disneyland version. Since nobody’s going to be allowed in the cave, they will replicate the entire cave. They’ll replicate the paintings on the walls. And there was even a plan to re-create, in our imagination, the scent inside of the cave. Which means maybe some carrion of rotting cave bears, some fire, some … resins. I’ve found a master perfumer who fantasize[s] wildly about how the odor may have been 32,000 years ago. However, when you are entering there, it is slightly humid. There’s no significant traces of any smell of anything significant in there.” On shooting in 3-D “When I saw photos, it looked almost like flat walls — maybe slightly undulating or so. Thank God, I went in there without any camera a month before shooting. What you see in there is limestone, and you have these wildly undulating walls — you have bulges and niches and pendants of rock, and there’s a real incredible drama of information. The artists utilized it for their paintings. … So it was clear it was imperative to do this in 3-D, in particular, because we were the only ones ever allowed to film.”
On how Fred Astaire footage wound up in the documentary “Arguably, or for me, the greatest single sequence in all of film history [is] Fred Astaire dancing with his own shadows, and all of a sudden he stops and the shadows become independent and dance without him and he has to catch up with them. It’s so quintessential movie. It can’t get more beautiful. It’s actually from Swing Time [1938]. And when you look at the cave and certain panels, there’s evidence of some fires on the ground. They’re not for cooking. They were used for illumination. You have to step in front of these fires to look at the images, and when you move, you must see your own shadow. And immediately, Fred Astaire comes to mind — who did something 32,000 years later which is essentially what we can imagine for early Paleolithic people.”
ZAGREB (Reuters) ? A centre-left opposition bloc is on course to take power in Croatia on Sunday but faces a tougher fight to revive the ex-Yugoslav republic’s flagging economy before it joins the European Union in 2013.
Voters look set to punish Prime Minister Jadranka Kosor’s conservative HDZ for corruption scandals and rising unemployment.
The opposition bloc, led by the Social Democrats (SDP) of former diplomat Zoran Milanovic and known as Kukuriku, is forecast to win a majority of the 151 seats in parliament, according to a poll on Wednesday by Ipsos Puls.
The HDZ, Croatia’s dominant political party since independence in 1991, is polling a distant second.
Milanovic, 45, would take the reins just as Croatia, a tourist hotspot of 4.3 million people on the Adriatic, faces its deepest economic downturn as an independent state.
His first task will be to avert a credit rating downgrade by introducing a lean state budget by the end of March.
Milanovic has said he expects “sweat, but no blood or tears.”
He told Reuters on Thursday: “Croatia is in a financial crisis. We will have to face up to the fact that we have been living beyond our means.”
More than two decades after it split from Yugoslavia in a 1991-95 war, Croatia is due to join fellow ex-Yugoslav republic Slovenia in the EU in July 2013.
The country’s economy boomed over the past decade on the back of foreign lending and services that largely replaced its socialist-era industry.
Sleek highways were carved through the countryside to the Adriatic coast and the property market thrived. But governments failed to curb lavish state spending, cut red tape or reform the labor market. Now it appears the debt crisis has hit much harder than expected.
“DRASTIC REFORMS”
The Kukuriku (cock-a-doodle-doo) alliance, which took its name from a restaurant on the coast where the party leaders agreed to join forces, says it plans a combination of austerity measures and steps to revive industry and attract foreign investment.
It has not ruled out turning to the International Monetary Fund as a “last resort” to cope with the fallout from the euro zone crisis.
The HDZ government won praise from the EU for pursuing an anti-graft campaign over the past two years that saw former party leader and prime minister Ivo Sanader in court.
But the extent of government graft uncovered has hurt the party’s standing, with a number of senior party officials arrested or questioned over alleged slush funds diverting profits from state firms or doctoring public tenders.
Now Croatia’s poor economic shape is causing concern in Brussels, where enthusiasm for further expansion to the poorer countries of the Western Balkans was already waning before the sovereign debt crisis shook the foundations of the union.
Despite the fact they are not joining the euro zone, “more and more EU governments and parliaments are starting to think about the economic performance of new member states,” said a senior EU diplomat in Zagreb, who declined to be named.
Despite an otherwise stable banking sector, one small local lender collapsed last week because of mismanagement. Soccer players from two Croatian Premier League clubs have gone on strike over unpaid salaries.
Many shop windows in the capital Zagreb are pasted with closure or discount notices.
Unemployment stood at 17.4 percent in October. The biggest national union, SSSH, estimates that at least 20,000 workers have lost their jobs since 2009, while another 15,000 are working without pay.
“The new government must immediately start drastic reforms,” said Vladimir Ferdelji, a local businessman who heads the national managers’ association. Otherwise, he said, Croatia risks going the way of Greece.
“This will mean street protests, unstable government, devaluation of the kuna, a massive rise in unemployment, unless we make big changes,” Ferdelji said.
Polling stations open at 7 a.m. (2 a.m. EDT) and close at 7 p.m., when exit polls will follow. An official, preliminary count is expected by midnight.
(Reporting by Zoran Radosavljevic; Editing by Matt Robinson)
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LOS ANGELES ? The latest “Twilight” movie has plenty of daylight left with a second-straight win at the weekend box office.
“The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn ? Part 1″ took in $42 million domestically over the three-day weekend and $62.3 million in the five-day Thanksgiving boom time from Wednesday to Sunday. That raised its domestic total to $221.3 million, while it added $71.5 million overseas, lifting its worldwide total to $489.3 million.
Debuting at No. 2 was the family flick “The Muppets,” with $29.5 million for the three-day weekend and $42 million over the five-day holiday haul.
Three other family films rounded out the top-five for the three-day weekend: “Happy Feet Two” at 3 with $13.4 million; “Arthur Christmas” at No. 4 with $12.7 million; and “Hugo” at No. 5 with $11.4 million.
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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/21134540/vp/45441244#45441244
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NEW DELHI (Reuters) ? Trade Minister Anand Sharma said on Friday that the government’s new policy to allow foreign supermarkets into the country would create 10 million jobs over three years, while not affecting smaller, domestic retailers.
The government on Thursday approved 51 percent foreign direct investment in the supermarket sector, paving the entry of firms such as Wal-Mart, Tesco and Carrefour into one of the world’s largest untapped markets. (Reporting by Abhijit Neogy; editing by Malini Menon)
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STOCKHOLM (Reuters) ? Zlatan Ibrahimovic has inspired sportswear manufacturer Nike to create a jacket based on the tattoos on the Sweden and AC Milan forward’s upper body.
“Tattoos are an art form and were very suitable for this project,” Nike Nordic PR manager Jeannette Francke told Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet.
“It’s a very personal jacket.”
Ibrahimovic will get to keep one of the four jackets made with another going on display in a store in the Swedish capital Stockholm.
“To get a jacket like this is both unexpected and fun,” said the striker.
The last two will go on display in Amsterdam, where Ibrahimovic once played for Ajax, and fashion capital Milan, both of whose clubs he has represented.
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By now if you've been following the European Galaxy Nexus launch, you'll be aware of the infamous volume bug that results in volume levels spiking all over the place when the phone (or something else nearby) is in 2G mode on a 900MHz network. This morning Google and Samsung confirmed that they're aware of the problem and have a software fix ready to go. However that hasn't stopped the cries from across the blogosphere (and beyond) that the root cause is a hardware fault, and that Google is papering over the cracks by fixing it with software. Some have even called for Samsung to issue a recall of all Nexuses sold over the past week.
Enter systems engineer, app developer and all-round voice of reason Lee Johnston (known here on AC as britishturbo). He posted the following explanation in our comments section, and again on his Google+ page. For us mere mortals, it does a great job of explaining what's really going on, why it's a common issue with complex electronic devices like cellphones, and why we don't need to worry.
I'm a Systems Engineer and also a Developer. I deal with things like this every day. What we have here is indeed a hardware issue, in that the radio interference is coming in through the radio hardware. However things like this can be fix fairly easily in software. It's called debounce.
When you monitor an electronic input like the buttons on a phone there is always noise and flutter even when you just press the button. If testing by Google has shown that they just need to turn up the debounce time (the time which an input must exceed for it to be determined to be a genuine press) then it will more than likely just work and no one will ever see it again.
Like I said I deal with this kind of thing every day, it's not a big deal as long as your debounce time is not excessive. But noise happens down on the order of 1 to 40 ms, real inputs when you press a button last from 100 or 200ms if you tap the button, up to seconds if you hold it down.
This is nothing like Apple and the iPhone 4 antennae problems that could not be fixed in software. I'm sure everyone will see in due time, the problem will be fixed, and the dust will blow over.
And people will be saying "wow, I was wrong, Google rocks!"
Over on Google+, Google engineer Dan Morrill reshared the post, saying Lee's post was "completely accurate" description of a "very common phenomenon", with the increase in debounce time being the "classic fix". So that's that.
Our own Jerry Hildenbrand had similar things to say when this first cropped up a few days ago — it's impossible to completely protect a complex device like a smartphone from RF interference, and some of it has to be managed with code. As such, something like the Nexus volume bug can absolutely be fixed with a software update, just as Lee Johnston explains above.
Source: AC Comments, Google+
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/kUxmw6z3cQo/story01.htm
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Robert Ray / AP
A pedestrian walks across a bridge along the Chicago River in downtown Chicago past a bridge house with a Bank of America advertising banner. The advertisements installed this month are turning heads and reviving a debate over how governments around the world raise money in tough economic times.
By Carla K. Johnson, Robert Ray, The Associated Press
?Seven vinyl banners draped this month along one of Chicago’s most iconic bridges, advertisements some have dubbed “a visual crime” and “commercial graffiti,” are reviving a debate about how governments raise money in tough economic times.
In the aftermath of the Great Recession, a public school district in Colorado is selling ads on report cards and Utah has a new law allowing ads on school buses. Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s administration, straining to fill a $600 million budget hole, is looking to raise $25 million from ads on city property ? including bridges, electrical storage boxes and garbage cans.
The effort kicked off this month with Bank of America ads on the 81-year-old Wabash Avenue Bridge, which crosses the Chicago River and has appeared in movies including “About Last Night” and “The Dark Knight.”
“I think it’s disgusting,” Chicago resident Linda Rosenthal said recently, shaking her head as she surveyed the signs. “The architecture in Chicago is stunning. To see this awful advertisement angers me.”
The white ads with blue lettering and Bank of America’s logo are posted on limestone bridge tender houses, which hold the equipment used to raise the bridge when tall boats pass beneath. Bank of America paid $4,500 to put seven signs on the bridge for about a month, said city spokeswoman Kathleen Strand.
Strand promised the city’s new campaign will have “policies to protect the integrity of Chicago’s facade” and likened the initiative to the Chicago Transit Authority bringing in about $20 million annually from abundant ads on buses and elevated trains that don’t seem to anger anybody.
“The municipal marketing strategy is really about pursuing innovative opportunities to avoid having to cut city services or increase the tax burden on Chicagoans,” Strand said.
Still, some ask where the line will be drawn. Could the city’s historic Water Tower be next? Or Grant Park’s famed Buckingham Fountain?
The city’s two major daily newspapers have faced off with opposing views. Chicago Tribune architecture critic Blair Kamin called the bridge ads “a visual crime” and “a grotesque cheapening of the public realm.” A Chicago Sun-Times editorial said the ads, while unappealing, “beat going bust.”
Bank of America spokeswoman Diane Wagner said the company said yes when Chicago officials asked if the bank wanted to advertise on the bridge because it’s a major employer and philanthropic supporter in the city.
“We agreed to be the first company to display on the bridge because we want to help the city explore new revenue sources and we think this is an innovative way to generate new revenue,” Wagner said.
Was it a smart move?
Chicago advertising professionals doubt it was a smart move for either side.
“I have made my living in advertising, but there has to be better ways to raise money,” said Tim Terchek, executive creative director of the Drucker Group ad firm. What’s more, the bridge ads could backfire if public disgust sticks to the bank, he said.
Leo Burnett Company’s chief strategy officer Stephen Hahn-Griffiths overlooks the bridge ads altogether.
“It’s like commercial graffiti,” Hahn-Griffiths said. “It makes no sense from a marketing perspective and I question the intent of doing this because it does not seem like a smart decision.”
Former Milwaukee Mayor John Norquist, president and CEO of the Chicago-based Congress for the New Urbanism, suggested the city could instead rent out spaces like the City Hall lobby or library and cultural center theaters for weddings and other events.
“Placing advertising on a city’s architectural assets takes away from the public realm,” Norquist said.
Some officials across the country, and the world, disagree.
In Rome, an Italian shoe company founder has pledged to foot $34 million to restore the Colosseum ? the ancient arena blackened by pollution ? and its founder has said the gesture could launch more private sponsorship for public benefit in Italy. In Venice, Mayor Giorgio Orsoni defended the use of publicity on restoration of such projects as the famed Doges Palace, saying sponsors’ contribution allowed the work to be accelerated.
But Venice also has strict rules on the use of advertisements. Only 10 percent of an exposed facade can be covered, and ads for cigarettes, alcohol and those featuring nudity are banned.
Back in the U.S., a suburban Salt Lake City school district plans to be Utah’s first to plaster its buses with advertisements in an effort to generate additional revenue without raising taxes. While the ad revenue is expected to supplement the Jordan School District’s budget, officials said it won’t be enough to make up for the recent budget cuts.
It’s a similar story in Golden, Colo., where Jefferson County Public Schools’ report cards now feature ads for the CollegeInvest college savings program. The ads raise $30,000 a year.
“Parents understand where we are at with the funding issues and most of the reaction has been positive,” said school district spokeswoman Lorie Gillis.
Retiree Jim Phillips, who leads free tours of Chicago’s bridges, challenged the city to channel public curiosity about the structures into money-making ventures, such as charging tourists to see the bridge houses’ inner workings.
“If it gets to the point advertisements go on more of these historic structures, I don’t think there’s any way to stop them on others,” Phillips said. “What if you put a NASCAR suit on the Picasso? What if you slapped a Google sign on one of the lions at the Art Institute?”
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By now if you've been following the European Galaxy Nexus launch, you'll be aware of the infamous volume bug that results in volume levels spiking all over the place when the phone (or something else nearby) is in 2G mode on a 900MHz network. This morning Google and Samsung confirmed that they're aware of the [...]
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Podcast MP3 URL: http://traffic.libsyn.com/androidcentral/acpc69.mp3 Thing 1: U.S. Galaxy S II event Which Samsung Galaxy S II is right for you? Hands-on with the Sprint Galaxy S II Epic 4G Touch (updated with video) Hands-on with AT&T’s Galaxy S II (updated with video) Eyes on the T-Mobile Galaxy S II (updated with eyes-on video) Thing 2: [...]
LOS ANGELES ? Hollywood organizations and entertainment unions are uniting in support of filmmakers jailed in Iran. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, American Society of Cinematographers, International Documentary Association and American Cinema Editors released statements Wednesday condemning the arrests of six independent filmmakers in Iran last month. The groups were joined by [...]
St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa and players celebrate after Game 6 of baseball’s National League championship series against the Milwaukee Brewers Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011, in Milwaukee. The Cardinals won 12-6 to win the series and advance to the World Series. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa and [...]