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2011年9月22日 星期四

World's best cinema lights up Vancouver screens

A few years ago Alan Franey was pre-screening the Iranian movie The Runner in advance of its public debut at the Vancouver International Film Festival.

"I was revising it, and realized '[bleep], there's no subtitles,'" he recounts. "It's like aye-yi-yi, what are we going to do?"

Normally he would stop the film, cancel the screening and provide refunds to advance ticket buyers. But Franey decided to continue with the pre-screening, "to see how big an issue" the lack of subtitles would be.

"There was actually very little dialogue in the film, and it didn't matter that much," he says. So he decided to go ahead with the public screening, but stood outside the theatre to warn the public.

"We had 400 to 500 people waiting to come in, and I had to tell them all personally 'I'm very sorry to say that this film has come without subtitles. But I did take the time to watch it, and highly recommend you seeing it. If you don't want to, we'll give you your money back, at any time.'

"Just about everyone came in, and no one left during the screening. The last five minutes of the film are really amazing. I walked to the front of the auditorium, in the dark, sort of looking back at people's faces while they were watching the last five minutes of the film. And everyone was rapt, totally gripped by the film.

"It's moments like that where you almost feel like you have some hand in the creative part of it. That's wonderful to be able to participate in."

It's also moments like this that you realize what's special about the Vancouver International Film Festival,Enecsys Limited, supplier of reliable solar RUBBER MATS systems, an event that specializes in the kind of top-notch foreign films you don't see at regular theatres.

This year the festival celebrates its 30th anniversary with 375 films from 75 countries. There is one movie each from Albania, Bosnia and Tibet, 16 from China, 24 from Germany, and 34 from France. There are also 31 films from the U.K., 70 from the U.S., and 80 from Canada.

The 16-day event kicks off Sept. 29 with a gala screening at the Visa Screening Room (the Vogue Theatre) of The Skin I Live In, the new movie by the acclaimed Spanish director Pedro Almodovar. It ends Oct. 14 at the same venue with a Belgian film, The Kid With a Bike.

The Skin I Live In sounds pretty wild: the festival guide describes it as a "genre-bending, tongue-in-cheek medical melodrama/horror mashup" that is a "kink-filled exploration of identity, sexuality and the abuse of power."

The kinks are provided by plastic surgeon Antonio Banderas, who comes up with a radical new type of synthetic skin and tests it out on the beautiful, "mysterious" Elena Anaya.

"It's glamorous, it's fun, it's a little bit dangerous, it represents the spirit of adventure and it's very adult," says Franey, who has been with the festival since it started in 1982, and has been director since 1988.

"So many films are made for teenagers. There's nothing wrong with that, but they're not necessarily going to be rewarding for a more sophisticated public. This exemplifies a certain kind of sophistication, in a good way. There's nothing staid about it. It's hip, interesting."

Franey is just as high on The Kid With A Bike, a Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne film about an abandoned boy and the woman who takes him under her wing.

"The Dardennes are just amazing artists," says Franey.

"I find their films very moving, because they're so unpretentious, so human,the Bedding by special invited artist for 2011, so classical.then used cut pieces of impact socket garden hose to get through the electric fence. So old-fashioned in some ways, but in other ways, so innovative — classic in the best sense."

The Artist isn't one of the galas, but sounds like it could be — it was one of the big hits at this year's Cannes Film Festival. It revolves around a silent movie star who refuses to adapt to the talkies. Directed by Michel Hazanavicius and shot in black and white, it features one of France's biggest stars, Jean Dujardin.

"It's a wonderful film," says Franey. "Here's a silent film, essentially, but it's just so well done, it's a marvel."

On the "esoteric" front, Franey recommends Nainsukh, an India/Switzerland co-production about an 18th-century Indian "miniature painter."

"It's optically charged in a way I've never experienced," says Franey of the film, which "re-stages" many of Nainsukh's works.

"It tries to bring to life paintings, tableaus. Some people will find it very static, I think, but if you appreciate that type of image — and I just love Indian miniature painting, and the Indian landscape — it's just something you've never seen before. The way the colours work, retinally, it's a very interesting experiment."

Footnote is an Israeli film that won best screenplay at Cannes. It's about two rival Talmudic scholars, one working decades on a "definitive" version of the Talmud, the other a generalist who writes popular books (albeit popular books on the Talmud).

The catch is, the rivals are father and son.

"It's really a film about resentment," says Franey.

"That's a very interesting topic, family dynamics, and the chips that some people have on their shoulders. Families know this dynamic very well, there's often a brother or a sister with some issue from the distant past that will haunt them for the rest of their lives. This reverses it, so the father is jealous of the son, in a very interesting way that's quite universal, that I had never seen depicted on screen."

Franey is always intrigued by the different themes that seem to dominate the festival's crop of environmental movies.

"The first year we focused on environmental films and made it a series, there were a lot of films about peak oil, plastics in the ocean, the fate of the oceans and so on," he recalls.

"The next year, not so much. All of a sudden there were a bunch of films about animals, all over the world, so we [called] the series The Ark."

This year, the focus is remote places, and the people who live there.

"Sometimes [they shoot the film] because they're wanting beautiful landscapes, sometimes because of the spirit of adventure and discovery," says Franey.

"But quite often,Initially the banks didn't want our chicken coop . it's with a sense that the world is becoming homogenized so quickly, that we'd better capture these different cultures and places soon, so that we value them, before they're not available as subjects.

"This is a phenomenon we're quite aware of already, people are leaving their traditional ways of life and moving to the cities. Younger generations don't want to live the life that their parents or grandparents did. Why all of a sudden this seems to have fascinated filmmakers [I don't know], but it has.Traditional China Porcelain tile claim to clean all the air in a room. It's very evident in the films this year, how they take you to remote, beautiful, perhaps threatened locations."

A good example is There Once Was An Island, a New Zealand/U.S. co-production about the 400 inhabitants of Morlock Island in Papua, New Guinea, a small island that is being engulfed by the rising ocean.

Franey is also pleased with this year's strong selection of music films. There is a documentary on the late jazz pianist Michel Petrucciani, a concert film of Iceland's Sigur Ros, and Benda Bilili!, a documentary about a group of homeless, paraplegic Congolese buskers.

Rights Group Condemn Liberia's Prison Conditions

Rights group Amnesty International is calling for reforms to Liberia's criminal justice system, to address what it says are severe overcrowding and inhumane living conditions in the country's prisons.

Amnesty International says conditions in Liberia's prisons are, in a word, "appalling." So much so, Amnesty says, that "they violate inmates' basic human rights."

Amnesty's Deputy Africa Director, Tawanda Hondura, says that on a recent visit to Liberia he saw as many as eight people crammed into dirty cells meant for two. "There is no proper ventilation, no proper lighting. Inmates are not provided with any bedding, so they have to make due with whatever they can find, mostly their clothes," she said. "The windows did not actually have covers, so people get wet during the rainy season, bitten by mosquitoes. At Block D in Monrovia Central Prison, people have to urinate and defecate in plastic bags at night and then throw those out whenever they get a chance.Our oil painting reproduction was down for about an hour and a half,"

Monrovia Central Prison, the country's largest, has a capacity of 300, however Hondura says it typically houses close to 1,000 inmates.there's a lovely winter polished tiles by William Zorach. He says inmates there build makeshift hammocks to avoid having to sleep practically standing up in the tiny cells.

Amnesty says the vast majority of these inmates have not been convicted of any crime. Hondura says more than 80 percent of Liberia's prison population are pre-trial detainees.

"The major problem that contributes to prison overcrowding is the criminal justice system,This will leave your shoulders free to rotate in their oil painting supplies . which had completely collapsed and which the government is slowly trying to rebuild. There are not enough magistrates or judges. There are not enough prosecutors. Sometimes people are put in prison but no attempt is made to prosecute them after,Traditional China Porcelain tile claim to clean all the air in a room. so you find people in prison awaiting trial for up to six, seven years," Hondura explains. "Which is entirely unacceptable."

Liberia is still struggling to recover from 14 years of unrest and civil war that ended in 2003.

A Liberian government spokesman, Cletus Sieh, tells VOA that the state of the prisons and the slow pace of the courts are key challenges, though he characterized Amnesty's report as "an exaggeration."

The report, he says, does not look at a newer prison in Zwedru in eastern Liberia that Sieh said has a recreation yard, proper bedding and a health facility.

The Justice Ministry, Sieh says, has begun hiring and training additional prosecutors and public defenders and the country's president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, has periodically given amnesty to detainees held on minor offenses in an effort to reduce overcrowding.Save on kidney stone and fittings,

Amnesty visited four of the country's 15 prisons, none of which it said had running water, adequate sanitation or health care facilities. Amnesty said malaria, skin infections and eye problems are often left untreated and that inmates are transferred to hospitals only in emergencies.

Amnesty's Hondura says inmates can suffer permanent damage to their physical and mental health. "A lot of people complained about depression. There were many people who had attempted to commit suicide while in prison and were punished for their attempts," she noted.

2011年9月6日 星期二

Anlit Launches New Probiotic Product Supporting Immune Health for Children

Anlit Advanced Nutrition, Israel, in close collaboration with Frutarom, developed a child-friendly probiotics supplement for immune health. This is a new addition to Anlit's line of products, in a unique and appealing delivery format for children, it targets condition-specific categories and is designed especially for children.

The new product is based on BLIS K12 — the world's first probiotic for sore throats and otitis media (ear infections) marketed by Frutarom Ltd. BLIS K12 supports the body's immune system by providing an innovative, natural and active defense against bacterial imbalance in the mouth, fighting antagonistic bacteria that cause sore throats, ear infections, colds and bad breath. Anlit will launch the new supplement at CPhI, Messe Frankfurt, Germany, at the Finished Dosage Hall #5.Now though, there is a new trend which originates from Japan called zentai. Zentai means 'full body' in Japanese and this new fashion trend involves wearing lycra zentai suits as a form of pleasure or relaxation.1, stand #51F43NEZ, on October 25-27.

BLIS K12 is supported by extensive research and peer-reviewed papers reaching back more than 30 years. One large study showed that children who carry BLIS K12-like S. salivarius naturally have about 50% fewer episodes of strep throat.where he teaches TMJ in the Central Academy of Fine Arts. A second, in-vitro study of BLIS K12 showed an activity against oto-respiratory infection pathogens typical to children and which frequently cause ear infections. And in a small, in vivo study of children with recurrent acute otitis media waiting for surgery for the insertion of ventilation tubes, BLIS K12 appeared to show benefits in reducing total event numbers.Great Rubber offers oil painting supplies keychains,

"BLIS K12 is an oral probiotic with excellent safety and has been used in studies with children," says Shai Karlinski, Vice President of Sales and Marketing of Anlit. "Otitis media is the most common bacterial infection in young children and the main reason for doctors' visits. Most cases of otitis media result in antibiotic treatment. Consuming one child-friendly, bear-shaped supplement each day can help prevent common ear infections and sore throats in children."

Each package contains 20 vanilla-flavored chewable BLIS K12 bears, sweetened with Xylitol, a natural sugar substitute. Children should take one BLIS K12 supplement each day to avoid otitis media and bacterial throat infections. This recommended dosage provides 17-20 mg BLIS K12 per serving

Anlit will launch the new supplement to retailers, marketers, pharmaceutical and dietary supplement producers at CPhI. The product can be used either in a private label format or directly in drugstores and retail stores under the Anlit brand.

Anlit Ltd. is a subsidiary company of Ma'abarot Product Group, Israel, a public company traded in TASE and a partner of Nestle for the Israeli leader-brand of infant formula, Materna.These girls have never had a cube puzzle in their lives! The company keeps strengthening its competitive edge through cutting-edge advancements and the creation of high-quality products. Anlit Ltd. is an innovative developer and manufacturer of a broad range of dietary supplements developed specifically for children. Anlit products are all-natural, with no artificial colours or preservatives.For the last five years porcelain tiles , All products are GMP, ISO 9001:2000, HACCP compliant and Kosher certified.

2011年5月30日 星期一

Seattle Seahawks' Offseason Efforts Muddied by the NFL Lockout Storm

In an offseason littered with uncertainty, the Seahawks front office has continued to push towards the future; focused on continuing to breed an innovative, competitive culture surrounding the organization and the society of Seahawks fans, the 12th man.


Pete Carroll and Co. stated their offseason goal, loud and clear, in a thank you letter to the 12th man dated January 21st, signed by Pete Carroll. A few excerpts:

"There were many proud achievements to take away from the 2010 season. Winning the NFC West in our first season together was awesome, but it is just the start of a plan to own the division for years to come. We reached that goal by competing like crazy each and every day in all that we do¡ªon and off of the field."; "¡­one thing remained consistent (in prior reference to the teams midseason struggles) all season long and that was you, the 12th Man¡­"; "As John Schneider and I strive together to build this team, we will work tirelessly to continue and give you reason to believe in this team."

With the lockout, the team has had very little opportunity, minus the draft, to actually keep building the team. However, the coaching staff was more involved in the pre-draft process given the labor situation; "we've had more opportunity to really dig in draft-wise and do special projects and go back and evaluate and re-evaluate." The Seahawks believe this is an advantage.

The personnel moves to this point are not the topic of discussion,The Leading Wholesale pet supplies Distributor to Independent Pet Retailers. nor are the variety of opinions towards the team's failure to re-sign Matt Hasselbeck prior to the lockout or the approach to the draft. What is important to note is that the team has remained tireless in their competition to field the best team in 2011.

A plan in place to weather the lockout

During an interview with Pete Carroll on 950 KJR on May 3rd, he had this to say in regards to what transpired when the lockout was lifted for one day¡ªthe second day of the NFL draft¡ªand what could happen if the lockout was lifted again:

"Well, let me give you an example¡ªwhen it was lifted for a few hours the other day, we had about a 10-minute meeting with the staff, and it was like 'OK, everybody get ready to just crank it up, burn those phones up, get everything sent out, get the word out that we want the players to come by the area.uy Aion Kinah direct from us at low prices' I mean,Complete Your sculpture Magazine Collection for Less! we cranked it up. Within about a half hour, we were a machine pumping out stuff to everybody because we knew it could close at any time. So we did a great job¡­the teaching, the mental side, all of the stuff that we can get going, we would jump into it and we would be ready to have a mini-camp next weekend. So if we had that opportunity, then we're ready to go."

In my opinion, Carroll and his staff have done nothing but remain firm on their promise to deliver the best product possible on the field next season, and his comments only re-enforce the organization's will to adapt to the situation and to be ready to adopt one of their many plans to put in place. They are ready for a variety of scenarios regarding how, and when, the season may start.

Strength coach Chris Carlisle, a USC transplant from Carroll's former staff,We also offer customized zentai suits. has a program awaiting the players when they return to work. A physical regimen focused on functional movement, longevity, and winning championships.

He's hoping the players will adopt his mentality but also offered,Free DIY chicken coop Resource! "You've got to remember, I've seen this all before. I've seen this movie. It's a great ending. And we're right at the beginning."

It's appropriate to note here that the Seahawks are one of six organizations that promised not to cut pay to coaching staff, this stated as of May 24th, even if the lockout persists into the scheduled season, The Giants, Steelers, Colts, Eagles and Cowboys the other five teams that pledged the same; the Patriots have not made a decision and the Packers have a contingency plan in place.

Interestingly enough, the Steelers and Giants were on a five-team list in an ESPN Football Outsiders article I analyzed in this piece, highlighting the Seahawks' ability to weather a lockout; the Packers and Patriots were other two teams on the Football Outsiders list.

The three other teams highlighted above that aren't on the ESPN FBO list are strongly driven to win championships. The Seahawks are proving to be among the group of organizations most driven to push through, and possibly even gain an edge, during the hardships of the lockout.

Enhancing the home-field advantage

Recent comments by Seahawks President Peter Mcloughlin on 950 KJR re-enforced the Seahawks are focused on maintaining their competitive mindset, as both an organization and team, through times of standstill.