Archive for December, 2007

Best Movies of 2007

Friday, December 28th, 2007

I’m publishing the 10 best movies from Tom Charity, a CNN dude. However, before I do that, let me just mention the movies I most enjoyed this year.

1. Transformers – That’s right!

2. Balls of Fury – Hilarious!
3. Superbad – Some scenes dragged for too long, but overall very funny.

Films I still want to see:
1. I am Legend
2. Beowulf
3. There will be Blood
4. No Country for Old Men
5. Walk Hard
6. The Simpsons

By Tom Charity
(…)Anyway, here are the films that made my year — and three that threatened to ruin it:

There Will Be Blood
Anderson’s lacerating epic about the birth of the oil age. Daniel Day-Lewis, in the best performance of the year, is extraordinary as the prospector entirely consumed with his own enterprise; Paul Dano the evangelist who may be his nemesis.

Into the Wild
Director Sean Penn’s sublime end-of-the-road movie invests its story with beauty and spirit — in a strange way it’s a very heartening tragedy. With Emile Hirsch and vivid support from Catherine Keener, Brian Dierker and Hal Holbrook.

Zodiac
David Fincher found a story to match his own obsessive need for control in this infuriating but brilliant and original film about the elusive (and in some ways debilitating) quest for truth.

The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
Filmed in languid, wispy vignettes by cinematographer Roger Deakins, this is an elegiac, rueful evocation of the death of the Western hero, a slow passing that occurs long before Jesse (Brad Pitt) draws his last breath. Affleck is the disillusioned, romantic Ford — and the film is his tragedy more than anyone’s.

No Country for Old Men
Also shot by Deakins (and in the same location as “There Will Be Blood”), the Coen brothers do right by Cormac McCarthy’s compelling thriller, a kind of lament at the new nihilism.

Once
In an exceptional year for musicals, this shoestring Irish picture seemed freshly minted: a spontaneous and authentic alternative to overproduced schmaltz.

Black Book
“Robocop” director Paul Verhoeven’s first Dutch film in 20 years is a blistering World War II movie featuring sympathetic Nazis and duplicitous Resistance fighters. But this isn’t just role reversal: There is no moral high ground in war, only naked self-interest, desire and desperation. It’s something to compare with the fall’s Iraq movies.

Persepolis
An autobiographical animated film by Marjane Satrapi, an Iranian who grew up in a liberal anti-monarchy Tehran household in the 1970s, then came of age under the ayatollahs and completed her education in Europe. This poignant, very funny memoir puts a personal face on the world’s most pressing culture clash.

Syndromes and a Century
There are directors who become heroes for bending the rules. Then there are those who throw the rule book right out the window. Thailand’s Apichatpong “Joe” Weerasethakul is making movies like nobody before or since. This is one of the strangest art movies of the year, but it’s entirely accessible to anyone open to new experience.

4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days
The Cannes Film Festival prize winner (which screened in Los Angeles for an Oscar qualifying run) is a prodigious if harrowing piece of work. This intense Romanian drama by Cristian Mungiu shines a spotlight into those dark places where angels fear to tread, yet it’s a profoundly moral film.

And the three worst …

Because I Said So
Anyone who thinks “Knocked Up’s” Apatow is sexist should be forced to sit through this wretched comedy in which former feminist icon Diane Keaton does not rest until her 22-year-old daughter (Mandy Moore) is safely wed.

License to Wed
Moore gets hitched again (and they say Lindsay Lohan had a bad year). Robin Williams is the psycho priest who bugs the bedroom of the bride to be and listens in with his choirboy chum.

300
Frankly, it was a tossup for the third spot between this gung-ho Greek meatfest and Michael Bay’s overblown toy commercial, “Transformers.” A lot of people got off on both, I realize, and the computer-generated work was impressive in its way. But no matter how you spin it, war porn is war porn — and we’d better off without it.

Full article

Nine Ways to Build Your Own Social Network

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

The news may overflow with stories about the social networking giants, such as Facebook and MySpace, but a horde of companies are doing their best to reduce the fundamental features of these websites to mere commodities. These up-and-coming companies provide so-called “white label” social networking platforms that enable their customers to build their own social networks (often from scratch) and to tailor those networks to a range of purposes.

The idea of white labeling a network is to make the platform provider as invisible as possible to the social network’s users and to brand the network with the builders identity or intent. While definitions of “social networking” may vary, social networks are primarily defined by member profiles and some sort of user generated content.

There are roughly three types of companies that have emerged in the space of white label social networking. The first provides hosted, do-it-yourself solutions with which customers can largely point and click their way to a brand new social network. Companies of this type interact minimally with their customers and rather focus on providing the network-building tools that they demand.

We have taken a sample of nine of these companies – Ning, KickApps, CrowdVine, GoingOn, CollectiveX, Me.com, PeopleAggregator, Haystack, and ONEsite – all of which provide free baseline services, and reviewed them individually below. We have also included the chart on the right summarizing all of these companies’ offerings. Credit for initial research into these companies goes to Jeremiah Owyang who compiled a comprehensive list of white label social networking services.

Author: Mark Hendrickson

View Full Article Here.

How many virgins?

Friday, December 7th, 2007