Tuesday, November 20, 2007

More Wet Around Period

Eyes Wide Shut


Eyes Wide Shut, the latest masterpiece by Stanley Kubrick , that sees the return of a genius after twelve years since his last work, Full metal jacket.
Based on the novel by Arthur Schnitzler entitled Double Dream, Eyes Wide Shut shows parallel paths, those of husband and wife, in confusion and self-awareness.
Small changes to the story of the Viennese writer make such a difference to achieve the outcome of a story with implications disturbing and tragic set in the contemporary reality that sees the spread of a mysterious origins of disease such as AIDS.



Thursday, November 15, 2007

Egg Substitute In Salmon Cakes




Time Square

Times Square is one of the major intersections in Manhattan, at the intersection of Broadway and sEvent Avenue and stretching from West 42nd Street to West 47th Street. Times Square is formed by the blocks between Sixth Avenue and Eighth Avenue between West 40th Street and West 53rd Street, forming the most westerly part of the commercial area of \u200b\u200bMidtown Manhattan.
Although smaller than the Red Square in Moscow, the Puerta del Sol in Madrid, the Champs-Elysees in Paris, in London's Trafalgar Square or Tiananmen Square in Beijing, Times Square, however, has reached an iconic status and has become Landscaping a symbol of his city. Times Square is best known for large and numerous billboards and digital animation.

Salon Welcome Letter New Residents

The American Dream A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess



the Letter of Anthony Burgess' Los Angeles Times


I saw A Clockwork Orange by Stanley Kubrick in New York I had to do to get elbowed as everyone else. It seemed to me that the show deserved a lot of crowd: it is in every way a Kubrick film, technically brilliant, witty, precise, poetic, able to open up new perspectives to the spirit. I managed to watch the movie as a total reconstruction of my novel, and not as a simple interpretation, it is not exaggeration to say that it is of the 'Orange mechanics of Stanley Kubrick, "and this is the greatest tribute I can make the skill of the director.
But the fact remains that the film came from a book, and I think a few comments about the movie inevitably relate to me. In terms of philosophy and theology, the orange of Kubrick is the fruit of my tree.



Clockwork Orange wrote long ago, in 1961, and I have some difficulty in giving guidance on what the writer that far away now, having to earn a living, had come to produce five novels (including this one) in fourteen months . The title is the easiest thing to explain. In 1945, when returning from the front, in a London pub I heard a cockney octogenarian said of someone who was "busted as a Clockwork Orange". I became curious expression for the odd mix of vernacular and surreal.
For nearly twenty years I wanted to use it as a basis for some of my work: I've had the opportunity then when I conceived the project of writing a novel about brainwashing.
The British press had spoken with a certain persistence of the increase in crime.
What do these guys? Prison reformers do not or worse, so why not save taxpayers' money by subjecting them to an easy-conditioning, a kind of therapy disgust, to generate in them an association between acts of violence and discomfort, nausea or even evocations of death? So many to adopt this proposal (which at the time was not a government proposal, but merely an idea expressed by individual theorists, as influential).



Clockwork Orange would be a kind of manifesto, or even a sermon on the importance of being able to choose from. My hero, or antihero, Alex, is truly evil, to a level unthinkable, but his evil is not the product of a theoretical or social conditioning - it is his personal business, which has embarked on full brightness. Alex is bad, and not only misguided, so in a properly organized society like his evil deeds must be punished.
But his evil is human: we can see potential in aggressive acts in us, that the citizen does not materialize in the war criminal, social iniquity, the evil that is practiced in the family, dreams that are grown in their own little corner . Alex is humanity in three ways: it is aggressive, loves beauty, uses of language.
It is ironic that his name can be understood as "speechless" as he has invented an entire vocabulary, its staff, a group of jargon. Yet even he does not spend a word for what concerns the management of the community, or organization of state: for him this last is but a mere object, a thing far away as the moon, even if less passive.
From a theological point of view, evil is not measurable. Yet I believe in the principle that an 'action may be more of an evil' other, and that the last act of evil is the dehumanization and murder of the soul - which brings us back to talk about the choice of good deeds good and bad. Requires an individual can only be good and just, and kill his soul in the name of the alleged good of social stability. My dish
Kubrick and want to say that it is preferable to a world of violence knowingly taken - such as voluntary choice - in a world conditioned, programmed to be good or harmless.
In the film, as well as in the book, the evil done by the state, doing the brainwashing of Alex, is quite spectacular. Alex loves Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, and used as a stimulus to her dreams of violence. This was his choice, but nothing would prevent him from using the music as a mere consolation, or take it in the image of the divine order. The fact that when conditioning starts he has not yet made the best choice, does not mean it never will.
But due to the disgust of therapy that Beethoven associated violence, this choice is precluded him forever. It is a punishment that acts on the involuntary, and is equivalent to rob a man - act stupid and irrational - of his right to rejoice in God's vision.



What upsets me is that Kubrick, and that some readers and viewers of A Clockwork Orange claim to having found a free pleasure in portraying the violence, which turns the work of "social message" to a mere pornography.
Certainly, without the violence would have been nicer, but the story of Alex amendment would lose power if it had not been able to see what it was correcting. For me, portraying the violence had to be a cathartic and charitable act together, because my wife was the victim of a cruel and reckless violence in London in 1942, at the time of the bombing was raped and beaten by three American deserters. Perhaps readers of my book will recall that the author of the work entitled A Clockwork Orange is a writer whose wife was raped.
Some viewers of the film have been disturbed by the fact that Alex, despite his cruelty, it is still worthy of affection. But if we have to love the human race, we still love Alex as a member representative. If
Clockwork Orange, as well as in 1984, falls into the category of literary health warnings - or film - the indifference, the feeling morbid and excessive confidence of the state, then this will have some value.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Cervix Before Ovulation

iPhone




iPhone is a revolutionary new mobile phone that allows you to
make calls simply by touching the name or number

in your address book, or in your favorite list
. Also syncs all your contacts
,
directly from your PC, from your Mac or Internet service
. It lets you select and listen to voice messages in

any order you like, just like e-mail.

iPhone is an iPod with a large touch screen that allows you to enjoy

content, including music, audiobooks, videos, television programs, movies and

all this on a nice 3.5 inches. It allows you to synchronize

the contents of your iTunes library on your PC or Mac and access all

content with the touch of a finger
.


also contains one of the most advanced web browser ever on a portable device
.






Tawnee Stone Wikepedia




JANNERET CHARLES-EDOUARD - Le Corbusier
Man, Architect and treatises

Temperament by Swiss watchmaker and, together, an abstract painter; maniac codified and propagandist of extraordinary versatility; adamant supporter of plans, eager to excel, rather than for the excellence of poetic results for brilliant clarity, methodological, grumpy, selfish, sarcastic, lyrical, sensitive to social issues not so much for real participation, and for the need to enclose the algebraic systems by human behavior.


"individualism, the result of delirium, we prefer the banal, the common
the rule rather than the exception. The common rule, the common rule are
strategic foundation of the way towards progress and the beautiful. The good general
attracts us, and the heroic beauty seems to be a dramatic accident. We love
solution and distrust of the failures, though grandly dramatic. "

"Architecture is the learned game, correct and magnificent play of volumes assembled under light ..
, cubes, cones, spheres, cylinders and pyramids are the great primary forms
that the light effectively concretized ... because they are
beautiful shapes, forms most beautiful architecture ... The Egyptian, Greek and Roman architecture is a
of prisms, cubes, cylinders or spheres trihedron ... Gothic architecture,
in its essence is not based on spheres, cones and cylinders, only the aisle
expresses a simple form, but a second degree in the complex geometry of intersections
warheads. That is not a cathedral is very beautiful, and we will seek compensation
subjective in nature, unrelated to the plastic values \u200b\u200b.... "

Can You Wax A Snowboard With Floor Wax?

Le Corbusier Ville Savoye


Villa Savoye Le Corbusier Poissy 1929-1931

placed in a park at 30 km from Paris, offers visitors a glimpse, as the temple of the Fidia Propylaea.
Plant: virtually a square elementary radical.
Structure: Mesh square of thin tubes and floors of reinforced concrete, the Dom-Ino in standard edition.




Volume: a box wrapped with perfect surfaces and diaphanous suspended on stilts. Continuous strips, glassy, \u200b\u200band panoramic; transparent diaphragm and sliding between living room and terrace, to unify the indoors with an enclosed open space, above the heady game model of the solar which leads to the "architectural promenade".


Villa Savoye Giedion considers the document most striking architectural cubism; purist in key does not seem doubtful. The traditional building splits the subject into perspective the main front, sides and back, with the fourth dimension and Picasso, this hierarchy is absurd, and this is enshrined in a cut, literally, making it nearly identical facades.


The Cubist explode the shell penetrating the interior of the object: a ramp splits the villa with a wound that coagulates the discourse of the longitudinal cavity, the cartilage can be seen behind the rounded ground floor, there you go, leaving left free forms of the scale of the table and flower stands, reaching the first level, revealing on one hand the terrace in front of the residence, the right atriums of the rooms, ending up on the roof-garden, with a dance of undulating shapes .


generating plant? Sure, but not the section that allows you to conquer any inert each withdrawal. Gemmea stereometria signals from miles away and accessible from any side, even from under the equivalent image in symbiosis.

Also in 1927, Le Corbusier drew up those five aspects of architecture, to theorize the fundamental principles of the modern movement, which are reflected in the new Villa Savoye:
  • Pillars
  • The Garden Terrace The Plant
  • Free
  • The ribbon window
  • the free side