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2012年2月28日星期二

500 Days of Summer——A perfect love not meant to last



DVDSmith, a good movie backup website to get this love movie ripped and copied.
We never remember in chronological order, especially when we’re going back over a failed romance. We start near the end, and then hop around between the times that were good and the times that left pain. People always say “start at the beginning,” but we didn’t know at the time it was the beginning. "500 Days of Summer" is a movie that works that way.
Some say they’re annoyed by the way it begins on Day 488 or whatever and then jumps around, providing utterly unhelpful data labels: "Day 1," "Day 249." Movies are supposed to reassure us that events unfold in an orderly procession. But Tom remembers his love, Summer, as a series of joys and bafflements. What kind of woman likes you perfectly sincerely and has no one else in her life but is not interested in ever getting married?
Zooey Deschanel is a good choice to play such a woman. I can’t imagine her playing a clinging vine. Too ornery. As Summer, she sees Tom with a level gaze and is who she is. It’s Tom’s bad luck she is sweet and smart and beautiful — it’s not an act. She is always scrupulously honest with him. She is her own person, and Tom can’t have her.
Have you known someone like that? In romance, we believe what we want to believe. That’s the reason "500 Days of Summer" is so appealing.

Tom is in love with Summer from the moment he sees her. His thoughts on love may not run as deeply as, say, those of the Romantic poets. He writes greeting cards, and you suspect he may believe his own cards. It’s amazing people get paid for a job like that. I could do it: "Love is a rose, and you are its petals." Summer is his new ... assistant? He needs an assistant in this job? She likes his looks and makes her move one day over the Xerox machine.
Can he accept that she simply likes him for now, not for forever? The movie, which is a delightful comedy, alive with invention, is about Tom wrestling with that reality. The director Marc Webb seems to be casting about for templates from other movies to help him tell this story; that’s not desperation, but playfulness. There’s a little black and white, a little musical number, a little Fellini, which is always helpful in evoking a man in the act of yearning. Tom spends this movie in the emotional quandary of Mastroianni in "La Dolce Vita," his hand always outstretched toward his inaccessible fantasies.
Summer remains mysterious all through the film, perhaps because we persist with Tom in expecting her to cave in. When we realize she is not required to in this movie, because it’s not playing by the Hollywood rules, we perk up; anything could happen. The kaleidoscopic time structure breaks the shackles of the three-act grid and thrashes about with the freedom of romantic confusion.
One thing men love is to instruct women. If a woman wants to enchant a man, she is wise to play his pupil. Men fall for this. Tom set out in life to be an architect, not a poet of greeting cards. He and Summer share the same favorite view of Los Angeles (one you may not have seen before), and he conducts for her an architectural tour. This is fun not because we get to see wonderful buildings, but because so rarely in the movies do we find characters arguing for their aesthetic values. What does your average character played by an A-list star believe about truth and beauty? Has Jason Bourne ever gone to a museum on his day off? 
Joseph Gordon-Levitt has acted in a lot of movies, ranging from one of the "Halloween" sequels to the indie gem "Brick." He comes into focus here playing a believable, likable guy, hopeful, easily disappointed, a little Tom Hanksian. He is strong enough to expect love, weak enough to be hurt. Zooey Deschanel evokes that ability in some women to madden you with admiration while never seeming to give it the slightest thought. She also had that quality in the overlooked "Gigantic" (2008), although the movie’s peculiar supporting characters obscured it.
Tom opens the film by announcing it will not be your typical love story. Are you like me, and when you realize a movie is on autopilot you get impatient with it? How long can the characters pretend they don’t know how the story will end? Here is a rare movie that begins by telling us how it will end and is about how the hero has no idea why.
Note: The movie’s poster insists the title is "(500) Days of Summer." Led by Variety, every single film critic whose review I could find has simply ignored that punctuation. Good for them.
Summery:500 Days of Summer, a well done example of relationships where one person is more into it than the other, and how much that can hurt and be confusing. For anyone who has ever experienced this, you can recognize and relate to it. Even if you haven't, it was still entertaining.
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The Best Breakup Movies for believing in yourself


Valentine’s Day came and went and you may have a great day with your couple with a batch of roses or a box of chocolate in a romantic cover. Or you are experiencing a terrible breakup and the feelings like your heart can not beat again in a moment. We know that breakup hurts both parts and the sadness remains in hearts for a long time, or even after many years. Love comes with a simple eye sight and love goes away without a warning. Do you still believe in true love and are you still waiting for your Mr./Ms Right?
Below are some movies for breakup people who experience breakup hurts. They are movies about love and helps you to overcome the hurts and hopes you could find your true love soon!
Up – Never give up love (check my previous post by searching  ”Film Review: Up”)
Up is an animation movie released by Disney in 2005. It is a simple story. Carl and Elly they met the other when they were kids and got married when then grew up. Elle passed away, and left Carl alone when they were old. Carl feels lonely and desperate and does not know what else he can do besides living in the same way to Elle is still alive. Carl decides to chase Elle and his dream and a kid named Russle joins in with Carl. Finally they succeeded.
I believe audience would be touched at the beginning of the movie, memories about Carl and Elle, how they met and know the other, then got married, got old and Elle passed away. Carl also makes up his mind to chase their dream because he loves Elle so much and wants to finishes the dream for Elle.
The movie tells us love can change someone and there is a love named True Love.
Titanic – Believe in love
Titanic is a classic movie and the first edition was released in 1997 and it has been the number 1 on the most profitable movies list until Avatar was released in 2009. Titanic 3D will be released in 2012. It is believed that the new version of the classic love story would make a hit again.
Titanic makes 2 superstars: Kate and Leonardo. Titanic also makes a long-lasting romantic love story.
Jack scarified himself to save Kate’s life. Love is the reason that caused Jack to have such brave and Kate loves Jack forever in the rest of her life.
Jack and Kate their love begins in the Titanic journey and ends when Titanic sank in the sea. Love continues even life is gone. Only love has such power.
The movie tells us love can encourage us to keep moving on for the one you love.
If Only –Cherish the love you have before it is too late
If Only is a love story about the guy chose to die for the girl to save the girl’s life in a car attack. The movie is a story because it makes the same day the same things come again and the actor can choose what to do for the girl.
Ian is a business man in London and Samantha is a student in music colleague. Ian loves Samantha very much but loves his career more.
At the first 30 minutes of the movie, is a day with nothing special except a car attack and the girl dies. The guy feels so sad and can’t fall asleep. A new day comes and he suddenly finds the girl sleeps there and all the same to yesterday, and seems only he knows. He decides to enjoy all with Samantha and chose to get on the cab with Samantha and gets ready to protect Samantha with his own life.
If Only is a beautiful story about true love but it is sad. “What if you could turn back time?”, sad to say that the fact is none of us can turn back time, sorrow and joy, come and go. That is just life.
The movie tells us that we should love and treasured the ones we love with our heart, it is too late to regret when the ones are gone.
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2012年2月27日星期一

How to copy DVD to Hard Drive with DVDSmith Movie Backup Freeware


Are you finding a way to get rid of boredom on business trip? Do you feel troublesome of carrying heavy  DVDs every time?. If the answer is yes, then you are in the right place.
This step-by-step guide will show you how to use DVDSmith Movie Backup Freeware to convert all sorts of movies to Hard Drive. You can use this software in conjunction with DVD burning software of your choice, to make a backup copy of any DVD video disc, or with Any DVD Converter Pro to convert your DVD folder to MP4, AVI, 3GP or other video formats for your iPod, PSP, mobile phones and many portable media players.
Copying DVD to hard drive with DVDSmith Movie Backup is extremely simple. With a few clicks, your DVD can be copied to hard drive as DVD folder and there won’t be any quality loss. Below is the instructions of copying DVD to hard drive with DVDSmith Movie Backup.
Step 1Download and Run DVDSmith Movie Backup Freeware 
Click here to download DVDSmith Movie Backup freeware and install,launch this program, you’ll  see its interface.


Step 2. Insert a DVD in your DVD drive
The logo of your DVD drive will be changed into a disc shape with disc name as below:



(Note: this disc named 0223 is for illustration only, since that the disc name will be loaded automatically according to your disc.)
Step 3. Choose backup mode
In the main work space, you can see two backup modes:

This will backup all contents from the DVD, including main movie, bonus features, and maybe some other extra video clips.


This will only backup the main movie from the DVD, excluding bonus features or other extra video clips.
(Note: see the difference between these two modes)
Step 4. Select source disk location
All DVD drivers will be listed in the drop down list. Select the drive where the movie DVD is inserted.

Step 5. Select output folder path
Remember to choose a place where there’s enough space to put the backup files.


If the Free Space of Hard Disk is smaller than the DVD Size, you should press this DVDSmith Movie Clone: Backup movie DVD to computer button to change output folder with enough free space in the disk.
Otherwise, this prompt will appear:

Step 6. Select Copy Method.
There are three copy methods availalbe of copying DVD to hard drive with DVDSmith Movie Backup. The DVD copy methods are:
Normal: For unencrypted and CSS encrypted DVD.
Lowly Enhanced: less scan times to decrypt DVD.
Highly Enhanced: more scan times to decrypt DVD.
Step 7. Start backup
After all DVD copying settings are done, press “Start Backup” button to start the DVD copying process.

If you decide to backup later or just want to cancel it, press “Stop Backup” button to stop the DVD copying process.



Step 8. Check the Output Folder
Once the backup process is finished, you can explore them on the hard disk:



(Note: above file illustration is in Full Disc mode. If using Main Movie mode, there will be different.)

After this few steps, you can enjoy your favorite movie now.
If you need to copy movie DVD to DVD dis or rip DVD to other Electronic devices such as iPod, iPhone, PSP, PS3, Xbox 360, etc.Any DVD Cloner Platinum is recommended. It’s an easy-to-use and powerful DVD copying and ripping tool!

Difference between Full Disc and Main Movie
In the main window of DVDSmith Movie Backup, there’re two modes you can select Full Disc or Main Movie.
With Full Disc mode, it’s able to backup all contents from the DVD, including main movie, bonus features, and perhaps other extra video clips.
If using Main Movie mode, this program will check and backup the DVD automatically by itself. Normally, the main movie consists of files with names like “VTS_01_xxx”, “VTS_01_xxx.xx”, etc, excluding bonus features or other kinds of video clips with names of “VIDEO_TS”, “VIDEO_TS.BUP”, “VIDEO_TS.IFO”, etc.
Check below output folder illustrations for Full Disc (L) and Main Movie (R):





Google will launch a "Seaview " plan, taking you cruise Australia the Great Barrier Reef


Regarded as one of the seven natural landscape wonders of the world, the Australia Great Barrier Reef will be shown to the public as a kind of special way. Google cooperate with Queensland university and insurance company Catlin Group, creates a Google street view version of Australia the Great Barrier Reef, which will let the network users who can’t come to visit also have a feast of eyes, and can also see the world’s largest coral reef system at the end of the world.
The plan will be officially launched in September this year, and will do investigating and shooting in 20 places of the Great Barrier Reef, all the videos will be uploaded to the website Seaview. Pay more attention if you are interested.
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2012年2月26日星期日

Still be unable to sleep at night? Just have a try of this magical "the pendulum video" to hypnotize


Have you got hypnotized by online video? Visual artist Jonathan Brainin made a "pendulum video" (the pendulum is a common hypnosis props), let you experience a magical hypnotic effect. He put the camera placed in the front of the big screen, and let a smaller screen swing around pendulum in the middle, which makes an Infinite circulation of pendulum visual effect.  Carefully stare at it, which is maybe effective.
The following is the video:
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New Website Lets You Build Stories Out of Reaction GIFs


DVDSmith, make backup of your favorite DVD!
Words aren’t always enough to express your feelings. At least, that’s according to the makers of That’s So True, a site that allows you to convey your emotions with reaction GIFs.
Reaction GIFs are short, multi-image animations of people — often TV or movie celebrities — acting out specific emotions. The recent uptick in these GIFs’ popularity sparked tech startup Spartz Media to launch That’s So True on Thursday.
“Reaction GIFs capture emotions better than pictures alone can; it’s one thing to see a picture of a person’s surprised face and quite another to see that person’s eyes bolt open with surprise,” 25-year-old Spartz Media founder Emerson Spartz told Mashable. “The GIF brings the story to life in a way that words alone cannot.”
That’s So True has a custom builder, which lets you input text and choose from a gallery of categorized reaction GIFs. You can also upload new GIFs for you and others to use in your stories.

A Look Back at Popular GIF Themes

Ten trends emerged last year in the GIF world. Let’s relive them right now.
The GIFs are used to ratchet up what would otherwise be a flat, text-only story format,” Spartz says. “Ultimately, we are giving people a new and visually-stimulating way to tell short stories.”
That’s So True expands Spartz Media’s growing properties — OMG Facts, GivesMeHope and MuggleNet, among other brands — that attract 160 million monthly pageviews via websites, mobile sites and apps.
GIFs in general have become a popular vehicle to showcase notable moments of 2012. In January, a GIF of comedian Tina Fey photobombing Amy Poehler during the Golden Globes went viral. And this month, popularSuper Bowl GIFs captured the best moments of the game, halftime show and commercials.
What do you think of GIFs? Have you used them? Do you like them? Sound off in the comments below.
Having party with friends in mind:
In fact we more like this:
When meeting a handsome guy
You had meant to be like this:
But in fact you are more like this:
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2012年2月24日星期五

The Silence of the Lambs


It has been a good long while since I have felt the presence of Evil so manifestly demonstrated as in the first appearance of Anthony Hopkins in "The Silence of the Lambs." He stands perfectly still in the middle of his cell floor, arms at his sides, and we sense instantly that he is not standing at attention, he is standing at rest - like a savage animal confident of the brutality coiled up inside him. His speaking voice has the precision of a man so arrogant he can barely be bothered to address the sloppy intelligence of the ordinary person. The effect of this scene is so powerful that it underlies all the rest of the movie, lending terror to scenes that do not even involve him.

 
Click here to get The Silence of the Lambs copied

Like all great entrances in the movies, his is carefully prepared. We learn that his character, Dr. Hannibal Lecter, is both a brilliant psychiatrist and a mass murderer, known as "Hannibal the Cannibal" because he eats his victims. He is already behind bars (and unbreakable Plexiglas) when the movie opens, and indeed "The Silence of the Lambs" is about the search for another mass murderer, named "Buffalo Bill," who skins his victims.

Operating on the theory that it takes one to know one, the FBI agent in charge of the case (Scott Glenn) thinks Lecter might be able to provide useful clues in the search for Buffalo Bill. But Lecter toys with most of his inquisitors, or dismisses them, and so the agent hits on the idea of sending in an untried young female trainee (Jodie Foster). Perhaps she will appeal to the monster.

The notion of the beauty and the beast is of course central to horror stories, but, watching "The Silence of the Lambs" for the second time, I began to wonder if the author of the original novel, Thomas Harris, had started the project by jotting down a list of the great universal phobias and dreads. Here is a movie involving not only cannibalism and the skinning of people, but also kidnapping, being trapped in the bottom of a well, decomposing corpses, large insects, being lost in the dark, being tracked by someone you cannot see, not being able to get people to believe you, creatures who jump from the shadows, people who know your deepest secrets, doors that slam shut behind you, beheadings, bizarre ual perversions, and being a short woman in an elevator full of tall men.

If the movie were not so well made, indeed, it would be ludicrous. Material like this invites filmmakers to take chances and punishes them mercilessly when they fail. That's especially true when the movie is based on best-selling material a lot of people are familiar with. ("The Silence of the Lambs" was preceded by another Thomas Harris book about Hannibal Lecter, which was made into the film "Manhunter.") The director, Jonathan Demme, is no doubt aware of the hazards but does not hesitate to take chances. His first scene with Hopkins could have gone over the top, and in the hands of a lesser actor almost certainly would have. But Hopkins is in the great British tradition of actors who internalize instead of overacting, and his Hannibal Lecter has certain endearing parallels with his famous London stage performance in "Pravda," where he played a press baron not unlike Rupert Murdoch. There are moments when Hopkins, as Lecter, goes berserk, but Demme wisely lets a little of this go a long way, so that the lasting impression is of his evil intelligence.

Foster is inevitably upstaged by Hopkins' rich and gruesome creation, but her steadiness and pluck are at the heart of the movie. www.130q.com

Some interesting aspects have been provided for her character: She is "one generation up from white trash," as Lecter correctly guesses; she tries to disguise her hillbilly accent, and she has to muster up all of her courage to order a roomful of lascivious lawmen out of an autopsy room. The movie has an undercurrent of unwelcome male attention toward her character; rarely in a movie have I been made more aware of the subtle ual pressures men put upon women with their eyes.

Against these qualities, the weak points of the movie are probably not very important, but there are some. The details of Foster's final showdown with Buffalo Bill are scarcely believable.

Unless you look closely, you may miss the details of how Lecter deceives his pursuers in one grisly scene. The very last scene in the film is hard to follow.

But against these flaws are balanced true suspense, unblinking horror and an Anthony Hopkins performance that is likely to be referred to for many years when horror movies are discussed.

Do you like these designs of iPhone 5?


After release of iPhone 4 S , there are a lot of supposition about  appearance design of iPhone 5. The   independent stylist named Frederico Ciccarese displays us some really beautiful iPhone 5 concept design, which really rocked our eyes at the moment. So let's us hurriedly appreciate it!
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2012年2月23日星期四

X-Men: First Class


The best acting in “X-Men: First Class” is by President John F. Kennedy, who in his Thanksgiving 1962 message to the nation, expresses gratitude for the successful end of the Cuban Missile Crisis while suppressing what he surely must know, that American and Soviet missiles spent a great deal of time flying back and forth while mentally controlled by the awesome powers of mutants. The movie’s use of the missile crisis certainly serves the purpose of establishing this prequel in the early 1960s and answers a question I’ve always had: Does the real world overlap with the histories of superheroes?

 
The movie is high-tech and well-acted, with lots of action and noise as it portrays the origins of the X-Men, a group of about a dozen mutants (so far). It begins in a Nazi prison camp, where young Erik Lehnsherr is forced to witness a tragedy and finds he can control metals with his mind — but only when he’s angry. He grows up to become Magneto and is played by Michael Fassbender, the lean German actor who the buzzmeisters say will become a big star from this film. Heaven help him. He was so good in “Fish Tank,” “Inglourious Basterds” and “Jane Eyre”; must he play Magneto to become a star? For that matter, Raven/Mystique is played by Jennifer Lawrence, just nominated for a best actress Oscar. Now she’s a blue shape-shifter with scales. The price of stardom.
At Oxford, we meet the telepath Charles Xavier (James Mc­Avoy) as a young man before he was paralyzed. He will eventually operate a school to shelter and train mutants, and he dreams they can help the world. His archenemy is Sebastian Shaw (Kevin Bacon), Magneto’s cruel tormentor in the Nazi camp, now a man who recruits mutants to the dark side, where if they’re good, maybe they’ll be able to wear a helmet like his and look like a Roman charioteer. If anyone whacks him up alongside the head, he’s gonna get a nasty cut from that pointy cheek-protector.
Other mutants are gathered into one fold or the other. Each one has a specialty. There is a shape-shifter, a tempest-tosser, a screamer, a fire-blaster, a quick adapter (named Darwin, of course), and so on. That each would develop a unique ability through simultaneous mutation is a tribute to the intelligent design of Stan Lee and his Marvel Comics crew. Still, it must be confining to have only one trick; you need to move with a crowd to cover all the bases.

The plot involves attempts by CIA agent Moira McTaggert (Rose Byrne) to use Xavier to battle Shaw, who presents a threat to world peace. Exactly how the CIA discovered the mutants is a little unclear; indeed the agency exists mostly as a convenience to the plot, and the source of Moira, who seems to really like Xavier — and as a telepath, he should realize that if anyone does.
Anyway, the destinies of the good and bad mutants intersect with the Cuban Missile Crisis, which was not quite as we think of it. The scene where the mutants stand on a beach and mentally duel by causing both American and Soviet missiles to shuttle back and forth in the sky is … hilarious, I was going to say, but no, I should consider this scene more devoutly.
Director Matthew Vaughn gave us “Kick-Ass” (2010), in which an 11-year-old girl was hammered almost to death for our entertainment. This movie lacks comparable violence, but is louder. At least all the X-Men are old enough to see an R-rated movie without adult supervision. Not that “X-Men” is R-rated; god forbid that a comic-book movie should turn away a single eager ticket-buyer.
X-Men: First Class” is competent weekend entertainment. It is not a great comic book movie, like “Spider-Man 2,” or a bad one, like “Thor.” It is not in 3-D, which is a mercy. The actors all embody their roles convincingly, if somewhat humorlessly, and the special effects cope admirably with those rockets changing directions. The battle scenes involve people having terrible things happen to them in somewhat incomprehensible ways, but they also create an intriguing texture for Raven the shape-shifter; Nicholas Hoult as Beast looks as if he’s wearing a shag- rug suit, but there you have it.