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The Last Movie You Saw On DVD or VHS or TV.

 
 
aidan
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Jan, 2011 05:46 am
I just watched : The Stoning of Soraya M. So powerfully done and too upsetting to put in my own words, but here's some information:

Quote:
The Stoning of Soraya M. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia search The Stoning of Soraya M. (.سنگسار ثريا م)

The Stoning of Soraya M. (Persian: .سنگسار ثريا م) is a 2008 American drama film adapted from French-Iranian journalist Freidoune Sahebjam's 1990 book La Femme Lapidée, based on a true story.

The film is directed by Cyrus Nowrasteh and stars Academy Award nominee Shohreh Aghdashloo, James Caviezel (as Freidoune Sahebjam, the foreign journalist) and Mozhan Marnò (as the title character).

Stoning had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival, where it was the runner-up for the Audience Choice Award. It was also the second runner-up for the Cadillac People's Choice Award. The book has been banned in Iran.[2] [edit]

0 Replies
 
talk72000
 
  1  
Reply Tue 4 Jan, 2011 05:03 pm
I saw "Westinghouse" dvd and was surprised that he really the only one of the Robber Barons era that treated his employees with respect and was very paternalistic. His rival was Thomas Edison but he was not a nice man. He really did not invent the incandescent bulb. It was a Canadian James Woodward. Edison merely bought the patent.

]
Quote:

Bruce Ricketts

Think back. Who invented the light bulb? Thomas Edison? Right?
WRONG!

In 1875, Edison purchased half of a Toronto medical electrician's patent to further his own research. That researcher was named James Woodward.

Woodward and a colleague by the name of Mathew Evans, described in the patent as a "Gentleman" but in reality a hotel keeper, filed a patent for the Woodward and Evan's Light on July 24, 1874.

Working at the Morrison's Brass Foundry on Adelaide St. West in Toronto, they built the first lamp with a shaped rod of carbon held between electrodes in an glass bulb filled with nitrogen.

Woodward and Evans were treated as cranks and subject to much public ridicule. "Who needs a glowing piece of metal!!" They attempted, with very little success, to form a company to raise money to refine and market their invention. (Where is the federal government when you really need them?)

In 1876, Woodward obtained a U.S. patent on his electric lamp and, in 1879, Edison considered it sufficiently important to completely buy out the patent from Woodward, Evans, and all their Canadian partners. Woodward sold a share of his Canadian patent to Thomas Edison in 1885.

Thus the electric light bulb became American.

In part this is the text of Woodward's original patent:

Be it known that We, Henry Woodward of the city of Toronto in the County of York, in the Province of Ontario Medical Electrician, and Mathew Evans also of the city of Toronto, in the County of York, in the Province of Ontario Gentleman, have jointly invented:
New and useful improvements in the art or process of obtaining Artificial light by means of Electricity and we do hereby declare that the following is a full clear and exact description of the same.

In the first place we use a gas engine, or other suitable motive power, for the purpose of rotating a magneto Electric Machine, and at Such Velocity, as shall create electricity, sufficient to heat certain pieces of Carbon to a state of incandescence.

In the Second place, we use pure Carbon and place the same in lamps, or outer suitable vessels, as hereinafter described.

A piece of Carbon, as hereinbefore mentioned, pure in quality, and of suitable size, proportionate to the size of lamp or vessel to be used, is scraped and shaped until fitted for the purpose. One electrode is then Connected with the Carbon at the top, and the other electrode is connected with the Carbon at the bottom, in the following manner. A small hole is drilled a short distance into each end of the Carbon to fit the electrodes, and when necessary they are further secured by surrounding them with a portion of plaster of Paris or other suitable substance. The electrodes not passing through the carbons, nor Connecting with each other. It is then enclosed in a globe, or other vessel, either of glass or other Suitable material. The air is then extracted from the said globe, or vessel, after it has been hermetically sealed at the ends, and then filled with rarified gas that will not unite chemically with the carbon when hot. Electricity is now supplied and in sufficient quantity, so as to heat the carbon within the vessel to a State of incandescence, the rarified gas previously introduced now becomes luminous, and constitutes the light herein designated as Woodward and Evans' Electric Light.

This process will give a light of any required intensity, and there is practically no limit to the number of lights that may be obtained from one Magneto Electric Machine.


Special Note: An eagle eyed reader from the UK spotted an error in this original story. I originally stated that Edison was granted a patent in 1876. In fact he was not granted a patent because his "invention" too closely resembled an invention in the UK of a filament in a vacuum tube, developed by Joseph Swan in the 1860's.

In 1880, Swan and Edison teamed up to produce the first "practical" light bulb.

As the reader points out, Edison always claimed, "If I didn't develop the incandescent light bulb, then I didn't develop anything." For the record, this is the chronology of light bulb development as listed in <http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/bllight2.htm>:

1809 - Humphry Davy, an English chemist, invented the first electric light. Davy connected two wires to a battery and attached a charcoal strip between the other ends of the wires. The charged carbon glowed making the first arc lamp.

1820 - Warren De la Rue enclosed a platinum coil in an evacuated tube and passed an electric current through it. His lamp design was worked but the cost of the precious metal platinum made this an impossible invention for wide-spread use.

1835 - James Bowman Lindsay demonstrated constant electric lighting system using a prototype light bulb.

1850 - Edward Shepard invented an electrical incandescent arc lamp using a charcoal filament. Joseph Wilson Swan started working with carbonized paper filaments the same year.

1854 - Henricg Globel, a German watchmaker, invented the first true light bulb. He used a carbonized bamboo filament placed inside a glass bulb.
Mathew Evans patented a light bulb.

1878 - Sir Joseph Wilson Swan (1828-1914), an English physicist, was the first person to invent a practical and longer-lasting electric light bulb (13.5 hours). Swan (pictured at right) used a carbon fiber filament derived from cotton.

1879 - Thomas Alva Edison invented a carbon filament that burned for forty hours. Edison placed his filament in an oxygenless bulb. (Edison evolved his designs for the light bulb based on the 1875 patent he purchased from inventors, Henry Woodward and Matthew Evans.)

1880 - Edison continued to improved his light bulb until it could last for over 1200 hours using a bamboo-derived filament.


Thanks for keeping me honest, Jennifer. - BR


http://www.bigsiteofamazingfacts.com/who-invented-the-phonograph

A Frenchman also invented the phonograph along with Edison.

Quote:
Charles Cros, a Frenchman, drew up a plan for a phonograph in 1877, but never built his mechanism. At the same time, Thomas Edison had been working on a phonograph of his own and later that same year, patented the first of his many versions.

When Edison had learned of Alexander Graham Bell’s new invention, the telephone, he had begun to play with its design; he wanted to make a sound machine capable of other tasks. Edison noticed that the vibrations of his voice moved a piece of iron in Bell’s ‘ telephone.


http://www.bigsiteofamazingfacts.com/who-invented-the-phonograph

I also saw the "Documenting the face of America" aout Roy Stryker photographers. In 1936 Roosevelt's New Deal reduced unemployment from about 21% to 14%. With WWII unemployment reduced to single figures.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Depression_in_the_United_States

I saw the original "All the King's Men". It was really good. John Derek was really young in the movie.

I also saw the documentaru on Frida Kahlo. Leon Trotsky lived in Rivera property, Frida's husband, and was a celebrity Communist. No wonder Stalin easily located him and had him killed in Mexico.

I also saw the "Shipbreakers" in Alang, Gujarat in India. Dangerous work.
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Tue 4 Jan, 2011 05:08 pm
@tsarstepan,
i really want to see this film, saw a preview of it on another dvd
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plainoldme
 
  1  
Reply Tue 4 Jan, 2011 09:51 pm
Watched Jules et Jim for the first time. I liked it but I couldn't help but wonder if the movie's reception would have been different in 1962 if people knew more about bipolar disorder then. Catherine was clearly bipolar.
0 Replies
 
eurocelticyankee
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jan, 2011 01:55 pm
Watched the "Black Swan". Disturbing but captivating,
you always knew she was, better not say.
But I kept thinking, "somebody feed that girl".
Natalie Portman was very good.
http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRS7kbfFTbYGafCum7oAK8zUcOzrC7JPsovhdeKdUdTsGg9COlS
talk72000
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jan, 2011 06:56 pm
@eurocelticyankee,
The movie: Leon, the Professioanl with Jean Reno, Gary Oldman, Natalie Portman (the child)

eurocelticyankee
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jan, 2011 07:04 pm
@talk72000,
That was a good movie, Gary Oldman was one SOB in that film.
http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQEgtHdfkrHdqQhsvai4xJyzXppNlBgtK19cgShMXSC5Nqr7xJNFg
talk72000
 
  2  
Reply Wed 5 Jan, 2011 07:42 pm
@eurocelticyankee,
He played a lot of villains even as Lee Harvey Oswald.

eurocelticyankee
 
  1  
Reply Wed 5 Jan, 2011 07:46 pm
@talk72000,
Too true, he plays a good villain.
He stole the show with a 6-7 min scene in True Romance.
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eurocelticyankee
 
  1  
Reply Thu 6 Jan, 2011 12:48 pm
Just watched "Skeletons" a new British film,
have to say I really enjoyed it.
http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSvk2G1Ges3KeX8KYpEgFipivtPR69BJZ6FbFdG79tNeqSDvSw5PA
http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSlUs4uGH2_Izxjf2h9M1xKFhnblp5sEvrOjyjdAg6A4o3BigM8
0 Replies
 
talk72000
 
  1  
Reply Thu 6 Jan, 2011 03:09 pm
I just saw the dvd "The Queen and I" about the Shah of Iran and his death in exile. The Communist filmmaker Nahid Persson Sarvestani meets with the Shah's widow and shows her struggles and daily life with hopes for the future of Iran. It is touching as both the filmmaker and the Queen struggles with tragedies.























0 Replies
 
talk72000
 
  1  
Reply Thu 6 Jan, 2011 03:19 pm
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Fri 7 Jan, 2011 03:02 pm
watched the Australian film, Tomorrow, When the War Began, pretty good little flick, basically the Australian version of Red Dawn. The story follows Ellie Linton, one of eight teenagers waging a guerrilla war against an invading foreign power in their fictional hometown of Wirrawee.

http://www.twtwb.com/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomorrow,_When_the_War_Began_(film)


the movie is based on the first book in a series of very successful Australian novels

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomorrow_series
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plainoldme
 
  1  
Reply Sat 8 Jan, 2011 11:02 pm
The Girl with the Pearl Earring. I did not enjoy this movie. I hadn't seen a Scarlett Johansson movie. I don't think she is attractive . . . I can hear several men wailing already. Her solemn face. The passivity of Colin Firth's Vermeer. The smirking of the daughter who hated the maid. Much ado about nothing. Sounds like a great title for a play.
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tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Sat 8 Jan, 2011 11:19 pm
Watched a very difficult to watch indie horror film, Frozen on Netflix streaming. Three college friends go to the ski resort somewhere in New England. Of course bad things are ready to happen. Somehow, the three are stuck up on the chairlift that Sunday evening and left unnoticed stranded on the chairlift until the next weekend when the mountain opens up for business.

How do they survive up there when wind and snow and blistering cold tears away at their expense? Will they get down safely? Find out by watching ... if you dare.

The thriller of a film has some great performances from the relative unknown actors in the three leads:
Emma Bell
Shawn Ashmore (best known as Bobby Drake/Iceman in the X-Men trilogy)
Kevin Zegers.
OmSigDAVID
 
  1  
Reply Sun 9 Jan, 2011 03:01 am
@tsarstepan,
tsarstepan wrote:
Watched a very difficult to watch indie horror film, Frozen on Netflix streaming.
Three college friends go to the ski resort somewhere in New England.

Of course bad things are ready to happen.
Hopefully, thay were all sufficiently well-armed to control the situation, if an emergency arises.




tsarstepan wrote:
Somehow, the three are stuck up on the chairlift that Sunday evening and left unnoticed stranded on the chairlift until the next weekend when the mountain opens up for business.

How do they survive up there when wind and snow and blistering cold tears away at their expense?
Will they get down safely? Find out by watching ... if you dare. . . .
IF thay had been sufficiently well-armed (including flare guns)
thay coud have n woud have used their guns to signal distress, while thay were up there;
or at least target practice, to while away the time.





David
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Sun 9 Jan, 2011 09:36 am
@OmSigDAVID,
Without spoiling the film, our beloved characters really could have used a firearm especially a rifle....
0 Replies
 
firefly
 
  2  
Reply Sun 9 Jan, 2011 04:56 pm
Watched Gran Torino yesterday--Clint Eastwood both starred and directed, doing a fine job wearing both hats. Eastwood has said this will be his final film role as an actor. If so, it is a wonderful requiem for those gritty characters he so memorably created when he was younger. I almost kept expecting him to say, "Make my day" when he confronted the punks in this film.
Quote:
Manohla Dargis compared Eastwood's presence on film to Dirty Harry and the Man with No Name, stating, "Dirty Harry is back, in a way, in Gran Torino, not as a character but as a ghostly presence. He hovers in the film, in its themes and high-caliber imagery, and of course most obviously in Mr. Eastwood’s face. It is a monumental face now, so puckered and pleated that it no longer looks merely weathered, as it has for decades, but seems closer to petrified wood."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gran_Torino

I enjoyed watching Eastwood, and the evolution of his character, more than the social commentary aspects of this film. A crusty and "lovable" old bigot, even one who achieves some moral redemption in the end, made for an uncomfortable and somewhat far fetched hero in my mind. But, overall, it is a good film, with a very fine Eastwood, and I found it quite worthwhile.
0 Replies
 
Irishk
 
  1  
Reply Sun 9 Jan, 2011 05:09 pm
@tsarstepan,
tsarstepan wrote:
Watched a very difficult to watch indie horror film, Frozen on Netflix streaming. Three college friends go to the ski resort somewhere in New England. Of course bad things are ready to happen. Somehow, the three are stuck up on the chairlift that Sunday evening and left unnoticed stranded on the chairlift until the next weekend when the mountain opens up for business.


We watched that a couple of months ago on streaming. The whole time I was watching it, I lept wondering WHY I was watching it LOL. Mr.Irish seemed kind of interested in it, so I didn't say anything...just kept watching Smile
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Sun 9 Jan, 2011 05:14 pm
@Irishk,
I watch some of these movies and it strikes me... why do the filmmakers really hate their characters so much to keep on piling bad things on top of bad things onto their poor characters. Confused
0 Replies
 
 

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