day : 15/11/2010 6 results

Top 10 Political Prisoners

Following elections earlier in November that were widely seen as a sham, Burma's ruling military ...

A Screenwriter’s Hogwarts Decade

A LOT has happened since the screenwriter Steve Kloves began working on his adaptation of the very first Harry Potter book, “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” in the late 1990s. The three central characters — Harry (Daniel Radcliffe), Hermione (Emma Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint) — have grown up on screen, enduring the twin horrors of Voldemort and adolescence before our very eyes. The stories have become progressively darker and more complicated. And Mr. Kloves has immersed himself so deeply in the world of Harry Potter that by the time J. K. Rowling’s seventh and final volume, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” came out in 2007, he said, he knew the characters almost as thoroughly as she did herself. Adapting the stories for film has been a delicate process all along, as faithfulness to books adored by millions has always had to be balanced with the conventions (and length) of Hollywood blockbusters. (Mr. Kloves is the screenwriter for all but one of the movies, “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.”) But “Deathly Hallows” was perhaps the most difficult of all. More than 700 pages long and crammed with quick-moving plot developments leading to an apocalyptic finale, the book ultimately proved too dense to make into a single film. So it has been split into two. Part 1, to be released on Friday, covers the first half of the novel, a kind of prolonged road trip in which Harry, Ron and Hermione become nomads in hiding, sorting out their feelings for one another while eluding capture and searching for magical objects that must be destroyed before Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) can die. Part 2, which builds to a final battle between good and evil inside the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, ...

Facebook Offers New Messaging Tool

PALO ALTO, Calif. — For more than two decades, e-mail has been the killer application of the Internet. But Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Facebook, believes that e-mail is antiquated. On Monday, Mr. Zuckerberg unveiled a new unified messaging system on Facebook that allows people to communicate with each other regardless of whether they are using e-mail, text messages or online chat services. “We don’t think a modern messaging system is going to be e-mail,” Mr. Zuckerberg said. He said that e-mail is too formal, too slow and too cumbersome, especially for young people who have grown up communicating using online chat and text messaging systems. The new Facebook service, which will allow users to have @facebook.com e-mail addresses, intends to integrate the three forms of communication into one inbox that is accessible from PCs or mobile phones. ...

Big News: LINKIN PARK ANNOUNCE TOUR WITH THE PRODIGY!

What a lineup! Linkin Park announced their North American Tour Dates today and they will be playing with none other than Gods of Electro The Prodigy - at least for a few dates! Pendulum and Does it offend you? Yeah! will join the tour from January 20th to February 11th while The Prodigy will take over for the shows from February 15th to February 26th. Tour dates after the break. ...

You Me At Six frontman duets with Paramore

You Me At Six frontman Josh Franceschi joined Paramore on stage at London's O2 Arena on Saturday (November 13) to lend his vocal talents to the band's 2007 breakthrough hit, Misery Business. ...

Green Day say alcohol is the secret to their success

Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong says that the US punk titans owe much of their recent success to one thing and one thing alone - alcohol. Speaking to Kerrang!'s sister magazine, Q, Armstrong says Green Day's live performances have improved over the years because they're usually drunk on stage. "Around Insomniac [in 1995] we became a shitter live band. ...
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