sgt.vinny
Banned
+0|7111
wicked man are u really an xconvict i wanna be just like u

tell me more!! tell me more!! tell me m omore!!!

Last edited by sgt.vinny (2006-03-06 18:37:53)

luckybaer
Member
+10|7224| Going Feral
ROFLMFAO!!!  Stop!  Stop!  You're killing me...
I gotta shut down the browser.  This is too much!
xconrob
Banned
+0|7120|Canada
STORY TIME SOTRYI TME YEAAAAA

Ebert:     Users:      You: Rate this movie right now     

Catherine (Gwyneth Paltrow) looks after her father Robert (Anthony Hopkins) a once-brilliant mathemetician who is now sinking deeper and deeper into insanity in "Proof."


Proof


BY ROGER EBERT / September 23, 2005

Cast & CreditsCatherine: Gwyneth Paltrow
Robert: Anthony Hopkins
Claire: Hope Davis
Hal: Jake Gyllenhaal
Prof. Barrow: Gary Houston
Joann: Anne Wittman
Eddie: Leland Burnett
Prof. Bhandari: Roshan Seth

Miramax presents a film directed by John Madden. Written by David Auburn and Rebecca Miller. Running time: 99 minutes. Rated PG-13 (for some sexual content, language and drug reference).

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John Madden's "Proof" is an extraordinary thriller about matters of scholarship and the heart, about the true authorship of a mathematical proof and the passions that coil around it. It is a rare movie that gets the tone of a university campus exactly right, and at the same time communicates so easily that you don't need to know the slightest thing about math to understand it. Take it from me.

The film centers on two remarkable performances, by Gwyneth Paltrow and Hope Davis, as Catherine and Claire, the daughters of a mathematician so brilliant that his work transformed the field and has not yet been surpassed. But his work was done years ago, and at the age of 26 or 27, he began to "get sick," is the way the family puts it. This man, named Robert and played by Anthony Hopkins, still has occasional moments of lucidity, but he lives mostly in delusion, filling up one notebook after another with meaningless scribbles. Yet he remains on the University of Chicago faculty, where he has already made a lifetime's contribution; his presence and rare remissions are inspiring. Recently he had a year when he was "better."

Catherine was a brilliant math student, too -- at Northwestern, because she wanted to be free of her father. But she returned home to care for him when he got worse, and her life has been defined by her father and the family home. Hal (Jake Gyllenhaal), her father's student and assistant, is hopelessly in love with her; she shies away from intimacy and suspects his motives. Most of the movie takes place after the father's death (flashbacks show him in life and imagination), and Hal is going through the notebooks. "Hoping to find something of my dad's you could publish?" Catherine asks him in a moment of anger.

Claire, the older sister, flies in from New York and makes immediate plans to sell the family home to the university: "They've been after it for years." Catherine is outraged, but the movie subtly shows how Claire, not the brilliant sister, is the dominant one. There is the sinister possibility that she thinks (in all sincerity) that Catherine may have inherited the family illness, and should not be allowed to stay alone in Chicago. Claire expresses love and support for her sister, in terms that are frightening.

There is a locked drawer in Robert's desk. Catherine gives Hal the key. It contains what may be a revolutionary advance on Robert's earlier work; a new mathematical proof of incalculable importance. Did Robert somehow write this in a fleeing moment of clarity? The authorship of the proof brings into play all of the human dynamics that have been established, between Catherine and Claire and Hal, and indeed between all of them and the ghostly presence of the father.

"Proof," based on the award-winning Broadway and London play by David Auburn, contains one scene after another that is pitch-perfect in its command of how academics talk and live. Having once spent a year as a University of Chicago doctoral candidate, I felt as if I were back on campus. There is a memorial service at which the speaker (Gary Houston) sounds precisely as such speakers sound; his subject is simultaneously the dead mathematician, and his sense of his own importance. There is a faculty party at which all of the right notes are sounded. And when Catherine and Hal speak, they talk as friends, lovers and fellow mathematicians; they communicate in several languages while speaking only one.

What makes the movie deep and urgent is that Catherine is motivated by conflicting desires. She wants to be a great mathematician, but does not want to hurt or shame her father. She wants to be a loyal daughter, and yet stand alone as herself. She half-believes her older sister's persuasive smothering. She half-believes Hal loves her only for herself. At the bottom, she only half-believes in herself. That's why the Paltrow performance is so fascinating: It's essentially about a woman whose destiny is in her own hands, but she can't make them close on it.

It would be natural to compare "Proof" with "A Beautiful Mind" (2001), another movie about a brilliant and mad mathematician. But they are miles apart. "A Beautiful Mind" tries to enter the world of the madman. "Proof" locates itself in the mind of the madman's daughter, who loves him and sorrows for him, who has lived in his shadow so long she fears the light and the things that go with it.

Note: It doesn't make the movie any better or worse, but it's unique in that all of the locations match. There are no impossible journeys or non-existent freeway exits. The trip from Hyde Park to Evanston reflects the way you really do get there. So real do the locations feel that it's a shock to find that most of the interiors were filmed in England; they match the movie's Chicago locations seamlessly.


OMG I SO TOTALLY AGREE THAT THEY SHOIULD DO IT SDO IT I SAY GET RID OF THE STATWS PADDERS and great sorty xconrob
sgt.vinny
Banned
+0|7111
sweeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeet

Last edited by sgt.vinny (2006-03-06 18:39:35)

revolution.inc
Pass
+35|7220|Phoenix, Az
liek sears-ly huuk mee opp wit sume of tem babes!
A.Frade
Banned
+4|7138
whos your agent?
xconrob
Banned
+0|7120|Canada
sgt.vinny
Banned
+0|7111
ssssssssssssssssssssssssssiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiik
revolution.inc
Pass
+35|7220|Phoenix, Az
meat mee kat, hees liek souper slmal end fluppy hees sooooo coute!
http://www.hedweb.com/animimag/elephant.jpg
A.Frade
Banned
+4|7138
On the other hand ablino gorillas are teh shit!
Eg.
http://www.trendmicro.com/vinfo/images/WORM_MUGLY_F.gif
http://www.suprmchaos.com/gorilla_091403.jpg      <-----i THINK HE ATE HIS OWN SHIT
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/200 … a1d_ho.jpg

Last edited by A.Frade (2006-03-06 18:44:23)

sgt.vinny
Banned
+0|7111
wwwwwwwwwwwwiiiiiiiiiccked
xconrob
Banned
+0|7120|Canada
im dieding omg omg omg THATS AMAZING OMNG NICE FIND LMAO LMAO UR AMAZING
SORRY IUM FROM RUSSIAN MY ENGLISH POROR OBUY OMGH I NO FUNNY WEHEN I SEE FUNYN AND THATS GUHNYNN OMG MAN UR GFUNYNN im no TNOEVEN KIDDING THAT IS MY BACKAFAWYONI THE SECOND ONE THATS MY BACKFGOIND
xconrob
Banned
+0|7120|Canada
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Superslim
BF2s Frat Brother
+211|7141|Calgary

Havazn wrote:

xconrob wrote:

(EUS)Gen.BadSnipaDay wrote:

Wow another 7 year old that gets bullied at school trying to be funny on a forum... sad...
relax u forty year old freak. go spend another summer inside playing bf2 all day >
Please tell me you dont occupy the same country as me.

For the record, this guy does not represent all canadians.
Maybe he's a newfie?  They are all retarded 
xconrob
Banned
+0|7120|Canada
Posted by brian on Mon March 06, 09:16 PM
from the have fun hitting reload page dept.
A press release by Adobe dismisses robotic monkeys as "just a passing fad."  I think Adobe may be missing the boat on this one.  Many companies are gearing up to take advantage of robotic monkeys.  Could just be sour grapes on their part.


( Send This Page to a Friend | 0 of 0 com

wuts ur problem brain
revolution.inc
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Cindy Sheehan Arrested After U.N. March By PAUL BURKHARDT, Associated Press Writer
2 hours, 59 minutes ago



NEW YORK - U.S. and Iraqi women demanding a withdrawal of U.S. troops from     Iraq marched from the     United Nations to the U.S. Mission on Monday, where peace activist Cindy Sheehan and three others were arrested, police said.

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The march followed a press conference at U.N. headquarters where Iraqi women described daily killings and ambulance bombings as part of the escalating violence that keeps women in their homes.

Women Say No to War, which helped organize the march, said Sheehan and three other women were arrested while trying to deliver a 60,000-signature petition to the U.S. Mission to the United Nations urging the withdrawal of troops from Iraq.

Ann Wright, a former Army colonel and U.S. diplomat, said in a group statement that the U.S. Mission, representing the United Nations' U.S. delegation, refused to send a representative to meet with the delegation and the women refused to leave without delivering the petition.

"I am outraged that the U.S. Mission could not send someone down to meet with a delegation of women whose lives and families have been shattered by this destructive and immoral war," said Wright.

Mission spokesman Richard Grenell said Sheehan was invited to come in to discuss her concerns, but chose instead to block the entrance to the Mission. "It was clearly designed to be a media stunt, not aimed at rational discussion," Grenell said.

New York Police Det. Kevin Czartoryski confirmed the arrest of Sheehan and three other protesters on charges of criminal trespassing and resisting arrest.

At the U.N. press conference, Entessa Mohammed, a pharmacist who works at a Baghdad hospital, became tearful recalling the death and injury she said she has witnessed daily.

She estimated that 1,600 Iraqis are killed in Baghdad every month.     President Bush "said he would minimize civilian deaths, but in reality, the opposite is happening," Mohammed said.


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liek omgosh shees mee hiro, i lobe herr soo muchas!

Last edited by revolution.inc (2006-03-06 18:51:26)

xconrob
Banned
+0|7120|Canada
U Read My Mind
SIKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKK
WICKEDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
A.Frade
Banned
+4|7138
good job on the find. great read. I advise everyone to read this article! and to give revolution a big hug for finding it!
xconrob
Banned
+0|7120|Canada
all i think is just black people shouldnt be alive thats all does it makes me a bad person
revolution.inc
Pass
+35|7220|Phoenix, Az
liek i waz whashing thee ogygen chanel fer whooomen n ten zena caem won! omgoshy

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Many parents don't admit their child is overweight By Charnicia E. Huggins
Mon Mar 6, 11:23 AM ET



NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Many parents do not identify their child as "overweight," but will select a sketch of a heavier model when asked to choose one representative of their child, new study findings show.

ADVERTISEMENT
 



"Comparisons between images and sketches showed that parents' visual perceptions of their children more clearly reflect their child's physical appearance than words they might use to classify the child's weight," study author Dr. Helen J. Binns, of Northwestern University in Chicago told Reuters Health.

"So parents have a correct visual perception, but don't consider that to fit in the medical 'diagnostic categories,"' she added.

Previous studies have found that helping parents recognize their child's overweight status and their willingness to make the necessary behavioral changes is key to their child's treatment. Parents who fail to recognize that their child needs help may not be ready to receive any related counseling or other interventions, researchers say.

Yet, various reports show that many mothers -- especially those with young children -- do not consider their overly chubby children to be overweight, with some wrongly believing that their child is "about the right weight."

In the current study, Binns and her team examined parents' perceptions about their child's overweight status and investigated whether sketches may be useful in helping parents recognize their child's problem.

Of the 223 children studied, 20 percent were overweight and 19 percent were at risk for overweight. Over half (60 percent) of the 2- to 17-year-old study participants were under 6 years old.

Similar to previous studies, the researchers found that many parents failed to recognize that their child was overweight. Only about one third (36 percent) of parents correctly identified their child as overweight or at risk for becoming overweight.

However, asked to select a sketch representative of their child, 70 percent selected a middle or heavier sketch, Binns and her team report in this month's issue of Pediatrics.]

This was particularly true for parents of children 6 years or younger, the researchers note.

In addition to choosing the heavier sketches, parents of younger children were also more likely to use words to identify their child as overweight or at risk for overweight, and were more likely to worry about their child's weight.

Overall, 26 percent of parents of overweight or at-risk-for-overweight children said they worried about their child's weight and 18 percent said a doctor had expressed concern about their child being overweight or gaining weight too quickly.

Parents of older children were less likely to worry, unless they considered their child to be less active or slower than his or her peers, or if a doctor had expressed concern about their child's condition, the report indicates.

So what can parents do to address their child's excess weight?

"Start by setting a good example in relationship to foods, physical activity and leisure time activity," Binns advised, noting, "your children are watching you and will follow what you do."

Also, she recommends that parents "play actively" with their children and "decrease the availability of opportunities for sedentary behavior."

SOURCE: Pediatrics, March 2006.


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stryyker
bad touch
+1,682|7169|California

enter the owl

https://i43.photobucket.com/albums/e382/ticongeroga/drunk.gif
HeavyMetalDave
Metal Godz
+107|7107|California
How much longer do you think mankind will last until he becomes EXTINCT?

Coz Im sleepy.
A.Frade
Banned
+4|7138
wow evolution your journalism is top of the line you sniff out this amazing articles like shit!
xconrob
Banned
+0|7120|Canada

revolution.inc wrote:

liek i waz whashing thee ogygen chanel fer whooomen n ten zena caem won! omgoshy

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Many parents don't admit their child is overweight By Charnicia E. Huggins
Mon Mar 6, 11:23 AM ET


GREAT Read great find. But it lacks compassion for the middle-oincome group. I give it 2 out of 5 stard it needs more spunk and hip-hop in it. It lacks flavour and charisma maybe enter in a junction or a conjuction


NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Many parents do not identify their child as "overweight," but will select a sketch of a heavier model when asked to choose one representative of their child, new study findings show.

ADVERTISEMENT
 



"Comparisons between images and sketches showed that parents' visual perceptions of their children more clearly reflect their child's physical appearance than words they might use to classify the child's weight," study author Dr. Helen J. Binns, of Northwestern University in Chicago told Reuters Health.

"So parents have a correct visual perception, but don't consider that to fit in the medical 'diagnostic categories,"' she added.

Previous studies have found that helping parents recognize their child's overweight status and their willingness to make the necessary behavioral changes is key to their child's treatment. Parents who fail to recognize that their child needs help may not be ready to receive any related counseling or other interventions, researchers say.

Yet, various reports show that many mothers -- especially those with young children -- do not consider their overly chubby children to be overweight, with some wrongly believing that their child is "about the right weight."

In the current study, Binns and her team examined parents' perceptions about their child's overweight status and investigated whether sketches may be useful in helping parents recognize their child's problem.

Of the 223 children studied, 20 percent were overweight and 19 percent were at risk for overweight. Over half (60 percent) of the 2- to 17-year-old study participants were under 6 years old.

Similar to previous studies, the researchers found that many parents failed to recognize that their child was overweight. Only about one third (36 percent) of parents correctly identified their child as overweight or at risk for becoming overweight.

However, asked to select a sketch representative of their child, 70 percent selected a middle or heavier sketch, Binns and her team report in this month's issue of Pediatrics.]

This was particularly true for parents of children 6 years or younger, the researchers note.

In addition to choosing the heavier sketches, parents of younger children were also more likely to use words to identify their child as overweight or at risk for overweight, and were more likely to worry about their child's weight.

Overall, 26 percent of parents of overweight or at-risk-for-overweight children said they worried about their child's weight and 18 percent said a doctor had expressed concern about their child being overweight or gaining weight too quickly.

Parents of older children were less likely to worry, unless they considered their child to be less active or slower than his or her peers, or if a doctor had expressed concern about their child's condition, the report indicates.

So what can parents do to address their child's excess weight?

"Start by setting a good example in relationship to foods, physical activity and leisure time activity," Binns advised, noting, "your children are watching you and will follow what you do."

Also, she recommends that parents "play actively" with their children and "decrease the availability of opportunities for sedentary behavior."

SOURCE: Pediatrics, March 2006.


Email Story IM Story Discuss Printable View RECOMMEND THIS STORY
         Recommend It:

Average (22 votes)
» Recommended Stories
Health News
Government Working on New Bird Flu Vaccine AP Rare Disease Linked to MS Drug Worries FDA AP Advair, Other Asthma Drug Get Label Alerts AP Foes of Food Labeling Bill Criticize Law AP For First Time, Flu Spreads From Birds AP Most Viewed - Health
Zimbabwe capital a cholera "time-bomb" AFP Study: Lifting Weights Attacks Belly Fat AP Sushi may be bad for health: California group Reuters Baxter said plasma treatment kills bird flu virus Reuters Retired couple seen with $200,000 health need Reuters 
Reuters Photo: An overweight Chinese boy checks his new cartoon cards in Beijing September 20, 2000. Many...

On Yahoo! Health

Eat Right, Stay Fit
Take charge of your health with Cheryl Koch's nutrition blog.

» More on Yahoo! Health
Full Coverage

Bird Flu
Get the latest news, video and photos.

From Y! Health

Health Questions?
Find answers on Yahoo! Health:


» More from Y! Health
Suberpb aboustolety breattaking. GREAT FUCKING FIND MOTHER FUCKEr

Last edited by xconrob (2006-03-06 18:56:27)

revolution.inc
Pass
+35|7220|Phoenix, Az

A.Frade wrote:

wow evolution your journalism is top of the line you sniff out this amazing articles like shit!
jes jes, mee nose that! mee famliy awarted mee teh liekly moste suckseful!       thay r poptarted thos so tat dosent cont!

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