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Rabu, 01 April 2015

Interstellar

Everything has its time, we're told in Ecclesiastes. And for planet Earth, it's time for death.

Not that you'd know it from a cursory glance. In fact, most folks hope the old girl is on the road to recovery decades after an environmental cataclysm wiped out most of the globe's food supply. Now, severely depopulated and humbled, we're getting back to the basics: growing food, maintaining shelter, spending time with family. A few of us might even take in a ball game on a lazy afternoon.

But a nitrogen-eating blight is again cutting down crops, one by one. Wheat, rice, okra ... nothing survives the disease these days except corn, and that may not last much longer. Massive dust storms sweep across the land, choking out light and life alike. And even as people push through day by day, it seems society has lost something critical: it's desire to explore, to search for something better.

"We used to look up in the sky and wonder at our place in the stars," former astronaut Cooper says. "Now we just look down and worry about our place in the dirt."

And that place in the dirt for Coop means scraping together a living as a farmer instead of continuing his career as an astronaut. It means having to deal with his high-tech combines taking off in their directions instead of doing what he's programmed them to do. And listening to his 10-year-old daughter, Murphy, saying there's a ghost in her room. Then, when a dust storm blows through Murph's open window, it seems the grime has made strange patterns on the floor ... as if it—the dirt itself—was trying to tell them something.

It is, actually. And Coop discovers the dusty lines are binary code that, when translated, become coordinates on a map. When he and Murph go there, they find a massive, secret science facility—perhaps humanity's last real hope. The scientists and engineers who work there, led by Coop's old NASA associate Dr. Brand, have found a mysterious wormhole near Saturn that leads to a new galaxy. They've already sent a dozen intrepid scientists through the hole and to some promising planets beyond, but they need another ship to now shoot through, retrieve data from the 12 and return home with it.

And, Brand tells Coop, they could sure use a good pilot to fly the thing. If all goes well and the theory of relatively works as it ought, he could get back home in, oh, a few decades or so—looking no worse for wear and ready to save whatever's left of humanity.

If not ... well, Coop should give Murph an extra-long hug goodbye. 
source:http://www.pluggedin.com/videos/2015/q1/interstellar.aspx

Plot
With Earth dying and resources dwindling, former astronaut Cooper (McConaughey), along with scientists Brand (Hathaway), Doyle (Bentley) and Romilly (Gyasi), take humanity’s last spaceship through a wormhole in search of a new beginning for the human race.
source:http://www.empireonline.com/reviews/reviewcomplete.asp?FID=138121

Movie Info
With our time on Earth coming to an end, a team of explorers undertakes the most important mission in human history; traveling beyond this galaxy to discover whether mankind has a future among the stars. (C) Paramount
Rating: PG-13 (for some intense perilous action and brief strong language)
Genre: Action & Adventure , Science Fiction & Fantasy
Directed By: Christopher Nolan
Written By: Christopher Nolan , Jonathan Nolan
In Theaters:
On DVD: Mar 31, 2015
Runtime:
Paramount Pictures - Official Site
source:http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/interstellar_2014/


Do You Believe?

Do You Believe – Lives intersect on the streets of Chicago – rich lives, poor lives, desperate lives.


They each have their dreams, their secrets, and their hurts, which keep them from connecting with each other, and keep them from living their lives to the fullest.
A ‘chance’ encounter with a street preacher challenges a local pastor into putting his faith to the test. How he reacts ricochets to those around him, drawing them all towards the place where they must confront an essential question for themselves: “Do you believe? Do you believe in the power of the cross?”

The Newsboys song “We Believe” will be featured at the end of the upcoming film. Tait joked “In a perfect world I would have the Newsboys to keep making records and a write a record to a movie.”
source:http://www.christianfilmdatabase.com/review/do-you-believe/ 

Dove's Review
Do You Believe?” is the best faith-based film I have ever seen! I have seen a lot of them, so this is certainly a compliment. The superlatives will flow from the faith-based community regarding this film. The stories are wonderful, the characters are rich, the acting is terrific, and several characters’ stories meet at the climax on the same bridge during a stormy night. The overriding theme of the film is that God can take things that are not good and weave them into something that is. It is the “God’s eye view,” according to Pastor Matthew (Ted McGinley), that must be kept in perspective. To anyone who has ever faced death, lost a loved one (especially a child), been at a crossroads or crisis of some kind, this movie will resonate.

McGinley is excellent as the pastor who is confronted by an old man who makes him think about the Cross and what he truly believes about it. The pastor then leaves crosses at every seat for his next sermon and preaches about it. An example of one of the stories that intertwine is that of JD (Lee Majors) and his wife Terry (Cybill Shepherd), who lost their daughter Kathleen some years earlier. They have left her room unchanged. A friend named Joe (Brian Bosworth) helps a homeless woman named Samantha (Mira Sorvino) and her daughter Lily (newcomer Makenzie Moss) and they wind up in front of JD and Terry when they serve them a meal at a Salvation Army lunch. Feeling compassion for them on a rainy night when JD knows they are sleeping in a car, he invites them into their home. Lily tells her mother they need to thank Jesus for the bed. And, despite her caution, Terry cannot help but feel drawn to Lily and her mother.

Other stories feature two brothers named P.B. (for Pretty Boy) and Kriminal (played by Senyo Amoaku). Pretty Boy feels drawn toward God and finds Him one night when he flees police and runs into a church just as Pastor Matthew is preaching about the cross and asks, “Do you believe?” Kriminal doesn’t like the change in Pretty Boy, but a turning point takes place in his life following a tragic event. Add to this an unwed mother who decides to keep her baby while on the way to the abortion clinic when she feels the baby kick, and Carlos, a former Marine who carries a lot of guilt and yet saves a young woman from committing suicide, and you have plenty of drama. Sean Astin is perfect as a skeptic doctor who witnesses a medical miracle before his eyes and tries to deny it. In addition, a paramedic named Bobby (Liam Matthews) hands a dying man a cross and ministers to him, but faces retribution from the man’s wife and her attorney.

The stories all seamlessly fit together by film’s end, and the bridge scene is dramatic and powerful. I was not bored once during the movie and was deeply moved on several occasions. The director did an excellent job. The film is peppered with just the right number of humorous moments to relieve some of the tension the characters face. We are happy to award “Do You Believe?” our “Faith-Friendly” Seal for ages twelve plus. See this movie! This film has it all!
source:http://www.dove.org/review/10830-do-you-believe/

Movie Info

A dozen different souls-all moving in different directions, all longing for something more. As their lives unexpectedly intersect, they each are about to discover there is power in the Cross of Christ ... even if they don't believe it. Yet. When a local pastor is shaken to the core by the visible faith of an old street-corner preacher, he is reminded that true belief always requires action. His response ignites a faith-fueled journey that powerfully impacts everyone it touches in ways that only God could orchestrate. This stirring new film from the creators of God's Not Dead arrives in theaters Spring of 2015. More than a movie, it's a question we all must answer in our lifetimes: DO YOU BELIEVE? 
(C) Submersive Media
 
Rating: PG-13 (for thematic elements, an accident sequence and some vioelnce)
Genre: Drama
Directed By: Jonathan M. Gunn
Written By: Chuck Konzelman , Cary Solomon
In Theaters:
US Box Office: $7.2M
Runtime:
Freestyle Releasing - Official Site
source:http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/do_you_believe/