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When I mention Julie & Julia to my musician friends, most of them haven't seen it. The movie was recently released as a DVD. That makes it easier to access. It's a smart idea combining two personal stories, very well done.I have two inspirational hits from this film, one for Julie and one for Julia.
The inspiration of Julia Child is the lesson of finding your passion. She was unfocused until she enrolled in Cordon Bleu to learn to cook French cuisine. That was the pivotal action of her life.
The best seller book, Mastering the Art of French Cooking would never have happened. The TV show would never have been made. It all hinged on that decision to study the subject.
She fell totally in love with French cooking. "Butter!" she says in an early scene. (The French word is even more seductive.) She is glazed and in a trance over butter. And French cooking.
We all need a pivot to turn from just plugging along to really making a song out of our life. (Or a fiddle tune.) You've heard of "find your passion." Julia Child found hers. Everything followed from that.
The second inspiration is Julie Powell's goal-intention-project of preparing all the recipes in Julia's book in one year's time and blogging about it. The ambitious, but doable project and the one year time constraint act as a wonderful motivational goad.
The project met resistance. Of course it would. Somehow, persistence wins.
The subtext of her idolization of Julia Child is an interesting study of emulation. Ultimately her achievement goes beyond the need for approval from her idol.
A few years ago, I had a similar experience. I set out to play one hundred different tunes one hundred times each. To devote this much time to a tune about twice a week was not completely crazy. But it was not easy for my mind to accept. After a while I got into an accustomed process. I just did it.
It raised my level of playing.
This year, inspired by Julie & Julia, I'm choosing a similar project. The big idea is, Publish 100 fiddle tunes from my repertory online. Do this over the next year.
It's fair to say that I strongly advocate the inspiration from the movie. If you have not connected with your passion, consider a big project to get started.
Even, in the harshest case, you are defeated from achieving your target, you will learn so much about yourself, it's worth it.
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Gordon Gekko, fresh from prison, re-emerges into a much harsher financial world than the one he left.

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When a successful British ghost writer, THE GHOST, agrees to complete the memoirs of former British Prime Minister ADAM LANG, his agent assures him it's the opportunity of a lifetime. But the project seems doomed from the start not least because his predecessor on the project, Lang's long-term aide, died in an unfortunate accident. The Ghost flies out to work on the project, in the middle of winter, to an oceanfront house on an island off the U.S. Eastern seaboard. But the day after he arrives, a former British cabinet minister accuses Lang of authorizing the illegal seizure of suspected terrorists and handing them over for torture by the CIA-a war crime. The controversy brings reporters and protesters swarming to the island mansion where Lang is staying with his wife, RUTH, and his personal assistant (and mistress), AMELIA. As The Ghost works, he begins to uncover clues suggesting his predecessor may have stumbled on a dark secret linking Lang to the CIA-and that somehow this information is hidden in the manuscript he left behind. Was Lang in the service of the American intelligence agency while he was prime minister? And was The Ghost's predecessor murdered because of the appalling truth he uncovered? Resonating with topical themes, this atmospheric and suspenseful political thriller is a story of deceit and betrayal on every level sexual, political and literary. In a world in which nothing, and no one, is as it seems, The Ghost quickly discovers that the past can be deadly and that history is decided by whoever stays alive to write it.

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James Cameron's "Avatar" uses cutting-edge motion-capture technology to blend the physical performances of the actors with the computer-generated world of the animators in a way that has never been seen before. 

James Cameron's new movie "Avatar" has been hailed for its innovative animation techniques. The film broke new ground with its use of motion-capture technology, which took months to develop. The motion picture combines computer-generated characters with live action to produce a spectacle that is mesmerizing moviegoers worldwide.

To achieve the desired effect, Cameron and a team of computer experts created a new type of camera that captured the facial expressions of the actors and digitally recorded them for later use by the animators. Each actor wore a tiny camera that rested in front of his or her face. The images were recorded and then transferred to computers. This allowed for the physical performances of each actor to be translated accurately into the computer-generated animations. In contrast to traditional motion-capture techniques, in which the performances are added to computer-generated scenes in post-production, Cameron could also observe each performance in the virtual world as it was being captured. 

Much of the equipment used for the animation in "Avatar" was designed specifically for the film. Despite the high budget and number of years that it took to produce the film, the astonishing animation-and international box office blow-out-have proven worthwhile. Surely, the new animation techniques will be inspiring filmmakers and moviegoers alike for years to come.

About the Author

James has been writing articles online for nearly 6 years now. Along with watching movies, he enjoys writing articles about entertainment and families, check out one of his favorite web sites Garden Harvest Supply which offers one of his favorite vegetables, the bean plant.

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PARAMOUNT PICTURES PREMIERES UP IN THE AIR

Billed as one of George Clooney's finest cinematic performances, this movie portrays the life of the ultimate corporate jetsetter. Clooney plays Ryan Bingham, whose job it is to travel around the country firing people. His company is hired by other corporations to do their dirty work of informing staff that they no longer have a position in the company they have been working for, sometimes for many years. As Bingham explains it, "we get people at their most vulnerable and then set them adrift". Bingham's life is one in which he finds himself contented - without the responsibilities of marriage and other relationships, yet also without a home. For Bingham, home is in the first class seats and VIP lounges of 747s and major airports across America. His job has no soul, family connections are a distraction, and his major goal in life is to reach 10 million frequent flyer miles. While not blind to the superficiality of the way he is treated by airport staff everywhere he travels - he is fully aware that whenever his name appears before the staff behind the counter, they are trained to give him the same warm welcome and smile, word for word, each time - he enjoys the lifestyle of the corporate businessman who knows he has a job to do and does it well. As life goes on though, and he hooks up with a seeming soul mate who has the same dreams in life as him - escape from relationships and retreat into the safety of casual fun - a distant light begins to burn slowly brighter that causes him to consider that, just maybe, this isn't all he really wants out of life. Two of the catalysts to this slow realisation are, firstly, when Bingham's upstart young colleague, who has been traveling the skies with him, hits a raw nerve by calling him a 12 year old boy, and secondly when he is later, in a seemingly innocuous manner, described as "just someone who is lost". Along with this confronting feedback are the issues of how to deal with his evolving feelings for his newfound partner in fun, the distraction of the upcoming nuptials of his sister, and his boss's threat to Bingham's jetsetting lifestyle by having him and all his colleagues grounded to save costs in this time of global financial crisis. Amidst all of this, Bingham starts to think that the life of all fun and no intimacy is not all it is cracked up to be. This film highlighted to me the inseparability of the complexity of human emotions from the most detached of lifestyles. There is no such thing as a purely mechanical relationship. In fact, the latter term is an oxymoron. A vast ocean of emotions are always just below the surface, seemingly stifled in their cry out to be heard shouting the truth under the suffocating blanket of superficial affairs and an emotionally disconnected lifestyle. Nowhere in the movie is this more poignant as when Bingham is floored with a bombshell by his female friend, just as he is reaching out for true connection. The pain on his face at that moment reveals the shattered state of his soul within. C.S. Lewis once said that "to love at all is to be vulnerable. Love anything, and your heart will certainly be wrung and possibly be broken. If you want to make sure of keeping it intact, you must give your heart to no one, not even to an animal. Wrap it carefully round with hobbies and little luxuries; avoid all entanglements; lock it up safe in the casket or coffin of your selfishness. But in that casket-safe, dark, motionless, airless-it will change. It will not be broken; it will become unbreakable, impenetrable, irredeemable." If the great writer was still with us today, he might have said that this quote was the perfect descriptor of Ryan Bingham's life - one which is truly 'up in the air'. This movie reveals, in both a serious and lighthearted way, issues of life, love, relationships, and meaning, and does so in a way that is both appealing and thought-provoking. It is for these reasons that Up in The Air impacted me like no other movie in recent times. Strongly recommended.

 

About the Author

Nils is a born-and-bred Australian with a passion for making the Gospel relevant to the everyday person. Married to Nell, he has an honours degree in sociology as well as an accounting degree. An avid reader, Nils' interests are early Christianity, the person of Jesus, the question of God and apologetics, and communicating how Jesus and the Gospels relate to every aspect of life. More of his writings can be found on his website - Soul Thoughts (http://soulthoughts.com).
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