Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Get Smart gadgets not all fiction








Funny thing about those gadgets in Get Smart. The people who make them in the real world are paying attention. So too was the case in 1965 when the Get Smart TV series first launched.

With all the shtick and catch-phrases the comedy TV series became famous for, the gadgets have endured in their legacy: The shoe phone, the cone of silence, the list goes on.

Truth is, the real makers of gadgets and weapons do take note when some deceptive device appears on the big or small screen. That gadget might come darn close to mirroring what exists in the real world of espionage. 

The covert devices used in the Get Smart movie are not far removed from the ingenuity dreamed up four decades ago.

Anne Hathaway, who plays Agent 99 in the film, got to employ three gadgets, and loved learning how to execute them: The compact that releases a gas that exposes laser beams; exploding dental floss; and a cellphone with knockout gas inside it.

�When the gadgets worked, it would be great, but another funny part is when they wouldn�t work,� Hathaway told Metro.

In fact, Hathaway says one contribution of hers to the film, well other than that acting part, was suggesting how to execute a gadget scene that had been going awry for Steve Carell (Maxwell Smart, Agent 86). She suggested how he could better handle one of his gadgets to fix a nagging problem that was holding things up on the set.

�I was proud of that,� she says.

From the TV series, scenes featuring the cone of silence contain some of the best comedy skits going, but guess what ... it existed.

Director Peter Segal says someone who worked on the movie had a relative who had a connection to the CIA and was able to confirm this fact: The cone of silence was used in the American Embassy in Moscow. A plastic cone was placed over people and music played inside so the conversations couldn�t possibly be picked up by a bug.

�And, as usual, they said it didn�t work,� said Segal, laughing. �Almost everything in the movie is based in some kind of reality and so we came up with a few of our own gadgets to go along with some of the iconic ones (from the TV series).�











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Sunday, 15 June 2008

Paul Newman - Paul Newman Doing Nicely Following Lung Cancer Reports


Paul Newman has issued a short statement saying he is "doing nicely" after reports emerged that he is suffering from terminal lung cancer.

A number of US television networks and websites had claimed on Monday that the Oscar-winner was seriously ill with the disease, and undergoing out-patient treatment at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

But according to his agent Toni Howard, the rumours are incorrect.

She told E! News that the claims were "not true", following a slew of gossip regarding the actor's health, which were fuelled when he was photographed looking gaunt and unwell at a charity fundraiser.

A statement from his spokesman Jeff Sanderson has revealed of Newman's actual condition, merely saying: "Newman's doing nicely.

"This is what I got from him. He says he's doing nicely, and this is the statement I wanted to share with you, and that's what I have," Jeff Sanderson told the Reuters news agency.

"I spoke to his office… this is the statement that came directly from him."

The Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid star stepped down as director of a production of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men at the Westport Country Playhouse in Connecticut, with unspecified health issues cited.

Having been nominated for nine Oscars - winning a best actor Academy award for The Color of Money in 1986 - the 83-year-old retired from acting in May 2007, blaming poor health.

"I've been doing it for 50 years. That's enough," he told ABC television at the time.

"I'm not able to work any more as an actor at the level I would want to. You start to lose your memory, your confidence, your invention."


11/06/2008 12:09:55





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Tuesday, 3 June 2008

Under the Same Moon

Director Patricia Riggen delivers a heartwarming debut with UNDER THE SAME MOON. The story of the enduring bond between mother and son, the film stars Kate del Castillo as Rosario, a mother struggling to support her family in Mexico while living illegally in Los Angeles. Meanwhile, her son, Carlitos (Adrian Alonso), is left under the care of his grandmother. But when she dies, nine-year-old Carlitos embarks on a colorful and arduous journey across the border in search of his mother. The script has Carlitos narrowly escaping kidnapping, drug addicts, and Border Patrol workers, aided by the unlikely friendships he forges along the way. As we watch Rosario grapple with life as an illegal immigrant in Los Angeles, Carlitos's optimism and strength of spirit gain him a migrant worker (Eugenio Derbez) as a traveling companion.

Riggen keeps a potentially depressing topic surprisingly light by including frequent musical interludes, and cinematographer Checco Varese takes care to create a visual journey that's stunning throughout. America Ferrera (UGLY BETTY, REAL WOMEN HAVE CURVES) appears in a small role, but it is 13-year-old Alonso who steals the show as the brave, funny, and precocious Carlitos. Apart from the subtitles, the film offers family viewing for parents and children alike. While it touches on timely and pressing issues concerning immigration and discrimination, the film, which won a standing ovation at the Sundance Film Festival, works on a simpler level as well by focusing primarily on the sweet relationship between a mother and her son.

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