Spring Break movie marathon
If you lose your plane tickets or jet-skis, there is still plenty of fun to be had while sitting on your butt and watching a boatload of movies over Spring Break. Here are some suggestions for the perfect movie marathon.
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If you lose your plane tickets or jet-skis, there is still plenty of fun to be had while sitting on your butt and watching a boatload of movies over Spring Break. Here are some suggestions for the perfect movie marathon.
With The Academy Awards less than a week away, discussions on who will and won’t win are heating up. Every year, people have predictions about winners and opinions about who was snubbed and who was robbed in the awards ceremony. Here’s what I have to say about this year’s nominees.
Evan Dossey, a 2012 graduate, was generally successful with writing assignments until he took the Writing Proficiency Exam.
Sam Watermeier writes a column for the Daily News. His views and opinions don’t necessarily agree with those of the newspaper or The Daily. “Zero Dark Thirty” is hard to watch, which is apparent right from the opening minutes, in which we hear cell phone and police scanner talk of the 9/11 attacks. This barrage of audio recordings played over a black screen evokes the feeling of staring into the abyss. The conversations regarding the attacks are chilling and tragic. If only the rest of the film evoked the same raw humanity. What starts as a stark reminder of our nation’s vulnerability becomes a cold, dry account of its revenge upon the man who attacked it.
This year’s Oscar list is as notable for its snubs as for its nominees.
In 15 days, our planet will perish — or so say some musings.
Since “The Dark Knight” grounded Batman in gritty reality, the line between popcorn entertainment and intimate drama has grown noticeably thinner. Big genre films now have more complex, thoughtful characters and tangible conflicts.
Recent film production graduate Dylan Sampson first saw “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” the way many people have.