When Broadway Went to Hollywood
Book
The Wizard of Oz, Gigi, Top Hat, High Society - some of the most popular movie musicals ever made...
![Dancing Bees: Karl Von Frisch and the Discovery of the Honeybee Language](/uploads/profile_image/cdc/a79b7e77-c252-4ce2-854a-081b40363cdc.jpg?m=1522329665)
Dancing Bees: Karl Von Frisch and the Discovery of the Honeybee Language
Book
We think of bees as being among the busiest workers in the garden, admiring them for their...
Nature's Fabric: Leaves in Science and Culture
Book
Leaves are all around us in backyards, cascading from window boxes, even emerging from small cracks...
![NBA LIVE Mobile Basketball](/uploads/profile_image/32b/f6fba8b5-049c-4f88-9ed0-495a85b6c32b.jpg?m=1522355570)
NBA LIVE Mobile Basketball
Games
App
Tip off with EA SPORTS NBA LIVE Mobile! Build your team, dominate your opponents in 5-on-5 action,...
![SpiderBeetleBee by Bill MacKay](/uploads/profile_image/c0a/12f92a2c-5c50-40bd-8831-b3bdb1dd7c0a.jpg?m=1522324236)
SpiderBeetleBee by Bill MacKay
Album Watch
Drag City presents the second volume of Bill MacKay and Ryley Walker's inspired collaboration. It's...
folk rock
![Puzzli - Incredible Puzzle Fun](/uploads/profile_image/fae/c8077c36-7e32-4206-9d32-84c419880fae.jpg?m=1522331615)
Puzzli - Incredible Puzzle Fun
Games and Entertainment
App
Over 3300 incredibly entertaining puzzles. Discover fascinating facts about the world while playing....
![Search for Cheap Flights by SkyRadar](/uploads/profile_image/923/219dcfcd-cc88-45b0-9df4-5334babd9923.jpg?m=1522337271)
Search for Cheap Flights by SkyRadar
Navigation and Travel
App
Find and book cheap air tickets with no fees. Cheap flights Pro App will compare airfares from...
![Rises The Night (The Gardella Vampire Hunters, #2)](/uploads/profile_image/8ac/8b057aca-fc16-4ffd-9d88-df391b3ac8ac.jpg?m=1567689685)
Rises The Night (The Gardella Vampire Hunters, #2)
Book
The second installment in award-winning, New York Timesbestselling author Colleen Gleason's...
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/eaf/78ccc884-30d4-471a-b635-0b78c7699eaf.jpg?m=1639134107)
Lee (2222 KP) rated Rampage (2018) in Movies
Apr 13, 2018
Rampage the movie begins out in space, where genetic editing experiments too dangerous/illegal are taking place onboard a space station. Things have gone badly wrong though and canisters containing an experimental genetic pathogen begin hurtling towards North America in what looks like a meteor shower. Back down on Earth we're introduced to Davis Okoye (Dwayne Johnson) - San Diego zoologist, ex-military (so, comfortable with guns, flying helicopters etc, could come in handy later...) and general all-round cool guy. In his care is an albino gorilla called George, who was rescued from poachers as a baby by Davis. They've built up a special bond ever since, communicating in sign language to the level where they are able to joke and generally take the piss out of each other. Overnight, one of the space canisters lands in the zoo and is released into the face of an inquisitive (or Curious?) George. From there he begins to grow bigger, and become increasingly violent.
Elsewhere, two other canisters have landed out in the wild. One right by a pack of wolves and another hitting a lake. The brother and sister team heading up Energyne, the company responsible for the space station and the genetic work (Malin Åkerman and Jake Lacy), dispatch a bunch of clean up guys with big guns to try and apprehend the wolf, which ends up going badly. Meanwhile, an ex employee of Energyne, Dr Kate Caldwell (Naomie Harris), who is also responsible for creating the pathogen, heads to the zoo. She wants to make amends for everything and bring down the company that fired her. Government agent Harvey Russell (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) also shows up at the zoo with a bunch of men of his own, looking to take George away by plane - something else which you just know is going to end badly. Morgan plays Harvey Russell as basically just a slightly toned down version of his Walking Dead character, Negan. Grinning cockily throughout the whole movie and when he first squares up to Davis, you fully expect him to start swaggering around, monologuing about swinging dicks or something. He tells Davis that "when science shits the bed, I'm the guy they call to change the sheets"!
The three monsters begin making their way to Chicago to start smashing stuff up, attracted by a beacon emitting a sound only they can hear. Something "the tech guys rustled up overnight" at Energyne. Davis and Dr Caldwell also head to Chicago to try and help George and end the destruction, eventually aided by Harvey Russell.
Rampage has the potential to be a trainwreck, another casualty in the long line of awful video game movies, especially when there are so many CGI-heavy monster-city-smash movies out there these days. It all works surprisingly well though. When the monsters begin trashing things, it's not an over the top assault on the senses where you can't even make out any sign of human life and the affect that all of this is having on them. The action is well done and enjoyable, and peppered with plenty of trademark Dwayne Johnson humour too. Outside of the action, it's also Johnson that holds the rest of the movie together and prevents it from dipping below average. Dr Caldwell is a very underused and forgettable character, serving only as sidekick to The Rock. Everyone else, aside from Harvey Russell, is also pretty forgettable too. But then at the end of the day, this is all about George and his monster buddies, and overall I found this to be a very enjoyable movie.
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/b67/31234d17-cdc2-4cb5-8010-eb8a14369b67.jpg?m=1578534333)
Becs (244 KP) rated A Raisin in the Sun in Books
Oct 2, 2019
A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry
Genre: Literary Classic, Play, Drama, Fiction
Synopsis: First produced in 1959, A Raisin in the Sun was awarded the New York Drama Critics Circle Award and hailed as a watershed in American drama. Not only a pioneering work by an African-American playwright – Lorraine Hansberry’s play was also a radically new representation of black life, resolutely authentic, fiercely unsentimental, and unflinching in its vision of what happens to people whose dreams are constantly deferred. In her portrait of an embattled Chicago family, Hansberry anticapted issues that range from generational clashes to the civil rights and women’s movements. She also posed the essential questions – about identity, justice, and moral responsibility – at the heart of those great struggles. The result is an American classic.
Audience/Reading Level: Middle School +
Interests: Plays, dramas, literary classics, racial segregation, women’s movement, 50s era.
Point of View: Third Person Omniscient
Difficulty Reading: Not at all, I rushed through it because I loved it so much! As in some of Shakespeares plays, you don’t get stuck on the general language of the era it was written, as it’s written close to a book you would get from this era.
Promise: “Award-winning drama of the hopes and aspirations of a struggling, working-class family living on the South Side of Chicago connected profoundly with the psyche of black America–and changed American theater forever.” – It did. 🙂
Insights: I love reading plays as it’s a way to step out of a comfort zone of reading Young Adult novels. It gives me a chance to dip into my theater/acting side and use what I’ve learned from theatre classes. A Raisin in the Sun is a well-written American classic that honestly should be read in every school from middle school and up. The lessens that are taught throughout the play are subtle yet obvious which creates a background that we can use in our every day life.
Ah-Ha Moment: The moment that Beneatha came into the picture and was a total feminist. Man, she’s my favorite character besides Mama (Lena Younger) and her little plant.
Favorite Quotes: “Beneatha: Love him? There is nothing left to love. Mama: There is always something left to love. And if you ain’t learned that, you ain’t learned nothing. (Looking at her) Have you cried for that boy today? I don’t mean for yourself and for the family ’cause we lost the money. I mean for him: what he been through and what it done to him. Child, when do you think is the time to love somebody the most? When they done good and made things easy for everybody? Well then, you ain’t through learning – because that ain’t the time at all. It’s when he’s at his lowest and can’t believe in hisself ’cause the world done whipped him so! when you starts measuring somebody, measure him right, child, measure him right. Make sure you done taken into account what hills and valleys he come through before he got to wherever he is.”
“Mama, you don’t understand. It’s all a matter of ideas, and God is just one idea I don’t acept. It’s not important. I am not going out and commit crimes or be immoral because I don’t believe in God. I don’t even think about it. It’s just that I get so tired of Him getting credit for all the things the human race achieves through its own stubborn effort. There simply is no God! There is only Man, and it’s he who makes miracles!”
What will you gain: A haunting yet revealing play that will be as fresh of a read today, as it was in the 50’s.
Aesthetics: The entire play. The cover. The characters. The underlying meaning beneath it all. The era it was written and is based off of. Just everything about this little book.
“I want to fly! I want to touch the sun!”
“Finish your eggs first.”