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#Henry Ramer
badmovieihave · 20 days
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Bad movie I have More Animation Greats 1998 It Has Cactus Swing 1995, La Salia 1996, 64 Million Years Ago 1981, Evolution 1971, Hot Stuff 1971, Every Dog's Guide to Complete Home Safety 1986, The Family that Dweft Apart 1973, The Dingles 1988, The Old Lady's Camping Trip 1983, and Every Child 1979
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cinemaquiles · 23 days
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Guerra nas Estrelas, Contatos Imediatos e Christopher Lee: Invasão dos Extraterrestres!
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benchbanana · 2 years
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Rigs of rods thomas c2 for 0.4.8.0 version
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#Rigs of rods thomas c2 for 0.4.8.0 version full
To our knowledge, this is the only known case of spine surgery.
#Rigs of rods thomas c2 for 0.4.8.0 version full
Ultimately, the gorilla required surgical intervention for her disease and made a full recovery. The authors report a case of a human-habituated mountain gorilla, Alvila, resident at the San Diego Zoo, who was found to have a herniated intervertebral lumbar disc after being attacked by the gorilla troop's silverback male gorilla. Lumbar diskectomy in a human-habituated mountain gorilla ( Gorilla beringei beringei).Īryan, Henry E Jandial, Rahul Nakaji, Peter Greenberg, Mark S Janssen, Don L Huang, Johnson Taylor, William R coli in this species, raising the possibility of infection from a reservoir host. coli-specific sequences (ITS-1, sub-types A0 and B1). Confirmatory PCR and sequencing revealed two distinct B. Hassell, James M Blake, Damer P Cranfield, Michael R Ramer, Jan Hogan, Jennifer N Noheli, Jean Bosco Waters, Michael Hermosilla, CarlosĬysts morphologically resembling Balantidium coli were identified in the feces of a mountain gorilla ( Gorilla beringei beringei). Occurrence and molecular analysis of Balantidium coli in mountain gorilla ( Gorilla beringei beringei) in the Volcanoes National Park, Rwanda. However, the different patterns of peripheral joint involvement suggest a causality resulting from lifestyle (e.g., the presence/absence or extent of knuckle walking) or a habitat-related infectious agent. Susceptibility to spondyloarthropathy was apparently genetically imprinted before Gorilla separated into G. beringei showed a pauciarticular pattern, the pattern in G. While both had prominent axial disease, they differed in patterns of peripheral arthritis. gorilla specimens were afflicted, which are statistically indistinguishable frequencies. Contrasting with only isolated osteoarthritis and infectious arthritis was the frequent occurrence of a form of erosive arthritis associated with joint fusion. gorilla individuals were examined macroscopically for the presence of articular and osseous pathologies. We studied the occurrence of various forms of arthritis to examine possible nature/nurture causality. beringei occupy very different, geographically separate habitats. Comparison of arthritis characteristics in lowland Gorilla gorilla and mountain Gorilla beringei.
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wutbju · 3 years
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So all the students -- 124, btw, not 88 -- who were at Bob Jones College in that first year are as follows:
Perry Bestor Allen from Crichton, Alabama
Ella Louise Buckner from Headland, Alabama
Henry Seymour Blocker from Sandusky, Ohio
Mary Evelyn Brannon from Headland, Alabama
I. D. Barton from Andalusia, Alabama
Olin Comer Cleveland from Hartwell, Georgia
John Andrew Cherry from Dothan, Alabama
Hilary Herbert Clements from Pinckard, Alabama
Henry Mallory Chandler from Grady, Alabama
Dorothy Maxine Ceruti from Millville, Florida
Virgil Miller Culpepper from Ensley, Alabama
Asa Lee Carter from Ramer, Alabama
Leonidas Littlebury Colley from Brundidge, Alabama
Nollie  Dykes from Ariton, Alabama
LeGare  Day from Abbeville, Alabama
Dorothy  Dowling from Enterprise, Alabama
Leonard LeRoy Dunlap from Meridian, Mississippi
Cecil Marvett Ellisor from Andalusia, Alabama
Bessie Ruby Enfinger from Skipperville, Alabama
Rawdon Lee Gallman from Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Samuel Willard Gates from Carrollton, Alabama
Johnnie  Goare from Slocomb, Alabama
Joseph Leon Goodin from Opp, Alabama
Henry Edward Grube from Mobile, Alabama
Ariana  Haymaker from Winona Lake, Indiana
Nellie Pauline Hallford from Slocomb, Alabama
Dorothy Vivian Harris from Valdosta, Georgia
John William Hightower from Brundidge, Alabama
Russell Clifford Hobbs from Lynn Haven , Florida
William Jennings Hughes from Brewton, Alabama
James Ottis Hays from Red Level, Alabama
Ottawa Grace Hall from Blountstown, Florida
Fannie Mae Holmes from Fort Deposit, Alabama
Bonclie  Howell from Hartford, Alabama
Evenly  Howell from Hartford, Alabama
Lonnie Coleman Henley from Ramer, Alabama
James Welborne Johnston from Panama City, Florida
Anna Louise Johnson from Lynn Haven , Florida
Frank Milner Jones from Daleville, Alabama
Isaac Godfrey King from Sneads, Florida
John Clifford Lewis from Red Level, Alabama
Marvin M. Larrimore from Dickinson, Alabama
Bertha Eloise Long from Clio, Alabama
Lillia V. Long from Clio, Alabama
Ruth  Mowbray from St. Andrews, Florida
Margaret  Massey from Luverne, Alabama
Kate  McMillan from Wausau, Florida
Minnie Eunice Monk from Lynn Haven , Florida
Matha Virginia Monk from Clio, Alabama
Ruth Doris Mahan from Montgomery, Alabama
Ruth Ellen Miller from Vernon, Florida
Frances Eudora Moseley from Sylacauga, Alabama
Homer  Napier from Dothan, Alabama
Laura Frances Porter from Sylacauga, Alabama
Frank Norris Pitts from Montgomery, Alabama
Graff  Parish from Dozier, Alabama
Jesse Lamar Price from Eufala, Alabama
Jesse Lee Riley from Enterprise, Alabama
Eugene Clower Smith from Port St. Joe, Florida
Randolph Aenon Sparks from Aucilla, Florida
Miriam Burnett Sellers from Slocomb, Alabama
Eva May Silent from Slocomb, Alabama
Robert Paul Stough from Dothan, Alabama
James Monroe Strickland from Dothan, Alabama
Illah May Smith from Olustee, Florida
Gladys Alma Trawick from Skipperville, Alabama
Bowers Shipp Sandusky from Marianna, Florida
Evelyn Avery Urquhart from Montgomery, Alabama
Virginia  Urquhart from Montgomery, Alabama
Alvine Herman Vanlandingham from Hartford, Alabama
Walter Bowden Venters from Chipley, Florida
Florrie Love Williams from Panama City, Florida
Ruby  Woodham from Slocomb, Alabama
Lynwood Henry Wilson from Crewe, Virginia
Hugh Emmette Wilson from Sweetwater, Alabama
John Wesley Wilson from Goodwater, Alabama
Daniel Cleveland Whitsett from Abbeville, Alabama
Anthony Hamilton Warner from Montgomery, Alabama
Paul Jennings Ward from Geneva, Alabama
Marguerite  Ward from Panama City, Florida
Bessie Lou Ward from Slocomb, Alabama
Alvin Lewis Walden from DeFuniak Springs, Florida
George J. Leslie Amos from Andalusia, Alabama
Olin B. Brooks from Birmingham, Alabama
Selden Temple Bristow from Lynn Haven , Florida
James Carl Bowden from Tennille, Alabama
I. Z. Bowden from Tennille, Alabama
Minnie Pearl Canterbury from Montgomery, Alabama
Oma Leonteen Cain from Panama City, Florida
Lucy Belle Canterbury from Panama City, Florida
Dora Lee Canterbury from Panama City, Florida
J. C. Dean from Ponce De Leon, Florida
Morrison Mosley Davis from McClenny, Florida
Charlie Herns Edenfield from Altha, Florida
Mildred  Edwards from Dothan, Alabama
Maries  Edwards from Dothan, Alabama
Annalee  Folks from Panama City, Florida
Pat  Hall from Thomasville, Alabama
Frances Catherine Glover from Panama City, Florida
James Lafayette Houston from Comer, Alabama
Steadman Eugene Hobbs from Panama City, Florida
Mrs. W. J. Hughes from Hartford, Alabama
Max Darby Jones from Port St. Joe, Florida
Bob Jr. Jones from College Point, Florida
James Walter Kelly from Slocomb, Alabama
Annie Louise Lee from Panama City, Florida
Lenna Elizabeth Leonard from Lynn Haven , Florida
Andrew Paul McKenzie from Panama City, Florida
Minnie Lois Mayers from Panama City, Florida
William Leonard Peters from St. Petersburg, Florida
William Hubbard Reynolds from Montgomery, Alabama
Gaston  Robinson from Clanton, Alabama
Helen Kathryn Sims from Panama City, Florida
Howard William Sapp from Panama City, Florida
Martha Jane Surber from St. Andrews, Florida
Rea  Steele from Panama City, Florida
Herbert Patton Sapp from Panama City, Florida
Minnie Beatrice Seay from Bartow, Florida
Mabel  Thompson from St. Andrews, Florida
Graves Sim Urquhart from Montgomery, Alabama
Marion Kenneth Vickery from Flomaton, Alabama
Mike Litton Whaley from Ozark, Alabama
Edward Meredith Wilson from Goldwater, Alabama
Alcus Addis Walden from DeFuniak Springs, Florida
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henrycavillportal · 4 years
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"EXCLUSIVE: While there is not a Man of Steel sequel in the works, we’re hearing that Henry Cavill is in talks to reprise his role as Superman in the Warner Bros. DC Universe.
We hear Cavill could come back in a couple of different ways, not a standalone film, but there are plans to put him back in the big red cape again sources with knowledge tell us.
Warner Bros. is not developing a Man of Steel sequel, and Wonder Woman 1984, Suicide Squad are in the can, and Superman isn’t expected to make a cameo in Matt Reeves’ The Batman. Other projects where Cavill could make a cameo are Shazam 2, Dwayne Johnson’s Black Adam or Aquaman 2, which are the next productions to be prepped once COVID-19 safety restrictions lift.
When reached, Warner Bros. provided no comment.
Cavill made a surprise appearance on Zach Snyder’s Vero Watch Party for Man of Steel last week. At the end of that session, Snyder announced that his director’s cut of Justice League is heading to HBO Max in 2021. Cavill played Superman in Man of Steel, Batman v. Superman and Justice League.
Cavill is repped by WME, the Garcia Companies, and Gang, Tyre, Ramer, Brown & Passman." Via @Deadiline
#HenryCavill @HenryCavill #Superman #ManOfSteel #teamsuperman #dc #hero #unitetheleague #aligaseunirá #ligadajustiça #justiceleague #filme #movie #SnyderCut #Batman #RP #midia #MOS #fiqueemcasa #stayhome #krypton #clarkkent #martha #PlanetaDiario #jonathankent #booknerd #cinema #restoacasa #wb #job #dccomics
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And Now the News
Episode Recap #29: And Now the News
Original Airdate: October 14, 1988
Starring:
John D. LeMay as Ryan Dallion Robey as Micki Foster
Guest cast:
Kate Trotter as Dr. Avril Carter Kurt Reis as Dr. Kevin Finch Fran Gebhard as Bradley Ian A. Wallace as Nurse Swanson Alex Karzis as Craig Eddy Henry Ramer as Radio Announcer Stephen Black as John Gibson Shaun Austin-Olsen as Clarence Stone Wendy Lyon as Mary Fraser George Buza as Hulk Maniac
Written by Richard Benner (as Dick Benner) Directed by Bruce Pittman
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We open on a stormy, rainy night outside of a hospital, technically a psychiatric institute for the criminally insane. Inside, a doctor Finch is trying to cure a hysterical woman of her snake phobia by holding snakes right in her face while pushing her to confront why she is scared of them. He feels like she made a breakthrough.
Another doctor, Dr. Avril Carter, enters Ward B, which has some very deranged patients. She watches as a man yells out the window of his door. An nurse says he will get the patient some drugs, but Carter says no, the man has to face the psychiatry board in the morning and she doesn't want him drugged. The patient continues to freak out.
Another patient goads the nurse about always following the doctor's orders. The man gives the patient his medication.
In her office, Carter removes an antique radio from a safe. It is playing music, but is not plugged in, in fact the wire is frayed.
Dr. Finch brings Mary, his snake-phobia patient back to her room. When she asks if he thinks she'll be released, he says he believes so, since she was never a threat to anyone but her father, the root of her phobia. After her door is locked, she notices the radio, now on her table.
Finch tells a different nurse his treatment with Mary might be a break-through for other similar patients. He invites the nurse to his office for a drink.
Mary goes to bed and listens to the radio. It tells her the news: thousands of snakes are loose in the institution - especially her ward. Mary gets up and moves her sheet and sees many snakes. She screams, they are coming out of everywhere in her room. She screams again as the radio taunts her. She ends up dying of fright as Dr. Finch and the nurse rush in. As they take her away, the radio goes on to say that Dr. Avril Carter will find a cure for serial killer Craig Eddy, the psychotic from earlier. Carter hears the broadcast.
She goes to Eddy's room and treats him, knowing the curse on the radio will help. He calms as she talks to him, beginning to cry. She holds his head, telling him he is cured.
At Curious Goods, Micki comes in with the mail. They have a postcard from Jack saying he'll be back in a week. There is also an answer to their mailer, telling them about the antique radio. Seems the man who bought it, Joseph Damian, died in the institution. The lawyer who wrote said the man checked himself in with the radio. They decide to investigate the hospital.
At the institute, they ask the nurse about the doctor in charge, Dr. Finch. She thinks he'll be replaced by the up and coming Dr. Carter, who is sort of a super star in the psychiatric field. And Finch has lost some patients, she thinks they were scared to death.
Micki and Ryan meet with Dr. Finch, asking about Joseph Damian, who came in with a radio they would like to buy back. He says he can check the file, but he never met the man. Micki asks if they can look around, but Finch is reluctant. He is curious about the radio. Micki says it could hurt someone. The doctor is still suspicious, and shows them the door.
Outside, Micki and Ryan try to come up with a way to get back inside. Micki wants to call Jack, but Ryan says they need to work it out. He thinks he'll sneak in at night. Micki is unsure.
Later, Craig Eddy is told he is being released to a standard prison. He isn't sure of his sanity, but Dr. Carter says he won't hurt anyone again. He smiles and leaves. Carter is goaded by another patient, Gibson, who wants a turn with her miracle treatment. She doesn't think he can be cured. He threatens her, intimating that he knows something. She walks away.
That night she visits Dr. Finch in his office. He is obviously a bit distraught over Mary's death. Carter asks if he wants to talk about it, he says no. He says he was asked to give her time off to speak at a convention. He jokes that the Nobel Prize could be next. She think he's jealous, but he says just wants some of her luck. She says it is just a business, she takes on the tough cases to get noticed. He mentions the release of Eddy. She says he's cured. Finch doesn't think he could be cured, especially not so quickly. He demands to know what she did. But she doesn't bite, instead taunting him with Mary's death. She says he's lost six now. She leaves.
Micki drops Ryan off and he scales the chain link fence to the institute. As he goes over the top, he hits the electrical current and is shocked and falls, his foot getting caught and saving him from hitting the ground.
Inside, the nurse rushes Ryan on a gurney, telling another nurse to get Dr. Finch.  She finds him with a patient who is afraid of fire. Finch has a match in front of the quaking man and snaps at the nurse. She leaves. He continues his treatment.
Ryan comes to as Dr. Carter examines him. She asks if he knows who he is and what day it is. She says he is lucky. As the attendant unties him, Ryan makes an excuse about pledging a fraternity, so he had to climb the fence. Carter is wary, but tells Ryan she won't call the police.
Outside, Ryan comes upon Micki and tells her about the fence. He seems in good shape for his ordeal. He tells Micki that Dr. Carter might be someone to look into. He also wonders if someone who is not a patient could have the radio. They head back to Curious Goods.
Inside the institute, the radio tells Dr. Carter that she is about to make a breakthrough with John Gibson, the man who goaded her earlier and is highly violent and dangerous, a serial rapist. She waits for the radio to tell her what to do with him.
Micki can't find any information in Jack's files to help. Ryan finds that Dr. Finch has published a lot of papers on fears and phobias, specifically those who end up in violent murders or death. They think they should talk to Carter, since maybe Finch has something to do with the radio, with all his patients dying.
At the institute, Finch continues to work on the patient with the fear of fire. The man is terrified. Carter shows up and Finch sends the patient off. He snaps at Carter. She says she is going to work with Gibson, but he says no. The man is too violent. She asks why he doesn't like her. He said he doesn't trust her or her methods, she's too quick, cures people too easily. She asks again for the records, he says no. She says she will go ahead without his approval. He says he'll get her fired. She snaps back, telling him he is worse, his patients are actually dying at his hand. He steams as she leaves.
Micki, posing as a journalist looking to interview the rising Dr. Carter, sneaks past an open door. She is startled by a patient and then is comforted by Gibson, who says he isn't like the rest of the patients. She is still unnerved.
Carter continues to take notes from the radio on curing Gibson. The radio says to stay tuned, they have news on another violent death. Ryan paces outside, waiting for Micki.
The patient afraid of fire wakes up when he hears Dr. Carter in his room. She says he deserves an award and places the radio in his room. She leaves and it plays music - at first.
The nurse tells Micki to stay away from Gibson. Carter appears and allays Gibson while scolding the nurse about the security on the ward. She takes Micki to her office.
The radio has a news broadcast that the institute is on fire, burning out of control. The patient freaks out, seeing smoke and flames. He begs for help. He screams as he sees his room burning, then he is on fire himself. He tears the safety grate off his window, throws himself out and dies on the ground below, as Ryan watches, helpless.
Later, the man's body is removed by ambulance as Micki approaches Ryan. She says she was barely able to ask a couple of questions of Carter before she was called away. Ryan says another patient is dead. They leave, hoping to come back to finish the "interview" tomorrow.
Finch says the coroner believes the patient was dead before he hit the ground. In the patient's room, Finch asks the nurse about the radio he saw earlier. She says he didn't have one. When he asks if anyone else was there, she remembers Dr. Carter came and offered to help. He rushes out.
Carter listens as the radio tells about the patient’s death. It says he was the first of three deaths that night that will lead to a cure for the rapist Gibson and Carter winning the Nobel Prize. It also tells her how to deal with Gibson. As Finch calls to her, she hides the antique.
Finch knows she did something, knows about the radio. She plays dumb. He starts to put the pieces together about her involvement in his patients' deaths. He wants to know what she is doing. Then he hears the static of the radio and as he bends down to pick it up Carter hits him with a lamp.
She rolls him on a gurney into the room of the patient who is utterly insane. Finch tries to fight, but the crazy man pulls him inside as Carter locks the door. The patient kills the doctor. Across the hall, Gibson has watched this all play out. Carter finds a business card on the floor for Micki at Curious Goods. Gibson then asks her if it feels good to kill.
The phone rings at the store and Micki answers. Someone on the other end pretends to be Finch and says he has the radio. He tells them where to meet and hangs up. We see it is Gibson, being led by Carter. Carter says he has her permission to hurt Micki, that it is for the best. He is confused by her giving him the okay.
Micki and Ryan arrive, and she goes on her own, since the doctor would recognize Ryan. She goes to where "Finch" told her to meet him. It is a dark and abandoned part of the hospital. Ryan dons some rubber gloves to again scale the electric fence.
Micki goes down the creepy hallway, calling out for Dr. Finch. She starts to get wary, no one is around. She hears breathing, but before she can react, Gibson pulls her into a room and throws her onto a mattress. She screams as they struggle. Micki fights the crazed man.
Ryan successfully gets over the fence and goes to find Micki, but the security lights go on so he runs.
Micki continues to fight Gibson, a rough struggle between the two of them. She hits him with a piece of wood and stuns him. Ryan rushes into the ward she is in, hearing her screams. Micki, battered, stumbles away as Gibson slowly comes to. Ryan punches Gibson but Carter appears and hits Ryan over the head, knocking him out. Carter and Gibson leave with an unconscious Ryan as a shocked and freaked Micki tries to get her wits about her. Micki finally rushes out, calling to Ryan. She sees them bring him into the institute and rushes off. 
Carter and Gibson have Ryan tied up next to the radio as it begins to play. Micki slowly makes her way to the building, gathering nerve to go inside.
Carter says Ryan's death has to look like an accident. The radio tells her that she will soon have her success over Gibson's mental issues after the next news broadcast, about another death at 11:55 pm.
Carter plans to electrocute Ryan and use his death to restore Gibson's sanity. She has electrical paddles ready, but the power goes out. They go to investigate. Ryan struggles to free himself. The nurse tells them a breaker is out, but they are working on it, so they go back. Another nurse asks this nurse if she has seen Carter and Micki listens in.
Back in the room, as Carter goes to electrocute Ryan, Micki rushes in and pushes the woman, who stumbles into Gibson, electrocuting him instead. Micki and Ryan try to escape as Carter approaches them with the paddles. But the radio announces her death, since she was unable to give it three deaths to cure Gibson. It tells her their deal is off and as she grabs it in anger, the radio electrocutes her, as well. The room lights up and Micki and Ryan hide themselves. The radio, unharmed, says it will be back with another offer after a musical number. Micki slowly touches it then picks it up. They leave.
At the store, Micki and Ryan, battered and weary, bring the radio down to the basement. Micki asks how long they can keep doing this, that they both almost died. Ryan asks if she wants to stop. She says she knows they can't stop, but when will it get easier? Suddenly, the radio comes on with a breaking story. It has a way to recover cursed antiques harmlessly, if certain conditions are met. Freaked out, Micki tossed the radio to Ryan as the episode ends.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My thoughts:
A great episode with an interesting antique. By helping Carter cure some of these patients, while some people die for her to do so, are people saved in the future from these insane maniacs now being cured? Hmm...
I like that we get to see Micki and Ryan on their own, with Jack away. Ryan makes a dumb move with the electric fence, but he still wants to try and get this item back themselves, without having to bug Jack for help. I like it.
The scene where the rapist attacks Micki is hard to watch. The performances are gritty and real and Robey definitely gave it her all there. She seems to be in genuine distress at the end. Scary stuff.
Kate Trotter is always great, and she gives Avril not only the hard, take no gruff edge of a woman determined to do whatever it takes to get ahead, but a bit of a soft side, as well. When she is forced (?) to kill Dr. Finch by giving him to the maniac, we see some glimpse of remorse, however short-lived. She is human, even if it is just barely.
One of the best bits of this one is the very end. The antique doing a sort of last ditch effort to avoid eternity in the vault by offering up a way to get other cursed items back, with minimal fuss and muss. Zoinks - that is scary stuff! Not only is it speaking to them, but the curse is definitely aware of Micki and Ryan and what they are doing. Interesting.
Next week: Tails I Live, Heads You Die
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road-romans · 7 years
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s01e02 - Sur une symphonie d'Oleg Ermakov, fuyons en Sibérie !
“La proximité de la nature pouvait-elle apporter la liberté ?”
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Oleg Ermakov fut forestier dans une réserve naturelle du lac Baïkal avant d’avoir à réaliser son service militaire. Devenu écrivain, dans sa Pastorale sibérienne il lance son personnage dans une fuite que rien ne semble pouvoir arrêter. Mais, au juste, à quoi veut-il échapper ? Comme c’est en marchant qu’il tentera de répondre à ces questions, à sa suite, je longe le lac Baïkal jusqu’à la réserve de Baikalo-Lenskiy, je regarde un lac différent tous les matins et pars sur les traces de Daniel Menchikov.
“La taïga descend en vagues verdoyantes. Au loin, elle se confond avec la mer, il faudrait être idiot pour dire le lac.”
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En s’engageant dans la réserve naturelle du Baïkal, Daniel Menchikov fuit la ville, l’usine et les hommes :
“On vivait trop les uns sur les autres pour se supporter : de quel respect parler quand vous sautez in extremis dans un tramway bondé où votre place est prise, et que l’humanité n’est plus qu’un mur de dos tournés comme si le tram roulait vers les jardins du paradis plutôt que vers des usines et des bureaux ennuyeux à mourir.”
Il trouve dans cette réserve une communauté d’hommes qui vit en proximité avec la nature ; il se laisse doucement influencer par Remizov, philosophe en marge qui cite à l’envi Henry David Thoreau ; et se met aussi, peut-être, à aimer une jeune fille. Mais déjà, cette communauté recèle tous les dysfonctionnements de quelconque société : l’obligation de travailler, l’interdiction de se rendre dans certaines zones, et l’alcoolisme qui permet d’oublier la dureté de cette vie-là. Même ici, “on n’était plus nulle part à l’abri des chefs”.
Mais le Baïkal et son immensité accompagne sans cesse la vie de ce village, il est là en permanence :
“Le Baïkal est partout (…) partout de l’eau.”
Et quand je remonte la côte-est du lac à bord d’une camionnette Ouralski Avtomobilny Zavod, les chemins s’enfoncent dans les épaisses forêts, mais nous retombons inexorablement sur les eaux vertigineuses du Baïkal. A ce jeu de cache-cache, l’eau gagne toujours et devant son immensité, nous voulons bien, avec Daniel Menchikov, regarder le Baïkal comme une mer. Mais aussi comme le ciel, car souvent, le soir efface la frontière entre l’eau et l’air. Le Baïkal est envahissant, c’est encore ce que me confia un des forestiers de la réserve Baikalo-Lenskiy en évoquant ce « duch’ svobody », cet esprit de liberté qu’insuffle le lac et auquel on ne peut échapper.
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Camionnettes Ouralski Avtomobilny Zavod 
Aussi, quand Daniel Menchikov est appelé à ses obligations militaires, la fuite parmi les montagnes et les forêts de Sibérie lui semble préférable. Idéaliste, il ne doute pas qu’on l’entendra à Moscou et se met en tête d’aller expliquer des raisons que la raison d’Etat fait bien d’ignorer… Menchikov est pris une première fois mais les officiers comprennent vite qu’ils ont affaire à un idéologue de la fuite et qu’ils ne sauraient convertir ce délinquant des bois en un soldat docile. Contre toute attente, le déserteur est libéré. On le prive ainsi de la raison de sa course : « Que faire ? », comme dirait l’autre.
Liberté, vérité et infinité
En dialecte local, « taïga » signifie impénétrable. Voilà peut-être ce que recherche Daniel quand il parcourt ces prairies : un secret impénétrable. Tel un héros antique, il est habité par son destin :
“Il savait cela depuis l’enfance, c’était là, partout, toujours mais sous une forme larvée, anonyme, floue, qui d’un coup avait pris corps et résonnait. Comme un secret antique encore mal compris.”
Evoluant dans la forêt, remontant les rivières à contre-courant et traversant de vastes prairies, Daniel refuse la loi des hommes.
“Ramer à contre-courant demandait beaucoup de force.”
Mais que peut bien devenir cet homme retournant à un état de nature et affrontant cette “peur bien connue de l’homme face à la forêt que naguère il avait fui à jamais” ?
Et quand bien même, dans cette immensité silencieuse, Daniel fait des rencontres, c’est pour croiser des habitants au destin tout aussi solitaire. Il vit ainsi un temps avec une vieille femme dans un village de datchas. A mon tour de traverser ces villages où le temps semble s’être arrêté avant que quelques maisons secondaires flambant neuves nous rappellent notre époque. En Sibérie, le temps n’a en effet plus cours.
“Quelle sottise de se demander l’heure quand on est debout parmi les herbes mortes, au milieu des arbres. A mille ans près : en avant, en arrière, à gauche, à droite…”
Coupé de tous, confronté au silence et à ses propres questionnements, l’errance de Daniel frôle souvent la folie, il se perd plus d’une fois.
“Il avait du mal à se rappeler qui il était et comment il s’était retrouvé ici, et ne voulait pas penser à ce qui l’attendait.”
Daniel réussit-il à échapper à sa condition humaine ? Confronté à lui-même et à l’immensité, ses pensées et son corps changent jusqu’à rêver de pouvoir se dissiper dans cette nature, de ne plus avoir à rassasier ce corps d’homme.
“Ici, l’on ne peut présager de l’avenir. Dans la forêt, les pensées muent. Dans la forêt l’on respire autrement.”
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L’auteur de la pastorale sibérienne conclut ainsi l’errance de son héros ainsi :
“Il n’était plus le rameur qu’il avait été. Il était pasteur désormais. Le pasteur de ses pensées dans la vastitude.”
De mon côté, je me rappellerai que, quand je roulais péniblement sur les chemins qui longent le Baïkal, on me dit à plusieurs reprises ce proverbe russe : “v Rosii net dorog, a yest’ tol’ka napravlenie” (en Russie, il n’y a pas de routes mais il y a des directions). Quoi qu’il en soit, il semble que, en direction du Baïkal, des chemins se soient croisés.
Pastorale transsibérienne, Oleg Ermakov, Editions Jacqueline Chambon, 2004
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seanaxmaker · 8 years
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Review: The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz
Review: The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz
[Originally published in Movietone News 32, June 1974]
“Hey look, it floats!” cries Duddy Kravitz, from the bathtub. Duddy’s fellow Jew and fellow admirer of the bathtub buoyancy phenomenon, the diffident Leopold Bloom, luxuriated in a fantasy of himself lying, at the end of the day, “laved in a womb of warmth,” gazing at his limp member—a “languid floating flower.” Duddy, antihero of the…
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henrycavillportal · 4 years
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Henry Cavill ainda não está pendurando sua capa do Super-Homem.
Fontes confirmam à @Variety que o ator de "Man of Steel" está em negociações para retornar como Clark Kent em um próximo filme da DC Comics.
Os representantes da Warner Bros e Cavill não puderam ser encontrados para comentar.
Além da história de origem do Superman de Zack Snyder, "Man of Steel", em 2013, Cavill interpretou o herói icônico em "Batman v Superman" de 2016 e "Liga da Justiça" de 2017.
Snyder anunciou recentemente uma recriação da "Liga da Justiça" para a HBO Max, através de internos dizem à Variety Cavill não estaria se adequando ao redux da "Liga da Justiça", mas sim uma participação especial em um dos próximos filmes da DC, que inclui "Aquaman 2" , "" Esquadrão Suicida 2 "e" O Batman ".
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A mais recente aparição na tela grande do ator britânico aconteceu em "Missão Impossível - Precipitação" em 2018, ao lado de Tom Cruise.
Atualmente, Cavill estrelou "The Witcher", da Netflix, e interpreta o papel de Geralt of Rivia. Ele é representado pelo WME, gerente Dany Garcia, das empresas Garcia e Gang, Tire, Ramer e Brown.
As notícias de Cavill sobre um filme da DC Comics foram relatadas pela primeira vez por @Deadline." via Variety
#HenryCavill @HenryCavill #ZackSnyder #HBmax #WME #vero #Superman #ManOfSteel #HomemDeAço #hero #filme #movie #DC #dccomics #Rebirth #DoomsdayClock #cinema #HQs #ComicBooks #Comics #Geek #nerds #WarnerBros #filmes #filme #action #movie #film #movies #actors #director
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eaipvda-blog · 13 years
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The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz Movie Theater
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz movie download
Actors:
Zvee Scooler Henry Ramer Joseph Wiseman Joe Silver Denholm Elliott Richard Dreyfuss Randy Quaid Jack Warden Robert Goodier Micheline Lanctôt
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Cin-Eater: The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (1974)The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (1974). ;Barney;s Version;Paul Giamatti stars in Barney;s Version, the adaptation of the 1997 novel by the late Canadian writer Mordecai Richler, who is probably best known in this country for the movie The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz,. I think that unwatched movie is still alive somewhere buried under the dozens of VCR tapes that still haven;t. Do You want to Download The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz. The so-entrepreneurial Duddy also appears in the novel written by Mordecai Richler, titled "Barney;s Version," which, in turn,. The film is a little long at 134 minutes,. Urbains Horseman (1971; Governor Generals Literary Award), Solomon Gursky Was Here (1990; Commonwealth Writers Prize, shortlisted for the Man Booker. Joining the 131 existing inductees, the 2011 honourees will be added to Canada;s Walk of Fame, which annually recognizes individuals for their achievements in various fields, including music, sport, film and television,. Lionel Chetwynd, multiple Emmy nominee and Oscar-nominated screenwriter of The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, and Norman Powell, producer of 24 and former CBS Television executive, walked out of the Caucus. BARNEY;S VERSION Reviewed by Joyce | The Video Station: (303. He and his brother are raised by a single father, a taxi driver, and Duddy has a burning drive to be somebody,. Our hero;s first effort is to produce videos of bar mitzvah;s, filmed by an alcoholic Englishman.. Urbain;s Horseman (1971; Governor General;s Literary Award), Solomon Gursky Was Here (1990; Commonwealth Writers; Prize, shortlisted for the Man Booker. Lewis, director of Barney;s Version | Redblog(Previous Richler novels adapted to film include The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz with Richard Dreyfus and Joshua Then and Now with James Wood.) The character-driven film follows the incorrigible rogue and romantic. Greatest Canadian movie ever? You tell us! - Hollywood NorthThe Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz was my first exposure to great Canadian cinema, and still ranks among my favorites. Stunner. First published in 1959, The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz was Mordecai Richler;s fourth novel, but the first to gain widespread attention. Full Movie in High Quality ?. under marxism movie making is considered bourgeois. Interview - Richard J
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