As you proceed to personally
call others commentary into question.
Not exact matches
When it came to that last question, there was plenty of anger to go around, with many complaining about David Cameron's decision to
call the referendum,
others infuriated at the weak Leave campaign, and still
others offering less than polite
commentary on segments of their fellow citizens.
Some
call them online confessionals,
others believe they're merely a millennial fad, and most just see them as vehicles for inappropriate
commentary.
Blu - ray Highlight: There are a number of great extras to choose from (including one of the funnier blooper reels and a cool feature
called Disney Intermission where the Muppets perform short gags and tease
other bonus material whenever you pause the movie), but the
commentary with director James Bobin and co-writers Jason Segel and Nicholas Stoller is too much fun to ignore.
Factory has eschewed a
commentary in favour of retrospective interviews; if it was one or the
other, they definitely made the right
call.
Skip the two
commentaries — one from producer Jon Avnet (quite the portrait of arrogance for a man whose filmmaking expertise resulted in Red Corner and Up Close and Personal), the
other a group yakker featuring writer - director Kerry Conran, production designer Kevin Conran, animation supervisor Steve Yamamoto, and Visual Effects Supervisor Darin Hollings (their frequent gaps in conversation throwing the comparatively loquacious Avnet's Hollywood gasbaggery into relief)-- and head straight for their digest version, a two - part making - of from Sparkhill
called «Brave New World» (49 mins.
On Blu - ray and DVD with two
commentary tracks (one from director Paul Feig and co-writer Katie Dippold, the
other featuring editor Brent White, producer Jessie Henderson, production designer Jeff Sage, visual effects supervisor Pete Travers, and special effects supervisor Mark Hawker), the featurettes «Meet the Team,» «Visual Effects: 30 Years Later,» and «Slime Time,» and «Jokes a Plenty: Free For All,» and a collection of alternate improvisational takes (what was
called «Line - o-rama» in Judd Apatow disc releases).
Other bonus materials include an audio
commentary with directors Don Bluth and Gary Goldman, deleted scenes, five interactive set - top games and a ten - minute featurette
called Secrets behind the Secret.
Now on to the supplements, in a section I'll
call «Bait and Switch, Part Two:» prior to the November 1999 release of the original Haunting DVD, listings indicated it would include an audio
commentary from director Jan DeBont and production designer Eugenio Zanetti, plus some deleted scenes and
other features.
Should you give the first option a spin, you'll get the theatrical version of the film plus a making - of documentary
called Spirit of Vengeance, and two
commentaries (one with director / writer Mark Steven Johnson and VFX Supervisor Kevin Mack, and the
other featuring producer Gary Foster).
In «The Ends of History» (
Commentary, Feb. 5, 1992), Harvey J. Kaye chastises Lynne V. Cheney, the head of the National Endowment for the Humanities, and
others on her side of the fence for promoting what he
calls «an artificial and one dimensional» history curriculum.
In a
commentary piece entitled Heeding the lessons of teenagers, fellow Education Advocate and columnist Wendy Lecker used her latest article in the Stamford Advocate and
other Hearst Media Group outlets to remind us that when it comes to the so -
called «education reform» agenda it is critically important that student voices be heard above the din of politics and the greed of the corporate education reform industry.
Nintendo will hold smaller events where press and
other E3 attendees can check out upcoming games, and will host another Nintendo Direct video - they're
calling it a «Nintendo Digital Event» now - online on the morning of June 10, plus «Nintendo Treehouse» videos of
commentary and demos from the show floor throughout E3.
While his reign eventually came to an end, with opinion turning against his dogmatic edicts, his ideas — which he published in the pages of the Partisan Review, the Nation, and
Commentary — remain a critical touchstone for anyone trying to grasp the Abstract Expressionists, the Washington Color School painters, and
others who were engaged in formalist, «non-objective» art, as abstraction was
called back then.
It might also seem that it would be more accurate that this
commentary be
called Reprising Postmodernism and Conceptualism, since Hardinger and Rooney, among many
other artists of their generation, make each object the subject of a contextual scheme, and for Hardinger an eco-political one.
Weary of the criticism that was plaguing his signature car part works that situated them as a
commentary on American car culture, consumerism and taste, Chamberlain sought out
other materials through which he could create sculptures so as to avoid then so
called «car crash syndrome.»
In addition to
calling out the most prominent current climate change denier of them all — Donald Trump, we profiled eight
other leading climate change deniers in the world of politics, individuals whom — as the
commentary notes — have been responsible for «clouding the climate change debate» and stalling action by participating in «a campaign of deliberate misinformation.»
A «
call for evidence» from the UK government on how to reform the energy sector,
calling for information and
commentary by industry and
other stakeholders, has been welcomed by the country's Electricity Storage Network trade association.
And at some point someone here is going to
call anyone who is not convinced by this uncited, in - expert
commentary (anyone, in
other words, who accepts the mere possibility that the billions of humans on the planet and their massive technocracy might, just might have an effect on the environment) as a «true - believer.»
In a
commentary on the 2012 State of the Union address, Brooks chided President Obama for ignoring the Peterson Foundation's
call to «tax fossil fuels to spur innovation,» among
other recommendations.
Cs made their claim and in doing so, relied upon the
commentary in Volume 38 (2) of the Encyclopaedia of Forms & Precedents that states the inclusion of a «
call - in» clause should at least be considered in any case
other than: «the very simplest cases such as an application for change of use or for the carrying out of relatively minor building operations where... it is unlikely that the grant of planning permission would be challenged by third parties by way of judicial review....»
However, there are also
commentaries (e.g. by Ron Friedmann) explaining that so -
called innovation at many / most law firms might be best described as the uptake of technology or methodologies that have been common in
other industries for years.
So you might have a couple of babies on the floor looking at each
other, and an educator will be there to, what we
call, scaffold that, to just make sure it's safe, to make, maybe have a bit of running
commentary about what's happening so that the children know that they're thought about, and the babies can know that there is someone present, and also the educator can be there to regulate the interaction.
These new results also support
other research on an overlapping area of study — an emerging field
called self - control, says Kathleen Vohs, a consumer behavior expert at the University of Minnesota who published an accompanying
commentary piece on the findings in the same issue of Science.