Not exact matches
Adam Bear and Paul Bloom at Yale University asked
people to look at white
circles on a
screen and silently guess which one would turn red.
«Spider - Man» frequently falls victim to easy sentimentality — the knee jerk reaction seems to be «if we want
people to care, put a six - year - old
on screen» — especially with Peter and Gwen's
on - again / off - again relationship which doesn't develop so much drive in an endless
circle, marking time until the climax.
So you were talking about this kind of karmic
circle where it comes back around — where now «Hoop Dreams,» a film Ebert helped make successful, he was someone that shined a light
on these less - well - known films that had weaker marketing budgets or so forth, drew
people's attention to Errol Morris, who you saw
on screen, really helped launch the careers of some of these
people by shining that light
on them... and you were saying how from your experience as a critic and all that, you say in your own words, you yourself feel the same desire, that your job is to cast that light.
I especially like the trick where the camera slowly pans in a
circle and the
people on screen move around behind it and show up in unexpected places.
When a user receives an inbound message from someone, either a text message or a Facebook message, the sender's Facebook profile photo appears
on the
screen in a small
circle, where users can tap the photo to chat with that
person, even if you're doing something else with your handset.