lunes, 5 de mayo de 2014

The 10 Best Books of 2013

AMERICANAH

By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.
 
By turns tender and trenchant, Adichie’s third novel takes on the comedy and tragedy of American race relations from the perspective of a young Nigerian immigrant. From the office politics of a hair-braiding salon to the burden of memory, there’s nothing too humble or daunting for this fearless writer, who is so attuned to the various worlds and shifting selves we inhabit — in life and online, in love, as agents and victims of history and the heroes of our own stories.

THE FLAMETHROWERS
By Rachel Kushner.
      
Radical politics, avant-garde art and motorcycle racing all spring to life in Kushner’s radiant novel of the 1970s, in which a young woman moves to New York to become an artist, only to wind up involved in the revolutionary protest movement that shook Italy in those years. The novel, Kushner’s second, deploys mordant observations and chiseled sentences to explore how individuals are swept along by implacable social forces.


THE GOLDFINCHBy Donna Tartt.
       
Tartt’s intoxicating third novel, after “The Secret History” and “The Little Friend,” follows the travails of Theo Decker, who emerges from a terrorist bombing motherless but in possession of a prized Dutch painting. Like the best of Dickens, the novel is packed with incident and populated with vivid characters. At its heart is the unwavering belief that come what may, art can save us by lifting us above ourselves.

LIFE AFTER LIFEBy Kate Atkinson.
       
Demonstrating the agile style and theatrical bravado of her much-admired Jackson Brodie mystery novels, Atkinson takes on nothing less than the evils of mid-20th-century history and the nature of death as she moves back and forth in time, fitting together versions of a life story for a heroine who keeps dying, then being resurrected — and sent off in different, but entirely plausible, directions.

TENTH OF DECEMBER
StoriesBy George Saunders.
      
Saunders’s wickedly entertaining stories veer from the deadpan to the flat-out demented: Prisoners are force-fed mood-altering drugs; ordinary saps cling to delusions of grandeur; third-world women, held aloft on surgical wire, become the latest in bourgeois lawn ornaments. Beneath the comedy, though, Saunders writes with profound empathy, and this impressive collection advances his abiding interest in questions of class, power and justice.

AFTER THE MUSIC STOPPED
The Financial Crisis, the Response, and the Work Ahead
By Alan S. Blinder.
      
Blinder’s terrific book on the financial meltdown of 2008 argues that it happened because of a “perfect storm,” in which many unfortunate events occurred simultaneously, producing a far worse outcome than would have resulted from just a single cause. Blinder criticizes both the Bush and Obama administrations, especially for letting Lehman Brothers fail, but he also praises them for taking steps to save the country from falling into a serious depression. Their response to the near disaster, Blinder says, was far better than the public realizes.

DAYS OF FIRE
Bush and Cheney in the White House

By Peter Baker.
      
Baker succeeds in telling the story of the several crises of the Bush administration with fairness and balance, which is to say that he is sympathetic to his subjects, acknowledging their accomplishments but excusing none of their errors. Baker, the chief White House correspondent for The Times, is fascinated by the mystery of the Bush-­Cheney relationship, and even more so by the mystery of George W. Bush himself. Did Bush lead, or was he led by others? In the end, Baker concludes, the “decider” really did decide.


FIVE DAYS AT MEMORIAL
Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital
By Sheri Fink.
      
In harrowing detail, Fink describes the hellish days at a hospital during and after Hurricane Katrina, when desperate medical professionals were suspected of administering lethal injections to critically ill patients. Masterfully and compassionately reported and as gripping as a thriller, the book poses reverberating questions about end-of-life care, race discrimination in medicine and how individuals and institutions break down during disasters.

THE SLEEPWALKERSHow Europe Went to War in 1914
By Christopher Clark.
      
Clark manages in a single volume to provide a comprehensive, highly readable survey of the events leading up to World War I. He avoids singling out any one nation or leader as the guilty party. “The outbreak of war,” he writes, “is not an Agatha Christie drama at the end of which we will discover the culprit standing over a corpse.” The participants were, in his term, “sleepwalkers,” not fanatics or murderers, and the war itself was a tragedy, not a crime.

WAVE
By Sonali Deraniyagala.
      
On the day after Christmas in 2004, Deraniyagala called her husband to the window of their hotel room in Sri Lanka. “I want to show you something odd,” she said. The ocean looked foamy and closer than usual. Within moments, it was upon them. Deraniyagala lost her husband, her parents and two young sons to the Indian Ocean tsunami. Her survival was miraculous, and so too is this memoir — unsentimental, raggedly intimate, full of fury.

jueves, 1 de mayo de 2014

Movie Releases 2014

Here is the most anticipated releases for this year, you enjoy them, but when I clear out some movies and premiered n.n 

Ten Celebrities with the Extremely Gross Hygiene Practices

1. BRAD PITT


2. JULIA ROBERTS


3. JOHNNY DEPP


4. COLIN FARELL


5. MATHEW MCCONAUGHEY


6. ORLANDO BLOOM


7. COURTNEY COX


8. ZAC EFFRON


9. CAMERON DIAZ


10. RUSSELL CROWE

miércoles, 23 de abril de 2014

The 10 Best Action Movies of All Time

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1. Die Hard

Director: John McTiernan
Stars: Bruce Willis, Alan Rickman, Bonnie Bedelia, Alexander Godunov
It's Christmas Eve, and John McClane (Bruce Willis) has to go rescue his wife's douchebaggy new employers. So what if McClane peppers his destruction with self-pity? You would too if you were gunning for the world's only terrorist with feet smaller than your sister's.
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2. Terminator 2: Judgment Day

Director: James Cameron
Stars: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton, Edward Furlong, Robert Patrick
Robo-Schwarzenegger returns, this time to save John Connor, the future leader of the human resistance against machines. With a freaky sci-fi premise, amazing action, and visual effects that still hold up, T2 gets our vote. The Governator, not so much.
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3. The Matrix

Director: Larry and Andy Wachowski
Stars: Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne, Carrie-Anne Moss, Hugo Weaving, Joe Pantoliano

The inspiration for countless camera tricks and slow-the-action-waaaaay-down shootouts, The Matrix managed to do what Speed and Point Breakcouldn't-make Keanu Reeves seem human (albeit only compared to a horde of intelligent computer programs).
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4. Raiders of the Lost Ark

Director: Steven Spielberg
Stars: Harrison Ford, Karen Allen, Paul Freeman, John Rhys-Davies, Ronald Lacey, Denholm Elliot

Impressionable '70s babies kids learned a lot from Raiders-what "archaeology" means, how much fun whips can be, and that Nazis melt like a nice Gruyère. Above all, Indiana Jones taught us that balls-out swagger goes a long way.
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5. The Bourne Ultimatum

Director: Paul Greengrass
Stars: Matt Damon, Julia Stiles, David Straithairn, Edgar Ramirez, Scott Glenn, Joan Allen, Albert Finney, Colin Stinton, Joey Ansah

The last of a trilogy that improved with each sequel, Ultimatum's relentless cat-and-mouse chase turns a train-station stroll into a pulse-quickening pursuit, a coffee-table book into a brutal weapon, and Matt Damon into the ultimate ass-kicking machine. That was a lot of hyphens, but you get the drift.
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6. Predator

Director: John McTiernan
Stars: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Carl Weathers, Bill Duke, Jesse Ventura, Kevin Peter Hall, Elpidia Carrillo

OK, let's get this straight. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jesse Ventura (that's two governors right there), and Apollo fucking Creed (Carl Weathers) get stalked by a dreadlocked alien who's armed with a nuclear device? Two words: Fuck and yes.
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7. The Killer

Director: John Woo
Stars: Chow Yun-fat, Danny Lee, Sally Yeh, Kenneth Tsang, Chu Kong

The ultimate Hong Kong collabo—John Woo and Chow-Yun Fat—strikes again, this time with Fat double-fisting firepower in as an assassin who has to fend off a double-cross on his way to redemption. The original Mandarin title is Die xue shuang xiong, which translates to "holy SHIT, that's a lot of bullets."
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8. The Dark Knight

Director: Christopher Nolan
Stars: Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Aaron Eckhart, Gary Oldman, Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman, Eric Roberts

Heath Ledger's final opus, directed by the dude who made Memento, all with Christian Bale's hilarious gravel voice and some of the greatest psychosis/blowing things up in the greatest city of all time. The final result: A superhero epic that;s well worth the two-and-a-half-hour sit-down.
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9. Aliens

Director: James Cameron
Stars: Sigourney Weaver, Michael Biehn, Bill Paxton, Paul Reiser, Lance Henriksen, Carrie Henn, William Hope

James Cameron's sequel to Ridley Scott's brilliant sci-fi/horror flick Alien teaches us to never underestimate the stupidity of man-who else would insist on colonizing an alien-infested planet? Once communication with the colony is lost, the guns come out, and they don't stop blasting 'til the credits roll.
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10. Braveheart

Director: Mel Gibson
Stars: Mel Gibson, Sophie Marceau, Patrick McGoohan, Angus Macfayden, Brendan Gleeson, Catherine McCormack

Mel Gibson's medieval period piece took home five Oscars, but it's no cinephile schlockfest—unless flaming arrows and mass hangings are your idea of high-brow fare. Ignore it at your peril, sugartits.
To see more movies: http://www.complex.com/pop-culture/2012/03/the-50-best-action-movies-of-all-time/braveheart 

lunes, 7 de abril de 2014

Top 'Love' Songs of All Time

  1. "Endless Love" Diana Ross & Lionel Richie                                                          Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for nine weeks (1981)
  2. "I’ll Make Love to You" - Boyz II Men                                                                                            Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for 14 weeks (1994)
  3. "We Found Love" - Rihanna feat. Calvin Harris                                                                          Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for 10 weeks (2011)
  4. "How Deep Is Your Love," Bee Gees                                                                                             Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for three weeks (1977)
  5. "Silly Love Songs" - Wings                                                                                                                   Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for five weeks (1976)
  6. "I Will Always Love You" - Whitney Houston                                                                               Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for 14 weeks (1992)
  7. "Let Me Love You" - Mario                                                                                                                  Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for nine weeks (2005)
  8. "Because I Love You (The Postman Song)" -Stevie B                                                                   Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for four weeks (1990)
  9. "Best of My Love" - The Emotions                                                                                                 Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for five weeks (1977)
  10. "I Can’t Stop Loving You" - Ray Charles                                                                                    Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for five weeks (1962)
  11. "Bleeding Love" - Leona Lewis                                                                                                     Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for four weeks (2008)
  12. "My Love" - Paul McCartney and Wings                                                                                        Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for four weeks (1973)
  13. "Because You Loved Me" - Celine Dion                                                                                        Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for six weeks (1996)
  14. "Crazy Little Thing Called Love" - Queen                                                                                   Hot 100: No. 1 for four weeks (1980)
  15. "To Know Him Is to Love Him" - The Teddy Bears                                                                  Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for three weeks (1958)
  16. "Love Is Blue" - Paul Mauriat                                                                                                       Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for five weeks (1968)
  17. "Woman in Love" - Barbra Streisand                                                                                               Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for three weeks (1980)
  18. "Love Takes Time" - Mariah Carey                                                                                                   Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for three weeks (1990)
  19. "It Must Have Been Love" - Roxette                                                                                             Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for two weeks (1990)
  20. "Vision of Love" - Mariah Carey                                                                                                         Hot 100 Peak: No. 1 for four weeks (1990)