Saturday, June 12, 2010
Top Ten Lists : Top 10 Words Of Summer
frisbee, marshmellow... What other words do you associate with the summer? What are their origins?
The top 10 lists of words on the m-w.com site are pretty cool! The "Top 10 Phrases from Shakespeare" and the "user-submitted words" are among my favorites. And yours?
Speaking of summer.... btw... before the summer (and before I can turn in your grade) I need: your online CCC feedback and your book reports!
Here is the link to the online CCC feedback form . It should take about 30 to 40 minutes... Please add comments about what you learned or discovered...
See you next week for our last class.
james
Friday, April 2, 2010
Sunday, February 7, 2010
I Like to Watch - Salon.com
The Superbowl (with the cool commercials) is coming this weekend...
"Saturday, Feb 6, 2010 21:01 EST
What Super Bowl? Alternatives to the big game""
Meanwhile what's the score with your "picture presents - image cadeaux"? I think the Smithies are way ahead! There are still a lot of empty links in our team's picture presents pages... Not all of you have posted all four pictures yet...
Now that your project week is finished the Smithies need your "images cadeaux"!
Do it today...
(If you need help let me know!)
See you Friday. We'll be in C124 at our normal time. Don't be late.
james
Do you all know the Salon.com website? It's full of non-conventional commentary...
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
The Fringe Benefits of Failure, and the Importance of Imagination | Harvard Magazine
An interesting commencement speech by someone I'm sure you've all heard of.
have a good project week...
james
Please go back to this posting our blog http://serbian-sculpture.blogspot.com/ and add a comment...
Haiti - Salon.com
"I came to Haiti to research. Six months later, I lay under the rubble of a house, my friend crushed to death nearby"
Just so you have other things to think of than the Smithies!
This is a nice story... do you know the Salon.com site?
-----------
I think the CCC2010 (cross cultural connections) project with the Smithies is off to a good start!
Remember the forums are for you to express yourselves and to communicate... and French, English whatever, (but we did agree on one message per week that you send to me to correct for you.)
have a good project week!
james
Sunday, January 31, 2010
Reality Equation
Hi, this is Parimal's blog.... the one guy in the Smithie class!
It's a pretty interesting blog...
What do you think?
james
Friday, January 22, 2010
FRN250-01S10: CULTURA - MIT project
this site is one of the inspirations and models for our CCC project..... the Cultura Project which was started at MIT.
Here's what they say about the film we began to watch... there's much more on the site.
Films
"THREE MEN AND A BABY" (1987)
IN THE US PRESSFILMS IN REVIEW, 3/88, p. 165, Charles Sawyer
Three Men And A Baby is a total delight: gentle, touching and very funny. [..] Early scenes between the baby and her new fathers lean heavily on the obvious, but that's simply a prelude to a deep and touching attachment between the men and the baby.
[......]
By letting his three charming co-stars be themselves, I suspect Nimoy is most responsible for the immense appeal of this charmer. However, all three actors are excellent and Marvin Hamlisch's music adds a bright and bouncy touch.
Three Men And A Baby is based on a successful French film of a couple years back. I for one am glad someone saw the wisdom of a well-done American version.
LOS ANGELES TIMES, 11/25/87. Calendar/p. 1, Michael Wilmington
Three Men and a Baby is an Americanization of one of the biggest recent French box-office hits: Coline Serreau's Three Men and a Cradle. Serreau's movie was fairly frothy, and this one is frothier still.
[.....] Where before, much of the humor came from a woman's amused reaction to the sudden maternal problems of three definitively anti-marriage bachelors, this adaptation - written and directed by men - is more coy, more cutesypoo. But it has the likability of the first movie. The people who made it have carried over much of the original's weightless, sweet-tempered flavor.
[.....] Despite their easy camaraderie, it's hard to figure out why these three are living together-or why they never hire a nurse. Danson's gypsy actor looks as if he could use help with the rent, but do a successful architect-who designs penthouses like this-and a nationally syndicated cartoonist need roomies?
MONTHLY FILM BULLETIN, 4/88, p. 120, Geoff Brown
Hollywood's versions of French comedies do not usually hit the box-office jackpot[...] But Three Men and a Baby has been an exception. The baby, obviously, helps: this is the season of Baby Boom, Raising Arizona, and films resurrecting family values in strange disguises. The baby's actual mother proves of little account, popping up only when the film is already running out of steam. As in the original, the comic mileage is extracted from three determined bachelors entering the brave new world of baby foods, nappy-changing, and wiping up the cute little bundle's 'diddles'. This was thin enough in the French version, though Trois hommes et un couffin glided along on the appealing playing, Coline Serreau's fluent direction, and the cameraman's skilful lighting of the rambling interior set. Hollywood's hard-driven edition only emphasises the flimsy material.
NEW YORK, 12/7/87, p. 152, David Denby
In another men-without-women picture, Three Men and a Baby, Tom Selleck, Ted Danson, and Steve Guttenberg play swinging bachelors who sober up all too quickly when a baby girl is left on their doorstep. This proto-sitcom has a good deal less force than the 1986 French movie on which it's based, Three Men and a Cradle, which was a study of male egotism. Leonard Nimoy, who directed, isn't tough enough to resist the obvious, and the movie becomes so cute it stops being funny. There's one surprise, however. Tom Selleck, a bust in movies so far, shows an amiable flair for light comedy. Find this man a script and a co-star of the female sex.
NEW YORK POST, 11/25/87, p. 33, Roger Ebert
Three Men and a Baby begins with too many characters and too much plot, and 15 minutes into the film I was growing restless.
[.....] The movie never steps wrong as long as it focuses on the developing love between the big men and the tiny baby. At first they're baffled by this little bundle that only eats, sleeps, cries and makes poo-poo- lots and lots of poo-poo. "The book says to feed the baby every two hours," Selleck complains, "but do you count from when you start, or when you finish? It takes me two hours to get her to eat, and by the time she's done it's time to start again, so that I'm feeding her all of the time."
Those scenes are the heart of the movie. Unfortunately, there is also a completely unnecessary sub-plot that distracts from the good stuff. Three Men and a Baby is a faithful reworking of a French film from a few years ag [...]
Learning that an American remake of the French movie was being planned, I assumed that the drug angle would be the first thing written out of the script.
But, no, Nimoy and his writers, James Orr and Jim Cruickshank, have remade the entire French movie, drugs and all, leading to a badly staged and distracting confrontation between the heroes and the dealers at a midtown construction site.
Luckily, there's enough of the domestic comedy to make the movie work.
NEWSDAY, 11/25/87, Part II/p. 11, Joseph Gelmis
The original scenario has been altered very little in the remake, just minor changes in the plot and an infusion of idiomatic American one-liners.
"Mom," says Danson to his mother (Celeste Holm), "I'm a screwup."
"You were a screwup," says she. "Now you're a father."
The remake is, like the original, good for a few laughs and a few tugs at the heartstrings. But the judgment of my original review applies equally to the remake: "The sitcom farce they play is at odds with the sincerity of the emotions the story is meant to evoke."
Selleck Danson and Guttenberg made me chuckle more than their French counterparts. Not necessarily because they're funnier. But because it's funny to see familiar American bachelor icons from Magnum, P .I. and Cheers and countless movies become the love-slave of an infant who must be fed, diapered or entertained every waking moment.
Three Men and a Baby is fluff, but it's agreeable enough if you're in a kitchy-coo state of mind.
NEWSWEEK, 11/30/87, p. 73, David Ansen
[....] Unfortunately, most of the comedy rests on a series of untenable contrivances. For starters, we are asked to believe that three successful New Yorkers well past their college years-an architect (Selleck), an actor (Danson) and a cartoonist (Guttenberg) would be sharing a million-dollar penthouse apartment on Central Park West. Even more curious, these guys never bother to hire a nurse. The reason, of course, is simple: there'd be no comedy if they exhibited common sense. And why, you might ask, do they bring baby along on a dangerous mission to confront the gun-toting drug dealers whose package of heroin they have accidentally acquired? Again, the movie jettisons logic in pursuit of the cutes. And it backfires. All you can think of is that our heroes are acting like jerks. And the moviemakers can't even wring a good joke out of the situation.
These characters remain outlines, with only the personalities of the stars to fill them in. Here are three obviously competitive, career-oriented men confronting an outrageous, inconveniencing situation. A golden opportunity, you might think, for an edgy, farcical exploration of the macho mind under siege. But Nimoy and his writers prefer blandness to satire; an E.T. without toilet training, little Mary has been sent to earth to prove that even playboys have big hearts. A feel-good fantasy for baby boomers, Three Men and a Baby is so aggressively innocuous you may be ready for beddy-bye time long before it's over.
VILLAGE VOICE, 12/1/87, p. 82. Jan Hoffman
Here's a go-figure scenario for you: In the spring of 1986, France mails us Three Men and a Cradle, its highest grossing film in two decades, nominated here for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. Three Men was a light, albeit thoughtful, reverie about three roommates, ultra-bachelors who ultimately succumb to their tender parenting instincts for an adorable infant dropped at their doorstep. The sauciness of this send-up was thoroughly French; its politics came from a bemused feminist-writer-director Coline Serreau.
Hey, whatever they can do, Hollywood can do better! Within less than a year of the film's release here, Americans remade it for a broader audience. They got two guys to write it, and cast two of the leads with TV actors. [....]
The American version sticks closely to the cluttered plot of the original. [...] Just about every important detail was lost in the translation. The Frenchmen were endearing rather than handsome, just average middle-class guys scrambling to make a living and keep their ramshackle digs women-proof and comfy. They were notch-men, sure, but director Serreau presented their amorality in caricature. When the baby enters their lives, she pisses in their faces.
The French version concentrates on showing how the men's lives change because of the baby; they adapt to her. A dinner party with hot-to-trot lovelies at their pad collapses when they neglect their dates to care for the wailing infant. They're snappish with exhaustion, become careless with their work. But the good-natured Americans are really never less than troopers; they figure out how to adapt the baby to their lives. When architect Selleck visits a construction site, he outfits her with a little pink hard hat.
The American version also has a nasty additional character who never would have been in Coline Serreau's film: the architect's chilly lawyer-girlfriend, who is not the slightest bit interested in the infant, and even derisive about child-rearing. Glenn Close meet Diane Keaton! What's next? Fatal Baby Attraction?
Friday, January 8, 2010
she being Brand...
This is a poem by e.e. Cummings.
I know it's a bit weird but it was written like that in many websites so I guess that Cummings has written it like that too.
It is about sex. Enjoy..
she being Brand
-new;and you
know consequently a
little stiff i was
careful of her and(having
thoroughly oiled the universal
joint tested my gas felt of
her radiator made sure her springs were O.
K.)i went right to it flooded-the-carburetor cranked her
up,slipped the
clutch(and then somehow got into reverse she
kicked what
the hell)next
minute i was back in neutral tried and
again slo-wly;bare,ly nudg. ing(my
lev-er Right-
oh and her gears being in
A 1 shape passed
from low through
second-in-to-high like
greasedlightning)just as we turned the corner of Divinity
avenue i touched the accelerator and give
her the juice,good
(it
was the first ride and believe i we was
happy to see how nice she acted right up to
the last minute coming back down by the Public
Gardens i slammed on
the
internalexpanding
&
externalcontracting
brakes Bothatonce and
brought allofher tremB
-ling
to a:dead.
stand-
;Still)
E.E. Cummings
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
The French and the Americans
American students sharing their views on Americans and French.
Et tout ceci en Français !
Sunday, December 6, 2009
James Burchfield plays (invisible) turntables | Video on TED.com
here you don't need any subtitles!
------------------
Please go back to this posting on our blog (http://serbian-sculpture.blogspot.com/) and leave a comment.
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Funny videos about Americans
No wonder the world is in a mess.
How could Americans choose such a president? Here is a part of the answer: