Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Movie Review: Fast & Furious 7

It's all about Paul Walker in the seventh installment of the massively successful street racing series, and that's just fine

The death of Paul Walker in November 2013 cast a pall over the future of the lucrative Fast & Furious franchise, which at that point was already halfway into production on its seventh installment. Walker, the blond-haired, blue-eyed hunk that was one-half dreamboat, one-half boy next door, had played a central role in five of the first six films, along with partner in crime Vin Diesel, and it was unclear how the production could continue despite his untimely departure.


Fortunately for the viewers, and for the pockets of distribution company Universal Pictures, we live in an era of special effects for which an actor’s absence is no longer an insurmountable obstacle, and so the effects artists went to work to conjure a mostly performance out of Walker that would not have appeared as seamless even just a few years ago. There are a few hiccups along the way, but for the most part the film is as enjoyable as any of its predecessors, even as it edges a little too close to James Bond excess, and the final montage honoring Walker will tug at the heartstrings of anyone with a pulse.

Rating: ***
Directed by
James Wan
With Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Michelle Rodriguez, Jason Statham and Dwayne Johnson

In Fast & Furious 7, the gang’s past catches up with them, as Deckard Shaw (Jason Statham), the brother of the villain in Part 6, decides to takes revenge on his newly deceased sibling by going after Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel), Brian O’Conner (Walker) and the rest of Toretto’s squad. Along the way, which takes them from Los Angeles to Abu Dhabi and back again, they accumulate allies and foes as the screenplay attempts to layer its thin plot with additional characters.

Director James Wan only mildly accelerates our pulses with his action scenes, most of which have major narrative gaps because it allows the good guy to arrive at the right moment or the bad guy to stand on the right spot, thus concluding a fast sequence of cuts and zooms in a way that resolves the tension but rides roughshod over credibility.

Like the infamous tank-jumping scene in Fast & Furious 6, which was panned by all and derided by most, this latest — and, by the looks of it, final — installment in the franchise has a few scenes that derive their entertainment value from being impossible. Not unlike many 007 films, or even that highway scene in Knight and Day, the film generates pleasure when it goes a little off the rails. One of the biggest laughs, but also one of the highlights, comes about 50 minutes into the film, when Walker makes an impossible jump from a bus dangling over a cliff onto a car as it spins its front end across the abyss to catch him in time.

Another 007-inspired moment, in which a sexy woman steps out of the sea in slow motion while the camera pans from her legs to her face, will be immediately recognizable as a (deliberate) exaggeration and is sure to elicit a good-natured chortle from the audience.


These kinds of scenes — silly at worst and unrealistic at best, but consequently all the more enjoyable — are unfortunately counterbalanced by shoddy camera work (one particular gimmick, repeated many times over, is to attach the camera to a falling body, thus creating the peculiar image of a static center with a dynamic outer core), multiple push-ins on women’s oh-so-unsubtly-exposed buttocks and quick cuts to mask the stand-ins that replaced Walker in post-production: his brothers, Cody and Caleb.

Of course, that last point of criticism will be contentious in the eyes of some, as the film could not have been completed without finding a solution to Walker’s absence. But in at least two fight scenes, we almost never see the characters’ faces, and one of those scenes takes place in a parking garage so dimly lit we are surprised the two men actually succeed in landing a punch. We accept this approach, because even those who have followed just a modicum of celebrity news the past few months would know the film was completed in large part without one of its leads.

This awareness is essential to our appreciation of the final scene, which packs a serious emotional punch as we see the veil being pulled back a little. Diesel doesn't quite break the fourth wall, but there is an unmistakable double farewell of sorts — in the world of the film and in world outside the film. These closing moments are made all the more poignant by our insight into the events behind the scenes and our knowledge that these two actors had shared the same diegesis for nearly a decade and a half.
Fast & Furious 7 is not a great film. Its final action sequence is overlong, story lines are badly cut together, the masking of the absent Walker is at times painfully obvious and some of the performances, like smooth-talking but dimwitted Roman (Tyrese Gibson) or the awkward blond agent Elena (Elsa Pataky), are caricatures that belong in a film with a Roman numeral “VII” attached to it.

However, as a tribute to Walker, who is as captivating at the age of 40 as he was as a 26-year-old, the film is a beautiful eulogy that ensures we remember him as Brian O'Conner, the policeman turned street racer, husband and father, whose friendship with Dominic Toretto grounded him when he needed stability and gave us endless adrenaline-pumping thrills over the years, for which we will be eternally grateful.

Source from here.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

How to Play ISO image files in Windows Media Center

This tutorial will guide you through adding your DVDs to Windows Media Center (include Windows 7/8/8.1/10 and so on), with this top ISO Converter, you will not have any problems at anytime.  

“ How does one play ISO image files in Windows Media Center? I just finished building my HTPC, and have begun configuing WMC, and adding updates and the like to my system. I decided so test out Slysoft's AnyDVDHD (and thier CloneDVD software), and have backed up several disks, but am uncertain of the best set-up for viewing these in WMC. Any guidance here would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.” 

 


With Windows Media Center, you can catch broadcast and internet TV shows on your big screen, sync media to your windows phone or Zune, set up your Xbox 360 as a media center extender for enjoying all your home entertainment. Apart from this, how about making full advantage of media center by watching ISO files in Windows Media Center? 

To view your ISO movie on Windows Media Center, here is an easier way: that is to convert your ISO movies to WMC best supported video format. Here, Pavtube ISO to WMC Converter is the best tool for you. Overall, this program can help you extract DVD movies to Windows Media Center playable format. It is professional and easy to use for editing and conversion and makes great quality copies of DVDs. The synchronization of audio and video and super fast conversion speed are also wonderful. The Mac version is ISO to WMC Converter for Mac.  

Free download this top ISO to WMC Converter: 

       

Step 1: Run the best ISO Converter from Pavtube, and load ISO files to it. You can also load DVD discs. 



Step 2: Select an optimized video format for output. There are hundreds of profiles under “Format” menu, but you would always find the right one as output format. For example, choose MP4 as showed below. The format is designed for users that wanna get ISO files to Windows Media Center. 



Tip: PavtubeDVDAid let users control/customize output file quality. To improve video quality, simply click "Settings" and set video bitrate up. 



Step 3: Start ripping ISO to MP4 video for Windows Media Center.

Click "Convert" button to rip ISO to Windows Media Center, once the ripping task is finished by Pavtube DVDAid, you can click "Open" button at the bottom of the main interface to get the output MP4 file for adding to Windows Media Center for playing and sharing with your family. 

With this top ISO to WMC Converter, you can get any ISO files for enjoying on your Windows Media Center for Windows 2003/XP/Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8/Windows 8.1/Windows 10. 

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Tuesday, April 7, 2015

‘A Love Story’ (‘Un Amour’): Film Review

The Bottom Line: A poignant real-life tale of one couple's entente cordiale
Opens: Wednesday, Mar. 25th (in France)
Director: Richard Copans 



Producer-director Richard Copans tells the story of his Franco-American origins

Between Jerry Lewis, Maurice Chevalier, Bill O’Reilly and freedom fries, the United States and France have carried on a love-hate relationship that’s lasted for over two centuries now. One particularly inspiring case of the former is examined with beaucoup affection in A Love Story (Un Amour), producer-director Richard Copans’ documentary account of how his American father and French mother came together at a time when the world was coming apart, holding on through thick and thin as war engulfed Europe and they found themselves separated by an ocean. 

Composed of archive photos, letters, sound recordings and present-day interviews, with dueling voiceovers providing each character’s point of view, this non-fictional narrative offers up a moving and historically apt follow-up to Copans’ 2003 film, Racines, which examined the filmmaker’s roots in rural France and Eastern Europe. But its veritable tale of Franco-American passion makes it a stand-alone work that could find takers in fests and select art houses following a late March release in Gaul. 
 



 
Copans is more known at home as a producer than as a director, heading up the Paris-based company Les Films d’ici, whose doc-heavy catalogue includes works by Robert Kramer, Nicholas Philibert, Claire Simon and Luc Moullet. He first got behind the camera for the feature-length Racines, and is picking up the plot a decade later with a script – co-written with novelist-actress Marie Nimier – that jumps between the 1930s-40s and the present to faithfully recreate his parents’ story. 

His father, Simon “Sim” Copans, first came to Paris as an exchange student from Brown, studying at the Sorbonne and living nearby on the rue Soufflot, where he witnessed the funeral of the assassinated president Paul Doumer in 1931. Eight years later, Simon was back in France on a group visit to Chartres Cathedral when he crossed paths with Lucienne, a young woman from the eastern city of Soissons. 

The two soon hit it off with their shared love of literature and left-wing politics, both of them ardent Republican supporters during the Spanish Civil War. Simon, who was a member of the Youth Communist League along with activists like Harry Foner – shown in the film singing his witty ballad “Love in the YCL” – wanted to enlist, but instead he and Lucienne became godparents to children orphaned by the conflict. 

When Germany invaded Poland, Simon convinced his girlfriend to marry on the fly, allowing her to flee with him to the U.S. But there was one hitch: not only was he Jewish and she Catholic, but Lucienne was fervently opposed to the idea of marriage, which she saw as an archaic institution belonging to the generation of her parents. 

Simon nonetheless pleaded until Lucienne gave in, and after a shotgun wedding in Paris they moved to Manhattan, where the groom’s family set up a more traditional ceremony. These sequences allow for some amusing anecdotes about what it was like for a French country girl to find herself among a bunch of Yiddish-speaking New Yawkers, with Rabbi Marcia Rappaport commenting on how traditional Jewish customs have evolved over the last century, granting more autonomy to women. 

The lovebirds spent nearly two years apart when Simon was drafted into an army propaganda squad, driving around Normandy to give news about Allied victories and playing American jazz records for the recently liberated population. The letters he wrote to Lucienne at that time form the backbone of A Love Story’s narrative, while his wife’s earnest replies are read aloud by Gallic actress Dominique Blanc.  Other texts are recited by contemporary characters whom Copans encounters as he retraces his parents’ long journey, the future and the present blending into a single whole. 

 
Even if the film is more of a personal exercise than an anthropological one, the director manages to frame his origin story within the greater context of world history, revealing how individual trajectories are shaped by events beyond anyone’s control. At best one can try to cope with the bad times, which is what Copans’ parents did until they were reunited and eventually settled in Paris. There, Simon would continue broadcasting jazz on French public radio, and his American-accented voice would spark other memories – including that of writer Georges Perec, who immortalized the shows of “Sim” Copans in his famous text, Je me souviens. The affair continues. 

Production company: Les Films d’ici
Director: Richard Copans
Screenwriters: Marie Nimier, Richard Copans
Producers: Serge Lalou, Richard Copans
Executive producer: Anne Cohen-Solal
Director of photography: Richard Copans
Editor: Sylvain Copans
Composers: Michel Portal, Vincent Pelrani
International sales: Les Films d’ici 

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/a-love-story-amour-film-786446

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Rip Blu-ray to Plex in MKV with DTS 5.1 Sound

This is our Customer Review: 

“ If I rip a blu ray with Byte Copy, can I then convert it to an MKV with DTS 5.1 in Byte Copy?
Oh and one more thing, I would still like to do all this while finding a way to convert the video with Lossless 5.1 DTS Audio to an MKV file to save space for when I stream on Plex on my in home network. “ 



Do you have met the same situations when backup blu-ray movies to Plex Server? This guide introduces the Blu-ray to MKV ripping workflow for watching on Plex with DTS 5.1 sound in all audio streams: 

How to rip Blu-ray to MKV with DTS 5.1 for all audio streams via Plex

If you want to rip commercial Blu-ray Discs and with DTS 5.1 audio output, then Pavtube ByteCopy will be your first choice which does a great job in quick decrypting the protected Blu-ray discs within a few clicks and help you backup Blu-ray movies into lossless MKV files with desired HD video quality, audio streams and subtitles. what's more, it saves 7.1 surround audio from original disks. If you’re Mac users, you can turn to Pavtube ByteCopy for Mac. Now, you can get the 50% off discount from Pavtube Easter Gifts 2015. 
   
More money-saving Trip: 

ByteCopy($42) + Video Converter Ultimate($65) = Only $79.9, Save $27.1 

Now, start to convert Blu-ray to MKV with DTS 5.1 for all audio streams. 

Step 1. Load Blu-ray movie.

Get ready to insert your Blu-ray disc to disc drive, click this “Load Disc” button to browser to disc drive and import the disc. Or you could load BD folder and BD ISO from computer hard drive to this best Blu-ray to MKV Converter. 



Step 2. Choose suitable output format.

Pavtubr ByteCopy offers an special category for users who would like to keep multiple audio tracks including DTS 5.1 audio in saved Lossless MKV file.

To pass-through original TrueHD/Dolby Digital/DTS/PCM audio, just select Multi-track Video > Lossless/encoded Multi-track MKV(*.MKV) for output. In this way the original audio tracks are streamed without transcoding from source BD Disc to saved MKV file. 



Step 3. Adjust profile presets (Optional).

You are allowed to customize profile presets as you like, you could remove unwanted audio track in Audio tab under Settings menu, and uncheck subtitles you do not need in Subtitles tab. 



Step 4. Start ripping Blu-ray to lossless MKV format.

Save all your settings, and back to ByteCopy main interface, hit the “Convert” button to start converting. When the lossless backup completes, you would get a single large MKV file saved in output file destination. And you could play copied Blu-ray MKV movie on your Plex with DTS 5.1 audio preserved. 

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Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Hot movie review - ‘A Girl Like Her’


A conceptually sophisticated, emotionally manipulative drama about America's teen bullying epidemic.
 
 
The causes and consequences of teen bullying get a potent if not entirely persuasive airing in “A Girl Like Her,” a mix of found-footage thriller, mock-doc realism and public service announcement that rings true almost as often as it rings false. There is much to admire in writer-director Amy S. Weber’s well-acted, well-meaning cautionary tale about a high-school student who attempts suicide after being relentlessly targeted by a verbally abusive classmate. Yet the film’s agenda-driven approach, while sure to strike topical chords and generate exposure in American high schools far and wide, has the inevitable effect of compromising the drama, which seems less and less convincing the more blatantly it strives for authenticity. 

Weber’s film has a tough opening scene: Jessica Burns (Lexi Ainsworth), a sophomore at South Brookdale High School, opens her parents’ medicine cabinet, downs a bottle of pills and falls unconscious. All this is shot from Jessica’s p.o.v.: She’s wearing a pin concealing a tiny camera, which we later learn was given to her six months earlier by her friend Brian (Jimmy Bennett), for reasons that will be revealed shortly. As the girl lingers in a coma, watched over by her heartbroken parents (Stephanie Cotton, Mark Boyd), a documentary filmmaker, Amy (Weber herself), starts filming in and around the corridors of South Brookdale High, determined to capture a definitive snapshot of the average public-school experience. It’s not long before Amy has begun tracking the story of Jessica’s suicide attempt, the motive for which she soon traces to Avery Keller (Hunter King), one of the most popular girls in school — and, as we later observe in Jessica’s secretly recorded footage, the sort of mean girl who would give even Regina George pause. 
 


In short, every moment of “A Girl Like Her” is meant to be perceived as “real,” captured by cameras that are explicitly accounted for in the story — whether it’s Jessica’s pin, Avery’s own video diaries or the more heavy-duty equipment wielded by Amy’s crew. It’s a shrewd enough conceit, nicely reflecting the obsession with self-depiction and technology that afflicts the average modern teenager (and quite a few adults as well), while also heightening the verisimilitude of what we’re watching. Working with d.p. Samuel Brownfield and editor Todd Zelin, Weber capably simulates the look and texture of a documentary, observing with fly-on-the-wall detachment as students hang out in the hallways, capturing the heated discussions at an emergency PTA meeting, and using school administrators and teachers as calm, rational talking heads. 

At a certain point, however, Weber pushes her conceptual strategy well past the point of plausibility. If what we’re seeing here is supposed to pass for an actual documentary, the result feels clumsy enough at times as to suggest a textbook demonstration of how not to make one — starting with the crew’s habit of eavesdropping on students in their most private moments (the sound recording in these scenes is improbably first-rate). Elsewhere, there are instructive reminders that throwing a verite frame around a scene doesn’t automatically render it believable, just as the act of filming a parent’s grief doesn’t become less exploitative simply because the camera is shaking along with them. 

What makes “A Girl Like Her” intriguing in spite of these flaws is the fact that Weber’s interest clearly resides more with the villain than with the victim in this scenario, which may account for why Jessica, though well played by Ainsworth, never becomes more than an object of sympathy. Avery, by contrast, emerges as the true protagonist of a story that fully intends not only to expose her, but also to redeem her — to hold her up as a living, breathing embodiment of the old saying that “Hurt people hurt people.” Heading up a strong cast, the 21-year-old King (an Emmy winner for her work on “The Young and the Restless”) etches a fully rounded characterization here, doing full justice to Avery’s viciousness, but also to the defensiveness and vulnerability lurking beneath her stereotypical blonde-queen-bee surface. 

Humanizing a monster — and allowing her to tell her story in her own words — is an eminently worthy aim in a movie that is nothing if not eminently worthy. But at a certain point, Weber’s meddlesome alter ego doesn’t seem to be documenting the events in question so much as auditioning for the job of guidance counselor, all but enfolding her characters in a group hug. The teary-eyed, over-scored montage that closes “A Girl Like Her” would feel manipulative in the extreme even if it didn’t build to a final shot of altogether remarkable dishonesty: For a movie that’s trying to teach the teenagers of America that their actions can have tragic repercussions, there’s something borderline irresponsible about the idea that a simple show of remorse is all it takes to make everything OK.  

Source: http://variety.com/2015/film/reviews/a-girl-like-her-review-1201462415/