Mark Hamill Outtake Photo Becomes Subject Of Reddit Photoshop Battle

Take a silly candid behind-the-scenes shot from the set of a beloved movie and post it online and you’re bound to get lots of likes, but if it’s a photo of Mark Hamill making a goofy face while dressed like Luke Skywalker on the set of Star Wars, and that picture is posted to Reddit with an accompanying Photoshop challenge then you’re bound to get lots of hilarious submissions!

Derpy Luke Skywalker can be seen swimming with the dolphins, using the Force to create rainbows from the palms of his hands, and generally act in a manner considered quite unbecoming by the noble Jedi Council.

-Via Nerd Approved

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What a Pretty Killing Machine You Have There, Miyazki: The Wind Rises

What a Pretty Killing Machine You Have There, Miyazki: The Wind Rises

It is a particular treat to see a Hayao Miyazaki movie on
the big screen, and the Japanese animator’s latest is no exception. The Wind Rises
is as gorgeous as any Studio Ghibli production, crisp and pastel,
soothing and stunning. Rife with dream sequences of impossibly layered aircraft
against perfect skies dolloped with clouds, Rises
reaches the fantastical imaginative heights we’ve come to expect from Miyazki.
And when it isn’t wowing you with what you’ve never seen before, it’s wowing
you with what you have. There’s so much pleasure to be taken from the tiny details
that the big screen amplifies: the moths that flock around an outside lantern,
the incandescent halo of the moon shining through translucent nighttime clouds,
the wildly unnatural colors that sneak in and out of the sky during the final
moments of daylight.

Supposedly Miyazaki’s final film, The Wind Rises is a workout for your eyes, but unfortunately, not
your brain. Instead of his usual delirious fantasy, plot haphazardly unspooling in more or less real time, Miyazaki’s delivered a
conventional (though highly fictionalized) biopic of Jiro Horikoshi, the man
responsible for designing several of Japan’s World War II fighter planes.

Miyazaki
has called Horikoshi "the most gifted man of his time in Japan." Maybe he finds this to be self-evident, because there is scant proof in the movie. Sure, we see Jiro advancing in his
career and working up to the point of being appointed chief designer of a Navy
competition, but we don’t know why, other than his ability to
find inspiration in a mackerel bone whose curve he deems "beautiful"
and his wild dreams.

In those sequences, which almost always take place on the wings of airplanes, he discusses design with his engineering
inspiration, Giovanni Battista Caproni. Caproni mentors him with whimsical
wisdom: "Airplanes are beautiful dreams." " Inspiration unlocks
the future. Technology eventually catches up." "Artists are only
creative for 10 years. We engineers are no different." (Is the last a
comment on Miyazki’s own 60-year well drying up?)

For a movie made by someone with such mastery of visual narration, The Wind Rises does an awful lot of
telling. When Jiro reunites a girl (and her maid) with her family during the Great
Kanto Earthquake of 1923, someone observes in response, "What a great
guy!" When he proposes a plane design much later in life to his rapt team
and jokes that it could be made lighter by leaving the weaponry off (to their
great amusement), a superior notes, "This is delightful." His
courtship with Naoko, the girl he aided during the earthquake whom he meets
again later in life while on vacation, begins when they meet by a spring. ("Please don’t go. I was giving thanks to this spring. I
asked it to bring you here. I asked it to bring you to me," she tells him.) It then consists of walking with her in a
downpour and then tossing some paper airplanes at her hotel room from his
balcony. Soon after, he tells her father, "I love her very much."

Undercooked characters and unearned plot developments have never been
much of a problem in Miyazaki’s work (though they’re perhaps more present than
most of his fans would like to admit) because his movies are generally insane, and they’re cartoons, anyway. Who needs conventional narrative building blocks
when Miyazaki is offering you a fortress of imagination? But The Wind Rises is different—it’s conventional in structure, as a character study, a Bildungsroman, a romance. At
his most realistic, Miyazki is hardest to swallow.

Regardless, people take Miyazaki and this movie in
particular very seriously. He’s been criticized both for
venerating an engineer of death machines, and for having that
death-machine engineer express a less than enthusiastic attitude about the war
he’s helping facilitate. I came away believing that the former argument is
stronger (moments like the "What a great guy!" one seem defensive if
not propagandist).

As for the latter claim, Jiro skirts the issue mostly,
focusing on his work and not its implications, most likely inspired by
Cabroni’s early assertion that, "Airplanes are not for war. They’re not
tools for making money." Late in the movie, his colleague Honjo
rationalizes their role: "We’re not arms merchants. We just want to design
good aircraft." Jiro replies, "That’s right." What a bold stance.

Miyazaki said that he was inspired to make this movie when read something Horikoshi had said:
"All I wanted to do was to make something beautiful." Undoubtedly,
this was Miyazaki’s aim, as well. Both he and his inspiration met their goal, and
what we are led to believe is that’s what matters more than any resulting
effects. The Wind Rises, though, is ultimately
too grown up of a film to be guided by such willful naiveté.

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The lowest possible score in Super Mario Bros

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One look at the Fiji house and he gets the message

The Atlantic’s yearlong investigation on the current state of fraternities in America, and the lawsuit industry that rides alongside.

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Olympics Propel NBC to Its Most Dominant Weekly Victory Ever

NBC skated, snowboarded and curled its way to the network’s most dominant frame on record last week — delivering roughly four times the average of its closest competitor. Same-night viewing numbers for entertainment series these days don’t approach what they were four or eight years ago, making live sports like the Olympics an even more… Read more »

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Peek Inside The World’s Forbidden Subway Tunnels

Artist Logan Hicks enjoys going where he isn’t allowed.

It’s hard not to be obsessed by the parts of a city most law-abiding citizens never see: views from the top of its tallest towers and inside its underground tunnels.

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Deleted And Extended Scenes From Game Of Thrones Season 3

(Video Link)

Audiences are so enthralled with all the bloodshed, battles and political intrigue the HBO series Game of Thrones has to offer that they’re crying out for more, and with the fourth season nearly upon us our favorite murderers, liars and deceivers are back to keep Westeros weird.

Here’s a bounty of deleted scenes from season 3, fifteen minutes worth to be exact, which should be enough to whet your appetite for the upcoming fourth season.

But beware- there are spoilers a-plenty and NSFW language in this compilation of deleted and extended scenes.

-Via Nerdist

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Condé Nast Plots One World Trade Center Takeover

Condé Nast’s official World Trade Center move-in date looms nearer: Well, it’s in January 2015, but a lot of preparations need to be made, obviously.

WWD reports that in an internal memo sent to staff, CEO Chuck Townsend outlined what to expect in the new building. And if you believe the publishing myth that building floor assignments matter — they do, they really do — these initial details speak volumes:

Vanity Fair and The New Yorker, the old-guard, good old boys’ clubs, will inhabit floors 41 and 40 and 39 and 38, respectively — just levels below the executive floor on 42. W — which has always been at Condé’s Third Avenue satellite building rather than at 4 Times Square — finally gets a spot in the mothership, but it will share the 32nd floor with Golf Digest.

The fashion power-grouping, including pet projects of Anna Wintour, will be found in the 20s: Glamour, Lucky, and GQ are on 30, 29, and 28, respectively, while Vogue editorial is on 25, directly above the photo studio. (The editorial and publishing teams of Teen Vogue, Details, and Architectural Digest  are sprinkled on various floors, with the publishing teams of more major brands.)

Don’t read too much into the Golf Digest cohabitation, W. Because really, the only floors that truly matter are the “remarkable amenity floors on 34 and 35” just two floors up. Townsend writes that those floors are “connected by an extraordinary spiral staircase” and house a reception area, conference center, library, art gallery, private dining room, the cafeteria, and an after-hours café.

Read more posts by Allison P Davis

Filed Under: conde nast
,vogue
,one world trade center
,relocations
,magazines
,publishing
,hierarchy in the sky

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NH legislator introduces bill to stop small-town cops from buying tanks

New Hampshire state representative J.R. Hoell has introduced state legislation that will require police departments to get approval from citizens at a town hall meeting before they buy military-style gear.

    



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Europrean Union eyes sanctions on Ukraine

Anti-government protesters uses a slingshot during clashes with the police on Independence Square in Kiev early on February 19, 2014Security forces have temporarily halted a push to take over Kiev ‘s main protest camp.


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