Monday, December 27, 2010

Race in a career in Motorsports, with or without a college degree

Receive first-hand knowledge of how to enter in the motorsports industry. Save years of hard work by learning what hiring managers are looking for and your time and efforts focus on things that really matter to your career in motorsports.


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Monday, December 20, 2010

Reinvent your career online

Reinventing yourself for a new career or because you need a job. If you are looking for a job and have succumbed Reinvention Guide is your key to unlocking career boost methods. Illustrated and easy to follow guide. Find a new job now!


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Monday, December 13, 2010

RestaurantNews.com Franchise / Career Guides

RestaurantNews.com resources since 2001. Our Franchise Restaurant guide provides details of contacts for companies from more than 240 opportunities franchise restaurant. Our career restaurant guide provides coordinates for 300 hiring restaurant business.


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Friday, December 10, 2010

Shakespeare in Love (Miramax Collector's Series)

Shakespeare in Love (Miramax Collector's Series)One of the most endearing and intelligent romantic comedies of the '90s, the Oscar-winning Shakespeare in Love is filled with such good will, sunny romance, snappy one-liners, and devilish cleverness that it's absolutely irresistible. With tongue placed firmly in cheek, at its outset the film tracks young Will Shakespeare's overwrought battle with writer's block and the efforts of theater owner Philip Henslowe (Geoffrey Rush, in rare form) to stage Will's latest comedy, Romeo and Ethel, the Pirate's Daughter. Jokey comedy, though, soon takes a backseat to ravishing romance when the beautiful Viola De Lesseps (Gwyneth Paltrow) disguises herself as a young man to wangle herself an audition in the all-male cast, and wins both the part of Romeo and, after much misunderstanding, the playwright's heart. Soon enough, Will's pirate comedy becomes the beautiful, tragic Romeo and Juliet, reflecting the agony and ecstasy of Will and Viola's romance--he's married and she's set to marry the slimy Lord Wessex (Colin Firth) in the near future.

The way that Oscar-winning screenwriters Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard enfold their story within the parameters of Romeo and Juliet (and even Twelfth Night) is nothing short of brilliant--it would take a Shakespearean scholar to dissect the innumerable parallels, oft-quoted lines, plot developments, and thematic borrowings. And most amazingly, Norman and Stoppard haven't forgotten to entertain their audience in addition to riding a Shakespearean roller coaster, with director John Madden (Mrs. Brown) reigning in his huge ensemble with rollicking energy. Along the way there are small gems to be found, including Judi Dench's eight-minute, Oscar-winning turn as a truly regal Queen Elizabeth, but the key element of Shakespeare in Love's success rests on the milky-white shoulders of its two stars. Fiennes, inexplicably overlooked at Oscar time, is a dashing, heartfelt Will, and as for Best Actress winner Paltrow, well, nothing she'd done before could have prepared viewers for how amazing she is here. Breathtakingly beautiful, fiercely intelligent, strong-willed, and lovestruck--it's a performance worthy of Shakespeare in more ways than one. By the film's end, you'll be thoroughly won over--and brushing up your Shakespeare with newfound ardor. --Mark Englehart

Price: $14.99


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Monday, December 6, 2010

Secrets to great acting

You can learn to act and discover the little-known secrets that all the best players have used for decades for Earth parts without spending thousands of dollars on courses and classes acting.


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Friday, December 3, 2010

Shakespeare Behind Bars

Shakespeare Behind BarsThe plays of Shakespeare are rife with brutes and murderers--why shouldn't they be played by brutes and murderers? In the Shakespeare Behind Bars program at Luther Luckett Prison in Kentucky, the actors are convicted felons who murdered their wives and abused children--but the documentary Shakespeare Behind Bars, like Shakespeare himself, sees these men in three dimensions, taking the time to explore the complex mixture of remorse, anger, and yearning that consumes their lives. The production of The Tempest, a play explicitly about forgiveness, is only the frame for an examination of how these men struggle to forgive themselves. That may sound sentimental and bleeding-heart on the surface, but watch the movie: There's nothing sappy about staring into the face of a child molester as he articulates, with sad but clear and undeluded eyes, his forlorn hope that his life might be remembered for something more than the worst things he did. The actual performance of the play is less important than watching these men connect with Shakespeare's characters, from the villainous Antonio (two actors cast in this role end up dropping out because they're put in solitary confinement) to the virtuous 15 year old Miranda. Shakespeare Behind Bars captures, with almost disturbing intimacy, the humanity of men that most of society would like to dismiss as monsters. A remarkable documentary. --Bret Fetzer

Price: $19.99


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