Tuesday, July 23, 2013

98% Mud

All Critics (154) | Top Critics (33) | Fresh (151) | Rotten (3)

For at least three-quarters of the way, this is a fine film, and one that kids and parents could see together.

There is an enchanted-fairy-tale aspect to Mud, but its bright, calm surface only barely disguises a strong, churning undercurrent.

A modern fairy tale, steeped in the sleepy Mississippi lore of Twain and similar American writers, and with a heart as big as the river is wide.

Nichols has a strong feeling for the tactility of natural elements-water, wood, terrain, weather.

Nichols takes his time with the story, dwelling on how the boy is shaped by the killer's tragic sense of romance, yet the suspense holds.

"Mud" isn't just a movie. It's the firm confirmation of a career.

Warm, humorous, and smart, a Huckleberry Finnish snapshot of carefree boyhood on the brink of adolescence.

Mud is about the fragility of men, the craving to be loved - by a woman, by other men - and how easily that love is misplaced, taken away, cheated or lost.

Mud has a rare big-screen beauty, and its old-fashioned storytelling recalls A River Runs Through It, Night of the Hunter, and Stand By Me.

This moody, broody character-driven crime story is another fine step in the career redemption of Matthew McConaughey.

Mud is the kind of small scale, character driven drama one rarely sees out of the States any more, and cements Nichols as one of his country's most significant independent auteurs.

Just like its lead character, this film is packed to the brim with sadness, swagger and soul.

All the women in this movie are shrews, liars and/or emasculators.

Mud is a moving exploration into the nature of manhood, with superb performances, striking location and engrossing story creating a mesmerising and heartfelt coming of age drama.

A stripped back approach to tracking the process of growing up, but lacks the faith to see the plan executed to the end

Nichols takes his time unravelling Mud and Ellis's entwined fates, but his characters are so rich that it's well worth being in their company.

In its energy and nuance, Mud seems like the kind of film Hollywood would've made in the Seventies, and would've continued to do if not for the advent of market-conscious filmmaking.

More than a mere tribute to Twain and Dickens: this has all the makings of a modern classic.

An extremely sophisticated and progressive examination on how adolescent masculinity is defined by often-contradictory cultural attitudes towards femininity.

Mud is as beautiful to watch as it is to listen to, and feel kinship to, whether you're from the South or just Southern at heart.

In Jeff Nichols, America has a champion of the religious and working class. With the schism between the right and left in the U.S. growing ever larger... his ascent couldn't have come at a better time.

This is a film with a great naturalistic style and captivating performances and which does just about everything right.

Jeff Nichols writes characters with depth, nurtures strong performances form his cast and allows the screenplay's backwater setting to effectively create tone and texture.

This is American cinema at its very best as Huckleberry Finn meets Stand By Me.The two boys are terrific and McConaughey is sensational as Mud, dazzlingly frazzled as the hunted and haunted man on the run.

Up till just past the three-quarter mark, Mud is one heck of a nifty psychological fable.

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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/mud_2012/

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Monday, July 22, 2013

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Kavalek in Huffington: Tired chess brains in China

By GM Lubomir Kavalek

Saved from collapse by the rich Russian sponsors, the FIDE Grand Prix moved to China this month for its fifth leg. Some of the world class chess players came to Beijing tired from the previous hectic schedule. They took part in some of the six major tournaments in the last four months: the Candidates tournament, Alekhine and Tal Memorials, Norway Classic and Grand Prix events in Zug and Thessaloniki.

The victory in Beijing went to Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, 28, who seems to be on a winning streak. Last month, the Azerbaijani grandmaster won the World Rapid Championship in Russia and the Geneva Masters.

Mamadyarov with the winning trophy

The tournament began with Sergei Karjakin's breakaway, three wins in the first three rounds, but he was pulled back after he lost three games in a row. At that moment Mamedyarov's move to first place with a burst of 3.5/4 was closely followed by Alexander Grischuk, 29. The two leaders looked tired at the finish, just preserving their places, each managing only one draw in the last two rounds.

The idea of the FIDE Grand Prix was adopted from the Grandmaster Association's World Cup, a series of six Grand Prix tournaments, played in 1988-89 with the participation of all the strongest players at that time, including Garry Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov.

FIDE is also using a similar complicated point system for the overall results. Each player participates in four of six tournaments and the worst result is discarded. Two players from the FIDE Grand Prix will advance to the next Candidates tournament. Topalov leads the series, Mamedyarov is second. But Alexander Grischuk and Fabiano Caruana can mount a challenge in the last tournament in Paris in September.

The game between the two Grand Prix leaders was important for the final classification in Beijing.

[Event "FIDE GP "] [Site "Beijing "] [Date "2013.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar"] [Black "Topalov, Veselin"] [Result "1-0"] [ECO "E32"] [WhiteElo "2761"] [BlackElo "2767"] [Annotator "GM Lubomir Kavalek/The Huffington Post"] [SetUp "1"] [FEN "r5k1/pp3pp1/3n1q1p/3Q4/5B2/2P3P1/P3rP1P/R2R2K1 b - - 0 20"] [PlyCount "8"] [EventDate "2013.07.04"] [EventType "tourn"] [EventRounds "11"] [EventCountry "CHN"] [EventCategory "21"] {Topalov could have played 20...Nf5 with a good game. His choice is not surprising since he is known for his aggressive play. But it gives Mamedyarov the edge.} 20... Ne4 $2 21. Qd3 $1 Nxc3 22. Rac1 $1 Nxd1 $2 {Black loses by force.} ({Topalov had to play} 22... g5 23. Rxc3 gxf4 24. Qxe2 Qxc3 25. Qg4+ Qg7 26. Qxf4 {, although white keeps the advantage.}) 23. Qxe2 Nc3 24. Qc4 { The knight is caught. The white queen controls six escaping squares, the rook the last two.} 1-0

On the wrong side of chess brilliancy

It seems strange that two grandmasters rated among the world's Top Ten can lose three consecutive games. It was not Karjakin's misfortune, but Hikaru Nakamura's losing hattrick in the last rounds of the Tal Memorial that reminded me of a story played out nearly a half century ago during the tournament in Belgrade in October 1965.

I came to the Yugoslav capitol with a victory in Varna, Bulgaria, and one grandmaster norm. I needed another one. The GM norms depended in those days on the composition of the tournament. The more grandmasters, the lower the norm. FIDE didn't say how strong the grandmasters should be and many titled veterans were popular invitees. Perhaps it didn't matter too much: there were only some 60 grandmasters in the world and the title meant something.

The Belgrade tournament was different with a bunch of players in their twenties. Like Nakamura, I was leading the event by a half point with three rounds to go. A single point would guarantee me the first place and the final grandmaster norm. But I lost two games and drew in the last round, finishing a half point behind the winners, grandmasters Florin Gheorghiu and Milan Matulovic. Everything ended well: I made my final GM norm in December in Leipzig.

I began the downward spiral with the game against Dragoljub Velimirovic who had a reputation of a reckless attacker. I allowed him a bishop sacrifice in the Philidor defense for what I thought was only a slight discomfort of my king. I was looking for some devastating punches from his side, but he slowly and quietly developed his pieces. Suddenly, I was without a good move. I realized I was at the wrong end of a chess brilliancy. It was the best game of the tournament.

[Event "Belgrade"] [Site "?"] [Date "1965.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Velimirovic, Draguljub"] [Black "Kavalek, Lubomir"] [Result "1-0"] [ECO "C41"] [Annotator "GM Lubomir Kavalek/The Huffington Post"] [PlyCount "71"] [EventDate "1965.??.??"] 1. e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. Nc3 e5 4. Nf3 Nbd7 5. Bc4 Be7 6. O-O c6 7. a4 Qc7 {The Dutch psychology professor and International Master Johan Barendregt was the main defender of this Philidor system. Black postpones castling or can start attacking on the kingside with h7-h6 and g7-g5.} ({Still,} 7... O-O {is preferable.}) 8. Qe2 Nb6 $6 {Asking for trouble, but I could not forsee what was Velimirovic about to do. That's , perhaps, why he was called the Yugoslav Tal.} 9. dxe5 dxe5 10. Bxf7+ $1 {The storm starts with a thunder. Immediately after the game, we were not sure about the correctness of the sacrifice. Even today's computers show the game being roughly equal.} Kxf7 {At the first glance it is not clear how white plans to attack. Remarkably, with the black king in the middle, Velimirovic calmly develops his pieces.} 11. a5 {Chasing the knight back, white gains the important square c4 for his queen.} Nbd7 12. Qc4+ Ke8 ({Black can't allow a king hunt after} 12... Kg6 13. Nh4+ Kh5 14. Qf7+ Kxh4 (14... g6 15. Nf5) 15. g3+ Kh3 16. Qe6+ Ng4 17. Ne2 Ndf6 18. Kh1 Bxe6 19. Ng1#) 13. Ng5 Nf8 ({White gets the other rook after} 13... Rf8 14. Ne6 Qd6 ({ After} 14... Qb8 15. Nxg7+ Kd8 16. Rd1 {black is playing without his queenside pieces.}) 15. Nxg7+ Kd8 16. Rd1 Qb4 17. Ne6+ Ke8 18. Nc7+ Kd8 19. Qxb4 Bxb4 20. Nxa8 {winning.}) 14. Rd1 Bd7 ({I missed a better defense} 14... Bd6 15. Be3 h6 16. Rxd6 hxg5 (16... Qxd6 $2 17. Qf7+ Kd8 18. Rd1 $18) 17. Rad1 (17. Nb5 Qe7 18. Rxc6 Be6) 17... Be6 18. Rxe6+ Nxe6 19. Qxe6+ Qe7 20. Qxe7+ Kxe7 21. Bxg5 { with two pawns for the exchange white should not worry too much, but neither should black.}) ({Another way to prevent mate on f7 is} 14... Bd8 {but white keeps the advantage with a rook sacrifice} 15. Rxd8+ $1 (15. Be3 $6 Bg4 $1 $11) (15. Bf4 $5 Qe7 $1 $11 (15... exf4 16. Nb5 cxb5 17. Rxd8+ Kxd8 18. Nf7+ Qxf7 19. Qxf7 N6d7 $11)) 15... Kxd8 16. Be3 Ke8 17. Rd1 Be6 (17... h6 18. Nb5 $1 $18 ) 18. Nxe6 Nxe6 19. Qxe6+ Qe7 20. Qc4 {with white's edge.}) 15. Be3 { Velimirovic quietly brings another piece into attack and I couldn't found a sensible defense.} ({It was possible to strike immediately with} 15. Nb5 Qb8 16. Qf7+ Kd8 17. Nd6 Bxd6 18. Qxg7 Be7 19. Nf7+ Kc7 20. Nxe5 Qe8 21. Qxh8 $18 { Houdini 3}) 15... Qc8 $2 {An unfortunate retreat, but other moves are only slightly better:} (15... h6 16. Nb5 Qb8 17. Qf7+ Kd8 18. Qxg7 (18. Nxa7 c5 $1) 18... hxg5 19. Qxh8 cxb5 20. Bxg5 $18 {Houdini}) (15... Kd8 16. Nf7+ Kc8 17. Rxd7 $1 (17. Nxh8 Be6) 17... Qxd7 18. a6 b6 19. Rd1 Qe6 20. Nd5 Bc5 21. Nxf6 gxf6 (21... Qxc4 22. Rd8+ Kc7 23. Ne8#) 22. Bxc5 bxc5 (22... Qxc4 23. Rd8+ Kc7 24. Bd6#) 23. Qa4 {and white's attack is too powerful.}) 16. Qf7+ Kd8 17. Na4 $1 {An elegant finishing touch. White has many threats: 18.Nb6 or sticking a light piece on the square c5. There is not much black can do.} c5 (17... h6 18. Nb6 $1 $18) 18. Nxc5 $1 Bxc5 19. Qxg7 Ng6 20. Bxc5 (20. Qxf6+ $1 {appears to be stronger, for example:} Be7 21. Ne6+ Ke8 22. Ng7+ Kd8 23. Bb6+ axb6 24. Qxb6+ Qc7 25. Rxd7+ Kxd7 26. Qe6+ Kd8 27. Rd1+ $18 {Houdini}) 20... Nh5 (20... Qxc5 21. Ne6+ $18) 21. Be7+ Kc7 ({Black gets mated after:} 21... Nxe7 22. Nf7+ Ke8 (22... Kc7 23. Qxe5+ Kc6 24. Rd6+ Kc7 25. Re6#) 23. Nd6+ Kd8 24. Qxh8+ Kc7 25. Nb5+ Kc6 (25... Bxb5 26. Qxe5+ Kc6 27. Qd6#) 26. Qxe5 b6 27. Nd4+ Kb7 28. a6#) 22. Bd6+ (22. Qf7) 22... Kc6 (22... Kd8 23. Qh6 $18) 23. Qf7 Kb5 (23... Qg8 24. Qf3 $18) 24. a6 bxa6 25. Qd5+ ({White simply mates after} 25. Qb3+ Kc6 26. Rxa6+ $1 Qxa6 27. Qd5+ Kb6 28. Qc5+ Kb7 29. Qc7#) 25... Kb6 26. c4 { Velimirovic prefers quiet moves.} ({But he had a forced mate:} 26. Rxa6+ $1 Kxa6 27. Ra1+ Kb6 28. Qa5+ Kc6 29. Qc5+ Kb7 30. Qb4+ Kc6 31. Ra6+ $1 Qxa6 32. Qc5+ Kb7 33. Qc7#) 26... Qc6 27. Qa5+ Kb7 28. Bc5 Rac8 29. b4 Rhd8 (29... Ka8 30. Rd6 Qb7 31. Rxa6 $18) 30. Nf7 (30. Rd6 {ends it faster:} Qc7 31. Qxa6+ Ka8 32. Bxa7 $18 {mating soon.}) 30... Rg8 31. Rd6 Ngf4 32. Rxc6 Rxg2+ 33. Kf1 Rxc6 34. Nd8+ Kc8 35. Nxc6 Bxc6 36. Bd6 1-0

The game brings us back to Beijing where the young Dutch grandmaster Anish Giri, 19, suffered a similar fate. In the same Philidor defense, the Chinese grandmaster Wang Hao, 23, sacrificed his bishop the same way as Velimirovic. After Giri panicked, Wang kept increasing his attack until it attained destructive force.

[Event "FIDE GP "] [Site "Beijing CHN"] [Date "2013.??.??"] [Round "?"] [White "Wang Hao"] [Black "Giri, Anish"] [Result "1-0"] [ECO "C41"] [WhiteElo "2752"] [BlackElo "2734"] [Annotator "GM Lubomir Kavalek/The Huffington Post"] [PlyCount "43"] [EventDate "2013.07.04"] [EventType "tourn"] [EventRounds "11"] [EventCountry "CHN"] [EventCategory "21"] 1. d4 d6 2. e4 Nf6 3. Nc3 e5 4. Nf3 Nbd7 5. Bc4 exd4 6. Qxd4 Be7 7. Bxf7+ $5 { A sacrifice that can jolt you. It may not be completely correct, but Wang Hao was not doing particularly well in the tournament and decided to have some fun. } (7. O-O) 7... Kxf7 8. Ng5+ Ke8 (8... Kg6 9. f4 $18) (8... Kg8 9. Qc4+ d5 10. Nxd5 $18) 9. Ne6 c5 {The only move, opening escape road for the black queen.} 10. Qd1 Qb6 11. Nxg7+ Kf7 12. Nf5 Bf8 ({After} 12... Ne5 13. Nxe7 Kxe7 14. Bg5 Be6 15. f4 Nf7 16. Bxf6+ Kxf6 17. O-O {the black king is not secured.}) 13. O-O d5 $6 {A nervous reaction. Black didn't have to give up the d-pawn.} ({Giri should have tried} 13... Rg8 14. Nd5 Qc6 {with roughly equal chances.}) 14. Nxd5 (14. exd5 {was also playable.}) 14... Nxd5 15. Qxd5+ Ke8 $2 {Allowing white to develop the rest of his pieces quickly.} (15... Qe6 16. Qd3 (16. Nh6+ Bxh6 17. Qxe6+ Kxe6 18. Bxh6 Nf6 $11) 16... Nf6 17. Re1 {White has three pawns for a piece, but black is in the game.}) 16. Bg5 Qg6 ({Computers' suggestion} 16... Qc6 {is also inadequate. White keeps the queens on the board} 17. Qd2 { with advantage.}) 17. Rad1 Rg8 (17... Qxg5 18. Nd6+ Bxd6 19. Qxg5 $18) 18. f4 a5 ({White should win after} 18... h6 19. e5 $1 Qxf5 (19... hxg5 20. e6 Rg7 21. Nxg7+ Qxg7 22. fxg5 $18) 20. Qxg8 Qf7 21. Qxf7+ Kxf7 22. Bh4 $18) 19. e5 Qxf5 20. Qxg8 Ra6 21. Rfe1 Rg6 ({After} 21... Re6 22. Rd6 Rg6 23. e6 $1 {white wins. }) 22. e6 $1 (22. e6 $1 Rxg8 23. exd7+ Kf7 24. d8=Q $18) 1-0

Indispensable Chess Results

I saw the 1965 crosstables from Varna, Belgrade and Leipzig in the latest volume of Gino Di Felice's Chess Results, published by McFarland. The Italian author arranged together 11 volumes of tournament crosstables and match scores from 1747 till 1967. The last tome covers the years 1964-1967, a period of my first international tournaments, and I was able to relive some exciting moments. Sometimes Di Felice begins a crosstable on one page and finishes it on the next page, but it is nothing major. His comprehensive work is indispensable and essential to any chess historian, researcher and writer, and may be enjoyable for anybody who loves to browse through older tournaments.

Image by FIDE press chief WGM Anastasiya Karlovich

Original column here ? Copyright Huffington Post


The Huffington Post is an American news website and aggregated blog founded by Arianna Huffington and others, featuring various news sources and columnists. The site was launched on May 9, 2005, as a commentary outlet and liberal/progressive alternative to conservative news websites. It offers coverage of politics, media, business, entertainment, living, style, the green movement, world news, and comedy. It is a top destination for news, blogs, and original content. The Huffington Post has an active community, with over one million comments made on the site each month. According to Nielsen NetRatings, the site has around 13 million unique visitors per month (number for March 2010); according to Google Analytics the number is 22 million uniques per month.

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Source: http://www.chessbase.com/Home/TabId/211/PostId/4010506/kavalek-in-huffington-tired-chess-brains-in-china-210713.aspx

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Why the Biggest Obstacle for Elon Musk's Hyperloop Might Be Tunnels

Why the Biggest Obstacle for Elon Musk's Hyperloop Might Be Tunnels

It all sounds so Jetsonian. A new 600 mph "Hyperloop" method of transportation connecting Los Angeles and San Francisco? That's the buzz around the internet water cooler as people guess what Elon Musk has in store for the transportation of tomorrow. I say, sign me up! But if we take any lessons from past visions of futuristic transportation (as we are wont to do here at Gizmodo) we can probably guess the Hyperloop's greatest hurdle: tunnels.

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Source: http://paleofuture.gizmodo.com/why-the-biggest-obstacle-for-elon-musks-hyperloop-migh-837260844

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Swimming Tip: Sighting ? The Health Journal: Fitness, Nutrition ...

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Karen Kovacs and Mother After Completing 2013 Peace Frogs Bank to Bank Charity SwimWritten by Karen Kovacs, PT, OCS, USAT Level 1 Coach

Sighting. The shortest distance between two points is a straight line.

No time like now to get used to sighting for your destination while swimming in open water. Keep in mind, you will have to factor in the current, tide, wind and waves as you select landmarks to help keep you on track.

While you are doing your pool swims, start trying to figure out how often you actually need to peek or lift your head out of the water to be sure you are maintaining a straight line. You want that motion as smooth as possible, so that involves a quick look and lifting of your head either as you are exhaling or after you take a breath. This can be exhausting and put an unexpected stress on your neck if you wait until the day of the event to try this when you are forced to sight.

Some people definitely swim in a straighter line than others, and the last thing you want to do is waste a lot of time and energy either swimming off course or in a crooked line or sighting too frequently. That is why it is important to practice this skill in the pool. Ideally, you can do this outside the swim lane lines which forces you back on course every time you bump one. You can get a feel for whether or not you tend to drift to the left or right, too.

Be sure to do this in the open water, too. Find a distant landmark, and determine the ideal number of strokes to go before you lift your head to sight. Though there will be safety kayakers close by during the event you?ve registered for, you don?t want to rely on someone yelling to keep you on course. And you certainly don?t want to bump into them.

If you wear glasses, you can purchase goggles for about $20 that have magnifying lenses (like the ?cheaters? many of us over the age of forty are now forced to use for reading). These helped take away a tremendous amount of anxiety for my husband who used to not be able to see the bright yellow buoys during a triathlon, let alone spot a landmark miles away.

Sighting to swim in a straight line in the open water is definitely a skill that takes practice. With so many variables that cannot be controlled in the open water, this is one? component of open water swimming you will want to try to master.

Vid ere est credere.? Seeing is believing.

Karen Kovacs, PT, OCS is a physical therapist and clinical director of Tidewater Physical Therapy?s Gloucester Point location. She is an accomplished endurance athlete and is a USAT Level 1 Coach.

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Source: http://www.thehealthjournals.com/2013/07/swimming-tip-sighting/

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Monday, July 1, 2013

To Drive More Clicks, Twitter Is Testing A Popular Tweets History Feature [Update: It's Gone]

twitter embedded tweetA little over a year ago, Twitter kicked off an initiative to experiment with different ways of making tweets more interactive -- a strategy that has brought us Twitter cards with previews, and shortcodes for embedding tweets elsewhere. Today, one of the latest experiments is adding more data into the mix: a list of sites linking to where a tweet has been embedded.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Xb-C7C_vi4c/

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