Saturday, August 6, 2011
Most of us love gadgets and technology is our friend. From Teeny to Gramps, people can't deny the effect that this modernized civilization offers - not even star or celebrity. Tomio Geron (Forbes Social Markets) shared to us a list of Hollywood tech savvy stars.
Tomio quoted "Celebrities from Hollywood, music or the sports world seem to have a fascination with Silicon Valley and tech start-ups. Whether it’s the inner gadget geek, the urge to start a company, an interest in a quick-flip investment, a hope to be an hip early adopter, or just an interest in schmoozing with the next Ev Williams, celebrities seem to have a strong attraction to tech. Some like to show up at industry conferences, others invest in companies, while others just like to sign up for new web sites to boost their geek cred."
So here are the list of Top 10 Hollywood's tech savvy stars.
1 - Ashton Kutcher
He is better known for his acting career. But he has invested in tech companies including Skype, Airbnb, Likealittle and Milk. He recently started a tech investing fund called A Grade with Ron Burkle and Gary Oseary. Kutcher recently attended a Demo Day for incubator Y Combinator in Mountain View, Calif., drawing a crowd of wide-eyed entrepreneurs eager to talk to him.
2 - MC Hammer
MC Hammer, a.k.a. rapper Stanley Kirk Burrell has been a frequent guest at tech events in Silicon Valley with the likes of Ron Conway. Hammer also was an advisor to start-up DanceJam.com. Hammer here is seated with Conway in the audience during a town hall meeting with President Barack Obama, Wednesday, April 20, 2011, at Facebook headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif.
3 - Chamillionaire
He has become a regular at Silicon Valley tech conferences, where he says he wants to learn more about how new technology can affect the music industry. Most recently he attended the July 29 TechCrunch Crunchup at AOL in Palo Alto, Calif. He also has been a judge at a TechCrunch start-up conference.
4 - Tim Ferris
Bestselling author Tim Ferris (The 4-Hour Workweek) has also been an active angel investor in tech start-ups. His investments include Twitter, Reputation.com, DailyBurn and SimpleGeo. He's also an advisor for companies including Evernote, StumbleUpon and Uber.
5 - Kim Kardashian
She is a co-founder of online subscription shoe company ShoeDazzle.com, which has reportedly raised $60 million in total venture financing. The founder of the company is Brian Lee, a serial entrepreneur whose first company, LegalZoom is expected to go public soon.
6 - Justin Timberlake
Justin Timberlake is an investor in companies including Stipple, a photo advertising start-up, and Miso Media, a music education start-up.
7 - Curt Schilling
Former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling is a founder of gaming start-up 38 Studios.
8 - Will.i.am
Will. i.am of the Black Eyed Peas in January was named director of creative innovation at chip giant Intel. (What that means exactly is unclear.) His geek cred was solidified in December 2010 when he wrote and performed a song about cloud computing for Salesforce.com at CEO Marc Benioff's keynote.
9 - Lady Gaga
Lady Gaga invested in Backplane, a social networking start-up, along with former Google CEO Eric Schmidt's Tomorrow Ventures.
10 - Shaquille O'Neal
Shaquille O'Neal joined Twitter in November 2008 and helped draw mainstream users to the service. He also used web video service 12seconds.tv, drawing massive traffic to that website. He still records spots regularly on video iPhone app Tout.
- Reference/Source: Forbes.com by Tomio Geron (Social Markets) [08/05/2011]
About
Forbes.com
Forbes.com Inc. is a leading Internet media company providing business information services and lifestyle editorial content designed to serve the needs of business leaders, professionals, investors and affluent consumers. The Forbes.com Web site, located at http://www.forbes.com, is focused on the theme of wealth -- how it is created, how it is managed and how it can be enjoyed. The site includes daily original reporting on the business of technology; real- time business information news updates; the complete online editions of Forbes magazine, Forbes Global, Forbes ASAP and Forbes FYI; a powerful search engine with access to all current and archived Forbes content; stock and mutual fund stock quotes, and comprehensive company profiles; an expanded online version of the Forbes.com Best of The Web guide; and a wide array of interactive tools, calculators and databases, including the annual Forbes Lists.About Tomio Geron, Author
He cover the social web/social networking, start-ups and various other Silicon Valley topics from San Francisco. He was previously a reporter for Dow Jones VentureWire, where he covered venture capital and Internet start-up companies, from search engines to seed investing to special purpose vehicles. He also previously worked for Red Herring, the Long Beach Press-Telegram, and other outlets. In a previous life he was a web developer. Follow Tomio on Twitter: @tomiogeron.
Saturday, July 30, 2011
10 of the Best Movie Soundtracks Better than the films they represent
0 comments Posted by org at 12:01 AMMTV's Clutch Staff quoted " Soundtracks are an overlooked yet important factor in the movie-watching experience. Far more interesting, though, is when a solid soundtrack is paired with a steaming pile. When this happens, the music becomes one of two things: a show-stealer, outshining the very movie it's featured in; or a trickster, fooling people into believing the movie is a classic."
So here's 10 of the Best Movie Soundtracks Better than the films they represent.
1 - Garden State, 2004
Category: trickster
The breakthrough indie songs from the likes of The Shins, Frou Frou and Thievery Corporation were good enough to distract viewers from the fact that the film was a gloppy intravenous drip of sad giggles and unabashed Natalie Portman idolatry. Zack Braff: curator of indie, purveyor of twee, voice of toilet paper-using puppy.
2 - The Twilight Saga, 2008-2012
Category: show-stealer
The trilogy's track list boasts a roster of heavyweights--Muse, Thom Yorke and Vampire Weekend--and reads like a fantasy music draft between the editor of Pitchfork and the founder of Emo Weekly. The film itself appeals only to the latter.
3 - Boiler Room, 2000
Category: show-stealer
The film's high-rolling hustlers are set to the sounds of raw hip-hop from some of New York's best MC's: Biggie, Rakim, De La Soul and a still-underground 50 Cent. Clearly an attempt to draw a profound parallel between Wall Street and rap's paper-chasers, the juxtaposition only served to make the Wall Street meatheads playing with Monopoly money seem even more outlandish.
4 - Vanilla Sky, 2001
Category: trickster
This movie is always in the HBO cycle because of Tom Cruise's particularly Tom Cruise-y performance, the Penelope Cruz nip shots, and the incredibly eclectic soundtrack featuring classics from Bob Dylan and Peter Gabriel, as well as somber cuts from Radiohead and R.E.M. Fortunately, this all diverts your attention from the nonsensical plot (I mean, really, why would you set your splice point for AFTER the disfiguring car wreck?). Although, maybe that's why it's nonsensical in the first place.
5 - Hot Rod, 2007
Category: show-stealer
When a movie is utterly dumb, it can be painful. But when music is utterly dumb, it can be a blast (see: Ke$ha). This dumb comedy celebrates some of the best dumb, montage-ready songs of the '80s, including forgotten gems like "Two Of Hearts" and "You're The Voice," plus four Europe songs. Is it absurd to include four Europe songs? Of course. Which is exactly why it works.
6 - Above The Rim, 1994
Category: show-stealer
One of a multitude of forgettable sports flicks, except it has arguably the best hip-hop soundtrack of all time: Dr. Dre in the studio, 2Pac's first go-round with Death Row, Snoop Dogg and, oh, maybe you've heard of a little ditty called "Regulate." If aliens wanted to know what West Coast rap sounded like in the early '90s (these aliens are incredibly curious about incredibly specific topics), you'd hand them this album.
7 - Good Will Hunting, 1997
Category: trickster
Now that we're well past the 10-year statute of limitations, can we all finally admit this movie was an overrated fluke? No? Well, let's at least agree that the aching Elliott Smith-centric soundtrack still holds up. The album also contains Gerry Rafferty's "Baker Street," which is the melted Velveeta of songs: unnaturally smooth and cheesy, but undeniably appealing.
8 - Idlewild, 2006
Category: show-stealer
You know what they say: A bloated album from Outkast is better than a fine-tuned effort from anyone else. Highlights include "Mighty O," "N2U," "Morris Brown" and "Call The Law" featuring Janelle Monae. Andre 3000 and Big Boi can do no wrong (cinematic endeavors notwithstanding).
9 - 21, 2008
Category: show-stealer
A murderer's row of late-aughts hit-makers: Rihanna, LCD Soundsystem, MGMT, Mark Ronson, Peter Bjorn and John. We'll just pretend that remix of The Rolling Stones' "You Can't Always Get What You Want" didn't happen (which is also what Kevin Spacey does with this movie).
10 - RocknRolla, 2008
Category: show-stealer
All of Guy Ritchie's crime capers are injected with a rollicking mix of songs. But this is the first collection to surpass the film, thanks to stompers from The Hives, The Clash, Wanda Jackson and a few gritty blues covers.
Suggestion: Regardless of the category, be sure to erase this on your Netflix queue files and go straight to iTunes instead.
- Reference/Source: MTV.com by Clutch Staff (Movies, Music)
Sunday, July 3, 2011
A massive hat tip to Aamir Khan (the producer, not the actor) for having the gumption to produce such diverse fare and make it succeed at the box office, for, back in 2001, a four-hour film about cricket (Lagaan) was a huge financial risk. Similarly, films about dyslexia (Taare Zameen Par), farmer suicides (Peepli Live) and an artsy Mumbai diary (Dhobi Ghat) were all risks, but had punters queuing up at the turnstiles. Marvellously written by Akshat Verma,Delhi Belly is a racy caper laced with colourful and rude language and something that a more conventional producer wouldn’t have dared to touch.
The plot though derivative and reminiscent of Guy Ritchie films like Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and Snatch, with a nod to Quentin Tarantino penned and Tony Scott helmedTrue Romance as well, is fresh to Indian audiences and fresh and original in its treatment. The film follows journalist Tashi (Imran Khan), his photographer Nitin (Kunaal Roy Kapoor) and cartoonist Arup (Vir Das) who live in squalor in a crumbling flat in Delhi. A reluctant Tashi is due to wed his flight attendant girlfriend Sonia (Shenaz Treasury, who has inexplicably dropped the ‘wala’ from her surname) shortly. Sonia becomes an unwitting mule for a parcel of smuggled diamonds. When this gets exchanged with a packet containing Nitin’s stool sample, all hell breaks loose and Delhi’s gangland is on the flatmates’ trail. Adding to the mix is Tashi’s work colleague, the sultry and soon-to-be-divorced Menaka (Poorna Jagannathan) who has the hots for him.
Delhi Belly is a fast, pacy ride that doesn’t pause for breath and thankfully for songs, except for a hilarious dream interlude of Arup’s. This isn’t a film for the squeamish or the easily offended as it contains (covered) erections, (under the covers) cunnilingus and a galaxy of foul language that is used most inventively. The characters look and talk like real Delhi youngsters, speaking in a mixture of English with some Hindi mixed in. Unlike Band Baaja Baaraat and Do Dooni Chaar that concentrated mainly on capturing lower middle-class Delhi, director Abhinay Deo and cinematographer Jason West (Rock On!!), contrast the hip urban cool spots of the city with the crumbling edifices and teeming markets of the old city. The sharp editing and Ram Sampath’s pounding soundtrack keep the film moving along briskly and Verma’s script always produces a twist where least expected. The acting is uniformly excellent with Jagannathan’s debut proving to be a smashing one. Even the normally annoying Treasury is perfect casting, as her character in the film is meant to be annoying.
So, on to the man himself, Aamir Khan. The eagle eyed in the audience can spot his face on a poster above Arup’s bed and on a standee outside a cinema playing Return of Disco Fighter, a character Arup is obsessive about. Since the videos have been released, it is no secret that Aamir does a rambunctious homage to Elvis, Carl Douglas and Biddu’s Kung Fu Fighting, Mithun Chakraborty’s Gunmaster G9 and his and Bappi Lahiri’s Disco Dancer all rolled into one over the end credits. This is the perfect cherry on the cake to a great cinematic experience that provides genuine belly laughs. The makers of the asinine Thank Yous andDouble Dhamaals of this world would do well to watch Delhi Belly and learn how to make smart comic capers.
Labels: Movies
Saturday, July 2, 2011
Labels: Movies
A media franchise is an intellectual property involving the characters, setting and trademarks of an original work of media (usually a work of fiction), such as a film, a work of literature, a television program or a video game. Generally, a whole series is made in a particular medium, along with merchandising and endorsements. Multiple sequels are often planned well in advance, and (in the case of motion pictures) actors and directors often sign multi-film deals to ensure their participation.
According to TheAtlantic.com, Here's the Top 10 of the Greatest Movie Franchises of All Time.
1 - INDIANA JONES
Box Office Rank: 4
Critics' Score Rank: 3
Harrison Ford was 65 years old when he picked up the trademark Indy fedora and whip for a fourth time in 2008. The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull was the year's third-highest grossing film, proving that Ford—and Jones—hadn't missed a beat.
2 - TOY STORY
Box Office Rank: 7
Critics' Rank: 1
The third installment of the franchise could be the first animated film to ever win the Best Picture Oscar.
3 - SPIDER-MAN
Box Office Rank: 2
Critics' Rank: 7
The Social Network's Andrew Garfield was recently cast in director Mark Webb's upcoming 2012 reboot of the franchise, which will center on Peter Parker as a teenager.
4 - STAR WARS
Box Office Rank: 1
Critics' Rank: 8
George Lucas's iconic series had the highest average-gross of all film franchises, nearly double its closest competition, the Spider-man series.
5 - LORD OF THE RINGS
Box Office Rank: 5
Critics' Rank: 6
Eight years after the final installment of the Lord of the Rings trilogy hit theaters, director Peter Jackson is back in production on a film adaptation of The Hobbit.
6 - THE GODFATHER
Box Office Rank: 11
Critics' Rank: 2
The Godfather is the only franchise to have two installments win the Academy Award for Best Picture, and The Godfather: Part II is the first sequel to ever win the top Oscar.
7 - HARRY POTTER
Box Office Rank: 10
Critics' Rank: 5
The latest Harry Potter film hit theaters Thursday at midnight, with insiders already bracing for a record weekend of box office gross.
8 - SHREK
Box Office Rank: 6
Critics' Rank: 17
Not only have the Shrek films been box-office successes, but the franchise has spawned regular holiday-themed specials that have become ratings smashes for ABC and NBC.
9 - BACK TO THE FUTURE
Box Office Rank: 15
Critics' Rank: 9
Fans celebrated the 25th anniversary of Back to the Future's original theatrical run with a commemorative DVD release, a special theatrical run, and numerous homages to its legacy.
10 - JURASSIC PARK
Box Office Rank: 3
Critics' Rank: 26
Steven Spielberg's pioneering computer-generated imagery made the original Jurassic Park a theatrical event. Seventeen years later, there's rumors of another Jurassic trilogy.
- Reference/Source: TheAtlantic.com
- Reference/Source: Wikipedia.com
Thursday, June 30, 2011
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Size : 178mb
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Labels: Movies
Friday, June 24, 2011
If you are looking for top movies you are sure to come across Another Year in your searches.
This is one of those movies that seems to be about ordinary people and ordinary lives but demonstrates how no one’s life is really ordinary. It is gentle and sweet yet it is so much more than just a feel good movie. The focus of the movie is an older couple that is looking forward to retirement and enjoying their empty nest.
Over the course of the movies, several interesting characters drift in and out, like Ken, the alcoholic friend of Tom and Mary, the divorcee that seems fine on the outside but on the inside is totally dependent on others. This is one of the best movies of the year and you’ll surely agree when you’ve seen it for yourself.
Here's our top 10 of the Best Hollywood Movies in 2010 that I enjoyed watching.
1 - Inception
"In a world where technology exists to enter the human mind through dream invasion, a highly skilled thief is given a final chance at redemption which involves executing his toughest job to date: Inception."
No other movie deserves the top spot. Christopher Nolan turned out one of the best of all time. The mystery and sci-fi were so well tied in that the audience came back to the theaters for more and more. The phenomenal star cats and super talented director made the movie number one.
2 - Iron Man 2
"Because of his superhero alter ego, Tony Stark must contend with deadly issues involving the government, his own friends and new enemies."
Robert Downey Jr. provides another great performance in a role that seems to be tailor made for him. The sequel was bigger than the original and with the angry Mickey Rourke and Scarlett Johansson in the fray this one got even better.
3 - Toy Story 3
"The toys are mistakenly delivered to a day-care center instead of the attic right before Andy leaves for college, and it's up to Woody to convince the other toys that they weren't abandoned and to return home."
The heartwarming adventures of the toys continued to win over parents and kids alike. Every sequel of the movie continues to be better than the previous one and his one was no exception. An instant classic!
4 - Tron Legacy
"The son of a virtual world designer goes looking for his father and ends up inside the digital world that his father designed. He meets his father's creation turned bad and a unique ally who was born inside the digital domain of The Grid."
Tron was ahead of its time. 2010 was the correct year. Combine the vision, superior GFX and heightened fanboy expectations with the amazing Daft Punk score and you have a winner.
5 - Scott Pilgrim vs. The World
"Scott Pilgrim must defeat his new girlfriend's seven evil exes in order to win her heart."
The movie was based on one of the best Indie comics of all times and did not disappoint. It was a great mix of love, action, oddity and bizarre sequences. Michael Cera absolutely nailed this one.
6 - The Expendables
"A team of mercenaries head to South America on a mission to overthrow a dictator."
An explosive star cast consisting of Sylvester Stallone, Jet Li, Jason Statham, Dolph Lundgren, ‘Stone Cold’ Steve Austin, Mickey Rourke, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Add in a cameo by Bruce Willis. Action fans were crawling on their knees for this one. They were getting spoilt rotten.
7 - Ridley Scott’s Robin Hood
"In 13th century England, Robin and his band of marauders confront corruption in a local village and lead an uprising against the crown that will forever alter the balance of world power."
The man behind classics such as Alien, Blade Runner and Gladiator returned to the screen with Robin Hood. His favorite star Russell Crowe also joins in to create a saga of the enigmatic legend of Robin Hood. It was a memorable take on Robin Hood.
8 - Alice in Wonderland
"19-year-old Alice returns to the magical world from her childhood adventure, where she reunites with her old friends and learns of her true destiny: to end the Red Queen's reign of terror."
Tim Burrton’s Alice in Wonderland looked out of the world and stunning. Helena Bonham Carter as the Red Queen and Johnny Depp as the Mad Hatter put in great performances to make the movie one of the best of 2010.
9 - Clash of the Titans
"The mortal son of the god Zeus embarks on a perilous journey to stop the underworld and its minions from spreading their evil to Earth as well as the heavens."
The classic sword and sandal classic flick was remade using modern CGI. The director did a fantastic job of creating the underworld and the heavens while the newcomers Sam Worthington and Gemma Arterton made the roles of Perseus and Io believable.
10 - The Social Network
"A chronicle of the founding of Facebook, the social-networking Web site."
The gripping tale of how the most dominant social network came into being makes for a riveting and engaging watch. The focus on ideas, feelings and people made this one memorable.
- Reference/Source: Islandcrisis.net [2011-01-15]
Friday, May 27, 2011
A filming location is a place where some or all of a film or television series is produced, in addition to or instead of using sets constructed on a movie studio backlot or soundstage. For example, the television series 24 is filmed primarily on location except for some scenes which are always filmed on the same sets. On location is a term used to describe the filming on such a real site. The term is often mistakenly believed to mean that the production is being filmed on the actual location in which its story is set, but this is not necessarily the case.
There are many houses used as filming location, but totalfilm.com cut it down to 20 list to whom we can live in. Here's your top 10 of 20 movie houses you can move in.
1 - Blade Runner (1982)
The House: Designed by guru Frank Lloyd Wright, the 1924 Ennis House is nestled in the Hollywood Hills and sold for $15m in 2009.
The Movie: Ridley Scott’s moody masterpiece, set in a futuristic 2019 where ex-police officer Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford) is on the hunt for human look-alike Replicants.
If We Lived There: We’d paint each one of those squares a different colour and turn it into a 24/7 disco.
2 - Atonement (2007)
The House: A beautiful English manor called Stokesay Court. Built in 1889, it’s out in Shropshire somewhere.
The Movie: Haunting war drama in which a lie spirals out of control, and leads to James McAvoy heading out to war, never to see the love of his life ever again.
If We Lived There: We’d walk around in our finest frock all day long, draped in jewellery, and eat nothing but caviar.
3 - North By Northwest (1959)
The House: The Vandamm House. Not to be confused with the house of Jean-Claude Van Damme. Sadly it doesn’t actually exist, but you could build a copy - we're sure there's a blueprint lying around Hollywood somewhere.
The Movie: Celebrated as one of Alfred Hitchcock’s finest, Cary Grant stars as an innocent man mistaken for someone who wants to release government secrets to the world. It ends with that famous Mount Rushmore stand-off.
If We Lived There: It would either cure us of our debilitating fear of heights, or drive is crazy.
4 - Meet The Fockers (2004)
The House: Situated in the East of Los Angeles, this rather unique abode is normally white, and is known as the Baldwin Cottage (after founder Elias Baldwin).
The Movie: Comedy sequel, in which poor Focker Gaylord (Ben Stiller) has to introduce his family to his fiancée’s rabble – with belly-rolling results.
If We Lived There: We’d pretend we were Willy Wonka – doesn’t that look like the kind of place he’d live if evicted from the chocolate.
5 - What Lies Beneath (2000)
The House: A gorgeous lakeside residence in Addison, Vermont. Director Robert Zemeckis and his crew built the entire thing just for the movie.
The Movie: Creepy ghost story in which Michelle Pfeiffer is haunted by a spook when she moves into her new home. Meanwhile, has her scary neighbour really murdered his wife?
If We Lived There: We’d get an exorcist in pronto – you can never be too careful.
6 - Zombieland (2009)
The House: Sitting in Atlanta, Georgia, this abode doubles as Bill Murray’s crib in Zombieland. In reality, it belongs to ‘Big Poppa’, who was apparently formerly married to Kim Zolciak from The Real Housewives Of Atlanta.
The Movie: Hilariously tongue-in-cheek zombie flick that follows a quartet of survivors in a post-apocalyptic world that’s fallen at the feet of ravenous flesh-munchers.
If We Lived There: We’d probably get lost for days and end up crying in a corner until the maid rescues us.
7 - Gone With The Wind (1939)
The House: Twelve Oaks, a once stunning town house.
The Movie: Sweeping epic based on Margaret Mitchell’s novel, set against the backdrop of the American civil war.
If We Lived There: We’d need to spend a good decade or so returning it to its former glory (it burned down in the 1950s), but we reckon we can get a ruin for a heck of a discount.
8 - Twilight (2008)
The House: Super-cool, super-stylish digs owned by the Cullen family of vampires. In real life, it’s owned by Nike footwear designer John Hoke.
The Movie: Faint-inducing adaptation of Stephenie Meyers’ first Twilight novel, starring dreamboat Robert Pattinson as a twinkly good vampire who doesn’t eat people – unless they really deserve it. Which is why he refuses to – uh – eat Bella, who bites her lip a lot in response.
If We Lived There: We’d hire a CSI team to find all of R-Pattz fingerprints throughout the house, then frame them. We're odd like that.
9 - Disturbia (2007)
The House: Beautiful timber-frame American home situated in Whittier, California. Nice garden, too.
The Movie: Canny teen update of Rear Window, in which Shia LaBeouf’s ASBO nuisance is under house arrest when he spots his neighbour behaving weirdly. Is he a closet murderer?
If We Lived There: We’d sit on the porch every evening playing the banjo and drinking Duff.
10 - Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986)
The House: Located in Long Beach, California, this is the house owned by the Bueller family in the movie. It was also used in Red Dragon and Not Another Teen Movie.
The Movie: John Hughes classic following the titular Ferris’ fun-filled day skiving school. Charlie Sheen makes a brief, early cameo appearance.
If We Lived There: We’d invite Matthew Broderick over for dinner.
- Reference/Source: totalfilm.com by Josh Winning [May 24th 2011]





















































