Based on Mark Helprin’s bestseller, ‘Winter’s Tale’ is a romantic fantasy staring Colin Farrell as a petty thief who is on the run from a crime boss.
While robbing her house, he meets and falls in love with a young woman who is dying of consumption, played by Jessica Brown Findlay.
Farrell says he fell in love with the story: “I just went with it. Maybe I’m a big, old softie, a hopeless romantic, I don’t know. I did. It just gripped me from the start. I love the period and I just completely went for it and bought it.”
“Yeah, and for that reason, I loved it. I suppose I loved it for the boldness that that is and what it takes for a story like that to be made now,” agreed co-star Jessica Brown Findlay.
The film has received mostly negative reviews, but its director Akiva Goldsman said he was not worried about cynics who may not appreciate its message.
“For me, being open-hearted and hopeful and looking for a reasonableness behind the world is important. It’s not easy. I think life gives you endless reasons to be cynical but I choose to try to find the hope of purpose,” said Goldsman.
Set in a mythic New York City and spanning more than a century, ‘Winter’s Tale’ is a story of miracles, crossed destinies, and the age-old battle between good and evil.
It also featured Russell Crowe as the demonic crime boss and Will Smith as Lucifer.
‘Winter’s Tale’ is in cinemas from Valentine’s Day.
Lil' Kim took to the stage at The Blonds Fashion Week after-party hosted by MAC Cosmetics at Gilded Lily in New York City on Wednesday night, Feb. 12, to announce her pregnancy. "I'm a mom, but I can turn it up a little!" she said as she rubbed her belly.
Indeed, the 39-year-old rapper doesn't plan on slowing down any time soon. "I'm still going to work," she tells Us. "I'm still going to be hardcore. The baby has made me even more of a beast!"
Right before performing "Lighters Up" she made sure to pay tribute to the late Notorious B.I.G., telling the crowd, "It's also going to be Biggie's birthday and the anniversary of his death soon so we [as she points to her belly] love you."
Lil' Kim has chosen to keep the identity of the unborn baby's father private at this time.
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Associated News The Supreme Court guessing game is over, but the drama may just have
begun.
The court's Thursday ruling upholding most of President Obama's health care
law, sparked a frenzy of reaction from political figures, business leaders,
medical professionals and ordinary Americans. By Friday, with the dust starting
to settle, the debate is sure to intensify over the political, economic and
medical ramifications of a landmark 5-4 decision that will affect the lives of
virtually every American.
The ruling is a victory for the president, ensuring for now that his
signature domestic policy achievement remains mostly intact. It also
ensures that the law will play a prominent role in the general election
campaign, as Republican candidate Mitt Romney vows to repeal the law if
elected.
The so-called individual mandate, requiring that all Americans have health
insurance, takes effect in 2014, at the same time that the law would prohibit
insurance companies from denying coverage to people with existing health
problems. Most experts had said the coverage guarantee would balloon costs
unless virtually all people joined the insurance pool.
Most Americans already are insured. The law provides subsidies to help
uninsured middle-class households pay premiums and expands federal health care
for poor people.
"Whatever the politics, today's decision was a victory for people all
over this country," Obama said, speaking on national television from the
White House.
"It should be pretty clear by now that I didn't do this because it was
good politics," he said. "I did it because it was good for the
country."
Romney pinned the court's decision to the election and asking voters to
render their own ruling.
"If we want to get rid of ObamaCare," he said, "we're going
to have replace President Obama."
Democrats, many of whom were bracing for the court striking down the mandate
for individuals to buy health insurance, celebrated the decision
Thursday. Rep. Charlie Rangel, D-N.Y., told Fox News that the ruling
"gives us the opportunity to re-sell the bill, which we did not do
before."
But Republicans vowed to re-double their campaign to repeal the
still-controversial law.
The ruling "underscores the urgency of repealing this harmful law in
its entirety," House Speaker John Boehner said in a written statement.
"Republicans stand ready to work with a president who will listen to the
people and will not repeat the mistakes that gave our country ObamaCare."
Chief Justice John Roberts, who was appointed during a Republican
administration, joined the four left-leaning justices on the bench in crafting
the majority decision.
The ruling relied on a technical explanation of how the individual mandate
could be categorized. Roberts, in the opinion, said the mandate could not be
upheld under the Constitution's Commerce Clause. However, it could be upheld
under the government's power to tax.
"The Affordable Care Act is constitutional in part and unconstitutional
in part The individual mandate cannot be upheld as an exercise of
Congress's power under the Commerce Clause," Roberts wrote. "That
Clause authorizes Congress to regulate interstate commerce, not to order
individuals to engage it. In this case, however, it is reasonable to
construe what Congress has done as increasing taxes on those who have a certain
amount of income, but choose to go without health insurance. Such legislation
is within Congress's power to tax."
Roberts stressed that the decision does not speak to the merits of the law.
"We do not consider whether the act embodies sound policies. That judgment
is entrusted to the nation's elected leaders," he said.
The ruling did rein in one element of the law -- the expansion of Medicaid
across the country to take in millions of low-income Americans. The opinion
allows Washington
to offer more funding to states to expand the program, but says the federal
government cannot penalize states for not participating in the new program by
withholding existing Medicaid funds.
Justice Anthony Kennedy, who was thought to be the swing vote on the
decision, joined the minority in describing the whole law as invalid.
"The act is invalid in its entirety," Kennedy said from the bench.
He went on to say the administration went to "great lengths to structure
the mandate as a penalty, not a tax" -- challenging the majority's rationale
for upholding the mandate.
Despite the persistent resistance to the law and the possibility that it
could still be repealed, the historic decision Thursday will offer some measure
of vindication for Obama, who devoted the first half of his term to pushing it
through Congress.
The overhaul was one of the central planks of Obama's 2008 run for
president. The faltering economy only later took a leading role in the race as
the financial markets spiraled around the time of the party conventions. Obama,
after taking the oath of office, dispatched with his administration's recession
response by swiftly passing through the roughly $800 billion stimulus
package.
The president immediately pivoted back to health care. He tasked allies in
Congress with working out the specifics of a proposal, a process that would
play out on the national stage over the course of a year, until its passage
with a series of deals by Democrats, who went on to sustain losses in the 2010
midterm elections.
The decision Thursday virtually guarantees the health care law will remain
at the forefront of the 2012 campaign.
June 23rd is the centenary of the birth of Alan Turing, father of computer
science and artificial intelligence, who committed suicide just shy of 42. In a
shocking and frank memoir, his late elder brother John says Alan’s life might
have turned out a lot better if his mother was not so nagging—and he recounts
the details of his brother’s awful death.
Alan
Turing, who was born 100 years ago on June 23, 1912, might not have invented
the computer. (That honor goes to Charles Babbage and Lord Byron's daughter.)
But today’s computing would be unthinkable without the contributions of the
British mathematician, who laid down the foundations of computer science, broke
Nazi codes that helped win World War II at the famous Bletchley Park, created a
secure speech encryption system, made major contributions to logic and
philosophy, and even invented the concept of Artificial Intelligence. But he
was also an eccentric and troubled man who was persecuted (and prosecuted) for
being gay, a tragedy that contributed to his suicide just short of the age of
42 when he died of cyanide poisoning, possibly from a half-eaten apple found by
his side. He is hailed today as one of the great originators of our
computing age.
In 1959, four years after Alan Turing’s suicide just shy of the age of
42, his mother Sara published her biography Alan M. Turing. Shortly
after, his elder brother John began his own alternative account, seeking to
“put the record straight” and correct any inaccuracies or biases in his
mother’s version. Although he worked on the essay throughout the ‘60s and ‘70s,
John declined to release the account until after his mother’s death, and
ultimately left it unpublished in his private papers. It was found in a drawer
by his son John Dermot Turing, and finally included as part of the re-release
of Alan M.
Turing, in celebration of the centenary of his birth. The following is
adapted from the book: My brother Alan was born
on 21* June 1912 in a London
nursing home. At this, and at all other times, my father took all decisions of
consequence in the family. Now, rightly or wrongly, he decided that he and my
mother should return alone to India,
leaving both children with foster parents in England. Alan and I were left with
“the Wards”—always we referred to them as “the Wards.” We were the wards
and they were our guardians but no matter—this was to be the centre of our
existence for many years and our home from home. I believe it was here, perhaps
in the first four or five years at the Wards, perhaps even in the first two,
that Alan became destined for a homosexual. Has anyone mentioned it until now? No. My mother was fully
aware of it before Alan’s death (not, I imagine, that she had the faintest idea
of what it implied), but she makes no reference to it in her book. One can put
that down to Edwardian reticence if one pleases. In my view, based on such
conversation as I had with my mother about it, necessarily reduced to a
minimum, her reaction was much what one might expect if a specialist had
informed her that her son was color blind or had an incurable obsession with
spiders: it was a nasty shock of brief duration and of no great significance. I
am trying to make this memoir as truthful as I can, so I will not go to the
length of pretending that I like homosexuals. To my mind, what is intolerable
is the world of the “gay crusade” and, as my unfortunate brother may be
cast in the part of an early and valiant crusader, this is by no means an
irrelevant comment. My mother, perhaps
unwittingly, gives the impression in her book that she recognized Alan’s genius
from the start, and that she sedulously fostered it. If so, she did not give
that impression in the family at the time; in fact, quite the contrary.
‘Alan M. Turing: Centenary Edition’ by Sara Turing. 194 pp. CambridgeUniversity Press. $30. (KingsCollege,
University of Cambridge) My father, on the whole,
either ignored my brother’s eccentricities, or viewed them with amused
tolerance but (as will appear) there were deep dudgeons when Alan started to
accumulate appalling school reports at Sherborne. As for myself, with the
selfishness of youth, and separated by a gap of four years, I did not care what
Alan did, and I was content to go my own way, as indeed he was content to go
his. Our interests were so dissimilar that they never clashed. The only person
in the household who was forever exasperated with Alan, constantly nagging him
about his dirty habits, his slovenliness, his clothes and his offhand manners
(and much else, most of it with good reason) was my mother. If this was due to
some early recognition of his genius, she was certainly doing nothing to foster
it by trying to press him into a conventional mould. Needless to say, she
achieved nothing by it except a dogged determination on Alan’s part to remain
as unconventional as possible. The truth of the matter, as I now view it in
retrospect, is that neither of Alan’s parents or his brother had the faintest
idea that this tiresome, eccentric and obstinate small boy was a budding
genius. The business burst upon us soon after he went to Sherborne. After a few
terms, it became apparent that he was far ahead of the other boys in
mathematics: when Alan was sixteen, the maths master told my mother that there
was nothing more that he could teach him and he would have to progress from
there on his own. I think it must have been when Alan was due to take the
School Certificate examination (now replaced by “O” levels) that he read Hamlet
in the holidays. My father was delighted when Alan placed the volume on the
floor and remarked “Well, there’s one line I like in this play.” My
father could already see a burgeoning interest in English literature. But his
hopes were dashed when Alan replied that he was referring to the final stage
direction (Exeunt, bearing off the bodies).
The first day of summer, known as the summer solstice, begins at around 7
p.m. tonight. The weather in the capital region will be extremely hot according
to a heat advisory issued last night by National Weather Service.
The temperature in the capital region will reach up to near 99 high today
due to a one-day heat wave along with high pressure in the sky.
Patchy fog, hot and humid conditions are likely to happen, ushering in some
of the hottest weather ever seen in the region since last year. It is likely that
the record high temperature of 97 degrees will be broken.
And thunderstorm is not out of the question, given the intense amount of
daytime heating. Precipitation will possibly visit the region late Thursday
night onto Friday morning with the approach of cold front into the region.
Tomorrow temperatures appear to be the above normal.
The weekend will likely bring back the normal temperature of this time of
year due to the high pressure coming from Canada.
The summer solstice marks the longest day of the year, though not
necessarily the hottest. Temperature is influenced by the mixture of
atmosphere, land and oceans taking in part of the Sun's rays and releasing it
at different rates, in light of the Farmer’s Almanac.
Below is the detailed, one-week forecast from the National Weather Service: Today: Sunny and hot, with a high near 96. Calm
wind becoming west northwest between 5 and 8 mph. Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 56.
Southwest wind between 7 and 10 mph. Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 80. South southwest
wind between 13 and 15 mph, with gusts as high as 20 mph. Thursday night: Increasing clouds, with a low around 55.
South southwest wind between 13 and 16 mph, with gusts as high as 21 mph. Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 79. South
southwest wind around 9 mph. Friday night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 55. Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 77. Saturday night: Mostly clear, with a low around 53. Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 79. Sunday night: Clear, with a low around 53. Monday: Sunny, with a high near 80. Monday night: Clear, with a low around 55. Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 85.
This Sunday, fathers around America
will be showered with gifts, meals, hugs and activities centered on us. We will
receive ties, cologne, cufflinks and gift cards from our wives. Our children
will give us clay coin holders (which were ashtrays 30 years ago), and art
featuring stick figure families, with daddy having the largest circle-head. We
will be thanked for our hard work, our sacrifice and our love...And many of us
dads will think it's all much ado about nothing.
Of course we lay down the law. Yes, you better defer to us when it comes to
the thermostat, lights and how long it takes to shower. Yes, we are the he-man
bug killers and retrievers of stuff on high shelves. You better believe that we
are the driving instructors and keepers of the remote, and don't you forget ANY
of that!
But the one thing that Father's Day means to fathers is gratitude. Boy oh
boy, we are so thankful for YOU.
Most every father I know, myself included, lives in awe of our families.
None of us ever get over the images of pregnancy and childbirth. Those events
impact us forever, and frame our lives forever.
Most of us spend Father's Day just so happy that you love us, so humbled by
the miracle of life. We are amazed we somehow got to marry a girl like YOU. We
can't get over that our daughters love us, and that our sons want to BE us. On
Father's Day, we get out the telescope and count our lucky stars.
Fathers' Day is not only a day of reflection, for most dads it's a day which
finds us looking forward as well.
As we look around us, the hunter-gatherer in us takes note of what the
family needs going forward. We pledge silently to ourselves that Monday begins
a new push for more and better, safer and healthier everything for our
families. We resolve that we will be better fathers, more
attentive husbands; prepared to double our efforts so as to provide. Longer
days, harder work, less sleep; whatever it takes to keep the family healthy,
protected and happy.
Many of us will promise ourselves to finally get to the doctor
for the check ups and screenings which we hate so much. Because we so fear our
own mortality, very often men take refuge in the notion that "no news is
good news" so we avoid the doc like the plague itself.
Father's Day reminds us how badly we want to be around for as long as
possible to see weddings and grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
So at some point this Sunday, take a few moments to just observe dad.
I promise that if you watch us long enough, you'll see a deep breath, a
wiped tear or a lingering gaze. At any moment you may see serenity, awe or
fear.
And if you could hear our thoughts at those moments we'll be saying "I
want this to last forever."
To our wives and children on behalf of dads everywhere, your gift to us is
you...And we are so very grateful. T.J. McCormack is a comedian and commentator. He is host and producer of
"Sunday Night with T.J. McCormack."