Cybersecurity

Alcaraz gives point to Shelton on racket fling

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Economy   来源:Tennis  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:The unfortunate perpetrator is Lucas Hollister, a teenager in 1880s Wyoming who’s recently been orphaned, along with his little brother. We learn later that their father shot himself a year after their mother died. So Lucas (Patrick Scott McDermott, in an accomplished performance) has become the parent.

The unfortunate perpetrator is Lucas Hollister, a teenager in 1880s Wyoming who’s recently been orphaned, along with his little brother. We learn later that their father shot himself a year after their mother died. So Lucas (Patrick Scott McDermott, in an accomplished performance) has become the parent.

Totsuko, an exuberant, uncensored soul, has the tendency to blurt things out before she quite intends to. She accidentally tells a nun that her color is beautiful. In the midst of a dodgeball game, she’s transfixed by the purple and yellow blur of a volleyball hurtling toward her — so much so that she’s happily dazed when it smacks her in the head.Like Totsuko, “The Colors Within” (in theaters Friday) wears its heart on its sleeve. Painted with a light, watercolor-y brush, the movie is softly impressionistic. In one typically poetic touch, a slinky brush stroke shapes the contours of a hillside horizon. That evocative sensibility connects with the movie’s spiritual underpinnings. Totsuko prays “to have the serenity to accept the things she can’t change.” In “The Colors Within,” a trio of young loners bond over what makes them uniquely themselves, while finding the courage to change, together.

Alcaraz gives point to Shelton on racket fling

The ball that knocks down Totsuko is thrown by a classmate named Kimi (Akari Takaishi), who not long after that gym class drops out of school — hounded, we’re told, by rumors of a boyfriend. (Boys are off-limits for the boarding school.) Totsuko, curious what’s happened to Kimi, sets out to find her, and eventually does. At a local used bookstore, she sits working behind a desk, strumming her electric guitar.To speak to Kimi, Totsuko grabs a piano book for an excuse. When a bespectacled boy named Rui (Kido Taisei) approaches and says he plays the theremin, Totsuko blurts out that they should start a band. They aren’t much more than strangers to each other, but they do — a group urged together by Totsuko’s earnest positivity and her instinct that they are suited to one another. (Totsuko sees blue for Kimi, green for Rui.)Despite their relatively scant experience (none in the case of Totsuko), the trio begin making music together. They practice in an old church near Rui’s home that Kimi and Totsuko take a ferry to get to. They don’t share much about their lives, but enough to know, roughly, what each is wrestling with. Kimi hasn’t yet told her grandmother, who raised her, that she’s out of school. Rui, headed next year to college, loves music but has parents who expect a different professional path.

Alcaraz gives point to Shelton on racket fling

But much goes unspoken in “The Colors Within.” If there’s a character who voices what isn’t articulated, it’s the kindly Sister Hiyoshiko (Yui Aragaki), the nun with the “beautiful” color. As she subtly encourages them, it’s clear that her sense of guidance and atonement goes beyond school policy. “We can chart a new course any time we wish,” she says.But much of what matters in “The Colors Within” isn’t said aloud. It comes, like Totsuko’s feelings of color, through an essence of character that, regardless of any missteps or disappointments by these three young people, emerges loud and clear in music. Are they songs? Or hymns? Either way, in the climactic concert, Naoko, the filmmaker of 2016’s “A Silent Voice,” allows all the dialogue to subside and let their music do the talking. And it rocks.

Alcaraz gives point to Shelton on racket fling

“The Colors Within,” a Gkids release is rated PG by the Motion Picture Association for mild thematic elements. Running time: 100 minutes. Three out of four.

Whatever cruelness you might assign to the month, Dea Kulumbegashvili’s “April” probably has it beat.in Santo Domingo has plunged the Dominican Republic into mourning.

Authorities say the disaster early Tuesdayand injured more than 200 others. Nearly two dozen people remain hospitalized, with several in critical condition.

The biggest tragedy to strike the Dominican Republic in recent history has raised questions about the safety of infrastructure in the capital and beyond. While authorities have said it’s too early to determine why the roof fell, the government has created a technical team to investigate the case.Here’s a timeline of what happened:

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