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...Best Actor awards could go to actual movie stars: Clooney, with his glistening likability and hunkitude, in the Drama category, and Depp, who's even dreamier (and murders and sings), in Comedy-Musical. But we never ignore Daniel Day-Lewis, making only his third film in a decade and, as the oil magnate in There Will Be Blood, giving another of his super-intense, bite-the-head-off-live-rats, I'm-mad-inside-too performances...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Globes Atone for the Critics | 12/13/2007 | See Source »

...hoping for a broad spectrum of interests to apply,” Segal said. “Not all entrepreneurs are simply looking to start multimillion-dollar businesses, and the purpose of I^3 is to encourage innovation across every discipline.” Daniel “Zak” Tanjeloff ’08, the winner of last year’s Entrepreneurship Forum business competition, said he was excited to see entrepreneurship be emphasized as a bigger part of campus life. “The competition allows entrepreneurs to coalesce, and it gives teams something to work...

Author: By Maria Y. Xia, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Challenged to Innovate | 12/12/2007 | See Source »

...crowd, the New Yorkers - have convened to choose the most notable movies and moviemakers. No Country was named best picture in four of the groups, There Will Be Blood in L.A. George Clooney won two best actor awards for playing a lawyer at crisis point in Michael Clayton; Daniel Day-Lewis a pair for his oil mogul in There Will Be Blood; and, in Boston, Frank Langella won the prize for playing an aged novelist in Starting Out in the Evening. Three groups selected Julie Christie as best actress - she's an Alzheimer's patient in the Canadian film Away...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Do Film Critics Know Anything? | 12/10/2007 | See Source »

...most versatile among the cast as Titus‘s brother Marcus: alternately passionate and level-headed in his grief, and touchingly tender toward his mangled niece. As Tamora, Soler is every inch the vengeful hussy. Rapists Demetrius and Chiron (Jason R. Vartikar-McCullough ’11 and Daniel R. Pecci ’09) are chillingly rambunctious and buffoonish in their cruelty. There is a particularly searing moment when they execute Lavinia’s rape scene completely aurally from off stage. The red-bandaged, mutilated Lavinia then staggers pathetically back onstage. The effect is shocking...

Author: By April B. Wang, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: A Troubling ‘Titus’ In the Ex | 12/10/2007 | See Source »

...rotors of the helicopter stirred up clouds of snow as it landed on the fields of the Gordon Track and Tennis Center. During the flight, contact was maintained with the Boston Logan Air Traffic Control Tower at all times. Several Harvard students went along for the helicopter ride. Passenger Daniel E. Catomeris ’11 brought a camera and a crew mate along to document his journey for “On Harvard Time.” “It was incredible,” Catomeris said. When it came to events involving flying aircraft, it took...

Author: By Maria Y. Xia, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: College Students Enjoy Rides in the Sky | 12/10/2007 | See Source »

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