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...there's one thing that commercial American films know how to do, it's fill a screen with splendor. A huge screen, like the one in the Grand Palais' Lumiere theater, makes any Hollywood-style movie look better. Basic Instinct, no world-beater, had a pearly, febrile glamour when it was shown on opening night here 13 years ago. And Sith, a spiffy catalog of the things Hollywood does best, found its perfect showcase in the Lumiere. Of course the audience of 2,400 exulted when the Star Wars logo first appeared; that happens any time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cannes Diary VI: Sun, Moon and Star | 5/16/2005 | See Source »

...look to answer this week: Will we be able to look forward to another season of "Arrested Development" and "The Office" next year? Will our grandmothers and ministers be able to look forward to another season of "Joan of Arcadia"? Will ABC have any flashy plans to fill the "Nightline" time slot after Ted Koppel leaves? Will any of the pundits moaning about Ted Koppel leaving "Nightline" actually have watched the show more than five times in the last year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TV Upfronts: The Desperate Search for Households | 5/16/2005 | See Source »

When he was Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, Pope Benedict XVI was known as the hard-line enforcer of church doctrine for John Paul II. But the man the new Pontiff has just named to fill his old job, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, is harder to pin down. San Francisco Archbishop William J. Levada is, for one thing, the first American ever to reach such an influential position in the Roman Catholic hierarchy. A native of Long Beach, Calif., who headed the diocese in Portland, Ore., before moving to San Francisco in 1995, he is known...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Man Who Would Be Ratzinger | 5/16/2005 | See Source »

...those conventional radio signals responded to the weather and time of day in a way that satellite transmissions don't. Late at night, if the skies were clear enough to make out every star in the Big Dipper, the empty spaces on my AM dial would suddenly and mysteriously fill up with broadcasts from a thousand miles away. Minneapolis' WCCO, the powerful station that I grew up listening to and whose chuckling, easygoing announcers shaped my identity as a Minnesotan, reached out to me late one evening in eastern Washington as I sat parked on the shoulder of a state...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stuck in the Orbit of Satellite Radio | 5/15/2005 | See Source »

...fancy Pixar cartoons either. They look like lame Saturday-morning cartoons. That's going to change. Characters in the Xbox 360 game based on The Godfather have a gravitas and dramatic weight to them that we haven't seen before. Those blocky, too smooth cartoon faces are starting to fill in with wrinkles and lines and freckles. Suddenly, they emote...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Microsoft: Out of the X Box | 5/15/2005 | See Source »

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