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Word: lussier (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...With the movie (whose actual title is just My Bloody Valentine) being shown in 3-D on more than a thousand screens, director Patrick Lussier and writers Todd Farmer and Zane Smith had to devise some stuff that jumps out at you - like the opening money shot, in which the killer slams a poker through the back of a guy's head and its comes out through his eye, the orb jutting into the audience like the garnish on a kebab skewer. Kudos for that, and for the variations the filmmakers run on the mischief a pickax can work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mall Cop and Other Disreputable Pleasures | 1/20/2009 | See Source »

...taking a ride with someone quite likely to be the killer. For the genre director, a horror film is a game of geometry. It's all about the slow movement of the victim and the camera into a space of probable peril. In the Hitchcock school of tension-ratcheting, Lussier is an apt apprentice. (He also borrows a Hitchcock trick, from Stage Fright, of showing a misleading scene from the killer's demented point of view.) The movie is nothing above the ordinary, but that doesn't matter to the horror fanboys, who go to these movies the way their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mall Cop and Other Disreputable Pleasures | 1/20/2009 | See Source »

...Leah R. Lussier ’07, the alumni coordinator for Native Americans at Harvard College—citing research conducted by Stephanie Fryberg at the University of Arizona—said there is a negative emotional and psychological toll on Native American students at schools that use Native American imagery...

Author: By Aditi Balakrishna, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Ivy Apologizes for Hosting ‘Fighting Sioux’ | 11/28/2006 | See Source »

...gunshot wound in Minneapolis this May. He was 24. He once served as president of Native Americans at Harvard College (NAHC) and served as co-chair of the Student Advisory Committee of The Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations as a sophomore from 2002 to 2003. Leah R. Lussier ’07, NAHC president, called him an “ogichidaa”—the word for “leader” in the language of the Ojibwe tribe, to which she and Meat’s family belong. Meat had been spending the semester...

Author: By April H.N. Yee, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: An ‘Ogichidaa’ | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

Leading the blanket dance, Lussier unfurled her magenta shawl, and the crowd—some who had known Meat, others who had simply been moved by the scene—followed and circled around her. As the blanket’s pile of cash grew, the four men continued to chant to the deep beat of their drum...

Author: By April H.N. Yee, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: At Powwow, Friends Mourn Death of Respected Campus Leader | 5/8/2006 | See Source »

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