Word: naomie
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...chair for fellows; John Jernigan ’06, chair for Foreign Policy Group; Julie Kobick ’05, Forums chair; Jason Semine ’04, chair for Freedom in America Policy Group; Joe Green ’05, chair for Harvard Political Union; Naomi Ages ’05, chair for internships; James Granger ’05, outreach chair; Guillermo Coronado ’05, projects chair; Brad Smith ’05, chair for Social Security Policy Group; and Ilan Graff ’05, chair for study groups...
...board will consist of Legislative Director Guillermo Coronado ’05, Speakers Director Joey Hanzich ’06, Outreach Director Andrew Stillman ’06, Communications Director Ryan McAuliffe ’06, Treasurer Joel Washington ’05, Institute of Politics Relations Director Naomi Ages ’05 and Projects Director Andrew Frank...
...from the original: the suspenseful opening and the hackle-raising climax (with a ghost crawling out of a TV set). Still, the Japanese film dragged at just 90 minutes; the remake is nearly two hours, with a trawler of new red herrings introduced but little value added. And though Naomi Watts (Mulholland Drive) carries the film in the role originated by Nanako Ma-tsushima, she can't single-handedly lift it beyond a stale spook sonata...
...Image begins with a snapshot in time, a single event that propels the narrative both forward and backward: the death of Naomi Landsmann, Leora’s best and only friend. This event causes Leora to meet Naomi’s grandfather, Bill, whose passion for Biblical photographs causes him to view life in discrete moments, snapshots that never form a cohesive whole. Though Bill’s goal is to create “the Bible on film, its greatest moments recorded in stop-action photography,” these tiny squares cannot create a world of meaning...
...days later you die. So goes the urban legend that was the basis of a Japanese pop phenomenon--a movie trilogy, TV series and comics. The Ring is the American spin-off, stylishly directed by Gore Verbinski and well acted by an appealing cast, led by Mulholland Drive's Naomi Watts. She's a reporter looking for a logical explanation for her niece's death and her son's increasingly haunted state. She almost finds one, and that proves to be a problem. What she discovers is a conventional mother-child psychodrama that doesn't persuasively match up with...