Word: on-screen
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...mentioned that the HomeDock on-screen interface lets you browse through music, but I didn't mention video. That?s because you have to switch modes to play videos (assuming you have a video-capable iPod). Press a button on the remote and the DLO interface disappears. Go over to the iPod itself and browse through your videos. You can use your remote to scroll through the iPod menus until you find a video. When you play it, it will appear on your TV screen. It?s a little cumbersome compared to the on-screen music interface...
...director whose life story became the stuff of spy thrillers when he and his movie-star wife were kidnapped by North Korean agents in 1978; in Seoul. One of the South's most prominent directors in the 1960s and '70s?his 1958 film Jiokhwa featured the country's first on-screen kiss?Shin and wife Choi Eun Hee were abducted because North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il, a movie buff, wanted to boost his country's film industry. Shin and Choi made a dozen movies at Kim's behest before staging a daring escape...
...McDormand ups the neurotic ante of her performance in “Almost Famous,” but as her character spirals into insanity, Holofcener’s dialogue can’t keep up the pace. Her on-screen outbursts are the most forced demonstrations of emotion in this very bittersweet movie; fortunately, her subtle displays of affection with her (speculated to be gay) husband, Aaron (Simon Burke) sweeten every scene they play together...
...wins the most sympathy and raises the most questions for me. Maybe because of the fact that in the aftermath of Brangelina, Aniston’s been portrayed by everyone from US Weekly to Katie Couric as a “victim,” she seems heartachingly human on-screen. If someone that well-coiffed and perfectly sculpted—and by this I mean both the actress and the character—dates idiots, doesn’t know what to do with her life, and has body image issues, then I guess everyone can feel a little...
...movie centers on Doug and Brenda’s survival, it turns gratuitously violent—and absolutely ridiculous. Buckets of blood are used and poor Ravin’s vocal chords must have suffered greatly from her constant on-screen screaming. Honestly, she shrieks louder than Neve Campbell, Sarah Michelle Gellar, and all other horror heroines combined...