Word: visualizing
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...will assuredly end up with a few videos on the top of the TRL countdown (the video for “Confessions” has already reached #1), but none of the album’s songs would attract an audience without a little help from a provocative Lohan visual. Lindsay Lohan has made some good movies, some great music videos, and her previous singles were decent as well. On this album, she should have paid heed to the maxim: “If it ain’t broke, don?...
...stage, her hair flying wildly over a white kimono—while she is performing for all of Kyoto, her facial expressions convey that she is personally dancing for the Chairman (Ken Watanabe) whom she loves. There is always the risk that Hollywood’s sound and visual effects will ruin the text’s literary merit, but the cinematic techniques of “Memoirs of a Geisha” actually enhance the tone and mood of the story. In the opening scene, in which Chiyo and her sister are ripped away from their home, the lighting...
...unconventional use of the umbrellas injects a layer of inventive visual interpretation into the entire production. While holed up in his room, Berenger receives a threatening phone call from the rhinoceroses—there is no sound, but the audience watches with trepidation as he frantically unscrews the receiver to reveal a miniature red umbrella within the phone. In the chilling final set, hundreds of umbrellas, motionless and silent, provide an unsettling backdrop for Berenger’s anguished cries...
...problem is not isolated to Harvard. Professor Stilgoe says that few colleges and high schools treat geography with any seriousness. This is particularly problematic because map reading, the correlation of the three-dimensional world to a two-dimensional schematic, is a basic measure of visual intelligence. He is disappointed that the College Board has not more proactively encouraged schools to promote this type of visual education. He states: “The SAT people refuse to include a test of visual intelligence. Few undergraduates, even Harvard undergraduates, see such tests until they are being interviewed for jobs as investment bankers...
Beneath the floorboards of Sever Hall, Robb Moss, lecturer in Visual and Environmental Studies (VES) and independent filmmaker, leads me into VES 50, “Fundamentals of Filmmaking,” and gallantly pulls out a chair. “This is the Crimson reporter I told you about,” he announces to the eight students chattering around a table. Then, turning to me: “Why don’t you tell us a little about yourself?”Wow. Nobody has ever done that in my four years of high school and almost...