Word: yun
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...screenplay than rip off Notorious and throw in a limp virus thriller. Then you can blame Tom Cruise, who, despite his rogue's haircut, is stuck in extra-bland mode as superagent Ethan Hunt (when the Cruise mask is ripped off in the opening sequence, I was praying Chow Yun-Fat and his charisma would be underneath). And how did a television show that always revolved around the 'team' concept become the Tom Cruise vanity show anyway? By the time Woo is finally allowed to unleash his bag-of-tricks near the end, he does admittedly pull off some spectacular...
...Chow Yun Fat and Michelle Yeoh, Asian stars who have made their mark on both sides of the Pacific, play wise warriors defending their lord from a mysterious invader. While Chow and Yeoh tiptoe toward the awareness that they may have little time to realize their unspoken love, a girl-woman (radiant ingenue Zhang Ziyi) teases them with her suspiciously superior martial skills and tests both their emotional and physical equilibrium...
...winner SUSAN SARANDON is an avid supporter of Mark Plotkin's Amazon Conservation Team, STING throws an annual rain-forest benefit concert in New York City's Carnegie Hall, writer ARUNDHATI ROY has campaigned to stop the building of dams on India's Narmada River, Hong Kong actor CHOW YUN-FAT has done promotional work for the World Wildlife Fund, and Brazilian singer GILBERTO GIL was so worried about water pollution in his hometown of Salvador, Bahia, that he joined the Green Party and won a seat on the city council. Now it's Leo's turn...
Then there's the case of a well-known stock tipster who calls himself "Tokyo Joe" and uses his investment website to post colorful snapshots of himself. The sec says the New York-based entrepreneur, a Korean whose real name is Yun Soo Oh Park, charged members of his investment club up to $200 a month and then pushed them to buy stocks he was simultaneously selling from his own account. Beyond this practice, known as "scalping," the agency also claims Tokyo Joe lied about his trading record and touted companies without disclosing that he had received shares from...
...CHARGED. YUN SOO OH PARK, 50, a.k.a. "Tokyo Joe," with fraud; by the Securities and Exchange Commission; in New York City. Park charged online subscribers for stock advice, then traded ahead of his picks, making "substantial profits," said...