Dark Knight rises

Dark Knight RisesThis has got to be on of the best movies so far, i can’t imagine how good this movie was when i watched it. OK we all know that billionaire play boy Bruce Wayne is Batman but who else knows this apart from Alfred his butler. Unknown to batman that a new breed of villains are coming to Gotham city. Bane is not your typical kind of villain in this sequel, he’s bad, mean and able to get the job done. He actually held an entire city hostage who in the World does that? Batman just like every other sequel we see, always have a dark side which he tries to hide and move away from but it always comes back to hunt him. you think you can run away from your fears, think again they will be there to hunt you and that’s what happened with batman, he was so scared that a villain like bane could come to Gotham city and do havoc that even him could not stop and that’s what killed him the most, knowing that he couldn’t be able to stop the bad guys. That’s what he thought but that’s not what people who believed in him thought. In the movie batman never showed up as a hero ever since Harvey died and the city declared him a Hero without knowing in full extent what he did to Commissioner Gordon’s son and how he died. So batman was out of the superhero gig for a while, it’s not until bane showed up in his city and started wrecking mayhem did batman put up his suit again to fight the evil that lurked in his city. I liked the entrance batman did when he first showed up in the movie, the scene where the cops were chasing bane, that part just killed me, it was a beautiful entrance that was so cool and well thought out. I have to applaud Christopher Nolan for his fantastic movie. he out did himself by making three fantastic batman movies. In all, the Dark Knight Rises is my favorite of the three and I want to watch it again because it’s a very good movie.

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Socom 4

SOCOM 4There’s always a new breed of Soldiers who will fight for the front line of victory. SOCOM 4, should be one of my best shooter games on the PlayStation 3 console. it has everything that’s there to be in a shooter game, an AI team, a leader and the responsiveness of the AI team to react to threats and dangers. In the game it depicts a situation happening in South East Asia whereby NATO forces has been deployed there to resolve the situation but then again trouble always lingers around people who provides peace. Unknown to the team, that their overall commander “Gorman” was the man behind all the attacks. The game is quite fantastic, you have customized weapons and it has this real life kind of shooting, it’s not done in a way that your character can take all the bullets in the world and still remain alive. few shots to vital places in the body and he’s gone, that’s what a real game is all about. Besides this, your AI team are fully aware of the surroundings around you. they are divided into Blue and Gold team. Blue teams comprises of Wells and Schweitsher while the Gold team comprises of 45 and Chung. In the game play, they made is so well that the AI are able to detect and take out enemies at your command or if the enemies are a threat to you. Besides, you can also command your teams to go area where they can take our targets to clear a path for your movement. I love using Chung and 45, they are so good in taking out target that you don’t even have to tell them, they just know when to do it and if you are using the silent approach they are the best team to tag along with you. On the other hand the Blue team are quite the heavy gunners, they are able to prevent enemies from reaching you in case you just need them to cover your path while you are trying to go some where, they are the team to use. In all a combination of both teams makes the game a success. you can infiltrate enemy lines, destroy targets and be back for dinner if you want. SOCOM 4, it’s a good shooter game to have.

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Madagascar 3: Europe Most Wanted

Madagascar 3: Europe Most Wanted You know something about movies is that once they start rolling out, especially once its good. they just keep on having sequels upon sequels. I love Madagascar not because of some whining ass penguins that think they are elite spies or some two bit Lion that’s friends with a hippo, giraffe and a zebra. It’s just because it’s damn too funny seeing animal of different background cooperating to achieve one common goal, and that’s what Madagascar is all about, surviving and trying to reach home. In the third sequel Europe most wanted, I think they out did themselves here. you had characters that are funny and they actually did funny things. Take for example Vitaly, he’s an over sized Russian Tiger performing circus acts. now the thing about him that amazes me is that he finds it very intriguing to be pass through small holes and he totally huge. The concept they had for the third sequel was amazing, they out did themselves here by still retaining the funny, happy and somewhat action parts in the storyline. It’s a lovely family movie to watch, i would love to watch it again once it’s out on DVD or Blu Ray because i just love the animation, it’s funny to my taste and it has a good ending.

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Dark Knight Rises: fancy a capitalist caped crusader as your superhero?

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Dark Knight Rises: fancy a capitalist caped crusader as your superhero?” was written by Catherine Shoard, for theguardian.com on Tuesday 17th July 2012 12.13 UTC

All superheroes are black sheep. But the Dark Knight has always been murkier than most. His superpowers are not an accident of birth, or of stumbling into the wrong lab at the wrong time. They’re not powers at all, simply a simulation made possible by good fortune and the leisure that accompanies it. Bruce Wayne can splurge on the kit and cars to set himself up as a crime-fighting Christ substitute, plus power and glitter enough to hide his hobby. He’s always been a curious idol: within aspiration because he’s flesh and blood; beyond it because he’s the lucky recipient of inherited wealth.

So it should be no surprise that The Dark Knight Rises so firmly upholds the financial status quo. Christopher Nolan’s film indulges in much guttural talk of the gap between the 99% and the 1%, but it is the former who are demonised, whose revolting actions require curbing and mutinous squeals muting. Your average Joe, it turns out, requires a benevolent, bad-ass billionaire to set him straight, to knock him sideways, if necessary.

The Occupy Gotham movement, as organised by gargly terrorist Bane, is populated by anarchists without a cause, whose actions are fuelled by a lust for destruction, not as a corrective to an unjust world. Such self-made characters as we meet in the film are, by and large, fishy – power-grabbers hiding behind a fig-leaf of philanthropism. Even someone who earns their crust nicking other people’s stuff looks agog when the masses storm posh apartments to try and redistribute a bit of bubbly.

Batman’s butler-crush and bells and whistles feudalism is swallowable – it’s a cartoon, right! Likewise the free pass that Wayne’s Rowntree-ish gestures, disapproval of criminals and general tortured grizzling seems to allow him. But The Dark Knight Rises is a quite audaciously capitalist vision, radically conservative, radically vigilante, that advances a serious, stirring proposal that the wish-fulfilment of the wealthy is to be championed if they say they want to do good. Mitt Romney will be thrilled. What’s strange is that quite so many of the rest of us seem to want to buy into it.

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Sri Lankan president cancels speech in London over protest fears

Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Sri Lankan president cancels speech in London over protest fears” was written by Shiv Malik and Alexandra Topping, for theguardian.com on Wednesday 6th June 2012 13.22 UTC

The president of Sri Lanka has been forced to cancel a keynote speech in the City of London after concerns about the threat of large demonstrations by Tamil rights groups.

Mahinda Rajapaksa, who has been accused of presiding over human rights abuses after allegations of war crimes by Sri Lankan armed forces, did however attend a lunch for the Queen, hosted by the Commonwealth secretary general at Marlborough House on Pall Mall, central London.

Hundreds of Tamil and human rights campaigners gathered outside Marlborough House to show their opposition to Rajapaksa’s presence at the meal.

The Sri Lankan president was jeered as he swept through the main gate in a Range Rover. His car did not carry a flag because of security concerns.

The Queen spent a brief moment with Rajapaksa and appeared to fleetingly shake hands with him as she met guests at a reception in the Blenheim Saloon, inside Marlborough House.

Rajapaksa was seated on the table directly to the Queen’s left with Babli Sharma, wife of the Commonwealth secretary general; the Namibian president, Hifikepunye Pohamba, and his wife; and New Zealand prime minister, John Key, and his wife.

Rajapaksa had been set to give the keynote speech at a special diamond jubilee meeting of the Commonwealth Economic Forum on Wednesday morning, but the event’s organisers, the Commonwealth Business Council (CBC), said on its website: “After careful consideration, the morning sessions of the forum … will not take place.” Tickets to the event cost £795 plus VAT.

A spokesman for Scotland Yard said it had agreed to guarantee the president’s security but the CBC had “decided it was not in their interest to stage the event” because of the extent of the policing required and the likely disruption to the City of London.

Fred Carver, the campaign director of the Sri Lanka Campaign, welcomed the news, calling it a testament to the movement.

“It is absolutely not appropriate for President Rajapaksa to be feted by the Queen at the behest of the Commonwealth secretary general,” said Carver.

“It is likely Assad [Bashar al-Assad, Syria’s president] learned some lessons from the way the international community tolerated [many more] civilian casualties in Sri Lanka. What lessons will Assad learn from seeing how quickly the international community rehabilitates those responsible?”

Sen Kandiah, founder of the British Tamils Forum, said: “Common sense has prevailed. There is now enough evidence that allegations of war crimes in Sri Lanka lead directly to the president himself.

“That is why British government officials are reluctant to meet him. He is not welcome here.”

The protests come after a Sri Lankan man, who was left scarred and suicidal after two weeks of torture, accused the British government of forcibly deporting asylum seekers who are then tortured in Sri Lanka.

The victim told the Guardian he was tortured over the space of 17 days after being deported from the UK last year.

His torturers accused him of passing on to British officials information about previous beatings at the hands of state officials and other human rights abuses to ruin diplomatic relations between the two countries.

The coalition is coming under increasing pressure to revisit a policy that suggests it is safe to return Tamils to Sri Lanka. Last week the high court halted the deportation of 40 people to the island at the last minute, citing human rights concerns.

In an in-depth interview, the former member of the rebel Tamil Tigers’ intelligence service said he was tortured after the Home Office deported him and two dozen other asylum seekers in June 2011.

More than 70 UK border guards accompanied girls and men on the flight from Stansted airport last summer after a last-minute judicial review and his initial claim for asylum, based on previous evidence of torture, were turned down by UK authorities, he said.

Speaking through a translator, the victim, identified only as Hari for fear of further retribution by Sri Lankan authorities, said that six months after he was deported security personnel arrested him and beat him with rods, put petrol-filled plastic bags over his face and hung him by his feet with a nylon rope.

Hari’s back displays a welter of scars and the Guardian has seen medical reports supporting his claims.

Hari managed to bribe his jailers and escape back to the UK via Russia and is now filing a second claim for asylum.

“I came here with a hope,” he said. “I believed that the UK authorities would consider my case reasonably but, regardless of all my history and the evidence, they sent me back and I had to suffer again.”

Last week, the UK government forcibly deported several other Sri Lankans, ignoring pleas from human rights organisations to halt flights in the face of mounting evidence that UK and European returnees have been tortured.

The Home Office has insisted it is safe to return Tamils to Sri Lanka after the end of a long civil war, and quotes a European court ruling that “not all Tamil asylum seekers require protection”. However, officials are facing increasing pressure to change their policy.

In a dramatic turn of events last week, a senior high court judge halted up to 40 deportations from taking place as the plane waited on the tarmac.

Citing evidence from Human Rights Watch that returnees were being tortured on arrival, the judgment granted a last-minute reprieve.

Drafted by Justice Eady and seen by Channel 4 News, it is reported to have said: “The recent Human Rights Watch report, dated 29 May 2012, suggests that there may be new evidence relevant to the risk of ill treatment.”

Human Rights Watch said that in one of the 13 cases it had taken up, the UK’s immigration and asylum chamber had accepted that a woman who managed to make her way back to the UK in late 2010 after having been deported by Border Agency staff was tortured and raped on her forcible return to Sri Lanka.

A spokesman for the British Tamils Forum said the Human Rights Watch cases were likely to be “just the tip of the iceberg”.

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The Dictator

The DictatorFrom the same producers and actor that brought you Bruno and Borat. The dictator seems like, the unorthodox movie people usually talk about but don’t wanna act in. From the Trailers, Haffaz Aladeen is the bizarre dictator of the oil-rich African nation of Wadiya. Aladeen is as egotistical and ruthless as dictators come, executing anyone who disagrees with him by using his signature “head chop” signal. Aladeen is summoned by the UN to address their concerns about his nuclear program, of which he clearly doesn’t give a damn about. He embraces the American culture, the best way he can but we all know that things will turn out bad no matter what.It seems like a good movie, well from what the type of movies the producers always make, this should also be a hit. Sacha Baron Cohen (Aladeen) has this tendency to always use pro-fain words a lot in his movies, so this should be a mild comedy but also for adults only. The movie is already out but I haven’t seen it yet hopefully it would be good.

[Via IMDB]

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