[Vtigercrm-commits] Time to replace your roof? Find a roofing expert instantly
Roofing Savings
RoofingSavings at gssomassh.info
Tue Aug 6 23:25:39 UTC 2013
Time to replace your roof? Find a roofing expert instantly
http://www.gssomassh.info/1781/133/282/1143/2399.11tt74660321AAF25.php
Unsub- http://www.gssomassh.info/1781/133/282/1143/2399.11tt74660321AAF26.html
real for Stark,
as well as for the audience.The questionable use of science is superficially
contrasted in the conflict between Tony and Guy Pearces mad scientist Aldrich
Killian. Pearce is delightfully campy as the long-haired nerdy scientist
who, once spurned by Stark, weaponizes his DNA advancements against Iron
Man. The similarities between the two characters pose the question: just
how close is Tony to using science for malevolent purposes? Pearces campiness
is also a good contrast to the more frightening villain played by
Ben Kingsley. The less said about The Mandarin, the better, but Kingsley
delivers one of his most surprising performances yet.Both Don Cheadle and
Gwyneth Paltrow return as War Machine (now renamed as Iron Patriot) and
Pepper Potts. Pepper, too, finds her own adversary in Tonys ex-flame Maya
Hansen (Rebecca Hall). The Oscar-winning Paltrow, for the most part, is
wasted as the abducted damsel-in-distress, though she does have her moment
in the spotlight to kick some butt.Shane Black handles this material much
better than the previous director, Jon Favreau. Having written his share
of action films, including the Lethal Weapon films, Black knows how dialogue
and action should work in a film like Iron Man and transferring
that screenwriters mentality to the directors chair has helped tremendously.The
summer blockbuster season is now officially on, and Robert Downey, Jr. and
Marvels Iron Man 3 suit up for rip-roaring
Looking to take the high life underground, Chinas officials are reportedly
moving their secret parties to saunas disguised as farmhouses and hiding
pricey alcohol inside water bottles.New Chinese President Xi Jinping has
warned fellow Communist party officials to cut back on spending public money,
but the People's Daily, the partys official newspaper, says some still arent
getting the message."Instead of going out to high-end restaurants, [officials]
are now eating in private clubs," it said Wednesday on its front
page, according to The Telegraph. "Is this deep-rooted habit of dining out
on public funds so hard to change?"The newspaper also said it has
received reports of officials hiding Panda cigarettes -- around $110 US
a pack -- inside Red Pagoda packets that cost only $1.50 US.Chinas
official news agency, Xinhua, says a year-long campaign has been planned
to try to eliminate the wasteful spending.Click for more from The Telegraph.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.vtigercrm.com/pipermail/vtigercrm-commits/attachments/20130806/52cc33c0/attachment-0001.html>
More information about the vtigercrm-commits
mailing list