May 24th, 2005 by
Abbas Halai
poor sobs. they got their copies a day too late. how sad is that.
A police crackdown - Pakistan is one of the top 10 producers of pirated DVDs - caused the delay.
The appearance of Revenge of the Sith - the sixth and final edition of George Lucas’ epic galactic adventure - in the city’s pirate market “was well behind schedule”, retailers told the BBC News website.
Most new English-language movies are pirated within 48 hours of their release, they say. Indian movies, by comparison, are released in Pakistan’s pirate market three days before their legal release in Indian cinemas.
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May 24th, 2005 by
Abbas Halai
why we lie to each other and ourselves. courtesy scientific american.
The obvious question raised by all of this accounting is: Why do we lie so readily? The answer: because it works. The Homo sapiens who are best able to lie have an edge over their counterparts in a relentless struggle for the reproductive success that drives the engine of evolution. As humans, we must fit into a close-knit social system to succeed, yet our primary aim is still to look out for ourselves above all others. Lying helps. And lying to ourselves–a talent built into our brains–helps us accept our fraudulent behavior.
If this bald truth makes any one of us feel uncomfortable, we can take some solace in knowing we are not the only species to exploit the lie. Plants and animals communicate with one another by sounds, ritualistic displays, colors, airborne chemicals and other methods, and biologists once naively assumed that the sole function of these communication systems was to transmit accurate information. But the more we have learned, the more obvious it has become that nonhuman species put a lot of effort into sending inaccurate messages.
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May 24th, 2005 by
Abbas Halai
alan moore has seemingly given dc comics the finger and cut off all ties and gone to indy publisher top shelf. the next installments of the league of extraordinary gentlemen will not be published by dc comics anymore.
Alan Moore, co-creator of the “V For Vendetta” comic, has publicly disassociated himself from the upcoming Warner Brothers movie project based on the comic book and written and produced by the Wachowski Brothers. And as a result, he has cut his remaining ties with DC Comics, including future volumes of the “League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen.”
Speaking to me on Friday, Moore added to this sentiment, telling me “after the films came out, I began to feel increasingly uneasy, I have a dwindling respect for cinema as it is currently expressed.” This came to a head when Alan Moore was sued as part of a suit against 20th Century Fox for plagiarism of the screenplay “Cast Of Characters” which bore heavy resemblance to the movie version of “The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen” starring Sean Connery.
The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen” was a series Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill created for Wildstorm, a comic studio and then part of the publisher Image Comics. The series takes the entirety of Victorian pulp fiction as a backdrop for new adventures for a team of very familiar characters. As part of his ABC line for Wildstorm, the comics continued even after DC Comics bought Wildstorm. Moore’s history with DC Comics over creator ownership and corporate attitudes had seen him swear off working with them, so a “firewall” was built up so Moore could continue the line, but never have to deal with DC Comics. However, DC editorial occasionally interfered with published work, leading Alan Moore withdrawing cooperation from an anniversary reprint and CD of his iconic superhero work “Watchmen.”
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