Sunday, October 26, 2014

Nightcrawler--Movie Review

by Peter J. O'Connell

 Nightcrawler. Released: Oct. 31, 2014. Running time: 117 mins. Rated: R for violence, including graphic images, and for language.

Nightcrawler was released on Halloween. It's a horror movie about a monster—but not the usual kind of horror/monster movie. The monster here is the media, and the horror is the nightmarish excess that an obsessive drive for success can produce.

Louis Bloom (Jake Gyllenhaal) is a Los Angeles scrap collector and petty thief whose conversation consists of cliches and jargon, of the type found at second-rate motivational seminars and courses on TV and the Internet, spoken in a machine-like manner, about how to succeed in business. By chance one night, Louis comes across a crash scene and observes “nightcrawlers” at work. These paparazzi seek not images of celebrities but ones of accidents, fires and crimes, which they sell to TV news outlets eager for the gruesome footage because it boosts their ratings. The operative principle is: “If it bleeds, it leads.”

Louis is excited by the “career prospects” offered by nightcrawling and is soon rushing to gory incident after gory incident in the neon-lit night, aggressively seeking the “best”--in effect, the bloodiest—shots. He even hires a hangdog, more-or-less homeless, young man (Riz Ahmed) to help him, and he finds an eager buyer for his footage in the sensation-seeking news director of a ratings challenged station (Rene Russo). After a while, to promote his prospects further, Louis sabotages his competition, manipulates the tragic scenes he is recording, and even creates tragedies himself.

Jake Gyllenhaal gives a superb performance as Louis. His appearance—gaunt and sallow, with angular face, dark eyes burning in sunken sockets, and slicked back hair with topknot—is almost skeletal, or demonic. His delivery of his lines is intense—sometimes obsequious, sometimes menacing—yet still almost robotic. Gyllenhaal's particular combination of appearance and delivery here should sear Louis Bloom into the memory of audiences as one of the most striking characters in film in years.

Nightcrawler's writer/director Dan Gilroy apparently had in his mind and memory some themes and characters from iconic films of Hollywood's last great period, that from the late '60s to the early '80s. Louis Bloom has a lot in common with Travis Bickle (Robert DeNiro) in Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver (1976). They both are loners who live by night, attempt inappropriate dates with an attractive woman, are obsessive, spawn violence. They each even have offbeat hairdos: Travis a mohawk, Louis a topknot. Each has a key scene in front of a mirror. And Sidney Lumet's Network (1976) dealt memorably with the media's willingness to race to the bottom. Nightcrawler, however, has no real equivalent of that famous outcry from Network: “I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it any longer.” It would seem that Gilroy wants us to ask: Is today's media-manipulated America even capable of such an outcry?



Tuesday, October 7, 2014

"World's Smartest" dog featured on "60 Minutes"

"60 Minutes" introduced America to "The World's Smartest Dog" Sunday night -- and she lives in South Carolina.
Chaser, a border collie whose owner is a former Wofford College professor, recognizes more than 1,000 words. To put that number into perspective, most human 2-year-olds know about 300 words.
The work Chaser's owner, professor John Pilley, has done is giving scientists insight into the minds of dogs.
To watch the full story from "60 Minutes," as correspondent Anderson Cooper visited Chaser at Wofford, click here:

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Reduce Dog Shedding by 75% in a Month

I spend a lot of time cleaning dog hair off of floors, so I have a strong motivation to learn how to keep as much of it on the dog as possible. Shedding hair, particularly at certain times of the year, is normal.  What’s not normal is the kind of shedding problem where large amounts of hair billow off the dog every time he shakes or massive deposits of loose coat wind up sticking to your hand every time you run it along his side regardless of season. It’s the type of shedding that keeps you up late shopping online for a vacuum cleaner named after a natural disaster, and it may very well be indicative of a problem.  The good news is that it’s a problem that’s usually solved rather easily. Read More

What You Should Know and Do this Flu Season If You Are 65 Years and Older

It has been recognized for many years that people 65 years and older are at greater risk of serious complications from the flu compared with young, healthy adults. During most seasons, it's estimated that 90 percent of seasonal flu-related deaths and between 50 and 60 percent of seasonal flu-related hospitalizations in the United States occur in people 65 years and older (Kostova/Reed models). This is because human immune defenses become weaker with age. So influenza can be a very serious disease for people 65 and older. Read More

How to Find Things You Lost

Losing something can be a frustrating inconvenience or even a devastation. Whether you've lost your parking pass or your grandmother's necklace, there are a few tricks that can help you find the lost object quickly and painlessly. If you want to know how to find things you lost, just follow these steps.Read More

14 Foods Your Doctors Eat

Food can save your life. That's no exaggeration. But if you're saying "yes" to the wrong diet—one crammed with sugar, industrial fat, salt, excess meat, and refined flour—you could be headed for a health disaster. Put the right foods on your plate, though, and you're making a choice that could ward off weight gain, diabetes, heart disease, and even cancer. We turned to integrative medicine expert Tasneem Bhatia, MD, author of What Doctors Eat, to see which foods the nation's top docs pile on their plates. Read More