Archive for the 'movies' Category

Hedgehog Adverts

Nov 11, 2007 in fun, family, animals, pets, Entertainment, movies

I just love this adverts, they are addicting and funny and clever…

Lyrics

You know your own street
And everyone you meet
You know which dogs bark
The best way to the park
It’s your neighbourhood
That’s where you feel good
Though you know the road well,
Still you never can tell
You’ve got to be wise
You can be surprised
On the roads near home…
Stop, Think then Go
Ooo-ooo ooo-ooo ooo-ooo ooo-ooo ooo
Ooo-ooo ooo-ooo ooo-ooo ooo-ooo ooo

The hedgehog road safety advert, with Giraffe.

The hedgehog road safety advert, with Elephant.

The hedgehog road safety advert, about lights.

Popularity: 27% [?]

MacGyver beats Indiana Jones

Sep 15, 2007 in fun, tv, movies

macgyverYou are facing a hurricane, or a flood or some kind of disaster. Who would you call for help?

MacGyver won Indiana Jones and others in a characters list that people would like to have as a helper in the real life.

The research was conducted by McCormick Tribune Foundation and people could vote in seven options:

  • MacGyver,
  • Indiana Jones,
  • James Bond,
  • John McClane (Die Hard),
  • Jason Bourne (Bourne Identity),
  • Jack Bauer (24) and
  • Lara Croft

indiana27% choose MacGyver, Richard Dean Anderson’s character in the famous 80’s TV show. If you don’t remember, he was legendary for escaping tough situations by improvising with readily available materials.

Indiana Jones, played by Harrison Ford, got 16 percent of the votes, John McClane played by Bruce Willis in the “Die Hard” movies got 14 percent.

Also receiving votes were James Bond, 8 percent, Jason Bourne, played by Matt Damon, 8 percent, Jack Bauer played by actor Kiefer Sutherland or the series “24″, 7 percent and Lara Croft of the movie “Tomb Raider” played by actress Angelina Jolie also 7 percent.

And you? Who do you call?

Popularity: 23% [?]

Movie and TV Shows Reviews

Aug 10, 2007 in geek, video, Lost, tv, movies

Everybody knows Geeks Favourites TV shows:

Lost, Star Trek, Heroes, X-Files…

And geeks love to discuss their theories. So, if you are a geek (or not) looking for a place to discuss your favourite TV Show or Movie, visit Critics Rant.

It’s a great website for movie reviews, Criticsrant.com features the latest blockbusters, with great opinions and new points of view.

If you like good movie discussions join Critics Rant news letter and enter for a chance to win a DVD every single day.

You can win points based in your participation and referring friends.

Stay on top of your favourite tv shows with CriticsRant.com

Popularity: 18% [?]

Where On Earth Was Middle-earth?

Jun 30, 2007 in geek, movies

StrangeMaps


Created by Tolkien somewhere in the 1930s, the map shows the ‘mortal lands’ of Middle-earth, which according to Tolkien himself is part of our own Earth, but in a previous, mythical era. At the time of the events described in ‘The Hobbit’ and ‘The Lord of the Rings’, Middle-earth is moving towards the end of its Third Age, about 6.000 years ago.

Tolkien didn’t create Middle-earth ex nihilo: ancient Germanic myths divide the Universe in nine worlds, inhabited by elves, dwarves, giants, etc. The world of men is the one in the middle, called Midgard, Middenheim or Middle-earth. That term doesn’t thus describe the entirety of the world Tolkien thought up. The correct term for the total world is Arda – probably derived from German Erde (’Earth’) and only first mentioned posthumously in the Silmarillion (1977); and Eä (for the whole Universe).

The Hobbits are described as inhabiting ‘the North-West of the Old World, east of the Sea’, and therefore it’s tempting to associate their home with Tolkien’s own, England. Yet, Tolkien himself wrote that ‘as for the shape of the world of the Third Age, I am afraid that was devised ‘dramatically’, rather than geologically, or paleontologically.” Elsewhere, Tolkien does admit “The ‘Shire’ is based on rural England, and not any other country in the world.”

Tolkien at least compares his ‘Old World’ with Europe: “The action of the story takes place in the North-West of ‘Middle-earth’, equivalent in latitude to the coastlands of Europe and the north shores of the Mediterranean (…) If Hobbiton and Rivendell are taken (as intended) to be about the latitude of Oxford, then Minas Tirith, 600 miles south, is at about the latitude of Florence. The Mouths of Anduin and the ancient city of Pelargir are at about the latitude of ancient Troy.”

But, as Tolkien states in the prologue to ‘The Lord of the Rings’, it would be fruitless to look for geographical correspondences, as “Those days, the Third Age of Middle-earth, are now long past, and the shape of all lands has been changed…” And yet, that’s exactly what Peter Bird attempts with the map here shown. Bird, a professor of Geophysics and Geology at UCLA, has overlapped the map of Middle-earth with one of Europe, which leads to following locations:

• The Shire is in the South-West of England, which further north is also home to the Old Forest (Yorkshire?), the Barrow Downs (north of England), the city of Bree (at or near Newcastle-upon-Tyne) and Amon Sul (Scottish Highlands).
• The Grey Havens are situated in Ireland.
• Eriador corresponds with Brittany.
• Helm’s Deep is near the Franco-German-Swiss border tripoint, close to the city of Basel.
• The mountain chain of Ered Nimrais is the Alps.
• Gondor corresponds with the northern Italian plains, extended towards the unsubmerged Adriatic Sea.
• Mordor is situated in Transylvania, with Mount Doom in Romania (probably), Minas Morgul in Hungary (approximately) and Minas Tirith in Austria (sort of).
• Rohan is in southern Germany, with Edoras at the foot of the Bavarian Alps. Also in Germany, but to the north, near present-day Hamburg, is Isengard. Close by is the forest of Fangorn.
• To the north is Mirkwood, further east are Rhovanion and the wastes of Rhûn, close to the Ural mountains.
• The Sea of Rhûn corresponds to the Black Sea.
• Khand is Turkey
• Haradwaith is the eastern part of North Africa, Umbar corresponds with the Maghreb, the western part of North Africa.
• The Bay of Belfalas is the western part of the Mediterranean.

Via StrangeMaps

Popularity: 10% [?]

The 10 Greatest Sounds from Star Wars

Jun 30, 2007 in youtube, Entertainment, movies

Popularity: 9% [?]

Close
E-mail It