1/30/2008

no title

The grass has turn to yellow
Your face still fresh in my memory
I’ve been longing to hear your voice
Whether the time is coming
Longing is a journey itself
Never really come never really go
i sit in the stair with the picture of your smile

19.06.06
while sitting on downstairs at German Embassy, Jakarta
W.W

1/25/2008

Le Grand Voyage

I am very fond of this movie! I just share this article...but I just copied ...

This film tells about father and son. Réda is a French-Moroccan teenager due to sit for Baccalauréat. When his devout father asks Réda to accompany him on a pilgrimage to Mecca, he reluctantly agrees. However, the father insists that they travel by car. As both embark on a road trip thousands of kilometers away from southern France, the once-icy father-and-son relationship starts to thaw as both gradually come to know each other.

Along the way, the two meet several interesting characters. The son learns about Islam and why his father thought it would be preferable to make the pilgrimage by car rather than by airplane.

The route taken by the father and son goes from France through Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Turkey, Syria, and Jordan before reaching Saudi Arabia. According to the Internet Movie Database, the film was actually shot in some of these countries, namely France, Slovenia, Bulgaria, and Turkey. Most scenes that were set in the middle east were shot in Morocco. However, some scenes involving the two principal actors were actually shot in Mecca. While the Saudi Arabian government had previously permitted documentary crews to shoot in Mecca, this was the first fiction feature permitted to shoot during the Hajj. The film's director, Ismael Ferroukhi, said that while shooting in Mecca, "no one looked at the camera; people didn't even seem to see the crew - they're in another world."

Whatever….but what is interesting to me is how the relationship between father and son.

Directed by Ismaël Ferroukhi
Produced by Humbert Balsan
Written by Ismaël Ferroukhi
Starring Nicolas Cazalé,
Mohamed Majd
Distributed by Pyramide Distribution
Release date(s) September 7, 2004
Running time 108 min
Language Moroccan Arabic, French

Cast
Nicolas Cazalé – Réda
Mohamed Majd – The Father
Jacky Nercessian – Mustapha
Ghina Ognianova – The old woman
Kamel Belghazi – Khalid
Atik Mohamed – Le pélerin Ahmad

A Beautiful Mind


A Beautiful Mind is a 2001 America biographical film about , John Forbes Nash, the Nobel Laureate (Economics) mathematician. The film was directed by Ron Howard and written by Akiva Goldsman. It was inspired by a bestselling,Pulitzer Prize-nominated 1998 book of the same name by Sylvia Nasar. The film starsRussel Crowe, along with Jennifer Connely, Ed Harris and Paul Bettany.


The story begins in the early years of Nash's life at Princeton University
as he develops his "original idea" that will revolutionize the world of mathematics. Later, Nash develops schizophrenia and endures paranoid and delusional episodes while painfully watching the loss and burden his condition brings on his wife and friends.

Plot

The film opens with John Nash arriving as a new graduate student at Princeton University.
He is a recipient of the prestigious Carnegie Prize for mathematics. He meets his roommate Charles, a literature student, who soon becomes his best friend. He also meets a group of other promising math and science graduate students, Martin Hansen, Sol, and Bender, with whom he strikes up an awkward friendship. Nash admits to Charles that he is better with numbers than people, and that he strives for a truly original idea for his thesis paper. He is largely unsuccessful with the women at the local bar. However, the experience is what ultimately inspires his fruitful work in the concept of governing dynamics, a theory in mathematical economics. After the conclusion of Nash's studies as a student at Princeton, he accepts a prestigious appointment at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), along with his friends Sol and Bender.

Five years later while teaching a class on Calculus,
he meets Alicia, a student with whom he falls in love and eventually marries. While at Princeton, Nash runs into his former roommate Charles and meets Charles' young niece Marcee. He also encounters a mysterious Department of Defense agent, William Parcher. Nash is invited to a United States Department of Defense facility in The Pentagon to crack a complex encryption of an enemy telecommunication. Nash is able to decipher the code mentally. Parcher observes Nash's performance from above, while partially concealed behind a screen. Parcher later encourages Nash to look for patterns in magazines and newspapers, ostensibly to thwart a Soviet plot. After being chased by the Russians and an exchange of gunfire, Nash becomes increasinglyparanoid and begins to behave erratically.
After observing this erratic behavior, Alicia informs a psychiatric hospital. Later, while giving a lecture, Nash realizes that he is being watched by a hostile group of people. Although he attempts to flee, he is forcibly sedated and sent to a psychiatric facility.
Nash's internment seemingly confirms his belief that the Soviets were trying to extract information from him, and that being taken by the officials of a psychiatric facility was a kidnapping by Soviet agents. Alicia, desperate to help her husband, visits a drop-box and retrieves the never-opened "top secret" documents that Nash had delivered there. When confronted with this evidence, Nash is finally convinced that he has been hallucinating. The Department of Defense agent William Parcher and Nash's secret assignment to decode Soviet messages was in fact all a delusion. Even more surprisingly, Nash's friend Charles and his niece Marcee are also only products of Nash's mind.

After a painful series of insulin shock therapy
sessions, Nash is released on the condition that he agrees to take antipsychotic medication. However, the drugs create negative side-effects that affect his relationship with his wife and, most dramatically, his intellect. Frustrated, Nash secretly stops taking his medication, triggering a relapse of his psychosis. While bathing his infant son, Nash becomes distracted and wanders off. Alicia barely manages to save their child from drowning. When she confronts Nash, he claims that his friend Charles was watching their son. Alicia runs to the phone to call the psychiatric hospital for emergency assistance. Charles, Marcee, and Parcher all appear to John and urge him to kill his wife rather than allow her to lock him up again. After Alicia flees the house in terror, Nash steps in front of her car to prevent her from leaving. After a moment, Nash states "She never gets old" as he observes that Marcee is the same age that she was when he first met her several years before. Only then does he accept that all three of these people are, in fact, part of his psychosis.

Caught between the intellectual paralysis of the antipsychotic drugs and his delusions, Nash and his wife decide to try to live with his abnormal condition schizophrenia.
Nash attempts to ignore his hallucinations and not feed "his demons", that’s really interesting. Nash is growing older while working on his studies in the library of Princeton University. He still suffers hallucinations and periodically has to check if new people he meets are real, mentions taking newer medications, but is ultimately able to live with and largely ignore his psychotic experiences. Nash approaches his old friend and intellectual rival Martin Hansen, now head of the Princeton mathematics department, and receives permission to work out of the library and audit classes. He eventually begins teaching again. He is honored by his fellow professors for his achievement in mathematics, and goes on to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics for his revolutionary work on game theory. Later, Nash and Alicia are about to leave the auditorium in Stockholm, when John sees Charles, Marcee and Parcher standing and smiling. Alicia asks John "What's wrong?" John replies "Nothing." With that, they both leave the auditorium.

Cast
Russel Crowe as John Forbes Nash. A mathematical genius who is obsessed with finding an original idea to ensure his legacy.Jennifer Connelly as Alicia Nash. A later student of Nash who catches his interest.Paul Bettany as Charles Herman. Nash's roommate and best friend throughout graduate college.Ed Harris as William Parcher. A government agent for the Department of Defense. He enlists Nash to help fight Soviet spies.Josh Lucas as Martin Hansen. Nash's rival from his graduate school years at Princeton.Adam Goldberg as Sol. A friend of Nash's from Princeton University who is chosen, along with Bender, to work with him at MIT.Anthony Rapp as Bender. A friend of Nash's from Princeton University who is chosen, along with Sol, to work with him at MIT.Vivien Cardone as Marcee. Charles' niece.Christopher Plummer as Dr. Rosen. Nash's doctor at a psychiatric hospital.Judd Hirsch as Helinger. The head of the Princeton mathematics department.

In 2002,
the film was awarded four Oscars for Adapted Screenplay (Akiva Goldsman), Best Picture (Brian Grazer and Ron Howard), Directing (Ron Howard), and Supporting Actress (Jennifer Connelly). It also received four other nominations for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Russel Crowe), Film Editing (Mike Hill and Daniel P. hanley), Best Makeup (Greg Cannom and Colleen Callaghan) and Original Music Score (James Horner).

The 2002 BAFTAs
awarded the film Best Actor and Best Actress to Russell Crowe and Jennifer Connelly, respectively. It also nominated the film for Best Film, Best Screenplay, and the David Lean Award for Direction. At the 2002 AFI Awards, Jennifer Connelly won for Best Featured Female Actor. The film was also nominated for Movie of the Year, Actor of the Year (Russell Crowe), and Screenwriter of the Year.

Note: I just copied this article from wikipedia because I fond of this movie...

Book Review: A History of God

A History of God: The-4000 Year Quest of Judaism, Christianity and Islam is a best-selling book by author Karen Armstrong. It describes the history of the three major monotheistic religions in detail. The book has been praised for its "astounding research" and "deft storytelling." The book traces the evolution of the idea of God as interpreted by the great thinkers of the three monotheistic traditions or "God religions", Judaism, Christianity and Islam, from their roots in pagan traditions of the Middle East up to the modern day.

Karen Armstrong begins with the rise of the cult of Jahweh among the pagan deities of Canaan. She also examines the sources of the Pentateuch in the figures of the four supposed authors (or groups of authors) known as J, E, P and D. After this, she examines the philosophical careers of some of the major Israelite prophets, including Isaiah, second Isaiah, Hosea and Ezekiel and examines the contribution that each made to the Jewish conception of God. Armstrong turns next to the life and career of Jesus, including his roots in the Pharisaic tradition of Rabbi Hillel, and the his effect on the Jewish conception of God. His death and its attendant symbolism are then examined, including the interpretations various authors, most notably Paul, brought to these events. After Christ's death, the book explores the rise of trinitarianism leading to the. Nicene creed. Karen Armstrong traces the evolution of the contrasting Eastern and Western Christian conceptions of God and the trinity. The rise of Islam and its subsequent take on the nature of God are examined next with Armstrong analyzing how Shia Islam, with its' emphasis on direct political action in service to Allah, led to the 1978 Iranian Revolution. Karen Armstrong continues her narrative through the rise of philosophical and mystical traditions in Islam, Christianity, both Eastern and Western and Judaism, up until the pre-modern era. Armstrong discusses the rise of modern Christian religiosity, in particular the Protestantism of Martin Luther and John Calvin. Karen Armstrong concludes with a speculative discussion of the place of God in the post-modern world.

Note: I just copied this articles from wikipedia

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