POPULARITY
Im Jahr 2001 wurde das Internet oft als ein großes hoffnungsvolles Versprechen betrachtet. Es sollte die Welt enger zusammenbringen, Grenzen überwinden und das Wissen der Menschheit für alle zugänglich machen. Doch es gab auch kritische Stimmen, die die potenziellen Gefahren dieses neuen Mediums erkannten. Einer der Filme, der diese dunkle Seite des Internets beleuchtet, ist "Pulse" (Originaltitel: "Kairo") von Kiyoshi Kurosawa, einem der einflussreichsten Regisseure des japanischen Horrorkinos. In "Pulse" wird die Isolation, die durch das Internet entsteht, auf erschreckende Weise thematisiert. Die Charaktere sind wie Punkte in einem leeren Raum, die sich nur kurz und zufällig begegnen, bevor sie wieder auseinanderdriften. Eine unheimliche Geister-Pandemie breitet sich aus und lässt die Menschen ihren Lebenswillen verlieren, bis sie buchstäblich zu Schatten ihrer selbst werden. Doch "Pulse" ist nicht nur eine düstere Dystopie, sondern auch ein filmisches Meisterwerk, das mit minimalen Mitteln maximalen Horror erzeugt. Statt auf Unmengen an Schockeffekten setzt der Film auf subtile Andeutungen und die Erzeugung einer bedrückenden Atmosphäre. Diese Techniken machen "Pulse" zu einem der unheimlichsten Filme aller Zeiten. In der aktuellen Folge von "Das Filmmagazin" besprechen wir diesen Klassiker des J-Horrors und analysieren, warum er auch über 20 Jahre nach seiner Veröffentlichung noch immer so faszinierend ist.
In Pulse à voir pendant l'événement Korsonor The post Korsonor : un festival sonore et visuel inédit first appeared on Radio Vostok.
In "Pulse of the People," Nick and Cecil ask what the level of concern is for the Avs in winning this series based off their Game 1 performance. Is everyone over there at Dove Valley buying into the Broncos' new coaching staff? The fellas reacted to Baron Browning talking about moving back to the outside to play linebacker. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today's Passage, “The childhood shows the man, as the morning shows the day,” Said by John Milton, an English poet and statesman who died in 1674. He was also the author of Paradise Lost. “As the morning shows the day”My grandmother used to say, “Everything looks better, Megan, in the morning.” It sounds simplistic, but my grandmother lived to be 99 and endured many deprivations and hardships in life, as she grew up very impoverished, working in a cotton mill in small town in Georgia. She also lived through the passing of my younger sister to cancer. It was her house I drove to for comfort in the aftermath of my younger sister's death. So what did my grandmother, mean by ‘everything looks better in the morning'? Mornings are our new beginnings, a renewal, the birth of a new day day. They are also symbolic of a new thought, the dawning of a new idea. In Pulse of the Morning, Maya Angelou, a civil rights activist, poet and award-winning author known for her acclaimed 1969 memoir, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, writes, “The horizon leans forward, Offering you space to place new steps of change. Here, on the pulse of this fine day, You may have the courage, To look up and out and upon me.”Likewise, the innocence of children, like the dawn of a new morning, show us a new day. Children are our greatest teachers, our instructors, yet so often we view this the other way around. We develop into adults who buy into our own constraints, judgments and oppressions then shame our children to ‘toe the line' and ‘follow our lead', but we are operating in the shadow of the night. We demand early specializations, scripted lessons and course curriculums are taught to our children. We bring our jaded darkness to dawn. It is only when we see our children as the light, that we realize they should be taught less and listened to more.Connect with me: Instagram.com/megan_nycmom
durée : 00:54:13 - Xavier Desandre Navarre - par : Alex Dutilh - À la suite de son album “In-Pulse”, Xavier Desandre Navarre nous livre dans ce “In-Pulse 2” qui paraît chez Cristal Records/Sony, un jazz riche en émotions. Les compositions du percussionniste évoquent un monde où les frontières et distances semblent abolies. - réalisé par : Fabien Fleurat
durée : 00:54:13 - Xavier Desandre Navarre - par : Alex Dutilh - À la suite de son album “In-Pulse”, Xavier Desandre Navarre nous livre dans ce “In-Pulse 2” qui paraît chez Cristal Records/Sony, un jazz riche en émotions. Les compositions du percussionniste évoquent un monde où les frontières et distances semblent abolies. - réalisé par : Fabien Fleurat
In Pulse this week, Uganda urges its youth to go back to the earth and embrace agriculture. African youth at the climate conference COP23 in Bonn fight for climate action. And Germany's Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy hosts a kind of speed dating for African start-ups. All that right here on Pulse with host Eunice Wanjiru.
In Pulse this week, Uganda urges its youth to go back to the earth and embrace agriculture. African youth at the climate conference COP23 in Bonn fight for climate action. And Germany's Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy hosts a kind of speed dating for African start-ups. All that right here on Pulse with host Eunice Wanjiru.
In Pulse this week, a team of volunteers in Ghana have embarked on a reading clinic encouraging children to read aloud. The young members of the Rohingya community in Pakistan are a ticking time bomb waiting to explode as their people face trouble in Myanmar and a look at what’s being going on on the social media front.
In Pulse this week, a team of volunteers in Ghana have embarked on a reading clinic encouraging children to read aloud. The young members of the Rohingya community in Pakistan are a ticking time bomb waiting to explode as their people face trouble in Myanmar and a look at what’s being going on on the social media front.
In Pulse this week, a team of volunteers in Ghana have embarked on a reading clinic encouraging children to read aloud. The young members of the Rohingya community in Pakistan are a ticking time bomb waiting to explode as their people face trouble in Myanmar and a look at what’s being going on on the social media front.
In Pulse this week, a team of volunteers in Ghana have embarked on a reading clinic encouraging children to read aloud. The young members of the Rohingya community in Pakistan are a ticking time bomb waiting to explode as their people face trouble in Myanmar and a look at what’s being going on on the social media front.