We saw it this weekend too.it was awesome!!! Love a GOOD horror flick! I recommend highly for people who enjoy this genre of film. Takes a lot to surprise me, but this one did in a way that deserves applause for the director.Ī wonderful social allegory. Like a good roller coaster ride, your emotions and loyalty are all over the place. The acting was believable using no huge blockbuster folks. No CGI (computer generated imagery) was used, or so that was obvious. The imagery of down and out Detroit Michigan as the setting was brilliant. But when I saw the trailer for this movie, it stopped me in my tracks! It appeared to be so simple, could it possibly be as riveting as they claim? Hollywood disappoints on so many occasions, with their hyped up positive paid reviews of so many movies. I thoroughly enjoy a good scary flick, but there are really very few good ones.
So, over the weekend I saw the movie Don't Breathe.
The full article by Carl Richards can be found here.
It can come in the form of anger, frustration, resentment or something even worse. “Why are you still carrying her?”There is an actual cost to holding onto things we should let go of. “I set the woman down hours ago,” the older monk replied. “That woman back there was very selfish and rude, but you picked her up on your back and carried her! Then, she didn’t even thank you!” After several hours, unable to hold his silence, he spoke out. She didn’t thank the older monk she just shoved him out of the way and departed.Īs they continued on their way, the young monk was brooding and preoccupied. The older monk quickly picked her up and put her on his back, transported her across the water, and put her down on the other side. The younger monk noticed the woman, said nothing, and walked by. They had nowhere to place the packages they held for her, so they couldn’t help her across the puddle. She stood there, looking very cross and impatient. The rains had made deep puddles and she couldn’t step across without spoiling her silken robes. Two traveling monks reached a town where there was a young woman waiting to step out of her sedan chair. Let’s start with a story from Jon Muth’s book “ Zen Shorts.” Keep scrolling to learn the true story of her incredible life. Johnson still lives near Langley in Hampton, Virginia, where she'll be celebrating her 98th birthday later this month. The movie is based on a nonfiction book of the same name by Margot Lee Shetterly, who grew up near NASA's Langley Research Center, where Johnson and her colleagues worked. Many of NASA's first missions were made possible by Johnson's intrepid, unparalleled calculations. Henson plays Katherine Johnson, a brilliant mathematician at NASA working on the space program in its earliest days, beginning in the 1950s. Henson retorts in my favorite line from the new trailer for the movie "Hidden Figures," due theaters this January. "There's no protocol for a man circling the Earth either, sir," Taraji P. "There's no protocol for women attending," says a white man in a suit holding a sheaf of papers. Meet Katherine Johnson, mathematician extraordinaire. The unbelievable life of a forgotten genius who turned American's space dreams into reality.