For those of you Star Wars rumor hounds, there’s a bit of juicy information that just surfaced about the “Force Tree” in Star Wars: The Last Jedi. The tree was spotted in set pictures last year for filming scenes set on Ach-To, the planet Luke and Rey are on at the end of The Force Awakens. Apparently, the tree, of significant Force sensitivity will be laid low at some point in the film, engulfed in flames thanks to the work of a mysterious agent. According to new speculation, the culprit of lighting the tree on fire may very well be
New Rumors About the “Force Tree” Emerge in Star Wars: The Last Jedi...
New Rumors About the “Force Tree” Emerge in Star Wars: The Last Jedi...
- 3/30/2017
- by Nat Berman
- TVovermind.com
If there’s one episode of Shark Tank that I believe stuck out most in everyone’s mind the day it occurred it was when farmer Johnny Georges came out to promote his idea called “The Tree-t-Pee.” At one point in his presentation he forgot his pitch and there was a humongous silence. Johnny’s been a farmer for over 20 years and it turns out had a very simple and extremely innovative idea. His product, Tree T Pee, is meant to conserve water through irrigation, and has served to do so quite effectively. The amount of water used per tree has gone
Shark Tank Tree-T-Pee: The Most Selfless Entrepreneur to Ever Appear on the Show...
Shark Tank Tree-T-Pee: The Most Selfless Entrepreneur to Ever Appear on the Show...
- 3/19/2017
- by Nat Berman
- TVovermind.com
Aaron is joined by David Blakeslee and Robert Taylor to talk about that massive May haul that Criterion announced, the titles leaving FilmStruck, The Tree of Wooden Clogs, Flash and Target sales, punk rock in the 1970s, and various other Criterion oddities.
Episode Notes
4:00 – May 2017 Criterion Releases
38:45 – Flash Sale Discussion
43:00 – Target Sale
46:30 – The Tree of Wooden Clogs
53:00 – Preview of Upcoming Releases & Misc News
1:00 – Films Leaving FilmStruck
1:06 – FilmStruck including Speed Round
1:16 – Short Takes (Symbiopsychotaxiplasm Take One, The Uninvited, À Nos Amours)
1:23 – What We’ve Been Doing
1:26 – Piece of Flair
Episode Links Pure Cinema Pod Criterion – Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles Criterion – Othello Criterion – Good Morning Criterion – Dheepan Criterion – Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project 2 Criterion – Ghost World Scott Reviews Tree of Wooden Clogs Trevor Reviews Tree of Wooden Clogs Movies Leaving FilmStruck Criterion Reflections – Symbiopsychotaxiplasm, Take One Wrong Reel 233:...
Episode Notes
4:00 – May 2017 Criterion Releases
38:45 – Flash Sale Discussion
43:00 – Target Sale
46:30 – The Tree of Wooden Clogs
53:00 – Preview of Upcoming Releases & Misc News
1:00 – Films Leaving FilmStruck
1:06 – FilmStruck including Speed Round
1:16 – Short Takes (Symbiopsychotaxiplasm Take One, The Uninvited, À Nos Amours)
1:23 – What We’ve Been Doing
1:26 – Piece of Flair
Episode Links Pure Cinema Pod Criterion – Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles Criterion – Othello Criterion – Good Morning Criterion – Dheepan Criterion – Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Project 2 Criterion – Ghost World Scott Reviews Tree of Wooden Clogs Trevor Reviews Tree of Wooden Clogs Movies Leaving FilmStruck Criterion Reflections – Symbiopsychotaxiplasm, Take One Wrong Reel 233:...
- 2/22/2017
- by Aaron West
- CriterionCast
Aaron is joined by Mark Hurne, Dave Eves, and his future Criterion wife, Jessica. We have a lot to talk about this week, including Black Girl, Cameraperson, Wong Kar Wai, California Split, Do the Right Thing, and we even have a new game show of sorts.
Episode Notes
3:40 – Black Girl
7:45 – Cameraperson
12:00 – Tree of Wooden Clogs Preview
14:30 – Wong Kar Wai
20:20 – David Lynch: The Art of Life
25:50 – Newsletter Clue
32:30 – California Split
34:10 – Do the Right Thing
38:00 – May Predictions/Wishes
49:10 – Short Takes (Vagabond, The In-Laws, The Hit, Chronicle of a Summer)
55:00 – FilmStruck
Episode Links Criterion Close-Up 54 – Hausu Party Arik Reviews Black Girl Aaron Reviews Kirsten Johnson’s Cameraperson Criterion Collection – The Tree of Wooden Clogs Wong Kar Wait at the Criterion Collection Janus Films Announces Theatrical Release of David Lynch: The Art Life David Lynch: The Art Life Trailer Bam...
Episode Notes
3:40 – Black Girl
7:45 – Cameraperson
12:00 – Tree of Wooden Clogs Preview
14:30 – Wong Kar Wai
20:20 – David Lynch: The Art of Life
25:50 – Newsletter Clue
32:30 – California Split
34:10 – Do the Right Thing
38:00 – May Predictions/Wishes
49:10 – Short Takes (Vagabond, The In-Laws, The Hit, Chronicle of a Summer)
55:00 – FilmStruck
Episode Links Criterion Close-Up 54 – Hausu Party Arik Reviews Black Girl Aaron Reviews Kirsten Johnson’s Cameraperson Criterion Collection – The Tree of Wooden Clogs Wong Kar Wait at the Criterion Collection Janus Films Announces Theatrical Release of David Lynch: The Art Life David Lynch: The Art Life Trailer Bam...
- 2/15/2017
- by Aaron West
- CriterionCast
New York, NY – December 1: Thousands of people gathered to watch the annual lighting of the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree in New York City. Mayor Bill de Blasio, actors Alec Baldwin and Kate McKinnon were on hand to light the 94-foot Norway spruce outside the building in midtown Manhattan. The tree is adorned with 50,000 multicolored […]
The post Rockefeller Christmas Tree Lights Up In New York appeared first on uInterview.
The post Rockefeller Christmas Tree Lights Up In New York appeared first on uInterview.
- 12/3/2016
- by Aleks Simeonova
- Uinterview
Rai #10 hits stands this week and you should buy it, but I want to skip doing a 1500 word review on a single comic this time and just focus on one part, probably because I’m Japanese.
Rest assured, Matt Kindt is still killing it all around and Clayton Crain is putting out one of the most visually unique and interesting books to look at that’s currently out — but I just want to talk about Sakura Swords of Faith.
The tree, which looks like a cherry blossom, famously Sakura in Japan, is the only symbol of life or beauty we see on desolate wasteland of a earth. In what could be a completely cold book, a kind of typical an familair dystopic science fiction setting and palette, Crain has been able to offer us signs of life. If not a warmth, than at least the possibility of hope for it.
Rest assured, Matt Kindt is still killing it all around and Clayton Crain is putting out one of the most visually unique and interesting books to look at that’s currently out — but I just want to talk about Sakura Swords of Faith.
The tree, which looks like a cherry blossom, famously Sakura in Japan, is the only symbol of life or beauty we see on desolate wasteland of a earth. In what could be a completely cold book, a kind of typical an familair dystopic science fiction setting and palette, Crain has been able to offer us signs of life. If not a warmth, than at least the possibility of hope for it.
- 9/4/2015
- by Jay Tomio
- Boomtron
For one family in England, a move to a new home in rural Somerset initially brings out the best in their treatment of each other, but the walls housing their newfound harmony have perilous plans in store. The house in Kim Newman’s new novel, An English Ghost Story, is not “home sweet home” material, and readers can experience moving day in the exclusive excerpt provided to us by Titan Books.
“A dysfunctional British nuclear family seek a new life away from the big city in the sleepy Somerset countryside. At first their new home, The Hollow, seems to embrace them, creating a rare peace and harmony within the family. But when the house turns on them, it seems to know just how to hurt them the most – threatening to destroy them from the inside out. A stand-alone novel from acclaimed author Kim Newman.
Kim Newman is a well known...
“A dysfunctional British nuclear family seek a new life away from the big city in the sleepy Somerset countryside. At first their new home, The Hollow, seems to embrace them, creating a rare peace and harmony within the family. But when the house turns on them, it seems to know just how to hurt them the most – threatening to destroy them from the inside out. A stand-alone novel from acclaimed author Kim Newman.
Kim Newman is a well known...
- 10/1/2014
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Every year on The Walking Dead, Greg Nicotero and the talented team at Knb Efx raise the bar for makeup effects and Season 4 was no exception, with the Tree Walker being one of their most impressive zombies to date. When it came time to decide on the Season 4 Collector’s Edition Blu-ray case, it was an easy choice to go with the Tree Walker and Greg Nicotero told me how it started with Robert Kirkman’s script and ended up in Todd McFarlane’s hands:
“The Tree Walker was an amazingly descriptive piece of writing by Robert Kirkman. You don’t see a lot of the walker in the episode, but Robert described him as being in the woods and a tree fell over and landed on his legs. The tree pinned him there, so he’s been sitting there with vines and moss growing over him for the last year.
“The Tree Walker was an amazingly descriptive piece of writing by Robert Kirkman. You don’t see a lot of the walker in the episode, but Robert described him as being in the woods and a tree fell over and landed on his legs. The tree pinned him there, so he’s been sitting there with vines and moss growing over him for the last year.
- 8/29/2014
- by Jonathan James
- DailyDead
The last living thing to leave Ground Zero was a pear tree. A Callery pear tree, specifically. The tree was discovered in the rubble of the World Trade Center after 9/11, and though it was heavily damaged, it's since been nursed back to health in the Bronx and is being returned to the National 9/11 Memorial in Lower Manhattan. This is its story. Filmmaker Scott Elliott made this short about the "Survivor Tree" (as it's now known) for Narrative.ly. It's called "The Tree That Would Not Be Broken." Elliott wants to include the story of the Survivor Tree in a planned...
- 6/23/2014
- by Alex Heigl
- PEOPLE.com
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