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The medium, the message

MOVIE REVIEW
Arrival
Directed by Denis Villeneuve

By Noel Vera

Denis Villeneuve’s Arrival is an oddity of a major Hollywood production: a science fiction film boasting the latest special effects where the effects are at best incidental, a pooling together of men and material resources intent on promoting temporal and spiritual transcendence to its audience.

Design tilt asks how to ‘inspire humanity through design’

ADOBO MAGAZINE is getting those in the creative and design professions sizzling to flex their artsy muscles in this year’s adobo Design Awards Asia (aDAA). The competition is now on its eighth year (the magazine is on its 10th), and the competition runs around the theme, “How do you inspire humanity through design?”

When the fake-news peddlers come for your company

By Kara Alaimo

FAKE NEWS ON social media stymied the presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton. Now, businesses are wondering what they should do if they’re targeted next.

China, India account for half world’s pollution deaths in 2015

China and India accounted for more than half of the total number of global deaths attributable to air pollution in 2015, a study published on Tuesday said.

Pollution even in Earth’s farthest reaches: ocean study

PARIS — Banned chemicals are tainting tiny crustaceans that inhabit the deepest ocean, a study said Monday — the first evidence that humans are polluting even the farthest reaches of our planet.

Jollibee adds to Valentine joys

Ads & Ends
Nanette Franco-Diyco

Iron Man sucks!

MOVIE REVIEW
The Lego Batman Movie
Directed by Chris McKay

By Noel Vera

The first 20 minutes are best (What is it about recent pictures that the first 20 minutes are always best? Have they forgotten to teach the importance of the next 80 at script writing class?): Batman leads a spectacular public life, soaking in wave after wave of adulation with a celebrity’s limitless confidence. The joke about his private life — in his vast Batcave located deep within Wayne Island, surrounded by miles of tunnels and countless memorabilia and tons of military-style weaponry — is that he doesn’t have a life; he’s basically kidding himself saying everything is awesome when he (and we watching him) know otherwise. In short: life as someone like Trump would like it to be vs. life as it really is.

Spectacular water show opens Venice Carnival

VENICE — The Carnival of Venice, which each year draws thousands of revelers dressed in masks and period costume, got under way in the iconic Italian city on Saturday with a stunning show staged on its famous canals.

Singapore sees tourism slowing after record arrivals in 2016

SINGAPORE forecasts slower growth in tourist arrivals this year, citing global economic and political uncertainties and stiffer competition from neighbors in the region.

Making art in a chaotic city

By John L. Silva

Book Review
No Chaos, No Party
Edited by Eva McGovern-Basa
218 pages
Published by Almavida Holdings, Inc.

What to see this week

4 films to see on the week of February 17-24, 2017

What to see this week

The Bye Bye Man
The critics on review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes really, really dislike this horror film, giving it a measly 22% score. In this film three friends stumble upon the horrific origins of a mysterious figure they discover is the root cause of the evil behind unspeakable acts. Directed by Stacy Title, it stars Cressida Bonas, Douglas Smith, Lucien Laviscount, Doug Jones, Faye Dunaway, and Carrie-Anne Moss. “There may be worse horror films than The Bye Bye Man this year,” writes David Fear of Rolling Stone magazine, “but there will be none that shows more contempt for its intended audience.”

MTRCB Rating: R-13

What to see this week

A Cure For Wellness
This thriller is soundly disliked by the critics on the review aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes which gave it a measly score of 37%. In the film, an ambitious young executive is sent to retrieve his company’s CEO from a mysterious wellness center at a remote location. He soon suspects that the spa’s miraculous treatments are not what they seem. Written and directed by Gore Verbinski, it stars Dane DeHaan, Jason Isaacs, and Mia Goth. TheWrap’s Alonso Duralde writes: “By the end of the seemingly interminable 146 minutes, audiences will have already guessed the story’s ultimate twists, although by that point it’s quite likely they will have long since ceased to care either way.”

MTRCB Rating: R-16

What to see this week

I’m Drunk, I Love You
A romcoM by the producers of Heneral Luna — Artikulo Uno Production, Buchi Boy Entertainment, and Tuko Film Productions — I’m Drunk, I Love You follows two college best friends who decide to go on one last road trip before graduation in order to settle how they really feel for each other. But it turns out that this is not that kind of a love story. Directed by JP Habac, it stars Jasmine Curtis-Smith, Maja Salvador, and Paulo Avelino.

MTRCB Rating: PG

What to see this week

My Ex and Whys
A Star Cinema romcom directed by Cathy Garcia-Molina, My Ex and Whys follows the story of Cali, the blogger behind “The Bakit List,” and her ex Gio who, after breaking her heart, returns to her life unexpectedly. The film stars Enrique Gil and Liza Soberano.

MTRCB Rating: PG

Small percentage of people spread most Ebola cases

MIAMI — Most of the people infected with Ebola in the West Africa epidemic that began in 2014 got sick through contact with a small number of “superspreaders” with the disease, researchers said Monday.

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