After Watch :: CHILDREN OF HUANG-SHI::

English
I'd like to tell you about a way you can combine the best of two worlds: watching movies, and making money online. I've often used an analogy in referral – or permission-based marketing. You go to see a movie and come away absolutely loving (or hating) it. The first thing you do, especially if you loved the movie, would be to tell all of your friends about it (without giving away the ending, of course!). Based upon your recommendation, your friends would either go see the film, or avoid it if you gave it a scathing review. However, the theater showing the movie, as well as the studio that made it, don't send a dime your way for the referral, do they? So, where online can you talk about movies you've seen, and make money at the same time? I'd like to point out three good ones, and let you explore them for yourselves.st, and perhaps the most enjoyable to use, is Squidoo.com. Started by Seth Godin over two years ago, it is a community of people, called lensmasters, who create webpages on specific, highly focused topics, called lenses. The idea is to produce very useful content that , like a microscope lens, zooms in on a topic, to give people an in-depth look at whatever interests them. Aside from simply creating an in-depth review of a movie you've just seen, you could do a lens on the actors or filmmakers involved, or the studio, or combine with another lens (called a dual lens) in the SquidFlix. If you loved the movie, you take the positive side while another lensmaster takes on the negative side. Connect to your other lenses, or other peoples' lenses. By monetizing your lenses with links to Amazon, Ebay, CafePress, and others, every time someone clicks out and makes a purchase, you and Squidoo split the proceeds, based on a percentage that you specify. You can even specify various charities to have portions of your earnings donated to them. Very honorable concept.
The firhere is the full articles
PAN’S LABYRINTH unfolds through the eyes of Ofelia, a dreamy little girl who is uprooted to a rural military outpost commanded by her new stepfather. Powerless and lonely in a place of unfathomable cruelty, Ofelia lives out her own dark fable as she confronts monsters both otherworldly and human. As Ofelia, the gifted young Spanish actress Ivana Baquero holds the screen with a remarkable combination of innocence and maturity, vulnerability and strength. Baquero is joined by a superb cast that includes international stars Sergí Lopez (DIRTY PRETTY THINGS), Maribel Verdú (Y TU MAMÁ TAMBIÉN) and Ariadna Gil (BELLE ÉPOQUE), as well as frequent del Toro collaborator Doug Jones (HELLBOY).
A lone automobile travels a narrow road in the Spanish countryside in 1944. In the back seat, a little girl named Ofelia (Ivana Baquero) and her mother Carmen (Ariadna Gil) are on their way to their new home. A bright and dreamy little girl, Ofelia keeps her precious books of fairy tales close at hand, despite Carmen’s gentle admonition that it may be time for her to put away these childhood favorites. It is unlikely that such pastimes will meet the approval of Ofelia’s new stepfather, Captain Vidal (Sergí Lopez). And Carmen, who is pregnant with the captain’s child, is anxious for her daughter to get along with the man to whom she has entrusted their future.
But for Ofelia, fables of good and evil, magic and danger are more than simple entertainment. They are her window onto the world, awakening her to life’s everyday possibilities and mysteries. When a dragonfly captures Ofelia’s attention during a roadside stop, it is not a gangly insect that she follows into the woods but a glistening emerald ambassador, welcoming her to its domain.
There is little sense of welcome, however, when Ofelia and her mother finally arrive at their destination, an abandoned mill in rural Spain that Vidal has converted into a military headquarters. Though Captain Vidal is there to greet them, his annoyance at their late arrival is palpable. Indeed, there is nothing in the officer’s cold, exacting demeanor to suggest that he wishes to be a parent to Ofelia, whose own father died several years ago. What Vidal wants is the son that Carmen is carrying, not a family.
On the grounds of the mill, armed soldiers are everywhere. Charged with rooting out resistance fighters in the nearby mountains, Vidal and his troops zealously pursue any and all signs of their opponents. Thus far, the rebels have managed elude capture, though fascists have solidified their power in the region. Those local people who clean and cook for the soldiers do their work quietly, speaking only when they are spoken to. Carmen, her condition already precarious, grows even sicker and is soon confined to her bed.
In this tense and fearful environment, Ofelia finds a sympathetic presence in the housekeeper Mercedes (Maribel Verdú), who shows her a rambling, neglected old garden near the mill. With its winding paths, it is a lovely place to wander, though one can easily become lost there after nightfall.
That garden labyrinth will become Ofelia’s haven, a dark refuge from loneliness and sorrow. It is a place of fantastical creatures and powerful talismans, presided over by a teasing, inscrutable Faun (Doug Jones). Here, Ofelia will come to terms with the world as she now knows it – and with the monsters that live not only in her imagination, but in her daily life.
Picturehouse presents PAN’S LABYRINTH. Written, produced and directed by Guillermo del Toro. Produced by Bertha Navarro, Alfonso Cuarón, Frida Torresblanco, and Álvaro Augustin. Director of photography Guillermo Navarro, ASC. Edited by Bernat Vilaplana. Production designer Eugenio Caballero. Set construction by Construcciones Escenicas Moya S.I. Music by Javier Navarrete. Sound designer Martín Hernandez, sound by Miguel Polo. Special effects make-up and animatronics by DDT FX, digital effects by CafeFX, and physical effects by Reyes Abades. Executive producers Belen Atienza and Elena Manrique, co-executive producer Edmundo Gil, associate Producer CafeFX. Produced in association with Sententia Entertainment. Casting by Sara Bilbatua. Wardrobe design by Lala Huete. Starring Sergí Lopez, Maribel Verdú, Ivana Baquero, Alex Angulo, Doug Jones, Eusebio Lazaro, and Paco Vidal. With the special collaboration of Federico Luppi and, in the role of Carmen, Ariadna Gil.
Hell boy 2 memberikan kekaguman yang luar biasa kepada para penikmat movie (apa lagi anda yang sudah mengikutinya dari edisi perdanya nya). Hal tersebut dikarenakan terdapat perluasan karakter cerita… dan merangsang para penonton untuk menerka nerka… apakah ada edisi berikutnya, apakah terkait dengan yang sekarang sedang di simak.
Akting para artistnya juga luar biasa, bahkan aku bilang sangat-sangat sempurna, meskipun karakter sang hero “hell boy” sedikit mirip penjahatnya, namun suara/vocal “hell boy” sangat berwibawa, dan menunjukan kekuatannya.
Saya benar-benar tidak kecewa dengan film ini.. “great action, great drama, great tech, and great sound”….
So…. Jangan harap saya akan ceritakan seluruh movienya…. ‘pasti seru’… di jamin… plus plus..
Penasaran…? penasaran….?