Every year around this time we hear the complaints: There aren't enough good parts for women, actresses are relegated to decorative supporting roles, the movies have become a man's world. We beg to differ, at least for the moment.
Sex and the City has already proved there's a vast female audience desperate for entertainment, and Wanted has unexpectedly posited Angelina Jolie as the season's new action hero. (The movie's opening weekend in the US attracted a 52 percent female audience, thank you very much.) Between Charlize Theron in Hancock and the stars of the films below, this summer is suddenly looking like the Ride of the Valkyries at the box office.
* Eve in WALL-E
Guys: Have you ever met a woman who was just out of your league? That's what the look in WALL-E's lenticular eyes says when he meets the gleaming, laser-slinging space probe from the mother-ship. Yet WALL-E works as a literally star-crossed romance while convincing us that Eve (voiced by Elissa Knight) could save the human race from its own worst impulses. Just don't get her angry.
* Abigail Breslin in Kit Kittredge: An American Girl
She wields a typewriter instead of a gun, but Breslin's Kit Kittredge is exactly as tough as you need to be to get through the Great Depression with family and soul intact. The movie lets the character skate along the edge of despair but refreshingly saves Kit from cynicism. The hardest task in this movie is keeping faith, and Breslin channels the courage and everyday decency of an earlier era.
* Galina Vishnevskaya in Alexandra
The movie about the babushka who drops in on her soldier grandson at his barracks could have been some kind of sitcom. But not when the granny is the grand dame Vishnevskaya. The Russian opera diva's maternal force dominates Alexander Sokurov's dreamy antiwar picture. She looks fearsome when holding a rifle, but she's even more moving when wondering why men need such stupid things.
* Cate Blanchett in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
It's great to see Karen Allen back, but the fourth Indy adventure only kicks into gear when Blanchett's Colonel Dr Irina Spalko is strutting about barking orders like an S&M fusion of Natasha Fatale and Fearless Leader from Rocky and Bullwinkle. She's handy with a sword, too, making her possibly Indiana's most closely matched adversary ever. Blanchett has played more indomitable characters - Queen Elizabeth, Bob Dylan - but none this alluringly scary.
* Anne Hathawayin Get Smart
Yes, Steve Carell gets most of the laughs. And yes, he and his stunt double get most of the action sequences. But playing Special Agent 99 in this so-so version of the 1960s TV show, Hathaway stands beside Carell more than she stands next to him. Contrary to Jolie's example, the definition of strength is not a woman's ability to hold a pistol. It's her ability to resist using it on a shamelessly funny co-star.
* Hiam Abbass in The Visitor
The best news about the movie's unhappy detour to an immigrant detention center is Abbass's arrival as the inmate's mother. Her refined beauty and mannerly carriage make her seem too delicate for the outrageous situation into which she's been swept. But by the end, you're floored by the realization that this patient, thoughtful woman is the strongest character in the film.
* Ronit Elkabetz in The Band's Visit
The leader of an Egyptian police band - a prim, sad man (Sasson Gabai) - is marooned with his men in a flyspeck Israeli town and forced to shack up with the local cafe owner (Elkabetz). She is everything he isn't: wild-haired, funky, oozing humor and weariness and sex. Is this a love story? Of sorts, but it's really a comedy about a cautious man confronted with a gloriously uninhibited woman.
* Lainie Kazan in You Don't Mess With the Zohan
If women who go to movies are underserved, women who appear in them are undersexed. So it's Adam Sandler's Israeli assassin-turned-hairstylist to the rescue. He makes love to half the seniors in New York, and Kazan is his first and most unflappable partner, holding court with the hilarious wisdom of a dame who's been around the block. If not sexually, then comedically for sure.
* Angelina Jolie in Wanted
They call her ... Fox. Go ahead and laugh; she'll laugh with you, and then break your spine. Jolie's cool-eyed assassin is much the best part of this resplendently noisy summer boy's-toy, mostly because she's the only one who seems to know how silly it all is. Regally insinuating herself into the mayhem, the star riffs on her Amazonian public image and amps it up a few notches. There's no sex scene, though - who'd have the nerve?
That US assistance was a model for Taiwan’s spectacular development success was early recognized by policymakers and analysts. In a report to the US Congress for the fiscal year 1962, former President John F. Kennedy noted Taiwan’s “rapid economic growth,” was “producing a substantial net gain in living.” Kennedy had a stake in Taiwan’s achievements and the US’ official development assistance (ODA) in general: In September 1961, his entreaty to make the 1960s a “decade of development,” and an accompanying proposal for dedicated legislation to this end, had been formalized by congressional passage of the Foreign Assistance Act. Two
Despite the intense sunshine, we were hardly breaking a sweat as we cruised along the flat, dedicated bike lane, well protected from the heat by a canopy of trees. The electric assist on the bikes likely made a difference, too. Far removed from the bustle and noise of the Taichung traffic, we admired the serene rural scenery, making our way over rivers, alongside rice paddies and through pear orchards. Our route for the day covered two bike paths that connect in Fengyuan District (豐原) and are best done together. The Hou-Feng Bike Path (后豐鐵馬道) runs southward from Houli District (后里) while the
March 31 to April 6 On May 13, 1950, National Taiwan University Hospital otolaryngologist Su You-peng (蘇友鵬) was summoned to the director’s office. He thought someone had complained about him practicing the violin at night, but when he entered the room, he knew something was terribly wrong. He saw several burly men who appeared to be government secret agents, and three other resident doctors: internist Hsu Chiang (許強), dermatologist Hu Pao-chen (胡寶珍) and ophthalmologist Hu Hsin-lin (胡鑫麟). They were handcuffed, herded onto two jeeps and taken to the Secrecy Bureau (保密局) for questioning. Su was still in his doctor’s robes at
Mirror mirror on the wall, what’s the fairest Disney live-action remake of them all? Wait, mirror. Hold on a second. Maybe choosing from the likes of Alice in Wonderland (2010), Mulan (2020) and The Lion King (2019) isn’t such a good idea. Mirror, on second thought, what’s on Netflix? Even the most devoted fans would have to acknowledge that these have not been the most illustrious illustrations of Disney magic. At their best (Pete’s Dragon? Cinderella?) they breathe life into old classics that could use a little updating. At their worst, well, blue Will Smith. Given the rapacious rate of remakes in modern