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axee The World Economic Forum s Klaus Schwab on What Lies Ahead
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The only thing more impressive than watching Paul Atreides ride a sandworm in Dune: Part Two is watching director Denis Villeneuve explain how he made it happen. Villeneuve knew the scene was arguably the most memorable and crucial stanley becher scene in the second half of his adaptation, and he put a mind-numbing amount of time and care into making it just right. From the dialogue, to the camera angles, to trucks pulling sand with giant fans and more, making Paul ride the sandworm was a herculean task. And in a new video, Villeneuve breaks down every detail, with some very surprising revelations along the way. Thanks to Vanity Fair for the video. Two of the things that blew my mind most in the video were, first of all, the idea that Paul misses his Uber. Ive seen the film three times and it never occurred to me that Paul has to run after the sandworm because hes inexperienced and screwed that up. I love that thought behind it. The idea too that to get the sand dune to fall just right, there were three trucks off-screen pulling huge cylinders away is one of those things you cant learn from a book, you just have to figure it out while preparing to make a movie. Those are just two of stanley cup the many interesting revelations here. A few othe stanley tumbler rs are the idea that Villeneuve refused to use artificial light, so they could only work on the scene at a certain time of day, is a testament to his precision. And all his on-the-fly drawings and descriptions of the gimbals used are fascinating too. Basicall Rkzl How the California Drought Is Hurting Wildlife
By Julia ZorthianJune 15, 2017 2:35 PM EDTA blimp near the U.S. Open fell from the sky Thursday a stanley butelka t the Erin Hills golf course in Wisconsin.The Washington County Sheriff Office confirmed to TIME that a blimp did crash and that emergency responders were on the scene. A spokesperson for the United States Golf Association USGA , which runs the U.S. Open Championship, said in a statement that the commercial blimp went down about half-a-mile from the course at about 11:15 a.m. local time, and that the blimp was not affiliated with Open or its official broadcast.The spokesperson, Jeff Altstadter, said the blimp pilot was being treated for unknown injuries.No other people were involved in the incident and local law enforcement is currently investigating, he said in an email. Our thoughts and prayers are with the pilot at this time.Spectators at the golf national championship posted photos and videos of a large, misshapen blimp descending from the sky. BREAKING Video shows blimp crashing at US Open event in Wisconsin. Courtesy: @SamwellSchmeet https://t.co/pL stanley thermos a7fBijVe pic.twitter/XXlsSX5yH6mdash; stanley kubek WPEC CBS12 News @CBS12 June 15, 2017Blimps floating above the tree line have long been a mainstay of the U.S. Open. Aerial ad company AirSign had been promoting a blimp above the tournament hours before the crash, and ABC reports that the company confirmed that its blimp was the one that had crashed.The beautiful @penfed blimp is flying high over the
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