Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Transformer (Megan Fox give up)






It's been revealed overnight that there's going to be one significant cast member who won't be returning for Michael Bay's soon-to-shoot third Transformers movie. And that person? None other than Megan Fox.
This is a pretty surprising development, especially considering that it seemed all was fine and dandy between Fox and Bay. It hadn't been, of course. Off the back of the shoot for Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen, Fox infamously criticised Bay, declaring that he was "like Hitler".
Specifically, her quote from Wonderland magazine was that:
"He's like Napoleon and he wants to create this insane, infamous mad-man reputation. He wants to be like Hitler on his sets, and he is. So he's a nightmare to work for but when you get him away from set, and he's not in director mode, I kind of really enjoy his personality because he's so awkward, so hopelessly awkward. He has no social skills at all."
These words were reported just two months after Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen stormed the box office. It seemed they were to have ramifications.
Bay laughed it off at the time, but according to reports at Deadline Hollywood - which broke the news that Fox wasn't returning for the new film - he was also the man who would have made the final call on the actress' involvement in Transformers 3.
Thus, Paramount didn't take up its option on Fox for the movie, and Michael Bay would have had to sign off on that decision. It seems that he did, and Fox was gone.
For Megan Fox's part, her publicist has issued a statement saying, "It was her decision not to return. She wishes the franchise the best," but Deadline Hollywood is adamant that this was Bay's call.

Kate Dennings

 Kate Dennings







How Much Does Kat Dennings Weigh?

She is thought to weigh about 197lbs or 89.5kb – this may weigh a lot but it’s important to note her massive bust and bra size.

How Tall Is Kat Dennings?

She is 5’4.5″ or 164cm

What Are Kat Dennings’s Measurements?

40-27-34

What Is Kat Dennings’s Bra Size?

40DD

Monday, April 23, 2012

Movie(Film)

Now this next bit may seem a little obvious, but the first generation of people who may never have seen a film camera are now coming to the age where they are surfing the internet and possibly encountering the mysteries of a film camera for the first time. So what is film? In this day and age it is simply a length of polyester based plastic covered with a photosensitive coating, that is - it reacts to light striking it (in the past the backing has been celluloid or glass). Now the science behind this would fill an entire website with ease, so we won't be covering this in any depth. For our purposes we will say that the films used today are very reactive to light and should never be exposed to light except inside the camera, again obvious to the film generation users, but we are a dying breed! Film allowed to come into contact with light outside of a camera will be exposed, ruining it, a condition known as fogging. For this reason film makers developed two principle strategies to allow the user to reload the camera with film in daylight without fogging the film. These are, a paper backing rolled with the film with an excess "leader" before the actual photosensitive film starts, or a small metal canister where the film exits through a slit with tight lightproof felt edges.

 
Aside from these principle mechanical differences, there are different types of film available, ranging from black and white negative film to color transparency (or reversal) film. After this there are more technical films such as Infra Red and x-ray sensitive films, which for our purposes are outside the scope of this site. Within all these different film types are different degrees of sensitivity, indicated by the films' ASA rating, the higher the number - the more sensitive the film. A good 'everyday' film is Kodak Gold, 200 ASA, which we use as a standard in all museum 35mm cameras. As a film user you can choose to develop your films yourself or send to a laboratory. Different types of film require different processing treatment, a brief UK guide to methods used by The Living Image below, serve to illustrate the easiest solutions.