Artist Rachel Sussman has travelled the world for more than a decade looking to photograph and catalogue the oldest living things on the planet. She researches and works with biologists in an attempt to photograph organisms that are 2,000 years old and older.
“The photographs are images of the past in the living present, portraits of individuals meant to forge a personal connection to a time frame well outside our temporal comfort zone”, she writes.
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This is a movie that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever from a narrative point of view
There have been many recent films based around memory loss, but few that most adults will want to forget as quickly as Nativity 3.
Many of us, like St Bernadette’s long-suffering headteacher (Celia Imrie) will be having nightmares for weeks to come about its ubiquitous “hero” Mr Poppy (Marc Wootton), who turns up anywhere and everywhere, especially when you least want to see him.
This is a movie that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever from a narrative point of view. The plot involves an Ofsted inspection, a wedding in New York and lots of excruciating song-and-dance routines involving flash mobs. Martin Clunes is the new teacher who loses his memory after being kicked in the head by a donkey, thereby putting his marriage to Sophie (Catherine Tate) at risk. As an exercise in cinematic pandemonium, the film probably has enough energy and bad jokes to keep the kids happy – but it may prove an ordeal for their parents.
There have been many recent films based around memory loss, but few that most adults will want to forget as quickly as Nativity 3.
Many of us, like St Bernadette’s long-suffering headteacher (Celia Imrie) will be having nightmares for weeks to come about its ubiquitous “hero” Mr Poppy (Marc Wootton), who turns up anywhere and everywhere, especially when you least want to see him.
This is a movie that makes absolutely no sense whatsoever from a narrative point of view. The plot involves an Ofsted inspection, a wedding in New York and lots of excruciating song-and-dance routines involving flash mobs. Martin Clunes is the new teacher who loses his memory after being kicked in the head by a donkey, thereby putting his marriage to Sophie (Catherine Tate) at risk. As an exercise in cinematic pandemonium, the film probably has enough energy and bad jokes to keep the kids happy – but it may prove an ordeal for their parents.
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