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The Blacklist Season 2 Episode 10 Recap: Luther Braxton Conclusion Posted: Things are getting explosive on "The Blacklist," and we mean that in the most literal way possible. Last week, Elizabeth Keen and Raymond "Red" Reddington were hanging out in a detention facility casually taking down a blacklister (as ya do) when they were hit with a round of explosives ordered by the sinister folks at the NCS. But did Lizzy and her father-figure / possible actual father make it out alive? Read our recap to find out. Braxton Captures Lizzy, Shots Are Fired The good news: Lizzy and Red definitely aren't dead due to the fact that the NCS is completely terrible at routine bombings. The bad news: Luther Braxton whisks Lizzy away after The Factory is hit, shoves her in a helicopter and takes her to Alaska for a quick water-boarding session. FKA Hellboy's mission? To find The Fulcrum (aka the only leverage Red has over The Director's head) using Elizabeth's locked up memories to do so. Unfortunately for Braxton, Elizabeth's past is majorly repressed, which gives him no choice but to kidnap a memory specialist who uses a "combination of hypnotherapy and pharmaceuticals" on her. Sounds super fun and not at all dangerous! So, what's Elizabeth been hiding about the mysterious night she and her stuffed bunny almost burned in a fire? From what we can tell by Lizzy's trippy memories, she was told to hide in a closet by a mysterious man wearing a ruby ring, and then spent most of the evening listening to a bunch of strangers argue. Not much else is revealed -- but Lizzy does wake up from her hypnosis gasping "my father was there," so suffice it to say she has daddy issues. Reddington Works His Magic, More Shots Are Fired Over in Washington, Cooper's team finally make themselves useful by shading NCS liaison Kat Goodson (aka The Director's evil sidekick) and sending a rescue unit to save Reddington, Samar and Ressler. These folks waste no time trying to track down Liz, and while Reddington goes about things his own special way (more on that in a moment), Ressler and Samar jet-set to Alaska and find out that Braxton was given pharmaceuticals by a med student named Wilson Bishop. While Ressler and Samar do things by the book, Reddington strong arms Braxton's network of evil BFFs and finds out that Braxton is meeting The Director in a church -- a totally appropriate location for sinister business conversations. Turns out this corrupt official hired Braxton to find The Fulcrum so that Reddington couldn't use it as leverage against him and his cronies, and of course Red flies to Alaska to take control of the situation. By which we mean he forces Braxton into a car at gun point, obviously. Elizabeth Unlocks Her Memories, Finds The Fulcrum While Doing So Despite the fact that she almost died while under hypnosis, Elizabeth decides that she's fine with having her memory tapped, and asks the doctor to work her magic once again. Unfortunately, Reddington breaks in just as things are getting good -- but he green-lights the doctor's continuation of the process, and after some intense music, Lizzy looks up at Red and says...(drum roll, please)..."you were there." Cue gasps and heart-clutching. Clearly it's time for Red and Lizzy to engage in some real talk, so here's what goes down: Raymond confirms that he was among a group of people who came to Lizzy's house looking for The Fulcrum, and she in turn confirms that she remembers her father dying in the fire. Lizzy then accuses Red of only caring about her because of The Fulcrum, which causes him to well-up with heart-breaking tears. The poor guy is filled with emotion, so he does what any notorious criminal would do: he breaks into The Director's house, hangs Braxton's body from a noose, and throws around a few threats. Unfortunately, The Director retaliates by having Kat Goodson give a press conference outing Red as a criminal at large, but meh -- it's nothing he hasn't dealt with before. Oh, and in other completely devastating news, Cooper is shown looking traumatized in a doctor's office at the end of this episode, and his health seems to be rapidly deteriorating. Here's hoping he makes it through the rest of this season in one piece! On a lighter note, two important things happen to Lizzy in the episode's final moments: 1) Braxton's hypnotherapist says that her memory of the fire is unreliable, and that it's been tapped into before, and 2) She rips open her stuffed toy bunny and finds -- you guessed it --The Fulcrum! Which is a tiny box filled with strange wires. Explanation, please. Burning Questions 1. What is The Fulcrum, exactly? Because to us it looks like either a bomb or a tiny jewelry box, just saying. 2. If Lizzy's memories of the fire are unreliable, was Reddington actually there? 3. Now that Red is officially at large (at least according to the NCS), will he have to go into hiding? 4. Elizabeth didn't actually see her father die -- could he still be alive? 5. Lizzy's mom is hardly ever mentioned. Is she alive, or did she die in the fire? This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
Disney's 'Pinocchio': 25 Things You Didn't Know About the Animated Classic Posted: Given how revered Disney's "Pinocchio" is today, it's hard to believe it was a flop when it was first released exactly three quarters of a century ago. Upon its New York City premiere, on February 7, 1940, critics hailed the film as a masterpiece, and even to this day, many prefer it to Disney's pioneering first animated feature, 1937's "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." Yet it took the film many years and multiple re-releases to make a profit. Today, of course, the legacy of "Pinocchio" is inescapable. Everyone's image of the puppet-boy with the nose that grows when he lies comes not from Carlo Collodi's original novel but from the kid with the Tyrolean hat and the Mickey Mouse gloves, as drawn by Disney animators. And the opening tune, Jiminy Cricket's "When You Wish Upon a Star," is ubiquitous as the theme music played before every Walt Disney movie and home video release. Still, as indelibly as "Pinocchio" has been imprinted on your memory, there may be plenty you don't know about the film, from who voiced the characters to the technical breakthroughs behind it to the unusual lawsuit threatened by the author's nephew. Here, then, are 25 things you probably didn't know about "Pinocchio." May our noses grow if we're lying. 1. Carlo Collodi wrote the original novel in installments in an Italian magazine in 1881. It was published as a book two years later. 2. The name "Pinocchio" literally means "little wooden head." 3. The hardest part of the production was making Pinocchio a sympathetic character. Collodi's story was rewritten to remove the wooden boy's mischievous (even malicious) streak and make him more passive. But the trickier part was making him look more like a human boy than a block of wood. 4. According to a 1938 New York Times article, Walt Disney tossed 2,300 feet of footage, representing five months work, "because it missed the feeling he had in mind." 5. It took 12 artists 18 months to come up with a look for Pinocchio that was rounded and cute enough to pass muster. Animator Milt Kahl finally hit upon the idea of drawing him as a human boy and then adding the puppet's nails and joints. 6. In Collodi's story, Pinocchio kills the cricket with a hammer, though the insect comes back as a ghost. Nonetheless, Walt included him and decided to let him live. He came up with the name Jiminy and the idea to make him wear clothes and walk and talk like a person. 7. Other differences from the source material: In the book, the Blue Fairy has a team of animals working for her, including a poodle (her coachman), a group of mice (to pull the coach) and a snail (a messenger). Impresario Stromboli is called "Mangiafoco" ("fire-eater") in the novel, and Pleasure Island is called "Toyland." And the sea creature that swallows Geppetto and Pinocchio is a giant shark, not a whale. 8. Cliff Edwards, a.k.a. Ukelele Ike (the name he used as a popular novelty-tune singer in the 1920s and '30s) auditioned for the voice of Pinocchio, but the 43-year-old had too much grown-up in his voice, so he was cast instead as Jiminy Cricket. 9. Dickie Jones, a 12-year-old who had also appeared in Frank Capra's "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington," landed the role of Pinocchio. He also voiced Alexander, one of the boys on Pleasure Island. 10. Future Broadway dance legend Marge Champion, then married to Disney animation director Art Babbitt, was the physical model for the Blue Fairy, acting out the character's movements on film for the animators to study. She had performed a similar task for Disney's Snow White. 11. The voice of the Fairy was provided by Evelyn Venable, an actress best known for her roles in "Death Takes a Holiday" (opposite Fredric March) and "The Little Colonel" (alongside Shirley Temple). She was also the model for the initial Columbia Pictures logo of a woman holding a torch. 12. According to the Times, character actor Walter Catlett, who voiced the theatrical con artist Honest John the fox, based his characterization on two famous acting brothers whose name started with B -- presumably, John and Lionel Barrymore. 13. Honest John's sidekick, Gideon the cat, was initially a speaking character, voiced by Mel Blanc, better known today as the voice of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and most of the other "Looney Tunes" characters from rival studio Warner Bros. But then the filmmakers decided to make Gideon a mute, like Dopey in "Snow White," and all of Blanc's voice work as Gideon was cut from the film, save for three hiccups. Blanc also voiced Geppetto's pet cat Figaro, in the scene where the feline sneezes. 14. Voicing the roars of Monstro the whale was Thurl Ravenscroft, later best known as the voice of Kellogg's Frosted Flakes mascot Tony the Tiger. 15. Ravenscroft and his singing group, the Mellomen, also performed a song called "Honest John," which was ultimately cut from the film. 16. Some 2,000,000 drawings were used in the creation of the film, 300,000 of which appear in the final print. 17. Much of the film's visual richness comes from Disney's famed multiplane camera, used to give the painted environments an illusion of depth. In "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," which gave the multiplane camera its first real workout, the cinematographer could approach the multiplane set-up only from above. But for "Pinocchio," the Disney team developed what it called a universal crane that could approach the set-up from any direction, like a crane-mounted camera on a live-action set. 18. The studio thought highly enough of the film's visual artistry that it staged exhibitions of original artwork at the Brooklyn Museum and two other New York galleries to coincide with the film's Big Apple premiere in February 1940. 19. The film cost $2.3 million to make, about twice as much as "Snow White." It earned back less than $2 million during its initial run. 20. Some theorized that the movie did poorly initially because it's so grim. Pinocchio is terrorized throughout the movie, and four of the five villains who torment him get off unpunished. 21. The film eventually made a profit during its re-release in 1945. Disney would put the film back into theaters a total of seven times between 1945 and 1992. 22. Paolo Lorenzini, Collodi's nephew, asked the Italian ministry of popular culture to sue Disney for overly Americanizing his uncle's creation. "Pinocchio's adventures are an Italian work of art and must not be distorted to make it American," he stated. There's no evidence that any action was ever taken toward his complaint. 23. The film won two Academy Awards for its music: an Oscar for Best Original Score (credited to Leigh Harline, Paul J. Smith, and Ned Washington) and a Best Original Song prize for Harline and Washington's composition, "When You Wish Upon a Star." It was the first animated feature to win competitive Oscars. 24. Ravenscroft would land singing and speaking roles in many other DIsney animated features over the next half-century, from "Dumbo" to "The Brave Little Toaster." His voice can still be heard on such Disneyland attractions as The Haunted Mansion, Country Bear Jamboree, and Pirates of the Caribbean. 25. Edwards went on to voice the role of Jim Crow in Disney's "Dumbo" (1941), where he sang "When I See an Elephant Fly." He reprised the role of Jiminy Cricket in numerous Disney cartoons over the next two decades. This posting includes an audio/video/photo media file: Download Now |
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