Showing posts with label Scuba Dive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scuba Dive. Show all posts

Friday, November 19, 2010

Family at war.(The Squid and the Whale)(Movie review).

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In a dark corner of the Museum of Natural History in New York there is a diorama of a giant squid caught between the jaws of a whale. It is huge, vivid and quite alarming--two mighty beasts tussling, and never a victor. This is the spectacle which gives this film its curious title: as a young boy, Walt Berkman was taken to see it by his mother but he was too frightened to look, except through his fingers. At 16, he returns and gazes at it head-on.

We are in 1980s Brooklyn. The aforementioned Walt (Jesse Eisenberg) and his younger brother, 12-year-old Frank (Owen Kline), are pitched into a crisis when their parents announce their separation. Joan seems already to have mourned her marriage, but her husband Bernard (Jeff Daniels) is furious, and blames his wife. After all, she is the one who had the affair (a fact which seems to have made him envious as well as angry) and so he seizes possession of the moral high ground. While their parents wrangle over who gets custody of the cat at the weekend, Walt and Frank draw in their horns and tumble quietly off the rails. Walt mistreats his girlfriend and cheats in a school talent show; Frank drinks beer and fantasises about his mother's sex life.

It is a painful subject, but an extremely funny film. Its director, Noah Baumbach, co-wrote Wes Anderson's The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (Wes Anderson is a producer on this film) and this has a similar feel--sorrowful, glad, touching, awkward, hilarious--but with none of the whimsy of The Royal Tenenbaums or The Life Aquatic. Family strife is at the heart of all Anderson's films, and Baumbach takes over the subject with a quiet confidence and a similarly modest attitude.

The film begins on the tennis court, where a friendly family game (if there ever is such a thing) descends into argument. Bernard, on the losing side, 'accidentally' fires a shot straight at his wife. Our perspective is established as that of the boys--we stay with them by the net while the parents' ensuing row is removed to a distant corner. In the car on the way home, the camera travels in the back seat with the children, while the parents bicker in front. Of course we are conscious, where Walt and Frank are not, of the bitterness between Bernard and Joan.

We are also aware of Bernard's cunning manipulation of his elder son. Frank is aloof and unfathomable--Bernard seems to have given up on him--but Walt adores his father, and Bernard attempts to imprint upon Frank the worst aspects of his own character. As Walt deliberates whether or not to sleep with his girlfriend, Bernard suggests that his son could do better. 'She's all right for now,' he says. 'Sleep with her once, and see if you like it.' Walt is in danger of setting his jaw against women and the world, and nothing would please his father more than to have an ally modelled in his own image. Bossily dismissing people who threaten him as 'not intellectual', Bernard is infuriated by Frank, who wants to be a tennis coach and won't submit to his code. But when Walt asks his father to inscribe a book for him, Bernard blithely scrawls on the flyleaf, 'Best wishes, Bernard Berkman (Dad)'.

It is undoubtedly a collaborative work, but Jeff Daniels emerges as the real treat of the film. Bernard is both ridiculous and terrifying, and Daniels plays him to perfection. Once a famous writer, now struggling to find a publisher for his new novel, Bernard used to be the star of his private world. Control is slipping away from him--he is losing at tennis, losing at marriage, losing at writing. He clutches at his impressionable eldest son in a panic. Daniels communicates self-righteous indignation (from behind a bushy beard) with a baleful, admonishing stare. Bernard is priggish, childish, pathetic--but Daniels makes him fascinating rather than abhorrent. He is a complete character, as are all the Berkmans, and I found myself fretting about the family after leaving the cinema, just as I worried about the Glass family of the Salinger stories.

Sadly overlooked at the Oscars (but with a best screenplay nomination for Noah Baumbach), The Squid and the Whale has nonetheless been rewarded at film festivals and critics' awards. There is something intensely agreeable to me about a film of this kind. Its nervy characters, baffled by life and bruised by its disappointments; its picky dialogue; its gentle teasing, without condescension--all are reminiscent of such successes as Sideways, Lost in Translation, The Life Aquatic, The Royal Tenenbaums and even of Metropolitan and Manhattan. If films such as these are enjoying a moment, then all the better for us.


Named Works: The Squid and the Whale (Motion picture) Movie reviews

Source Citation
Glazebrook, Olivia. "Family at war." Spectator 8 Apr. 2006: 56+. General OneFile. Web. 19 Nov. 2010.
Document URL
http://find.galegroup.com/gps/infomark.do?&contentSet=IAC-Documents&type=retrieve&tabID=T003&prodId=IPS&docId=A144871878&source=gale&srcprod=ITOF&userGroupName=22054_acld&version=1.0


Gale Document Number:A144871878

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Diving to strength.(aquatic therapy for Darrell Salzman).

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SIX months after an explosion cost him his lower right arm, Wisconsin Army National Guard Sgt. Darrell Salzman was treading water--literally.

"The hardest thing that I've had to do since the injury was actually here," Sgt. Salzman said as he floated in full scuba gear in Walter Reed Army Medical Center's aquatic-therapy pool in Washington, D.C.

"You have to tread water for 10 minutes with half a hand. That was so hard to do. A couple of times, I went underwater, but I stuck with it."

The explosion in Iraq cost Sgt. Salzman his right arm below the elbow and the ring finger on his left hand. It also damaged nerves and fingers on his left hand.

Mr. John W. Thompson, Sgt. Salzman's scuba instructor, calls water the great equalizer. Sgt. Salzman and other wounded Soldiers agree.

"Soldiers Undertaking Disabled Scuba Diving" is a new, all-volunteer program for wounded service-members at WRAMC.

SUDS is the brainchild of Mr. Thompson, a former Outward Bound instructor who is certified by the Professional Association of Diving Instructors and by the Handicapped Scuba Association.

The goal is to challenge wounded Soldiers and give them a skill that they can continue to enjoy into old age, he said.

New to scuba diving, Sgt. Salzman is far from new to the water. "I'm in the water all the time," he said. "In the summer it's always been my life."

A homebuilder by trade, he was a lumberjack sports competitor at age 5, specializing in logrolling and boom running.



A fixture on ESPN's "Great Outdoor Games," he won 14 medals and ESPN's 2005 ESPY Award for Best Outdoor Sports Athlete. He has been both semi-pro and pro, tied for the all-time medal winner in the "Great Outdoor Games," and set log-rolling and boom-running world records.

Sgt. Salzman, 27, plans to return to college and perhaps teach industrial education or shop.

"With my injuries, I have to relearn everything," he said. "I used to be right-handed. Now I'm left-handed, but I have a damaged left hand, so I've got to relearn everything, from tying my shoes to how to pack my bag."

In the aquatic-therapy pool, Sgt. Salzman is relearning and expanding his water skills.

"I had never scuba-dived before," he said. "It's a whole other world. I can pretty much do everything in the pool that I could do before."

"The scuba-aquatic therapy has definitely boosted his confidence," said Sgt. Salzman's wife, Josie. "He can scuba dive just fine, just like any other person."

Other therapeutic programs available to wounded Soldiers at Walter Reed include fly-fishing, deep-sea fishing and kayaking.

Contributors to SUDS include the Annapolis Scuba Center, the Chatham Bay Foundation, Disabled Sports USA and PADI.

To learn more about the Soldiers Undertaking Disabled Scuba Diving program, visit www.sudsdiving.org To donate to SUDS' support, visit Disabled Sports USA at www.dsusa. org and specify that the donation is for the SUDS program.

Staff Sgt, Jim Greenhill works for the National Guard Bureau Public Affairs Office.

Source Citation
Greenhill, Jim. "Diving to strength." Soldiers Magazine 62.11 (2007): 33. General OneFile. Web. 17 Nov. 2010.
Document URL
http://find.galegroup.com/gps/infomark.do?&contentSet=IAC-Documents&type=retrieve&tabID=T003&prodId=IPS&docId=A170929033&source=gale&srcprod=ITOF&userGroupName=22054_acld&version=1.0


Gale Document Number:A170929033

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