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Friday, June 19
The Indiana Daily Student

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The Indiana Daily Student

A movie about Stewie.... Muahaha!

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If you're like me and watch 12-16 hours of television a day, you've probably seen many an advertisement for the new "Family Guy" DVD "Family Guy Presents Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story." If you're really like me and have a DVR that records "Family Guy" on every channel (because it's on at every time of day), then you're probably drooling over this DVD (and probably have already bought it).


The Indiana Daily Student

Becoming a part of the Shot glass Mafia

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Aging is all about milestones. Sixteen means getting behind the wheel instead of meeting Mom outside the movie theater to be picked up promptly at eight. Eighteen means living up to your democratic duty and exercising your right to vote. But it's 21 that's arguably the most anticipated among young people in America. While for many 21 is the age that officially represents the transition into adulthood, it also bestows upon millions of college students across the country the right to finally purchase alcoholic beverages legally.


The Indiana Daily Student

A lesson in French filmmaking

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Jean-Luc Godard's "Masculin féminin" and I have a bit of history together. Long ago in a film class I took, when it came time to study the French new wave, we didn't screen Godard's "Breathless" or Truffaut's "The 400 Blows" -- two of the top films associated with the period. No, instead "Masculin féminin" was shown and for a brief period that night, my idea of cinema was completely altered.


The Indiana Daily Student

You may not want to find 'home'

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Let's be honest, there are few people in American history who have a better story to tell than Bob Dylan. For the greater part of a decade, Dylan seemed to have a toe in almost every social pool, and that chunk of time (early to mid-1960s) is the sole focus of Martin Scorsese's new DVD "No Direction Home." When you team up one of the greatest living storytellers with one of the greatest living stories, it's impossible not to get a hit. The documentary travels from Robert

The Indiana Daily Student

We are all disturbed

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Are you "Down with the Sickness?" When you hear the name David Draiman do you immediately think of the signature growl he does in many of more popular Disturbed songs? If you answered yes to either of the above, then you're more than likely a Disturbed fan. Disturbed, the Chicago-based four-piece band, is finally back with a new bassist in tow after a little over three years in the studio. Their newest release Ten Thousand Fists is an excellent illustration of a band taking their past successes and building on them to ultimately form a solid album.


The Indiana Daily Student

Sex, sex, sex!

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As a young adult in today's society, I can hardly imagine a time when talking about sex was taboo. But when our parents were our age, a sexual revolution was exploding all around them. "Inside Deep Throat: Theatrical NC-17 Edition" gives our generation the opportunity to catch a glimpse of what a volatile time this was in America. Directors Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato made an extraordinary documentary that focuses on how and why "Deep Throat" became the touted "most profitable film of all time."


The Indiana Daily Student

These guys have a delicious 'gift'

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Every time I listen to Blackalicious, one thing always catches my attention: the blazing speed at which Gift of Gab raps. There are a lot of performers out there who rap quickly, but Gift of Gab leaves them in the dust. He is like a hip-hop version of that guy who used to do Micro Machine commercials. Also, he doesn't seem to require oxygen like us mortal humans. That is the only way to explain his ability to rap for such long stretches without taking a breath; either that or between takes on The Craft he must have frequently collapsed in an asphyxiated heap.


The Indiana Daily Student

Trapt in nu-metal hell

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There must be some sort of infernal machine that produces filler band for modern rock radio. First, start with poorly tattooed, pierced-lipped white teenagers from California. Then, add some radio-friendly angst and chugga-chugga guitar riffs. Next comes a dash of "agro-EXTREME" culture right off a Mountain Dew commercial. The final product, after being cooked for a little under 15 minutes, is a bland cookie-cutter nu-metal band. The customer's primary reaction, if said customer is over 14, is to promptly change the station to something else.


The Indiana Daily Student

'Wildflower' too flowery, not wild enough

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Adventures in music work in one of two ways: pass or fail. Sometimes they pass, like when Bob Dylan went electric or when Green Day made a rock opera. But most of the time they fail, which is the verdict that must be delivered for Sheryl Crow's latest album, Wildflower; a disappointedly ballad-laden effort that is too flowery and simply not wild enough.


The Indiana Daily Student

Rossdale takes us back a decade

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In 1997, I chose to see Bush over Beck for my 13th birthday. Beck's music has endured longer, but Bush was the essence of cool for many teenagers at the time. Those years were a great time for alt-rock, but the last few have been rough on Gavin Rossdale. One of the biggest post-grunge rock stars in the world ten years ago with Bush, Rossdale is now best known as Mr. Gwen Stefani, a decade after his former band's premiere, Sixteen Stone.


The Indiana Daily Student

DeLay, successor swapped donations

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WASHINGTON -- Tom DeLay deliberately raised more money than he needed to throw parties at the 2000 presidential convention, then diverted some of the excess to longtime ally Roy Blunt through a series of donations that benefited both men's causes, according to campaign documents reviewed by The Associated Press.



The Indiana Daily Student

'Flowers' anything but broken

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"Broken Flowers" seems like it would make a good metaphor for a lot of director Jim Jarmusch's films. They all seem to be very beautiful and interesting but after time, much like a flower, by the end they've wilted up and died. Going into "Broken Flowers" there were a lot of doubts in my head, mainly since all previous experiences with Jarmusch led to disappointment, but when you've got the genius of Bill Murray in your film, what could possibly be broken is easily fixed.


The Indiana Daily Student

May I please have some more, Polanski?

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Sure there are a handful of "Oliver Twist" films already in existence, and this recent version merely serves to demonstrate Hollywood's present obsession with remakes of other remakes. But this version of Charles Dickens' "Oliver Twist" has something that puts it over the top that the others did not have: director Roman Polanski.


The Indiana Daily Student

Welcome to filmmaking purgatory

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It's funny. I didn't know that "Serenity" was really just fancy Hollywood jargon for "purgatory." You know, that place where everything's not quite good, not quite bad, but just kind of there? That's kind of how it is with this movie, which picks up sometime after the extremely short-lived 2002 television series "Firefly." "Serenity" is almost a sci-fi movie that's almost an action/adventure movie that's almost a western that's almost a comedy.


The Indiana Daily Student

The same game as the others

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Never before has a film mixed class warfare and golf so seamlessly. Then again, there probably aren't a lot of options for that choice. "The Greatest Game Ever Played" is a classic underdog story, in the same vein as "The Match of their Lives," "Miracle," "Cinderella Man," "Seabiscuit" and every other "cellar dweller-to-champion" movie you've ever seen. That's not to say it's bad, though. Any flick that can make one of the most mind-numbingly boring spectator sports halfway interesting deserves recognition.


The Indiana Daily Student

A gory 'history' lesson

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While leaving the theater after "A History of Violence" it was apparent to me this film is going to create division with its audience. Some may deem it overly violent and pointless trash. Others may call it a modern-day masterpiece, and some may even leave the theater unsure of how to feel.


The Indiana Daily Student

What was your score?

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If SAT scores are any indication, freshmen at IU are getting smarter every year. Studies calculate averages differently, but mean scores provided by the University have risen 18 points since 2001, even though IU students are still near the bottom of the Big Ten, and scores are lower than the national average.



The Indiana Daily Student

Rape experts say silence not a solution

Though seven rapes on campus have been reported to the IU Police Department so far this semester, national statistics suggest that as many as 10 or 20 times more might have occurred. Student sexual assault experts suggest psychological distress and social pressures might account for the reason for such widespread silence.