Word: visualization
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...only knew Piaget but had worked with him. Delessert sent along a photo of the two collaborating on a book, which we couldn't resist reproducing here. You will find other remarkable, often rare photos inside, thanks to picture editor JAY COLTON and assistant JESSICA TARASKI, along with visual treats of all kinds--charts, graphics and even what looks like a subway map. Use it to guide your own journey through the century. We hope you'll enjoy it as much...
...many facts and ideas. But the significant thing about Kubrick was that he built his life-style and life's work around a few simple, widely acknowledged verities: that our universe is ruled by chance, that life is too short, that movies are, or ought to be, primarily a visual medium. The difference between him and us was that he didn't regard these as mere talking points. He acted on them. Obsessively...
Watch the drama unfold in Clint Eastwood's latest movie, "True Crime". Like most investigative reporters, Eastwood's character Steve Everett has wound up trouble with alcohol, women and the New York Times. With Denis Leary. Harvard Film Archive, Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, 24 Quincy St. 495-4700. 9:30 p.m. $5 students...
...Alice in the Cities" tracks the budding friendship of a German photojournalist (Rudgier Vogler) and an abandoned 9-year-old girl (Yella Rottlander) as they search for her mother (Lisa Kreuzer). German with English subtitles, black-and-white, 16mm. The Harvard Film Archive, The Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts Main Auditorium. 495-4700. 9:45 p.m. FREE...
Deep End may remind you of a "quality" TV play of the '50s: it is conscientious, delicately acted, lacking in visual flair. It is so generous to all the characters that it tends to meander. Now it's Beth's story, now Vincent's, now Sam's. It has little interest in villainy: the backstory of the kidnapping takes just moments. But in a time when there are few serious family dramas--and when those few, like Stepmom, play it shrill and sticky--the old limitations can look like cardinal virtues...