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Updated Sun, July 27, 2008.
251.www.ledger-enquirer.com43800
252.www.registerguard.com43000
253.www.uexpress.com42400
254.www.dailypioneer.com42300
255.www.shreveporttimes.com42300
256.www.decaturdaily.com42100
257.www.desmoinesregister.com41500
258.www.mailtribune.com41300
259.tampatrib.com40500
260.www.heraldsun.news.com.au40100
261.www.daynews.com.cn39700
262.www.thisisnottingham.co.uk39400
263.www.jp.dk38900
264.www.mid-day.com38800
265.www.macombdaily.com38500
266.www.izvestia.ru38500
267.www.nypress.com38200
268.www.gazette.com37800
269.www.thetowntalk.com37600
270.www.bakersfield.com37500
271.www.thestatesman.net37400
272.www.fortwayne.com37300
273.www.nashvillecitypaper.com37300
274.www.washingtoncitypaper.com36900
275.www.oblad.no36800
276.www.newseum.org36600
277.www.kommersant.ru36600
278.www.honoluluadvertiser.com36300
279.www.timesunion.com35600
280.www.heraldsun.com35500
281.www.theday.com35400
282.www.estripes.com35400
283.www.bnd.com35100
284.www.dailybreeze.com34600
285.www.theoaklandpress.com33400
286.www.canadafreepress.com33300
287.www.newvision.co.ug33300
288.www.inq7.net33100
289.www.djc.com32200
290.www.jconline.com32100
291.www.mk.ru32000
292.www.dailybulletin.com31900
293.www.jacksonsun.com31900
294.seattle.bizjournals.com31800
295.www.tribune.com31600
296.www.dvhn.nl31400
297.www.theeagle.com31200
298.www.rapidcityjournal.com31100
299.www.calgarysun.com30900
300.www.montrealmirror.com30700
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262. www.thisisnottingham.co.uk

Rating: 39400 points*
*amount mentions of word 'www.thisisnottingham.co.uk' on the other websites

www.thisisnottingham.co.uk

This is Nottingham - news, entertainment, jobs, homes and cars

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The feelgood spin doctors | Mark Lawson
Bad times call for upbeat slogans, producers seem to think, no matter what the film is really aboutThese are feel-bad times in western economies, and two high-profile movies just released in the United States (due in Britain early next year) can be commended for reflecting this. In Up in the Air, George Clooney plays a chilly figure whose job is to fly around the US as an industrial executioner, sacking employees at firms who are downsizing or, as the cute euphemism has it, "right-sizing". Equally tuned to the current mood is Everybody's Fine, starring Robert De Niro as a seriously ill widower who, when his children renege on their promises to visit him for Christmas, summons his dwindling energies for a bus tour to their doorsteps.Although both films have good jokes in them, they are fundamentally bleak case studies of alienation. Clooney's character, Ryan Bingham, is emotionally cut off from the lives of his family and the dozens he condemns to unemployment each day. He rejects even the idea of home, living by preference in executive-upgrade rooms at airport hotels, between which he moves in rented cars and air mile-swelling business-class cabins.The main locations to which Everybody's Fine (ironic title) takes De Niro's Frank Goode (ironic name) are just as cold and soulless: a recession-deserted supermarket, a doctor's surgery, a concrete underpass at midnight, an empty apartment, a hospital ward. Goode, in common with Clooney's character, suffers a crisis of isolation in an aircraft miles above the earth.No potential moviegoer, though, would get much sense of the downbeat atmosphere of these pieces from the advertising. Ads for Everybody's Fine show De Niro grinning wackily, surrounded by young actors playing happy families, with a Christmas tree in the background. Large quotes from little-known Kansas radio stations proclaim this to be the "must-see, feel-good seasonal movie!"In a similar strategy, the trails for Up in the Air hint strongly at a rom-com love triangle, a sort of frequent-flyer rewrite of Brief Encounter: those who buy tickets will probably be surprised by the exact shape of the leading man's relationships with the characters played by Vera Farmiga and Anna Kendrick. A journalist planning a feature on the film told me the publicists were keen to "play down the unemployment angle", although the plot's most original element is a man whose job is taking away jobs.I appreciate that a poster quote reading "a brilliant study in existentialist despair – the Guardian" isn't going to sell much popcorn, but Up in the Air and Everybody's Fine are essentially being mis-sold, in a way to which cinema is becoming increasingly prone. This year's best film at the Oscars, Slumdog Millionaire, was also widely marketed as a feelgood movie, although its themes include extreme poverty, child slavery, marital cruelty, the subjugation of women, and gang murder.This cheeky misleading happens because of a panicked assumption among producers that, in bad times, audiences don't want to be sent out feeling bad and so, rather unfairly, products that properly reflect the state of society are punished for it. But it's not only in their deceptive publicity that De Niro's and Clooney's films represent the false optimism to which American showbusiness is prone.In both cases, the final part – the "third act", as screenwriters call it – imposes on the protagonists a process in which, like Scrooge, they are alerted to the errors in their personality and offered a chance to change. This pressure for redemption, reflecting the optimism and religiosity that run so deep in American culture, disfigures so much of the nation's entertainment.It's a common experience for sharp and intelligent films to move away from realism in the final reel, just as many Broadway dramas veer towards a reassuring resolution as the stagehands begin to crank the curtain for its final fall: a current example is Superior Donuts, the new play by Tracy Letts, who won both the Tony and Pulitzer prizes for August: Osage County. In this script, the closing moments seem more alert to the needs of theatregoers who have paid more than $100 a ticket than to the arc established for the characters.So writers and directors are forced to negotiate between realism and the commercial and psychological demand for sentimental neatness. And, when the PR department comes in, Everybody's Fine has its implied question mark turned into an exclamation mark and the name of Up in the Air suddenly alludes not to moral ambiguity but a romantic cloud nine.Another 2010 Oscar hopeful, The Lovely Bones, even manages a positive spin on the rape-murder of a teenage girl by transporting her to a CGI heaven from which she can help to solve her killing through posthumous sleuthing. It's true that Alice Sebold's novel contained this supernatural redemption but the movie becomes even gloopier by playing down the savagery of the death. Perhaps, if the publicists are really lucky, a reviewer somewhere will describe this story of a child slaughtered by a sex attacker as "the feelgood movie of the year".Financial crisisGeorge ClooneyRobert De NiroTheatreOscarsMark Lawsonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
guardian.co.uk
Sweden in crisis talks over Saab
The Swedish government holds emergency talks with unions to prepare for the possible closure of Saab.
news.bbc.co.uk
Detroit terror attack: delay over airport X-ray scanners 'risking lives'
Ministers accused of putting lives at risk by failing to order body scanners despite fears of al-Qaeda syringe bomb attacks.
telegraph.co.uk
Saudi forces 'oust Yemeni rebels'
Saudi troops regain control of a border village occupied by Yemeni rebels, the kingdom's deputy defence minister says.
news.bbc.co.uk
Hope and despair in northern Iraq
In Kurdish northern Iraq, signs of hope and stability are starting to show through the scars of war. But despite this, Treeva Fenwick finds that there are reasons why some feel life was better under Saddam Hussein.
news.bbc.co.uk