Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.
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It's Basic Rocket Science Enders Game (Rated R) by HEATHER GRIFFITHS There are not many movies in recent memory that have generated Cape Fear Eye Associates is now offering you the kind of controversy generated the most advanced technology available for cataract by Ender's Game (114 minutes). To sum up, in 1985 Orson Scott Card surgery with the LenSx Laser Technology wrote a wonderful science fiction • Image-guided laser refractive story about a group of children, cataract surgery wise beyond their years, recruited for military action to save humanity. • Bladeless, computer controlled laser This novel spoke about violence, • Laser astigmatism correction isolation and the pressure we place on children to be what we need • Customized cataract surgery them to be. I loved this book, and up • Most precise surgical outcomes until recently I recommended it to people all the time. Then the author • One of the safest and most successful started writing political articles about procedures today criminalizing acts between same sex •Comfortable, relaxed setting couples in a series of increasingly vitriolic pieces, in which he suggested that same-sex attraction was the result of being molested as a Schedule your consultation today with child, among other spurious claims. Sheel Patel, MD or J. Wayne Riggins, OD, MD The things he wrote and publicly and see if you're a candidate for this life-changing procedure stated are ridiculously stupid. My husband is an artist and he often makes the point that we must separate the artist from the art they create. So, should anyone participate in a boycott of the www.CapeFearEye.com film, based on the fact that some of the money used to buy your ticket will end up in the pocket of Orson Scott Card, who cofounded the production studio got Ender's Game made and gets a production credit? That's a tough that finally one, made easier by the fact that the film was, frankly, not that good. It is approximately 2086. An alien species, called Formics, attack Earth and kill millions. Mazer Rackham (Sir Ben Kingsley) stops the invasion and humanity begins immediately preparing to defend itself. About fifty years later, Ender Wiggins (Asa Butterfield) is carefully observed by Colonel Hyrum Graff (Harrison Ford, phoning it in) and Major Gwen Anderson (Viola Davis). They put him through his paces and decide to graduate him to Battle School. In Battle School, Ender struggles with being separated from his sister, Valentine (Abigail Breslin) and becoming too much like his brother, Peter (Jimmy Pinchak). He is an outcast from the moment he steps onto the shuttle, alienated from his peers when Graff singles him out for special recognition. He plays the "mind game," just as he did in the novel, although the movie version is considerably simplified. This game is entirely in CGI, a choice I am not sure I can get behind. The game is supposed to mirror Ender's psychology while simultaneously serving as a plot point picked up at the end of the film. Here, the game is so truncated I would prefer it had been cut to make room for more Battle Room scenes, or more time on Bean (Aramis Knight). The Battle Room is where Ender manages to gain ground with his peers. He is quickly transferred to Salamander Army, under the command of Bonzo Madrid (Moises Arias). He trains with Petra (Hailee Steinfeld) and manages to distinguish himself despite Bonzo's orders that he remain out of battles. His efforts generate resentment, and he gets into a fight that seriously injures Bonzo. Guilty about Bonzo's injuries, he attempts to resign, but Valentine manages to convince him to stay in the war. Then it's off to Command "School," where he trains with Mazer Rackham and ultimately leads all his old Battle School chums in "simulated" combat I had high hopes for the film adaptation of what remains one of my favorite novels and I was disappointed. The Peter/Valentine internet subplot is gone, and the attempt to externalize Ender's internal monologues fell short of the depth achieved in the novel. I didn't care for roughly 50 percent of the casting, and Bean is nearly eclipsed by Petra. Even after Card repudiated some of his more extreme statements I approached his work differently, so I have to wonder; was I disappointed in the movie or myself for wanting to see the movie? Now showing at Wynnsong 7, Carmike 12 and Carmike Market Fair 15. IN THE MORNING Weekdays 5:30AM to 10:00AM 20 UCW NOVEMBER 20-26, 2013 HEATHER GRIFFITHS, Contributing Writer. COMMENTS? Editor@upandcomingweekly.com. WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM

