5 hours ago · Guillermo del Toro's magical Pinocchio process video is utterly mesmerizing. Guillermo del Toro's magical Pinocchio process video is utterly ...
16 hours ago · In the new video, which features a number of different Pinocchio scenes in the midst of production, del Toro opens up a bit about what all ...
15 hours ago · PinocchioIn the new video, which features a number of differentPinocchioscenes in the midst of production, del Toro opens up a bit about ...
16 hours ago · Guillermo del Toro's magical Pinocchio process video is utterly mesmerizing. r/newsintechnology - Guillermo del Toro's magical Pinocchio process video is ...
3 hours ago · Guillermo del Toro taking a peek at a miniature set featuring Pinocchio sleeping or not yet alive in Geppetto's workshop. | Netflix.
"...While there’s also quite a bit of digital production involved in the film’s
making, del Toro explained how the minute imperfections that come with
hand-made stop motion art have a way of making stories like this feel
more magical because they give you a sense of how the overall process
works.
“I
really wanted this movie to land in a way that had the expressiveness
and the material nature of a handmade piece of animation — an artisanal,
beautiful exercise in carving, painting, sculpting,” del Toro explains.
“But it had the sophistication of movement that research in rigs and
puppetry-making have taken us.”
Once upon a time, it seemed as if Netflix’s upcoming stop-motion Pinocchio from co-directors Guillermo del Toro and Mark Gustafson’s might in a bit of competition with Disney’s “live-action” spin on the classic story
from Robert Zeemckis. But that all changed when del Toro stopped by
Netflix’s annual Tudum event to give everyone a closer look into the
labor-intensive, mesmerizing, and magical process that brought his Pinocchio to life.
In the new video, which features a number of different Pinocchio scenes
in the midst of production, del Toro opens up a bit about what all he
wanted to bring to his take on the fairytale, and why he insisted that
the bulk of its animation was done by hand.
In July 1862, the Confederate territorial government withdrew to El Paso, Texas. With the approach of Union troops, it relocated to San Antonio, where it remained for the duration of the civil war. The territory continued to be represented in the Confederate States Congress, and Confederate troops continued to fight under the Arizona banner until the war ended.
The political geography of the two Arizona Territories differed
in that the Confederate Arizona was approximately the southern half of
the historic New Mexico Territory, while the Union-defined Arizona
Territory was approximately the western half of what had been New Mexico
Territory, which became the basis for present-day Arizona.
1 day ago · A near-total ban on abortion in Arizona that was written in 1864 but has been blocked since 1973 can now be enforced, a Pima County judge ...
INSERTED:
Map
of the division of the states before the start of the Civil War
(1861-65)
Notes: The Union had 34 states including border states and
territories; West Virginia 35th in 1863 and Nevada 36th in 1864.
Territories: Colorado (1876), North Dakota and South Dakota (1861),
Nebraska (1867), Nevada (1864), New Mexico (1912), Arizona Territory
(1912), Utah (1896), Washington (1889), Idaho (1890), Montana (1889).
Text: "In an 8-page decision published
late Friday afternoon, Superior Court Judge Kellie Johnson ruled
"because the legal basis for the judgment entered in 1973 has now been
overruled," she must "vacate the judgment in its entirety."
"The
court finds an attempt to reconcile fifty years of legislative activity
procedurally improper in the context of the motion and record before
it," Johnson wrote. "While there may be legal questions the parties seek
to resolve regarding Arizona statutes on abortion, those questions are
not for this court to decide here."
Arizona judge reinstates 1864 abortion ban from before territory became a state - UPI.com
www.upi.com › Top_News › 2022/09/23
23 hours ago · Sept. 23 (UPI) -- An Arizona judge on Friday ruled that an 1864 territorial law banning abortions should be reinstated, just a day before a ...
Arizona Sentator Krysten Sinema reacts to decision to lift an injunction on all abortions
Ruth Bashinsky
5 - 6 minutes
Krysten Sinema blasts judge's decision to reinstate abortions
ban - except to save mother's life: Says judgment 'removes basic rights
Arizona women have relied upon for over a century.'
, updated
Superior Court Judge Kellie Johnson of Pima County
released a ruling on Friday that allowed the enforcement of the law that
dates back to the mid-19th century
On
Saturday, Sinema went to Twitter criticizing the decision - 'a woman's
health care decisions should be between her, her family and her doctor'
Women
in the state will now be unable to get an abortion - and it would be
considered illegal - except when a pregnant person's life is at risk
The
injunction was lifted a day before a new law that would ban most
procedures after 15 weeks was scheduled to take effect, the news outlet
reported
Republican Arizona Attorney-General
Mark Brnovich applauded the Friday ruling, an apparent win since
Brnovich wanted tougher restrictions in his state
Arizona
Senator (D) Krysten Sinema ripped a judge's decision to lift injunction
on all abortions - except to save the life of a mother - saying it: 'removes basic rights Arizona women have relied upon for over a century.'
The
decision was made by Judge Kellie Johnson of Pima county's superior
court. Johnson released a ruling on Friday that allowed the enforcement
of the law that dates back to the mid-19th century.
On
Saturday, Sinema went to Twitter to express her frustration and
criticized the decision claiming, 'a woman's health care decisions
should be between her, her family and her doctor.'
Women
in the state won't be able to get an abortion - it would be considered
illegal - except when a pregnant person's life is at risk, The Washington Post reported.
Sinema said the decision will endanger a women's health, safety and well-being. . .
Sinema's comments comes a day after Judge Johnson's ruled that the
state can enforce a ban that has been blocked for nearly 50 years, since
the Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade protected abortion access
nationwide, The Hill reported.
The ban was passed in the 1800s before Arizona became a state, but its enforcement was stopped after the Roe ruling in 1973.
The
Arizona judge ruled that the injunction that prevented enforcement of
the law was only issued because of Roe v. Wade, so it must be lifted
completely, the news outlet said. . ."
Arizona organized as a separate territory: Feb. 24, 1863
By Andrew Glass
02/24/2016 12:28 AM EST
Link Copied
2 - 3 minutes
Arizona, formerly part of the Territory of New Mexico, was organized
as a separate territory on this day in 1863. The United States had
acquired the region under the terms of the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American War, and through the 1853
Gadsden Purchase.
During the Civil War, the southern slice of the territory, including
Tucson, declared its independence from the United States and joined the
Confederacy. In March 1862, Union troops recaptured the Confederate
Territory of Arizona and returned it to the New Mexico Territory.
For a time, it appeared Arizona would someday join the Union as part
of New Mexico — a plan Republicans believed would help them retain
control of the Senate in the aftermath of the war. While this was
supported by most New Mexicans, it did not find favor with most
Arizonans.
Soon the Arizona Territory was bustling with fortune seekers. The
discovery of gold in 1863 near Prescott, which became the territorial
capital in 1864, and the 1877 discoveries of silver at Tombstone, near
Tucson, and copper at Bisbee, attracted many of the same people who had
come through Arizona in 1848 on their way to the goldfields of
California. (Most people of Hispanic descent living in Arizona today
immigrated to the state from Mexico after 1900.)
Emma Adams, who
spent 10 days in Tucson in 1884 before traveling on, via the Central
Pacific Railway, to Los Angeles, wrote: “Americans, Mexicans, Germans,
Russians, Italians, Austrians, Frenchmen, Spaniards, Greeks, the
Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese, the African, Irishman, and Sandwich
Islander are all here, being drawn to the spot by the irresistible
mining influence.”
On Feb. 14, 1912, President William Howard Taft signed a bill making
Arizona the 48th state. It was the last to be admitted until the 1950s,
when Alaska and Hawaii joined the Union..."
1864 ~ The Arizona Territory is established and four counties are created: Pima, Yuma, Yavapai and Mohave. 1865 ~ Pah-Ute County is organized from Northern ...
Governor Doug Ducey will be the next speaker in the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation & Institute’s A Time for Choosing Speaker Series,
a forum for leading voices in the conservative movement to address
critical questions facing the future of the Republican Party. Through
formal speeches delivered at the Reagan Library in Simi Valley,
California, speakers specifically address fundamental questions, such as
“Why are you a Republican?,” “What should the Republican Party stand
for?,” and “What are the Republican philosophies we can all agree on?” The event is free to attend; Reservations are not required for this event. All walk-ins are welcome.
Doug Ducey was elected as Arizona’s 23rd governor in 2014 and re-elected in 2018 with more votes than anyone in state history.
Within Arizona, Governor Ducey has eliminated overburdensome
regulations, fostered the creation of hundreds of thousands of jobs, and
reformed taxes every year he’s been in office. He has also positioned
Arizona as a national leader in school choice and civics education. He
is a former businessman and CEO of Cold Stone Creamery who today also
serves as Chairman of the Republican Governors Association.
GENEROUS SUPPORT FOR OUR TIME FOR CHOOSING SERIES PROVIDED BY:
UNDERWRITERS: Ambassador & Mrs. Howard H. Leach Larry R. Polhill Anonymous