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Wednesday, April 28, 2010 at 6:29 AM | 0 comments  

Perder Es Cuestion De Metodo Review



Sergio Cabrera in my opinion is the greatest director to come out of Colombian cinema. In "Perder Es Cuestion De Metodo" he manages to deliver yet another stunning visual portrait of Bogota in all its flawed beauty. The film also delivers a sobering insight into the corruption at all levels of society and the copasetic way in which Colombians go about dealing with it. If anyone is curious as to how a Colombian mind operates and thinks, this will certainly give you an idea of the general attitudes and psychological issues that comes from living in what at one point was the most violent country in the world. Another film thats definitely worth watching as far as a real portrayal of Bogota is "La Estrategia Del Caracol" by the same director.




Perder Es Cuestion De Metodo Overview


Based on the best-selling thriller by Santiago Gamboa, this film is a clever social criticism of the wide-spread corruption in Colombia. The discovery of an impaled corpse near Bogotá, makes journalist Victor Silampa and office clerk Emir Estupiñán embark on a captivating and gruesome journey into the dark underbelly of this nation. With the aid of a young prostitute and the officer in charge of the case, Victor and Emir manage to discover a real estate fraud scheme that involves politicians, emerald hunters, journalists and other personalities, showing us in a mesmerizing way the reality of this country in conflict. Basada en la novela de suspenso de Santiago Gamboa, esta película es una acertada crítica social sobre la corrupción que agobia a Colombia. El periodista Víctor Silampa y el oficinista Emir Estupiñán se embarcan en una aventura después de descubrir un cadáver cerca de Bogota que les llevará a los lugares más oscuros de su país. Con la ayuda de una joven prostituta y el policía a cargo del caso, Víctor y Emir se tropiezan con un fraude el cual implica a políticos, joyeros, periodistas y otras personalidades públicas. El director Sergio Cabrera nos muestra de forma entretenida la dura realidad de la Colombia actual.


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When our homeschool materials order arrived in the mail recently, I planned on looking through things to see if I wanted to return anything. Well, I ended up reading through "The Mystery of the Periodic Table" by Benjamin D. Wiker and going to bed at one am!

Chemistry was something I 'got through' in high school. But this book was so engaging and interesting, and so clearly laid out the development of modern Chemistry, that I was unwilling to put it down. It is written in a conversational tone, and speaks directly to the reader. It makes the early alchemists and the later chemists into real people with real investigative passions.

There were two things that I really appreciated from this book which sort of surprised me: First, it was made evident that an intelligence was behind the elements. The book points out many ways that Chemistry is orderly, exact and not accidental. He doesn't say, "God invented the elements and their properties" but he has at least three paragraphs full of exclamation points and sentences which express wonder at the perfection that the chemists were astounded to find.

Second, the author repeatedly describes how the chemist had the wrong idea but experimented the right way; or he had just the right idea, but made the wrong conclusion. I found these instances very encouraging, especially for the young scientist, because it explains that trial and error is a crucial part of finding out facts of science. I don't want my kids to research a question, make a hypothesis, do an experiment, get an unexpected result, and count it a total failure.

The author also goes into some effort to show how the chemists of days past stumbled in a group effort spanning centuries to come to what is presently known as the Periodic Table. Until I read this book, I thought that the Periodic Table was just a reference guide, and now I know it is a historical, methodical, even beautiful and interesting diagram.

Our homeschool follows the Classical Education Model. I plan on reading this book to my third grader at the beginning of her first study of Chemistry. Then, when we cycle back to Chemistry in seventh grade, she can read it on her own. I think it is an excellent value. I know of no other product like it that includes all the chemists and their experiments, sketches of their apparati, and how they worked off each other's contributions and change each others outlooks. It includes updates up to almost present day. It is an excellent explanation of many basic chemical elements; a few experiments; entirely comprised of biographies; easily God-glorifying; written in an exciting manner which carries the reader along.

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