Rated PG, directed by Kevin Reynolds, with Jim Caviezel (Edmond), Guy Pearce (Fernand), Richard Harris (Abbe Faria), Dagmara Dominczyk, running time: 110 minutes.
Edmond Dantes is blessed with good looks and good fortune -- a fact which infuriates his friend Fernand de Mondego. Mondego uses his intricate knowledge of post-Napoleonic politics to have Dantes incarcerated on the notorious Chateau d'If prison island, where he wallows away until he meets Abbe Faria, who schools him in philosophy and fighting. When Dante later escapes, he joins up with pirates and carefully plots his revenge against his old friend Mondego, only after finding a fortune in treasure and posing as the title character. Director Reynolds, who helmed such dismal and expensive failures as Waterworld and Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, has come into his own here in a piece that, while often anachronistic, contains lavish costuming and an inspired score by Edward Shearmur.
PHOTO: MATA
Cheng Ching-hsiang (鄭青祥) turned a small triangle of concrete jammed between two old shops into a cool little bar called 9dimension. In front of the shop, a steampunk-like structure was welded by himself to serve as a booth where he prepares cocktails. “Yancheng used to be just old people,” he says, “but now young people are coming and creating the New Yancheng.” Around the corner, Yu Hsiu-jao (饒毓琇), opened Tiny Cafe. True to its name, it is the size of a cupboard and serves cold-brewed coffee. “Small shops are so special and have personality,” she says, “people come to Yancheng to find such treasures.” She
The low voter turnout for the referendum on Aug. 23 shows that many Taiwanese are apathetic about nuclear energy, but there are long-term energy stakes involved that the public needs to grasp Taiwan faces an energy trilemma: soaring AI-driven demand, pressure to cut carbon and reliance on fragile fuel imports. But the nuclear referendum on Aug. 23 showed how little this registered with voters, many of whom neither see the long game nor grasp the stakes. Volunteer referendum worker Vivian Chen (陳薇安) put it bluntly: “I’ve seen many people asking what they’re voting for when they arrive to vote. They cast their vote without even doing any research.” Imagine Taiwanese voters invited to a poker table. The bet looked simple — yes or no — yet most never showed. More than two-thirds of those
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