Car security cameras

It knows your weekend plans and what you're having for dinner because it's monitoring the plague of electronic devices in our pockets and purses. The Patriot Act-protected title character in Eagle Eye is a self-aware, anti-terrorism surveillance computer that goes rogue - deciding to assassinate the leaders of America to end the self-imposed state of terror. The all-seeing robot uses its gathered information and control of all things electronic to rope in two unsuspecting civilians - Jerry (Shia LaBeouf) and Rachel (Michelle Monaghan). Billy Bob Thornton is along for the ride as an FBI agent in pursuit of the pair. But good luck following the action - director D.J. Caruso's shaky shots are more disorienting than a 5-year old playing with a video camera. In the end, not even the snappy dialogue and charm of LaBeouf and Thornton can stop Eagle Eye's political nausea. (Jason Morgan)
Elegy - Philip Roth's novella The Dying Animal is a strange choice for a movie adaptation. A brief coda to Roth's Professor of Desire series about the sex-obsessed David Kepesh, it's basically a monologue in which college professor Kepesh recalls his affair with a Cuban American student 38 years his junior


nformation about former Dons coach Phil Woolpert. The information Newell provided was so good Harris set up an on-camera interview at the coach's Southern California home.
'After the interview, while I was breaking down my equipment, I asked coach Newell if anybody had ever done a documentary about him,' Harris said. 'He stopped, thought about it and said, Well, they've done a few books about me but never a documentary.' So I said, I'm going to do your story.' I didn't even ask him, I just told him.'
Newell was impressed with Harris' award-winning 'Bounce: The Don Barksdale Story' and gave his approval for 'Basketball Guru: The Pete Newell Story.'
'We developed a friendship and relationship from that first meeting, and ever since, I've taken a day every year to spend with Pete,' Harris said


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