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Where Can I Find Scientific Film Reviews Of Science Themed Films

Where can I find scientific film reviews of science themed films?

I'm looking for some place I can find professional scientific film reviews of science themed Hollywood films like Jurassic park; outbreak; deep impact; gattaca. I want the reviews to answer the questions: 1. which scenes in the film are fiction and why?
2. which scenes in the film are factual and why?
I found this video here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXN2sMoyIQs&list=PL8F49B9BFEFE6162B but this site only covers a limited amount of films....would anyone know where I can find a similar sort of resource that solely gives scientific reviews of science films?

Thanks in Advance

What are the best documentaries and movies for computer science students to watch?

This link shows best 9 tech Documentaries all are must watch documentaries9 of the Best Tech Documentaries1 Terms And Conditions May Apply2 We Are Legion 3 The Internet's Own Boy ...In this link they have separated out based on topics like web, computers, AI...100 Must-See Documentaries for Tech Geeks - OnlineCollegeCourses.com

What are some science fiction books, movies, and TV shows involving the Frankenstein theme of a scientist's creation betraying its creator?

A really good semi-recent movie was Ex Machina. A man creates a beautiful brilliant robot who then understands he wants to control and have her as his slabs/servant and tries to seduce him and turn the tables. He brings in a young man who also falls for the robot and its very interesting. Some obvious metaphors about women’s place in pre-feminist society are artfully there, the Sci-Fi is strong with this one and it is fun.

What are the best Science movies related with Geology?

From what I hear, Dante’s Peak (1997), about a volcanic eruption near a town in Washington state, is one of the most believable.10.5 (2004), a Sci-Fi film about a string of megaquakes in the US West Coast, is a good one…if you’re wanting a scientific comedy, because in terms of geology, it’s a joke.San Andreas (2015) is less of a joke, but in terms of the science, it’s still bad. But unlike 10.5 (2004), it does have SOME science, which is shell-shocking.Generally, the most accurate films are documentaries, like NOVA’s “LA Killer Quake.”I’d look for stuff like that.If you’re wanting a film to criticize, I recommend the films I just mentioned.

What good movies are recommended with themes like religion vs. science?

It isn't strictly religion vs. science, but you must watch The Man From Earth (2007).PS. Do not go through a synopsis or review of the movie before you watch it, because anything you read about it will effectively be a SPOILER.

What do drummers think of the movie Whiplash?

Whiplash Got It All Wrong!Movies about musicians offer musical approximations that usually satisfy in inverse proportion to a viewer’s devotion to the actual music behind the story. Whiplash turned out to be one such example. From past 6 months, I was being suggested to watch Whiplash because my friends thought I would love it. My MustWatchMovies list was so long that today, I finally watched it after 6 months of being told about it for the first time.You guessed it right from the title of this blog, I didn’t like the movie, let alone loving it. Miles has done a credible job of playing the protagonist. I really liked Terence Fletcher’s role as the authoritarian leader of the school’s concert band and an ostensible career maker. And ironically, this is the same place where I lost the movie.I don’t know the claims of director and producer for this movie. But if they had claimed to make a movie to show the real behind the scenes of a music school, it’s astonishingly far from reality.Smacking somebody's face on beat four.Instructor throwing the floor tom just because of the slow tempo.Trying to raise the capability to increase the tempo by trying to play as fast as possible and forgetting the fuck about music.Instructor classifying musicians as core members and alternates and asking the alternates to clean off the blood shed by core.I have been professionally trained in music. I have enough background in Music theory and percussion instruments to vouch for the process of learning music and what’s the real meaning of musicality.It’s really sad that Whiplash got it all wrong. It's never about pursuing a kid to get faster till the time he/she bleeds. This is what leads to burning out and eventually leaving the thing you actually loved and could have done so much better, had you been blessed with a fine instructor.Stopping rehearsal every two seconds to address tempo. I mean really?Increasing the tempo involves getting the metronome up and gradually increase it till the time it goes to the muscle memory. It can never be increased in 30 minutes with instructor sucking the blood out of your head.If the movie really wanted to promote perseverance and hard work, music wasn’t a very good choice of topic for that. That’s what I feel. Music is an art.Go-you-motherfucker-suck-on-that-drum-throne attitude simply doesn’t work in music.Nevertheless, movie was fun to watch but I felt the principles being showcased to be insanely wrong.

What are some movies a physicist might enjoy? Are there good movies based on real physicists?

My current top 3:1. Real Genius (1985) - A precocious 15-year-old is admitted to Cal- er, sorry, "Pacific Tech." There he encounters lasers, dry ice, secret government projects, and all kinds of hilarious shenanigans. Physicists will relate to the silliness and stresses inherent to any good technical education.2. Contact (1997) - based on the Carl Sagan novel by the same name. A female scientist discovers a message of extraterrestrial origin with a radio telescope array. Scientists race to decode it; politicians battle to control the aftermath. Sagan's work speculates intelligently about both how an alien intelligence might broadcast its existence and how humanity would react to such a discovery.3. Gravity (2013) - A routine spacewalk ends in disaster: two stranded astronauts try desperately to return to earth as the entirety of humanity's technical achievement in space is unceremoniously torn apart by debris from an exploded satellite. Physicists may appreciate that this sci-fi thriller presents realistic trajectories, views of the earth's surface, etc., without resorting to technological "magic," audible explosions in a vacuum, or other liberties typical of the genre. Personally I like that an astronaut finds herself at the mercy, not of (say) a supernova or a black hole, but of a familiar force, just barely beyond the atmosphere of her home planet, and I was struck by the frailty of both our bodies and our technology.

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