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To: Tom Hua who wrote (17167)12/10/2001 4:11:06 PM
From: Jay Hardy  Respond to of 19633
 
How about EMLX!

Tom, about Longitude: It's the story about an English carpenter in the early 1700's who successfully solved the problem of a seaworthy method for finding Longitude. Without which ships could not tell where they were very precisely. Because he was self-educated; and not a member of the "ruling" class it took 40+ years to prove his case to the arrogant Royal Society.

more:
Amazon.com essential video
Gracefully adapted from Dava Sobel's extraordinary bestseller, the four-part TV production of Longitude combines drama, history, and science into a stimulating, painstakingly authentic account of personal triumph and joyous discovery. Equally impressive is the way writer-director Charles Sturridge has crafted parallel stories that complement each other with enriching perspective. The first story involves the successful 40-year effort of 18th-century clockmaker John Harrison (Michael Gambon) to solve the elusive problem of measuring longitude at sea. In 1714 the British Parliament had offered a generous reward to anyone who solved the problem, and Harrison devoted his life to that solution. The second story, some 200 years later, involves the effort of shell-shocked British Navy veteran Rupert Gould (Jeremy Irons) to restore the glorious clocks that Harrison had built. Like Harrison, Gould is the most admirable type of obsessive, but, also like Harrison, he risks his marriage to accomplish his difficult task.
Thousands of sailors perished at sea before Harrison's triumph changed history, but Longitude demonstrates that Harrison's glory was slow to arrive--and his prize money even slower. A fascinating study of 18th-century British politics and clashing egos in the arena of science, the film is both epic and intimate in consequence, and Sturridge's magnificent script inspires Gambon and Irons to do some of the best work of their outstanding careers. The ever-reliable Ian Hart appears in Part 3 as Harrison's now-adult son and apprentice, and Longitude approaches its dramatic climax with the exhilarating tension of a first-rate thriller. Rallying after sickness to prove the integrity of their marvelous seafaring chronometers, the Harrisons still had to fight for official recognition, and Gould's restoration of the Harrison clockworks provides a fitting coda to this exceptional story about the thrill of discovery and the tenacity of remarkable men. --Jeff Shannon



To: Tom Hua who wrote (17167)12/10/2001 6:22:26 PM
From: gladman  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 19633
 
The NAZ is like the weather here in Chicago, every morning you wake up and think it's going to be freezing but then you open the front door and it's 50 friggin degrees out... you just shake your head and laugh because,,,, you know in about a week or 2,,, it's going to be a tundra!