Credit: Brooke Army Medical Center, Robert Shields, photographer
Last week (Jan. 14), Oscar-nominated actor Bradley Cooper paid a surprise visit to service members and patients at the Brooke Army Medical Center.
260 service members and staff were invited to preview Cooper’s new movie, American Sniper, based on the life of military sniper Chris Kyle. Kyle emerged from the war in Iraq as the most lethal sniper in the history of the U.S. military,
According to Bamc’s report:
As the movie was playing in the auditorium, Cooper was in the Institute of Surgical Research Burn Center Rehabilitation Gym visiting patients, staff and Warrior Transition Battalion Soldiers, signing several movie posters and T-shirts which he handed out.
As Cooper made his way through the hospital to the auditorium, he received a warm reception from everyone he encountered. As he entered the auditorium, the crowd erupted with cheers.
A few special guests...
Last week (Jan. 14), Oscar-nominated actor Bradley Cooper paid a surprise visit to service members and patients at the Brooke Army Medical Center.
260 service members and staff were invited to preview Cooper’s new movie, American Sniper, based on the life of military sniper Chris Kyle. Kyle emerged from the war in Iraq as the most lethal sniper in the history of the U.S. military,
According to Bamc’s report:
As the movie was playing in the auditorium, Cooper was in the Institute of Surgical Research Burn Center Rehabilitation Gym visiting patients, staff and Warrior Transition Battalion Soldiers, signing several movie posters and T-shirts which he handed out.
As Cooper made his way through the hospital to the auditorium, he received a warm reception from everyone he encountered. As he entered the auditorium, the crowd erupted with cheers.
A few special guests...
- 1/22/2015
- by Michelle McCue
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Normal 0 false false false En-us X-none X-none
By Todd Garbarini
The Conversation (1974), the best film that Francis Ford Coppola has ever made, begins with a bird's-eye view of a crowd of people in San Francisco's Union Square. The camera slowly and decisively zeroes in on specific people moving about, such as a mime (Robert Shields of the “Shields and Yarnell” television show from 1977-1978 and one of the world's greatest mimes) and eventually rests on our protagonist, Harry Caul, a wire tapper and surveillance expert played by Gene Hackman in one of his best screen performances. From the film's very first frame, this is a movie about seeing and listening without being detected. It's also about deeper issues such as guilt, paranoia, responsibility, absolution and redemption, themes that were common to American cinema in the 1970's during the Watergate scandal and the Vietnam era. What is even more amazing is...
By Todd Garbarini
The Conversation (1974), the best film that Francis Ford Coppola has ever made, begins with a bird's-eye view of a crowd of people in San Francisco's Union Square. The camera slowly and decisively zeroes in on specific people moving about, such as a mime (Robert Shields of the “Shields and Yarnell” television show from 1977-1978 and one of the world's greatest mimes) and eventually rests on our protagonist, Harry Caul, a wire tapper and surveillance expert played by Gene Hackman in one of his best screen performances. From the film's very first frame, this is a movie about seeing and listening without being detected. It's also about deeper issues such as guilt, paranoia, responsibility, absolution and redemption, themes that were common to American cinema in the 1970's during the Watergate scandal and the Vietnam era. What is even more amazing is...
- 10/24/2011
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
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