memories within..

InformationDecember 9, 2008 5:27 am

   

 

“When you can live forever,

what do you live for”

I wasn’t supposed to watch this movie coz it didn’t interest me at first.. But my classmate convinced me to watch the film.. And so I watched it. Turned out to be a nice film after all. So nice that I already read the next novels for the film. I’m currently reading the 4th book entitled, Breaking Dawn .. The next time I’m posting for twilight, it would be most probably the plot for the succeeding novels.^_^ Moreover, I like its OST.. Paramore’s Decode and Iron and Wine’s Flightless Bird American Mouth. Here’s the plot of the movie. You’ve gotta watch it too.! ^_^

Plot:

Seventeen-year-old Isabella “Bella” Swan moves to the small town of Forks, Washington, to live with her father, Charlie. There, she finds herself drawn to a mysterious classmate, Edward Cullen, who is revealed to be a 108-year-old vampire, but is physically seventeen. Although Edward discourages the romance at first, they soon fall deeply in love. When the arrival of three nomadic vampires, James, Laurent, and Victoria, puts Bella’s life in danger, Edward and his family, Alice, Carlisle, Esme, Jasper, Emmett and Rosalie, put their lives at stake to save her.


InformationJuly 27, 2008 9:05 am

Joe Rao
SPACE.com Skywatching Columnist
SPACE.com

Anyone gazing at the summer night sky for even a short length of time is likely to spot a few "shooting stars" darting across the sky.

Meteors are typically bits of material left behind by comets. They’re often no larger than sand grains, and they vaporize as they enter our atmosphere. In general, the Earth encounters richer meteoric activity during the second half of the year. Between August 3 and 15, there are a half-dozen different minor displays that are active.

The best display of the summer comes during the second week of August: the annual Perseid meteor shower. At its peak around the nights of Aug. 11 and 12, this display can produce 50 to 100 fast, bright meteors per hour.

This will be a fair-to-good year to watch for the Perseids. A bright gibbous moon, which initially will interfere with observations, will set at around 1:30 a.m., leaving the rest of the night dark for prospective meteor watchers. The only equipment you’ll need is your eyes and a modest amount of patience.

–> I hope I could see those shooting stars.. Hmm.. better prepare on that day.. ^_^