Page 4

Herald_033116_FNL_lorez

Page 4 March 31, 2016 EL SEGUNDO HERALD Classifieds The deadline for Classified Ad submission and payment is Noon on Tuesday to appear in Thursday’s paper. Advertisements must be submitted in writing by mail, fax or email. You may pay by cash, check, or credit card (Visa or M/C over the phone). Errors: Please check your advertisements immediately. Any corrections and/or changes in an ad must be requested prior to the following Tuesday deadline in order to receive a credit. A credit will be issued for only the first time the error appears. Multiple runs will only be credited for the first time the error appears. No credit will be issued for an amount greater than the cost of the advertisement. Beware: Employment offers that suggest guaranteed out-of-state or overseas positions may be deceptive or unethical in nature. If you have any doubts about the nature of a company, contact the local office of the Better Business Bureau, (213) 251-9696. Herald Publications does not guarantee that the advertiser’s claims are true nor does it take responsibility for those claims. Employment Photographer wanted f o r Inglewood, Hawthorne, and Lawndale areas: We need photos each week plus coverage of some events.$10/ per published photo. Must provide names and captions with all photos. Interested parties email management@heraldpublications. com. No calls please. For Rent El Segundo 3 bd/2 ba plus family room, dishwasher, stove, tiled and carpeted floors, fireplace, ceiling fans, vertical blinds, two balconies, laundry on premises, secured parking, 1618 sq ft, 1 year lease, $2800.00 per month. 512 W. Imperial Ave. Contact John @ 310-322-1552 To appear in next week’s paper, submit your Classifed Ad by Noon on Tuesday. I Saw The Light From Hank Williams’ Shadows By Ryan Rojas for Cinemacy.com Audiences are about to see American music icon Hank Williams in a whole new light. From director Marc Abraham (whose other feature film credit was 2008’s Greg Kinnearstarrer  Flash of Genius) comes  I Saw the Light, a Hank Williams biopic that brings the singer’s dark past of booze, infidelity, and generally being an all-around “sonuvabitch” to the big screen. For our interview with Tom Hiddleston, Elizabeth Olsen, and director Marc Abraham, visit cinemacy.com. The main problem with the film, which feels like it slogs with a tired morose from start to finish, is that the story of Williams as a drunk isn’t a particularly interesting one–at least not when it isn’t balanced out with any other redeeming parts of his life as an inspired artist, and one so culturally important to rock and roll on the whole. In choosing to focus on the darker and more unknown parts of the troubled star’s life, we also get a heavy heaping of drunkenness and depression which, when assembled together in awkwardly edited fragments of the singer’s life, fail to make the case that his life was movie-worthy. Based on the book Hank Williams: The Biography, the film stitches together an assortment of moments from Williams’ life–an early marriage to Southern Belle Audrey Williams (Elizabeth Olsen), recording sessions here and there, the arrival of a new child, one or two other scenes of Williams actually performing in concert–along with Williams’ indulgences in drugs, alcohol, and women. While Abraham may have wished to tell a more honest story of the man under the 10-gallon cowboy hat by crafting scenes that feature one, two, or three people, the economy of the movie just feels too small to hold interest in. Noticeably, most scenes take place in small recording studios, bedrooms, and other tight spaces, which only ultimately expose how empty the story is; when you notice that Williams is wearing the same pajama pants in three separate bedroom scenes, it’s probably clear that there should have been more diversity in scenes, or moments of his life, rather than continuing to beat the movie’s central focus of dealing with depravity like a dead horse. As biopics go, and as another rock biopic to profile a legendary American icon country singer,  I Saw the Light  won’t be able to distance itself from the Johnny Cash movie Walk the Line, which continues to age and arguably stand as one of the finest biopics ever made. Where Cash’s devil-may-care attitude was rebounded by his madly-crazy love for one Ms. June Carter (with completely inspired performances from Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon), Williams is portrayed as a man troubled by his own demons and nothing more, which makes for an all-consuming character that comes off as just plain selfish. Tom Hiddleston manages to give a graceful and connected performance, as the English actor embodies the tortured star in a collected manner with the twinkle in his eye for delinquency. However, something about the lean Brit never feels particularly, dare I say it, American, and with such a limiting script, we never feel like we learn much more about Williams than his more scandalous ways. Elizabeth Olsen is along for the ride as Williams’ first wife, in what’s a two-hander type role, until around the third act when she (and her overly twangy country drawl) fall into the background as her less than faithful husband finds courtship with two other women. What feels like a cliché device of Williams learning of a chronic back illness that slowly deteriorates his body and psyche, putters out to a less than satisfying ending to what was already a drag. I Saw the Light fails to deliver what its title promises, as Williams fails to find enlightenment or meaning in a life of fast living. By the time the story caps at his youthful age of 29, we are only left to wonder what this story’s fuller potential could have been  if it didn’t wish to live in the shadows the entire time. 2 hr 3 min. Rated R for some language and brief sexuality/nudity. Now Playing. • puz MEDIUM 03.31.16 PUZZLE - 219 Crossword by Myles Mellor WEEKLY CROSSWORD See Answers Next Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 53. Excessive 57. “Should ____ be forgot.......” 61. Above 62. With violet or conservative 63. Old Italian bread 64. A pop 65. Away from the wind 66. Batman foe Down 1. Carton 2. Flees 3. All __ Jazz 4. Min. part (for short) 5. Latin “I” 6. Like hen’s teeth 7. Linen fabric 8. Healing juices 9. Bright 10. Exasperating child 12. Put to work 13. Camera part 14. Computer rule of bad input, bad output 16. Ducks and ___ 17. Wee 21. Badger 23. Thick piece 11. Diamond Head locale 13. Aboveboard 14. Collagist's need 15. Tree trimmings Sudoku Solution Last Week’s Answers 24. Snowman prop 25. Inspiring a feeling of fear 26. Bio stat 28. Get out of bed 29. Sleep 30. Pastoral place 33. Galileo’s birthplace 34. Percolate 35. Cruise stopover 37. Gullible one 38. Take back 39. Road surface material 43. Sweeping 45. Balm 46. Mandate 47. Battlestar Galactica character 49. ___ sandwich 50. Campus store 51. Light greenish-blue 52. Select 54. Lentil sauce 55. Single piece 56. Light brown 58. Gobbled up 59. High dudgeon 60. Absorb, as a cost 2 8 4 7 5 3 1 6 9 9 3 7 1 6 8 5 4 2 6 1 5 9 2 4 8 7 3 5 7 9 4 3 6 2 8 1 8 6 1 5 9 2 4 3 7 4 2 3 8 7 1 6 9 5 3 4 8 2 1 7 9 5 6 1 5 6 3 4 9 7 2 8 7 9 2 6 8 5 3 1 4 Across 1. Short order? 4. Medieval worker 8. Nile viper 11. Diamond Head locale 13. Aboveboard 14. Collagist’s need 15. Tree trimmings 18. Harsh 19. Insistent 20. Havana residue 22. Prying 23. Command to a dog 27. The ___ bird catches the worm! 31. Lord’s worker 32. Native Canadian from Ontario 33. Tire meas. 36. Lodge bashes 40. Governor in the Ottoman Empire 41. Too 42. Picasso’s equipment 43. Foils 44. Soft fabric 45. “General Hospital,” e.g. 48. Pilot’s announcement, briefly 50. Heart related Across 1. Short order? 4. Medieval worker 8. Nile viper A 1 N 2 T 3 I 4 T 5 A 6 C 7 O 8 S 9 B 10 A 11 S 12 H 13 W 14 O O D A 15 T R I A I 16 S L E N 17 O G O P 18 O U L T G 19 E A R SUDOKU by Myles Mellor and Susan Flanagan 20 K A L 21 E A N D C A 22 B B A G E 23 24 Each Sudoku G S A L puzzle Y R E consists of a 9X9 grid that has been subdivided grids of 3X3 squares. To solve the puzzle each row, column of the numbers 1 to 9. Puzzles come in three grades: easy, medium Level: Medium MEDIUM puz 219 - 1 (unmodified) A 25 N 26 G 27 E 28 R L 29 A 30 O O 31 N T 32 A 33 P 34 C 35 E R M E T 36 I 37 T S 38 I 39 D O T 40 R O U T A N 41 D H A L 42 I 43 B U T O 44 V A R 45 U E P 46 U R E S T R 47 E N E 48 W 49 I 50 D S 51 C 52 A T T Y G 57 R 58 A 59 P E S A N 60 D P E A 61 R 62 S 63 H 64 I F I S 65 N I D E I 66 O T A 67 A 68 G A R A 69 C K E E R 70 U E S T 71 A R E M 72 E E D S Y 73 E W S SUDOKU Medium M 53 O A 54 S O 55 E 56 R 2 7 9 4 9 8 6 8 3 9 3 7 9 1 6 2 7 7 8 5 9 8 3 5 7 1 4 2 1 8 Each Sudoku puzzle consists of a 9X9 grid that has been subdivided into nine smaller grids of 3X3 squares. To solve the puzzle each row, column and box must contain each of the numbers 1 to 9. Film Review Elizabeth Olsen as Audrey Williams and Tom Hiddleston as Hank Williams. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.


Herald_033116_FNL_lorez
To see the actual publication please follow the link above