Fingers
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | USA |
---|---|
Directors | James Toback |
Screenplay | James Toback |
Distributed by | Brut Productions |
Producers | George Barrie |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2316688 |
About Fingers
Jimmy (Harvey Keitel) wants nothing more than to play Carnegie Hall. He has talent, and the ambition is definitely there. But Jimmy is the son of a mob boss (Michael V. Gazzo) and when he's not practicing piano, he's roughing up guys unable to pay their debts to his father. To ease the pressure he feels between his family obligations and his artistic ambitions, Jimmy indulges in sex and drugs. But the stress is getting too much, and Jimmy may ruin everything as his life spins out of control. …
British sign language gets climate change update
... " Mr McMulkin used the sign for " photosynthesis" as an example, which uses one flat hand-shape to represent a leaf, while projecting the Fingers - like the sun s rays - from other hand...
Everything Everywhere All At Once: A guide to the references, Easter eggs and meanings
... A parody of 2001: A Space Odyssey s " discovery of tools" sequence involves a group of apes fighting to their death - except on this occasion they have hot dogs for Fingers...
One careful step at a time through Lebanon's minefields
... I was knocked unconscious and when I woke up I couldn t see my Fingers...
Iran schoolgirls remove hijabs in protests against government
... Some were raising their middle Fingers - an obscene gesture - at portraits of Ayatollah Khamenei and the founder of the Islamic Republic, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini...
Subbuteo: Meet Wales' 12-year-old table football champion
... " While some football team owners might struggle to control their players, Ruby has all of hers under her thumb - and flicking Fingers - whenever she wants...
Premier League: Mystery about professional hair cuts
......
Harry Potter: How one drag queen became 31 JK Rowling characters
... I was gluing hair to my body and to my Fingers - it was just disgusting...
Surgeons save hand severed by electric saw
... However, it had been cut off almost completely in two places - at the base of his palm and again just below the Fingers - resulting in a double-level amputation...
British sign language gets climate change update
By Victoria GillScience correspondent, Bbc News
Deaf scientists and Sign Language experts have created hundreds of new signs for British Sign Language (BSL).
Expanded BSL vocabulary now includes climate-related terms Like " greenhouse gas" and " carbon footprint" for which there were no official signs.
That meant children, teachers and scientists would often have to finger-spell long, complex, scientific terms.
" We're trying to create the perfect signs that visualise scientific concepts, " explains Dr Audrey Cameron .
Dr Cameron, who is profoundly deaf, leads at Edinburgh University, which has just added 200 new Environmental Science terms to the BSL dictionary.
She described how, in her own scientific career, a lack of vocabulary meant she was excluded from important meetings and conversations.
" I was involved in research for 11 years and went to numerous meetings but was never was truly involved because I couldn't understand what people were saying, " she told Bbc News . " I wanted to talk with people about chemistry and I just wasn't able to. "
Glasgow-based biology teacher Liam McMulkin has also been involved in The Sign -creation workshops, hosted by the. " The Beauty of Sign Language - particularly for Science - is that it's a visual Language , " he explained.
" Some of the concepts are abstract, but Sign Language can really help children to understand them. "
Mr McMulkin used The Sign for " photosynthesis" as an example, which uses one flat hand-shape to represent a leaf, while projecting the Fingers - Like The Sun 's Rays - from other hand.
" When I do this [move The Sun hand towards The Leaf hand], you can see that the energy is being absorbed by The Leaf , " he explained.
The Science glossary project, funded in part by, has been running since 2007 and has added about 7,000 new signs to BSL.
Describing The Process by which signs are developed, Dr Cameron explained: " We take a list of terms from The School curriculum And Then work together to come up with something accurate but also visual of the meaning. "
The newest signs are themed around biodiversity, ecosystems, the physical environment and pollution. There is an demonstrating the terms.
Missing wordsThe glossary is designed to support deaf children in schools. And as 13-year-old Melissa, a deaf student at a mainstream school in Glasgow explained: " they really help you understand what's happening. "
Melissa showed me the difference between laboriously finger-spelling greenhouse gases (G-R-E-E-N-H-O-U-S-E G-A-S-E-S), and using the new sign that includes moving her closed fists around Like gas molecules in the air.
" With The Sign I can see something is happening with the gas, " She Said .
Mr McMulkin, who is Melissa's Science teacher and is also profoundly deaf, added that hearing people were " constantly learning and acquiring knowledge" wherever they go, " but deaf people miss out on so much information".
" That's why it's so important to use Sign Language in Science lessons in schools, " He Said . " It allows deaf children to learn in their natural Language . "
Dr Cameron also highlighted the value in education of depicting intricate scientific concepts in hand Movements - for both hearing and deaf children.
Dr Cameron recalled observing a class in which five-year-olds were learning about how things float or sink. " They were learning about how things that are less dense will float, which is quite complex, " she explained. " And The Teacher was using The Sign for 'density'. "
The Sign explains that concept by using one closed fist and wrapping The Other hand around it - squeezing and releasing to represent different densities.
" I Thought - these five-year-olds are not going to get this. But some time after The End of The Lesson , they were asked A Question about why things float or sink and they all used The Sign for density, " Dr Cameron said.
" So I've seen how much of an impact this can have. And My Passion has just grown as the glossary has grown. "
Prof Jeremy Sanders , chair of the Royal Society diversity and inclusion committee, said: " We hope these new signs will inspire and empower the Next Generation of BSL-using students and allow practising scientists to share their vital work with The World . "
Additional reporting by Kate Stephens and Maddie Molloy
Hear more about The Mission to create this visual vocabulary on Radio 4 's
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com