The movie doesn't have any villain or bad guys. It WILL make you cry so if you don't like to cry than don't watch. It's sad but a beautiful kind of sadness. It's such a sad beautiful tale of loyalty that I'm crying writing the review. At the end of the movie Hachi sees his master "finally return" and closes his eyes to rejoin him forever. Hi s masters widow sees him still waiting and breaks down because he is still waiting. Hachi even escapes his owners children who have taken over caring for him so that he can wait for his master who will never come back. The dog still goes to the train station to wait for him. One day the man goes to teach but suffers a major heart attack and dies. The man grows very attached to the dog and they have their little routine where Hachi ALWAYS meets the man at the train station. He takes it home, planning to find it a home but winds up keeping him and names him Hachiko, or Hachi for short. Mild SPOILERS: the movie starts at a train station where a college teacher finds an Akita puppy that is lost. Which Side of History? How Technology Is Reshaping Democracy and Our Lives.Cómo saber si una aplicación o sitio web son realmente educativos.
How to Tell If an App or a Website Is Good for Learning.
International Details - Enemies has a lot of International Friends The latest from Timur Bekmambetov debuted in second place in his native Russia behind Avatar with an estimated $8 million on 700 screens. Those markets include Russia, Ukraine, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. International Details - Lightning Strikes on the International Chartīlack Lightning opened in sixth place internationally with $8.42 million on 798 screens in 5 markets. That film placed first in Italy with $7.56 million on 608 screens over the weekend, giving it $12.91 million in total. More than half the films on this week's International Details column were international films, starting with sixth place Io, loro E Lara. International Details - More International Flavor That said, while the DVD and the Blu-ray for Precious are worth picking up, the Up in the Air Blu-ray is too expensive compared to the DVD. Because of that, it is hard for me to say which one is more deserving of the Pick of the Week honors, so I'm going to award that title to both of them. I was supposed to review both Precious and Up in the Air, but they ran out of screeners for the latter. We have a pair of Awards Season players coming out this week. DVD and Blu-ray Releases for March 9th, 2010