I’ve started assembling a concise list of very good (or better) films that I’ve seen since I began keeping careful track of my ratings a few years ago. Of course, this list is highly subjective, but there’s a good chance you’ll quickly discover at least a few choice candidates you might not have considered. (Most are available from Netflix on DVD.)
Tag Archives: article
comparing movie reviews
Film review sites use a variety of different rating systems, making it somewhat difficult to compare assessments from many independent sources. Which is the better score, 4 out of 5 stars from a site that only uses whole stars, or 3 out of 4 stars from a site that uses half-stars? (You might be surprised at the answer!) To help answer such vexing questions, I’ve created a comparison of movie rating systems, with conversion tables covering the most commonly used rating schemes.
summary of the best movie information and review sites
Movies are a great source of entertainment, but choosing the next movie to watch can be challenging. You don’t want to waste your time watching a disappointing movie. On the other hand, you can’t afford to spend too much time making a choice. The problem isn’t due to a lack of information, but an over-abundance. To help navigate more efficiently through the maze of movie information that’s available online, I’ve put together a compact summary of essential movie resources, including links to the most useful pages on those sites. If you’re looking for ideas about which movies to see, beyond what’s currently playing in theaters, this should be a pretty good starting point.
non-blog pages, templates, and menus in WordPress
Although WordPress started out as a blogging tool, it has evolved into a general purpose content management framework. The Twenty Eleven theme includes three template “Page” types, which I’ve illustrated here:
- the original Sample Page based on the Default Template
- sample page using the Showcase Template
- sample page using the Sidebar Template
For historical reasons, WordPress uses the overloaded term “Page” for what might better have been called an “article”. In WordPress, a Page refers to an item of content that is not a blog posting. By default, these article pages are organized into an automatically generated menu structure, tied to the main menu bar at the top of each page. The default menu organization is based on the hierarchical relationship and ordering assigned to each page, and the menu item text (navigational label) is simply the article title.
Substituting a custom menu instead of using the default menu scheme provides much greater flexibility. (Use the Dashboard’s Appearance, Menus command to get to the menu customization screen.) For example, you can customize the text of menu items, so they needn’t match article titles, and you can incorporate blog posts, archive pages, and types of content other than article pages into the menu.
You can build a custom menu organization that does not depend on hierarchical, parent-child relationships specified with the article pages themselves. This avoids potentially undesirable complications due to the way that WordPress assigns URLs (permalinks) to pages. When a page is specified as having a parent, the assigned URL is the parent page URL, followed by a slash and then the title of the child page (i.e. the “slug” form of the title). This results in a longer URL, and one that is less likely to be stable under reorganization of the site. For that reason, I’ve avoided using WordPress’ page hierarchy mechanism, by designating “no parent” for each of my pages.
Related references:
- http://codex.wordpress.org/Glossary#Page
- http://codex.wordpress.org/Glossary#Slug
- http://codex.wordpress.org/Glossary#Template
- http://codex.wordpress.org/Glossary#Twenty_Eleven_theme
- http://codex.wordpress.org/Pages
- http://codex.wordpress.org/Pages_Screen
- http://codex.wordpress.org/Pages_Add_New_Screen
- http://codex.wordpress.org/Template_Hierarchy