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Page 105 - இருபது முதல் சிஇஎன்டியுவ்ஆர்ஒய் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Chloe Zhao s Nomadland to be released in February next year - World News

2020-12-15 22:35:51 GMT2020-12-16 06:35:51(Beijing Time) Xinhua English LOS ANGELES, Dec. 15 (Xinhua) Chinese filmmaker Chloe Zhao s award-winning film Nomadland has been set to open on Feb. 19, 2021 in North America, according to Disney s Searchlight Pictures. See You Down the Road, Nomadland, tweeted Searchlight Pictures on Monday. The studio also released a new official trailer, offering a further look at the critically acclaimed film. Based on Jessica Bruder s 2017 non-fiction book Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century, the film stars two-time Oscar winner Frances McDormand as an out-of-work woman who packs her van and sets off from her small town to travel around the vast landscape of the American West, exploring a life outside of conventional society as a modern-day nomad.

Frances McDormand Travels the American West in Nomadland Trailer

Nomadland The awards hopeful, Chloe Zhao s third film, premiered at the 2020 Venice Film Festival where it won the Golden Lion. Searchlight Pictures has unveiled a new trailer for Chloé Zhao’s awards hopeful Nomadland, starring Oscar winner Frances McDormand. In what Nomadland follows Fern (McDormand), a widow who leaves her small town to explore life outside of conventional society. The trailer opens to Fern at a camping ground, one of her many stops along her nomadic journey. Her van the vehicle that she calls home can be seen in the distance, followed by scenic shots of Fern driving through the American West.

A new book discusses not just why, but how the U S should pay reparations to Black Americans

A new book discusses not just why, but how the U.S. should pay reparations to Black Americans Rodney Brooks . © Gerald Herbert/AP This July 14, 2017 photo shows a memorial by Woodrow Nash for the German Coast Uprising at the Whitney Plantation in Edgard, La. After the uprising, slaves who participated were tried and executed. Their heads were placed in public view along the Mississippi River, to serve as a warning to others. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert) William A. Darity Jr. and A. Kirsten Mullen may be unique among advocates of reparations for Black Americans in actually offering a framework for how they would be paid. In their book “From Here to Equality: Reparations for Black Americans in the Twenty-First Century,” the authors say the amount of reparations should be determined by what it will take to eliminate the Black-White wealth gap between $10 trillion and $12 trillion, or $200,000 to $250,000 per eligible recipient, which they estimate to be abo

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