Dana Graves, whose pregnancy announcement to her husband after 17 years of infertility went viral, is making plans to finally bring her baby, born 16 weeks premature, home. Kaleb Arkell Graves was delivered via C-section at 24 weeks last October after doctors told Dana that the pregnancy had caused nearly fatal high blood pressure and to carry the baby any longer would cost her her life. 'The doctor told me, 'If you continue to carry this baby, you're going to die,' " Graves, 41, tells People. The Virginia woman insisted on carrying the baby until he reached a point where he would have the best chance of survival,...
- 3/10/2016
- by Tiare Dunlap, @tiaredunlap
- PEOPLE.com
Dana Graves, whose pregnancy announcement to her husband after 17 years of infertility went viral, is making plans to finally bring her baby, born 16 weeks premature, home. Kaleb Arkell Graves was delivered via C-section at 24 weeks last October after doctors told Dana that the pregnancy had caused nearly fatal high blood pressure and to carry the baby any longer would cost her her life. 'The doctor told me, 'If you continue to carry this baby, you're going to die,' " Graves, 41, tells People. The Virginia woman insisted on carrying the baby until he reached a point where he would have the best chance of survival,...
- 3/10/2016
- by Tiare Dunlap, @tiaredunlap
- PEOPLE.com
[Spoilers ahead if you haven't seen last night's episode.] In last night’s Homeland, Carrie was further betrayed by Saul and recommitted to a mental institution, which is pretty bad. Dana still has it worse. Think about it: Her ex exploded in the CIA bombing, and her dad was named as the man who plotted it. She attempted suicide. She’s having sex in laundry rooms with a kid she met in rehab. Vulture got ahold of Morgan Saylor, 18, while she was on a break from shooting the season’s tenth episode, to talk about “Uh… Oh… Ah…” (the title of last night’s episode, presumably referring to Dana’s big night), her furrowed eyebrows, and life without Damian Lewis. But first, there’s the issue of Dana’s new obsession with selfies.What’s your stance on selfies?They’re weird! I feel like people look ugly in them. I don’t know; it’s not something I...
- 10/7/2013
- by Denise Martin
- Vulture
Homeland, Season 3: Episode 1 – “Tin Man is Down”
Written by Alex Gansa & Barbara Hall
Directed by Lesli Linka Glatter
Airs Sunday nights at 9pm Et on Showtime
On a night when Breaking Bad – one of the most viscerally engaging series in television history – completes its run, it’s hard not to notice how quiet Homeland‘s third-season premiere is. This series is, after all, the one that pulled the Emmy win for best drama and had the attention of viewers and critics alike throughout its uneven second season (“uneven” is a more correct adjective than “weak” in this case; despite how disenchanted some people were last year, Homeland was still one of the best things on TV). So, coming out with a bang in “Tin Man is Down” seems like a good re-entry. But the pace of the premiere, rather than being a missed opportunity, is a testament to the...
Written by Alex Gansa & Barbara Hall
Directed by Lesli Linka Glatter
Airs Sunday nights at 9pm Et on Showtime
On a night when Breaking Bad – one of the most viscerally engaging series in television history – completes its run, it’s hard not to notice how quiet Homeland‘s third-season premiere is. This series is, after all, the one that pulled the Emmy win for best drama and had the attention of viewers and critics alike throughout its uneven second season (“uneven” is a more correct adjective than “weak” in this case; despite how disenchanted some people were last year, Homeland was still one of the best things on TV). So, coming out with a bang in “Tin Man is Down” seems like a good re-entry. But the pace of the premiere, rather than being a missed opportunity, is a testament to the...
- 9/30/2013
- by Sean Colletti
- SoundOnSight
Drew Goddard’s The Cabin in the Woods (2012) has been a huge critical and commercial success but has not yet been reviewed in these columns – though released commercially in India about a month or so ago. Although The Cabin in the Woods is nominally a teen horror film in the mold of Sam Raimi’s The Evil Dead (1981), it not only uses another kind of narrative – perhaps consciously derived from The Truman Show (1998) – to frame itself but also invokes whole sub-categories from the horror genre to assume the shape of a quiz or puzzle for film buffs.
The teen horror story part of the film revolves around five young people who go off on a picnic to a cabin somewhere in the mountains. At the last gas stop before their destination, a decrepit old man mumbles that it will be easier for them to reach the cottage than get back...
The teen horror story part of the film revolves around five young people who go off on a picnic to a cabin somewhere in the mountains. At the last gas stop before their destination, a decrepit old man mumbles that it will be easier for them to reach the cottage than get back...
- 6/19/2012
- by MK Raghvendra
- DearCinema.com
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