The Gate (2014 film)

The Gate (French: Le Temps des aveux) is a 2014 French-Belgian-Cambodian drama film directed by Régis Wargnier, based on the memoir of the same name by François Bizot. The film debuted at the Telluride Film Festival on 29 August 2014. It was also screened in the Special Presentations section of the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival in September 2014.

Cast

  • Raphaël Personnaz as François Bizot
  • Olivier Gourmet as Marsac
  • Phoeung Kompheak as Douch
  • References

    External links

  • The Gate at the Internet Movie Database
  • The Gate, Newcastle

    The Gate is a retail and leisure complex in Newcastle upon Tyne, England.

    History

    The venue lends its name from the street on which it lies, Newgate Street. It is part of the historic Grainger Town area of Newcastle. It was opened on 28 November 2002.

    The Gate has 19 venues spread across three floors, including a 16-screen Empire Cinema and Aspers Casino. The Gate is also next to Newcastle's Chinatown; there is an entrance on Stowell Street. The Gate building was built to replace the 35-year-old, 7-storey Newgate House, which was home to the prolific music venue; The Mayfair club. Mood Bar opened on 28 November 2002, the same time as The Gate.

    The 19,235 m², £80 million venue was built by Land Securities and the 12m tall sculpture outside, "Ellipsis Eclipses" was designed by Danny Lane. The 24 metre high glass façade was designed by Space Decks Limited. The Odeon Cinema (now Empire) was built to replace the 72-year-old Odeon/Paramount cinema on Pilgrim Street. The Gate provided 400 new jobs when opened and a further 600 during construction.

    Mark Deutrom

    Mark Deutrom is a musician, composer, songwriter, and producer.

    Career

    In the early 1980s Deutrom was a member of a Los Angeles based art co-op called Werkgruppe founded by D. Emily Hicks and Daniel Joseph Martinez. Lori Black was also a member. Deutrom contributed several multichannel soundtracks for Hicks' and Martinez's conceptual pieces culminating in a 23 channel synthetic audio environment for the 1984 Olympics Arts Festival installation entitled "The Peoples of Los Angeles". The piece included multiplex holograms of individuals from Los Angeles reciting soundtracks of their experiences in the region against a constantly shifting holographic audio ambience. Other collaborators included physicist and holographer Lloyd Cross, holographer Sharon McCormack, artist Abbe Don and musician Chili Charles. The exhibition was held at the University of Southern California Atelier Gallery in Santa Monica. A catalog was published that included 3-D glasses. "The Peoples of Los Angeles" was reviewed in The Los Angeles Herald Examiner. It was also reviewed in The Los Angeles Times.

    Gate

    A gate or gateway is a point of entry to a space enclosed by walls, or a moderately sized opening in some sort of fence. Gates may prevent or control the entry or exit of individuals, or they may be merely decorative. Other terms for gate include yett and port. The word derives from the old Norse "gata", meaning road or path, and originally referred to the gap in the wall or fence, rather than the barrier which closed it. The moving part or parts of a gateway may be called "doors", but used for the whole point of entry door usually refers to the entry to a building, or an internal opening between different rooms.

    A gate may have a latch to keep it from swinging and a lock for security. Larger gates can be used for a whole building, such as a castle or fortified town, or the actual doors that block entry through the gatehouse. Today, many gate doors are opened by an automated gate operator.

    Types

    Types of gates include:

  • Baby gate
  • City gate
  • Hampshire gate
  • Kissing gate
  • Lychgate
  • Mon, Japanese gates of many varieties including the Torii
  • List of scandals with "-gate" suffix

    This is a list of scandals or controversies whose names in scholarly sources include a "-gate" suffix, by analogy with the Watergate scandal. This list also includes controversies that are widely referred to with a "-gate" suffix, but may be referred to by another more common name in scholarly sources (such as New Orleans Saints bounty scandal).

    Etymology, usage, and history of -gate

    The suffix -gate derives from the Watergate scandal of the United States in the early 1970s, which resulted in the resignation of U.S. President Richard Nixon. The scandal was named after the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C.; the complex itself was named after the "Water Gate" area where symphony orchestra concerts were staged on the Potomac River between 1935 and 1965.

    The suffix is used to embellish a noun or name to suggest the existence of a far-reaching scandal, particularly in politics and government. As a CBC News column noted in 2001, the term may "suggest unethical behaviour and a cover-up". The same usage has spread into languages other than English; examples of -gate being used to refer to local political scandals have been reported from Argentina, Germany, Korea, Hungary, Greece and the former Yugoslavia.

    Gate (disambiguation)

    A gate is an opening in a wall or fence fitted with a moveable barrier allowing it to be closed.

    Gate or GATE may also refer to:

    Engineering

    Electronics

  • Gate (transistor), terminal of a field effect transistor
  • Logic gate, a functional building block in digital logic such as "and", "or", or "not"
  • Noise gate, a high-quality audio squelch control for reducing noise
  • Range gate, the area encompassed by one pixel of radar data
  • Hydraulics

  • Gate valve, a valve that opens by lifting a wedge out of the path of the fluid
  • Gate (engineering) a movable structure used to control the flow of fluid in a pipe or channel
  • Gate (water transport), the watertight door that seals off a chamber of a lock
  • Other

  • Gate, a sprue molding channel which carries molten metal into a mold
  • Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering, an entrance examination for admission to postgraduate courses in India
  • Media and entertainment

  • Gate (solitaire), a solitaire card game
  • Gåte, a Norwegian band
  • GATE, a fictional company Theodore "T-Bag" Bagwell works for in season 4 of the TV series Prison Break
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Standing At The Gate

    by: Eels

    So whatch'ya gonna do about me
    I've been hanging 'round a while
    Trading books and knowing glances
    I thought i'd stick around
    But this really ain't my style
    So this ain't heaven on earth
    Looks like we'll have to wait
    But we are standing at the gate
    I took a look inside your attic
    And secret shelves and hidden rooms
    It didn't scare me when i saw it
    Your hidden attic is no temple of doom
    And this ain't heaven on earth
    Looks like we'll have to wait
    But we are standing at the gate
    So whatch'ya gonna do 'bout me
    Put me on a secret shelf
    I wanna change myself around
    You know i'd do it




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