Liron levo biography of albert

Juliette Binoche

French actress (born 1964)

Juliette Binoche (French pronunciation:[ʒyljɛtbinɔʃ]; born 9 March 1964) is a French actress. She has appeared in more than 60 films, particularly in French and English languages, and has been the recipient of numerous accolades, including an Academy Award, a British Academy Film Award and a César Award.

Binoche first gained recognition for working with such auteur directors as Jean-Luc Godard (Hail Mary, 1985), Jacques Doillon (Family Life, 1985), and André Téchiné; the latter made her a star in France with a leading role in his drama Rendez-vous (1985). She won the Volpi Cup and César Award for Best Actress for her performance as a grieving music composer in Krzysztof Kieślowski's Three Colours: Blue (1993) and the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for playing a nurse in The English Patient (1996). For starring in the romantic film Chocolat (2000), Binoche received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. In 2010, she won the Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Actress for her role as an antiques dealer in Abbas Kiarostami's Certified Copy. Binoche has since starred in such films as Clouds of Sils Maria (2014), High Life (2018) and The Taste of Things (2023).

Binoche has appeared on stage intermittently, most notably in a 1998 London production of Luigi Pirandello's Naked and in a 2000 production of Harold Pinter's Betrayal on Broadway for which she was nominated for a Tony Award. In 2008, she began a world tour with a modern dance production in-i devised in collaboration with Akram Khan.

Early life

Binoche was born in Paris, the daughter of Jean-Marie Binoche, a director, actor, and sculptor, and Monique Yvette Stalens (born 1939), a teacher, director, and actress. Her father, who is French, also has one eighth Portuguese-Brazilian ancestry; he was raised partly in Morocco by his French-born parents.[5]

  • So begins a life-altering
  • Part IIIA. The Ultraviolet Spectrophotometric Method

    Title

    Part IIIA. The Ultraviolet Spectrophotometric Method

    Sections

    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    LIST OF TABLES
    1. INTRODUCTION, STATEMENT OF OBJECTIVE
    2. ORIGIN OF ABSORPTION SPECTRA
    3. INSTRUMENTATION
    4. THE BECKMAN SPECTROPHOTOMETER (13)
    5. SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC IDENTIFICATION
    6. HISTORICAL REVIEW OF ULTRAVIOLET ABSORPTION SPECTROPHOTOMETRY RELATED TO NARCOTIC ANALYSIS
    7. QUANTITATIVE SPECTROPHOTOMETRY
    8. THE INFLUENCE OF PH ON ULTRAVIOLET SPECTRA OF DRUGS AND ITS USE IN THEIR DETERMINATION
    9. TREATMENT OF DATA
    10. CONCLUSIONS

    Details

    Author: Charles G. Farmilo
    Pages: 18 to 41
    Creation Date: 1954/01/01

    THE PHYSICAL METHODS FOR THE IDENTIFICATION OF NARCOTICS (Cont.)

    Part IIIA. The Ultraviolet Spectrophotometric Method

    Charles G. Farmilo Food and Drug Laboratories, Ottawa, Canada

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

     

    Section

    Page

    List of tables18

    1.

    Introduction, statement of objective

    18

    2.

    Origin of absorption spectra

    18

    3.

    Instrumentation

    19

    4.

    The Beckman spectrophotometer

    23

    5.

    Spectrophotometric identification

    26

    6.

    Historical review of ultraviolet absorption spectro- photometry related to narcotic analysis

    26

    7.

    Quantitative spectrophotometry

    34

    8.

    The influence of pH on ultraviolet spectra of drugs and its use in their determination

    36

    9.

    Treatment of data

    38

    10.

    Conclusions

    39

    LIST OF TABLES

    Table

     

    Page

    I

    Combinations of filter, phototube and source in operating the Beckman spectrophotometer

    25

    II.

    Csoskan's classification of opium alkaloids and spectra (43)

    32

    III.

    Spectrophotometric data of opium alkaloids, according to Csoskan (43)

    32

    IV.

    Buffer composition and absorbency, according to Morgan (1949)

    33

    V.

    Effect of pH on absorption maxima of sulfanilamide

    37

    VI.

    Absorption maxima, minima and extinction values (

    Silly but fun 'Jerusalem Syndrome'

    An enjoyable comedy, the movie was one of the happy surprises of the 2007 Jerusalem Film Festival.

    By HANNAH BROWN
    THE JERUSALEM SYNDROME Rating: Three stars out of five Written and directed by Stephane Belaisch and Emmanuel Naccache. 93 minutes. In Hebrew and French, with Hebrew titles. w/ Liron Levo, Lionel Abelanski The Jerusalem Syndrome, an enjoyable comedy, was one of the happy surprises of the 2007 Jerusalem Film Festival. Though it might have received more attention had it not been overshadowed by the extraordinarily success of the more serious The Band's Visit. In any case, the fact that it's opening now is good news for moviegoers who want to see a farce that's silly but not stupid. The film's French directors, Stephane Belaisch and Emmanuel Naccache, have managed to pull off the considerable feat of making a movie about Israeli stereotypes that is actually funny, even saying something real about the types it lampoons. Liron Levo, a handsome actor who has often been burdened with serious and symbolic roles, proves himself to be a gifted deadpan comic as Avi, a Tel Aviv delivery man who is in love with Ivana (Lucy Dubinchik), a young prostitute about to be sold by her Georgian pimp Igor (Haim Zanati) to another pimp in Jaffa. Avi realizes that he must act quickly to free her. So, he steals a shared cab (sherut) to drive her away from danger. But the cab isn't empty, and they pick up others along the way, eventually taking along a French civil servant (Lionel Abelanski), who suffers from Jerusalem Syndrome, an actual psychosis that afflicts mostly non-Jews visiting Jerusalem - a kind of rapture that makes them believe they are holy. This particular buttoned-up Frenchman becomes convinced that he is the biblical Jonah and walks around in white robes, quoting lines from the Bible. Other passengers include a yeshiva student (Dan Herzberg) bringing a special streimel to a rebbe he worships, a sexy soldi
  • The story of the illegal
  • Two new films by
  • Keiji Fujiwara

    Year Title Role Notes/Refs
    1991 Sengoku Kanto SangokushiNarration
    1996 Keiō Yūgekitai: Katsugeki-henFire Tanuki, Fishing Tanuki, Rikishi, Kurobei the Octopus, Hyottoko, Castle Promenade Tanuki, Ninjas, 3-meter Alien, Benkei Musashibō, Missionary Xavier, Daidarabotchi
    Alice in CyberlandTorquemada
    1997 Doukyuusei 2Shinkansen Tendou
    1998 Real Bout Fatal Fury Special: Dominated MindWhite
    Kindaichi Shounen no Jikenbo Hoshimijima Kanashimi no Fukushuu OniYousuke Itsuki
    SD Gundam G GenerationEledore Massis
    Dragonforce IIFujimaru
    1999 Dungeon Keeper 2Hero, Dark Angel
    SD Gundam G Generation-ZEROEledore Massis, Ryou Roots
    Legend of HimikoShudei
    2000 SD Gundam G Generation-FEledore Massis, Ryou Roots
    Kaikan Phrase: Datenshi KourinKudou
    Brigandine: Grand EditionMeleagant, Gish, Kazan
    2001 Growlanser II: The Sense of JusticeMaximillian Schneider, Patrick
    Rockman X6Gate
    Giga Wing 2Kurt Aishinkagura
    SD Gundam G Generation-F.I.FEledore Massis, Ryou Roots, Noventa
    Seigi no MikataKouichi Mizuhara
    Crayon Shin-chan Ora to Omoide Tsukuru zoHiroshi Nohara
    2002 Hikaru no Go - Heian Gensou IbunrokuMichimasa Ogatano
    ElysionAlex
    SD Gundam G Generation NEORyou Roots
    Hikaru no Go - Insei Choujou KessenMichimasa Ogatano
    Ratchet and ClankWeapon Salesman
    2003 Star Ocean: Till the End of TimeLucifer Landberd, King Airyglyph XIII
    Mega Man Network TransmissionPharaohMan
    Hikaru no Go 3Michimasa Ogatano
    Initial D Special StageShingo Shouji
    S