Family Attorney
‘Sleepwalking’ a bit sluggish
|
|
In sleepwalking, Charlize Theron, also co-produced, plays Joleen Reedy, finds an injury ne’er-do - the homeless and a friend of the other breast. His brother James (Nick Stahl), and in both Joleen Tara (Annasophia Robb), their sensitivity, 11 years old girl. Joleen behind both hands to what it calls a “plan", and well intentioned, berauschte James soon finds himself unable to cope with a parent for minors. This proves the case, if it twice lights, the road to Tara open to go anywhere, but the farm where his father abusive (Dennis Hopper) is more than pleased to give equal treatment with Tara James, and has received Joleen Children. Robb is the latest in a seemingly endless series of precocious young talent, and can illuminate a framework Theron, given that only a few film actresses can be these days. But her magnetism may not be combined to compensate fully inflated history for a line that was neither expansionary nor profound, as the tribes to be. |
Related Articles from Attorney for Family
Business Digest: Saturday, July 18, 1987
The Dow Jones industrial average closed above 2,500 for the first time in its history. Stocks were lifted by a rise in the dollar that encouraged foreign buyers and by a stream of good earnings reports. The Dow rose 13.07 points, to 2,510.04, giving it a gain of 54.05 points for the week. For the year, the key indicator, which closed out 1986 at 1,895.95, has soared 614.09 points, or 32.4 percent. Most broader-based indexes also climbed to new highs as the Big Board's volume reached a hefty 210 million shares. [ Page 35. ] The dollar was driven sharply
Easing the Pain of Divorce
Conceding that the legal system too often exacerbates the pain of divorce, New York State's Chief Judge, Judith Kaye, announced a strong set of reforms this week designed to protect matrimonial clients against unscrupulous lawyers and to expedite judicial treatment of divorce cases. Her plan embraces most of the recommendations made earlier by a special 10-member committee of both judges and divorce lawyers. It also owes much to a 1991 report by New York City's Department of Consumer Affairs. That report detailed serious abuses, mainly against women clients, by lawyers who apply pressure tactics to collect fees, drive up prices