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    Being Tron Guy

    Meet the man inside the glowing Spandex unitard, who refuses to be a "geek pinata."

    By Ben Palosaari

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    Evil Amongst Us

    The nation's best known--and perhaps only--demonologist keeps up the struggle against Satanic spirits.

    By Aimee Levitt

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    Taps

    Sensing the end of an era, bottled-water companies spend billions to keep an eco-unfriendly industry alive.

    By Lee Klein

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    John Steinbeck's Ghosts

    A man fascinated by a violent 1930s strike solves a mystery with the help of a mobster's musician.

    By Tony Ortega

Up the Yangtze

By SCOTT FOUNDAS

Published on July 17, 2008

"It's hard being a human, but being a common person in China is even more difficult," says one tearful shopkeeper along the soon-to-be-submerged banks of the Yangtze River in Sino-Canadian documentary filmmaker Yung Chang's lucid, beautifully observed portrait of the same incipient flood zone that served as the backdrop for Jia Zhangke's Still Life and its companion documentary, Dong. Whereas Jia turned his attention to the 2 million zombielike former residents forced to relocate on account of the world's largest hydroelectric-dam project, Chang focuses on the luxury pleasure boats that sail up and down the titular waterway, offering tourists a "farewell" cruise through this ghostly landscape of crumbling buildings painted with water-level markers. In the Yangtze, Yung finds a brilliant natural metaphor for upward mobility in modern China: Whether they hail from the lowlands or the urban centers, everyone here is scrambling to reach higher ground.



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