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{“Brave” reviews are in: What do critics think?|Here’s what some of them had to say: “Youngsters with a taste for adventure will no doubt overlook the movie’s workmanlike outlines and applaud its spirited, self-reliant heroine, who proves to be as appealingly unruly as her tumble of Titian curls,” explains Ann Hornaday, Washington Post|”Brave” is easy to like but hard to love, a feel-good fable with the latest bells and whistles,” Joe Williams of the St|”The Pixar name used to mean something|And it never quite meant pleasantly safe, safely forgettable movies like this,” writes Stephen Whitty of the Newark Star-Ledger|This is the first time a Pixar production has featured a female lead character|The reviews are in for the animated film, which stars Merida, a fearless princess, voiced by Kelly McDonald|The film, directed by Mark Andrews, has scored a high 70 percent “Fresh” rating from critics on Rottentomatoes.com|”‘Brave’ isn’t a bull’s-eye, but it’s close enough,” writes Tom Long of the Detroit News|
Some DPP lawmakers object to the idea of any nuclear referendum at all, while others say that the language in the bill needs to be changed because it is prejudicial. According to the bill under discussion, referendum voters would be asked to vote on whether they agree with the proposition that “the construction of the fourth nuclear power plant should be halted and that it not become operational.” Taiwan began transitioning away from a one-party martial law regime in 1987 and is regarded today as one of Asia’s most vibrant democracies. But its political process has been undermined by occasional outbursts of violence in the legislature, much of which appears to be deliberately designed to score points among hardline supporters on either side of the island’s longstanding political divide.
“I don’t even want to fight back because it’s more important to me to keep writing music

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