Wooden marionettes from the east Bohemian town of Chrudim are heading to South Korea to be part of a large exhibition dedicated to Czech puppetry. The exhibition, prepared in cooperation with Czech Centres and the Czech Embassy in Korea, will get underway in the Seoul Museum of History at the start of June.
Spejbl and Hurvínek, two of the Czech Republic’s most famous puppets, are among the 120 marionettes from the Chrudim Puppetry Museum that are travelling to the South Korean capital Soul to be part of an extensive exhibition presenting the phenomenon of Czech puppetry, inscribed on the UNESCO world intangible cultural heritage list.
PUBG Update 1.65 Adds Season 11 and Emergency Pickup on PS4 and Xbox Patch Notes
On 4/8/21 at 6:51 AM EDT
PUBG update 11.1 has made its way to console as version 1.65 on PS4. While it may not feature the glitz and glamour of a new map or gun, it does bring back the fan-favorite Paramo map and introduces the Emergency Pickup support item. There are also a few interesting buffs and nerfs that make slight adjustments to the battle royale meta. The full details arrive courtesy of a recent blog post from
PUBG s developers at PUBG Corporation.
PUBG
console update 1.65 patch notes PUBG update 11.1 makes its way to console as version 1.65. Read the patch notes below to see all the big changes. PUBG is available now on PC, Xbox One, PS4 and Stadia.
Thursday, 8th April 2021 at 5:43 pm
PlayerUnknown’s Battleground is continuing to impress and capture the attention of gamers, and a large part of the reason for that is the continued updates that keep getting rolled out; the game first came out late in 2017 but still feels new thanks to the constant updates.
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We have another PUBG update to talk about today and, as you will see from the patch notes below, it is not a small one, with many changes, improvements and fixes rolled out to improve the overall experience for the players.
And with Battle Royale games continuing to dominate the gaming space, we doubt the popularity of PUBG is going to die down any time soon. So let’s see what the game has in store for us as season 11 rolls around.
Italian author Carlo Collodi’s 1883 book “The Adventures of Pinocchio,” as most everyone knows, is about a wooden puppet that yearns to be a real boy. Director Matteo Garrone’s new Italian-language adaptation of the beloved story (starring Federico Ielapi as Pinocchio and Roberto Benigni as Geppetto) faced the exact opposite challenge. Eschewing digital effects in favor of practical makeup magic, Garrone’s task was how to turn the 8-year-old Ielapi, along with nearly two dozen other human actors, into an elaborate array of storybook creatures, keeping true to Collodi’s original vision. And not only a wooden puppet, but also a cricket, an owl, a dog, a gorilla, a snail — and, yes, even a philosophical tuna fish, who Pinocchio meets in the belly of a giant sea monster. Garrone turned to the British prosthetics maestro Mark Coulier. An industry veteran for three decades, Coulier began his career creating creatures for horror films like Cliv