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    In Pictures

    Not just pink ribbons: Shocking breast cancer photos show the real bravery of survivors

    Barbara Kuntz
    Barbara Kuntz
    Oct 24, 2013 | 7:04 am

    See the raw beauty, strength and character of breast cancer survivors as captured through the lens of fashion photographer David Jay in The SCAR Project: Breast Cancer is Not a Pink Ribbon on view through Oct. 28 at Gremillion & Co. Fine Art Inc.

    The exhibit, sponsored by the Pink Ribbons Project, displays through Jay's 35 large-scale visuals a shockingly real world of women patients ages 18 to 35, revealing their determination to win over breast cancer. The SCAR Project is an exercise in hope, healing and humanity and is one of many events recognizing October as National Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

    “For these young women, having their portrait taken seems to represent their personal victory over this terrifying disease."

    Jay's inspiration evolved after a dear friend of his was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 29. Within two weeks, she'd had a mastectomy. Jay, who had taken his friend's photo many times, knew he would take pictures of her again — his way as a photographer of confronting and accepting this personal adversity. He also realized shooting for The SCAR Project would be difficult in many ways.

    "I wanted the pictures to be raw, honest, sincere," he says in a written Q&A presented with the exhibition. "Yet, I knew why the subjects had come: They wanted something beautiful. They had already suffered greatly and although I desperately wanted to serve them, I knew in my heart that compromising the visual integrity of The SCAR Project for the sake of easily digested beauty would serve no one. Certainly not the people I hoped to be impacted by the images, the public at large who remain blissfully unaware of the risk or reality of the disease . . . anesthetized by pink ribbons and fluffy, pink teddy bears."

    Six years later, Jay has photographed more than 100 women for The Scar Project. Four of the subjects have passed away thus far. He still adds images to collection, but later ones tend to be reserved for some of the most unfortunate situations as many of the women recover — and many do not. As the disease progresses, Jay continues to shoot the subjects in their scarred glory. Final photos are then added to the exhibition.

    Jay adds, “For these young women, having their portrait taken seems to represent their personal victory over this terrifying disease. It helps them reclaim their femininity, their sexuality, identity and power after having been robbed of such an important part of it.

    "Through these simple pictures, they seem to gain some acceptance of what has happened to them and the strength to move forward with pride."

    Emily

    14 The Scar Project breast cancer by David Jay October 2013 sgdfh
      
    Photo by © David Jay
    Emily
    unspecified
    news/entertainment

    Movie Review

    Final Destination: Bloodlines reboots cult favorite horror franchise

    Alex Bentley
    May 15, 2025 | 4:30 pm
    Kaitlyn Santa Juana in Final Destination: Bloodlines
    Photo by Eric Milner
    Kaitlyn Santa Juana in Final Destination: Bloodlines.

    On the surface, the Final Destination films really shouldn’t work. There is no villain other than the concept of death itself, and nearly every death that occurs is foreshadowed so heavily that it removes the normal suspense that comes in horror films. And yet the franchise was successful enough to spawn five films over 11 years in the early 2000s, and now a reboot, Final Destination: Bloodlines.

    A fantastic opening sequence set in the 1960s sets both the tone and the plot of the film, in which Stefani (Kaitlyn Santa Juana) has a recurring nightmare about a disaster that her grandmother, Iris (Gabrielle Rose), helped to avert. A visit to the reclusive Iris convinces Stefani that she and her family should not exist, and that each one of them is destined to meet a grisly end in the near future.

    Met with resistance from her family members, Kaitlyn is unsurprisingly proven right as the film goes along, with different people dying in a variety of bizarre ways. A visit to William Bludworth (the late Tony Todd), a mortician who’s been the one constant in the series, provides a glimmer of hope that they can cheat death. But will they figure it out before it’s too late?

    Directed by Zach Lipovsky and Adam B. Stein, and written by Guy Busick and Lori Evans Taylor, the film does not try to reinvent the wheel for the concept. The entire point is to get as creative as possible with the death scenes, and the filmmakers take that mandate seriously, with each successive death becoming increasingly gruesome. The Rube Goldberg-like manner in which each death occurs makes the scenes come off as entertaining instead of off-putting.

    The idea of Death hunting down an entire family line due to the actions of the family elder is a solid twist on the series’ central premise, and that change keeps the film from feeling repetitive. The story also introduces the possibility that the entire series is connected due to Iris’ actions, with the character possessing a scrapbook that references well-known incidents from previous films, a fun Easter egg for longtime fans.

    The creativity of the kill sequences does not carry over to the overall story, though. Almost every character in the film only exists in order to meet a horrific end, so anything that they have going on outside of being stalked by Death is purely window dressing. Consequently, it’s hard to really care about anybody, even if they are all related to one another.

    Because characters are so easily dispatched in the film, the cast is devoid of well-known actors. This is by far Santa Juana’s biggest role to date, and she does well enough to want to see more of her in the future. Adults like Alex Zahara and Rya Kihlstedt are character actors who bring some history with them, while the younger group is composed of people still trying to make names for themselves.

    Final Destination: Bloodlines is a solid return for the franchise, even if it feels more like a one-off film rather than a justification for more stories in the future. But given how easily the concept can be adapted into new circumstances, don’t be surprised if another movie pops up in a couple of years.

    ---

    Final Destination: Bloodlines opens in theaters on May 16.

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    news/entertainment

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