Get the best deals on Antique Skeleton Key when you shop the largest online selection at eBay.com. Free shipping on many items Browse your favorite brands affordable prices. There's a Carbon version that will run on Mac OS X or Mac OS 8.6-9.x with the CarbonLib 1.2.5 extension (or later) installed. Skeleton Key 1.0, which can be downloaded and used for free, is.
I love FileMaker 13’s new style tools! The tools make creating and maintaining a consistent theme style for a project, incredibly simple. After attending the FileMaker DevCon session, Layouts: Under the Hood, I love them even more. A tool that I’ve been using lately, to aid in creating custom themes for our clients, is the built in Mac OS X Color Picker, specifically the color palette tab. The Mac OS X Color Picker’s color palette tab allows you to add specifically-picked colors to a saved list. Using this, I can take a list of branded colors from a client, add them to a palette, and then start creating my FileMaker theme with the exact colors needed.
To create a new palette with the built-in Mac OS X Color Picker:
You have a number of ways to save colors to the color palette.
With this tool, you can literally point the spyglass at the color you want to capture. For example, let’s grab the colors from the FileMaker website. With a new palette created called FileMaker Website, I’ll…
When you do this, your cursor will change to a spyglass with a crosshair in the lens. You can hover over the color you want to select on the website. Once you have the color you want, you can click to capture it in your color picker.
A double-click of the color’s title will allow you to change its name. This will allow you to quickly walk through an image to build a palette which you can in turn use to create your theme.
A free plugin called Hex Color Picker will allow you to specify hexadecimal values for specific colors.
This way, you don’t need to bring up FileMaker Pro to add colors to your palette. This is particularly helpful if you do development in other languages or platforms.
The gear icon in the palette tab allows you to Open pre-existing palettes. This imports the palette into your local palette list. Unfortunately, the Mac OS X Color Picker doesn’t give an easy way to export a palette you’ve built, to pass it on to someone else. Luckily for us, we’re developers; so, we like getting our hands dirty! 😉 Here’s a work-around: The palettes are stored in your local folder: ~/Library/Colors
You can get to the folder by either:
open ~/Library/Colors/
~/Library/Colors/
Once in the folder, you’ll see a list of .clr files. These are your palettes. You can pass a copy of these files to someone else and they can use the above mentioned Open option in the color palette to import your palette.
One of the best reasons to use the built-in Mac OS X Color Picker, is that the palettes are available in any application that uses the built-in color picker. This means, if you like to use a tool like Omnigraffle to do layout wire framing, you can use the exact colors from your palette. Christopher Schmitz is a FileMaker 13 Certified Developer at Skeleton Key. About Skeleton KeySkeleton Key helps turn complex, complicated, and outdated systems into true information platforms. Our team of consultants and developers do this by developing custom-fit software tools and reporting dashboards that help businesses find, use, and understand their data, freeing them to focus on and grow their core business. In addition to custom databases and applications, we also provide training and coaching for getting the most out of your existing systems and understanding your unruly data. Skeleton Key is an open-book management company and active player of the Great Game of Business.
The Skeleton Key | |
---|---|
Directed by | Iain Softley |
Produced by |
|
Written by | Ehren Kruger |
Starring | |
Music by | Edward Shearmur |
Cinematography | Dan Mindel |
Edited by | Joe Hutshing |
Shadowcatcher Entertainment Double Feature Films | |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
| |
104 minutes | |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $43 million[1] |
Box office | $94 million[1] |
The Skeleton Key is a 2005 American supernatural horror film directed by Iain Softley, written by Ehren Kruger, and starring Kate Hudson, Gena Rowlands, John Hurt, Peter Sarsgaard, and Joy Bryant. The Southern Gothic narrative follows a New Orleanshospice nurse who begins a job at a Terrebonne Parish plantation home, and becomes entangled in a supernatural mystery involving the house, its former inhabitants, and Hoodoo rituals and spells that took place there.
Caroline Ellis, a hospice aide, quits her position at a nursing home and is hired as the caretaker of an isolated plantation house in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana. The aging matron of the house, Violet Devereaux, needs help looking after her husband Benjamin, who was mostly paralyzed by an apparent stroke. At the insistence of the family's estate lawyer, Luke Marshall, Caroline accepts the position.
After Ben attempts to escape his room during a storm, Caroline investigates the house's attic, where Violet said Ben suffered his stroke; she uses a skeleton key which Violet gave her. She discovers a secret room filled with ritual paraphernalia. Caroline confronts Violet, who reveals that the room used to belong to two African American servants who were employed at the house 90 years before. The servants, Mama Cecile and Papa Justify, were renowned hoodoo practitioners; they were lynched after conducting a ritual with the owners' two children, from whom Violet and Ben later bought the house. Violet tells Caroline that they keep no mirrors in the house because they see reflections of Cecile and Justify in them. Caroline borrows a phonograph record from the attic: Conjure of Sacrifice, a recording of Papa Justify reciting a hoodoo ritual.
Caroline surmises that Ben's stroke was caused by hoodoo, but believes that his paralytic state is a nocebo effect induced by his own belief, rather than something supernatural. Taking advice from her friend Jill, Caroline visits a hidden hoodoo shop in a nearby laundromat, where a hoodoo woman gives her tools and instructions to cure Ben. After she conducts the ritual, Ben regains some ability to move and speak and he begs Caroline to get him away from Violet.
Caroline tells Luke she is suspicious of Violet, but he remains skeptical. They travel to a gas station that Caroline previously noted was lined with brick dust, which she was told is a hoodoo defense; supposedly, no one who means one harm can pass a line of brick dust. She asks one of the proprietors, a blind woman, about the Conjure of Sacrifice, which she learns is a spell wherein the caster steals the remaining years of life from the victim. Increasingly convinced of hoodoo's authenticity, Caroline fears that Violet will soon cast the spell on Ben.
Caroline discovers that Violet is unable to pass a line of brick dust laid across one of the house's doorways, confirming her suspicions. She incapacitates Violet and attempts to escape the house with Ben, but the front gate is chained shut. Caroline hides Ben on the property and enters Luke's office for help. Luke, revealed to be Violet's accomplice, brings Caroline back to the house. Caroline escapes, gets into a fight with Violet, and violently pushes her down the stairs, breaking her legs in the process. With strategic use of brick dust, Caroline flees to the attic, calls 9-1-1 and Jill for help, and casts what she believes is a protective spell. Violet, having caught up with her, reveals she actually trapped herself inside a protective circle. Violet pushes a full-length mirror at Caroline, which reflects the original owner's daughter, then Violet, and lastly Mama Cecile. A recording of the Conjure of Sacrifice plays, and the two switch bodies.
Violet (revealed to be Mama Cecile, who had been occupying Violet's body through the Conjure) wakes up in Caroline's body, and force-feeds Caroline (now in Violet's body) a potion that induces a stroke-like paralytic state like Ben's. Luke (actually Papa Justify) arrives upstairs, revealing that Mama Cecile and Papa Justify have been conducting the Conjure of Sacrifice on new people since their supposed deaths; they had swapped places with the two children just before the lynching. Because hoodoo is supposedly only effective on those who believe in it, Cecile and Justify had to wait for Caroline to come to believe in hoodoo through her own investigation.
Emergency services arrive the next morning and take Caroline and Luke away, trapped in the paralyzed dying bodies of Violet and Ben; when Jill arrives, 'Luke' tells her that the Devereauxes left the house to Caroline, ensuring that Cecile and Justify will continue to occupy the house.
The Skeleton Key was filmed at the Felicity Plantation, located on the Mississippi River in Saint James Parish, Louisiana.[2]
The Skeleton Key was released in the U.S. on August 12, 2005, after having received an earlier release date of July 29, 2005 in the United Kingdom.[3] It grossed $92 million worldwide.[1] In the U.S., it took in $16.1 million in its first weekend, reaching number 2 at the box office; the total US gross was $47.9 million.[1]
Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 38% of 149 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 5.3/10. The site's consensus reads: 'Thanks to its creaky and formulaic script, The Skeleton Key is more mumbo-jumbo than hoodoo and more dull than scary.'[4]Metacritic rated it 47/100 based on 32 reviews.[5]
The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw awarded the film three out of five stars, noting: 'It's a pretty thankless role for poor John Hurt, and there are some plot holes. But there's some shrewd satire of racism as the modern south's persistent, dirty little secret and screenwriter Ehren Kruger's third act conjures up a neat little shiver.'[3] Carina Chocano of the Los Angeles Times praised the film, calling it 'tightly plotted and suspenseful enough to keep you guessing until the satisfying, unexpected end, which is worth suspending disbelief for,' adding that 'Hudson holds her own among impressive company. Not that Hurt has a whole lot to do other than grab an occasional wrist and recoil at his face in the mirror, and the usually measured Sarsgaard oversells it a bit, but Rowlands takes to the part like a fly to a shucked oyster.'[6]
Manohla Dargis of The New York Times criticized the film for its plot, describing it as 'enjoyably inane,' and also noted that the film 'indulges in almost every conceivable regional and [Southern Gothic] genre cliché.'[7]USA Today wrote that the film 'employs intriguing camera angles to heighten some of the suspense. It's too bad the movie goes over the top and falls apart in the last third.'[8]Stephanie Zacharek wrote in Salon: 'Softley, working from a script by Ehren Kruger, puts so much care into layering moods and textures that he doesn't always scoot the action along as briskly as he should.'[9] In The Seattle Times, Moira McDonald wrote that the film is 'occasionally scary but more often silly.'[10] In her review for The Austin Chronicle, Marjorie Baumgarten wrote: 'Director Softley again shows his gifts for creating atmospheric milieus...Yet the movie, overall, lacks tension and suspense.[11] In Film Journal International, Edward Alter wrote that, 'Iain Softley (K-Pax) and cinematographer Dan Mindel make the most of the setting,' but concluded that the film was, 'a paint-by-numbers supernatural thriller that's more interesting for its locations than for its story.'[12]
Jennie Punter in The Globe and Mail called the film, 'stylishly made but disappointingly lightweight.'[13] Writing for the Chicago Tribune, Jessica Reeves called the film 'serviceable but ultimately disappointing'.[14] In his annual film guide, Leonard Maltin rated the film mediocre, stating that it was 'well-produced and occasionally suspenseful, but populated by unpleasant characters and a story that moves too slowly.'[15] In the annual DVD & Video Guide, Marsha Porter wrote, 'A few good scares can't compensate for a sluggish pace, and the climactic twist comes as a surprise only because it doesn't make sense.'[16]