Add To Quick/Target Collection Shortcut: B Pretty self-explanatory, but important to remember! This will open the selected image into the Develop module for you to begin the editing process. You’ll find the download option at the bottom of this page □ Want both the full PDF guide of all the shortcuts AND the printable shorter “best-of” version? Don’t worry, I figure this will be the case for a lot of people so I’ll send both PDFs to your email. With over 8 years of Lightroom experience, including a stint as an ambassador for Adobe, I’m confident that anyone taking the time to download, print and learn these shortcuts will benefit from it. Quite simply, these are the shortcuts I find myself over and over again, and they vastly improve my workflow. It’s not possible to memorize the hundreds of shortcuts in the full guide, but it should be possible to memorize the ones on this shorter list, or you can just stick it to your wall next to your computer. The full guide is really useful, and well worth a read because it’ll probably teach you a few things about Lightroom that you didn’t even know it could do, but a condensed one-pager of the most useful shortcuts also sounds like a great idea, so that’s what I’m bringing you here! If you must get it, stick to a rental for your young child.I recently published a free downloadable PDF guide to all the Adobe Lightroom Classic CC keyboard shortcuts, but it occurred to me that it might also be useful to have a second simpler download that was just a single printable page. You don’t have to get this and it isn’t good enough to warrant passing up something from Pixar or Disney that you don’t have in your collection yet. The problem with Space Chimps is that there are just too many alternatives out there. It’s a shockingly small amount of extras and the lack of a commentary, making-of, or anything of that nature makes this an even worse value than normal. The trailers are listed individually on the menu so it seems like more, but they are very similar. That’s really all there is if you ignore the still gallery and the various trailers. It’s not particularly good, although I did get a kick on the producer and director saying that Cheryl Hines was helped by her improv background and then ten seconds later Hines saying doing the voice work was completely different than doing improv. A nine minute “Fox Movie Channel Presents Casting Session” featurette focuses on the voice actors and serves as the only behind-the-scenes info about the project. There is almost nothing else on the disc worth mentioning. I would never watch this movie, or any movie, in full screen since it is a sin for which there is no forgiveness, but at least you have the option and I’m all for choices. The best thing I can say about it is that it is one of those discs where you can flip it over and watch it either in widescreen (which you should) or full screen (which you should not). In a nice bit of symmetry, the lousy movie Space Chimps is given a pretty lousy DVD release. Use the money you would spend on this to buy a second copy of Wall-E for your other room. It will probably entertain a small non-discerning child while you fix dinner, but it’s not going to do anything at all for their parents or older siblings. Space Chimps is like one of those direct-to-DVD Disney movies. This leads to the usual clash that you see in movies like this, only in this case, the clash is between chimps who are going to go through a black hole. A senator (Stanley Tucci) sees an opportunity to gain some PR from the program and recruits Ham to go along with on the mission with Titan (Patrick Warburton) and Luna (Cheryl Hines), who are the serious kind of chimps in space. Ham III works in a circus being shot out of a cannon and has no interest in furthering his family legacy.Īfter a space probe disappears through a black hole, NASA decides to send a team of chimps though the black hole to see if it is safe for humans. In this case, the slacker is Ham III (voiced by Andy Samberg), the grandson of Ham, the first chimp into space. Unfortunately, writers Kirk De Micco ( Racing Stripes) and Robert Moreland ( Happily N’Ever After), use the old stand-by of a slacker wise-ass in a serious situation growing up, helping out, and saving the day. The basic plot premise is not that chimps go into space.
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