Saturday, September 30, 2017

Movie Review: Judwaa 2

Actor Naseeruddin Shah once said Bollywood "films that should never have been made are being re-made".

David Dhawan, who directed a series of crass comedies in the 90's probably doesn't agree, because he's made the same film twice. Once in 1997 with Salman Khan and 20 years later - in the Bollywood tradition of nepotism - with his own son in the lead.

To Varun Dhawan's credit, he is the best thing about a film that simply doesn't hold up. Twenty years ago, "Judwaa" barely passed the test of any comedy. Watch it again today and it grates on your nerves.

The director makes cosmetic attempts at keeping up with the times. The film's location changes to London, which explains the deletion of the song "East or West, India is the best."

In "Judwaa 2", India is shown only in flashbacks when a smuggler kidnaps one of newborn twins to extract revenge on the father.

The family moves to London, unaware that Raja (Varun Dhawan) is alive and is being raised in a fisherman's colony in Mumbai.

He runs away to London after an altercation with a criminal, leading to a comedy of errors. While Raja is boisterous and always ready for a fight, his twin brother Prem is meek and avoids confrontation. They both fall in love with women whose only role in the film is be arm candy.

The director milks the same joke over and over again. Prem and Raja mirror each other's actions - so when one is kissing, so is the other; when one lands a blow, so does the other. This leads to many slapstick moments and is funny just once, after which it gets repetitive.

There is a host of ensemble actors who add nothing to the film's humour quotient, and saunter in and out of the screen with no purpose.

"Judwaa 2" is already treading on thin ice, given it never had strong material to begin with. Thankfully, as in the original, it has a leading man with enough screen presence to manage scenes that would be too outlandish otherwise.

Replicant or human? 'Blade Runner 2049' reignites existential debate

LOS ANGELES: Was Harrison Ford's Officer Rick Deckard a human or a Replicant robot in 1982's "Blade Runner"?

That is the question that fans of Ridley Scott's sci-fi thriller have been pondering for 35 years and now in a long-awaited sequel, that question is explored further.

Out in theaters Oct. 6, "Blade Runner 2049" takes place 30 years after the original film, when human-like robots called Replicants were hunted by police officers called 'blade runners' in a dystopian Los Angeles.

In the new film from Time Warner Inc's Warner Bros, LAPD Officer K (Ryan Gosling) hunts illegal Replicants hiding on a decaying Earth and he stumbles across something that can disrupt the current strained co-existence between humans and Replicants. He is tasked with finding Deckard (Ford) for answers.

"It's an existential story," director Denis Villeneuve told Reuters.

"It says a lot about reality. It says a lot about our relationship with broken dreams. It says things about as human beings we are programmed by our genetic background and our education, and that we are like trapped by that background and it's very difficult for us to get free out of it," he added.

Before journalists including Reuters saw "Blade Runner 2049" at advance press screenings, they were read a note from Villeneuve urging not give away any key plot points.

What is known is that an older, rugged Ford reprises his role as Officer Deckard. The veteran actor called the film an "experiential opportunity" for audiences to engage in the philosophical rhetoric.

"There's a wonderful emotional context in the film, which is one of the things I most admire about it," Ford said. "So much of what I had an ambition for seems to have been achieved."

Scott's "Blade Runner" envisioned Los Angeles in 2019 as a sprawling urban metropolis infused with Eastern and Western cultures. In "Blade Runner 2049," Los Angeles has sprawled across much of California, and is built on top of Scott's world, the gritty city a melting pot of English, Japanese and Russian influences.

Villeneuve said he made "Blade Runner 2049" as a standalone movie but given the new film's higher stakes and bigger scope, a continuing franchise is not out of the question.

"The idea was to make a movie inspired by the universe of 'Blade Runner' with a very specific story and yes, I'm positive that if (it) ever is welcomed, Ridley will come up with another idea," the director said.

´Mad Men´ no more: ad industry makes diversity push in Trump era

BACKGROUND: 'Mad Men's Roger Sterling (L, John Slattery) and Don Draper (R, Jon Hamm). LA Times via Frank Ockenfels 3/AMC; SUPERIMPOSED: US President Donald Trump. The Atlantic
 

NEW YORK: Walk into your average ad agency in America and you could be forgiven for thinking you had travelled back in time, with many still resembling the white male bastions immortalized in the series "Mad Men."

That may be about to change as the industry redoubles efforts to recruit more minorities, sensing a chance to strengthen ties to populations that feel assaulted in the Trump era -- and better reflect contemporary US society.

Outreach efforts towards minority populations have long been complicated by the paltry number of African Americans who work in advertising: they remain in the single digits as a percentage of staff, while Latinos also are underrepresented.

For award-winning ad veteran Valerie Graves, who rose from being among the first black copywriters at the firms where she worked, to leading entire creative departments, the sector needs to recognize that non-whites "drive the popular culture of this country and of the world."

"It hardly seems likely that we´re not capable of doing advertising at a very high standard," she said, urging industry leaders to "realize that diversity is not just something that (they´re) being forced to do but is something that responds to the demographics of the country."

That message seemed to be resonating at last week´s giant Advertising Week conference in New York, where numerous panels spotlighted efforts both to bridge the diversity gap, and connect with minorities alienated by President Donald Trump´s tough stance on immigration and racial issues.

"There´s a real opportunity to forge a bond," said Ludwig Ortiz, a senior vice president at Energy BBDO.

When Ortiz´ firm surveyed Hispanic shoppers -- long seen as a key sector poised for growth -- 70 percent said they had seen displays of prejudice rise since the 2016 presidential election.

Researchers have also found that Hispanics took notice when Apple, Facebook and other technology companies called on Trump to maintain protections for so-called "Dreamer" immigrants, brought to the country as children, said research consultant Marissa Romero-Martin.

Hispanics "are looking at what brands are doing and not doing," Romero-Martin said.

Lone voices

An ad by Budweiser emphasizing the positive role of immigrants drew positive reviews at last year´s Super Bowl.

But other campaigns have misfired -- such as when Pepsi was roundly criticized for an ad in which Kendall Jenner made light of the "Black Lives Matter" movement -- in what marketers see as sympomatic of the lack of internal diversity.

Nearly half of advertising employees believe the industry is "terrible" or "not great" at hiring diverse professionals, according to a 2016 survey by the American Association of Advertising Agencies (4A´s).

"We are losing an opportunity to bring in diverse views," said Keith Cartwright, executive creative director at BSSP, who often finds himself the lone African American at client meetings.

To remedy the situation, the sector has put in place mentoring programs and scholarships to introduce young minority talent to industry leaders.

But a key driver has been large clients -- such as Verizon last year -- who are increasingly demanding that their ad agencies step up the pace of change.

The telecoms company did not set quotas for minorities, but demanded "meaningful progress" from its ad firms, said Diego Scotti, its chief marketing officer.

"We have 130 million customers," Scotti said. "We appeal to everyone, so we have to represent internally the understanding of our audience. If we don´t, we won´t be successful."

HP saw a jump in the promotion of women after delivering a similar ultimatum to its ad firms, although it says minorities are still too few.

"On the underrepresented minorities, we didn´t move the needle as much as we want," said Antonio Lucio, HP´s global chief marketing and communication officer. The company shifted recruitment to different schools and agencies to address the problem.

Majority-minority ´clash´

Her own success story aside, Valerie Graves fears progress will remain slow until there is a change in "mind and hearts."

But speakers at the New York fair urged executives to stay the course when they encounter resistance in the diversity push.

"When you really start to see organizational tension, don´t get scared and back away," said Keesha Jean-Baptiste, senior vice president of talent engagement and inclusion at the trade association 4A´s.

"At that point that´s when real change happens, which is underrepresented groups and majority culture starting to clash and creating real dialogue and a place of discomfort that start to drive outcomes... that change the nature of who´s rising to the top."

Kim Kardashian confirms third baby on the way

LOS ANGELES: Kim Kardashian has confirmed reports that she and husband Kanye West are having a third baby, with the couple expected to use a surrogate for the birth.

Kardashian's confirmation, in a trailer released on Thursday for the new series of reality show "Keeping Up With the Kardashians," means that three of the Kardashian siblings are expecting children around the same time.

Multiple media reports in the past week have said that Khloe Kardashian, 33, and Kylie Jenner, at 20 the youngest member of the celebrity family, are pregnant for the first time. The women and their representatives have neither confirmed nor denied the reports.

Kim Kardashian and West were rumored in June to have hired a surrogate because of serious health complications with Kardashian's first two pregnancies and the birth of children North, 4, and one-year-old Saint.

In Thursday's trailer, Kim is seen telling her sister Khloe her good news on the phone.

"What happens every time I say, 'Guess what?'"

"The person's pregnant?" Khloe responds.

"We're having a baby!," Kim announces.

The reality star has given detailed accounts on her blog about the difficulties she experienced during her two labors, and has spoken about considering surrogacy for future children with West.

"Keeping Up With the Kardashians" returns for a 14th season on Sunday on the E! television network. Thursday's trailer did not address the reported pregnancies of Khloe and Kylie.

Friday, September 29, 2017

Toned down and tuned in, Miley Cyrus turns country balladeer

She transitioned from wholesome TV kid to pansexual media sensation -- and now Miley Cyrus is reinventing herself again.

On "Younger Now," the sixth album in her already storied career, the 24-year-old dips back into country -- the music of her father, singer Billy Ray Cyrus.

But the album, which was released Friday, is despite its oxymoronic title no straightforward return to her childhood -- or the innocent days of her country-singing "Hannah Montana" Disney persona.

Instead, Cyrus finds through country storytelling a window to relay a maturing life story of discovering love, heartache and a political voice.

"Younger Now" begins with a title track in which Cyrus declares she has no regrets over a scrutinized life -- whose memorable moments include scantily clad twerking and joyful hits from a bong.

"I'm not afraid of who I used to be / No one stays the same," Cyrus sings, adding: "I feel so much younger now."

On the title song and the album's first single, "Malibu," Cyrus crafts a modernized take on 1970s pop-rock, a gentle electric guitar riff carrying a mid-tempo beat.

"Malibu" climaxes into the most rocking track on the album, a beat coming in after Cyrus describes a journey of building trust and love on the sun-kissed California beach.

By the third track, "Rainbowland," she goes full country -- collaborating with her godmother and fellow Tennessee-born cultural figure Dolly Parton.

Mellow and reflective

However sensational her on-stage antics or divisive her artistic choices, critics of Cyrus are hard-pressed to dismiss her voice, whose rich timbre and four-octave range make her one of the more versatile singers in pop.

On "Younger Now," Cyrus shows off her lower vocal range and dusts off her country twang which, while it never vanished, she has downplayed as her career developed.

But in showing her new maturity, "Younger Now" also turns the page on some of the spunk that gave Cyrus her musical success.

After the frenetic hip-hop energy of her defining 2013 album "Bangerz" and the playful psychedelia of 2015's "Miley Cyrus & Her Dead Petz," "Younger Now" is a mellow affair.

Much of the lyricism appears to reflect on Cyrus' on- and -- now reportedly -- off-again relationship with Australian actor Liam Hemsworth.

"I know that I gave you my heart / But you stomped it to the ground," Cyrus sings on "Week Without You," a country tune tinged with a doo-wop harmony.

Some fans online suspected that "She's Not Him" -- with the lines "I just can't fall in love with you / You're not him" -- was an explanation by Cyrus, who identifies as pansexual, of her feelings for New Zealand model Stella Maxwell, with whom she has made out in public.

Cyrus ends on a more subdued note, with a mournful violin behind the guitar featuring on "Inspired."

The song pays tribute to her father. But Cyrus has said she wrote the songs to come to terms with Donald Trump's election after the singer, like many celebrities, campaigned for Hillary Clinton.

Questioning how "we can escape all the fear and all the hate," Cyrus implores the world: "You're the handle on the door that opens up the change."

First behind-the-screen shots of Malala biopic revealed

Reem Sheikh will portray the role of Malala Yousafzai in the movie. Photo: Gul Makai

The shooting biopic of Nobel Peace Prize winner and social activist Malala Yousafzai has started and the star cast is as excited as we are.

Divya Dutta (R)will portray the role of Toor Pekai (L) in the Malala biopic. 
 

Bollywood actress Divya Dutt, who has starred in movies such as Baadlapur and Bhaag Milkha Bhaag, will portray the role of Malala's mother Toor Pekai.

The movie is being directed by directed by Amjad Khan and produced by Anand Kumar. 

Since the shooting began, Divya shared a few pictures of her look along with her co-star Atul Kulkarni.

The movie, titled Gul Makai, stars Reem Shaikh in the title role.

The young actor has featured in popular Indian shows such as Yeh Rishta Kya Kehlata Hai and Na Bole Tum Na Maine Kuch Kaha. She also starred in the Amitabh Bachchan-Farhan Akhtar-starrer Wazir.

On September 1, Reem had shared the first poster of the movie with her fans. 

Poster of my first movie- Malala Yousafzai Biopic- Gul Makai.

A post shared by Reem (@reem_sameer8) on

The next day, the young actress announced on social media that she is travelling to Bhuj for the first schedule of the shooting. 

On September 25, the director Amjad Khan shared another poster of the movie on his Twitter account. 

'GUL MAKAI' refers to the pen name used by Malala while she was blogging about the happenings in her city. The biopic chronicles the life of the young Pakistan activist and the hardships she had to endure. 

The release date of the movie has yet to be announced. 

Pakistani celebrities and their mini-me

You may be keeping up with the razzle-dazzle of the celebrity world, but are you keeping up with their offspring? They are growing up fast. There is no denying that the best celebrity doppelgangers are the kids themselves. As they say, "The apple never falls too far from the tree."

Geo.tv has compiled a list of the stars and their mini-me.

Mahira Khan's eight-year-old, Azlan

Wasim Akram's little one Aiyla Akram

Fawad Khan snuggling up with his son Ayaan Khan

Meesha Shafi's son Kazimir Rahman and daughter Janevi Rahman

Lamaisah, Amir Khan's little girl, turns three this year

Former captain of Pakistan cricket team, Misbah-ul-Haq's daughter Noriza and son Faham


Unicorns and glitter at Mawra Hocane’s 25th

 Actress Mawra Hocane celebrated her 25th birthday with glitter and unicorns on Friday and the party was all about close friends and family. The unicorn-themed birthday bash was chronicled on Instagram by the Hocane sisters and their BFF, Humaima Malick.

"Surprise Surprise! A Unicorn arrived while she only expected humans & my little one behaved like a legit little one @mawrellous is clearly turning older & wiser!" wrote her actor-sister Urwa.

Here are a few clicks from what seemed like a night to remember:

Mawra, donning a shimmery blue dress, can be seen cutting a cake with equally shimmery decorations on the wall.

Great host @urwatistic craziest birthday ever ! #siblinggoals #siblingsforlife

A post shared by HUMAIMA MALICK (@humaimamalick) on

The sassy Humaima Malik also attended the party.



Happiest Birthday My Magical Person ! @mawrellous ! Love you so much & more & more ! ️ #BestSisterInTheWorld #ForeverFriend

A post shared by URWA Tul Wusqua HOCANE (@urwatistic) on

The sister act!



Unicorns and glitter at Mawra Hocane’s 25th

 Actress Mawra Hocane celebrated her 25th birthday with glitter and unicorns on Friday and the party was all about close friends and family. The unicorn-themed birthday bash was chronicled on Instagram by the Hocane sisters and their BFF, Humaima Malick.

"Surprise Surprise! A Unicorn arrived while she only expected humans & my little one behaved like a legit little one

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Netflix to spend Can$500 mln to make films, TV shows in Canada

The Netflix logo is seen during a Netflix event in Berlin, March 1, 2017. AFP/John Macdougall/Files

OTTAWA: Netflix will spend Can$500 million (US$400 million) over the next five years to make original films and television shows in Canada, the company and Heritage Minister Melanie Joly announced Thursday.

This amounts to about five percent of the video streaming service's estimated total US$7 billion production budget for 2018.

As part of a deal with Ottawa, Netflix will open its first production company outside of the United States in this country, while avoiding minimum Canadian content regulations and paying into a government arts fund.

It agreed also to highlight Canadian-made content in both English and French on its global platform.

"It is important for us to see and hear stories that reflect back to us who we are as we are learning about our place in the world," Joly said in a speech.

"I hope this (deal) will be a model followed by other countries in the world," she later told reporters.

Ottawa had been under pressure by Canadian broadcasters to impose a tax on Netflix, akin to fees paid by broadcasters, that could be used to fund Canadian programming.

Canadian broadcasters also must fulfil a quota of Canadian content on air, which streaming services are not required to match.

Facebook, Netflix, Spotify, YouTube, and other online firms reach Canadians directly, outside of Canada's regulated broadcast system.

Most of their content is produced outside of Canada.

The government's deal with Netflix under the Investment Act allows it to claim a victory for Canadian content while also avoiding imposing new regulations on Internet companies.

Couch potato trends

According to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), there were about 11 million households in this country hooked up to cable or satellite television in 2016.

But their numbers are dwindling, with an estimated 200,000 or two percent of television subscribers per year cutting the cord, said an April report titled "The Battle for the North American Couch Potato."

The trend started in 2012 — two years after Netflix began offering streaming services in Canada — and is expected to accelerate over the coming years, said the Convergence Research Group, which authored the study.

Netflix, which government sources say has about five million subscribers in Canada, had lobbied against being treated like a traditional broadcaster.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau rejected a so-called "Netflix tax" in the 2015 election that swept his Liberals to power.

Joly cited already high rates paid by Canadians for broadband Internet access in her decision not to add a new tax on streaming services.

"Our government won't increase the cost of these services to Canadians by imposing a new tax," Joly said.

Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos said investments like this one would give Canadian producers and creators more access to financing, business partners and ways to connect with audiences around the world.

"Fans around the world are already falling in love with Netflix originals produced in Canada," he said. "Today's announcement affirms there's more to come as Netflix launches Netflix Canada, our permanent production presence in Canada."

The company has already co-produced a handful of Canadian television series with public broadcaster CBC and others, including Anne, based on the novel Anne of Green Gables, and Canadian author Margaret Atwood's Alias Grace.

As part of a swath of new cultural policies, Joly also announced new "cultural trade missions" abroad to help Canadian creators break into new markets.

Ottawa will seek to expand international co-production treaties to grow production budgets and attract financing partners, she said.

As well, parliament will be asked to review Canada's Copyright Act, as well as update the Broadcasting Act and Telecommunications Act for the digital age.

Julia Louis-Dreyfus announces she has breast cancer

Award-winning "Veep" star Julia Louis-Dreyfus has breast cancer, she announced through social media on Thursday.

The 56-year-old American actress revealed the diagnosis to her 750,000 Twitter followers, posting a note that read: "One in eight women get breast cancer. Today, I'm the one."

"The good news is that I have the most glorious group of supportive and caring friends, and fantastic insurance through my union," she continued.

"The bad news is that not all women are so lucky, so let's fight all cancers and make universal health care a reality."

Louis-Dreyfus, who has two children with actor Brad Hall, attached an image of the note to a tweet in which she wrote: "Just when you thought..."

The news comes less than two weeks after the "Veep" star won a sixth consecutive Emmy for comedy acting.

A native New Yorker of French stock, Louis-Dreyfus has been one of America's most popular and influential comedy actors since she found fame with cult sitcom "Seinfeld" in the 1990s.

On "Veep" she plays a somewhat bumbling vice president who later becomes the acting president, despite her hapless staff making political blunders along the way.

She has six consecutive best actress Emmys for "Veep" as well as three as an executive producer when it was awarded best comedy series.

She has won in the past for her roles on "Seinfeld" -- which also earned her a Golden Globe -- and "The New Adventures of Old Christine."

It has been a rollercoaster year or so for the actress, who tearfully dedicated her acting Emmy in 2016 to her father, who passed away two days earlier.

"I am so glad that he liked 'Veep,'" she said, her voice breaking down as she accepted the award. "Because his opinion was the one that really mattered."

"Veep" recently announced that the seventh season of the HBO show, due to premiere in 2018, will be its last.

Technology sheds new light on master of shade

He is known as the master of shade, and now 21st Century technology is shedding new light on the creative process behind Caravaggio's groundbreaking painting.

"Inside Caravaggio", an exhibition that opens Friday at Milan's Palazzo Reale, unites 20 of the Renaissance giant's most important works with X-ray and infrared images of them that offer visitors revealing insights into how he went about creating them.

The multimedia displays offer contemporary fans of the father of modern painting a glimpse into his idiosyncratic technique, the points at which he changed his mind and the modifications and adjustments he made to some of his most famous works.

Works have been loaned from a string of top Italian and international museums, including the Metropolitan in New York, which has released "Sacred Family with the Infant Saint John the Baptist (1604-1605)" and "Salome with the head of John the Baptist (1607 or 1610)".

Other highlights include "St. Francis of Assisi in ecstasy" (c.1597), borrowed from the National Gallery in London.

"It is a special exhibition," said curator Rossella Vodret. "He was a fascinating figure who never ceases to surprise us.

"Apart from offering 20 Caravaggios, which is an exceptional figure for this artist, the displays allow you to get inside his head, to relive his creative process."

In a portrait of St John the Baptist that is on loan from the Palazzo Corsini in Rome, the biblical figure is sitting and turning towards his right.

"It was not understood why he was in this position but with radiographic imaging we discovered that he was in fact turning towards a lamb, which is his iconic symbol but which the artist decided to paint over in the end," Vodret said.

In "St Jerome in Meditation," which usually resides in a museum at the Montserrat Monastery in Barcelona, the right leg of the elderly man was initially more exposed but finally covered up with a blanket.

The exhibition also offers a new perspective on Caravaggio's years in Rome, based on new research that dates the Milan-born artist's arrival in the city to 1596, four years later than previously thought.

"That means that the production of works thought to have taken eight years, were actually completed in four, and also that there is a a gap of four years, which he probably spent in prison after killing a man in Milan," said Vodret.

Caravaggio was forced to flee Rome in 1610 after killing another man in a brawl and is thought to have died in Tuscany four years later, aged just 38.

Mr Perfectionist Aamir Khan set to treat fans with new role

A still from a video posted on YouTube. 

Bollywood super star Aamir Khan is all set to play Shakti Kumaarr, a music director with a largely flawed personality.

Mr Perfectionist's fans will be able to see him in the upcoming film 'Secret Superstar'.

"He flirts with girls," Khan said. "Shakti Kumaarr has all the bad qualities you can imagine in a man."

The versatile actor has not shied from taking on different roles.

"Shakti Kumaarr is a music director who is going through a rough time," said Khan's wife and co-producer Kiran Rao. "Such characters are barely written for any actor."

The entire crew of the movies was in splits each time the 'Dhoom 3' actor tried on a different, colourful costume for the character.

"In his personal life, he is really simple, basic and organic. For him to wear these tight t-shirts, I think even he had a really good time," said director Advait Chandan.

A still from a video posted on YouTube.

For national award-winning actor Zaira Wasim, it was difficult to absorb Khan's transformation from a strict father figure to a wannabe music director.

"It was a mental jump for me to witness him in these quirky looks," Wasim said.

Produced by Aamir Khan and Kiran Rao under the banner of Aamir Khan Productions, Zee Studios and Akash Chawla, 'Secret Superstar' is written and directed by Advait Chandan.

The film is slated to release on October 19, 2017.

'Loving Vincent' brings Van Gogh's art alive

You have seen his "Sunflowers" in a museum, sung along with Don McLean to "Vincent (Starry Starry Night)" and gawped at the tens of million of dollars his works have fetched at auction.

But you have never seen Vincent Van Gogh's art quite like it is shown in the film "Loving Vincent."

Seven years in the making and billed as the world's first fully-painted feature film, "Loving Vincent" uses more than 130 of the Dutch artist's own paintings to tell his own story.

Each of the 65,000 frames of the animated independent film, created by Polish artist and animator Dorota Kobiela, is an oil painting hand painted by 125 professional artists who travelled from around the world to be a part of the project.

"It looks like something completely different, and that doesn't happen very often in our media-saturated world," said Hugh Welchman, who co-wrote and directed the film with Kobiela.

"Loving Vincent," showing in limited release in New York and Los Angeles and arriving in Europe in October, was first filmed with actors playing some of the people Van Gogh captured on canvas.

They include Saiorse Ronan as doctor's daughter Marguerite Gachet and Chris O'Dowd as postman Joseph Roulin, who walk through and inhabit his paintings as his story unfolds.

Then came the hard part. Finding and training the painters to reproduce Van Gogh's work.

More than 4,000 artists from around the world applied for the job and 125 were chosen and put through three weeks training.

"Even though we were hiring the very best oil painters, Vincent's style look like it should be very easy but actually it's difficult to do well," said Welchman.

"Even after training there were still quite a few painters who really found it impossible to get to grips with his style," Welchman said.

The $5.5 million production focuses on the last weeks of Van Gogh's life before his death in 1890 in France at age 37 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Welchman said the film has triggered some unusual responses.

"We've had a lot of people in tears at screenings. People are sending poems or making cakes with intricate Vincent paintings on the cake," he said.

He and Kobiela hope the film encourages audiences to discover more about Van Gogh.

"I'd like them to think there is more to his story than he went mad, cut off his ears, was a genius and did these incredibly colourful paintings that sell for lots of money."

Playboy founder Hugh Hefner dies at age 91

Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, who helped usher in the 1960s sexual revolution with his groundbreaking men's magazine and built a business empire around his libertine lifestyle, died on Wednesday at the age of 91, Playboy Enterprises said.

Hefner, once called the "prophet of pop hedonism" by Time magazine, peacefully passed away at his home, Playboy Enterprises said in a statement.

Hefner was sometimes characterized as an oversexed Peter Pan as he kept a harem of young blondes that numbered as many as seven at his legendary Playboy Mansion.

This was chronicled in "The Girls Next Door," a TV reality show that aired from 2005 through 2010. He said that thanks to the impotency-fighting drug Viagra he continued exercising his libido into his 80s.

"I'm never going to grow up," Hefner said in a CNN interview when he was 82. "Staying young is what it is all about for me. Holding on to the boy and long ago I decided that age really didn't matter and as long as the ladies...feel the same way, that's fine with me."

Hefner settled down somewhat in 2012 at age 86 when he took Crystal Harris, who was 60 years younger, as his third wife.

He said his swinging lifestyle might have been a reaction to growing up in a repressed family where affection was rarely exhibited.

His so-called stunted childhood led to a multi-million-dollar enterprise that centered on naked women but also espoused Hefner's "Playboy philosophy" based on romance, style, and the casting off of mainstream mores.

That philosophy came to life at the legendary parties in his mansions – first in his native Chicago, then in Los Angeles' exclusive Holmby Hills neighborhood – where legions of male celebrities swarmed to mingle with beautiful young women.

Long before the Internet made nudity ubiquitous, Hefner faced obscenity charges in 1963 for publishing and circulating photos of disrobed celebrities and aspiring stars but he was acquitted.

Hefner created Playboy as the first stylish glossy men's magazine and in addition to nude fold-outs, it had intellectual appeal with top writers such as Kurt Vonnegut, Joyce Carol Oates, Vladimir Nabokov, James Baldwin and Alex Haley for men who liked to say they did not buy the magazine just for the pictures.

In-depth interviews with historic figures such as Fidel Castro, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X and John Lennon also were featured regularly.

"I've never thought of Playboy quite frankly as a sex magazine," Hefner told CNN in 2002. "I always thought of it as a lifestyle magazine in which sex was one important ingredient."

Hefner proved to be a genius at branding. The magazine's rabbit silhouette became one of the best known logos in the world and the "bunny" waitresses in his Playboy nightclubs were instantly recognizable in their low-cut bathing suit-style uniforms with bow ties, puffy cotton tails and pert rabbit ears.

Hef, as he began calling himself in high school, also was a living logo for Playboy, presiding over his realm in silk pajamas and a smoking jacket while puffing on a pipe.

"What I created came out of my own adolescent dreams of fantasies," he told CNN.

"I was trying to redefine what it meant to be a young, urban unattached male."

After writing copy for Esquire magazine, Hefner married and worked in the circulation department of Children's Activities magazine when he began plotting what would become Playboy magazine.

The first issue came out in December 1953 – featuring nude photos of actress Marilyn Monroe – and was a hit.

As the magazine took off, it was attacked from the right because of the nudity and from the left by feminists who said it reduced women to sex objects.

Hefner once declared sex to be "the primary motivating factor in the course of human history" and, using that as a business model Playboy flourished during the sexual revolution and into the 1970s with monthly circulation hitting 7 million.

He ran into trouble in the 1980s with competition from Penthouse and Hustler – magazines that had much more explicit photos – and Playboy's social impact faded considerably by the 21st century.

The Playboy Clubs closed in 1991 but would be partially revived.

After suffering a minor stroke in 1985, Hefner made daughter Christie chief executive officer of Playboy Enterprises and she gave the business a makeover before stepping down in 2009.

Hefner's son, Cooper, who was nearly 40 years younger than Christie, assumed a major role in the company in 2014.

"My father lived an exceptional and impactful life as a media and cultural pioneer and a leading voice behind some of the most significant social and cultural movements of our time in advocating free speech, civil rights and sexual freedom," Cooper said in a statement, according to posts on social media.

Playboy magazine, starting with its March 2016 issue, did away with full frontal nudity in a rebranding that would have been unimaginable in the publication's heyday.

Playboy resumed nudity a year later as Hefner's son Cooper announced a new philosophy for the company.

In August 2016, one of Hefner's neighbors, a private equity investor, announced he had bought the Playboy mansion for $100 million with the understanding Hefner could stay there until he died.

Before Playboy, Hefner married Millie Williams in 1949 and they divorced in 1959, starting a period in which he became the ultimate bachelor.

The many women who shared his round, motorized, vibrating bed included models who posed in his magazine and in 1989 he married one of them, Playmate of the Year Kimberly Conrad.

They had two sons but Hefner's experiment with traditional domesticity ended in divorce after 10 years.

Conrad moved into a home next to Hefner so he could stay close to their sons.

In 2008 after one of his girlfriends, Holly Madison, broke up with Hefner, he said he had hoped to spend the rest of his life with her. Shortly afterward he added 19-year-old twins to his group before turning to marriage again with Harris.

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Aerosmith cut short tour due to Steven Tyler's medical issues

Rock band Aerosmith announced Tuesday it was cutting short its tour of South America after frontman Steven Tyler flew back to the US due to "unexpected medical issues."

"To everybody in South America – Brazil, Chile, Argentina and Mexico – I'm very sorry and feel like I've let you down," the 69-year-old wrote in a statement posted on Twitter, which did not specify the nature of the illness.

"I won't be able to continue the last four shows of this tour. I flew back to the US on doctor's orders last night.

"Please not to worry," he continued, "I am not in a life-threatening condition, but I need to deal with this right away and get some rest and medical care immediately in order to sustain and maintain my future performances... As they say, 'We humans make plans, and God laughs.'"

The band played on Monday night in Sao Paulo after performing on Thursday in Rio de Janeiro. The cities cut from the tour were Curitiba, Brazil; Santiago, Chile; Rosario, Argentina; and Monterrey, Mexico.

Aerosmith announced last year they were doing a "farewell" tour for 2017 but stopped short of saying the shows would be their finale.

The Boston-bred hard rock group formed in 1970 and are behind such classics as "Dream On," "Walk This Way" and "Janie's Got a Gun."

Momina Mustehsan makes it to BBC’s list of 100 influential women

Momina Mustehsan. 

Pop sensation Momina Mustehsan has made it to BBC's list of 100 inspirational women of 2017 from across the globe.

"The women on the list will be part of the 100 Women Challenge, tackling some of the biggest problems facing women around the world," BBC reported. "Coming together in four teams, the women will create innovate ways to tackle the glass ceiling, female illiteracy, street harassment and sexism in sports."

Mustehsan, a rising star in the world of music from Pakistan, is so far the only woman from the country on the list that has yet to fill 40 spaces.

She told the news outlet the quote that helped her most in life: "It only gets better when you get better." The 25-year-old singer said she found the quote inside a fortune cookie when she was binge-eating through depression. "That [quote] woke me up."

Besides being a singer, Mustehsan is an engineer and an ambassador for a cricket team, Islamabad United of Pakistan Super League.

Other than Mustehsan, those on the list from Asia include Mehroonisa Siddiqui Indian homemaker and mother of actor Nawazuddin Siddiqui, Rupi Kaur Canadian-Indian author and Sakena Yacoobi educationist from Afghanistan.  

Priyanka Chopra among highest paid TV actresses

Bollywood diva Priyanka Chopra has made it to the Forbes List of World's Highest-Paid TV Actresses in 2017 for the second consecutive time. 

The Quantico-star secured the eight spot with $10 million among the top 10 big earners of the small screen.

Priyanka's description on the list reads, "Bollywood crossover star takes advantage of her worldwide appeal with revenue streams from both the US and India. In the US, she is best known for her star-turn on Quantico."

Forbes added that endorsements are Priyanka's most consistent "money-maker". Chopra has a seven-figure deal with the likes of Pantene, Lyf Mobile, and Nirav Modi, according to Forbes.  

Priyanka's international popularity grew after she released her first album, In My City. Following this, she cemented her position as an international celebrity for portraying the role of Alex Parrish in crime-drama Quantico, for which she even won two People's Choice Awards.

The Bajirao Mastani actress made her Hollywood debut opposite Dwayne Johnson and Zack Effron in Baywatch

Other actresses in the list include Sofia Vergara, who became the world's highest-paid TV actress for the sixth year in a row, Mindy Kaling and Kaley Cuoco. 

Here's the Forbes list of this year's highest-paid TV actresses:

Sofia Vergara — $41.5 million

Kaley Cuoco — $26 million

Mindy Kaling — $13 million

Ellen Pompeo — $13 million

Mariska Hargitay — $12.5 million

Julie Bowen — $12 million

Kerry Washington — $11 million

Priyanka Chopra — $10 million

Robin Wright — $9 million

Pauley Perrette — $8.5 million

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Game of Thrones stars Kit Harington and Rose Leslie finally engaged

The two met on the sets while filming the show's second seasons while playing Jon Snow and Ygritte in 2012

After denying engagement rumours this year, Game of Thrones onscreen and now offscreen love birds Kit Harington and Rose Leslie have finally announced their engagement, BBC reported.

The two met on the sets while filming the show's second seasons while playing Jon Snow and Ygritte in 2012.

After Leslie's character was killed off in the fourth season, rumours were abound that the two had been dating, and merely strengthened after the two made their first public debut together on the red carpet at Olivier Awards.

Ygritte and Jon Snow 

"It was "easy" to fall in love with Leslie," Harington told L'Uomo Vogue, terming the filming of the second season in Iceland as the most memorable moments of the show.

"Because the country is beautiful, because the Northern Lights are magical, and because it was there that I fell in love," he said.

"If you're already attracted to someone, and then they play your love interest in the show, it becomes very easy to fall in love."

Jon Snow does know something, after all!

George Clooney prays for unity as celebs back #TakeAKnee

A screenshot of the Daily Beast article

LOS ANGELES: George Clooney on Tuesday became the latest entertainer to add his voice to a divisive national debate in the US over the rights of Americans to stage silent protests during the playing of the national anthem, saying he was praying for unity.

In a short poem, the Oscar-winning actor and director wrote that he was praying for America's children, police, those in the military, and that "dissent will always be protected in this great country."

The "Ocean's Eleven" star did not mention US President Donald Trump by name but his poem follows five days of attacks by Trump on National Football League (NFL) players who kneel during the playing of the US national anthem to protest racial disparities in the justice system.

On Tuesday, Trump called on the NFL to ban players who kneel.

"I pray that we can find more that unites us than divides us. I pray that our nation's leaders want to do the same," Clooney wrote in the poem, written for The Daily Beast news website.

"And when I pray, I kneel," he concluded.

Clooney is the latest celebrity to support the #TakeAKnee protest that has seen the likes of singers Stevie Wonder, John Legend, Pharrell Williams, Bette Midler and film maker Ava DuVernay drop to their knees at concerts, in photos posted to their social media accounts, or issue messages of support.

The X Files stars take a knee. Photo: Twitter 

A photo posted by "X Files" stars Gillian Anderson and David Duchovny linking arms and kneeling on the set of their TV show, was a top trending item on Twitter on Monday night.

Trump ignited a firestorm of criticism after comments on Friday in which he described NFL players who chose to take a knee through renditions of "The Star-Spangled Banner" as "sons of b******" who should be fired.

'Lord Voldemort' British actor Fiennes given Serbian passport

Award-winning British actor and director Ralph Fiennes, who portrayed Lord Voldemort in the "Harry Potter" series, was given a Serbian passport on Sunday for "promoting" the Balkan country.

The decision to grant honorary citizenship to the 54-year-old English star was reached earlier this month by the government of Prime Minister Ana Brnabic.

"I never thought I would become a Serb and now it seems that I am one," Fiennes said in Serbian during a brief ceremony after President Aleksandar Vucic presented him with the passport and an ID card.

"We Serbs are happy to have you as a friend and now we have you as our compatriot," Vucic told Fiennes.

Fiennes, a two-time Oscar nominee, has featured in some 30 movies including in "Schindler's List", "The English Patient", "Skyfall" and "Spectre."

He is currently in Belgrade shooting a movie about legendary ballet dancer Rudolph Nureyev after filming in Serbia in 2010 his debut movie as director -- "Coriolanus" -- an adaption of Shakespeare's play.

Fiennes is "promoting Serbia... through his artistic work and business activities", Brnabic told the Politika daily earlier this month.

"He became a genuine friend and promoter of our country and thus undoubtedly deserved honorary citizenship," she said.