Burn After Reading

Burn After Reading

Starring: John Malkovich, Frances McDormand, George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Tilda Swinton

Director: Joel Coen, Ethan Coen

Genre: Comedy

The Coen brothers cook up a smart comedy (about stupid people), set in Washington DC, that pokes fun at everyone but the politicians. No, really.

Release Date: 19-Feb-2009

URL: http://www.burnafterreading.com/

Language: English

Distributor: Tayangan Unggul

Synopsis:

CIA agent Osborne Cox decides to pen his memoirs and is fired from the agency. The disc containing the memoirs inadvertently gets left in a ladies' locker room at a gym, where Linda and co-worker Chad hatch a plan to sell its contents to the highest bidder.

Safe Trip Home

Artist: Dido

Genre: Pop

(RCA/SonyBMG)

Reviewer: CHUA CHERN TOONG


British pop diva Dido seems to specialise in churning out pleasantly safe pop tunes that are decidedly sallow, inoffensive and anodyne, as exemplified by her first two efforts, 1999’s No Angel and 2003’s Life for Rent.

The production values on both albums stick to a tried and tested blueprint: smooth, down-tempo, easy-listening pop that went down very well with Sophie Kinsella readers and adherents to post-feminist theories.

Even if she has notched a clutch of respectable hits on the charts, with key singles like Thank You and White Flag both reaching the top 10 in a number of countries, Dido’s musical formula seems to be permanently stuck in an unchanging groove, refusing to follow any du jour trends or embark on any radical artistic reinvention.

It’s the same approach that is adopted for this third studio effort, which is as featureless as pop records come.

The opening Don’t Believe in Love lopes along on a slightly trip-hop-informed beat, with a strategically placed string backdrop to add some colour.

Quiet Times introduces some polite acoustic-guitar lines, while It Comes and It Goes is only remarkable for its utilisation of a 5/4 time signature, a break from the straightforward cadences in the rest of the album.

Elsewhere, the moody Grafton Street possesses a nondescript electronic pulse reminiscent of Peter Gabriel’s Mercy Street, and Look No Further is a lethargic lullaby that eventually drifts away into nothingness.

Us 2 Little Gods has some sonically interesting vocal effects, but doesn’t add much to its overall structure, while Burnin’ Love has a slight gospel influence, with its carefully modulated choral harmonies.

The concluding Northern Skies drags on for nine lethargic minutes, shuffling along on a wearily outdated electro-pop cadence.

Brooding in some places, and blissful in others, Safe Trip Home never really breaks above its inherent placid surface, preferring to wallow in a safe womblike atmosphere for most of the proceedings.

It’s no overstatement to say that this album constitutes the perfect coffee-table record, tastefully constructed but creatively unimaginative. This could well be the aural equivalent of a particularly sluggish chick-lit tome, or an overdose of Valium.

Chris Brown expected in court Thursday

LOS ANGELES: Prosecutors say Chris Brown is expected in a Los Angeles court Thursday, despite that they have yet to file charges.

District Attorney’s spokeswoman Jane Robison said Wednesday that Brown is required to appear based on a date scheduled after his Feb. 8 arrest.

The 19-year-old R&B singer was booked on suspicion of making criminal threats after police say a woman identified him as her attacker. A person familiar with the incident but not authorised to speak publicly identified the woman as Brown’s girlfriend, Rihanna.

Police presented their case weeks ago, but prosecutors asked for more information. Brown remains free on $50,000 bail. A call placed to his attorney, Mark Geragos, was not returned Wednesday afternoon. - AP

'American Idol' selects 3 more finalists

LOS ANGELES (AP): The drama is over for Nathaniel Marshall and Kristen McNamara on "American Idol."

The pair of singers who sparred with their group during Hollywood Week were two of nine semifinalists sent packing Wednesday on the popular Fox singing competition - and they weren't selected to return for the special wild card round, either.

The third group of three finalists headed to the top 12: Lil Rounds, the smooth 23-year-old mother of three from Memphis, Tenn.; Scott MacIntyre, the soulful 23-year-old piano player from Scottsdale, Ariz., and Jorge Nunez, the charming 20-year-old college student from Carolina, Puerto Rico. The trio received the most viewer votes Tuesday.

The show's four judges seemed in agreement with the viewer votes this week. They apparently didn't want to be without Rounds, who received the biggest endorsement after singing Mary J. Blige's "Be Without You." The panel also lauded MacIntyre and Nunez, who broke into tears Tuesday after his rendition of Elton John's "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me."

"You're born to sing," said Kara DioGuardi. "What you have comes from the heart."

At the end of the show, the judges also announced the semifinalists who will get a second shot at the top 12.

Von Smith, Jasmine Murray, Ricky Braddy, Megan Corkrey, Tatiana Del Toro, Matt Giraud, Jesse Langseth and Anoop Desai will return to the stage for the wild card round Thursday. The judges will pick the final three finalists from that group.

"Thank you so much. Thank you so much," said a weeping Del Toro. "I want this so much. This means so much to me."

Nunez, MacIntyre and Rounds join previously picked finalists Kris Allen, Adam Lambert, Allison Iraheta, Danny Gokey, Alexis Grace and Michael Sarver. The show's dozen finalists will be known Thursday after the wild card round.

Beginning next week, the finalists start competing - with one singer sent packing each Wednesday.


Tarikh baru konsert Rihanna diumumkan 12 Mac ini

PETALING JAYA: Tarikh baru konsert sulung Rihanna di Kuala Lumpur akan ditetapkan pada 12 Mac ini, setelah penyanyi popular antarabangsa itu terpaksa menunda konsert yang sepatutnya berlangsung pada 13 Februari lalu gara-gara kecederaan teruk yang dialami akibat diserang kekasihnya, Chris Brown, tidak lama dulu.

Menerusi kenyataan akhbar, Pengarah Urusan Pineapple Concerts Sdn Bhd, Razman Razali berkata agen Rihanna, William Morris Agency di Los Angeles akan menetapkan tarikh baru itu pada hari tersebut.

Kontroversi yang melanda Rihanna dan penyanyi R&B popular, Chris Brown cukup hangat diperkatakan berikutan kes 'serangan' yang dibuat oleh Chris ke atas kekasihnya itu.

Insiden yang berlaku apabila Brown ditahan polis dua jam sebelum bermulanya majlis Anugerah Grammy pada 8 Februari lalu di atas dakwaan menyerang Rihanna menjadi satu berita yang amat menggemparkan.

Difahamkan, pergaduhan tercetus antara Rihanna dan Brown sebaik selesai parti pra-Grammy yang berlangsung sehari sebelum acara berprestij itu. Rihanna telah membuat aduan polis, namun Brown dibebaskan dengan jaminan US$50,000 (RM180,000).

Kedua-duanya juga turut menarik diri daripada membuat persembahan pada malam Anugerah Grammy itu.

Pergaduhan yang berlaku mengakibatkan kecederaan teruk di beberapa bahagian badan Rihanna. Penyanyi itu juga dikatakan mendapat gegaran yang teruk di kepalanya, serta terdapat bekas gigitan dan pendarahan hidung.

Oscars want to change? Well, since you asked ...

LOS ANGELES, Feb 17 — Speaking at the official annual pre-Oscars luncheon for nominees, staged in the same hotel ballroom where the Golden Globes were handed out in one of the umpteen other awards shows, Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences President Sid Ganis vowed next weekend’s Academy Awards telecast will be “truly different.”

ABC this year has Hugh Jackman as host and Bill Condon and Laurence Mark as producers, so that’s a given. Neither Condon nor Mark, who teamed behind the scenes on the musical “Dreamgirls,” has much TV experience. And Jackman is a multitalented star whose sexiness has been vouched for by People, but his last film, “Australia,” was a box-office disappointment and his well-regarded turns as host of Broadway’s Tony Awards were seen by as many folks as NBC’s “Knight Rider” revival.

But prudent change is never a bad thing. A good start for Ganis would be to axe the Oscars’ traditional show-stopper — in the least flattering sense of the term — the annual speech by the, ahem, academy president.

Who would allow the producer of “Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo” to prattle on about the movies’ contributions to humanity, while Kate Winslet, Penelope Cruz and the guy who edited “Slumdog Millionaire” are hustled away after 45 seconds?

This is the entertainment industry, right? Which promises more drama?

That’s the problem. Ganis talks about how the 81st annual Oscars on ABC next Sunday is “going to be a show that takes some risks,” according to the Hollywood Reporter, warning this year’s nominees: “Your categories are being presented in a completely different way. Heads up.”

More like heads down.

No one has a problem with how the categories are presented. The reading of the names, the envelope, the winner, the speech — that is the Oscars. Mess with that and you risk wrecking a brand as strong as Hollywood itself.

That’s a big part of why the Academy Awards ceremony is always one of the year’s most-watched TV shows. Ratings tend to ebb and flow with the box-office power of its nominees. (The failure of “The Dark Knight” to score a Best Picture nomination this year likely signals ebb.) But it is popular for the same reason pumpkins are popular around Halloween — tradition. No matter how many Oscars “Slumdog” wins, this isn’t the year to serve chicken curry at Thanksgiving.

If the academy wants to change some things, it should choose from the other side of the menu.

Cut the live musical numbers. And no, dancers don’t help. Notice a lot of singing in prime time? Exactly.

The presenters don’t have to engage in “awards show banter.” All anyone wants to see is how they look and what they’re wearing. Tell them to explain the category and maybe what it means to them, roll the nominees clip, announce the winner and step aside.

Pre-produce the honorary awards segments. A speech can be incorporated into the taped piece. No movie producers would allow a monologue to go on that long. The editing room is a wonderful thing. Use it. Winners can get a live ovation at the end.

Some excesses are to be expected. It is the Academy Awards. And ABC wants more show so it can have more commercial breaks, even when the ad market is so weak the academy deigned for the first time to allow movie studios to buy time on the Oscarcast.

But filmmakers know how everything starts to drag after three hours. Don’t waste the audience’s time.

Benjamin Button is the only person who will feel younger when it’s over. — AP

‘Slumdog Millionaire’ child stars face uphill battle

MUMBAI, Feb 17 — They are not your typical movie stars.

Ten-year-old Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail lives in a lean-to made of tarpaulins and blankets. Nine-year-old Rubina Ali’s home is a tiny bubble-gum pink shack. A murky open sewer runs down her narrow lane.

Plucked from one of Mumbai’s teeming slums to star in the Oscar-nominated hit “Slumdog Millionaire,” they are India’s real slumdog millionaires.

Like the film’s hero, an impoverished tea seller who wins money and love on India’s version of “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire,” they now have a chance to escape the grinding poverty they were born into. But as their still-unfolding story shows, things never go as smoothly in real life.

The filmmakers are helping the children, but fast discovering that good intentions and deep pockets don't guarantee success. Meanwhile, sudden fame and relative fortune are sowing resentment within the families and with neighbours, who wonder why their big-eyed boys weren't cast instead.

The Fox Searchlight release has grossed more than US$100 million (RM360 million), but the children’s lives seem nearly as fragile as before.

“He’s supposed to be the hero in the movie, but look how he’s living,” said Azharuddin’s mother, Shameem Ismail, sitting on a rotting board outside their lean-to. “It’s a zero.”

About 65 million Indians, roughly a quarter of the urban population, live in slums, according to government surveys.

“Most of them are doomed to remain as they are,” said Amitabh Kundu, dean of Jawaharlal Nehru University’s School of Social Sciences in New Delhi.

It’s too early to tell whether Rubina and Azharuddin — Azhar to his friends — will buck the trend.

The filmmakers debated whether to use slum kids at all.

“Part of your brain thinks, would it distort their lives too much?” said Danny Boyle, the British director, by phone from London. “Then someone said, ‘These people have so much prejudice against them in their lives. Why should we be prejudiced against them as well?’ ”

Rubina was cast as the young Latika, who grows up to become the hero’s love interest, and Azhar as his brother, Salim.

Boyle and producer Christian Colson figured education was the best way to help Rubina and Azhar. They got them places in Aseema, a non-profit, English-language school for underprivileged kids in Mumbai.

Some arrive at Aseema with matted hair, never having seen a mirror before. Many need counseling. On one blackboard, the lesson of the day read: “I must close my mouth when I eat.”

School chairwoman Dilbur Parakh said half make it through high school, and she tries to find vocational training for the rest.

The filmmakers also paid the children for 30 days of acting work, give the families a small monthly stipend and set up trust funds that Rubina and Azhar can tap once they graduate.

Colson describes the amount in the trust as substantial, but won't tell anyone how much — not even the parents — for fear of making the kids vulnerable to exploitation.

As the movie's popularity swelled, the filmmakers’ plan began to fray.

Journalists swarmed the school, forcing Rubina and Azhar to stay home. The families started demanding more, asking for cash and new houses, Colson said.

When the city razed Azhar’s neighbourhood, Colson wired the family money for a new home. He doesn’t know what happened to the money, but the family remains camped out in a lean-to.

Most troubling, he said, the parents' commitment to seeing their kids through school has waned.

So the filmmakers have agreed to buy apartments and allow the families to move in. But they won't transfer ownership to the parents until Rubina and Azhar finish school at age 18.

The filmmakers have also faced criticism that they didn’t fairly compensate the children, but have declined to reveal how much they paid, again citing fear of exploitation.

“It’s becoming a full-time job dealing with the daily hassle,” Boyle said. Still, he added, “I’m glad we did it, even with all the headache.”

He hopes to give Rubina and Azhar an education rather than a jackpot — what he called a “slow nurturing” instead of “a sudden dash for glory.”

“Moviemaking is distorting,” Boyle said. “The last thing you want to do is turn them into a star.”

But directing movies is easier than directing lives. Stardom is already distorting Rubina’s world.

The latest additions to her family’s meagre belongings — some stainless-steel pots and old blankets — are two small photo albums.

Inside are photographs of Rubina wearing a glittering salwar kameez outfit and sitting in a helicopter, ready to fly off to a strange new world of red carpets and Bollywood heroes.

“My friends when they see me on TV say, ‘Look, you’re going to be a big actress when you grow up. You’re going to forget us’,” Rubina said. “I say, ‘You are my best friends. How can I forget you?’ “

She dashed outside and scurried along the sewer. “See this?” she said, pointing at a tract of weeds. She seemed proud to pronounce a new English word to a foreign visitor: “jungle.”

But on the narrow, dirty lanes Rubina knows best, most kids speak Hindi and Urdu and forgo school to work.

“If I wear something nice then people say how I’m trying to show off, and I normally don’t talk to them in English,” she said.

Azhar’s mum, wrapped in the sparkly pink sari she wore to the movie opening, wonders where all the money the filmmakers promised is.

“I don’t know if I should go ask them if money is coming in,” she said.

Her husband usually brings in 1,500 to 3,000 rupees (RM108 to RM216) a month selling scrap wood, but now is hospitalised with tuberculosis, Ismail said.

Azhar sat at her elbow, distracted. His friends had been staring at him as he talked with one journalist after another.

“My friends have seen me get new clothes and go in cars and get books,” he said. “Even they want that sort of life.”

He celebrated his birthday recently by buying a cake and balloons for his neighbours.

Now he wanted to buy his friends chocolate, but his mother controlled the purse strings.

Azhar began to cry. Tears ran down his small face.

“It’s my money and you are using it!” he shouted.

“We have 200 rupees,” his mother said. “I’ll give you some later.”

He kept crying, twisting his body in small unhappy thrusts. “You’re not giving me money,” he yelled. “You’re spending it on other things.”

His mother grabbed a piece of brick and raised it over her head.

“Is it your money?” he shouted, daring her: “Hit me. You hit me!”

Then he fled.

Suddenly, school, Bollywood and the upcoming Oscars all seemed terribly irrelevant. There was only the plain dirt Azhar and his mother live on, and the immediate, unruly desire for cash.

Ismail tossed the brick to the ground, rolling her one good eye in exasperation. She can't see out the other one and says she needs 6,000 rupees for an operation.

“He’s a star,” she sighed. — AP

‘The Velveteen Rabbit’, more touching than most children’s movies

NEW YORK, Feb 18 — Family and low-budget-Christian film specialist Michael Landon Jr — you-know-who’s son — lifts his game considerably in turning Margery Williams’ children’s classic “The Velveteen Rabbit” into a film. Though it flirts with maudlin here and there, and the animation is hardly state of the art, the director of “The Last Sin Eater” and “Love’s Abiding Joy” turns his loose adaptation of that story into a nice children’s tear-jerker and a generally winning combination of live action and animation.

In the America of the early 1900s, Toby (Matthew Harbour) is a boy who has lost his mother and whose sad, humourless dad (Kevin Jubinville) has dropped him off with his own icy, society matron mom (Una Kay) to live. Life with his fussy, imperious grandmother in her rural estate doesn’t hold the promise of much fun for the kid. But Dad’s injunction must be Toby’s motto — “No tears.”

At least there’s an attic to play in, and grandma’s permission to play there. That becomes Toby’s escape. And when he finds a stuffed bunny, a rocking horse and a wooden goose, the boy slips into the world his dad once knew, a room transformed by his imagination.

All it takes is a tear and the toys are transported into an animated, magical alternate setting where the bunny, the goose (voiced by Oscar winner Ellen Burstyn) and horse (Tom Skerritt, funny) chat and pass along life lessons to the boy.

“Everything that’s real was imagined first,” the rabbit (Chandler Wakefield) teaches.

Horse knows the legend of the toys that can become real if their owners believe in them fervently enough. Of course kids outgrow their toys before that belief ever magically transforms their favourite playthings. But a horse can dream. And so can a wooden goose with an eye for the metaphor at the heart of this tale.

“Love is what makes us real.”

This holiday-set “Velveteen” isn’t a literal translation of the Rabbit tale, but it hits the emotional highlights. Toby gets sick and the toys don’t know what to do; love and sacrifice play their part. The film’s odd production history — it was filmed a couple of years ago and is only opening in select cities a month before going to video — suggest that it’s been edited, and that trying to sell it with only a couple of “names” in the voice cast flummoxed its producers.

That’s a shame. This modestly mounted Rabbit is more touching than children’s movies typically are today. The live action cast may be unknowns, but they’re effective enough; the 2-D (drawn and digital) animation is winning; and the story will engross any 8-and-under with the patience to watch it.

Perhaps Landon & Co should have taken their own script’s advice and put this in more theatres.

“Just throw your heart into it and the rest will follow.” — AP

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Man ‘strangled wife after she called out the wrong name during sex’

LONDON, Feb 19 — A jealous husband strangled his wife after she called out another man's name during sex, a court has heard.

Colin Scully, 53, told police he throttled 39-year-old Tracey after she shouted “Paul” as they made love.

Scully suspected his wife was having an affair and claimed she had been sending explicit text messages.

He later told police that “Paul” referred to a Paul Deighton, a man they knew from a scooter club.

Scully also told officers that it “blew his mind” when his wife mentioned any other men, Leeds Crown Court heard.

James Sampson, prosecuting, said: “He knelt on her chest, causing bruising, and pinned her down crucifix style to the bed, where he strangled her using one arm.”

Tracey, who suffered from multiple sclerosis, would have taken a “significant amount of time” to die, according to a pathologist.

Scully later told police he remembered pushing his wife down on the bed before going to sleep in their children's room, the jury heard.

Police were only called the next day when he dialled 999 and said: “I've done something to my wife. I don't know what I've done.”

In his police interview, he said: “I strangled her, didn't I?”

The jury also heard from Tracey's alleged lover Paul Deighton, who became friends with the couple when they joined a scooter club in Bridlington in 2007.

He insisted that there had been no affair between them but admitted that she had sent him inappropriate text messages.

“The texts were entirely innocent at first but then changed from general conversation to a little bit more later,” he said.

“Nothing at all happened between us. My attitude was that I wasn't very happy about it at all.”

The victim's mother Wendy Wild also told the court that her daughter had confided in her that Scully liked to film her having sex with other men.

She said Tracey had claimed her husband wanted her to take their laptop with them to a Butlin's holiday the previous month.

Wild: “She told me that he wanted to get in touch with swingers. I asked her if she had done this before and she said, ‘Yes, he made me do it’.

“I said, ‘Have you both been with other people?’. She said ‘No, only me. He made me prostitute myself’.

“She was angry when she went on holiday and even angrier when she got back.”

Scully denies murder. The trial continues. — The Daily Mail

Artist Ibrahim Hussein dies

KUALA LUMPUR, Feb 19 — Noted artist Datuk Ibrahim Hussein died of a heart attack at the Pantai Medical Centre here early today. He was 72.

He leaves wife Sim Hussein and daughter Alia. The funeral is expected to be held this afternoon.

The artist, popularly known as “Ib,” was widely known internationally for his abstract work. He used a medium he called “printage” — a mixture of printing and collage.

He was also founder of the Ibrahim Hussein Museum and Cultural Foundation in Langkawi.