Thursday, September 2, 2010

Fishburnes porn-star daughter avoiding dark side

Fri Sep 3, 2010 1:31am EDT

LOS ANGELES Hollywood Reporter - Before summer began, no one had heard of Montana Fishburne. But the daughter of Oscar-nominated actor Laurence Fishburne, now the main guy on "CSI," was eager to make a name for herself.

On August 18, Vivid Entertainment released the aptly titled adult feature "Montana Fishburne." Mission accomplished. With the movie perched atop Adult Video News weekly sales chart, Fishburne has been fielding offers ranging from television and a book to ringtones. For better or worse, it seems the 18-year-old newly minted adult film star has broken into the business. She recently spoke about the adult entertainment industry and her plans to outgrow it.

HAVE YOU SPOKEN WITH YOUR FAMILY SINCE THE FILM WAS RELEASED?

Montana Fishburne: I did talk to my father. He told me he was embarrassed by me. My mom just says, "I love you." We dont talk about it every day. She wants me to be happy and doesnt want me to get dragged into the dark side of porn.

WHAT IS THE DARK SIDE OF THE ADULT FILM INDUSTRY?

Fishburne: Drugs. A lot of girls have low self-esteem and resort to drugs and other destructive behavior.

WHEN DID YOU DECIDE THIS IS WHAT YOU WANTED?

Fishburne: Ive been aware of the industry for four years. After I turned 18, I started to seriously think about the best way for me to enter the business. I was impressed with Kim Kardashians success after her tape was released by Vivid and decided to call the company to see if I could arrange a meeting. I met with founder and co-chairman Steven Hirsch and convinced him that I knew what I wanted, and we planned my movie debut.

REPORTS INDICATE THAT YOU MADE UPWARDS OF $250,000 FOR THE FILM. CAN YOU CONFIRM THIS?

Fishburne: I cant really talk about it, but I made some money. Its keeping me in the place I live.

GIVEN THE SUCCESS OF THE FILM, HAS VIVID APPROACHED YOU TO APPEAR IN ADDITIONAL FEATURES?

Fishburne: They offered it to me, and Im talking with them about it, but I havent signed on to anything yet. I dont know if I want to do it right away, Im actually getting a lot of mainstream offers. I want to pursue those opportunities and then come back to it.

CAN YOU REVEAL WHAT OFFERS YOURE CONSIDERING?

Fishburne: I cant be specific, but they are acting roles. Im open to scripted and reality. It just all depends on what the project it is. If something truly interests me, Ill get super involved and want to make it happen. Thats why I did this movie.

DO YOU THINK RELEASING THIS FILM WILL HAVE A NEGATIVE IMPACT ON YOUR CAREER MOVING FORWARD?

Fishburne: Kim Kardashians sex tape was released, but she still got past that. Even though she got all that negative attention for it, she still has all these other ventures going on now. That is what I want to emulate: having a tape come out and still being seen as a positive person. Not just, "Shes a porn star."

YOUR FATHER CLEARLY IS UPSET BY YOUR ACTIONS. DO YOU THINK YOU TWO WILL EVER RECONCILE?

Fishburne: Until he respects me and accepts me for who I am, I dont think we will have much of a relationship.

AN ASSOCIATE OF YOUR FATHERS REPORTEDLY TRIED TO BUY ALL THE VIDEOS IN AN EFFORT TO KEEP YOUR FILM FROM BEING RELEASED. WHATS YOUR REACTION TO THAT?

Fishburne: Yes, they were trying to stop it from being released, but the videos had already been shipped out. I understand that they were just trying to look out for my father, but I was happy it wasnt done.

DID YOU HAVE A TRADITIONAL UPBRINGING DESPITE BEING THE DAUGHTER OF A CELEBRITY?

Fishburne: It was traditionally unconventional. Ive had divorced parents since I was 2, and my dad was a really famous actor, so it was as conventional as it could be. We had the best of the best: private schools, traveling all over the world. Ive had a happy life.



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Vivid Entertainment: A new business model for porn

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French Spider-Man in Sydney court over climb AP

SYDNEY A French skyscraper climber nicknamed "Spider-Man" pleaded not guilty Friday to charges related to his bare-handed climb up a 57-story building in downtown Sydney.

Alain Robert, known for climbing some of the worlds tallest and best-known buildings without ropes or other equipment, was arrested Monday at the top of the Lumiere building.

He was charged with risking the safety of another by climbing a building or structure, and unlawful entry of an enclosed area. If convicted on both charges, he could face up to three months in jail and fines of 1,650 Australian dollars $1,497.

Outside Sydney District Court, Robert said he never meant to disrespect Australian law and denied that his climb had put any lives at risk.

"I was not endangering people," Robert said. "There was no point for me to plead guilty."

Many of his past climbs have resulted in arrests and fines. Last year, Robert was fined AU$750 for climbing the 41-story Royal Bank of Scotland building in Sydney.

The 48-year-old has climbed more than 70 skyscrapers around the world, including the Empire State Building, the Sears Tower and the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, according to his website.

The hearing was adjourned until Oct. 15.



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Toronto film fest boss stays cool under pressure

Thu Sep 2, 2010 11:05pm EDT

TORONTO Hollywood Reporter - The famously unflappable Cameron Bailey is looking a touch puzzled, and has for weeks.

The Toronto International Film Festival co-director is standing in his Carlton Street office, studying a giant film schedule as if it were an abstract gallery painting.

Toronto might land the cream of the crop of studio awards players and indie acquisition titles, but Bailey and his team have wrestled for weeks with how to schedule 247 star-driven films -- 112 of them world premieres -- over an 11-day movie marathon beginning September 9.

Bailey tilts his head from side to side to make sure he sees each films possible permutations: dates, running times, age ratings, Hollywood star power and the circus that goes with it, house sizes.

Its a film festival chess board for one of the worlds most well-attended events, and Bailey and his team are attempting to think five steps ahead.

His dedicated assistants scribble on pads in an effort to help him resolve an immediate challenge: Removing a third public screening for a U.S. indie drama, and adding one more for a star-driven Midnight Madness title.

"Can we do a clean switch?" he asks.

After a few moments of uncomfortable silence, an aide offers the unfortunate reality: Not at this hour.

Its crunch time. Torontos final movie lineup is hours away from going online -- along with news of another 102 studio and indie titles -- to be picked up by news outlets worldwide.

Whats more, the festival catalog -- 300 pages by 18 writers -- is hot off the presses, the TIFF box office will start selling tickets the next day at 7 a.m. and Toronto is set to showcase Bell Lightbox, its new year-round headquarters that has been in the works for eight years at a cost of almost $200 million.

So how does the man at the center of the storm deal with the pressure? For Bailey the answer is simple: Smile and dont panic.

Spend even a short amount of time with Bailey and it becomes abundantly clear that his preternatural calm is a key to his success. As the pressure mounts, Bailey somehow manages to become increasingly focused yet remain totally at ease. And he does it all with an ever-present smile that is the perfect counterpoint to the barely contained chaos swirling all around him.

Still staring at the imposing schedule from behind his desk, the 46-year-old Bailey is silent for what feels like an eternity. Everyone in the room simply waits.

"What would it be up against at 2 p.m.?" he finally asks.

Turns out the movie has a clear shot at the buyers of another U.S. indie also being shopped in Toronto that wont screen for press and industry until late afternoon.

"As long as we go Sunday, midmorning, theyre fine," he says, careful not to leave a Hollywood titans nose out of joint.

Finally, Bailey leans forward like a poker player who senses a winning hand and e-mails the U.S. sales agent two options for a new screening.

"Its tricky," he says with his trademark grin. "As soon as anyone knows the first inkling about where and when they might be scheduled, they become very attached to it, however tentative we are."

Bailey has much to smile about these days. When festival programing head Piers Handling offered him the job of co-director two years ago, he was coming off a long apprenticeship at TIFF while simultaneously trying his hand at a variety of other disciplines. In addition to programing Canadian titles in Toronto during the 1990s, Bailey also worked as a film critic, a broadcaster and a screenwriter on the 1997 film "The Planet of Junior Brown," directed by Clement Virgo. He even tried his hand at filmmaking with the video essay "Hotel Saudade," which bowed at Toronto in 2004.

"None of the jobs provided enough for me to live on," he says with a shrug while en route to Bell Lightbox.

He shudders now as he remembers the day Handling offered him a fest programer job in 1989.

"I said no. I really didnt think I was qualified. I was really young," he recalls.

Eight years later Handling would offer him the fest director position, but this time he accepted, driven by one of his passions: Supporting indie titles he felt needed to reach a global audience.

The vehicle he would use to attain that dream was Planet Africa, a showcase of films from Africa and the African diaspora that Bailey first launched in 1995.

Two years later, he was on hand one late night at the Bellair Cafe in Yorkville when in walked Harvey Weinstein. With a fat cigar in hand, the then-Miramax boss made a bee-line for Christopher Scott Cherot, a young director whose quirky debut had recently screened in the Planet Africa sidebar.

"Weinstein had his arm round Cherot, who came back with a big smile on his face," Bailey recounts. Before the night was over, Miramax had acquired Cherots low-budget romantic comedy "Hav Plenty" for a reported $1.5 million.

"Those kind of deals dont get made anymore," Bailey sighs.

To be sure, however, Toronto remains a juggernaut. Hollywood A-listers will descend on the festival and footage will end up on TV screens and newspapers worldwide.

But as a place to do business, TIFF has seen better days. Asked whether Toronto will see a repeat of last year, when a slew of acquisition titles came into Toronto and went home empty-handed, Bailey, in typical fashion, isnt tipping his hand.

"It might be a little quicker this year, or that may just be the new reality. Its hard to say," he ventures.

To be fair, Baileys tenure began just as the 2008 financial meltdown ushered in a new era of austerity within the global film community, forcing studios and indie producers to cut back on travel and party budgets.

"All of the studios have felt the need to contract what they spend on promotion, prints and advertising," he says. "That hasnt affected us so much. People still see us as an important launch pad."

While that might be true for well-funded, star-driven releases, Bailey concedes that government cutbacks for certain national cinemas have impacted the number of films Toronto programmers received this year.

"We have found the economy maybe gives us fewer films in some cases from certain countries, as their economies shrink, and also smaller budget films in some cases as well," he says.

On his ascension to the top at TIFF, Bailey inherited other challenges, including a need to close a funding gap to launch Bell Lightbox, which saw Initial construction costs of $120 million balloon to $196 million.

Pulling up to the new structure, Bailey leaves his taxi on King Street to greet his programing team, which is assembled inside for a pre-festival tour.

He takes a moment to look up and down the bustling street at adjoining restaurants, shops and theaters, all of which expect Bell Lightbox to become a lucrative entertainment destination for the locals.

Once inside, Bailey scans the year-round headquarters five stories, which until recently remained hidden behind boarding and scaffolding.

"We can enter from the back of the stage," Bailey says minutes later, standing in a 550-seat theater, looking to shepherd nervous filmmakers and preening stars from the green room to be introduced to appreciative Toronto audiences.

He leads his beaming, enthusiastic programmers through four more theaters which will soon screen a host of arthouse films and new prints of classics like Fritz Langs "Metropolis" and Jean-Luc Godards "Breathless."

His interaction with everyone is effortless and effective. He has a knack for making other people feel relaxed and good about themselves, and does so with the air of a career diplomat.

Its how he controls the conversation when talking to the media, festival donors or staff.

"Youre screening one of your films in here," he asks a programer in a smaller, 80-seat theater.

He moves from programer to programer, encouraging, advising with small tips. Always smiling.

Back on the street in front of Bell Lightbox, Bailey is aware that much is riding on the new structure. He also knows that if it doesnt work, hell likely take the heat.

But again, you wouldnt know it to look at him. Certain that TIFFs new home will provide a long-sought hub for the festival, he appears equally thrilled with idea that it will contribute something to the city itself.

"The new thing this year is the festival neighborhood, the fact that we will be in our own building, with a new hotel next door, with all the press conferences there," he says proudly as he gazes up at the building. "People will bump into each other in a way that they havent been able to for a long time."

He looks like the happiest man in Toronto.



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Cheryl Cole to be given divorce

X Factor judge Cheryl Cole is reportedly to be granted a divorce from her husband, Chelsea footballer Ashley.

A decree nisi is expected to be granted on Friday at the High Courts Family Division in London.

A case - entitled CAC vs AC, indicating Cheryl Ann Cole against Ashley Cole - is expected to be heard at 1000 BST.

It is due before District Judge Christopher Simmonds "for pronouncement of decree or order under the special procedure rule".

The pair separated in February after allegations were made in the press about the England and Chelsea defenders infidelity.

The pair met in 2004 when they were both living in the same London apartment block.

The pop star and the footballer were engaged in 2005 after he proposed in Dubai and they married the following year.

Phone pictures

But early in 2008 claims were made that Ashley Cole had been unfaithful during his relationship with Cheryl. He was also accused of sending photographs of himself via a mobile phone to another woman.

Ashley claimed they were sent after he had passed the phone to a friend.

Their troubled marriage became the focus of much media attention and Cheryl Cole was pictured on a number of occasions without her wedding ring.

The celebrity couple are one of 29 who will be granted decrees nisi at the Principal Registry of the Family Division in High Holborn, London.

A decree nisi is a preliminary divorce order which could be finalised within weeks if neither side objects.

They are the only couple on the list to be solely referred to by their initials.

A spokesman for Cheryl Cole declined to comment.



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BBC defends Thompson No 10 visit

The BBC has denied the director general compromised its independence by visiting Downing Street to discuss coverage of spending cuts.

A spokesman said Mark Thompson had discussed the possible participation of ministers in programmes about the spending review.

He also said the BBC would discuss this issue with all main political parties.

Ed Miliband, one of the Labour leadership candidates, told the Daily Mail the meeting was "deeply worrying".

Mr Thompson had made it repeatedly clear that the impartiality and independence of the BBC were paramount, the corporations spokesman added.

Mr Thompson has been pictured walking into Downing Street holding a memo from the BBCs head of news, describing its new season of programmes about the governments spending review.

Mr Miliband said that Mr Thompson had "a list of programme ideas which appeared to showcase Tory economic policies of savage, indiscriminate cuts".

Labour MP Michael Dugher, once a senior aide to former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, told the Daily Telegraph: "The BBC should be standing up for its independence and should not be bullied by Camerons aides with the threat of cutbacks."

Deputy director general Mark Byford, who is responsible for all the corporations journalism, wrote in a blog on 2 September about the planned coverage that the BBC "has an important role to play to clarify the issues for our audiences - to help them make sense of different ideas and points of view".

"Our aim is to provide insightful, objective programmes and expert analysis to help people understand the context and the potential options," Mr Byford added.

BBC media correspondent Torin Douglas said the director general was quoted on Thursday as saying that 30 years ago, in much of BBC current affairs, there was a "massive bias to the left" in terms of peoples personal politics.



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Dolphins caught, not killed, in Japan cove AP

TOKYO Dolphins have been herded into a cove as part of an annual hunt in the Japanese seaside town made famous by an Oscar-winning documentary about their slaughter, Sea Shepherd said Friday. A town official said none were killed.

The dolphin hunt at Taiji, documented in "The Cove," begins Sept. 1 every year. The boats returned empty Wednesday. But on Thursday, some dolphins were corralled into the inlet, according to anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd and a fishing official in Taiji.

The official in charge of media queries at the Taiji fishing organization said a handful of dolphins were kept for aquariums, but the rest were set free Friday morning. He declined to give details.

He said the criticism the town has received from the West was unfair because residents were merely trying to make a living, and the rocky landscape made it difficult to go into farming or livestock.

Sea Shepherd said it has been monitoring Taiji with a small crew of Australians, New Zealanders, Americans and Japanese this week.

Ric OBarry, who stars in "The Cove," has gathered about 100 people in Tokyo, including supporters from abroad, to protest the dolphin slaughter. He took a petition with 1.7 million signatures from 155 nations to the U.S. Embassy on Thursday.

"The dolphins need defenders at the cove today and tomorrow," said Michael Dalton of Sea Shepherd in a statement from Taiji. "If you came to Japan to save dolphins, the place to be is Taiji and the time to be here is now."

OBarry, 70, the former dolphin trainer for the 1960s "Flipper" TV show, has received threats from a violent nationalist group and skipped going to Taiji this year, a trip he makes every year to try to save the dolphins.

He said he had been advised by Japanese authorities not to go to Taiji, and repeatedly stressed that he does not want confrontation.

He was flanked by police, as well as supporters, when he went to the U.S. Embassy. But some of his supporters said they are headed to Taiji.

Nationalist groups say criticism of dolphin hunting is a denigration of Japanese culture.

The Japanese government allows a hunt of about 20,000 dolphins a year, and argues that killing them � and whales � is no different from raising cows or pigs for slaughter. Most Japanese have never eaten dolphin meat and, even in Taiji, it is not consumed regularly.

"The Cove," which won this years Academy Award for best documentary, depicts a handful of fishermen from the town of Taiji who scare dolphins into a cove and kill them slowly, piercing them repeatedly until the waters turn red with blood. Other Japanese towns that hunt dolphins kill them at sea.

Taiji, which has a population of 3,500 people, defends the dolphin killing as tradition and a livelihood. The annual hunt started Wednesday, although boats returned empty. Most of the dolphins are eaten as meat after a handful of the best looking are sold off to aquariums.

"Im not losing hope. Our voice is being heard in Taiji," said OBarry, who has campaigned for four decades to save dolphins not only from slaughter but also from captivity.

The films Japanese debut became a free-speech fight. It opened in some theaters in June after earlier screenings were canceled when cinemas received a flood of angry phone calls and threats by far-right nationalists.

Louie Psihoyos, the director of "The Cove," said he doesnt agree with blindly sticking with tradition.

"In America we had a much longer tradition of slavery, but that was banned," Psihoyos told The Associated Press. "My message to Japan is to see the movie for yourself with an open mind."



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Box Office Preview: Machete should dominate AP

LOS ANGELES Twentieth Century Foxs "Machete" is set to slice up the competition as director Robert Rodriguezs star-studded extravaganza will likely dominate the weekend with a Friday through Monday total of around $16 million.

With co-star Lindsey Lohan all over the news lately and the films theme of illegal immigration at the forefront of a national debate, this decidedly over-the-top and very nonpolitically correct action-comedy hybrid should give the summer a proper and bloody send off as we move into the more subdued fall movie season.

Second place will likely go to Focus Features "The American," starring George Clooney. The film opened on Wednesday with around $1.7 million and this portends a Friday through Monday total in the mid-$15 million range and a first six-day gross of around $18 million. Clooney is one of the most popular actors working today and is a true movie star. Director Anton Corbijn is a Dutch photographer and director well known for shooting highly stylized music videos for U2, Depeche Mode, Coldplay and Nirvana.

With an expected four-day gross of around $12 million to $13 million, Warner Bros. "Going the Distance" pairs the real life couple of Drew Barrymore and Justin Long in a romantic comedy that will be embraced by the date crowd while giving general audiences something light and fun to enjoy in a marketplace loaded with intense fare.

In fourth place with $11 million to $12 million will likely be Sonys "Takers." The PG-13 bank-heist thriller, which won last weekends box office derby by a nose, is doing well mid-week and has enjoyed solid word-of-mouth since its debut last Friday. Paul Walker and Chris Brown lead a young ensemble cast that is successfully hitting all the key demographics.

This sets the stage for the sophomore weekend of Lionsgates "The Last Exorcism" to possess a typical-for-the-genre second weekend drop in the 60 percent-plus range and a four-day gross of just under $10 million, thus rounding out the top five.

___

Paul Dergarabedian is president of the Box Office Division of Hollywood.com. and has been providing box office information to The Associated Press for nearly two decades.

___

Online: http://www.Hollywood.com/boxoffice



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Chris Brown returns to No. 1 spot with Deuces AP

NEW YORK Chris Brown is back to a familiar place � the No. 1 spot on the Billboard charts.

The 21-year-olds latest song, the goodbye groove "Deuces," hit the top spot of Billboards R&B/Hip-Hop songs chart this week.

Since Browns February 2009 altercation with then-girlfriend Rihanna, he has not had much success musically. He released his third album "Graffiti" in Dec. 2009 and its his lowest selling CD to date. Only two songs from the album hit the charts; the first single "I Can Transform Ya" peaked at No. 20 on the pop charts.

"Deuces" appears on Browns mixtape, "Fan of a Fan," and it features rappers Tyga and Kevin McCall.

Brown also stars in the heist thriller "Takers," which debuted on top of the box office last week.

___

Online:

http://www.chrisbrownworld.com



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Brendan Fraser heads to Broadway with "Elling"

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Telluride festival unveils film lineup

LOS ANGELES | Thu Sep 2, 2010 5:28pm EDT

LOS ANGELES Reuters - The Telluride Film Festival on Thursday unveiled the lineup of movies for this weekends event, regarded as among the top U.S. movie gatherings of the year and an early highlight for Oscar hopefuls.

The festival, which takes place over four days in the ski resort town of Telluride, Colorado, is considered a key event for cineastes featuring an eclectic group of foreign and U.S. movies.

This years highlights include British director Mike Leighs "Another Year," Mexican filmmaker Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritus "Biutiful" and a documentary from Martin Scorsese, "A Letter to Elia," about legendary director Elia Kazan .

Both "Another Year," starring Jim Broadbent and Lesley Manville, and "Biutiful," with Javier Bardem, debuted at this past Mays Cannes film festival and earned solid praise. Bardem shared Cannes best actor prize playing a man struggling to cope with his life.

Others in Tellurides key section, called the Show, include U.S. director Mark Romaneks "Never Let Me Go," Stephen Frears U.K.-entry "Tamara Drewe," Australian Peter Weirs feature "The Way Back" with Colin Farrell, and documentaries "Inside Job" from Charles Ferguson and "Tabloid" by Errol Morris.

Telluride has long been a launching ground for movies seeking critical praise and audience buzz ahead of Hollywoods Oscar race. "Slumdog Millionaire" wowed Telluride crowds in 2008 before going on its run at the best film Academy Award.

The Colorado event, combined with two major festivals in Venice and Toronto taking place over the next few weeks, kicks off roughly six months of Oscar-watching in Hollywood. Already at Venice is strong buzz for actress Natalie Portmans portrayal of a ballerina in "Black Swan."

Elsewhere at Telluride, director Weir will be given a Silver medallion award for his contribution to film, as will British actor Colin firth and Italys Claudia Cardinale.

Other highlights of the festival that starts Friday and ends on Mondays Labor Day holiday in the United States include surprise "sneak preview" movies, "Backlot" feature film portraits of artists, musicians and others, and short films, educational programs and seminars on filmmaking and movie art.

Editing by Christine Kearney



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Schnabel movie chronicles Mideast conflict AP

VENICE, Italy The latest movie by Julian Schnabel couldnt have been more timely.

"Miral" chronicles decades of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict through the rarely seen perspective of Palestinian women. The film, dedicated by the director to everyone on both sides who wants peace, made its world premiere Thursday at the Venice Film Festival, just as Israeli and Palestinian leaders sat down in Washington for the first direct negotiations in years.

"I am not a politician or a statesman, but I dont see how an artist can do any worse than politicians have done so far," said Schnabel. His previous movies include "Basquiat" and "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly."

Film producer Tarak Ben Ammar said he wished Israeli and Palestinian leaders could have seen the movie before their talks, which U.S officials hope will lead to agreement on the creation of a Palestinian state.

"I wish they would have seen the movie yesterday, to have been touched, because through the heart, the mind opens," Ben Ammar told journalists. "We are not naive enough to believe that this movie will change the world. But it will change the hearts of people who know nothing about Palestine."

The movie chronicles the Israeli-Palestinian conflict from 1948-1994 � stopping a year after Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, or PLO, signed the Oslo Accords providing a plan for Palestinian self-rule. The movie notes in its closing credits that the process never has been completed.

It is based on a novel by Palestinian writer Rula Jebreal, a composite of her own life and the events that shaped it that is centered around a school for Palestinian orphans of the conflict � herself among them.

Jebreal said the book was an homage to her father and her teachers, "who understood that in some way education was the key to becoming a pacifist."

"It is the story of a big land and a little girl who grows up and survives such a devastating conflict because she has somebody who helped her," Jebreal said. "I think there are many youths seeking and wanting this help."

The story starts in 1948, when a Palestinian woman, Hind Husseini, finds 55 children left orphaned in the Deir Yassin massacre, in which more than 250 Palestinian villagers were killed. Husseini takes the children to her home, feeds them and gives them a place to sleep. Soon more come � until she has established an orphanage and school in her familys home.

Thirty years later, the father of girl named Miral turns her over to Husseini after her mothers suicide. She is sheltered in the school until the first Intifada, when she and the other girls are sent to teach children in the refugee camps.

There, Miral, portrayed by Freida Pinto of "Slumdog Millionaire" fame, is confronted by the poverty of the Palestinian people, and her political self is born.

Themes of the movie � like the strength of personal relationships across the political divide � were echoed in the making of the film. In real life, Schnabel, a Jewish New Yorker who for years avoided engaging in the Palestinian issue � and Jebreal have become a couple.

Schnabel said he relied heavily on Jebreal in keeping the film authentic.

"I wanted to know what was going to be in a 15-year-old Muslim girls room, and what was not. What was going to be in a refugee camp," he said.

When they put four chairs in the lot of a refugee camp, Jebreal commented that it "looked like a four-star hotel," Schnabel said. Normally it would be bare.

Jebreal was their guide around the Palestinian territories, he said, and the doors to the American Colony Hotel, next door to Jebreals orphanage, opened up to the crew because they had known her as a girl.

In turn, Jebreal said Schnabels presence gave her strength to confront her past.

"I understood it would be a painful experience, seeing Yasmine Al Massri play the role of my mother being raped, and facing my family, who didnt want to know anything about this story because it was considered a dishonor to discuss an attack publicly. These were painful choices, but necessary," she said.

In the end, Schnabel said, the movie is about highlighting common values.

"The fact is that the values that were instilled in me by my mother were the same as those instilled in her by Hind Husseini," Schnabel said. "One of the reasons I made this film is it was so obvious to me that there were so many more similarities between these people than differences. I felt it was my responsibility to confront this issue, because maybe I spent most of my life receding from going to Israel, receding from my life as a Jewish person."

"Miral" is Schnabels fourth feature film. He says he is not interested in making another one "at least for a couple of years. I am just interested in bringing this movie to the public."

"Miral" is one of 22 films, plus a surprise film yet to be announced, in the running for the Golden Lion, to be awarded on Sept. 11.



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Eminem and Katy Perry lead U.S. singles chart

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Axl Rose tries Dublins patience, sends crowd home AP

DUBLIN Axl Rose, it seems, needs a little more patience � and a much louder alarm clock.

The 48-year-old singer of U.S. hard-rock band Guns N Roses irritated thousands of his Dublin fans at the 02 Arena on Wednesday night by showing up nearly an hour late � a recurring problem on his bands European tour � and then walking off after an unruly minority in the crowd hurled water bottles on the stage.

Most of the fans left, but Irish concert promoters MCD wouldnt let Rose leave until he finished the gig. The band went back on stage an hour later to a mostly empty venue and didnt stop playing until nearly 1 a.m.

MCD and the 02 issued a joint statement criticizing Rose for having "a long history for being late on stage," but emphasized that "no artist should be subjected to missiles and unknown substances being thrown at them."

Roses patience snapped after he warned the crowd to stop throwing things on stage.

"Here is the deal. One more bottle up here and we go. We dont want to go. Your choice," he told the crowd during an abrupt break to the bands second song, "Welcome to the Jungle."

But when introducing his other band members before a following number, up came another bottle � and off Rose went to a chorus of boos. "OK, thats it. Good night. Have a nice evening," he said.

Politicians called on the promoters to refund tickets that cost an average of EURO72 $92. MCD declined to say whether anyone would get their money back.

"Reports say that the lights came on and the security people told concertgoers to go home. Confusion reigned and thousands of fans had left by the time the band came back again on stage to complete their set," Irish senator Michael McCarthy said.

Rose is the only remaining original member of Guns N Roses, which was founded in Los Angeles in 1985 and achieved chart-topping successes with its first two albums, "Appetite for Destruction" in 1987 and the double-album "Use Your Illusion" in 1991.

The band effectively collapsed in the mid-1990s and Rose became a Malibu semi-recluse. He re-emerged in recent years with a completely new band that, after missing a decade of production deadlines, unveiled the album "Chinese Democracy" in 2008. It has received generally positive reviews but sold poorly compared to the bands heyday.

The European tour has been marred by late starts.

At the first stop Aug. 27, an open-air festival in Reading, west of London, Guns N Roses arrived an hour late and had their microphones and amplifiers cut off by organizers during their encore.

Two nights later in the northern English city of Leeds, Guns N Roses again was ordered to cut its performance concert a half-hour short because of an hour-late start. The tour has 22 cities in 13 more countries to go.

Such tardiness is nothing new for Rose. Guns N Roses kept Irish fans waiting two extra hours during its 1992 European tour.

___

Online:

http://web.gunsnroses.com/index.jsp



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Murakamis Norwegian Wood transformed to film AP

VENICE, Italy Vietnamese-French director Tran Anh Hung crossed cultural and linguistic borders to direct his latest film, "Norwegian Wood," based on the cult coming-of-age Japanese novel.

The Oscar-nominated director, who has taken home prizes from both Cannes and Venice, filmed the love story with an entirely Japanese cast � creating a painstakingly long process to perfect dialogue.

"We killed several interpreters," Tran joked during an interview Thursday, ahead of the films world premiere at the Venice Film Festival in competition for the Golden Lion. "Sometimes when it was tough, the interpreter cried, because I asked her to say something really mean to an actress."

It is hard to imagine the slight, clean-cut director having said anything mean to any of the actresses. However, he did take painstaking care with the dialogue, writing out what he wanted in English, having it translated into Japanese, and then listening to it spoken to make sure it was melodic, and not too clipped.

"I wanted it to be longer than usual ... to have the music of the lines. I dont like when sentences are short and going very fast ... Even in my Vietnamese movies, it does not sound natural like in life," Tran said.

Seeing the film in another language also made it immediately clear to him when something didnt work � and surrounded by a crew who spoke a foreign language meant he could filter out unnecessary chatter he would have otherwise engaged in.

The film, like Haruki Marukamis book, is set in Tokyo in the late 1960s. Watanabe, played by Kenichi Matsuyama, is a young university student struggling to choose between two women, one the girlfriend of his best friend who committed suicide, and the other self-confident and independent, representing the future.

The novel has won worldwide popularity, and many directors had approached the author to adapt it to film. More than 10 million copies of the book have been sold in Japan alone, with 2.6 million more sold in another 33 languages.

Tran said he didnt know why he was chosen, but producer Shinji Ogawa said Murakami wanted an Asian director to project the regions aesthetic.

"Obviously we did meet with Murakami. Not just once," Tran said. Murakami made many notes on the first screen play, which Tran called "a fairly important document," but said they were too numerous to elaborate.

"After this exchange of comments and notes, Murakami said, Go with the film you have in your head. What you have to do is make the most beautiful film possible."

Tran said the story about new love easily transcends borders.

"Its about the pain you feel when you are in the process of love. Love is growing and suddenly something stops it. It happens twice to Watanabe," Tran said.

Much of the film was shot in urban Tokyo, giving a glimpse into the turbulent 1960s, a period when Japanese youth were opening their embrace to the West in rejection of their fathers conduct during World War II. But Tran also goes into the countryside, taking the story to the lush grassy meadows and barren, snow-dusted hillsides � the landscape echoing the mood of the protagonists.

Trans direction put the cameras tightly on the actors faces, particularly the love scenes, where he said he wanted the focus to be on the emotion. He asked his cinematographer Mark Lee Ping-bing to use a digital HD camera to shoot the film � a decision that Lee, a Cannes-winning Taiwanese cameraman, has complained about in a new book.

Tran said Lees views were clear during the filming, but he stuck by his decision to go high definition in order to expose the actors � and their flaws � more.

"Its really raw, you can really see everything. Its really necessary for this film," he said.

Viewers may be surprised that the Beatles classic from which the book takes its name makes little more than a cameo in the film.

"Its only that the song is too soft, too cute, too sentimental. What happens with the characters is really stronger than that song," Tran said. "I put the song at the end of the movie because it works like the beginning of the book."

"Norwegian Wood" is among 22 films, plus a still-to-be announced surprise film, competing for the Golden Lion, which will be awarded Sept. 11.

Tran won the Golden Lion in 1995 for "Cyclo," which tells the hard-life tale of a young rickshaw driver, and his first film, "The Scent of Green Papaya," took home the Camera dOr from Cannes and was nominated for an Academy Award. "Norwegian Wood" is his fifth film.



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Natalie Portman earns early awards buzz for ballet drama

VENICE | Thu Sep 2, 2010 11:58am EDT

VENICE Reuters - Critics are queuing up to praise Natalie Portman in her latest movie "Black Swan," the opening picture at this years Venice film festival, with one review saying the performance "elevates her ... to a major star."

The 29-year-old plays a New York ballerina whose obsession with technical perfection takes a heavy toll on mind and body.

Finally chosen for a lead role after years of toiling in the shadows, Portmans character Nina is derailed when a new member of her dance corps threatens to steal the part.

With scenes of violence, elements of supernatural, a sex scene with her fellow female lead and an emotional rollercoaster ride, Black Swan has been described as a step up for the actress best known for her turns in the Star Wars series.

"Every film festival benefits hugely from a strong opening film, and they dont come a lot stronger than Black Swan," wrote David Gritten in Britains Daily Telegraph.

"Powerful, gripping and always intriguing, it also features a lead performance from Natalie Portman that elevates her from a substantial leading actress to major star likely to be lifting awards in the near future."

Others also uttered the "A"-word, as festivals in Venice and Toronto tend to mark the unofficial start of the long buildup to the Oscars. "The film looks bound to win its star, Natalie Portman, plaudits and award nominations for her searing performance as the ambitious but insecure Nina," said Geoffrey Macnab of the Independent.

KUNIS ALSO LAUDED

Even The Hollywood Reporters Kirk Honeycutt, one of a minority of early reviewers to criticize the movie, had warm words for its leading actress.

"In her acting ... you sense she has bravely ventured out of her comfort zone to play a character slowly losing sight of herself. Its a bravura performance," Honeycutt said.

Co-star Mila Kunis also wins praise for playing "a perfect alternate to Portman, equally as lithe and dark but with a smirk of self-assurance in place of Portmans wide-eyed fearfulness."

For director Darren Aronofsky, the largely positive response to Black Swan will come as a relief.

Although he won the coveted Golden Lion for best picture in Venice two years ago for "The Wrestler," his previous movie in the canal city, "The Fountain," was panned in 2006.

Portman said the demands of her latest role, noticeably darker than previous outings, did not mean a change of direction away from more mainstream Hollywood fare.

"With everything I do, I always want to learn something new and part of that too, I think, is never being a snob," she told Reuters in an interview.

"I never want to try and just make arty intellectual films. I love those, of course, as experiences, but I also love big, more traditional entertainment kind of movies."

Black Swan hits U.S. cinemas in December.

Additional reporting by Mike Davidson, editing by Paul Casciato



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Author Hawking says God not needed for creation AP

LONDON Did creation need a creator?

British physicist and mathematician Stephen Hawking says no, arguing in his new book that there need not be a God behind the creation of the universe.

The concept is explored in "The Grand Design," excerpts of which were printed in the British newspaper The Times on Thursday. The book, written with fellow physicist Leonard Mlodinow, is scheduled to be published by Bantam Press on Sept. 9.

"The Grand Design," which the publishers call Hawkings first major work in nearly a decade, challenges Isaac Newtons theory God must have been involved in creation because our solar system couldnt have come out of chaos simply through nature.

But Hawking says it isnt that simple. To understand the universe, its necessary to know both how and why it behaves the way it does, calling the pursuit "the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything."

"We shall attempt to answer it in this book," he wrote. "Unlike the answer given in The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy, ours wont be simply 42."

The number 42 is the deliberately absurd answer to the "Ultimate Question" chosen by sci-fi author Douglas Adams.

Hawking, who is renowned for his work on black holes, said the 1992 discovery of another planet orbiting a star other than the sun makes "the coincidences of our planetary conditions ... far less remarkable and far less compelling as evidence that the Earth was carefully designed just to please us human beings."

In his best-selling 1988 book "A Brief History of Time," Hawking appeared to accept the possibility of a creator, saying the discovery of a complete theory would "be the ultimate triumph of human reason � for then we should know the mind of God."

But "The Grand Design" seems to step away from that, saying physics can explain things without the need for a "benevolent creator who made the Universe for our benefit."

"Because there is a law such as gravity, the Universe can and will create itself from nothing," the excerpt says. "Spontaneous creation is the reason there is something rather than nothing, why the Universe exists, why we exist. It is not necessary to invoke God to ... set the Universe going."

Hawking retired last year as the Lucasian Chair of Mathematics at Cambridge University after 30 years in the position. The position was once held by Newton.



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Film brings lives of Palestinian women to Venice

VENICE | Thu Sep 2, 2010 12:29pm EDT

VENICE Reuters - The lives of four Arab-Israeli women spanning three generations against the backdrop of conflict are at the center of "Miral," a film by Julian Schnabel based on his Palestinian partners biographical book.

From the 1948 creation of the Jewish state to the 1993 Oslo accords that briefly raised hopes of peace in the Middle East, the film has a clear political message and points to the role of education in bridging ethnic, religious and political divides.

Screening in competition at the Venice film festival, it is an adaptation of a 2003 book by Rula Jebreal, a Palestinian who grew up in east Jerusalem and later moved to Italy where she became the first foreign anchor woman for the evening news.

Schnabel, an acclaimed American-Jewish painter here directing his fourth film, did not know much about Palestinian people until he read Jebreals book and said that shooting the film with her in Israel was an eye-opening experience.

"I felt I was a pretty good person to tell the story of the other side... I am not a politician or a statesman but I cant see how an artist could do any worse than politicians have done so far," he told reporters after a press screening on Thursday.

"I dont see painting as being decorative and I dont make films necessarily as entertainment ... in order for me to make a movie its usually I feel a responsibility to that subject and something that Ill come out to learn about myself."

Jebreal said that each story in her book is true, though she changed names and combined events and personalities.

ROLE MODEL

One of the central characters is Hind Husseini, who in the late 1940s decided to set up a school to give Arab children orphaned by the conflict a better future. Still open today, her institute has been home to more than 3,000 children.

Jebreal tells her own story through Miral, played by "Slumdog Millionaire" star Freida Pinto, who ends up at Husseinis boarding school after the death of her mother.

When Miral is sent to teach at a Palestinian refugee camp, she finds herself torn between joining the Intifada or following Husseinis role model.

"Its a story of a great land and a little girl who grows up and survives this conflict simply because she has somebody who helped her, and I think there are many, many young people out there seeking and wanting this help," Jebreal said.

Schnabel, who won the best director award in Cannes and at the Golden Globes for his 2007 film "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly," said his mother had taught him the same values that Husseini instilled in the young Jebreal.

"One of the reasons why I made this film is that it was obvious to me that there were more similarities between these people than differences," he said.

"I felt it was my responsibility to confront this because maybe Ive spent most of my life receding from going to Israel, receding from my responsibility as a Jewish person and this gave me an opportunity to protect something that my mother had spent her life trying to build."

Speaking about the importance of education to empower women, Schnabel joined an international outcry about the case of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, the Iranian woman sentenced to death by stoning for adultery.

"Its the 21st century and something is wrong with that picture. I mean, thats happening as we are sitting here drinking Perrier and God knows what."

Editing by Paul Casciato



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Rapper T.I. arrested for drug possession in LA

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Perry aims to show more dimensions with Dream AP

NEW YORK To some, the most surprising part of Katy Perrys sophomore success is that it exists.

After all, this was the ever effervescent girl who rose to fame two years ago with a song about girl-on-girl action. She dressed like a cross between Betty Boop and Judy Jetson and sang songs about metrosexual boyfriends and partying in Vegas.

Fun and catchy � but surely not built to last.

Cut to 2010, and its been Perrys year. Her No. 1 smash "California Gurls" has become the song of the summer; shes got another big hit with the racy "Teenage Dream"; and her second album of the same name debuted at the top of the charts this week, selling a little over 192,000 copies for one of the years best debuts, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

And her engagement to British comedian Russell Brand hasnt hurt her exploding star power.

"Its really validating, but not in like a mean girls kind of way feeling," says a wide-eyed Perry, with her girlish voice, in a recent interview. "Ive always believed in myself and its just wonderful that people can finally jump on the train and be a part of something really exciting."

The 25-year-old California girl hasnt toned down the zaniness much on her latest album � and listeners get the feeling she couldnt if she tried. In person, Perry comes across like a walking candy confection � on this day, shes wearing her jet-black hair pulled back in a ponytail; her eyelids are colored in a bright blue; and shes wearing a low-cut, tight minidress thats a rainbow of colors though she covers up with a gray jacket because of a hotel chill.

The video for "California Gurls," the infectious pop groove featuring Snoop Dogg, features Perry in a sexy version of Candy Land, and the theme continues with her album. The first 1,000 copies were made with a scratch-and-sniff scent of cotton candy; shes considering having candy instead of confetti rain down on her audience as part of her upcoming tour, which she plans for next year.

Yet theres grit behind the fluff. "Teenage Dream" features songs about toxic relationships, moments of conflict, self-doubt and even inspiration.

"This album shows the evolution that people werent expecting," says Amy Doyle, MTVs executive vice president of music and talent programming. "There are songs on this album that go a little deeper into her feelings and arent just these poppy little numbers. I think that she gets into a deeper lyrical side of herself."

Perry calls the album her "black box" � where she reveals Katy Perry the artist, often obscured by Katy Perry the caricature.

One song that shows another dimension is the angry "Circle the Drain," where she lashes out at a lover who is destroying himself and their relationship with drugs. While Perry says it came from her past, she declines to say whether its about former boyfriend Travie McCoy, who has acknowledged that hes battled substance abuse. However, Perry says its not about her fiance, who has openly talked about overcoming such addictions.

"It was difficult to write it because its not where I am now, but it was a feeling that I had stored away a long time ago, in my emotional filing cabinet," she says.

Grammy-winning producer and songwriter Christopher "Tricky" Stewart, who worked on the track with Perry, says the song was "a very important subject for her to get off her chest."

Moreover, Perry was interested in showing that she could offer more than danceable, playful pop grooves.

"More than anything, it was an attitude, a certain type of tone that she wanted to take on her record. Were both fans of Alanis Morissettes Jagged Little Pill album," he said. "We were looking for something edgy, something women could get behind."

While much of pop music is focused on a dance beat, and songs like "Last Friday Night" are geared for the party, Perry wasnt interested in making an album for the clubs.

"Sure, I wanted to make a record with more tempo, but I didnt want that to mean that I had to write about just DJs and dancing and getting drunk. ... I need a soundtrack for all the rest of my emotions, and thats what I really wanted to provide with this," she says.

"If you had all that Last Friday Night as the subject matter for every single song, it would be like, Youre soulless, your spineless. Is there anything else to your world?" Take that, Ke$ha.

Besides her growing collection of hit records, Perry has a wedding to plan: She and Brand became engaged in January after a whirlwind romance, and their relationship and impending nuptials no wedding date has been announced have made them tabloid favorites.

"Theyre two very interesting, very funny, very compelling people, and they just seem to be so deeply in love that people are fascinated by watching them," said Doyle. "They just seem like such the superstar match."

While Perry has no problem talking about Brand she refers to him as her boyfriend, she makes it clear that their romance, despite their public displays of affection, isnt for the cameras.

"Weve decided that after we get married, were not going to talk about our relationship anymore, because its like, were married, so were married. What more can I say?" she says. "But I think that we understand the general excitement, and were two people in love, and people in love like to tell people we are in love."

Perrys focus now is on pushing her "Teenage Dream."

"This record is going to kind of solidify the fact that I have something different to offer, a different perspective," she says. "This record could be more important than the first. It shows that it wasnt a lottery, it shows that it wasnt luck � it just shows that its good."

___

Online:

http://www.katyperry.com



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Rapper T.I., wife arrested on drug charges AP

LOS ANGELES Authorities say Grammy-winning rapper T.I. and his wife have been arrested on suspicion of possessing methamphetamines after sheriffs deputies stopped their car in West Hollywood and smelled marijuana smoke.

Deputy Diane Hecht said Thursday the 29-year-old rapper and Tameka Cottle were booked Wednesday night in Los Angeles County jail.

Deputy Luis Castro says the couple posted $10,000 bail each and were released from jail at about 4 a.m. Thursday.

T.I.s publicist declined to comment.

The rapper is a multiplatinum hitmaker who also appears in the new movie "Takers."

He has history of drug offenses and was released in March after serving time on a federal weapons charge.



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Blair memoirs break sale record

Tony Blairs memoirs, based on his time as the prime minister, have broken sales records, booksellers have said.

A Journey became Waterstones fastest-selling autobiography ever and shot to the top of Amazons best-seller list.

Mr Blairs account of his time in Downing Street sold more copies on its first day of publication than David Beckham and Russell Brands autobiographies.

It is currently the 12th best-seller in the US and 9th in Canada.

However, readers in France and Germany were not quite as interested, as the book only ranked 366th and 529th respectively.

Although Waterstones refused to disclose precise sales figures, a spokesman said the book had been a "stupendous" and "unprecedented" success.

He added: "Weve never seen a book like this sell so quickly in one day. Its selling in the sort of numbers you dont see outside of mass market fiction with huge appeal - Dan Brown and JK Rowling are the competition here.

The chain said it sold as many copies of A Journey on Wednesday as it did of former business secretary Lord Mandelsons memoirs The Third Man in three weeks.

Official sales figures will not be released until next Tuesday.

The memoirs include Mr Blairs accounts of the Iraq war, the 9/11 terrorist attacks in America and Princess Dianas death.

He also wrote about concerns over the amount he was drinking and of the rift he had with his successor Gordon Brown.



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A Minute With: director Lee Daniels on "Broadway"

LOS ANGELES | Thu Sep 2, 2010 9:33am EDT

LOS ANGELES Reuters Life - Independent filmmaker Lee Daniels got a big push for his movie "Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire" when Oprah Winfrey and Tyler Perry signed on as executive producers after the films Sundance Film Festival premiere in 2009.

"Precious" went on to be nominated for several Academy Awards, including best picture and best director for Lee. At the Oscars in February, it took home awards for best adapted screenplay and best supporting actress for MoNique.

With some newfound notoriety, Daniels has now attached his own name to an independent film, "Prince of Broadway," that he first saw as a juror at the Independent Spirit Awards in 2009.

The film opens in New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles this Friday. It follows an illegal immigrant named Lucky who sells brand name knock-offs in New York City. His life changes when a woman hands over to him a toddler she insists is his.

Reuters talked to Daniels about the film and his career.

Q: Oprah Winfrey and Tyler Perry are big names that moved mountains for "Precious." What can Lee Daniels do for "Prince of Broadway?"

A: "I learned from Oprah and Tyler that presenting helps. They rang the bell as loud as they could for me and people came to see my film. Were only opening in three cities with Prince of Broadway, so Ill ring that bell as loud as I can from those three cities. I think people interested in the kind of work I do will be blown away by this filmmaker."

Q: What was it about filmmaker Sean Baker that made you want to attach your name to his movie?

A: "His work stands for everything that I do. Every film I have done has been independent. Anyone who knows me and knows my work associates it with independent cinema. Im no Oprah or Tyler Perry, but in the independent world, my name means something."

Q: What was it about Prince of Broadway that got you excited when you first saw it?

A: "Being from New York myself, watching the film I saw the folks the way I see folks in New York City. It was a new voice."

Q: Luckys life is turned upside down one day when a woman he barely knows hands him a baby and leaves it with him. In real-life, you adopted your niece and nephew when they were just babies themselves. Any parallels there?

A: "There was definitely a connection with the way Luckys kid was handed off to him and how I was blessed with mine."

Q: "Prince of Broadway" is the first movie that bears your name since "Precious." Are you working on anything right now?

A: "Im co-writing my first studio movie for Sony Pictures called The Butler. Its a true story about a butler who served six Presidents in the White House. Im also debating whether or not to direct the independent film Selma."

Q: Whats to contemplate?

A: "Both of them are about civil rights. As a filmmaker, I can only do one civil rights story. Im weighing my options."

Q: Were you disappointed that "Precious" didnt win best picture or that you didnt win best director?

A: "Yes. Id be lying to you if I said I wasnt. But I was really happy director Kathryn Bigelow won for The Hurt Locker. If I didnt win, I wanted her to win."

Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Patricia Reaney



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Talent contestant denied tribunal

A Britains Got Talent hopeful who claimed she was discriminated against at her audition, has failed to get her case taken to an employment tribunal.

Emma Amelia Pearl Czikai, who suffers from cervical spine neuritis, wanted to sue Simon Cowell and his hit show.

The 54-year-old argued that producers knew about her condition and made a "fool" out of her on TV.

The decision not to pursue a tribunal was made at a pre-hearing review. Mr Cowell was unable to comment.

Unfair conditions

Ms Czikai first appeared on the show in May 2009, and was seen singing You Raise Me Up in front of the three judges.

After her audition, Cowell told her "it is a beautiful song - when youre not singing it".

Ms Czikai blamed her poor performance on being made to stand outside in the cold weather as she waited for her turn on stage.

"That traps the nerves, so immediately that aggravates the condition," she told the BBC earlier this year.

Ms Czikai insisted the conditions "were unfair" and asked producers not to show the footage, which they did not agree to.

Instead, they invited her to appear on the ITV2 spin-off show Britains Got More Talent.

The amateur singer said producers had agreed to make an explicit link between that performance and her original audition on the shows website, but failed to do so.

She said that allowing repeated viewings, without a link to an improved performance, "was an act of harassment perpetrated in the full knowledge of the fact I was being degraded and humiliated because of illnesses".

The subsequent attempt to take the case to an employment tribunal was dismissed because of the amount of time that had lapsed since the incident and the fact that Cowell was not her employer, she said.

However, Ms Czikai said she was not disappointed with the decision.

"My life has changed so markedly, now all I want to do is just forget about everything. I would rather walk away from it," she said.

"I think it [reality TV] is a dangerously out-of-control industry and if it cant be regulated by tribunals its an open field day."

"Ive done as much as I can to bring it to the publics attention."

She had reportedly been suing Cowell and his production company Syco and Fremantle Media �2.5 million, but Ms Czikai insisted she did not care about the money.

"I think Ive made the public aware of how awful these programmes are. I think Im just going to leave it now."



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Man in Letterman blackmail plot freed from NY jail AP

NEW YORK The former television producer who tried to blackmail David Letterman over the comedians office affairs was freed from jail Thursday, city Correction Department records show.

Robert "Joe" Halderman served four months of his six-month sentence in the case, which exposed Lettermans personal life to public scrutiny. Halderman got time off for good behavior during his stint at the Rikers Island jail complex, but he isnt done with his sentence: He still has to complete 1,000 hours of community service.

"He survived this, and hes glad to be getting off the island," his lawyer, Gerald Shargel, said Wednesday. The former CBS "48 Hours" producer � whos up for a News and Documentary Emmy award this year � is looking for work, Shargel added.

Halderman, 52, pleaded guilty earlier this spring to attempted grand larceny. He admitted he demanded $2 million in hush money last fall to keep from revealing personal information about Letterman.

The case spurred the "Late Show" host to reveal on-air that hed had sex with women on his staff.

Haldermans scheme was fueled by both financial problems and romantic jealousy, his lawyer has said. Halderman had seen from peeking in his girlfriends diary that shed had a relationship with Letterman, her boss � information he used to bolster his threat to make the comic icons world "collapse around him," authorities said.

The divorced Halderman has since remarried, Shargel said. And while he no longer has his job at CBSs "48 Hours" � the network has declined to discuss whether he resigned or was fired � he is up for an Emmy for an April 2009 story about an American exchange student charged with murder in Italy. He was one of four producers cited for the story. The news Emmys will be presented Sept. 27 in New York.

His community service will entail providing job training to formerly homeless people and convicts getting out of prison.

Letterman married longtime girlfriend Regina Lasko last year. They began dating in 1986 and have a 6-year-old son.

While Lettermans popularity emerged unscathed from the scandal, the host has said it was an emotional blow.

"You take a look at the explosion, and it knocks you down, and you wake up every morning, and youre scared and youre depressed and sad," he said on "Live With Regis and Kelly" in April.

"And you kind of got to let that knock you down and knock you down, and then pretty soon youve got to start knocking IT down. And then, when that happens, you start looking at the pieces left of your life."



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Bob Dylans Brazil Series on display in Denmark AP

COPENHAGEN Denmarks National Gallery is displaying 40 acrylic paintings by Bob Dylan that have never before been shown to the public.

Curator Kasper Monrad says the paintings in Dylans "Brazil Series" were specifically made for the Danish exhibition, which opens Friday.

The collection includes figurative scenes from Brazilian slums, farms and beaches. The 69-year-old folk singer sketched the scenes during visits to the South American country and then painted them on canvas in a studio.

Monrad said there were connections between Dylans music and his art.

Dylan was not at Thursdays presentation of the exhibition, which runs through Jan. 30.



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Majority agree with arts change

Two-thirds of people agree with the governments stance on cutting arts funding and increasing reliance on private cash, a survey has suggested.

And a fifth of the 2,022 British adults questioned said visual arts should not be given any government funding.

The poll was commissioned by organisers of The Threadneedle visual arts prize.

Meanwhile, Englands regional museums warn collections will be mothballed after expected arts cuts of at least 25% in Octobers spending review.

In July, the government asked all major arts funding bodies to show how they would manage cuts of 25% or 30%.

The Department of Culture, Media and Sport has already pulled the plug on the UK Film Council, which costs �15m a year and employs 75 people, along with 15 other bodies, including the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council.

It hopes private money will help plug the gap, but some of the countrys leading philanthropists have written to Prime Minister David Cameron warning the ambition is overly optimistic.

Chancellor George Osborne will announce results of the governments spending review on 20 October.

Pitiful return

The Threadneedle Prize-commissioned survey found that 66% of respondents agreed that the majority of visual arts funding should come from corporate sponsorship and private donations.

"Start Quote

Regional museums will lend and borrow fewer things, making it far harder for people to see nationally important treasures near to where they live"

End Quote Mark Taylor, Museums Association

It also found that just 16% thought public funding should provide the majority of support.

The winner of the �25,000 prize - open exclusively to UK-based artists - will be announced on 15 September from a shortlist of Boyd and Evans, Patricia Cain, Paul Cummings, Thomas Doran, James Jessop, Stuart McCaffer and Caroline Walker.

News of the Threadneedle survey results come as the Museums Association - representing English regional museums - warns of "a return to the pitiful days of collections stuck unused and neglected in basement stores".

A survey, carried out by the association, of 42 museum services found that a third thought cuts would force them to close sites or parts of sites.

And more then 40% said they would consider introducing or increasing charges, which the association warned would restrict public access.

Museums Association director Mark Taylor said cuts would undo the good work of the "Renaissance" funding programme - introduced in 2002 - which he said had "transformed Englands great regional museums" with an increase in visitor numbers of 40%.

"Regional museums will lend and borrow fewer things, making it far harder for people to see nationally-important treasures near to where they live," he warned.



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