Thursday, August 4, 2011

Paul McCartney says appears to be phone hacking victim

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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MTV adds social activism category to VMAs

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

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Too early to talk Oscar? Not for Dominic Cooper

NEW YORK | Thu Aug 4, 2011 3:05pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - It's still very early. In fact, it's not yet awards season in Hollywood, but already movie fans might have their first bona fide contender for this year's best actor Oscar.

Briton Dominic Cooper gives what critics are calling a brilliant performance in dual roles of the brutal, sadistic Uday Hussein -- the son of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein -- and his emotionally conflicted body double, Latif Yahia, in new movie "The Devil's Double."

His role in the film, which hit theaters in New York and Los Angeles last Friday and expands around the United States in coming weeks, scored Cooper a standing ovation at the Sundance Film Festival when it premiered there earlier this year.

Add to that bit of bravura that Cooper is coming off an acclaimed performance in 2009's "An Education" and is currently showing versatility in this summer's big-budget "Captain America: The First Avenger," and it all has Hollywood buzzing.

Cooper can feel the heat. He told Reuters he is now "getting really exciting meetings with really exciting directors who I want to work with...it's a shift."

He remembers Sundance as being "almost terrifying, the idea of people seeing the work," then said he was relieved because the audience "believed the illusion, that it is the same guy playing two parts, which was always going to be the problematic dilemma of the film."

In fact, Cooper is really playing three roles -- Uday, Latif and Latif playing Uday to fill-in as a body double for the feared son of the late Iraqi dictator, who lived in a decadent world of designer suits and was surrounded by violence and torture.

Uday Hussein was killed by U.S. troops in a gun battle following the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Latif lived to write a book upon which the film, which is more a gangster drama than Iraq truth tale, is loosely based.

Latif was a veteran of the Iran-Iraq war who was recruited to be Uday's body double. He had no choice in the matter. It was either that or death, beatings or violence to his family -- or all three.

ONE ACTOR, TWO CHARACTERS

Despite his own moral convictions, Latif is forced to comply with Uday's tortures, rapes, drug use and pornographic debauchery. He is conflicted in his new job, as he takes audiences on a journey into Uday's surreal world.

To portray the dual roles, Cooper said he concentrated on physical gestures, vocal tones, syntax and speech patterns. He made up a very high-pitched signature laugh for Hussein. He watched some video footage of Uday.

"There is not much of it, but when you do it's scary. There is this very hideous man, emanating bad vibes," Cooper said.

The lack of time to shoot the relatively low-budget ($15 million) movie meant Cooper was forced to switch characters quickly on the set. When both were together in one scene, a stand-in would read the dialogue, so he did not have another actor's reaction from which to work. In some scenes, Cooper wore an earpiece to hear the performance he had just given.

"I would ask if I could do Uday first, because he was the driving force and he was the one that took up a huge amount of energy," Cooper said.

While the movie has received mixed-to-positive reviews and comparisons to other character-driven gangster films, such as the 1983 version of "Scarface" starring Al Pacino, the praise for Cooper has been nearly unanimous.

"Playing both the somber Latif and the hysterical Uday is a stunt, but it is also a tour de force," wrote the New York Times' A.O. Scott.

Cooper seems humbled by all the attention, but also refreshingly frank when talking about his chances for possible Oscar glory in early 2012. Most actors say they do not to think about awards, but Cooper said it's hard to avoid it.

"Any actor that says they don't actually, occasionally do some ridiculous speech in their head at some point in their lives -- while they are on the toilet or some other ridiculous circumstance -- would be lying," he said.

"It's part of your ambition and desire to have your work noticed, I suppose, but I don't sit mulling it over, the fact that it is even being mentioned is wonderful."

(Reporting by Christine Kearney, editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Freida Pinto rises up in new "Planet of the Apes"

LOS ANGELES | Thu Aug 4, 2011 1:50pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Indian actress Freida Pinto got her big break when director Danny Boyle cast the ex-model as the love interest in the 2008 Oscar-winning hit "Slumdog Millionaire." Now, she's hitting silver screens in her first big-budget, effects-driven Hollywood movie.

Since then, the 26-year-old has appeared on People magazine's "Most Beautiful People List," starred in smaller, art-house films for Woody Allen and Julian Schnabel, and is the current face of L'Oreal cosmetics.

In "Rise of the Planet of the Apes," which hits theaters on Friday, Pinto plays an expert in primate behavior opposite James Franco and a bunch of genetically enhanced chimps who prepare to take over the world.

The movie is a prequel of sorts to the popular "Planet of the Apes" movies of the 1960s and '70s, and it follows director Tim Burton's take on the series with 2001's "Planet of the Apes. Pinto sat down with Reuters to talk about making the film and why she is a Hollywood -- not Bollywood -- star.

Q: It's been over 40 years since the first "Apes" film with Charlton Heston. Where does this film fit into the story?

A: It's a modern-day origin story, set now. It's about how a scientific experiment with a potentially life-saving new drug goes terribly wrong and leads to an ape revolution. I think the fact that it deals with topics such as animal testing is very relevant and current. It's very different from the original.

Q: You play a primatologist. Did you do much research for the role?

A: A lot. Like most people I only knew what I'd been taught in school about chimps, and that's not enough. So I watched a ton of videos about Jane Goodall, who I'd love to meet. All her research was fascinating and so useful, especially in how she studied human behavior in comparison to chimp behavior.

Q: Did you get to work with real chimps, or was it all performance capture?

A: No real chimps. It was pretty amazing. We've progressed so much with visual effects technology that we didn't need to use real animals. "Avatar" was a huge step forward, and in this film we've gone even further, in that we could shoot scenes with the motion capture apes outside -- we didn't have to be confined to a studio like before.

Q: Any surprises working with James Franco?

A: I always try to go into every film with flexibility, because all actors work differently and have different styles. Some are very intense in between takes and scenes, but James was very relaxed and always so prepared. So he could be reading a book and the moment they said 'Action!' he'd be totally present.

Q: This is quite a cautionary tale about human's tampering with nature, genetics and science. What did you learn from it?

A: It's a message film in a way, but it made me realize how important it is to start a conversation about very serious issues and not just be numb to them. How far do you go in order to better people's lives and fight disease, and at what cost? It definitely made me think about it all.

Q: You're next playing Phaedra in another big action film, "Immortals."

A: I actually shot it before "Apes" although it's not out until 11-11-11 (November 11, 2011). I'm the oracle priestess who can see and predict the future, although she doesn't quite know how it'll unfold. Although it's set in ancient Greece, we shot it in Montreal, and it was an amazing experience. Tarsem Singh created a living set, with all these fantastic cliffs and shrines, so it wasn't just all green screen.

Q: You're starring in all these big Hollywood epics. Will you ever make a Bollywood film?

A: I am trying to balance it all with smaller indie films, and I just did "Trishna" with Michael Winterbottom, which is my second Indian film after "Slumdog." So I feel I've done the Bollywood thing in a way.

Q: Where are you based? Any plans to move to Hollywood?

A: I live like a gypsy, all over the world. My main bases are Bombay and London, but even when I'm back home in Bombay I still live out of a suitcase, because I feel like if I unpack, within a few days I'll get a call to go somewhere else. So I prefer keeping that one bag always packed. And filmmaking is so international now. We did "Apes" in Vancouver, although it's set in San Francisco, and all the effects were done in New Zealand. Hollywood's really more a state of mind now.

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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UK lawmakers pressure Piers Morgan on hacking claims

LONDON | Thu Aug 4, 2011 7:59am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - British lawmakers called on Thursday for CNN talk show host and former tabloid editor Piers Morgan to return to his native Britain to answer questions about phone-hacking after allegations made by the ex-wife of former Beatle Paul McCartney.

The claim by Heather Mills that a journalist had listened to voicemail messages on her mobile phone has added fuel to the flames of a scandal that has engulfed Rupert Murdoch's News Corp empire and much of the British establishment.

In an interview with the BBC on Wednesday, Mills said a journalist working for British publisher Trinity Mirror, owner of the Daily Mirror tabloid newspaper, had confronted her with details of a message left by McCartney on her phone in early 2001 following a row.

She said the senior journalist -- who was not Morgan -- had admitted hacking her phone. Morgan was the editor of the Mirror at the time.

So far, allegations about the hacking scam have been mainly limited to the News of the World newspaper, owned by News Corp's British newspaper arm News International.

The Sunday tabloid was closed last month amid public fury after it emerged that hacking victims included a missing schoolgirl later found murdered and other victims of crime.

The claim by Mills widened the hacking scandal to other titles and turned the spotlight on Morgan, who edited the News of the World from 1994-95 and the Mirror from 1995-2004.

Morgan said in a 2006 article for Britain's Daily Mail newspaper that he had listened to one of Mills' phone messages.

Trinity Mirror and Morgan, now a chat-show host for CNN in the United States, issued statements denying any wrongdoing.

"Heather Mills has made unsubstantiated claims about a conversation she may or may not have had with a senior executive from a Trinity Mirror newspaper in 2001," he said, describing her claims as "somewhat extravagant."

"To reiterate, I have never hacked a phone, told anyone to hack a phone, nor to my knowledge published any story obtained from the hacking of a phone," he added.

MORGAN NEEDS "TO DO MORE"

Therese Coffey, a Conservative legislator who sits on a parliament's Culture, Media and Sport (CMS) committee which is investigating phone-hacking, said Morgan needed to do more than simply issue statements.

Fellow committee member Jim Sheridan said it would be "helpful" if Morgan could clear up the allegations.

"If the evidence suggests the Mirror group, Piers Morgan or indeed anyone else has been involved in phone-hacking then the police have to contact them and make sure that their nest is clean," he told BBC TV.

"I am deeply suspicious that this doesn't stop at News International."

Harriet Harman, deputy leader of the opposition Labour Party, said Morgan had questions to answer and that detectives, who are probing the hacking allegations as well as claims reporters paid bribes to police for information, should leave no stone unturned.

"It's not good enough for Piers Morgan just to say he's always stayed within the law," she said in a statement.

However, the chairman of the CMS committee told the BBC there were no plans to formally call Morgan to give evidence, and that the committee was focusing on suggestions News International executives had given them misleading evidence.

Two former senior News International figures have contradicted evidence provided by Murdoch's son James. It is likely the committee will recall him to clarify his earlier testimony.

(Editing by Peter Graff)



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Amy Winehouse duet with Tony Bennett going to charity

LOS ANGELES | Wed Aug 3, 2011 8:48pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A duet between jazz great Tony Bennett and the late singer Amy Winehouse is being released as a single to benefit a charity established by her father, Bennett's spokeswoman said on Wednesday.

The classic pop standard "Body and Soul" that Winehouse recorded with Bennett in March is one of her last works. She died unexpectedly at age 27 on July 23, after a long battle with alcohol and drugs.

An official cause of death for Winehouse has not been determined. Her father, Mitch, is creating a foundation in her name to help drug addicts.

Proceeds from Bennett and Winehouse's "Body and Soul" recording, which is being released as a single, will go to the foundation, said Liz Rosenberg, a spokeswoman for Bennett.

The song will also appear on Bennett's "Duets II" CD to be released on September 20.

Bennett, a Grammy winning jazz legend whose biggest songs include "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" and "Rags to Riches," celebrated his 85th birthday on Wednesday.

He recorded "Body and Soul" with Winehouse at the Abbey Road Studios in London, and has credited her for her abilities as a jazz singer.

Grammy winner Winehouse was famed for her black beehive hair and soulful voice, and is best known for her 2006 song "Rehab" that summed up her struggles with addiction.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis: Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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