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The Golden Globes — what did it all mean for the Oscars?

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NewsHubIs the Oscar best picture race over before the nominations have even been announced?
Damien Chazelle’s daring, magical musical “La La Land” swept its way through the Golden Globes on Sunday night, winning all seven of its nominated categories: best picture comedy/musical, lead acting honors for Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling , and awards for director, screenplay, song and score.
In doing so, it broke the record shared by two 1970s movies: “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” and “Midnight Express,” both of which won six Globes, including one category — acting debut — that no longer exists.
“I’m in a daze now, officially,” Chazelle said accepting the director’s prize, the second of three trips he made to the stage. And who could blame him?
Now, naysayers could grouse and note that “La La Land” was off by its lonesome in the comedy/musical categories, separated from the other two awards season front-runners, “Manchester by the Sea” and “Moonlight. “ But “La La Land” prevailed in two key categories in which the three movies were directly competing, director and screenplay, proving two things: 1) The Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. loves musicals — always has and probably always will, and 2) this particular musical possesses a power and charm that has a way of burrowing into people’s hearts. (I’m humming “City of Stars” even as I write this.)
Host Jimmy Fallon opened the evening with a “La La Land”-inspired musical tribute of sorts that demonstrated just how deeply Chazelle’s musical has entered the pop culture consciousness — even before fully expanding into a theatrical wide release. Fallon sang numbers based on two songs from the movie — “Another Day of Sun” and “City of Stars” — and parodied the movie’s Griffith Observatory dream sequence, waltzing and floating with Justin Timberlake amid a backdrop of stars.
It doesn’t hurt, either, that “La La Land,” like recent best picture winners “The Artist,” “Birdman” and, to a point, “Argo,” celebrates the one thing that Hollywood and Oscar voters can’t resist: itself.
“Manchester by the Sea” — the movie Fallon called the “only thing more depressing than 2016” — did manage to win one Globe, lead actor Casey Affleck. But that meager showing does little to prop up a belief that Amazon Studios’ indie drama has what it takes to win the best picture Oscar.
“Moonlight,” Barry Jenkins’ drama depicting three periods in the life of a young black man struggling with and ultimately learning to accept his gay identity, took one Globe too — the evening’s last, best picture drama. Jenkins’ singular movie remains the strongest challenger to “La La Land,” as it has become part of the cultural conversation in a very different way, inspiring discussions about race, sexuality and identity in a manner that transcends stereotypes and conventions.
It’s easy to envision an Oscar split for picture and director, with Chazelle’s musical winning the former and Jenkins taking the latter.
One of the evening’s biggest surprises was saved (almost) for last when French acting legend Isabelle Huppert won the lead actress drama Globe for “Elle.” In the film, Huppert plays a woman who is raped and decides to shift the power from victim to avenger.
Huppert has won many critics group prizes, including honors from the New York Film Critics Circle and the Los Angeles Film Critics Assn. But she’s still not guaranteed an Oscar nomination when they are announced on Jan. 24. The lead actress category is particularly crowded this year, with strong turns from Stone, Natalie Portman (“Jackie”), Amy Adams (“Arrival”), Annette Bening (“20th Century Women”), Meryl Streep (“Florence Foster Jenkins”) and Ruth Negga (“Loving”).
But academy voters have shown a willingness in three of the last four years to look around the globe for their lead actress choices — Emmanuelle Riva in 2012 for Michael Haneke’s “Amour,” Marion Cotillard in 2014 for the Dardenne brothers’ “Two Days, One Night” and Charlotte Rampling last year for Andrew Haigh’s “45 Years.” Huppert could well continue the trend.
Elsewhere, Viola Davis won the supporting actress trophy for her work in Denzel Washington ’s adaptation of August Wilson’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play “Fences.” Davis has won supporting honors with countless critics groups in the last few weeks and will probably go on to win at the Screen Actors Guild Awards and the Oscars. She could have competed in the lead category — as she did when she performed the same role opposite Washington on Broadway — and still swept through the season.
Davis gave a moving speech, paying tribute to her blue-collar father, noting “he had a story and it deserved to be told — and August Wilson told it. “ Davis was also part of the evening’s true high point, introducing Meryl Streep for the honorary Cecil B. DeMille Award (“You make me feel like what I have in me, my body, my face, my age, is enough.”)
Eloquent speeches like the ones Davis delivered represent another kind of performance. And if done well and from the heart, they tend to stick in Oscar voters’ minds.
In that respect, the night’s biggest winner might have been Streep herself, though I’m sure her tenuous place in the lead actress Oscar race was the last thing on her mind when she crafted her fiery acceptance speech. It takes a lot to silence the Beverly Hilton’s ballroom, but celebrants stopped their schmoozing when Streep brought the hammer down on President-elect Donald Trump , decrying his “instinct to humiliate” and noting that “when the powerful use their position to bully, we all lose.”
Referring to the time Trump imitated disabled New York Times reporter Serge Kovaleski on the campaign trail, Streep noted it “was one performance this year that stunned me.” Taking that astonishment and turning it into righteous fury, Streep reminded everyone why she remains an awards season perennial. There’s no one like her.
Casey Affleck talks about the way Kenneth Lonergan uses everyday language to convey deep emotion in „Manchester by the Sea. “
For her role as Jackie Kennedy, Natalie Portman says, „It’s not a fashion story,“ but the clothes do tell a story.
Joel Edgerton talks about staying truthful to the real-life story of „Loving. “
Director Nicolas Winding Refn and composer Cliff Martinez discuss their „Neon Demon“ collaboration.
„Manchester By the Sea“ director Kenneth Lonergan discusses writing a quiet character and working with actor Casey Affleck to bring him to life.
„Manchester By the Sea“ director Kenneth Lonergan discusses writing a quiet character and working with actor Casey Affleck to bring him to life.

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© Source: http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/la-et-mn-golden-globes-analysis-20170108-story.html
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Golden Globes serve up a side order of politics

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NewsHubThe old-fashioned musical triumphed, and there was joy through the land — „La La Land,“ that is. Though Damien Chazelle’s candy-colored musical cleaned up at the Golden Globes, there was a more serious undertone to the evening, with references both humorous and not to the impending Donald Trump era. There was also a bang-up opening musical number and one of the cutest child actors ever to grace an awards stage. Here are some key moments of the evening:
GAGA FOR LA LAND: It’s no secret that Jimmy Fallon loves musicals, and the host showed that love with an elaborate opening number paying tribute to the virtuoso dancing traffic jam scene in „La La Land,“ the night’s big winner. He even danced into the stars — with Justin Timberlake.

ECHOES OF MARIAH CAREY: The terrific opening immediately segued into an awkward moment for Fallon when, before he even started his monologue, the Teleprompter had failed. You know, live shows and all…

TRUMP ZINGERS: Was the president-elect watching? Who knows for sure, but he certainly had a presence at the ceremony. Fallon began his monologue noting that the Globes were „one of the few places left where America still honors the popular vote,“ and went on to note, among other things, that the votes were tabulated by „Ernst & Young & Putin. “ He even likened Trump to Joffrey, a villain from „Game of Thrones. “

PASSIONATE STREEP: Accepting her lifetime achievement award, Meryl Streep wasted no time in calling out Trump without mentioning his name — for his positions on immigration, and especially for his mocking of a disabled reporter. „It kind of broke my heart,“ she said. „This instinct to humiliate, when it’s modeled by someone in the public platform, by someone powerful, it filters down into everybody’s life. Because it kind of gives permission for other people to do the same thing. “ She also made an impassioned call to support an independent press.

A DEDICATION FROM TRACEE ELLIE ROSS: Ross, a star of „Black-ish,“ dedicated her best actress in a comedy award to „all of the women of color and colorful people whose stories, ideas, thoughts are not always considered worthy and valid and important. “ Ross was the first black woman to win the category since Debbie Allen in 1982. „I want you to know that I see you, we see you,“ she said.

CUTEST KID AWARD: OK, we’ve seen kids at the awards shows before, but maybe not THIS cute. Presenting his movie „Lion,“ Sunny Pawar, 8, appeared onstage with his costar, Dev Patel, and proceeded to break hearts with his adorableness.

ROYALTY RULES: Our enduring taste for royalty in popular culture was proven yet again with the TV drama award to „The Crown,“ the lavish Netflix series about a young Queen Elizabeth II. Claire Foy, who plays the queen, made sure to pay tribute to the long-reigning monarch herself in her acceptance speech for best actress in a drama.

O, THE AGONY OF ANIMATED FILMS:
Animated films are supposed to make us happy — not cry. The irresistible presenting team of Kristen Wiig and Steve Carrell turned that assumption on its head. Recalling the first time he saw an animated movie, Carrell recounted how the day he saw „Fantasia,“ his mom told his dad she wanted a divorce — and he never saw his dad again. Wiig recalled that the day she saw „Bambi,“ her family had to put all three of their dogs down. And she didn’t speak for two years.

REMEMBERING A MOTHER AND DAUGHTER:
The ceremony paused for a film montage honoring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds, who died within a day of each other last month. But it was a teary remark by Streep, ending her speech, that was the most poignant: „As my friend, the dear departed Princess Leia said to me once, ‚Take your broken heart. Make it into art.‘ Thank you, friend. „

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© Source: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/entertainment/movies-news-reviews/article125360684.html
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42 pockets

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NewsHubAs we float in a sea of glossy new tech that surrounds me during CES, we find myself wondering where on earth we would put all this things if we had to take it with me.
One organisation we met there thinks it has a answer – in a form of a coupler with 42 tip pockets, any tailored for a specific device.
Scotte Vest’s $150 (£120) sleeveless gilet is an Aladdin’s cavern of pockets: it includes a laptop-sized space on a back, somewhere to store a inscription in any of a front panels, an inside breast slot for smartphones done out of touchscreen-friendly element and a channel for headphone cables or chargers.
It also contains a sunglasses tote with trustworthy cleaning cloth.
However, a organisation does not suggest regulating all 42 pockets during once.
“It is carrying a slot for what we need during a moment,” pronounced orator Luke Lappala.
“If character isn’t indispensably your series one priority, we could fit all we ever need in there.”
I can attest for that, after stashing my 11in (28cm) laptop, charging wire and plug, smartphone, tablet, radio equipment, battery energy bar and cover in a singular Scotte Vest garment.
I didn’t demeanour or feel quite elegant, and a weight of a laptop alone roughly sloping me over twice – though once a bucket had staid onto my shoulders we began to feel like we was wearing a trek rather than a gilet.
It was surprisingly formidable to get all behind out again after this tiny experiment. we could feel a horse about my chairman though it took me a while to locate a slot it was in. Helpfully, any mantle comes with a tiny fabric map environment out a plcae of all a pockets.
The thought was innate in a year 2000 when arch executive Scott Jordan roughly shop-worn his ears in an airfield after removing a headphone wire tangled on a doorknob, Mr Lappala told me.
It was desirous by a normal fisherman’s vest.
Scotte Vest claims to have sole some-more than 10 million panoply so far, trimming from ditch coats to shorts, all with varying tallies of pockets.
It is good for travellers, pronounced Mr Lappala. And worker pilots.
The organisation even has a opposition in a form of a J25 done by AyeGear – nonetheless as the name suggests, that one has a small 25 storage areas.
I can’t trust I’ve come to Las Vegas to write about pockets.
Read all the CES coverage during bbc.co.uk/ces2017

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© Source: http://headlinenewstoday.net/42-pockets.html
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Why Elijah Page is the best folk singer you've never heard of "Close to tears, he left at the intermission": how Stanley Kubrick upset Arthur C Clarke

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NewsHubSurely you’ve heard of Elijah Page? A voice from the past, yes, but a voice you remember: he played guitar and stood up alone to sing about injustice and heartbreak in the days when it still seemed possible to change the world. Dylan, Guthrie, Seeger, Page – performing in clubs and at festivals, for ­audiences that took those voices to heart, that shaped their lives according to the songs they heard.
In reality, you are unlikely to have heard of Elijah (or Eli) Page, because W B Belcher invented him for his debut novel – but Page is a pretty convincing concoction. A compelling performer in his day, he vanished from the scene and, it seems, disappeared completely, as the narrator, Jack Wyeth, relates. Wyeth is a Page-obsessed folkie, a millennial with father issues (his guitar-playing dad left when he was five) who drops girlfriends and dead-end jobs like so much change from his pocket, never able to settle, never knowing what he wants.
One day, out of the blue, he gets a call from Eli Page’s manager. Page is ready to write a memoir; all he needs is a ghostwriter. Wyeth takes the job and goes to upstate New York but when he gets there he discovers, perhaps unsurprisingly, that his task is not as straightforward as he’d hoped.
The American folk scene offers a good canvas for the shattering of youthful illusions. It is hard to avoid comparing this novel to the Coen brothers’ haunting 2013 film, Inside Llewyn Davis , in which Oscar Isaac plays a 1960s folk musician based on a singer called Dave Van Ronk. Van Ronk gets a namecheck in Belcher’s book and, for those who love conspiracy theories, it may be worth noting that the writer who helped Van Ronk put his posthumously published memoir together was called Elijah Wald.
There’s more. Albert E Brumley’s 1929 spiritual “I’ll Fly Away”, which you can find on the soundtrack of the Coens’ O Brother, Where Art Thou? , also gets a mention here. This is the kind of knitting together that is intrinsic to folk on both sides of the Atlantic, where old tunes and new tunes circle each other and bind until it becomes hard to tell them apart.
Folk is – let’s be frank – always on the margins. If it weren’t, it wouldn’t be a place for rebellion and protest. Both Eli and Jack are marginal figures – even in their own lives, it seems. What brings them together is a need to escape from the confines of the present day, though that desire takes different forms. Eli has become a crank, a near ­recluse: imagine Bob Dylan crossed with J D Salinger and you’ll start to get the picture.
Belcher’s portrait of small-town life and the dark currents running under any surface is well done, and it’s clear that the author knows the drill. He lives along the same river, the Battenkill, that winds through the book; he is also on the board of directors of Caffe Lena in New York, the most venerable folk venue in United States.
Perhaps, at times, the material is a little too close to his heart. One of the strengths of Lay Down Your Weary Tune is its sense of mystery, but that mystery is stretched out just a little too long. What is going on with Eli? Who is responsible for the strange spate of crime in town? The story is a good one – laced with lost fathers and vanished daughters – but like those long, long Child ballads, it wouldn’t have suffered by losing a verse or two. And sometimes the similes get out of hand: wine glasses that “chirped like falsetto birds” when they clinked; a spine curved “like a lazy creek”. It’s lovely, but occasionally distracting.
The characters, however, are vivid and true. Jack becomes enamoured of Jenny, whose connection to Page is a puzzle right to the end of the book. Jenny is soft and strong and real, and her attachment to her ex-fiancé, a bullying local police officer called Cal, perfectly convincing. Eli stays just out of focus – but by design, dimmed to himself as well as to the people who try to get close to him. In the final pages, Jack finds a moment in which he sees: “Everything was perfect and everything was perfectly broken.” That may be the vision he has to live by. I’ll be happy to listen to the next song Belcher chooses to sing.
Lay Down Your Weary Tune by W B Belcher is published by Other Press, 408pp, £13.99
People were frequently surprised to learn that Arthur Clarke and I were good friends. He is considered the doyen of optimistic, technical, Space Age speculative writers, believing our species’ salvation to lie entirely in scientific discovery and engineering invention, his fiction full of detailed explication, sometimes virtually indistinguishable from fact. I am usually portrayed as the iconoclast of the SF “New Wave”, rejecting physics for psychology and favouring social themes over space stories, tending to examine the downside of technology. Yet actually we shared similar ideals. Much of our early work anticipated advances in astrophysics while dealing with the psychic future of mankind.
Many years after our first meeting I gave a party where I introduced Arthur to William Burroughs, the Beat author of Naked Lunch. No one expected them to have a lot in common, but they spent the next few hours together, sipping orange juice, occasionally asking for the music to be turned down because it was spoiling their conversation.
Born two days (and 22 years) apart, we met when I was 15, shortly before he went to live permanently in Sri Lanka. He was humorous, encouraging, egalitarian and generous, as interested in exploring the sea as examining outer space. We would generally meet whenever he was in England, usually at the Globe pub in Hatton Garden, where would-be writers could chat casually with established authors such as John Wyndham, John Christopher and C S Lewis; the SF fraternity had moved to the Globe from the White Horse in Fetter Lane in the mid-1950s. Arthur had already written his light-hearted Tales from the White Hart (1957) in affectionate memory of the Fetter Lane pub. Before the war he and some fellow SF writers had shared a flat in Gray’s Inn Road. His flatmates already called him “Ego” because of his total absorption in the subjects that interested him. He cheerfully accepted the nickname.
Born and raised in Somerset, Arthur came to London in the late 1930s to work as a pensions auditor for the Board of Education, but space travel was already his chief enthusiasm. An active member of the British Interplanetary Society, he grew up reading all the SF he could find, most of it in US pulp magazines, though H G Wells and Olaf Stapledon (the author of the epic Last and First Men ) remained his chief influences. He contributed frequently to the pre-war SF fanzines, co-editing Novae Terrae (“new worlds”) in its original form. One flatmate and fellow editor, William F Temple, described him as highly strung and given to “sudden, violent expressions of mirth”.
After working on radar in the RAF during the war, Arthur received a first-class degree in physics and mathematics from King’s College London, and sold a few speculative articles, including one to Wireless World that proposed communications satellites in space. His first sales of professional fiction were to Astounding (later Analog ), at that time the most prestigious American SF magazine, specialising in speculation based on hard science, with a strong emphasis on space travel. His later work – including his novella Against the Fall of Night , which became his first novel, The City and the Stars (1956) – appeared in rather more garish pulps such as Startling Stories. His fiction quickly brought him popularity with readers and in less than a decade he became known, with Isaac Asimov and Robert A Heinlein, as one of hard SF’s “Big Three”.
“Hard SF” is distinct from the kind written by Orwell, Dick or Ballard, which specialises in social and psychological speculation. Arthur’s work was distinguished from that of his peers by an almost mystical lyricism and a faith in a future where mankind would rid itself, through science, of its primitive and brutal characteristics. (Unlike Heinlein, with whom he eventually fell out over the American author’s support for Ronald Reagan’s “Star Wars” plans, he had little interest in military space fiction.)
***
At first his factual books, such as The Exploration of Space (1951), were more successful than his fiction. He was soon able to support himself by his writing, becoming a leading expert on rocketry and space travel, ready whenever the media needed a piece about space exploration. He even advised the creators of the running story “Dan Dare, Pilot of the Future”, which appeared in my favourite comic, the Eagle , and whose images prefigured those of 2001: a Space Odyssey.
He developed a keen interest in scuba diving; it was one of his chief reasons for moving to Sri Lanka in 1956 not long after the breakdown of his first and only marriage, which had lasted just a few months. He returned to England often, always staying with his brother Fred, his sister-in-law Babs and his mother, Nora, in suburban London. Occasionally he came with a diving partner, Mike Wilson, and brought film of their expeditions with him. He was extremely proud of his underwater discoveries, which included the lost Koneswaram temple in Trincomalee, an important historical site.
Some time after his arrival in Sri Lanka Arthur developed a profound friendship with the diver Leslie Ekanayake, whose family adopted him. He dedicated his 1979 novel, The Fountains of Paradise , to Leslie, describing him as the “only perfect friend of a lifetime, in whom were uniquely combined Loyalty, Intelligence and Compassion”. In 1977 he suffered a terrible emotional blow when Leslie was killed in a motorbike crash just before his 30th birthday. Arthur continued to live with the Ekanayake family until he died. He was buried next to Leslie. The family and his many friends in Sri Lanka describe Arthur as a gentleman of great generosity and spirituality, even though he was anti-religious and placed mankind’s salvation entirely in its own hands.
There is indeed a quality of spiritual idealism in most of Arthur’s major work, including 2001 as well as much of his non-fiction, an element largely lacking from the writing of his science-fiction peers. In most respects he was perhaps the most complex SF writer of his generation: his scientific training combined with a highly logical mind that was passionately committed to humanity and the natural world. Yet his pride in his achievements was obvious and he continued to earn his nickname.
In the mid-1970s my friend Angus Wilson visited him in Colombo. When he returned home Angus asked me if (like him) Arthur was gay. A keen SF reader, he shared a similar investment in humanity but had been somewhat overwhelmed by Arthur’s “tour” of his house: framed endorsements, pictures taken with presidents and princes, awards on display. Arthur struck him as competitive and “perhaps the most egocentric person I ever met”. Did I think Arthur was afraid that he, Angus, was trying to upstage him in some way? I assured him that Arthur was probably just showing off.
Arthur developed polio in the 1980s, making travel increasingly difficult. Shortly before he was due to be knighted in Colombo by the Prince of Wales in 1998, the Sunday Mirror published disgusting and unfounded gossip about him. I wrote to him to give him my moral support. He thanked me graciously. I should not worry, however, he said. The story was merely an attempt to embarrass his friend Prince Charles. He assured me that another friend, Rupert Murdoch, was looking after the matter. The story was soon retracted with apologies.
***
There are several published accounts of how the 1968 film 2001: a Space ­Odyssey came into being. I understood from Arthur that he was somewhat frustrated by the erratic schedule of its director, Stanley Kubrick. Consequently, the novel, which they were supposed to write before the film appeared, came out after the initial release date. But in the main he seemed happy with the collaboration, even up to the time that rough cuts were being shown. He was, I know, afraid that what with Kubrick’s inability to settle down and collaborate on the novel, with the result that the book was due to come out after the cinematic release, it might look like a novelisation of the film rather than an ­original work.
Based primarily on his short story “The Sentinel”, together with other published fact and fiction, the film was very much a joint effort, although Arthur was overly modest about his contribution. For his part, Kubrick seemed unable to come up with an ending that suited him. When I visited the set, the film was already about two years behind schedule and well over budget. I saw several alternative finale scenes constructed that were later abandoned. In one version, the monolith turned out to be some kind of alien spaceship. I also knew something that I don’t think Arthur ever did: Kubrick was at some point dissatisfied with the collaboration, approaching other writers (including J G Ballard and myself) to work on the film. He knew neither Ballard nor me personally. We refused for several reasons. I felt it would be disloyal to accept.
I guessed the problem was a difference in personality. Arthur was a scientific educator. Explanations were his forte. He was uncomfortable with most forms of ambiguity. Kubrick, on the other hand, was an intuitive director, inclined to leave interpretation to the audience. These differences were barely acknowledged. Neither did Kubrick tell Arthur of his concerns regarding the final version. Where, thanks to Arthur, the film was heavy with voice-over explication and clarifications of scenes, Kubrick wanted the story to be told almost entirely visually.
Without consulting or confronting his co-creator, Kubrick cut a huge amount of Arthur’s voice-over explanation during the final edit. This decision probably contributed significantly to the film’s success but Arthur was unprepared for it. When he addressed MGM executives at a dinner in his honour before the premiere, he spoke warmly of Kubrick, declaring that there had been no serious disagreements between them in all the years they had worked together, but he had yet to see the final cut.
My own guess at the time was that Kubrick wasn’t at ease with any proposed resolution but had nothing better to offer in place of his co-writer’s “Star Child” ending. We know now that the long final sequence, offered without explanation, was probably what helped turn the film into the success it became, but the rather unresponsive expressions on the faces of the MGM executives whom Arthur had addressed in his speech showed that they were by no means convinced they had a winner.
What had impressed me on my visit to the set was the dedicated enthusiasm of the Nasa advisers, who had offices at the studios. You could walk into a room and find a fully equipped spacesuit hanging behind the door. There were star-charts and diagrams on the walls; exploded drawings, models, mock-ups and pictures of spaceships and equipment. I saw Roy Carnon’s paintings of Jupiter and large sketches of scenes that would soon become every filmgoer’s idea of what the future in space would look like. The main set was dominated by a huge, fully working centrifuge, built at vast cost by Vickers-Armstrongs, the British engineering firm. Every technician I met talked about the project with such commitment that I was soon infected by the conviction that we really were preparing an expedition to Jupiter. Computer-generated imagery did not yet exist, and so a great deal had to be built or painted close to full size.
With almost no interest in space exploration, I nonetheless found myself excited by the atmosphere. Yet I did wonder if all the “authenticity” I saw around me might not be overwhelming. Could Kubrick’s singular imagination flourish in this atmosphere? Was that why it was taking so long to complete 2001 and the film was so heavily over budget? I had a slightly uncomfortable feeling that the considerable investment in establishing the reality of interplanetary space travel might produce a film more documentary than fiction.
As it turned out, Arthur did not get to see the completed film until the US private premiere. He was shocked by the transformation. Almost every element of explanation had been removed. Reams of voice-over narration had been cut. Far from being a pseudo-documentary, the film was now elusive, ambiguous and thoroughly unclear.
Close to tears, he left at the intermission, having watched an 11-minute sequence in which an astronaut did nothing but jog around the centrifuge in a scene intended to show the boredom of space travel. This scene was considerably cut in the version put out on general release.
***
If Arthur was disappointed by Kubrick’s decision to cut his dialogue and narrative to the bone, he was eventually reconciled by being able to put everything left out of the film into the novel, meaning that each man was able to produce his own preferred version. The success of the film ensured that the book became a bestseller, as audiences sought answers to questions raised by Kubrick’s version, and Arthur soon got over his disappointment, going on to write three bestselling sequels to his novel, only one of which has been filmed so far.
Inspiring governments to invest in space exploration and schoolboys to become astronauts, 2001 convinced the general public that science fiction could be taken seriously. Until Star Wars sent the genre back to an ­essentially juvenile form, the movie led to a greater understanding of the valuable creative possibilities of all kinds of science fiction. There would not be a more influential film until Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner , with its sober moral resonances. It also proved to Hollywood that good, big-budget SF movies could be money-spinners and garner critical respect at the same time. Without 2001 it is unlikely the genre would have progressed to its current state.
I have one other memory of that visit to the 2001 set. After being given a tour of the studio by the MGM publicist, I was led towards Kubrick’s office just as the director entered the main building. I prepared to meet the man who had contacted me a year or so earlier. I had many questions. Perhaps he would confirm some of my guesses.
Kubrick’s eyes went straight to me and did not leave me as he spoke brusquely to the publicist.
“Get these people off the set,” he said.
We were never face to face again.
“2001: a Space Odyssey” by Arthur C Clarke, introduced by Michael Moorcock, is published by the Folio Society (£29.95)

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© Source: http://www.newstatesman.com/culture/books/2017/01/why-elijah-page-best-folk-singer-youve-never-heard
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Emma Watson carries lovely tune in new 'Beauty and the Beast' trailer

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NewsHub(CNN) On a night where modern musical „La La Land“ won big during the Golden Globes, Disney gave moviegoers a new sneak peek of the next movie that could sweep people off their feet: the upcoming live-action „Beauty and the Beast. “
On March 17, experience an adventure in the great wide somewhere. #BeOurGuest pic.twitter.com/NUAUtpMfsH
New poster for Beauty and the Beast! @beourguest

US, North Korea trade threats over potential missile test

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NewsHubFollowing are key dates in the battle for Syria’s Aleppo where fierce fighting resumed on Wednesday in a blow to hopes for the peaceful evacuation of the last rebel-held areas.
Ballistic missiles launched during a drill at an undisclosed location in North Korea (File,AP).
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Pyongyang – North Korea says it reserves the right to test an intercontinental ballistic missile whenever it sees fit, in the latest rhetorical volley with Washington over Pyongyang’s nuclear weapons program.
The North’s Korean Central News Agency on Monday quoted a Foreign Ministry spokesperson as saying, „The ICBM will be launched anytime and anywhere determined by the supreme headquarters“ of the country.
Kim Jong Un announced in his New Year’s address that the country had reached the „final stages“ of ICBM development. The North has not explicitly said it will conduct an ICBM test in the immediate future.
On Sunday, on „Meet the Press,“ US Defence Secretary Ash Carter said the US military would shoot down any North Korean missiles appearing to be headed toward territory of the US or its allies.
24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.

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© Source: http://www.news24.com/World/News/us-north-korea-trade-threats-over-potential-missile-test-20170109
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Bears That Inspired 'Adorable' Korean Paralympic Mascot Live In Caged Captivity

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NewsHubElise Hu
On this farm in Dangjin, South Korea, hundreds of bears live in these cages for ten years until they are slaughtered for their bile. Conditions for bears used to be far worse.
Elise Hu/NPR
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On this farm in Dangjin, South Korea, hundreds of bears live in these cages for ten years until they are slaughtered for their bile. Conditions for bears used to be far worse.
When South Korea’s mountain town of PyeongChang hosts the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games next year, a white tiger and a black bear, respectively, will serve as mascots. They’ve been introduced as cuddly icons of Korean history and folklore.
„They are so cute and adorable, so I’m sure that you’re gonna fall in love with them,“ Korea’s figure skating champ and former Olympian Yuna Kim said, in announcing the PyeongChang 2018 mascots in a promotional video.
The „adorable“ Asiatic black bear is better known regionally as a moon bear, for the distinctive white crescent on its chest. It’s native to Korea and a symbol of the province where the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games will be held.
„It’s a very unique and symbolic creature in Korea,“ says Anna Jihyun You, a spokeswoman for the Olympics here.
„I can’t say … how far [these bears] go back [in folklore] but it’s really since a long time ago,“ she says.
But that place in history and lore hasn’t spared the actual bear breed itself from cruelty. An hour’s drive south of Seoul, you can find a bear-bile farm, one of 39 sprinkled across the country. Here, farmer Kim Kwang-su keeps 230 moon bears in rusty cages.
The Asiatic black bear is now an endangered species, after being captured in the wild and farmed for its bile.
Elise Hu/NPR
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The Asiatic black bear is now an endangered species, after being captured in the wild and farmed for its bile.
He breeds them and cages them for the legal minimum of ten years. Then they’re slaughtered for their gall bladders. In East Asia, bear bile is believed to solve a host of health problems — from hangovers to heart disease. The bears are never let out.
„It’s true we don’t have play facilities for the bears,“ Kim says. „But in South Korea right now, almost all these bears are kept in cages. “
A century ago that wasn’t true. Moon bears roamed freely in the mountains of Korea. But bear bile became such a sought-after traditional medicine that today, the bears have been captured and farmed to near extinction.
„The way that these bears are farmed is particularly cruel,“ says Jill Robinson, a veterinarian and founder and CEO of Animals Asia foundation. Her organization has been working, along with other nonprofits, to try to end the practice of bear-bile farming in China, Vietnam and South Korea.
„This is an issue that I sort of discovered way back in 1993 when I walked onto a bear-bile farm for the first time in my life and was just absolutely horrified by what I saw,“ she says. „Cages and cages all around me, with bears with the most miserable faces, with six-inch catheters protruding from their abdomens. Their teeth cut back, their paw tips cut back so that they couldn’t hurt the farmers as they were extracting the bile. “
Since then, South Korea has banned the practice of milking bears for bile while they are alive. But the animals are still living in captivity until they’re killed. The bear farmer — Kim — says he has come to enjoy the bears he keeps. But he has no other livelihood.
„Only by selling the bile can I maintain the business,“ Kim says. „So it hurts, it hurts me. I don’t even look at them when they’re being slaughtered. I feel really sad. I mean, you’re not a human being if you’re not sad about it. “
Which underlines the gulf between what’s happening to the actual Asiatic black bears and the cartoon-cute character of next year’s Paralympic mascot. While moon bear mascot „Bandabi“ glides his way down animated mountains in promo videos, the inspirations for Bandabi spend their days banging their heads against their cages.
„I just hope the Korean government does make that connection and finally gives its incredible species of bear the freedom they deserve,“ Robinson says.
Demand for bear bile has collapsed, which has led to the closure of many farms already. But nearly 800 moon bears still live in caged limbo in their native country.
Haeryun Kang contributed to this story.

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© Source: http://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2017/01/09/508892461/bears-that-inspired-adorable-korean-paralympic-mascot-live-in-caged-captivity?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news
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Blend-in TVs

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NewsHubSouth Korean tech giants LG and Samsung have launched TVs that aim to improved mix in to consumers’ vital rooms.
LG showed off a set that can be propitious roughly prosaic opposite a wall while Samsung teased a new kind of TV – designed to demeanour like a portrayal – that displays art when not in use.
Samsung also denounced a flagship set braggadocio larger liughtness levels than before.
Others, including Sony, also suggested new models.
Samsung’s flagship 75in (190cm) QLED 4K TV facilities a latest chronicle of a quantum dot record – little particles that evacuate opposite colours of light. These now underline a steel element that a organisation says allows for improved colour reproduction.
Samsung has motionless to hang with a winding arrangement for a high-end models – notwithstanding critique from some experts that observation angles humour with such designs. ‘Insanely bright’
The QLED TV can grasp HDR (high energetic range) liughtness of between 1,500 and 2,000 nits – one nit equalling a light from a candle.
“It’s insanely bright,” pronounced Jack Wetherill, a tech researcher during Futuresource.
“That is flattering energy inspired one would imagine, yet if they’re going down a track of removing as good a design as they can out of it, afterwards satisfactory enough.”
This sets it detached from other set makers who use another reward TV shade technology, OLED (organic light-emitting diode).
Such screens use a carbon-based film permitting a row to evacuate a possess light, rather than being backlit – this enables a ultra skinny designs.
Quantum dot TVs competence not be means to arrangement a deepest blacks probable with OLED, yet they are generally brighter.
LG’s new OLED 4K TV was as skinny as final year’s – only 2.57mm thick – and will be accessible in 65 and 77in models.
But a organisation has now designed a new mountain that uses magnets so a set can be bound prosaic opposite a wall, that a organisation says means it doesn’t expel “a singular shadow”. HDR ready
LG also announced a latest TVs would support 4 HDR formats – including Hybrid Log-Gamma jointly grown by a BBC and a Japanese broadcaster NHK. This will concede competition and other live broadcasts to be shown in a format.
Many experts determine that HDR creates a outrageous disproportion to a TV picture, creation it seem richer and permitting for aloft levels of contrariety between light and dim tones.
“It is some-more vibrant, a colours are some-more distinctive,” pronounced Mr Wetherill.
“It does move a most some-more considerable and immersive knowledge – no doubt about that.”
It is not nonetheless transparent that format will turn renouned with content-makers, so LG’s inclusion of all 4 should safeguard it does not turn archaic if and when a leader emerges.
Samsung also showed off images of a new Lifestyle TV, that it described as “a beautiful, always-on, truly intelligent arrangement that transforms a TV to art”.
It comes in a wooden frame, in an try to demeanour like a painting.
Sony also announced a new 4K OLED TV – a initial – a latest in a Bravia range.
As good as an HDR processor that can upscale customary energetic operation calm to “near 4K HDR quality”, a set has also dispensed with in-built speakers.
Instead, it emits sound around vibrations constructed on a aspect of a shade itself.
This wasn’t demonstrated during a press conference, remarkable Mr Wetherill, yet it was, he said, “an engaging concept”.
Panasonic did not plead a OLED TV skeleton during a press conference, yet it is probable a antecedent will be on a CES trade uncover floor.
At final year’s consumer wiring uncover IFA in Berlin, a association had pronounced it would recover sum of a TV during a winter. More from CES 2017:
Follow all the CES coverage during bbc.co.uk/ces2017

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Jan. 9-10: Princess Mononoke, Manjula Martin, Rhino in the Castro, Selena Bartlett, Stolas, Drop In Improv, Tim Lee

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NewsHubPrincess Mononoke: The 1997 Japanese epic historical fantasy anime film by Hayao Miyazaki screens (with English subtitles) in a special 20th anniversary presentation. [7 p.m., Century 20, 1901 Junipero Serra Blvd., Daly City]
Manjula Martin: The author of the essay collection “Scratch: Writers, Money, and The Art of Making a Living,” speaks, in a session with writers Caille Millner, Laura Goode, Susie Cagle and Yiyun Li. [7:30 p.m., Green Apple Books, 1231 Ninth Ave., S. F.]
Rhino in the Castro: Theatre Rhinoceros, The City’s pioneering queer stage company, hosts a series of readings of plays reflecting the LGBTQ community and its allies. [7 p.m., GLBT History Museum, 4127 18th St., S. F.]
Stolas: The Las Vegas-based progressive-rock trio opens for The Number Twelve Looks Like You, a “mathcore” band from Fair Lawn, N. J., combining “grindcore, progressive metal, and later salsa, funk and jazz.” [8 p.m., Brick and Mortar Music Hall, 1710 Mission St., S. F.]
Selena Bartlett: The neuroscientist and professor at Queensland University of Technology in Australia speaks about her book “MiGGi Matters: How to Train Your Brain to Manage Stress and Trim Your Body.” [7 p.m., Book Passage, 51 Tamal Vista Blvd., Corte Madera]
Dorothie and Martin Hellman: The couple is promoting “A New Map for Relationships: Creating True Love at Home and Peace on the Planet,” their collaborative book about how they saved their failing marriage. [7 p.m., Books Inc., 74 Town & Country Village, Palo Alto]
Drop In Improv: The $15 session offers the opportunity for experienced actors and practitioners to sharpen skills, and newcomers to get introduced to the world of improvisation. [7 p.m., Leela Improv Training Center, third floor, 901 Mission St., S. F.]
Closing Time-Music of Tom Waits, Leonard Cohen and Nick Cave: DJs Omar (Popscene) and Cole (Ownership) play music by the master songwriters in the eclectic club night. [Make Out Room, 9:30 p.m., 3325 22nd St., S. F.]
Tim Lee: The “scientist turned comedian” opens a two-night engagement. [8 p.m., Punch Line, 444 Battery St., S. F.]
Vintage Toy Buying Show: In an event described as “‘Antiques Roadshow’ meets Vintage Barbie,” America’s Toy Scout Joel Magee offers on-the-spot cash payments for popular 20th century (and earlier) toys, including “Star Wars” action figures, Transformers, Hot Wheels and 1960s comic book collections, [9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.. Courtyard San Francisco Airport, 1050 Bayhill Drive, San Bruno]
Janie Chang: The best-selling author of “Three Moons” is promoting her new novel, “Dragon Springs Road.” [7:30 p.m.. Kepler’s, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park]
Everyone Deserves a Home: An event corresponding with the exhibit of photographs by Audra Miller (and coordinated by Ariel Fortune and Lauren Hall) offers visitors the opportunity to meet the formerly homeless San Franciscans whose portraits and oral histories comprise the show. [4 p.m., Latino Hispanic Room, Main Library, 100 Larkin St., S. F.]
Son of the Velvet Rat: The band, the project of Austrian songwriter Georg Altziebler and his wife Heike Binder on organ and accordion, appears on a bill with Step Jayne and Dan Cantrell. [8 p.m., Hotel Utah, 500 Fourth St., S. F.]
Zadie Smith: The best-selling, award-winning English novelist (“White Teeth”), essayist and short story writer appears in a sold-out City Arts & Lectures presentation. [7:30 p.m., Nourse Theater, 275 Hayes St., S. F.]
Bay City Blues with Chris Cain: The evening’s special guest is Chicago blues guitar veteran Rockin Johnny Burgin. [7:30 and 9:30 p.m., Biscuits and Blues, 401 Mason St., S. F.]
Mark Shaw: The former criminal defense attorney and legal analyst discusses his new work “The Reporter Who Knew Too Much: The Mysterious Death of What’s My Line TV Star and Media Icon Dorothy Kilgallen.” [7 p.m., Books Inc., 1375 Burlingame Ave., Burlingame]

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UK student dies after 'falling from building in Japan on New Year's Eve'

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NewsHubAn „exemplary“ British student died on New Year’s Eve after reportedly falling from a high-rise building in Japan.
Durham University student Justin Browning had been part-way through his year abroad at Waseda University in Tokyo.
His body was discovered on the ground by a taxi driver, according to The Sunday Times.
It is thought the history student had gone to the top of the building to watch the new year celebrations.
Anthony Bash, honorary professor at Durham University and senior tutor of Hatfield College, said: „Justin was an exemplary student in the third year of his history degree and he was a well-liked member of Hatfield College. “
He added: „Justin’s untimely death has shocked and saddened everyone connected with Hatfield and the wider university. He will be greatly missed. Our thoughts are with Justin’s family and friends at this time.
Professor Jo Fox, head of history, said: „Justin was one of our very best students and was clearly on course for a strong first class degree. He demonstrated passion for history and in particular the history of Japan and China.
„We had recently heard that Justin’s second year extended project on Tibetan Buddhist folklore and ethnicity had just been accepted for publication in the Princeton Journal of East Asian Studies. We are incredibly proud of him.
„He was a model student – funny, committed, sharp, independent, and very well-liked by all. „

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© Source: http://www.independent.ie/world-news/europe/britain/uk-student-dies-after-falling-from-building-in-japan-on-new-years-eve-35351908.html
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