Netflix heads to Manila

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/movie/30351266

Netflix heads to Manila

movie & TV August 02, 2018 07:25

By The Nation

2,518 Viewed

Netflix not only returned to AsiaPop Comicon Manila 2018 last month but did so with its biggest presence in three years – featuring an immersive booth, star-studded panels, global announcements and a special screening of upcoming Netflix film Next Gen – all inspired by and designed especially for Filipino fans.

Netflix hosted super-powered panels for more than 1,000 fans at Hall N featuring Marvel’s “Luke Cage” series star Mike Colter, showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker, and this season’s villain Mustafa Shakir (Bushmaster). Finn Jones, who stars as Danny Rand/Iron Fist on Marvel’s “Iron Fist”, joined showrunner Raven Metzner (Sleepy Hollow, Falling Skies) to tease season two of the fan favorite.

As part of the Nexflix Anime panel, fans heard from the creatives behind “Godzilla: City on the Edge of Battle” (Toho producer Takashi Yoshizawa) and Castlevania co-executive producer Adi Shankar, who debuted the season two trailer of “Castlevania”.

Marvel’s “ Iron Fist” Season 2 features Danny Rand as he fights against the criminal element corrupting New York City with his kung-fu mastery and ability to summon the awesome power of the fiery Iron Fist.

It launches on Netflix on September 7.

Returning to Netflix for a second season, “Castlevania”, inspired by the classic video game series, is a dark medieval fantasy following the last surviving member of the disgraced Belmont clan, trying to save Eastern Europe from extinction at the hand of Vlad Dracula Tepes himself. Trevor Belmont, last survivor of his house, is no longer alone, and he and his misfit comrades race to find a way to save humanity from extinction at the hands of the grief-maddened Dracula and his sinister vampire war council.

“Castlevania” Season 2 will launch on Netflix on October 26.

Unearthing hidden agendas

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/movie/30351265

Unearthing hidden agendas

movie & TV August 02, 2018 07:15

By The Nation

2,442 Viewed

Actress and model Chicha “Kitty” Amatayakul is the star of the upcoming fantasy series, “Dek Mai” (“Girl from Nowhere”), a harrowing and heartbreaking tale based on the exploitation of girls from 13 schools.

The 25-year-old actress plays Nannoh, a new student brave enough to expose hidden agendas and dark side of people surrounding her. Those are Anuchit Sapanpong as Khru Tor, Komgrit Triwimol as basketball coach, Natthasit Kotimanuswanich as Daino, Claudia Chakrapan as Khru Aum, Chonnikan Netjui as Mew, Poompat Iam-samang as Hok, Thitinan Klangpetch as Taew, Nutchapan Paramacharoenroj as Nueng, Neranchara Lertprasert as Moey, Morakot Liu as Bam and Chanpim Ratchawongmuang as One.

“I’m very happy to play Nannoh. Every week, I attend an acting workshop with Khru No and Khru Bew and work with the director who is in charge of the next episode. Nannoh is different from a normal human. She breathes less, is never hungry or sleepy and feels no pain. In other words, she has no feelings. Nannoh is a new student at all the high school schools. Every time she moves school, she becomes entangled with mysterious and supernatural events. Nobody knows what Nannoh is thinking,” says Kitty.

“There are a lot of violent scenes from the beginning including one is which Nannoh is killed and buried. At first, the production team prepared a stand-in for me, but I decided to play it myself because I wanted it to be more natural and real,” she reveals.

“Dek Mai” will be broadcast on GMM Channel 25 every Wednesday at 10.25pm with repeats on Saturday at 11.55pm. It features 13 episodes and the first will screen on August 8.

Making the case for equality

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/movie/30351218

  • Film director Pimpaka Towira, far right, and Pinnapa “Minor” Pruksapan, centre, discuss “The Purple Kingdom”, a short film inspired by the case of missing Karen environment activist Porlajee “Billy” Rakchongcharoen.
  • Pinnapa “Minor” Pruksapan in “The Purple Kingdom”/Photo by Saptawee Puthom
  • Pinnapa takes a photo at the event.

Making the case for equality

movie & TV August 02, 2018 01:00

By Jintana Panyaarvudh
The Nation

6,119 Viewed

The disappearance of Karen environmentalist Billy Rakchongcharoen and the problems faced by his wife in getting the authorities to look into his case are portrayed in a short film

In real life, Pinnapa “Minor” Pruksapan, the wife of the missing Karen environmental activist Porlajee “Billy” Rakchongcharoen, has been seeking justice for her husband for the past four years.

On the screen, the mother of five who plays herself in “The Purple Kingdom” is trapped somewhere a dream world and reality.

Produced by independent film director Pimpaka Towira, the short film is inspired by disappearance of Porlajee who went missing near Kaeng Krachan National Park in Phetchaburi province, 161 kilometres south of Bangkok.

Park authorities arrested Billy on April 17, 2014 for possessing a wild honeycomb and six bottles of wild honey but released him after giving him a warning. He disappeared shortly afterward and has not been seen since.

 

Two years before he went missing, Billy played a key role in collecting evidence and interviewing witnesses to file a case with the Central Administrative Court against park authorities accusing them of destroying the Karen’s habitat in the Thai-Myanmar border during the socalled Tenasserim Operation in 2011.

The film was produced in 2016 but was not widely screened. It was shown again late last month at the first “Movies that Matter”, a monthly film event organised by Amnesty International (AI) Thailand to promote human rights.

Pimpaka says she came to know Billy through his short movie “The Way of Lives”, which tells the story of Karen villagers living in Kaeng Krachan National Park’s Bangkloi community.

“Billy gave this voiceless ethnic group the opportunity to tell their story to society,” she says.

The idea for “The Purple Kingdom” was born when Pimpaka was contacted by a law reform committee to produce a film as part of the “Nine Short Films, Move Reform Forward” project.

 

With Billy’s disappearance still making headlines, she chose the Karen activist’s disappearance as the subject of her contribution.

Pimpaka picked Pinnapa to play her real life role but fearing it could have a negative effect on the continuing legal case of Billy and his wife, changed her name in the movie to Namthip Thongyod.

“No one can relay her story or message better than Pinnapa,” she says.

Pinnapa was hesitant at first but later agreed to take the role after consulting with her lawyers.

Pimpaka uses her film to draw attention to inequalities in Thai society by comparing two women whose husbands have gone missing.

While Namthip was treated badly by authorities when she tried to file a missing persons report with the police, Woon, the wife in the parallel story, received nothing but helpful cooperation in finding her husband who was killed in a helicopter crash in the jungle.

“I want to show the disparity in our society. Influential people tend to use their connections to help each other,” Pimpaka says.

The film shows Namthip repeatedly being told by a policeman to speak clearly and slowly while filing her report. Pinnapa is quick to add that this is a real life conversation and left Billy’s wife exhausted.

 

In real life, it took Pinnapa more than four years to convince the authorities to begin an investigation into her husband’s disappearance and it was only in June this year that the Department of Special Investigation (DSI) accepted the case. Pinnapa says she had to go over all the original questions again with the DSI officials to assure them of the validity of information.

Pinnapa has not given up hope although she often feels that justice does not truly exist in her case.

“Is it because I’m poor and don’t have any money to pay them so the officials are not interested in helping me?” she says of her journeys back and forth between her house in Phetchaburi and Bangkok to file petitions.

“I don’t know if Billy is still alive. But I hope that if they [authorities] take this case seriously, they will at least find some trace of Billy. If they don’t it’s hopeless,” Pinnapa explains.

The Karen villagers in Kaeng Krachan have never had it easy but their plight didn’t become known to the general public until 2011 when news broke that a joint force of military and park officials at Kaeng Krachan, led by then chief Chaiwat Limlikhitaksorn, had burned 98 properties in the deep forest close to the Thai-Myanmar border during the so-called Tenasserim Operation.

In 1996, 57 Karen families, including Ko-I Meemi, the 107-year-old Karen community’s spiritual leader were relocated from their homes in Bangkloi Bon (the Upper Bangkloi) and Jai Paen Din (the heart of the land) to new villages – Bangkloi Lang (the Lower Bangkloi), and Pong Luek.

 

However, three months after the relocation, Pu KoI, Billy’s grandfather and a few other Karen who could not adjust to the new environment went back to their old communities. Five years later, park officials and military officers decided to burn the dwellings and their contents.

In June this year, the Supreme Administrative Court, ruled on the case – the first in the country dealing with customary and land rights reclamation – instructing the National Parks, Wildlife, and Plant Conservation Department, to pay Bt50,000 to each of the six plaintiffs for the damage done.

But the court said it could not allow the Karen to return to live in their original land because it had been declared as being inside a national park and they had no land documents to provide their rights.

“We had no knowledge of these Karen communities who were forced off their land. We always regard the Karen as migrant labourers rather than an ethnic group,” Pimpaka says.

“We [Thai people] always think the land belongs to us while they [the Karen] just want to stay in their ancestors’ dwellings and don’t want to be owners,” Pimpaka adds.

The director shot large parts of the film in Bangkloi Lang and Pong Luek.

 

“I met Pu Ko-I there. He didn’t know who I was. He then started to pray for bad things to happen to bad people,” says Pimpaka of her first encounter with the elderly Karen man.

“He later asked me whether our film would help him to return to his original home at Jai Paen Din. I was speechless,” she continues.

“The Purple Kingdom” has been screened at overseas film festivals, including in Switzerland and Singapore, and is scheduled for release in Malaysia this month.

“‘Enforced disappearance’ is a universal problem and doesn’t only happen in this region. Many countries are unable to either resolve or pass a law to protect against the act,” the film director says.

“I want my movie to inspire society to look at this case and feel more connected to the story,” she adds.

Pimpaka plans to produce more films related to the ethnic group in the future.Get involved

“Movies that Matter” is an initiative organised by Amnesty International (AI) Thailand to provide a monthly creative space in which people get together to experience, share, and discuss human rights issues.

On the third Saturday of each month, AI Thailand and related organisations will screen different human rights-related films. Topics covered include freedom of expression, sexual diversity, human rights education, human rights defenders, and refugees.

Piyanut Kotsan, director of AI Thailand, says there are many ways to learn and express interest in human rights and film is a powerfully expressive medium where you can explain potentially complicated subjects in accessible manner.

She added that the event is not just a movie screening, but an opportunity for community members to engage in discussions with film directors, human rights defenders, and activists, in order to explore the real issues that our world faces and to learn about the experiences of different individuals.

At its core, the goal of this initiative is to bring people together through film and raise awareness of human rights issues and Amnesty’s works.

 

Get involved

“Movies that Matter” is an initiative organised by Amnesty International (AI) Thailand to provide a monthly creative space in which people get together to experience, share, and discuss human rights issues.

On the third Saturday of each month, AI Thailand and related organisations will screen different human rights-related films. Topics covered include freedom of expression, sexual diversity, human rights education, human rights defenders, and refugees.

Piyanut Kotsan, director of AI Thailand, says there are many ways to learn and express interest in human rights and film is a powerfully expressive medium where you can explain potentially complicated subjects in accessible manner.

She adds that the event is not just a movie screening, but an opportunity for community members to engage in discussions with film directors, human rights defenders, and activists, in order to explore the real issues that our world faces and to learn about the experiences of different individuals.

At its core, the goal of this initiative is to bring people together through film and raise awareness of human rights issues and Amnesty’s works.

Behind the masks

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/movie/30351217

Behind the masks

movie & TV August 01, 2018 14:00

By The Nation

2,875 Viewed

“A Life in Shadows”, a documentary photography exhibition by Australian photographer Constantine Korsovitis opens on Friday (August 3) at the Ratchadamnoen Contemporary Art Centre as part of the PhotoBangkok 2018 festival.

Featuring more than 30 images documenting one of the oldest traditions of storytelling in the world, “A Life in Shadows” explores the nuance, sophistication and value of shadow theatre traditions in Southeast Asia – in particular Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and Cambodia – and the people who perform them.

While each of these nations has its own distinct culture, they share common cultural, religious, linguistic and racial characteristics. Shadow theatre is the singular voice of the region and its common thread is the use of the Hindu epics of the Ramayana and the Mahabharata as the source of stories.

In 2014, Constantine Korsovitis began his research on shadow theatre by photographing and interviewing with puppet masters, musicians and craftsmen in their homes. The idea was to identify the man or woman behind the artist, behind the mask of performance. The photographer is concerned with the pressure under which traditional art forms find themselves today as well as celebrating the human spirit, honouring all the artists who build this wonderful art form, several of whom have since passed away.

“A Life in Shadows” provides a glimpse of the artist’s life, beyond the confinement of the traditional performance and studio. The aim of the project is to extend beyond documentation and to elevate awareness and appreciation of traditional arts in the region and around the world. The project is also planned to culminate in a publication and a public archive of shadow theatre documentation and research. After Bangkok, the exhibition will travel to Singapore, Sydney, Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta.

The gallery is opens Tuesday to Sunday from 10am to 7pm and the show continues through August 26.

PhotoBangkok 2018 is the second edition of PhotoBangkok, a triennial, not-for-profit international photography festival created by the renowned Thai photographer Piyatat Hemmatat. It is running from July 5 to September 9, with the main exhibitions staged at the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre (BACC) and featured exhibitions housed at over 20 galleries across Bangkok. For more information, visit http://www.PhotoBangkokFestival.com.

All about love

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/movie/30351195

All about love

movie & TV August 01, 2018 07:00

By The Nation

3,218 Viewed

The first episode in the series “Proh Rak Man Subsorn” (“It’s Complicated”) – the second of four being produced by Line TV and Bearcave Studio this year – will be aired on Line TV tomorrow night (August 2) at 8pm.

Directed by Manit Sanubnan, this second series is about love and all its complications. “In A Relationship” shows how love isn’t just for two and stars Sarawut “Aon” Marttong, Pataratida “Tangmo” Patcharawirapong, and Raknapak “Namwan” Wongtanatat. “In An Open Relationship” talks about the irrelevance of body and mind and features Peera “Kampan” Panidchapong, Sudhasit “Maggie” Podthasak, and Papungkorn “Pak” Sakunsong. “Married” demonstrates that getting hitched is not a conclusion of love and has Thana “Nong” Chatborirak and Zuvapit “Baitoei” Traipornworakit as the stars, while in “Single” Suttirak “Jee” Subvijit and Supanaree “Fern” Suttavijitrong explore sex and love.

“I play Gun, a man who loves two girls at the same time and wants both to live with him. But before they’ll agree I have to solve all the problems so that three of us can live together,” says Aon Sarawut.

“I play Tent, a teacher,” says Kampan. “I have been in the entertainment circle for 20 years but this is the first time I have acted in a gay story..”

“Usually, marriage is the natural conclusion to love. The story is about a married couple having to face several unexpected problems and trying to solve them,” says Nong Thana.

“I star as Floyd, a man who doesn’t want to have sex with his lover. This part should make viewers everyone understand more about sexuality,” explains Jee Suttirak.

“Hipster or Loser” and “The Deadline” will play out the series.

Follow the movement at Facebook: @BearcaveStudio.TH, Twitter: @BearcaveStudio and IG: @Bearcave_studio.

A fond farewell to Garry Shanding

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A fond farewell to Garry Shanding

movie & TV July 31, 2018 09:45

By The Nation

2,307 Viewed

 You’re either the happiest person I know,” Judd Apatow once told his friend and mentor, Garry Shandling, “or you’ve completely lost your mind.” Shandling responded, “That’s about right.”

When Shandling passed away in 2016, he was widely remembered as a top stand-up comic and the star of two of the most innovative sitcoms in TV history. But to those who knew him, the “real” Garry Shandling was a far more complex person. Now, Apatow has created a remarkable portrait of this iconic comedian in the four-and-a-half-hour documentary “The Zen Diaries of Garry Shandling”, which debuts in Asia in two parts on Wednesday, August 1 and Thursday, August 2 at 8pm on HBO and HBO Go via AISPlay and AIS Playbox.

The documentary features conversations with more than 40 of Shandling’s family and friends, including James L Brooks, Jim Carrey, Sacha Baron Cohen, David Coulier, Jon Favreau, Jay Leno, Kevin Nealon, Conan O’Brien, Bob Saget, Jerry Seinfeld and Sarah Silverman, and four decades’ worth of TV appearances, along with personal journals, private letters and candid home audio and video footage that reveal his brilliant mind and restless soul.

From childhood tragedy to heartbreak, professional betrayal and unexpected physical trauma, to his emergence as a powerful teacher, friend and guiding spirit for a new generation of talent, Apatow’s documentary not only chronicles one man’s ability to survive the ups and downs of a life in show business, but also offers a profound investigation into the power of comedy to elevate the human spirit.

Shandling experienced a normal existence growing up in Tucson until age ten, when his older brother and only sibling, Barry, died from cystic fibrosis. His parents barely discussed their older son’s passing, and his mother, Muriel, began clinging to her younger son, developing an intense and sometimes troubling bond that would later generate some of his comedy material.

Shandling’s unlikely path towards success, through an encounter with George Carlin and an impulsive move to Los Angeles after college, took a turn in 1976, when he was involved in a serious traffic accident, resulting in a near-death experience. As he recovered, he noted in his diaries, which he began keeping in 1977, “Do it – you are ready, be a comedian. It is the real me. The secret is to be myself.”

“I thought of Garry as someone who told the audience, ‘You’re alright, because I have all these problems.’ But he did it in a way that was so incredibly clever, you had to respect him at the same time,” explains Jim Carrey,

Shandling made the leap from the pinnacle of stand-up success, appearing on “The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson,” to develop his comic persona into something that would redefine television comedy. Realising that one of his strengths as a standup was simply the ability to “talk to people,” he created a show where talking to the audience was the central focus – “a show that allows Garry to be Garry,” as his journals read.

“It’s Garry Shandling’s Show” was a decade ahead of its time, the first modern “meta”-sitcom that brought him a new legion of devoted fans and elevated his profile in the industry. “It was kind of a revelation,” remembers Conan O’Brien about the show’s three-season run. “It showed everybody, this is what kind of show can exist.” He also met Linda Doucett, who became his fianc้e, began building a new home, and was even rumoured to be heir apparent for the host seat on “The Tonight Show.”

Part two of “The Zen Diaries of Gary Shanding” offers an extensive examination of “The Larry Sanders Show,” his landmark HBO comedy series. Colleagues remember the demands of producing material that met Shandling’s high standards, while his diaries reveal an ongoing struggle with complacency and search for authenticity. The impact of “Larry Sanders” was immeasurable. “That show will outlast all of us,” says Jay Leno.

But in the wake of the show’s success, soul-wrenching tragedy, fuelled at times by Shandling’s own demons, played itself out. Sanders and Doucett broke up and he fired her from the show, leading to a lawsuit, which in turn raised financial questions that led Shandling to sue his manager, Brad Grey.

“I see him as a tortured person, because he was always trying to rise above,” remembers Kevin Nealon. “I mean, his core was good. I think it was the skin around that core that he was trying to break away from.” After “The Larry Sanders Show” ended, Shandling’s neuroses and insecurities became more evident, as he worked through unexpected emotional, physical and professional crises.

The ailing Shandling found solace in community. Sunday morning basketball games on his home courtyard brought friends together and kept him emotionally connected, while a mentorship of younger comics gave his life fresh meaning. “He was a comic angel,” recalls Sacha Baron Cohen.

A successful gig hosting the Emmys, creating unique extras for the DVD release of “The Larry Sanders Show” and an appearance with his friend Jerry Seinfeld on “Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee” (where Shandling opined about death and mortality) hinted at some of the lessons he’d learned in his lifelong quest for peace.

As his friends say farewell and some of Shandling’s most personal, heartfelt letters and thoughts are shared, Apatow’s documentary, like its subject, transcends easy definition, being at once hilarious, sad, fascinating and, above all, completely authentic.

Spain in the spotlight for “Elite”

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/movie/30351058

Spain in the spotlight for “Elite”

movie & TV July 30, 2018 16:09

By The Nation

3,171 Viewed

Netflix has released a fresh batch of selfie looks for “Elite”, its second Spanish original series and announced that the upcoming series will debut in the autumn in all territories where Netflix is available.

“Elite” is directed by Ramon Salazar and Dani de la Orden and stars Maria Pedraza, Miguel Herran and Jaime Lorente alongside rookies Itzan Escamilla, Miguel Bernardeau and Aron Piper.

It’s set at Las Encinas, the best and most exclusive school in Spain, where the elite send their children to study. It’s also where three working-class kids have just been admitted after their academy was collapsed and the local council divvied up the students between other schools in the area. They thought that they’d lucked out…but maybe they weren’t so lucky after all.

The clash between those who have everything and those who have nothing to lose creates a perfect storm that ultimately ends in a murder. Who is behind the crime? Is it one of these recent arrivals from a different world? Or is there something deeper hiding beneath the surface?

The show is executive produced by Zeta Audiovisual with the first season consisting of 8 episodes and entirely shot in 4K.

CBS titan Moonves accused of sexual misconduct

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/movie/30350975

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CBS titan Moonves accused of sexual misconduct

movie & TV July 28, 2018 10:48

By Agence France-Presse
New York

4,382 Viewed

A bombshell article published in The New Yorker on Friday accused CBS chairman and chief executive, Leslie Moonves, of sexual misconduct stretching back decades and painted a broader picture of similar behavior within the most watched US television network.

The article makes Moonves, a distinguished executive who transformed CBS into a ratings winner, one of the most powerful American men implicated in the #MeToo era that ignited last year after the career implosion of Harvey Weinstein.

CBS announced that it had launched an investigation into the “recently reported” alleged misconduct. Reports about the story sent CBS shares tumbling more than six percent, hours before it was even published.

Six women who had professional dealings with Moonves told the magazine that he sexually harassed them between the 1980s and late 2000s.

Moonves, 68, joined CBS in 1995 from Warner Bros. Television, where his team developed hit shows such as “Friends” and “ER.”

Four described forcible touching or kissing during business meetings, and two said Moonves physically intimidated them or threatened to derail their careers, The New Yorker’s Ronan Farrow reported.

“I recognize that there were times decades ago when I may have made some women uncomfortable by making advances. Those were mistakes, and I regret them immensely,” Moonves said in a statement obtained by AFP.

“But I always understood and respected — and abided by the principle — that ‘no’ means ‘no,’ and I have never misused my position to harm or hinder anyone’s career,” he added.

– ‘Appropriate action’ –

The New Yorker said 30 current or former employees complained that such behavior extended from Moonves to other parts of the corporation, including CBS News and its flagship investigative program “60 Minutes.”

But his wife, Julie Chen, whom he married in 2004 and who is the host of “Big Brother” on CBS, said she fully supported her husband.

“Leslie is a good man and a loving father, devoted husband and inspiring corporate leader. He has always been a kind, decent and moral human being,” she said on Twitter.

Men at CBS News accused of sexual misconduct were promoted, even as the company paid settlements to women with complaints, The New Yorker also reported, suggesting a wider toxic environment at the network.

In a statement sent to AFP, CBS suggested the article did not accurately reflect a company that “does its best to treat its tens of thousands of employees with dignity and respect.”

The corporation’s board of directors had earlier issued a pre-emptive statement, saying that upon conclusion of its investigation, it would “promptly review the findings and take appropriate action.”

In November, CBS News sacked Charlie Rose, at the time one of the most respected TV journalists in the United States, after eight women told The Washington Post he had made unwanted sexual advances.

– Legal battle –

Farrow shared a Pulitzer Prize with The New York Times for his reporting on Weinstein, which galvanized the #MeToo movement to quash pervasive sexual harassment in showbiz and other industries.

The son of actress Mia Farrow and film director Woody Allen said Friday his latest article was the product of an eight-month investigation. In May, he uncovered allegations of physical assault that forced New York state prosecutor Eric Schneiderman to resign.

Farrow’s latest expose raised speculation that Moonves might also be forced to step aside. Nor was it clear what impact it would have on a legal battle for control of the US television giant — between the Redstone family, which controls CBS, and the board, chaired by Moonves.

Shari Redstone is a major shareholder of both CBS and Viacom, and is seeking to merge the two companies. Moonves opposes the deal.

As chairman, Moonves oversees all operations of the company, which include the CBS Television Network, premium cable service Showtime, and the Simon & Schuster publishing company.

He has launched primetime CBS hits such as “Everybody Loves Raymond,” “Survivor” and “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.”

He was promoted to president and CEO of CBS Television in 1998, and became chairman in 2003. A one-time actor, he is father to four children. Chen is his second wife.

Last year, CBS was the most watched network in the United States, although it dropped into third place, behind NBC and Fox for adults aged 18-49.

CBS investigates sexual misconduct claims against CEO Moonves

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/movie/30350972

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CBS investigates sexual misconduct claims against CEO Moonves

movie & TV July 28, 2018 08:10

By Agence France-Presse
New York

4,410 Viewed

CBS launched an investigation Friday into alleged sexual misconduct by chairman and chief executive Leslie Moonves that sent its shares tumbling.

The Hollywood Reporter said that The New Yorker is set to publish an article later Friday in which Moonves, one of the most powerful men in Hollywood, is accused of sexual misconduct that includes unwanted kissing and touching.

The 68-year-old, who has transformed the fortunes of CBS, is one of America’s highest-paid CEOs and one of the most powerful men implicated in the #MeToo reckoning against sexual harassment.

CBS shares tanked as talk of the story spread through Wall Street, dropping 6.6 percent to $53.72, before closing down 6.1 percent at $54.01.

Hours later, The New Yorker had still not published the article or responded to requests for comment.

“All allegations of personal misconduct are to be taken seriously,” the CBS board of directors said in a pre-emptive statement.

“The Independent Directors of CBS have committed to investigating claims that violate the company’s clear policies in that regard,” they added.

The statement said the allegations were “recently reported” and go back “several decades.” Upon conclusion of the inquiry, CBS said, “the board will promptly review the findings and take appropriate action.”

The expose is reportedly written by Ronan Farrow, the 30-year-old whiz kid who shared a Pulitzer Prize with The New York Times this year for his reporting on fallen Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, which galvanized the #MeToo movement to quash pervasive sexual harassment in showbiz and other industries.

Farrow took to Twitter, hours after the CBS share price first tumbled, to say that he does not comment on reporting he has not published.

Legal battle

“If you’re reading about my work from secondary sources you’re often not getting the full or correct story — especially in cases where parties have an interest in downplaying or otherwise spinning,” he wrote.

It remained unclear what impact the reports would have on a legal battle for control of the US television giant — between the Redstone family, which controls CBS, and the board, chaired by Moonves.

Shari Redstone is a major shareholder of both CBS and Viacom, which owns cable networks such as Comedy Central, MTV and the movie studio Paramount. She is seeking merge the two companies. Moonves opposes the deal.

Forbes estimates his net worth at $700 million.

As chairman, he oversees all operations of the company, which include the CBS Television Network, premium cable service Showtime, and the Simon & Schuster publishing company.

He joined CBS in 1995 as president of CBS Entertainment from Warner Bros. Television, where his team developed hit shows such as “Friends” and “ER.”

At CBS, he launched prime-time hits such as “Everybody Loves Raymond,” “Survivor” and “CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.”

He was promoted to president and CEO of CBS Television in 1998, and became chairman in 2003. He married his second wife Julie Chen in 2004.

In 2017, CBS was the most watched network in the United States, although it dropped into third place, behind NBC and Fox when it came to adults aged 18-49.

Last November, CBS News sacked Charlie Rose, at the time one of America’s most respected TV journalists, after eight women told The Washington Post he had made unwanted sexual advances.

Carrie Fisher makes posthumous return to ‘Star Wars’

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Carrie Fisher makes posthumous return to ‘Star Wars’

movie & TV July 28, 2018 07:28

By Agence France-Presse
Los Angeles

4,214 Viewed

“Star Wars: Episode IX” begins filming next week, Disney said Friday, in a shock announcement revealing it will feature both Carrie Fisher in a posthumous appearance and series star Mark Hamill.

The final installment of the Skywalker saga — which began in 1977 with “Episode IV: A New Hope” — is due for release worldwide in December next year.

It picks up the saga after the protagonist, Hamill’s Luke Skywalker, appeared to have been killed off in the last episode. Fisher’s Princess Leia was still alive at the end of 2017’s “The Last Jedi” but the actress herself died a year earlier, in December 2016.

“We desperately loved Carrie Fisher,” said J.J. Abrams, who is back at the helm for “Episode IX,” having directed “Episode VII: The Force Awakens” in 2015.

“Finding a truly satisfying conclusion to the Skywalker saga without her eluded us. We were never going to recast, or use a CG character,” he added in a statement.

Disney said Fisher’s role would be gleaned from previously unreleased footage from “The Force Awakens,” with the blessing of her daughter, Billie Lourd.

It is not the first time Fisher’s likeness has featured in a “Star Wars” movie despite being absent from its filming.

“Rogue One,” a 2016 spin-off from the main series, directed by Gareth Edwards, had been in theaters for a couple of weeks when Fisher’s death from a heart attack was announced.

A much younger version of Fisher as Leia appears in that movie, thanks to the controversial application of computer wizardry to animate her image.

Returning cast members for the final episode include Daisy Ridley, Adam Driver, John Boyega, Oscar Isaac, Lupita Nyong’o, Domhnall Gleeson, Kelly Marie Tran and Joonas Suotamo.

Naomi Ackie and Richard E. Grant are among the new faces, while old “Star Wars” hands Anthony Daniels and Billy Dee Williams return as C-3PO and Lando Calrissian.

Composer John Williams, who has scored every chapter in the “Star Wars” saga, continues his unbroken run for the next adventure.