film

For Russia's 'Mr Nobody', Hollywood leap feels 'unreal'

BY ANNA SMOLCHENKO

  • "If you had told me two years ago that things would be like this, I would have laughed in your face," said Talankin, who previously worked at a secondary school in the industrial town of Karabash in the Urals. 
  • Two years ago he was a videographer at a small‑town Russian school, filming patriotic lessons and morning drills in the wake of Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. 
  • "If you had told me two years ago that things would be like this, I would have laughed in your face," said Talankin, who previously worked at a secondary school in the industrial town of Karabash in the Urals. 
Two years ago he was a videographer at a small‑town Russian school, filming patriotic lessons and morning drills in the wake of Moscow's invasion of Ukraine. 
This weekend Pavel Talankin will walk into Hollywood's biggest night as the co‑director of an Oscar‑nominated documentary exposing the propaganda and indoctrination of children in Russian schools.
Such vertiginous twists of fate should be "illegal", Talankin joked, speaking to AFP from Los Angeles.
"If you had told me two years ago that things would be like this, I would have laughed in your face," said Talankin, who previously worked at a secondary school in the industrial town of Karabash in the Urals. 
"It's unreal -- things like this just don't happen."
"Mr Nobody Against Putin," nominated in the Documentary Feature Film category, is based on hours of footage Talankin smuggled out of Russia after teaming up with US filmmaker David Borenstein.
After the invasion of Ukraine, Russia outlawed all criticism of the military, and cooperating with foreigners could lead to treason charges.
Talankin fled the country in the summer of 2024 with the hard drives containing what would become a 90‑minute documentary, leaving behind his mother, brothers and sisters.

Mingling with stars

The film won a BAFTA award in London last month for best documentary, one of the last major ceremonies before the Oscars. Monica Bellucci read out the winning title, while Prince William watched from the front row.
Talankin, who turned 35 on Wednesday, looked dapper in his bow tie.
"I liked how I looked in it. I kind of felt like I belonged with them," he said, laughing.
He expressed regret that he did not get a chance to speak with the future king, but he has had plenty of opportunities to rub shoulders with Hollywood royalty during the traditional pre‑Oscar events.
Last month's Academy Award nominees' luncheon and "class photo", where Talankin is pictured in the centre next to Benicio Del Toro, was a bit of a shock.
"I went out for a smoke. And walking toward me was Leonardo DiCaprio," he recounted. "I was a bit stunned, because never in my life had I imagined a scenario where I'd go to the smoking room and Leonardo DiCaprio would be coming straight at me."
But apart from celebrity lunches and selfies with the likes of Timothee Chalamet, life continues as usual, said Talankin, who has been learning English as he shuttles between the United States and Europe to promote the film.
"Of course, it's nice that people are watching the film, coming to screenings, and asking questions -- that people aren't indifferent," he said. "But I wouldn't go so far as to say that my star has risen."
But even if he does his best not to show it, his life has been an emotional roller coaster.
While the documentary received positive reviews in the West, Russian propaganda has launched a smear campaign against him.
"There has been so much pressure on him," said Radovan Sibrt, one of the film's producers. 
"But Pasha seems to be handling it fine so far. With ease and nobleness," he said, using the videographer's informal first name.
He said Talankin's voice was getting "stronger and stronger".
The film has proved polarising even among anti‑Kremlin Russians.
Some have criticised its raw, unpolished feel, while others argued that children were filmed without parental consent.
"Sometimes filming this way is the only way to get information," Talankin said. "Especially in a country like Russia, where absolutely everything is closed off."

'Fog of deception'

 
Supporters say the film serves as a powerful mirror to Russian society.
"For us Russians this is a crucial document of our era -- one that compels us to look closely at what is happening to the country, to its people, and to the young generation," said Leonid Parfenov, one of Russia's best‑known journalists and documentary filmmakers.
Prominent documentary director Vitaly Mansky said that by using plain language, Talankin's film lays bare the intensity of propaganda.
"It shows at the very grassroots level -- and not with the help of political scientists or experts -- how this whole fog of deception is manufactured," Mansky told AFP.
Talankin said he sometimes feels nostalgic about his old job and still sees the Karabash school in his dreams.
He does not know what he will do next, but hopes the film's success will generate new projects.
Sibrt, the producer, said a theatre play and a book might be in the pipeline.
"There are already some options coming up," though it would be up to Talankin to choose, he said. "He might surprise us again."
as/ah/fg/jfx

film

Oscar nominees in main categories

  • Here are the nominees in key categories for the 98th Academy Awards, to be handed out in Hollywood on Sunday.
Here are the nominees in key categories for the 98th Academy Awards, to be handed out in Hollywood on Sunday.
Vampire period horror film "Sinners" shattered the all-time record for nominations with 16, followed by "One Battle After Another" with 13. 
"Frankenstein," "Marty Supreme" and "Sentimental Value" tied with nine nominations each.

Best picture

"Bugonia"
"F1"
"Frankenstein"
"Hamnet"
"Marty Supreme" 
"One Battle After Another"
"The Secret Agent"
"Sentimental Value"
"Sinners"
"Train Dreams"
- Best director - 
Paul Thomas Anderson, "One Battle After Another"
Ryan Coogler, "Sinners"
Josh Safdie, "Marty Supreme"
Joachim Trier, "Sentimental Value"
Chloe Zhao, "Hamnet"
- Best actor - 
Timothee Chalamet, "Marty Supreme"
Leonardo DiCaprio, "One Battle After Another"
Ethan Hawke, "Blue Moon"
Michael B. Jordan, "Sinners"
Wagner Moura, "The Secret Agent"

Best actress

Jessie Buckley, "Hamnet"
Rose Byrne, "If I Had Legs I'd Kick You"
Kate Hudson, "Song Sung Blue"
Renate Reinsve, "Sentimental Value"
Emma Stone, "Bugonia"
- Best supporting actor - 
Benicio Del Toro, "One Battle After Another"
Jacob Elordi, "Frankenstein"
Delroy Lindo, "Sinners"
Sean Penn, "One Battle After Another"
Stellan Skarsgard, "Sentimental Value"

Best supporting actress

Elle Fanning, "Sentimental Value"
Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, "Sentimental Value"
Amy Madigan, "Weapons"
Wunmi Mosaku, "Sinners"
Teyana Taylor, "One Battle After Another"
- Best international feature film - 
"The Secret Agent" (Brazil)
"It Was Just an Accident" (France)
"Sentimental Value" (Norway)
"Sirat" (Spain)
"The Voice of Hind Rajab" (Tunisia)
- Best animated feature - 
"Arco"
"Elio"
"Kpop Demon Hunters"
"Little Amelie or the Character of Rain"
"Zootopia 2"

Best documentary feature

"The Alabama Solution"
"Come See Me In The Good Light"
"Cutting Through Rocks"
"Mr. Nobody Against Putin"
"The Perfect Neighbor"
- Films with eight or more nominations - 
"Sinners" - 16
"One Battle After Another" - 13
"Frankenstein" - 9
"Marty Supreme" - 9
"Sentimental Value" - 9
"Hamnet" - 8
bur-sst/acb

film

One surprise after another? Oscars night set to be unpredictable

BY PAULA RAMON

  • - 'Steamroller' - While suspense about best picture doesn't happen every year, what is truly unusual this time is the amount of uncertainty surrounding the acting prizes.
  • With "Sinners" and "One Battle After Another" neck-and-neck for best picture and several acting races far too close to call, this Sunday's Oscars gala is shaping up to be the most unpredictable in years. 
  • - 'Steamroller' - While suspense about best picture doesn't happen every year, what is truly unusual this time is the amount of uncertainty surrounding the acting prizes.
With "Sinners" and "One Battle After Another" neck-and-neck for best picture and several acting races far too close to call, this Sunday's Oscars gala is shaping up to be the most unpredictable in years. 
A Hollywood ceremony set to feature music from "KPop Demon Hunters" and Conan O'Brien as host will feature several nail-biting reveals, culminating in the announcement of the year's best film, which remains anyone's guess.
Until "the final envelope is opened for best picture, we're not going to know who's going to win," said Variety's awards columnist Clayton Davis.
"Both have a huge opportunity in order to break multiple Oscar records," he told AFP.
"Sinners," a smash-hit vampire period horror film from director Ryan Coogler, has already made Academy Awards history with its whopping 16 nominations.
The blues-inflected race allegory has a chance to chase down the most Oscar wins by a single movie, shared at 11 between "Ben-Hur," "Titanic" and "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King."
Coogler, previously best known for "Black Panther," could become the first ever Black person to win best director, in the 98 years of Oscars history.  
"He's only the seventh ever nominated," noted Davis, who spoke to many Oscars voters and says "the love for Coogler is undeniable."
But the frontrunner of this awards season has long been "One Battle," a zany thriller about a retired revolutionary looking for his teen daughter.
Set against a wild backdrop of radical violence, immigration raids and white supremacists, it earned 13 nods and could also break the overall wins record.
Its director Paul Thomas Anderson is one of the greatest auteurs of 21st century US cinema, but has never won any of his 11 previous nominations for films including "There Will Be Blood" and "Boogie Nights." 
Though "Sinners" was the bigger commercial hit, the exciting race between two "popular movies that people will know at home" should be good for ratings, Davis predicted.

'Steamroller'

While suspense about best picture doesn't happen every year, what is truly unusual this time is the amount of uncertainty surrounding the acting prizes.
A year after narrowly losing best actor honors with his uncanny Bob Dylan portrayal in "A Complete Unknown," Timothee Chalamet had long appeared a lock for his pushy ping-pong player "Marty Supreme."
But a series of ill-advised comments, most recently dismissing ballet and opera as art forms that "no one cares about," have seen the 30-year-old golden boy's chances plummet.
"Sinners" star Michael B Jordan, who plays two roles as twin brothers, won the important Screen Actors Guild's Actor Award this month, just before Oscars voting closed.
"This is a movie star performance that we don't get very often... he's really two steps away from the finish line," said Davis, who also does not rule out Leonardo DiCaprio ("One Battle") or Ethan Hawke ("Blue Moon").
The supporting acting prizes are also up for grabs.
Sean Penn could win a third acting Oscar for his comic yet terrifying soldier in "One Battle."
But he is up against international arthouse favorite Stellan Skarsgard ("Sentimental Value") and veteran Delroy Lindo, earning his first Oscar nod at 73 for "Sinners."
Supporting actress could see a rare horror villain role rewarded for Amy Madigan in "Weapons," or go to "One Battle" revolutionary Teyana Taylor or "Sinners" Hoodoo healer Wunmi Mosaku.
The only sure thing appears to be Jessie Buckley, who plays William Shakespeare's wife in "Hamnet."
"It's been the steamroller all season. That's the one thing you could take to the bank," said Davis.

KPop, Redford tributes

Best international film is arguably the hardest to call of all, with Norwegian family drama "Sentimental Value" up against Brazil's surreal political thriller "The Secret Agent."
O'Brien returns to host the Oscars for a second year running, while Barbra Streisand is rumored to be singing a tribute to her "The Way We Were" co-star Robert Redford, who died in September.
Ejae, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami, the singing voices behind "KPop Demon Hunters" fictional girl group HUNTR/X, will perform the Netflix smash film's Oscar-nominated song "Golden." 
The Oscars will air live on ABC and Hulu from 4:00 pm in Los Angeles (2300 GMT).
pr-amz/sst

court

Kneecap rapper wins new court victory over 'witch hunt' terror charge

BY JOE JACKSON WITH PETER MURPHY IN BELFAST

  • But in its decision on Wednesday, a two-judge panel at the High Court dismissed the appeal, siding with the chief magistrate.
  • An Irish-language singer from punk-rap group Kneecap will not face a terrorism charge after UK prosecutors lost a High Court challenge Wednesday against a judge's decision to dismiss the case.
  • But in its decision on Wednesday, a two-judge panel at the High Court dismissed the appeal, siding with the chief magistrate.
An Irish-language singer from punk-rap group Kneecap will not face a terrorism charge after UK prosecutors lost a High Court challenge Wednesday against a judge's decision to dismiss the case.
Liam O'Hanna was charged in May last year with displaying a flag of the proscribed Iran-backed Lebanese militant group Hezbollah at a November 2024 concert in London under the UK's 2000 Terrorism Act.
But he walked free from a London court in September after a chief magistrate, Paul Goldspring, found there had been a technical error around the timings in bringing the case against him.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) appealed the decision in January, arguing Goldspring had erred in ruling that the written charge had been filed too late.
But in its decision on Wednesday, a two-judge panel at the High Court dismissed the appeal, siding with the chief magistrate.
"The judge was right to hold that he had no jurisdiction," the pair stated in a 13-page ruling, concluding "no written charge was issued within six months" of the alleged offence. 
O'Hanna, named Liam Og O hAnnaidh in Irish, was charged on May 21 -- six months to the day after the concert when he allegedly displayed the flag. 
But the attorney general did not approve the charge until the following day, which O'Hanna's legal team argued meant it fell outside a six-month time limit.
O'Hanna, who performs under the name Mo Chara, welcomed the ruling. 

'Proud of our boys'

"Your own High Court has ruled against you," O'Hanna said at a Belfast press conference, in comments aimed directly at the UK government.
"The pathetic thing about this whole process is that you falsely try to label me a terrorist," he added, before accusing London of aiding various alleged crimes in the Middle East.
Cheered by supporters at the event, he was joined by Kneecap bandmates JJ O Dochartaigh and Naoise O Caireallain -- better known by their respective stage names DJ Provai and Moglai Bap.
"This ruling again just proves that they were right all along to fight the British in the courts and once again win," said Kevin Gamble, a 44-year-old Kneecap fan at the event.
"I'm very proud of our boys from West Belfast," added Bernie Devlin, 73, holding a Palestinian flag.
Darragh Mackin, a Belfast-based solicitor representing O'Hanna, said the attempted prosecution was "legally laughable". 
"It was a witch hunt," he added.
The CPS acknowledged the High Court had "clarified how the law applies" to such cases, and said that it accepted "the judgment and will update our processes accordingly".
O'Hanna was charged after a video emerged from the London concert in which he allegedly displayed the Hezbollah flag, an offence the singer has denied.
The band, whose members sing in Irish and regularly lead crowd chants in support of Palestinians in Gaza, have had multiple international concerts cancelled over their pro-Palestinian stance and other controversies.
Canada barred Kneecap last year from entering the country, citing the group's alleged support for Hezbollah and the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
However, their performance in Paris in September went ahead despite objections from French Jewish groups and government officials.
The group also played England's legendary Glastonbury Festival in June and drew packed audiences in Tokyo in January.
bur-jj-aks/mp

festival

'Legendary' Barbra Streisand to receive Honorary Palme d'Or at Cannes

  • New Zealand filmmaker Peter Jackson, best known for The Lord of the Rings trilogy, will also be awarded an Honorary Palme d'Or during the festival.
  • Hollywood and Broadway legend Barbra Streisand will be awarded an Honorary Palme d'Or at this year's Cannes Film Festival, organisers announced Wednesday, honouring a career that has spanned more than six decades.
  • New Zealand filmmaker Peter Jackson, best known for The Lord of the Rings trilogy, will also be awarded an Honorary Palme d'Or during the festival.
Hollywood and Broadway legend Barbra Streisand will be awarded an Honorary Palme d'Or at this year's Cannes Film Festival, organisers announced Wednesday, honouring a career that has spanned more than six decades.
"It is with pride and deep humility that I am delighted to join the circle of Honorary Palme d'Or winners, whose work has inspired me for so long," said the Broadway icon. She will receive the award at the festival's closing ceremony in May.
Streisand will add the prize to a legendary collection that includes four Emmys, ten Grammys, two Oscars, and a Tony. She is one of only 22 people to have achieved the elite EGOT status, winning the top US prizes in television, music, cinema and theatre.
After her start as breakout star in theatre on Broadway, Streisand evolved into a global icon across both the film and music industries.
She famously won the Best Actress Oscar for her first film role in 1968's "Funny Girl" at just 26-years-old before taking home a second in 1977 for "Evergreen", the original song from "A Star Is Born", in which she also played the lead role.
Streisand later stepped behind the camera to write, direct, and produce the film "Yentl" -- the story of a young woman who disguises herself as a man to study the Talmud. 
The project, based on a short story by Isaac Bashevis Singer, took 14 years to bring to the screen, but got seven Oscar nominations in 1984.
"It was the first time Hollywood had given such a large production budget to a female filmmaker," noted the Cannes festival.
Streisand is also the only female artist to have had an album top the charts in each of the last six decades.
For Cannes director Thierry Fremaux, the prize recognises Streisand's contribution as the "legendary synthesis between Broadway and Hollywood, between the music hall stage and the big screen".
New Zealand filmmaker Peter Jackson, best known for The Lord of the Rings trilogy, will also be awarded an Honorary Palme d'Or during the festival.
Past recipients of an honorary Palme d'Or include US actors Harrison Ford and Denzel Washington, as well as legendary Japanese animators Studio Ghibli.
agu/ekf/jj

court

Kneecap rapper scores new court victory as UK prosecutors lose appeal

  • But in its decision on Wednesday, a two-judge panel at the High Court dismissed the appeal, siding with the chief magistrate.
  • An Irish-language singer from punk-rap group Kneecap will not face a terrorism charge after UK prosecutors lost a High Court challenge Wednesday against a judge's decision to dismiss the case.
  • But in its decision on Wednesday, a two-judge panel at the High Court dismissed the appeal, siding with the chief magistrate.
An Irish-language singer from punk-rap group Kneecap will not face a terrorism charge after UK prosecutors lost a High Court challenge Wednesday against a judge's decision to dismiss the case.
Liam O'Hanna was charged in May last year with displaying a flag of the proscribed Iran-backed Lebanese militant group Hezbollah at a November 2024 concert in London under the UK's 2000 Terrorism Act.
But he walked free from a London court in September after a chief magistrate, Paul Goldspring, found there had been a technical error around the timings in bringing the case against him.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), which operates in England and Wales, appealed the decision in January, arguing Goldspring had erred in ruling that the written charge had been filed too late.
But in its decision on Wednesday, a two-judge panel at the High Court dismissed the appeal, siding with the chief magistrate.
"The judge was right to hold that he had no jurisdiction," the pair stated in a 13-page ruling, concluding "no written charge was issued within six months" of the alleged offence. 
O'Hanna was charged on May 21 -- six months to the day after the concert when he allegedly displayed the flag. 
But the attorney general did not approve the charge until the following day, which O'Hanna's legal team has consistently argued meant it fell outside a six-month time limit.
In a statement through his lawyers, O'Hanna said "this entire process was never about me, never about any threat to the public and never about 'terrorism'. 
"It was always about Palestine and about what happens if you dare to speak up. About what happens if you can reach large groups of people and expose their hypocrisy," the 28-year-old added.
"I will not be silent. Kneecap will not be silent."
Belfast-based Kneecap has long branded the attempted prosecution a "British state witch-hunt".
O'Hanna -- Liam Og O hAnnaidh in Irish -- was charged after a video emerged from the London concert in which he allegedly displayed the Hezbollah flag, an offence the singer has denied.
The band, whose members sing in Irish and regularly lead crowd chants in support of the Palestinians in Gaza, have had multiple international concerts cancelled over their pro-Palestinian stance and other controversies.
Canada barred Kneecap last year from entering the country, citing the group's alleged support for Hezbollah and the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
However, their performance in Paris in September went ahead despite objections from French Jewish groups and government officials.
The group also played England's legendary Glastonbury Festival in June and drew packed audiences in Tokyo in January.
bur-jj/jkb/fg

court

Australian Katie Perry wins trademark spat against singer Katy Perry

  • But songstress Katy Perry said her music had already gone "viral" as the designer started selling clothes around 2008, and sought to have the Australian trademark scrubbed out. 
  • Australian designer Katie Perry has won the right to sell clothes under her name, claiming victory Wednesday in a years-long trademark spat with US pop megastar Katy Perry. 
  • But songstress Katy Perry said her music had already gone "viral" as the designer started selling clothes around 2008, and sought to have the Australian trademark scrubbed out. 
Australian designer Katie Perry has won the right to sell clothes under her name, claiming victory Wednesday in a years-long trademark spat with US pop megastar Katy Perry. 
Designer Katie Perry accused her far more famous namesake of trademark infringement, arguing she had claimed the "Katie Perry" brand before the singer became a global sensation. 
But songstress Katy Perry said her music had already gone "viral" as the designer started selling clothes around 2008, and sought to have the Australian trademark scrubbed out. 
An Australian court agreed with the singer, ruling in 2024 the clothing trademark should be cancelled. 
But Australia's High Court has now ruled in favour of the local designer on appeal, finding there was unlikely to be any risk of "confusion" between the two. 
A representative for the singer told AFP that despite the legal action she "has never sought to close down" the Australian business.
sft/djw/tc

film

New generation of Irish actors harness talent for global stardom

BY PETER MURPHY

  • Thousands of miles from Los Angeles the next wave of Irish acting talent is being shaped on rehearsal floors at institutions like The Lir Academy in Dublin's docklands.
  • When the envelopes are opened at the Academy Awards in Los Angeles, one of the few guarantees is that actors from Ireland -- population just over five million -- are increasingly likely to be in the frame.
  • Thousands of miles from Los Angeles the next wave of Irish acting talent is being shaped on rehearsal floors at institutions like The Lir Academy in Dublin's docklands.
When the envelopes are opened at the Academy Awards in Los Angeles, one of the few guarantees is that actors from Ireland -- population just over five million -- are increasingly likely to be in the frame.
Performers from the Emerald Isle have become regular fixtures on Oscar shortlists in recent years, with wins, nominations and breakout performances.
Cillian Murphy, Barry Keoghan, Paul Mescal and Saoirse Ronan are among those helping cement the country's reputation as a powerhouse of screen acting.
Now Jessie Buckley, who has swept all major awards this season for her role as William Shakespeare's wife in Chloe Zhao's "Hamnet", is poised to add a Best Actress Oscar to her collection.
Thousands of miles from Los Angeles the next wave of Irish acting talent is being shaped on rehearsal floors at institutions like The Lir Academy in Dublin's docklands.
Founded in 2011 and linked to Trinity College Dublin, The Lir Academy -- whose alumni include Mescal -- admits only small cohorts of just 16 students each year for intensive conservatoire-style training.
In the rehearsal room, however, there is little talk of Hollywood.
The focus is on voice, movement, accents and classical text, which produces performers with technical control and -- crucially -- "authenticity", Director of Actor Training Gavin O'Donoghue told AFP.
"One of the most important elements of learning here is the ability to be a spontaneous actor on stage and on screen," O'Donoghue told AFP on a grey Dublin morning between classes.
"Screen acting demands being rooted in emotional and psychological truth, and Irish actors do that really well."

Theatre-first tradition

The foundational skills taught at The Lir Academy are reinforced by Ireland's wider theatre-first tradition in which actors often do stage before screen.
Ireland's tradition of playwrights -- from J.M. Synge who helped set up Dublin's Abbey Theatre in 1899 to Martin McDonagh whose film "Banshees of Inisherin" was nominated for a raft of Oscars in 2023 -- underpins the acting culture from which many screen stars emerge.
At the Abbey, Ireland's national showcase, actors perform in intimate auditoriums where language and psychological detail are paramount, according to its artistic director Caitriona McLaughlin.
"There is something about having to perform live in the moment that makes screen actors who come through Irish theatres exciting to watch," she said.
"Irish actors have it all," McLaughlin told AFP as she kept an eye on last rehearsals for an upcoming centenary revival of Sean O'Casey's 1926 Irish classic "The Plough and the Stars". 
"They have a strong connection with words so can play into the psychology of a character, they are physical, energetic, and have a great capacity for humour as well as drama," she said.
Irish actors' "vocal quality" that allows them to excel at accents like British and American and "lose themselves in the character" also makes them unique, according to McLaughlin.
Actors like Andrew Scott -- who honed his craft at the Abbey -- Saoirse Ronan, and Cillian Murphy of "Peaky Blinders" fame, can easily play British or American roles due to their aptitude for accents, she said. 
- Talent spotted early - 
Opportunities for young actors to build careers at home before Hollywood comes calling are also a factor in the current success, said state film-funder Screen Ireland's marketing head Louise Ryan.
The group supports debut shorts and features, allowing young actors to lead films and develop their craft, and also promotes Ireland as a film location, Ryan told AFP at the Irish Film Institute in Dublin.
"You can get 360-degrees experience with lead roles in indigenous films, and in parallel get a part in a big-budget TV show shot here like "Wednesday" which helps you get those international breaks," she said.
Ireland's small scale also means directors, casting agents and actors know one another, with talent spotted early and word travelling fast.  
"It is easier to break talent here as streaming shows like 'House of Guinness' and 'Say Nothing' are casting largely from the Irish pool," Dublin-based casting director Maureen Hughes told AFP.
According to the Abbey's McLaughlin, Ireland has always had the talent "right from the formation of this theatre", but the difference now is that the world is looking.
"This brilliant wave of talent is being exposed nationally and internationally," she said.
pmu/har/jkb/pdw/jfx

music

Alleged Rihanna mansion shooter charged with attempted murder

  • Ortiz was charged with one count of attempted murder, 10 counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm, two counts of shooting at an inhabited dwelling and one count of shooting at an inhabited vehicle.
  • A woman alleged to have shot up the luxury Los Angeles home of global megastar Rihanna was charged Tuesday with attempted murder.
  • Ortiz was charged with one count of attempted murder, 10 counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm, two counts of shooting at an inhabited dwelling and one count of shooting at an inhabited vehicle.
A woman alleged to have shot up the luxury Los Angeles home of global megastar Rihanna was charged Tuesday with attempted murder.
Prosecutors in the city said Ivanna Lisette Ortiz, 35, had opened fire at the sprawling estate on Sunday.
Aerial footage after the attack showed bullet holes in a gate at the property, which Rihanna shares with rapper A$AP Rocky and the couple's three children.
Ortiz, who is from Florida, has previously been involuntarily committed and lost custody of her then 10-year-old child, entertainment news outlet TMZ reported.
A Facebook page that appears to belong to her includes a number of videos and posts that refer to celebrities including Rihanna, Kim Kardashian and Cardi B.
One post tags Rihanna, whom she challenged "to say something to me directly instead of sneaking around like you talking to me where I'm not at."
In another video, she claims Rihanna wants to kill her.
Ortiz was charged with one count of attempted murder, 10 counts of assault with a semiautomatic firearm, two counts of shooting at an inhabited dwelling and one count of shooting at an inhabited vehicle.
She was ordered to be held on $1.875 million bail and instructed to have no contact with the Barbados-born singer.
Ortiz is next expected to appear in court on March 25.
Police officers previously said an AR-15-style assault rifle was used in the incident, which happened in the middle of day on Sunday while Rihanna was reportedly in the home.
hg/amz/des

film

Harvey Weinstein says prison is 'hell'

  • In the interview published Tuesday, Weinstein repeatedly insisted he had never sexually assaulted anyone.
  • Disgraced movie mogul and convicted rapist Harvey Weinstein says life in prison is "hell" in an interview where he repeatedly claimed he was not guilty of any crimes.
  • In the interview published Tuesday, Weinstein repeatedly insisted he had never sexually assaulted anyone.
Disgraced movie mogul and convicted rapist Harvey Weinstein says life in prison is "hell" in an interview where he repeatedly claimed he was not guilty of any crimes.
The man who once effectively ruled Hollywood before a spectacular fall from grace at the start of the #MeToo movement said he is trapped in his cell at New York's Rikers Island, with only guards for company.
"It's too dangerous for me to be around anyone else. Other inmates get to go to the yard. But every time I'm out there, I feel like I'm under siege," Weinstein told The Hollywood Reporter in an extraordinary interview published Tuesday.
"One time while I was waiting to use the phone, I asked the guy in front of me if he was done. He got off and punched me hard in the face. 
"I fell on the floor, bleeding everywhere. I was hurt really badly."
The Oscar-winning producer, who shepherded films including "Shakespeare in Love" and "Pulp Fiction" to the screen, was the ultimate power player in Hollywood for decades, credited with making careers -- and blamed for breaking just as many.
Weinstein was known for his fiery temper, and the industry had long been rife with suggestions that he took advantage of his power to sexually exploit women.
In 2017, blockbuster investigations by the New Yorker and the New York Times laid bare a series of claims by young women that triggered an avalanche of allegations from more than 80 complainants and prompted the global #MeToo movement.

'I don't want to die in here'

Weinstein's original 2020 conviction in New York, and the resulting 23-year prison term, were thrown out, but in a June retrial he was convicted of two counts of sexual assault.
A California court separately convicted him of rape and in 2023 sentenced him to 16 years in prison, a term the judge ordered to run after his New York sentence.
In the interview published Tuesday, Weinstein repeatedly insisted he had never sexually assaulted anyone.
"I will be proven innocent. That I promise you," he said of an upcoming retrial on a rape charge.
"The thing I was doing wrong was not sexual assault. It was cheating on my wife. I was desperate to keep that secret from her.
"I had lots of people come see me (in a hotel room). But there were some women who knew exactly what was expected. Maybe they felt bad later or they regretted it."
The 73-year-old said some of his accusers were simply chasing the money.
"Maybe they saw an opportunity for a payout. But not all of them were as naive as they liked to pretend.
"Yes, there was a power imbalance. I know I can be scary and difficult. But that's still a long way from sexual assault."
Weinstein, who uses a wheelchair, says he has undergone a heart operation while in prison and now has bone cancer.
He told The Hollywood Reporter that he is terrified of dying in prison.
"It scares the shit out of me," he said.
"It's incredible to have the life that I had and the things that I did for society and not have the leniency to deal with me in a kinder way.
"Whatever they think I did bad in my life, I didn't get the death penalty. I'm going to be 74 in March. I don't want to die in here."
hg/amz/jgc

film

Caviar, truffle and chicken pot pies: what Hollywood will eat at the Oscars

  • Quantities matter at a party of this scale: Puck anticipated that 1,200 of his traditional chicken pot pies will require 50 pounds (22 kilograms) of black truffle, served alongside 70 pounds of caviar, 1,000 plates of macaroni and cheese, and more than 200 pounds of tomahawk steak.
  • Hundreds of pounds of caviar, black truffle, sushi and tomahawk steak have been shipped to Hollywood for the traditional lavish Oscars after-party this Sunday.
  • Quantities matter at a party of this scale: Puck anticipated that 1,200 of his traditional chicken pot pies will require 50 pounds (22 kilograms) of black truffle, served alongside 70 pounds of caviar, 1,000 plates of macaroni and cheese, and more than 200 pounds of tomahawk steak.
Hundreds of pounds of caviar, black truffle, sushi and tomahawk steak have been shipped to Hollywood for the traditional lavish Oscars after-party this Sunday.
They will be washed down with thousands of bottles of tequila and champagne at the Governors Ball, where newly minted Academy Award winners get their statuettes engraved while fellow A-listers feast, dance and gossip.
"We make 25,000 small plates," said Wolfgang Puck, the celebrity chef who is returning to take charge of the party's menu for a 32nd consecutive year.
"You can have Japanese food, you can have Austrian food, you can have always the best steak," the Austrian-born restaurateur told AFP, as he seared a juicy tomahawk at a Tuesday press preview event.
At a time when diet pills are ubiquitous in Los Angeles, Puck joked that Tinseltown's famously weight-obsessed stars can have their Miyazaki beef "with Ozempic instead of spinach" if they prefer.
Quantities matter at a party of this scale: Puck anticipated that 1,200 of his traditional chicken pot pies will require 50 pounds (22 kilograms) of black truffle, served alongside 70 pounds of caviar, 1,000 plates of macaroni and cheese, and more than 200 pounds of tomahawk steak.
A new sushi station will feature five chefs preparing handrolls and nigiri.
Piper-Heidsieck champagne and Dassai sake will be served along with wines from Domaine Clarence Dillon -- and movie-themed Don Julio tequila cocktails.
This year's offerings include the "Best in Show," the "Golden Cut Margarita," the "Maestro Martini" and "The Sequel," made with gold vanilla edible paint streaked along the side.
These are the Mexican and Italian-inspired creations of Lorenzo Antinori, co-founder of Hong Kong's world-renowned Bar Leone, who has been flown in for the event.
As usual, dessert will be accompanied by thousands of golden chocolate statuettes, ensuring everyone can take an Oscar home.
"I think the reason why people love them so much is because it's so hard to get a real Oscar, right?" chef Garry Larduinat told AFP.
"So having one made of chocolate, being able to take it home and be like 'I was there,' that's very special. It's unique," he said.
"This is the only place you can get one."
pr/amz/mlm

LVMH

Louis Vuitton takes Paris fashion week on mountain ride

  • Ukrainian designer, Lilia Litkovska, who joined the Paris fashion week calendar this year, presented her first show on the final day.
  • Models wore mountain capes, shepherds' hats and carried bags with bells attached to them as Louis Vuitton brought the curtain down on Paris fashion week with a back-to-nature show Tuesday.
  • Ukrainian designer, Lilia Litkovska, who joined the Paris fashion week calendar this year, presented her first show on the final day.
Models wore mountain capes, shepherds' hats and carried bags with bells attached to them as Louis Vuitton brought the curtain down on Paris fashion week with a back-to-nature show Tuesday.
Parading in the main Louvre courtyard, with actors Zendaya and Ana de Armas in attendance, the brand's artistic director Nicolas Ghesquiere said the aim was to take the well-heeled spectators back to founder Louis Vuitton's roots in the Jura mountains.
Louis Vuitton left the Jura region as a teenager to set up shop in Paris in 1837.
"For this show, I really wanted to highlight the idea that nature is the greatest creator. It wasn't about imitating it, but rather about sublimating nature," Ghesquiere told journalists after the event entitled "Super Nature".
The French designer, who used hemp-based faux fur for his coats, said he wanted to highlight global "nomadism" through the patchwork dresses and wide rattan hats resembling inverted traditional baskets.
The show also highlighted the work of Ukrainian artist Nazar Strelyaev-Nazarko whose paintings were on the back of jackets and the front of skirts worn by Louis Vuitton models.
Ukrainian designer, Lilia Litkovska, who joined the Paris fashion week calendar this year, presented her first show on the final day.
Litkovska said the deconstructed clothes and biker boot outfits with models walking the runway with headlamps were inspired by events in her war-stricken home country.
She said the inspiration was walking home from her Kyiv studio in complete darkness and bitter cold.
"I had a flashlight, and there were people in the street across the street with me too. It's hard to explain, but you feel you're not alone. You feel a sense of closeness in that absolute darkness. We crossed our beams, and it was like a dialogue, a silent dialogue," she said.
lrb-jfg/tw/rmb

Echenique

Peruvian literary great Alfredo Bryce Echenique dead at 87

BY GONZALO TORRICO AND LUIS JAIME CISNEROS

  • Alfredo Bryce Echenique (1939–2026), one of the most representative voices of contemporary Peruvian literature," the House of Literature said.
  • Peruvian author Alfredo Bryce Echenique, a leading figure in Latin American literature, has died at the age of 87, the government-affiliated House of Peruvian Literature announced Tuesday.
  • Alfredo Bryce Echenique (1939–2026), one of the most representative voices of contemporary Peruvian literature," the House of Literature said.
Peruvian author Alfredo Bryce Echenique, a leading figure in Latin American literature, has died at the age of 87, the government-affiliated House of Peruvian Literature announced Tuesday.
Bryce shot to prominence with his 1970 post-modern masterpiece, "A World for Julius," a novel chronicling the lives of Lima's elite that drew on his own charmed but lonely childhood.
The book won Peru's National Literature Prize and became one of the country's best-loved works of fiction.
Bryce was considered Peru's greatest living author after the late Mario Vargas Llosa, a Nobel laureate who died last year.
"We mourn the passing of... Alfredo Bryce Echenique (1939–2026), one of the most representative voices of contemporary Peruvian literature," the House of Literature said.
Born into a family of bankers and descended from a president, Bryce was raised in a world of golf clubs and cocktail parties that contrasted sharply with the lot of Peru's Indigenous and mixed-race majority, from which the family's servants were drawn.
"Alfredo helped us discover a part of Lima..., of ourselves, that had to do with the great secrets that families keep," fellow Peruvian author Alonso Cueto said in an interview with N television channel.
Peru's presidency, on its X account, said "his pen... leaves an immense void but an eternal legacy."

'Famous at school'

In a 2009 interview with AFP, the diminutive soft-spoken author said that he was a born storyteller, who revelled in having an audience at an early age.
"My classmates would wait for me to tell them a story. I told them with great wit and irony, and I became famous at school," he said. 
He went into self-imposed exile in Europe in the 1960s to fulfill his dreams of becoming a writer.
"My mother would have wanted me to become a Peruvian Proust, she was mad about Proust and knew entire passages by heart," he told France's Le Monde daily in 2002.
His literary hero, however, was Stendhal, for the "emotion" his works packed.
He lived mainly in Spain and France, where he wrote and taught literature before returning home several decades later to Peru.
Class and identity would remain leitmotifs in his many award-winning novels and short stories, which blended humor with melancholy.
They include "Don't Wait for me in April" and "A Sad Guide to Paris."
Bryce lived his final years out of the public eye. 
He is survived by a sister. He did not have children.
gta/mar/cb/sms

television

'Heated Rivalry' stars condemn 'hateful' fan engagement

  • After premiering on the Canadian streaming platform Crave in late November, the series hit HBO Max and took off, becoming one of its most popular shows by Christmas.
  • A star of the massively popular Canadian show "Heated Rivalry" has hit back against an avalanche of hateful online posts, with the hockey drama's success stirring up a frenzy online.
  • After premiering on the Canadian streaming platform Crave in late November, the series hit HBO Max and took off, becoming one of its most popular shows by Christmas.
A star of the massively popular Canadian show "Heated Rivalry" has hit back against an avalanche of hateful online posts, with the hockey drama's success stirring up a frenzy online.
The show about the budding careers and secret relationship of two young male hockey stars -- one Canadian, one Russian -- over a series of years, has become a global phenomenon. 
But it has also inspired particularly intense fan engagement across social media, including homophobic and racist comments.
Lead actor Hudson Williams, who plays Canadian hockey star Shane Hollander, addressed the issue in an Instagram post, saying: "Don’t call yourself a fan if you share racist/homophobic/biphobic/misogynist/ageist/ableist/parasocial/bigoted comments of any kind."
"None of us need your hateful 'love,'" he posted on Monday. 
The same post was shared by several others involved in the show, including actor Francois Arnaud, show-runner Jacob Tierney as well as  Rachel Reid, who wrote the hockey‑themed queer romance novels that inspired the "Heated Rivalry." 
The first season of "Heated Rivalry" has turned previously unknown cast members into global stars, including Williams and co‑star Connor Storrie. 
After premiering on the Canadian streaming platform Crave in late November, the series hit HBO Max and took off, becoming one of its most popular shows by Christmas.
Variety called it "the biggest TV surprise" of 2025.
But those involved in the show have increasingly raised alarm about what they have termed toxic fan engagement.
Tierney warned that people had said "horrible things about my actors and about characters," in a recent podcast interview.
bs/sms

film

Oscar nominee Benicio Del Toro says 'One Battle' has 'heart'

BY PAULA RAMON

  • And then in 2001, he won the Oscar for best supporting actor for Steven Soderbergh's "Traffic," in which he played a Mexican border cop who tries to remain honest amid the drug wars.
  • Benicio Del Toro won his first Oscar 25 years ago for "Traffic."
  • And then in 2001, he won the Oscar for best supporting actor for Steven Soderbergh's "Traffic," in which he played a Mexican border cop who tries to remain honest amid the drug wars.
Benicio Del Toro won his first Oscar 25 years ago for "Traffic."
This year, he is once again in the Academy Award conversation for his soulful turn as karate dojo owner -- and part-time savior of immigrants -- Sergio St Carlos in "One Battle After Another," a role he says reflects his own sensibilities.
"There is a lot of me in there," Del Toro told AFP ahead of the Oscars gala on March 15, where he will vie for best supporting actor honors with co-star Sean Penn, Swedish veteran Stellan Skarsgard, Jacob Elordi ("Frankenstein") and Delroy Lindo ("Sinners").
In Paul Thomas Anderson's high-octane, politically charged thriller about leftist revolutionaries, white supremacists and immigration raids, Sensei Sergio provides a sense of calm at the film's heart.
Most of Del Toro's scenes come opposite Leonardo DiCaprio, who plays Bob Ferguson, a highly strung, and somewhat strung out, former militant who must hunt for his missing daughter (Chase Infiniti) when the past comes back to haunt him.
The 59-year-old Puerto Rican actor acknowledged he was surprised by the reception he has received for his role, which accounts for less than 15 minutes of screen time. 
"It feels good, and it also can make you a little bit uncomfortable too," he said in a Zoom conversation. "I'm proud of it."
"One Battle After Another" -- which earned 13 Academy Award nominations -- is the front-runner to take the best picture Oscar.
"I did enjoy the film, and I felt that the film did have a lot of potential," Del Toro said, noting that he felt his co-stars were "really the protagonists," with his to a lesser extent.
"Perhaps there's something in a movie that is so dark... since it brings a little bit of a sense of hope," he added of his character -- though he admits he did not initially see him that way.
- 'There's a heart there' - 
Del Toro was initially studying business at a university in California when he dropped out to pursue acting.
After some small television roles, an appearance in a Madonna music video and a few big screen appearances, his major breakthrough came in 1995 with "The Usual Suspects."
And then in 2001, he won the Oscar for best supporting actor for Steven Soderbergh's "Traffic," in which he played a Mexican border cop who tries to remain honest amid the drug wars. He bested a stacked field that included Willem Dafoe and Jeff Bridges. 
A second Academy Award nomination followed for Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's "21 Grams."
Del Toro, who has worked with top directors from Soderbergh to Inarritu to Denis Villeneuve, says he was immediately drawn to "One Battle" for the chance to work with Anderson for a second time, after "Inherent Vice" (2014).
The director "just creates a real comfortable place for creativity, for collaboration," he said.
Anderson asked him if would play a karate instructor and sent him a photo of a tiger... in a martial arts kimono.
But as time passed, the character evolved from someone just helping Ferguson on his search into more of a "fighter for the underdog, a protector of these migrants who were looking for the American dream," he said.
In one scene, Sensei Sergio introduces Ferguson to his extended family -- and to some of the migrants he hides so they can avoid arrest.
"I felt very, very, very, very strong about it," Del Toro said. "I felt like it needed to be treated with humanity... with respect."
He says he is happy his work has been honored because of what his character represents.
"There's a heart there... I think that's why people are gravitating towards Sensei," he said.
pr/sst/js/sms

Chalamet

Oscar nominee Chalamet woos Chinese fans days before Best Actor bid

  • Dozens of fans squeezed past each other for autographs and selfies with the three-time Best Actor nominee, known affectionally as "tiancha", which means sweet tea.
  • Oscar nominee Timothee Chalamet answered to "sweet tea" and praised a table tennis champion as he wooed Chinese fans on Tuesday in Beijing, days before the Academy Awards.
  • Dozens of fans squeezed past each other for autographs and selfies with the three-time Best Actor nominee, known affectionally as "tiancha", which means sweet tea.
Oscar nominee Timothee Chalamet answered to "sweet tea" and praised a table tennis champion as he wooed Chinese fans on Tuesday in Beijing, days before the Academy Awards.
The 30-year-old actor is in Asia promoting Best Picture hopeful "Marty Supreme", in which he plays a 1950s table tennis champion consumed by grand ambitions.
Loosely based on a true story, and benefiting from the Franco-American actor's unique viral campaign, the A24 film directed by Josh Safdie ("Uncut Gems") has become an unlikely global hit.
At an indoor red carpet event, Chalamet delighted fans by calling China's table tennis world no. 1 Sun Yingsha "an amazing player" after earlier purchasing a poster of the reigning world champion from a local shop.
The sport -- which Chalamet spent several years mastering in preparation for the film -- is hugely popular in China.
Dozens of fans squeezed past each other for autographs and selfies with the three-time Best Actor nominee, known affectionally as "tiancha", which means sweet tea.
The "Dune" and "Call Me By Your Name" star has a sizeable fan base in the country, despite the latter -- a gay romance -- not receiving a theatrical release as China heavily censors LGBTQ content. 
The rare visit to China by a prominent American actor comes as Hollywood looks to cash in on the country's box office.
China recorded 51.8 billion yuan ($7.5 billion) in ticket sales last year, challenging North America's box office of $8.6 billion.
"I feel like the movie could be as well received here as it was in the States, you know. Hopefully," Chalamet told reporters at the carpet -- coloured the same shade of orange the actor has sported across his "Marty Supreme" press tour.
Chalamet also visited Japan and the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu where he was filmed playing table tennis with silver-haired locals.
His Asia tour also comes as he has angered fans over viral comments suggesting "no one cares" about ballet or opera.
"Marty Supreme" officially opens in Chinese cinemas on March 20.
mya/msp

painting

Italy buys rare Caravaggio portrait for 30 million euros

  • The portrait of Monsignor Maffeo Barberini was painted by Italian master Caravaggio when the nobleman born in 1568 was in his 30s, years before he became pope. 
  • Italy has paid 30 million euros for a Caravaggio painting of the future pope Urban VIII, the culture ministry said Tuesday, a work that will enter the Barberini museum collection in Rome.
  • The portrait of Monsignor Maffeo Barberini was painted by Italian master Caravaggio when the nobleman born in 1568 was in his 30s, years before he became pope. 
Italy has paid 30 million euros for a Caravaggio painting of the future pope Urban VIII, the culture ministry said Tuesday, a work that will enter the Barberini museum collection in Rome.
The portrait of Monsignor Maffeo Barberini was painted by Italian master Caravaggio when the nobleman born in 1568 was in his 30s, years before he became pope. 
"This is a work of exceptional importance," Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli said in a statement, adding that it was "one of the most significant investments" ever made by the state for an artwork. 
Maffeo Barberini was elected to the papacy in 1623 and his pontificate lasted until his death in 1644. 
The painting was authenticated in 1963 by the art critic Roberto Longhi, a great specialist in the work of the 16th-century artist, whose full name was Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio.
"This acquisition, together with the recent purchase of the Ecce Homo by Antonello da Messina, is part of a broader project to strengthen the national cultural heritage," he said. 
The previous owners of the work, who were not specified, had allowed the portrait to be exhibited to the public for an exhibit on Caravaggio at Palazzo Barberini -- the noble family's historic home in central Rome -- which ended in February 2025.  
The museum's director, Thomas Clement Salomon, told AFP at the exhibition's opening in November 2024 that the fact it was being displayed was "exceptional."
"It has never been lent to an exhibition, it has never been seen in a museum, so it is an absolute preview," he said.
In the painting, a seated Barberini is clutching a letter in his left hand, with his right pointing forward, towards the viewer. 
Around 65 paintings in the world have been "securely attributed" to Caravaggio, according to the ministry statement, while portraits are very rare, with only three "known and firmly accepted."
ljm/jra/ams/ach 

film

In which Pooh turns 100: Hunny-loving bear marks a milestone

  • "He's so steeped in wisdom that he himself does not always think he's giving, and that's so timeless."
  • Winnie the Pooh, the self-described bear of "very little brain" who has charmed generations with his homespun and heartfelt wisdom, is turning 100.
  • "He's so steeped in wisdom that he himself does not always think he's giving, and that's so timeless."
Winnie the Pooh, the self-described bear of "very little brain" who has charmed generations with his homespun and heartfelt wisdom, is turning 100.
The beloved children's character ambled into the world in 1926 in a book written by English author A.A. Milne, and illustrated by E.H. Shepard.
Now Disney, which acquired the rights to Pooh and his pals from Hundred Acre Wood in the 1960s, is holding a year-long celebration of the slow-witted bear, whose image is found all over the planet, from Azerbaijan to Zimbabwe.
"Winnie the Pooh is all of us," said Kevin Kern, senior manager of research at the Walt Disney Archives in Burbank, California, where all kinds of Pooh paraphernalia are neatly catalogued.
"He shows all the emotions that we show. He sees the things that we see. He struggles like we do; whether he's trying to get up a tree to get honey or understand his friends.
"He's so steeped in wisdom that he himself does not always think he's giving, and that's so timeless."

Pooh for President

Milne's first book -- published in Britain and the United States in October 1926 -- was inspired by the author's son, Christopher Robin, and his collection of stuffed animals: Pooh, Piglet, Eeyore, Owl, Rabbit, and Kanga and her baby Roo.
Two years later, the effervescent Tigger joined the gang for the second book, "The House at Pooh Corner."
When Disney's first animated short appeared in 1966, Pooh's signature look -- a too-short red t-shirt and nothing down below -- was set.
Over the decades, there have been books in dozens of languages, plush toys, backpacks, lunchboxes, watches and feature films, most recently the live-action "Christopher Robin" in 2018, starring Ewan McGregor as an adult Christopher Robin who reunites with Pooh.
But the lovable bear's adventures did not stop there: he even ran for US president, with Disneyland holding a ticker tape parade in 1972 as a lighthearted alternative to the battle between Richard Nixon and George McGovern.
In the 21st century, Winnie made another -- albeit unintentional -- foray into politics when Chinese critics of Xi Jinping noted what they said was a resemblance between the country's leader and the portly bear.
Communist Party censors worked to scrub the internet of any reference to the character.
And in 2023 after US copyright protections lapsed, Winnie found himself advising children how to avoid a school shooter when a Texas school district pressed him into action for a leaflet to warn them to "Run, Hide, Fight." 
That same year, he became a knife-wielding villain in a low-budget slasher film called "Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey," which recouped its budget many times over with a theatrical run that surprised industry watchers. 
Mark Henn, an animator who worked on the altogether more family-friendly 2011 Disney film "Winnie the Pooh," said he had been thrilled to be able to draw a character he had grown up watching.
"He definitely is a bringer of joy," he told AFP.
"He's very calm. Even when he does get upset, there's a calmness to his demeanor, which I think most people really gravitate to."
hg/sst/dw

film

AI offers hope for young filmmakers dreaming of an Oscar

BY ROMAIN FONSEGRIVES

  • "That's a chance for beginners like me who can use AI to just make a film and to announce to the world that I have the ability to be a director," he told AFP. Zheng, 29, who hails from China, is one of a burgeoning class of students at USC's School of Cinematic Arts, studying animation in a place that has long been a training ground for future Pixar and DreamWorks talent.
  • Studying at the film school where Oscar-nominated "Sinners" director Ryan Coogler honed his craft, SiJia Zheng dreams of winning an Academy Award.
  • "That's a chance for beginners like me who can use AI to just make a film and to announce to the world that I have the ability to be a director," he told AFP. Zheng, 29, who hails from China, is one of a burgeoning class of students at USC's School of Cinematic Arts, studying animation in a place that has long been a training ground for future Pixar and DreamWorks talent.
Studying at the film school where Oscar-nominated "Sinners" director Ryan Coogler honed his craft, SiJia Zheng dreams of winning an Academy Award.
Now with the recent developments in artificial intelligence, he can see a shortcut to achieving his ambition.
"That's a chance for beginners like me who can use AI to just make a film and to announce to the world that I have the ability to be a director," he told AFP.
Zheng, 29, who hails from China, is one of a burgeoning class of students at USC's School of Cinematic Arts, studying animation in a place that has long been a training ground for future Pixar and DreamWorks talent.
He has used his time at the Los Angeles university to learn about the emerging field of AI animation.
That has included producing his seven-minute short film "Torment" about a masked killer terrorizing a high school. 
The film, which was recognized at the LA Shorts festival, was generated entirely by AI -- in just one week. 
Zheng recorded himself in front of a green screen and then asked the software to modify his face to make him into all the different characters in the movie.
The technology also allowed him to set his story in an Asian school and have scenes in a swimming pool -- two things that would have cost a fortune if he had filmed them traditionally.
"As a student, it's impossible to have that much money" to produce a film, he said.
- 'Tool' - 
Not everyone in Hollywood feels so positively about AI.
The technology was one of the key sticking points in the writers' and actors' strikes that paralyzed Hollywood in 2023.
Guillermo del Toro, the director of "Frankenstein," which will compete for the best picture Oscar on Sunday, is notoriously anti-AI, insisting he would "rather die" than use it.
Zheng said he had been impressed by the Mexican director's "amazing" film, particularly the opening scene where the monster attacks a 19th-century three-masted ship, which del Toro's prop department constructed specially for the movie.
But "when I watched the film...I was just thinking: 'Oh, using AI to do that would be much cheaper and...make something pretty similar.'"
He insists, however, that it doesn't replace the filmmaking spark.
"AI is just a tool, and people can use it to become even better."
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the body that will hand out the Oscars in Hollywood on March 15, seems to agree -- last year the body updated its rules to say it was neutral on the technology.
"Generative Artificial Intelligence and other digital tools...neither help nor harm the chances of achieving a nomination," it said last April.
- 'Ethical' use - 
At the University of Southern California (USC), teachers like Debra Isaac are trying to navigate the ethics around the emerging technology of AI.
The animation professor said she was shocked by an AI video that rocketed around the internet in recent weeks.
The short sequence, created by Seedance -- the AI generation model developed by TikTok's parent company, Bytedance -- shows an ersatz fight between Brad Pitt and Tom Cruise. Neither star was compensated.
But, used properly, AI does not need to be exploitative, and is not a lazy way to make films, Isaac said.
"It's not just about, 'Hey, I have a prompt, and I'm just gonna type a few words and I'll get my image, and I'll get my animation, and I'm done,'" she said.
"Some of these tools are not ethically dubious at all. They're trained by people that are using their own work," she added.
That's precisely what Xindi Zhang, a recent graduate of the program and winner of a Student Academy Award for her short film "The Song of Drifters," did. 
For the mini-documentary about the difficulty of feeling at home anywhere, the 29-year-old artist fed the AI dozens of her drawings. 
The database then served as graphic inspiration, allowing the computer to stylize the shots of the cities where the film takes place, accelerating production that would otherwise have taken years. 
Even with the help of AI, she spent nearly a month perfecting certain shots. 
It's "a craft that nobody really appreciates right now," she says.
But anyone who looks at the use of AI will soon find it's not a compromise-free shortcut to perfection.
"Good, cheap and fast will never happen, no matter what tool you use," Zhang said.
rfo/hg/jgc

music

Woman held over shots fired at Rihanna's LA mansion

  • The Los Angeles Police Department said Ivanna Lisette Ortiz was arrested at a shopping complex half an hour after the incident.
  • A woman alleged to have fired an assault rifle at the luxury Los Angeles home of Rihanna -- while the pop superstar was inside -- was being held by police on Monday.
  • The Los Angeles Police Department said Ivanna Lisette Ortiz was arrested at a shopping complex half an hour after the incident.
A woman alleged to have fired an assault rifle at the luxury Los Angeles home of Rihanna -- while the pop superstar was inside -- was being held by police on Monday.
Officers in the city said shots were fired towards the mansion in the middle of day on Sunday by a suspect driving a white Tesla, which had stopped across the street.
Aerial footage after the attack showed bullet holes in a gate at the sprawling property, which Rihanna shares with rapper A$AP Rocky and their three children.
The Los Angeles Police Department said Ivanna Lisette Ortiz was arrested at a shopping complex half an hour after the incident.
Captain Mike Bland told reporters the weapon used was an AR-15-style rifle.
Ortiz was booked on suspicion of attempted murder with bail set at $10.225 million.
Rihanna, one of the world's most popular pop stars, has not publicly commented on the shooting.
hg/des