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From Spain to Venice

FROM LEFT: Tilda Swinton, director Pedro Almodovar, and Julianne Moore at the photo call for the film 'The Room Next Door' during the 81st edition of the Venice Film Festival in Venice, Italy. PHOTO: AP

VENICE (AP) – Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar returned to the Venice Film Festival with stars Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore on Monday. The Room Next Door will have its world premiere on the Lido in the evening.

Though a new Almodóvar film is always an event for cinephiles, this one has special significance: It’s his English-language debut.

“My insecurity disappeared after the first table read with the actresses, with the exchange of the first indications,” he wrote in his director’s statement. “The language wasn’t going to be a problem, and not because I master English, but because of the total disposition of the whole cast to understand me and to make it easy for me to understand them.”

Moore and Swinton play disconnected friends, who met in their youth at a magazine job, and whose lives took different paths. Ingrid (Moore) wrote novels. Martha (Swinton) became a war reporter. And now after years apart, they meet again, in New York, when Ingrid finds out Martha has cancer and is in a nearby hospital.

Over the next weeks and months, they reconnect, learning about one another’s lives and Martha’s estranged daughter through a series of revealing conversations.

Before the film’s premiere, Swinton said that it would never have occurred to her that Almodóvar might eventually find a space for her in one of his films. In Almodóvar was a kindred artistic spirit, she thought.

FROM LEFT: Tilda Swinton, director Pedro Almodovar, and Julianne Moore at the photo call for the film ‘The Room Next Door’ during the 81st edition of the Venice Film Festival in Venice, Italy. PHOTO: AP
A scene from the movie. PHOTO: AP

“I still feel like a student seeing his first film,” Swinton said.

But she was English and he worked solely in Spanish. The idea of collaborating seemed like a fantasy only. Then one day, she said, she got up the nerve to say something to him. “I said, ‘Listen I’ll learn Spanish for you, you can make me mute’,” Swinton said.

“Characteristically, he laughed.”

Moore added, “I don’t know how I managed to walk into this world, but I felt lucky that he chose me.”

Almodóvar’s last Venice appearance was in 2021, where he presented the film Parallel Mothers, for which Penelope Cruz won its Best Actress prize. In 2019, Venice also gave him a lifetime achievement award. But his history with Venice stretches back 40 years.

“I was born as a film director in 1983 in Venice,” he said. A few years later, he’d return with the classic Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.

Of his latest, he wrote “Tilda Swinton and Julianne Moore carry the weight of the whole film on their shoulders, and they are a spectacle. I have been fortunate in that both give a veritable recital. At times during shooting, both the crew and I were on the verge of tears watching them. It was a very moving shoot and, in some way, blessed”.

Though death looms in the film, when Martha asks Ingrid to join her in a house upstate for her final days, all felt that it’s a film about life.

“We talked a lot about life, but we didn’t really talk about death. What can you say? You can talk about dying,” Swinton said. “This film is a portrait of self-determination… This feeling of (death) being a celebration felt for me very real and very relatable and I can’t say that I wouldn’t act in the same way if I was in her shoes.”

Both Swinton and Moore were excited to be in a film that spotlighted a female friendship between two women at their ages.

“We very, very rarely see a story of female friendship and especially a story about female friends who are older,” Moore said. “The importance that he shows us is so unusual and was so moving to me that he portrayed this relationship as so profound, because it is.” – Lindsey Bahr

UK government announces partial suspension of arms exports to Israel

British Foreign Secretary David Lammy. PHOTO: AP

LONDON (AFP) – Britain said on Monday it would suspend some arms exports to Israel, citing a “clear risk” that they could be used in a serious breach of international humanitarian law.

Foreign Secretary David Lammy told Parliament that the United Kingdom (UK) would suspend 30 out of 350 arms exports licences following a review by his department into Israel’s conduct of its war.

He said the partial ban covered items “which could be used in the current conflict in Gaza”, including fighter aircraft, helicopters and drones.

The ban does not include parts for Israel’s advanced F-35 stealth fighter jets, Lammy added. Lammy announced a review looking at the arms sales shortly after Labour swept to power in a landslide general election victory over the Conservatives in early July.

“It is with regret that… the assessment I have received leaves me unable to conclude anything other than that for certain UK arms exports to Israel, there does exist a clear risk that they might be used to commit or facilitate a serious violation of international humanitarian law,” he told lawmakers.

Britain’s centre-left Labour government has repeatedly called for a ceasefire in the Israel-Hamas war, and for the speeding up of aid deliveries into Gaza, since taking power on July 5.

Last week, the UK Foreign Ministry said it was “deeply” concerned by an Israeli military operation in the occupied West Bank, urging it to “exercise restraint” and adhere to international law.

Amnesty International’s UK chief executive Sacha Deshmukh said the government’s decision was a belated acceptance of “the very clear and disturbing evidence of Israeli war crimes in Gaza”.

But he and other rights groups said it did not go far enough, and called the exemption for F-35 components “a catastrophically bad decision” as the jets were being used “extensively” in Gaza.

The UK government has faced legal action from rights groups about its export of arms and military components to Israel.

Britain’s strategic licensing criteria states that weapons should not be exported when there is a clear risk they could be used in international humanitarian law violations.

That led to claims that the government was ignoring its own rules in the Gaza conflict.

British Foreign Secretary David Lammy. PHOTO: AP

Could Oasis reunion come early?

Liam Gallagher and Noel Gallagher. PHOTOS: AP

AP – The Oasis reunion could come earlier than expected.

The Britpop-era band ended a 15-year hiatus last week by announcing a tour of the British Isles next summer, with 17 gigs selling out on Saturday following a scramble for tickets by Oasis fans.

However, Liam and Noel Gallagher, the once-feuding brothers who are the face of Oasis, could be on the stage together way before then if a Saudi boxing promoter gets his own way.

Liam is slated to perform some hits at Wembley Stadium in London on September 21 ahead of the world heavyweight title fight between Anthony Joshua and Daniel Dubois, when more than 90,000 spectators are set to attend.

The Saudi advisor who organises boxing events for the kingdom Turki Alalshikh said on Monday he wants Noel to be at Wembley, too.

“It will be something amazing if we get them together,” the chairman of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority said in an interview with British radio station talkSPORT. “We will try, we will try. Why not?”

Oasis’ representatives didn’t immediately respond when contacted by The Associated Press (AP). – Steve Douglas

Liam Gallagher and Noel Gallagher. PHOTOS: AP

BTS Jin’s ‘Supertuna’ surpasses 100 million views

BTS Jin. PHOTO: HYBE

ANN/THE KOREA HERALD – The performance video for BTS member Jin’s solo song Supertuna has surpassed 100 million views on YouTube as of Monday, according to his label, Big Hit Music yesterday.

Jin originally uploaded the video in December 2021 as a special birthday gift for his fans.

In the video, he dances on a beach in Los Angeles, dressed in denim overalls and a T-shirt featuring a tuna design he drew himself.

Inspired by his hobby, fishing, Jin’s self-written song Supertuna was officially released the following year and topped Billboard’s World Digital Song Sales chart.

The single reclaimed the top spot on the chart in June, as fans pushed it back up to celebrate him completing his military service.

Meanwhile, he plans to put out a solo album by the end of this year. – Hwang You-mee

BTS Jin. PHOTO: HYBE

Two ships hit off rebel-held Yemeni region

The Greek-flagged oil tanker Sounion burning in the Red Sea. PHOTO: AP

DUBAI (AFP) – Two merchant vessels were struck in attacks on Monday off the coast of Yemen’s rebel-held Hodeida province, maritime security agencies said, reporting that both crew were safe in the aftermath.

One attack was claimed by Yemen’s Houthi rebels who have targeted ships they said are linked to Israel, a campaign they began in November in stated solidarity with Palestinian ally Hamas in the Gaza war.

The Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) said the first vessel, identified as Panama-flagged tanker Blue Lagoon I, was hit by two ballistic missiles, with a third hitting the water 50 metres from the ship.

The Houthis said in a statement they had targeted the Blue Lagoon with “missiles and drones, and it was directly hit”.

The JMIC, run by a 45-member international naval coalition, said the tanker “was subject to three ballistic missile attacks. All crew on board are safe (no injury reported)”.

“The vessel sustained minimal damage but does not require assistance. The vessel is continuing on to its next port of call,” it added.

The maritime security firm Ambrey said the tanker had been targeted because of a “company affiliation with a vessel calling Israeli ports”.

The attack occurred 70 nautical miles northwest of the port of Al-Salif in Hodeida, reported the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) agency, run by Britain’s Royal Navy.

In a separate incident later on Monday the UKMTO said another commercial vessel had been hit by a drone 58 nautical miles west of Hodeida, also without any casualties.

Houthi attacks have disrupted maritime traffic through the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, areas that are vital to global trade. The United States and Britain have struck Houthi targets in Yemen since January, but it has done little to deter the rebels.

The Greek-flagged oil tanker Sounion burning in the Red Sea. PHOTO: AP

Step into a new world

PHOTOS: AP

NEW YORK (AP) – Brandon Sanderson, whose epic Wind and Truth is a highlight of the upcoming publishing season, sees nothing wrong with the idea of “escapism”.

“It’s just the ability to go to another world and relate to other people’s problems, problems that aren’t our problems. It’s a really valuable tool in our lives,” the fantasy novelist told The Associated Press (AP) during a recent telephone interview. Sanderson’s fans have waited four years for Wind and Truth, the 1,300-page fifth volume in his Stormlight Archive fantasy series.

He acknowledged, with mixed feelings, that some will take relatively little time to finish it.

“They will absolutely read it in two days, which feels both gratifying and a little horrifying,” he said. “You put your heart and soul into something for so long, knowing that fans are going to be done in a couple of days and say, ‘When’s the next one?'”

The presidential election is expected to dominate headlines this fall, but booksellers look to Sanderson and others to sustain the wave of fantasy and the hybrid romantasy novels that have been selling strongly over the past few years. Wind and Truth is among numerous anticipated works that include Jeff VanderMeer’s Absolution, Alan Moore’s The Great When, Cecy Robson’s Bloodguard and Kerri Maniscalco’s Throne of Secrets, the second installment of her Prince of Sin series.

According to Circana, which tracks around 85 per cent of the retail market, fantasy sales have been growing for the past five years and since last summer have jumped by nearly 75 per cent, driven in part by the million-selling romantasy authors Sarah J Maas and Rebecca Yarros.

“The fantasy subject is the top growth segment of the total United States (US) print book market,” said Circana analyst Brenna Conner, who cites the reader-driven sales of #BookTok as a strong factor. “I also believe escapism is a component as more readers seek out stories with elements of escapism to counter daily stress and fatigue of the news cycle.”

At Barnes & Noble, Senior Director of Books Shannon DeVito noted that fantasy has expanded and diversified, blending horror and romance and mystery. She cited Maas and Yarros, and such upcoming releases as John Gwynn’s Norse-inspired The Fury of the Gods and Ann Liang’s mythical A Song to Drown Rivers.

“It’s event-proof,” DeVito said of fantasy and its offshoots. “It doesn’t depend on news of the day.”

PHOTOS: AP
PHOTOS: AP
PHOTOS: AP
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PHOTO: ENVATO

PROSE AND POETRY

Sally Rooney’s Intermezzo is a story of grief and sibling rivalry from the author known for the best sellers Normal People and Conversations With Friends. Nobel laureate Olga Tokarczuk’s The Empusium: A Health Resort Horror Story is the Polish’s author variation of the Thomas Mann classic The Magic Mountain. Nobelist Annie Ernaux of France combines memoir and images in The Use of Photography and perennial Nobel candidate Haruki Murakami expands on an early short story for The City and Its Uncertain Walls, which his Japanese publisher is calling “soul-stirring, 100 per cent pure Murakami world”.

Pulitzer Prize winner Richard Powers’ Playground touches upon everything from climate change to artificial intelligence (AI), while another Pulitzer winner, Louise Erdrich, sets The Mighty Red on a North Dakota beet farm during the economic crash of 2008. In Tell Me Everything, Pulitzer winner Elizabeth Strout returns to fictional Crosby, Maine, and such friends from Olive Kitteridge and Olive, Again as the elderly title character and the scribe Lucy Barton.

“I never intended to write them about them again. I think I keep bringing them back because they are so very well known to me,” Strout said. “They feel almost as real as actual people. I know they’re not real people, but they feel like real people.”

John Edgar Wideman blends fiction, history and memoir in Slaveroad, and Rebecca Godfrey’s Peggy is a fictional take on the heiress-art collector Peggy Guggenheim that was completed by Leslie Jamison after Godfrey’s death in 2022. New fiction is also coming from Richard Price, Lee Child, Michael Connelly, Kate Atkinson, Janet Evanovich, Rachel Kushner, Richard Osman, Tova Reich, Paula Hawkins, Jami Attenberg and Rumaan Alam.

Margaret Atwood began her career as a poet and her verse is collected in Paper Boat: New and Selected Poems: 1961-2023, while Blues in Stereo features early work from the late Langston Hughes. Prize winners Paul Muldoon, Kimiko Hahn and Matthew Zapruder all have collections coming out, along with new books from Billy Collins, Ben Okri, Kimiko Hahn, Frank X Walker and E Hughes.

Dear Yusef is a tribute to the celebrated poet Yusef Komunyakaa that includes contributions from Terrance Hayes, Major Jackson and Sharon Olds. Latino Poetry: The Library of America Anthology compiles verse from the 17th Century to the present.

TAYLOR-ED

Like all pop culture phenomena, from the Beatles to Star Wars, Taylor Swift’s appeal isn’t confined to a single art form.

Her songs and her life have inspired young adult novels, children’s books and biographies and the wave continues.

Katie Cotugno’s Heavy Hitter is an athlete/pop star romance based in part on Swift and NFL great Travis Kelce, while The 13 Days of Swiftness is a picture story for holiday shoppers who can chant such lines as “12 strings for strumming” and “11 bracelets beaded”.

 The anthology Poems for Tortured Souls includes verse from Emily Dickinson, Edna St Vincent Millay and other alleged kindred souls of Swift’s. Biographies/critical studies include the picture book Taylor Swift: Wildest Dreams, by Erica Wainer and Joanie Stone; and Rolling Stone writer Rob Sheffield’s Heartbreak Is the National Anthem: How Taylor Swift Reinvented Pop Music. – Hillel Italie

Philippines manufacturing sector continues growth streak

File photo shows workers at a shoe factory in Marikina City, the Philippines. PHOTO: XINHUA

ANN/INQUIRER.NET – The Philippines’ manufacturing sector continued its growth in August, driven by increasing new orders amid improving global demand, according to S&P Global.

The S&P Global Philippines Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), which tracks the country’s manufacturing performance, registered a 51.2 in August.

This marks the 12th consecutive month that the index has remained above the 50 mark, which indicates expansion. A PMI reading above 50 reflects improved operating conditions, while a reading below 50 suggests a decline.

While unchanged from July levels, the Philippines’ PMI reading was the second fastest among the top five Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) member-countries, trailing behind Thailand’s 52.

“The Filipino manufacturing sector showed sustained and modest gains midway through the third quarter. Growth in output and new orders accelerated on the month, thereby highlighting improving demand trends.

“However, employment fell, and buying activity cooled, suggesting that manufacturers remain cautious about growth prospects,” S&P Global Market Intelligence economist Maryam Baluch said in a statement.

File photo shows workers at a shoe factory in Marikina City, the Philippines. PHOTO: XINHUA

Ringgit ends lower against US dollar on cautious mode

PHOTO: ENVATO

BERNAMA – The ringgit extended its decline to close lower against the US dollar yesterday, weighed down by cautious sentiment and subdued demand, an analyst said.

At 6pm, the local currency weakened to 4.3675/3705 against the greenback, down from Monday’s close of 4.3550/3600.

Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd chief economist Dr Mohd Afzanizam Abdul Rashid said the ringgit also eased against major currencies, as traders likely took profits from last week’s gains when the local note appreciated by 1.3 per cent week-on-week against the US dollar.

Mohd Afzanizam added that markets are now focusing on tonight’s United States (US) data releases, including the ISM Index for August, to gauge the likelihood of an anticipated US interest rate cut. “It appears that markets have already made up their mind that the rate cut will occur in September. “However, should the data intermittently show some strength, it might cause the US dollar to appreciate,” he told Bernama.

At the close, the ringgit fell against the Japanese yen to 2.9921/9943 from 2.9688/9725 on Monday, declined vis-a-vis the euro to 4.8208/8242 from 4.8197/8252, and weakened against the British pound to 5.7267/7306 from 5.7203/7269. Meanwhile, the ringgit traded mostly lower against ASEAN currencies.

The local note weakened against the Singapore dollar to 3.3360/3386 from 3.3321/3361 yesterday and depreciated vis-a-vis the Thai baht to 12.7537/7680 from 12.7228/7429 previously.

It also fell versus the Indonesian rupiah to 281.2/281.6 from 280.4/280.9 but rebounded against the Philippine peso to 7.71/7.72 from 7.72/7.73 on Monday.

PHOTO: ENVATO

South Korea says Telegram complying with regulators

PHOTO: AFP

AFP – Messaging app Telegram removed some illegal material following a request by South Korean regulators, the Yonhap news agency reported yesterday.

A South Korean broadcaster revealed last month that university students were running an illegal Telegram chatroom, where they shared deepfake material. Other chatrooms were subsequently discovered, sparking public outrage. Police said on Monday they had initiated an investigation into the Dubai-based messaging company, accusing it of “abetting” the distribution of deepfake material, including artificial intelligence (AI)-generated images.

Regulators had requested Telegram remove some of the offensive material, and the app has informed the Korea Communications Standards Commission (KCSC) that it had taken down 25 pieces of content, Yonhap reported yesterday.

“Telegram also apologised for miscommunication regarding the issue and shared an exclusive email address for future communication with the media watchdog,” Yonhap reported, citing the KCSC.

Perpetrators of the recent spate of deepfake crimes have reportedly used social media platforms such as Instagram to save or screen-capture photos of victims.

This has fuelled public anger and prompted President Yoon Suk Yeol, a former prosecutor, to call on officials to “thoroughly investigate and address these digital crimes to eradicate them completely”.

PHOTO: AFP

 

Vietnam exports over six million tonnes of rice in eight months

PHOTO: ENVATO

XINHUA – Vietnam exported 6.16 million tonnes of rice in the first eight months of this year, up 5.9 per cent year on year, Vietnam News reported, citing the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Rice export brought revenue of nearly USD3.85 billion in the cited period, a year-on-year growth of 21.7 per cent, said the report.

Along with an output increase, the Southeast Asian country’s average rice export price rose about 14.8 per cent during the first eight months, reaching USD625 per tonne.

Vietnam aims to export over eight million tonnes of rice worth usd5 billion in 2024, the ministry said.

PHOTO: ENVATO