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‘Moana 2’ sails back to theatres

ABOVE & BELOW: Moana, voiced by Auli'i Cravalho holding Simea, voiced by Khaleesi Lambert-Tsuda; and Maui, voiced by Dwayne Johnson, in scenes from ‘Moana 2’. PHOTO: AP

NEW YORK (AP) – When you look at some of the numbers, it’s hard to believe Moana 2 was ever going to be anything but a movie.

When the teaser trailer for Moana 2 dropped in May, it was watched 178 million times in 24 hours. That’s more than Inside Out 2, more than Frozen 2, more than any animated Disney movie before.

A veritable ocean’s worth of anticipation is awaiting the sequel to 2016’s Moana, all proof that one of the more dramatic pivots in recent Walt Disney Co. history is paying off, big time. Moana 2 was originally intended to be a streaming series. Now, it’s steering toward being one of the fall’s biggest blockbusters. What can you say except you’re welcome?

When Bob Iger returned as chief executive of Disney in late 2022, one of his top priorities was shifting away from putting the studio’s most prized assets onto streaming. He wanted to put the focus back on the big screen – and all the ancillary benefits (including merchandising and streaming) that follow after. The series that directors David Derrick Jr and Jason Hand had worked on for more than a year would become Moana 2. The movie, which also added Dana Ledoux Miller as a director and co-writer, was only announced earlier this year. It’s opening on November 27.

“It became all hands on board,” Derrick said. “There’s a saying in Samoa: ‘All together or not at all.’”

Derrick and Hand, both veteran storyboard artistes at Disney, had effectively done their job too well. Their work convinced Disney executives to put the studio’s full weight behind a theatrical film, even though a live-action Moana remained in development. (That movie, directed by Thomas Kail, is set to open in July 2026).

ABOVE & BELOW: Moana, voiced by Auli’i Cravalho holding Simea, voiced by Khaleesi Lambert-Tsuda; and Maui, voiced by Dwayne Johnson, in scenes from ‘Moana 2’. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
Photos show scenes from ‘Moana 2’. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP

“We developed the world, we developed the over-arching story that we’re still telling,” said Derrick. “We would screen it in our big theatre the way we watch all of us our projects here. There was a groundswelling, unanimous concert of everyone saying this needs to be on the big screen.”

“It was always going to be big,” added Hand. “It just kept on getting bigger.”

Moana 2 was at the nexus of a major shift for Disney and for Hollywood in calculating how to weigh theatrical and streaming. Different studios have different strategies and those are still evolving. But after rushing to throw as much content as possible on streaming services, companies like Disney began to rethink their approach.

This year, Disney has regained its box-office swagger, led by a pair of USD1 billion films in Inside Out 2 and Deadpool vs Wolverine. Moana 2 could make it three. But however well Moana 2 does, it’s not likely to hurt its appeal once it begins streaming. The most popular film on Disney+ last year? Moana. “We always felt that it deserved to be on the big screen” said Hand. “It’s the best way to tell a story.” But the shift for Moana 2, which returns Auli’i Cravalho as the voice of Moana and Dwayne Johnson as the voice of Maui, wasn’t easy.

First of all, that meant living up to the standard of the first film – one that Miller, who is of Samoan heritage, considers groundbreaking for its Pacific Islander representation.

“I knew as a writer that movie was going to change what was possible,” said Miller. “It was going to change the way when I walk into a room I was going to be able to pitch a story because people had a new understanding of what it meant to be of the Pacific.”

Miller, who founded the organisation PEAK (Pasifika Entertainment Advancement Komiti) as a way for Pasifika people to find community in Hollywood, is also a writer on the live-action Moana.

“My world has become all Moana all the time,” she said, laughing. Both films, the directors said, developed alongside each other, with many connections and shared cultural consultants.

Set three years after the original film, Moana 2 finds Moana again forced to head across the Pacific on an ocean adventure. But this time, she’s travelling with a crew, in a new canoe, and carrying new responsibilities. That includes her younger sister, Simea (Khaleesi Lambert-Tsuda). “The way the first film connected her to her past, she’s now connecting everyone to the future,” said Derrick. “So we added and created all these new characters when it was in series and we got to know them in a deep way.” Hand compares the series development to a workshop for the new characters.

“Yes, it was a massive undertaking – probably more so than what we initially imagined,” Hand said. “But ultimately we were telling that same story. A lot of stuff that went by the wayside just naturally helped the story be its proper fighting weight.”

Now, Moana is joined by a wayfinding crew that includes the characters Loto (Rose Matafeo), an engineer; Kele (David Fane), a grumpy farmer; and Moni (Hualālai Chung), a historian and storyteller.

“What people don’t realise is that the people in the Pacific found the last discoverable land on Earth,” said Derrick, who also has ancestral ties to Samoa. “They created the largest cultural ethnosphere in the world prior to westward expansion – one third of the Earth, all through the art and spirituality and science of wayfinding. So for me, it’s very important that each one of these crew members display that Indigenous genius that it took.” – Jake Coyle

Grandma just wanna have fun

PHOTO: ENVATO

ANN/THE STAR – I always have a great time when I’m with like-minded friends who aren’t afraid to embrace a bit of playful fun. We can even act a little quirky and laugh it off with a gentle excuse: ‘not guilty by reason of age’.

Perhaps it’s something in the durians from Yong Peng, where I live, that sparks this boldness for lighthearted absurdities – capturing the charming, carefree spirit of the Boomer generation. Who knows?

I am always looking for something that spurs, stirs, and reverberates within me. I think it is called, fun – perhaps even levity. It helps to loosen the grip on life, stay open, and feel engaged. If there’s a common trait among us, it is the desire to be happy, to be kind, and gentle with ourselves. Boomers want midlife to stretch forevermore, or at least into our eighties or more.

More often than not, it’s the simple things that make us happy. By smiling at the people we meet, and by going out of our way to applaud each other, we receive the extra boost and jaunty sangfroid, to get over the humps of each day. Helping others go through a period of profound sadness and heartache, creates a meaningful experience.

The beauty of human connection is in the daily positive interactions with others such as giving sincere compliments, and sharing kind words with strangers – that could change their day. Do invest in good feelings, fleeting as they are. For our own mental health, it is wise to mix with people whose approach to life is spontaneously optimistic.

PHOTO: ENVATO
PHOTO: ENVATO
PHOTO: ENVATO

ENJOY THE GOODNESS IN LIFE

Gracious living is learning to enjoy the goodness of life, and accept the sufferings that come unbidden. We need to equip our mind with Teflon resilience so that we can be strong in the broken places.

Beyond midlife, our bodies become less efficient, less obedient, and our memory power declines. The little losses are the signs of the times, but there is always more than one way to look at life.

As baby boomers, we are the trailblazers of ageing well. And yet, each time I need to do online applications to renew or update a document, I lose some precious brain cells. Our hard won wisdom seems incongruous with the pace of AI. Now, you’d be cranky too. It’s no wonder that mental health issues are given priority nowadays.

Stumbling after technology aside, the emotional parts of ageing can be sobering, even cringe-worthy. Nothing makes you feel older than having nieces and nephews in their forties and fifties. No matter how young you may look or feel, having a 40-year-old child, speaks for your age. However, I happily call that a blessing for having lasted so long in an overwhelming world.

That said, seniors need to have some savings to be happy. No one can feel relaxed with money worries. Giving creates joy but even generosity requires money. So the key to living with dignity is to save right and spend smart. Guilt-free splurging is reserved for celebrations and red-letter days.

Taking the bold step of showing up each day with good thoughts. Your inner reserve of joy may be replenished and preserved so that you don’t disintegrate or crumble on sudden impact with bad news.

If you want to be strong, you must be ready to face challenges, to adapt, and go with the flow. The ability to be reflective can act as a balm to difficult feelings, and a tool to boost mental fortitude. Do whatever works for you as long as it helps to lift you out of the doldrums.

I take my bicycle for a spin in the early morning. Cycling down an incline at a familiar stretch of road leading to the neighbourhood park, I let go of the pedals, and enjoy free-wheeling down the slope. Wowee! Releasing the ‘wild side’ in me makes me feel so alive.

Ah, “over the hill” can be really cool.

Another way to have a microdose of fun is to blow bubbles or play hide-and-seek with my grandkids – grandma just wanna have fun – erupting in shrieking laughter and making happy noise. It’s exhilarating and great bonding with the little ones, like receiving a second wind.

We can stave off age-related fallibilities by adopting mindset change. Embracing a youthful mindset means you maintain the quality of your imagination, the alertness of mind, and the passion to experience new places and people. It’s about investing in yourself, staying socially engaged, and the abandoning of fear.

While many of us are agonising over the outward signs of ageing, we should be more concerned about staying spiffy, spunky, sane, and spry. If you surround yourself with silver-haired sirens who are gungho about life, the enthusiasm spills over, and you will forget what was gnawing you in the first place.

NEWFOUND CONFIDENCE

One of the upsides of growing older is that we don’t care so much about what others think of us – it shows we have enough self-confidence and self-regard not to be rattled by trivialities.

Having the ability to laugh at ourselves means we have warmth and humanity. I don’t mind acting like the village crank so long as I get to create opportunities for joy and laughter.

Relishing fun makes living each day worthwhile and meaningful. To achieve this, you need to release yourself of unnecessary responsibilities and senseless obligations. Lighter things further by letting go of anxieties, and giving in to little adventures and harmless mischief.

Sometimes you get a kick out of life by choosing to age outrageously. Tame or titillating – I agonise at the lingerie boutique – naughty or nice. Purchasing them brightens my day like savouring a secret.

Be engaged with the essence of your being to live more passionately. The late American novelist Ernest M Hemingway, had this to say: “Try to learn to breathe deeply, really to taste food when you eat, and when you sleep, really to sleep. Try as much as possible to be wholly alive with all your might.”

Worth a try, right? The very idea of living fully could indeed prompt us to persist and flourish. – Mary Eu

Building collapse near Naples kills two children, woman

Emergency services attend the site of a building collapse in Saviano, Italy. PHOTO: AP

ROME (AFP) – Three people including two young siblings were killed near Naples in southern Italy on Sunday after the two-storey building where they lived collapsed, firefighters said.

The home collapsed on Sunday morning in the locality of Saviano, killing a boy and a girl who lived there with their family, as well as a woman yet to be officially identified, which local media reported was their mother. Rescuers recovered the father and a baby alive, “and unfortunately the lifeless bodies of the other two children”, firefighters wrote on X.

Local media gave the ages of the girl and boy as four and six.

After hours searching the rubble by hand helped by sniffer dogs, firefighters had located a third victim, an unidentified woman, fire service spokesman Luca Cari told RaiNews 24.

More than 60 civil protection volunteers had joined the rescue efforts, the Campania region wrote on Facebook.

The father and the baby rescued from the rubble were recovering in hospital, with the father in serious condition, media reports said.

Footage provided by firefighters showed two gaping holes in the roof of the building, which was partially collapsed.

The cause of the collapse may have been a gas explosion, news reports said.

Emergency services attend the site of a building collapse in Saviano, Italy. PHOTO: AP

Malaysia’s inflation in August moderates to 1.9pc

Malaysians shop for vegetables at a wet market in Bentong. PHOTO: AFP

ANN/THE STAR – Malaysia’s inflation in August moderated to 1.9 per cent compared to a year earlier, slightly less than forecast, according to the Statistics Department (DOSM).

The consumer price index (CPI) rose at a slightly lower rate than market expectations, which had predicted a two per cent increase, according to a poll.

DOSM said the increase of inflation in August was driven by the incline in the main groups of restaurant and accommodation services (3.2 per cent); personal care, social protection and miscellaneous goods and services (3.2 per cent); housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels (3.1 per cent) and recreation, sports and culture (two per cent).

Meanwhile, other main groups recorded an increased rate below the overall inflation rate of 1.9 per cent. However, clothing and footwear remained at negative 0.2 per cent in August 2024.

Chief Statistician Dr Mohd Uzir Mahidin noted that at the state level, most states experienced inflation rates below the national rate of 1.9 per cent.

However, four states recorded increases above the national inflation level namely Pulau Pinang (3.3 per cent), Pahang (2.8 per cent), Sarawak (2.5 per cent) and Selangor (2.3 per cent).

All states registered an increase in the inflation of food and beverages. The highest rate was recorded by Selangor at 2.8 per cent, followed by Pulau Pinang (2.7 per cent), Sarawak (two per cent), Pahang (1.9 per cent), Putrajaya (1.8 per cent) and Terengganu (1.6 per cent).

Malaysians shop for vegetables at a wet market in Bentong. PHOTO: AFP

Singapore core inflation rises to 2.7pc in August

Holiday expenses picked up more strongly while airfares recorded smaller declines. PHOTO: THE STRAITS TIMES

ANN/THE STRAITS TIMES – Core expenses of households in Singapore picked up in August as inflation in services rose, but overall inflation was still the lowest in over two years.

This leads some analysts to believe officials will hold steady on Singapore’s monetary policy in the October meeting and only move to loosen it in 2025.

Core inflation, which strips out private transport and accommodation costs to better reflect the expenses of households here, rose to 2.7 per cent year on year in August.

It was the first increase in core inflation since February, and comes after the indicator dropped to 2.5 per cent in July, the lowest level in more than two years.

Of all spending categories, services inflation climbed the most to come in at 3.3 per cent in August, from 2.9 per cent in July. This came as holiday expenses picked up more strongly while airfares recorded smaller declines.

Maybank economist Brian Lee attributed most of the rise in August holiday expenses inflation to package tours.

“Strong travel appetite from Singaporeans may have contributed to this uptick, possibly with bookings ahead of the September and December school holidays,” he said.

Year on year, overall or headline inflation dropped to 2.2 per cent in August from 2.4 per cent in July, driven by a fall in private transport prices. This was the lowest reading since April 2021.

However, the momentum in prices remain as on a month-on-month basis, core inflation rose 0.3 per cent, while overall inflation climbed 0.7 per cent.

Holiday expenses picked up more strongly while airfares recorded smaller declines. PHOTO: THE STRAITS TIMES

11 bit studios shares slump after ‘Frostpunk 2’ release

PHOTO: ENVATO

CNA – Shares in Polish video game maker 11 bit studios slumped 38 per cent yesterday to the bottom of Poland’s mid-cap index after the number of players of the company’s flagship Frostpunk 2 game failed to meet market expectations shortly after its release.

Frostpunk 2, the sequel to BAFTA-nominated society survival city-builder Frostpunk, was released last Friday evening.

The highest number of concurrent players of the game on the Steam platform reached 35,533 last Saturday.

“We expected a significantly higher players peak in the 80,000-100,000 range, so we consider 35,500 as a negative surprise,” said Erste Group analyst Piotr Bogusz, pointing to an eight times stronger “wishlist” – players who had expressed an interest in the game’s release – for Frostpunk 2 than the original at launch.

“Relatively poor ratings may also affect the purchasing decisions of players who have Frostpunk 2 on their wishlist,” he added.

PHOTO: ENVATO

UK finance minister vows to ‘rebuild’ country

Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves with Prime Minister Keir Starmer. PHOTO: AFP

LIVERPOOL (AFP) – British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves yesterday vowed to “rebuild Britain” after 14 years of Conservative leadership, warning of “difficult decisions” in a speech at the Labour Party conference.

The speech, which comes a little over a month before the ruling Labour Party’s first detailed budget, was closely watched by investors amid fears of tax hikes.

The government of Keir Starmer, who became premier after a landslide victory by his centre-left Labour party in a general election in July, has blamed the defeated Conservatives’ administration for a GBP22-billion (USD28 billion) “black hole” in public finances.

United Kingdom (UK) state debt in August reached a landmark high of 100 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product – its total annual output – a level unmatched since the early 1960s.

Starmer previously warned Britons that the budget announcement on October 30 would be “painful”, with tax rises and spending cuts expected.

Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves with Prime Minister Keir Starmer. PHOTO: AFP

Reeves in her speech yesterday vowed a “budget that will rebuild Britain and deliver the change Labour promised”, and to establish economic growth as the government’s “number one mission”.

She said she believes in delivering a “better Britain, a Britain of opportunity, fairness, and enterprise”.

“I know that promise has felt far off in recent years. As our growth, productivity and family incomes have fallen behind,” she added, announcing a “decade of national renewal”.

“We will make the choices necessary to secure our public finances and fix the foundations for lasting growth,” the minister said.

While “difficult decisions” will be made, she warned, “there will be no return to austerity” and taxes will not be raised on working people.

Labour has already pledged to axe a winter fuel allowance for 10 million pensioners – a vehemently criticised decision.

General-secretary of the trade union Unite Sharon Graham slammed what she called Starmer’s “cruel policy”.

“The priority that I’d like to hear from him is that he’s going to reverse the decision” to scrap the boost payment, Graham told Sky News.

Surging Ko claims LPGA Queen City crown in style

Lydia Ko lifts the trophy. PHOTO: AFP

AFP – Lydia Ko continued her late-season surge yesterday, firing a sensational nine-under par 63 to win the US LPGA Queen City Championship by five strokes on the heels of her Olympic and British Open triumphs.

New Zealand’s Ko started the day two shots behind Thailand’s Atthaya “Jeeno” Thitikul, but she seized control with an eagle at the 11th and powered to victory with a 23-under par total of 265.

She had seven birdies and no bogeys at TPC River’s Bend near Cincinnati, Ohio, where Jeeno started strong with a birdie and an eagle on the front nine but just couldn’t keep pace coming in.

“It has been pretty surreal,” Ko said of the last two months, which saw her complete her collection of Olympic medals – and secure her place in the LPGA Hall of Fame – with her Olympic triumph in Paris. She followed that with her first major title in eight years at the Women’s British Open at St Andrews.

“After having three weeks off (I was) not entirely sure what it was going to be like,” she said. “To have a round like this to cap off a win is pretty special.”

Lydia Ko lifts the trophy. PHOTO: AFP00

Ko drained a 15-foot birdie putt at the 10th to pull level with Jeeno, and made another 15-footer for eagle at the 11th to take a two-shot lead as the Thai player was unable to capitalize on the par-five.

Jeeno pulled back a stroke with a long birdie at the par-three 12th, but there was another two-shot swing at the 13th, where Ko’s superb second shot left her an eight-footer for birdie as Jeeno missed the green on the way to a bogey.

Ko got up and down for birdie at the 15th and punctuated the win with a birdie at the par-five 18th.

Jeeno carded a two-under par 70, but her pursuit of a fourth LPGA title – her first in an individual stroke play event since 2022 – was further doomed by bogeys at the 15th and 17th.

Her 18-under par total of 270 gave her solo second ahead of South Korean Ryu Hae-ran, who carded a five-under 67 for 271.

Ko’s victory was her third LPGA title of 2024. She also won the Tournament of Champions to start the year.

Her 22 titles are seven more than any other active LPGA player and the 27-year-old said her resurgent season has her reconsidering her career goals.

“It’s always been a goal of mine to do the career Grand Slam, but I just thought that would be so out there,” said Ko.

Murdoch’s REA ups offer for property website Rightmove

PHOTO: AP

LONDON (AFP) – REA Group, the Australian online property website majority-owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp empire, said yesterday it has made a third multi-billion-pound offer to buy British peer Rightmove.

The latest proposal, worth GBP6.1 billion (USD8.1 billion), comes after Rightmove rejected REA’s previous two bids made this month.

“We are genuinely disappointed at the lack of engagement by Rightmove’s Board,” REA chief executive officer Owen Wilson said in a statement published on the London Stock Exchange.

Rightmove confirmed in a statement that it had received a third proposal that was “unsolicited, non-binding and highly conditional”.

Rightmove chairman Andrew Fisher said the board rejected the first two proposals as they “were uncertain, highly opportunistic and unattractive”.

He added: “The board will continue to act on behalf of our shareholders and respond to the most recent proposal in due course.”

Shares in Rightmove were up 2.8 per cent in early deals on London’s FTSE 100 index.

REA made public its interest on September 2, noting “clear similarities” between the pair “in terms of their leading market positions in the core residential business”.

The first offer was worth GBP5.6 billion. Rightmove rejected a second proposal on September 18.

PHOTO: AP

Vietnam moves closer to investment-grade credit rating

PHOTO: THE STAR

ANN/THE STAR – Vietnam’s national credit rating is making significant strides toward achieving the official investment-grade ranking.

This was emphasised during a seminar titled ‘National Credit Rating and Investor Relations’ organised by the Finance Ministry’s Department of Debt Management and External Finance and the German Development Cooperation Organisation (GIZ) last Wednesday in Hanoi.

At the seminar, the director of the department Truong Hung Long noted that after more than two years of implementing the Project on Improving National Credit Rating for 2030, Vietnam has seen positive results.

This progress highlights the country’s ongoing efforts to enhance its creditworthiness and attract more foreign investment.

In the context of global economic fluctuations in 2022, many countries experienced significant instability due to geopolitical conflict, leading to downgrades from credit rating agencies.

However, Vietnam bucked the trend. Both Moody’s and S&P recognised Vietnam’s resilience, with S&P upgrading the country’s rating from BB to BB+ and maintaining a “stable” outlook, while Moody’s upgraded it from Ba3 to Ba2, also with a “stable” outlook.

In 2023, Vietnam received an upgrade from Fitch, moving from BB to BB+ with a “stable” outlook. This indicates that Vietnam is now just one level away from investment-grade rating according to S&P and Fitch and two levels away according to Moody’s.

Long emphasised the benefits of improving a national credit rating, noting its positive impact on the overall economy.

An enhanced credit rating strengthens the nation’s reputation and fosters trust among international investors, which is crucial for reducing the cost of mobilising foreign capital.

With the decline in official development assistance and preferential loans to Vietnam, the importance of a strong national credit rating becomes more pronounced.

Head of the Project on Strengthening Public Financial Management under GIZ Vietnam Arne Fraemk said that Vietnam was at a pivotal moment in its journey towards becoming a high-income country.

PHOTO: THE STAR