Monday, October 21, 2013

'Slave': Unfettered, Unprecedented Force

Enlarge Image
From left, Michael Fassbender, Lupita Nyong'o and Chiwetel Ejiofor. Fox Searchlight
Movie audiences have never been presented with anything quite like the intertwined beauty and savagery of "12 Years a Slave," so it's anyone's guess whether they'll extend the embrace that Steve McQueen's film deserves. Such is the power of this landmark event, though, that it seems certain to transcend the movie realm and become a new reference point in contemporary culture—a defining vision of what slavery looked like, and felt like, in the U.S. before the Civil War.
It's a sun-scorched vision of hell that puts Hieronymus Bosch in the shade. At the same time—and here's the genius of the production, and of John Ridley's script—it's a thrilling tale of survival, based on a celebrated 1853 memoir by Solomon Northup. A free black man living happily and prosperously with his wife and children in Saratoga, N.Y., Solomon (Chiwetel Ejiofor) is pulled into a nightmare world when he is abducted by bounty hunters in 1841, then shipped off to a plantation in Louisiana as a slave in shackles and chains.
At first the educated, sweet-spirited victim doesn't realize what's happening to him, but he's brought all too quickly to understand the ruthlessness of slave traders who treat the men, women and children they sell as talking livestock—"My sentimentality," says a pitiless trader played by Paul Giamatti, "extends the length of a coin"—and the inhumanity of plantation owners who buy them. "There is no sin," says one owner, Edwin Epps, a lust-addled, Scripture-quoting brute played by Michael Fassbender. "A man does how he pleases with his property."
Like its source material, "12 Years a Slave" is a polemic, and a furious one. How could it not be, given the physical horror and moral squalor of the society it explores? Solomon's agonies—the lashings, the capricious beatings—are barely endurable for him, and a test of our willingness to bear witness, even though it's hard to turn away from the astonishing range and impassioned conviction of Mr. Ejiofor's portrayal. A slave named Patsey (Lupita Nyong'o, in another of the film's brilliant performances) endures even more terrible punishment at the hands of Epps, whose tortured sexuality leads him to rape her ritually, and to have her whipped until the flesh falls from her back.
The polemic is also a work of art. Mr. McQueen was a visual artist before he became a filmmaker, and he and his cinematographer, Sean Bobbitt, give us a succession of images that seem discovered rather than devised. (In one extended, excruciating sequence that I'll describe obliquely, so as not to diminish its impact, Solomon touches his toes to a patch of mud like a dancer performing a life-or-death gavotte.) The artistry extends to the heightened, almost literary language spoken by the slaves among themselves, and occasionally to their masters; it's a choice that could have fallen into affectation but serves to honor inchoate feelings that might otherwise have gone unexpressed. Yet Mr. Ridley's exemplary script gives everyone his intricate due. The white men and women who inhabit the film aren't all undifferentiated monsters—one can imagine them being tender with their children and generous to their friends—and those of them who perpetrate the most flagrant evil are anything but banal.
Mr. Fassbender shines, however malignantly, as the worst villain of the bunch. Epps is the lethally serious counterpart of the jovial monster played by Christoph Waltz in "Django Unchained," and one more reminder that villainy in drama is its own reward. Benedict Cumberbatch is Ford, a plantation owner with a paternalistic bent; he recognizes Solomon's intellectual and musical gifts and treats him reasonably well, but still sees him as a valuable piece of property. Paul Dano's overseer, Tibeats, is terrifying for his invincible stupidity.
Watch a clip from the film "12 Years a Slave." Actor Chiwetel Ejiofor plays Solomon Northup, a free black man from upstate New York in the antebellum United States, who is abducted and sold into slavery. (Photo/Video: Fox Searchlight Pictures)

As an emblem of plantation society's contradictions, Alfre Woodard's Mistress Shaw is serenely, almost surreally charming; a black woman and former slave, she is married to a white plantation owner. Brad Pitt's Bass is the antithesis of evil, a Canadian abolitionist who may be the least convincing character in the film because he shows up out of nowhere and delivers the script's only lapse into didacticism. That's easy to forgive on three counts, though: Mr. Pitt is perfectly fine in the role; as one of the producers, he was instrumental in getting "12 Years a Slave" to the screen; and the abolitionist's message of equality is a worthy one. "Your story is amazing," Bass tells Solomon gravely, "and in no way good." The film is amazing, and in every way good.

Saturday, October 19, 2013

5 Steps To Looking 10 Years Younger

5 Steps To Looking 10 Years Younger

By Steve & Becky Holman

More Details, Click here


Did you know that once you hit 40 years of age, whether you're a man or a women, your body starts aging FASTER than normal? Studies have shown that without the proper nutrients and exercise, your body will age about 6 months EXTRA for every year that passes. Think about that! If you are 40, that means by the time you hit 44 you will LOOK and FEEL 48. And by the time you reach 60, you will LOOK and FEEL 70 YEARS OLD! We see this every day... just look around you.
Did you know that 90% of people over the age of 35 lose enough muscle every year to burn off an additional 4 pounds of body fat? That means you not only lose the only thing on your body that creates shape, tone, and strength—you also gain more fat every year, even if your calories stay the same.
Did you know that all of this is reversible at any age? That there are specific ways to move, eat, and think that tell your brain to STOP this rapid aging process... and even SLOW IT DOWN to the point where you're aging less than a year for every year? That means you can look younger at 40 than you do at 35... or if you're like Becky and I, younger at 50+ than we did at 40!
This is not fantasy talk. This does not require a boatload of anti-aging drugs, supplements, or gimmicks. And, this works for anyone, male or female, and works at any age. 35, 45, 55, 65, 75... you name it. The biology is exactly the same.
My years as editor-in-chief at Iron Man Magazine have allowed me to peer into the secret routines of the anti-aging experts. Over the years, both Becky and I have picked up SO many tips, tricks, and strategies that have allowed us to literally reverse the aging process, at least from a cellular level. That means our body's look, feel, and MOVE younger than our chronological age.
We've taught this System to countless men and women over the years, and it always begins with these 5 key principles you must apply in order to STOP the rapid onset of aging that's going on right now, reverse it, and begin "aging backwards" by restoring your body's natural youth hormones.
That said, we have to warn you: What you are about to hear may go against all the conventional diet and exercise advice you've been hearing. That's because the world has, to be utterly frank, gone soft! "Core training", hot yoga, spin classes, tai chí all of these are just fine, but they won't slow your aging, and they certainly will never shape your muscles or burn off stubborn body fat. No way!

These 5 steps reveal the things you absolutely MUST AVOID if you want to slow the aging process, reclaim your health, and achieve your ideal body.

What you need is a splash of cold water, a touch of Old School, and the honest truth. Sound good? Let's dive in!

Step 1: Forget Low-Fat Diets

Forget Low Fat!Low fat everything has been the craze now for decades and look around. What has that wonderful bit of advice done for the bodies you see? We're fatter, sicker, and more addicted to sugar and carbs than any other time in history. And, we're passing these habits to our kids.
Fats are not to be feared – they're to be embraced. They do not make you fat; rather, they help your body regenerate your power hormones. Testosterone, the 'strength' hormone, for example, is the direct result ofcholesterol and dietary fat intake. That's right: "Cholesterol" isn't a dirty word! Your body needs dietary fat and cholesterol in order to produce ANY AND ALL vital hormones.
People on low fat diets look drawn, gaunt, and weak. They are often sick, sometimes to the point of literally breaking down. And, they can never just enjoy eating out. Every meal and every gram must be accounted for. Do you really think this will make you younger? Of course not... it will worry you to death if it doesn't kill you first!
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Step 2: Stop Running in Circles

Stop Spinning Your Wheels!Gym classes can be fun, if you like sitting in one place and torturing yourself. But have you noticed how little people change their bodies in these classes? Sure, it's good "cardio", but cardiovascular conditioning can be gained with far less time and effort.
Treadmills, and any form of endurance training (especially running) does very little to help the age reversal process. Many times, these long-duration exercise bouts accelerate the aging process by increasing free radicals. These free radicals are scavengers that prey on your body's essential nutrients and tissues.
There's a smart way to exercise... we'll cover that in a minute. And, what's wonderful is that it takes you about ¼ the time of traditional workouts. We'll cover more details on the next page. =========

Step 3: Stop Blaming Everything On How Old You Are

Stop Spinning Your Wheels!The guys to the left are not fat because they are old—they're fat becausethey eat, think, and move like a fat, old, dying person! Becky and I are both in our 50s—older than the guys in this photo—and I still sport a nice six-pack, and Becky transformed her body from the typical "middle age mom" to a slim, toned, and super-sexy woman who looks 10 years younger. (See the next page for photos!)
Listen: Your body doesn't own a clock. Studies have shown that men and women in their 90s were able to gain muscle tone in just a matter of weeks of simple weight training. I've personally seen men and women transform their physiques at literally all ages—25 to 95!
If you're around those naysayers who are constantly talking about growing old, all their aches and pains, and how life is just down hill after 40—LEAVE! Surround yourself with positive thinkers who absolutely crave a challenge. A challenge is what keeps you YOUNG, and the best challenge there is happens to be taking control of your health and body.
We'll show you HOW we do that on the next page.
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Step 4: Avoid Chronic Dehydration

Drink Your Water!Water isn't just "good for you" — water burns fat. Water suppresses hunger. Water renews your skin. Just drinking 12 ounces of pure water every day can take a few years off your face in a matter of weeks. You'll also drop fat, have more energy, and save your kidneys and liver from chronic overwork.
When your kidneys are taxed from too little water, your liver has to take over. Now, get this: Your liver is your number one fat-burning organ. Do you REALLY want it processing liquids and toxins rather than BURNING FAT? No way, right? Well, grab a glass of water, and watch the mirror. Within a few weeks, the change to your face and body will be noticeable.
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Step 5: Work Out LESS (Yes, Less)

Work Out LESSIf you don't work out at all, you're going to lose muscle tissue every year. That means you'll get fatter and flabbier each and every year with less shape and more sag. Is this what you desire? No way, right?
Well, the answer is old school resistance training. Here's the secret: hardly anyone is doing it right!
Becky and I have seen literally thousand of pro fitness athletes train over the years. The ones who looked the best — and that means looked the youngest, most toned, and had the least amount of unwanted fat — were the ones who left the gym while others were still warming up!
Over the past decade, Becky and I have developed a men and women's workout system that we call F4X Training System. This is a revolutionary way of combining four specific exercises done in literally a matter of minutes. That's ALL YOU NEED... And don't let anyone tell you otherwise!
That's right: We do not do endless cardio sessions (the F4X Training System is a great cardiovascular workout) and we do not spend an hour a day in the gym. We have a life, thank you. We have kids, and we value being both fit and real people at the same time. The F4X Training System was our personal breakthrough to achieving our ideal bodies, staying in tip-top shape with minimal time, and having a life outside a gym.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Step into Shilpa Shetty’s world

It’s rare to find celebrities who are unguarded and utterly gracious. Bollywood actress and Shilpa Shetty certainly falls into this bracket.
The 39-year-old star makes her own tea from the machine installed in her hotel suite in Dubai and offers to make you one too. The offer sounded genuine enough but she had me floored when she offered a lush looking chocolate cupcake that was laid out on the coffee table near us.
“I can’t have any since it is Navarathri and it’s not eggless. But you should try some, they look so good,” said Shetty, who was on a nine-day vegetarian fast for the Indian festival.
Shetty was in Dubai as the guest of honour at an event celebrating everything shoes at the level Shoe District in The Dubai Mall last week.
“I am here to do what I do best. To shop and to shop some more,” said Shetty with a laugh.
She can certainly afford it.
Shetty, who made her Bollywood debut in 1993 blockbuster Baazigar, became a global star when she was crowned the winner of 2007’s Celebrity Big Brother UK,amidst a vicious racism row. While she was a popular star with superlative dancing skills in India, the grace she displayed while she tackled bullying by her inmates won her brownie points from all quarters.
Instantly, she became one of the most recognised faces in Britain and even had invites to visit the Queen. The poster girl for multi-culturalism, who triggered a global race row, was showered with love and a slew of lucrative endorsement deals came her way. And what finished off the fairytale twist in her life with a flourish was her encounter with her then business partner, now life partner Raj Kundra.
“Raj is the most romantic person I have met,” said Shetty. Together they run a business empire and are proud parents to a 17-month-old Viaan Raj Kundra. From owning an Indian Premier League cricket team to her own perfume and a chain of wellness salons, their union has prospered.
tabloid! takes you into Shetty’s world with an exclusive interview.
Shilpa, the mother
“I am what you call a hands-on mummy. It’s the first time I have ever left him with my mum overnight. It’s difficult to come to terms with that, but I thought it would be selfish on my part to make him travel back and forth between Mumbai and Dubai. Someone intelligent once said to me: you miss the child more than they miss you. When I was growing up my parents worked very hard to give us a good life. They were middle class and they made sacrifices so that we all could go for holidays. Fortunately, I have the choice today to decide if I want to work full-time or not. And my mum, who is my biggest support-system, said if you have the luxury of being able to do so then just make the most of it.”
Shilpa, the career woman
“After becoming mother to Viaan, I am very choosy about the work I take on. It’s a personal choice to stay away from films because our life becomes too erratic. I have been there, done that for 18 or 19 years in Bollywood. When you are an actor, you don’t have time for yourself so how are you ever going make time for the baby? If I decide to take on something, I want to give it my all. This is a self-imposed sabbatical. I am not planning to act in films for at least a year unless something earth-shattering comes my way. Right now, I can only afford to take a day in a week for work. I have meetings at home.”
Shilpa, the wife and being Mrs Raj Kundra
“He is incredibly sweet and romantic. The day I got married, something funny happened. He began emptying my bag and he took my purse out. He took out the [credit] cards out and snipped it into two. I don’t ever have to splurge because it’s my husband who does all the splurging. I am blessed. Whenever I say, isn’t that nice – he surprises me with that gift on Christmas or anniversary. It was love at first sight for both of us. Now, we both cherish Viaan because I became a mother at 37. It was a huge development in our life and I had a difficult pregnancy. We both consider him a miracle.”
Shilpa, the producer
“I turn producer with a film that’s not Shilpa Shetty-esque. It’s this dark comedy that takes on Hindi cinema. It stars Sunny Deol and Harman Baweja and releases on January 11th. The director convinced me to pitch in a cameo.”
Shilpa Shetty, the Celebrity Big Brother sensation
“Every time there’s a racist attack on someone in any part of the world, the first call [to seek a comment] comes to me. Recently, when the girl of Indian origin won Miss America I had reporters calling me for my comment. My take? Why are you asking me this question? We have all moved on from Celebrity Big Brother.People gave me a lot of respect and it was not because of my body of work. It was because they liked the person in me. It’s a huge compliment because actors can be loved for the roles they choose. But there are few actors who are liked because of the person they are. After I won the Celebrity Big Brother UK my sister said: “you got the biggest award of your life. You got the award for playing you.” That thought stuck in my mind. My goal is that after I am dead and gone, I want people to remember me for the person I am.”
Shilpa, the IPL Rajasthan Royals owner
“I am obsessed with cricket. But to be honest, I prefer the IPL format to test matches.”
Shilpa, the yummy mummy
“After my pregnancy, I had put on 22.5 kilos. I looked like a baby elephant. But I shed it all by working out rigorously and following a strict diet. I lost 17 kilos in four month through cardio, yoga and cross fit. I used to do low carb, no-carb every alternate day. When you are a fitness icon, there is a lot of pressure to maintain your figure. At that time, when I went to restaurants I heard people whispering about my weight gain. They expect you to snap back into shape. It took me 10 months to shed all that weight.”
Shilpa, the shopper
“It’s the biggest stress buster. These days, I love shopping for Viaan. There’s this place in Juhu [Mumbai] where they have the cutest stuff for babies. I brought him a colouring board because I am petrified that he would scribble on my precious paintings.”
It’s all in the shoe...
As she checked out the level Shoe District that houses footwear from leading designers, we asked her about her favourite shoe designers:
“Christian Louboutin – his shoes are classic and can be worn for any occasion. I love the feel of Prada shoes and the comfort of Fendi. I like Miu Miu and Nicholas Kirkwood. A shoe can decide how stylish you are.”

Southern Spice: ‘Krrish 3’ in Tamil



  • A still from 'Krrish 3'
As the Indian festival of Diwali approaches and films fight for screen space, Tamil actors Vishal and Karthi have a rival in Bollywood film — Krrish 3, starring Hrithik Roshan. The superhero flick will also be released in Tamil.
Shibhu Thameens, a successful producer, distributor and theatre owner says he’s releasing the Tamil version in the south Indian states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala.
Krrish 3 earns the distinction of being released in maximum screens around the world, a first in the history of Indian cinema, according to its producers. The Tamil version’s lyrics were written by Annamalai.
The film is scheduled to be released across the world on November 4.

Sunday, September 29, 2013

BCCI race: no plum post for Dalmia, Srinivasan still rules

Jagmohan Dalmiya, interim chief of the Indian cricket board who who bailed it out during a crisis period, was left without any plum post and had to be satisfied with being only the chairman of the North East Development Committee at the board's Annual General Meeting (AGM) here Sunday. At the AGM of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) here Sunday, Dalmiya's name was doing the rounds for the post of Indian Premier League (IPL) chairman, which post finally went to Ranjib Biswal.
Sources told IANS that it was Dalmiya's age that went against his appointment as the IPL chairman. Dalmiya, 73, was the given the charge to promote the game in the northeastern states.
The appointment of Biswal as the IPL chairman was severely protested by the Dalmiya-headed Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB). The only key position that went to the CAB was that Chitrak Mitra retained his seat as the vice-president.
While Dalmiya, a former BCCI and International Cricket Council (ICC) president, missed out on a plum post, his three junior colleagues in the CAB found places in other important committees.
CAB joint secretaries Subir Ganguly and Sujan Mukherjee were named in the IPL governing council and NCA sub-committees while treasurer Biswarup Dey was promoted from the NCA sub-committee to the finance committee.
A top office-bearer in the BCCI told IANS that it was Srinivasan's manouvre to keep out Dalmiya.
"Srinivasan was the man who was instrumental in banning Dalmiya from the BCCI. Srinivasan knew that giving any more power to Dalmiya could have spelt doom for him in future," the official said on the condition of anonymity.

Dalmiya took over as the interim chief of the BCCI in June after Srinivasan had to step aside as the board president after his son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan was arrested by Mumbai police on charges of betting after the spot-fixing scandal broke out in the Indian Premier League (IPL). Dalmiya ensured smooth sailing for the BCCI during its most troubled times.

Spinner Monty Panesar feared England career was over

England spinner Monty Panesar has admitted that he thought he had destroyed his international career after being fined for urinating on a nightclub doorman.


   
The incident occurred two months ago, after Panesar was asked to leave a club in Brighton on the English
 
south coast.
   
The 31-year-old was fined by police and released by county side Sussex, but he was nonetheless named in the England squad for the return Ashes series in Australia later this year.
   
He says that he regrets the incident, but insists that it was not a deliberate act.
   
"I know it looks terrible, but I wasn't as drunk as people believe," he told British weekly newspaper The Mail on Sunday.
   
"Yes, I'd had a lot to drink, but I wasn't paralytic. I was asked to leave and then got caught short. The next thing I knew the bouncers were shouting at me and running after me.
   
"I swear I didn't see them and I had no intention of purposefully urinating on them or near them. To be honest, I barely went (urinated) at all and I'm pretty sure I didn't hit them."
   
He added: "The next morning I woke up and thought, 'What have I done?'
   
"My first reaction was that I'd just thrown my England career away, maybe even my whole cricket career. I felt very lonely and very depressed. It was a very dark time."
   
However, after joining Essex for the remainder of the domestic season, he called the England management to apologise for his behaviour and was rewarded with an international recall.
   
"I just can't tell you how thrilled I am with the selection," Panesar said.
   
"It's an incredible boost I needed as a cricketer and as a person, after a chapter in my life I'm ashamed of."
   
Matters were made worse when a video of Panesar being restrained by bouncers from the club emerged a few days after the incident, which his new Essex team-mates took great delight in showing him.
   
"I knew it was out there, but I hadn't seen it and had no wish to, either," Panesar said.
   
"But the boys showed it in the dressing room and had a friendly laugh at my expense. It's how sport deals with things like this.
   
"I was fine with it but, of course, it didn't make great viewing. I've seen it now, I lost whatever dignity I had, and I have no intention of ever seeing it again."
   
Panesar was the subject of fresh controversy this week when the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) handed him a suspended one-game ban for acting in a "potentially threatening and intimidating" manner towards Worcestershire's Ross Whiteley.
   
"I wouldn't say I was either threatening or intimidating," Panesar said.
   
"But I will admit to becoming incredibly frustrated because I was having no luck at all, with inside edges and catches falling just short.
   
"I have to be aggressive when I bowl, but it was a minor incident that I accept. The ECB and I have spoken about it and I must be mindful of my behaviour, but it's not seen as a problem by England."

Book Talk: Best-selling Jamie Ford on writing that second novel

Jamie Ford admits he was taken aback by the runaway success of his debut novel "Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet" and was sidetracked for a while on his next work by the self-consciousness this produced.
But an invitation to write a story for a literary event led to the tale of
 an orphan boy who thinks he sees his mother in a movie, which grew into "Songs of Willow Frost", out last week.
Ford revisits historical Seattle in his story of William Eng, who travels through the Depression-era city in search of his mother Willow, whom he has not seen since she was carried half-dead out of their apartment when he was a child.
Ford spoke with Reuters about living up to a debut book that spent more than two years on the New York Times best seller list.
How did you come up with the character of Willow?
She definitely took some time. I looked at that time period. I began with the orphanage and began with the character of William. This was coming 19 years after a flu epidemic and it seemed like a really volatile time. To place a Chinese woman here ... I guess I always sympathise with characters who are caught between worlds. I'm half-Chinese. I either never feel Chinese enough or never feel Caucasian enough.
It just seemed as if there was a bunch of really interesting history and Willow was a great character to walk the reader through all that. Plus, the more I read about (actress) Anna May Wong, the more I felt for her being a Chinese woman who had dalliances with white men - producers, directors - but because of miscegenation laws she could never marry a Caucasian man and she was really shunned by a lot of the Chinese community.
For this particular book, what were some of the difficulties of writing and what were the joys?
One of the difficulties was, you know, the second book. Just trusting my gut. That was hard. When I wrote "Hotel" nobody cared. When I wrote this one there was suddenly a high level of expectation. The joy was that I'm happy writing. I love the process, I love the research. Occasionally something unexpected will happen and a new character will walk onto the stage. I'll feel "Oh, I've made a new friend today". My wife didn't read the manuscript until it was completed but I remember telling her those moments when I really liked this character and I feel terrible for what I've done to this character. You engage with them. In my mind, my characters have immortal souls - they're in some parallel universe, doing their thing. When they get to that point where they seem fully formed, it's a very joyful moment.
Did you expect "Hotel" to do as well as it did?
Yes, I expected it to be a tremendous success and I went out and bought a Porsche, knowing I could pay for it later. No, seriously, if I had sold 15,000 copies I would have been over the moon. My measure for success was to have someone buy it and like it that didn't share my same last name.
Did it make it harder to write "Willow"?
It did. You know, I wrote another book in the middle. I changed the process a little bit because I was a little wary. With "Hotel", nobody saw it until it was done. But when I was 100 pages in I showed (the other book) to my wife and my agent and got a lot of feedback. I left the door open and there were a lot of cooks in the kitchen and I ended up rewriting it for about 18 months. It just got to a point where it was all scar tissue. But in the meantime I would turn in a draft and then I would be researching the next book, which was this book. Once I read a couple pages of what I thought might be a good beginning to this book at the Humanities Washington forum, I showed those 12 hastily scribbled pages to my editor. She loved them and she said, if you'd like to take a break from the other project and pursue this, go for it. And I did. It feels as if I vented all that angst in that other book.
Any advice for aspiring writers?

When I have aspiring writers or students ask me for advice, I've told them to go to a garage sale, buy three really horrible out-of-print books, pay no more than a quarter apiece for them and force yourself to read them with a writer's eye. By doing that, you'll notice mistakes or quick, sloppy writing or whatever you notice. And you'll notice that in your own writing. I found that if you think Michael Chabon is a brilliant writer and that all you read is Michael Chabon, when you try to write, it's like trying to lose weight and only looking at beauty magazines. It's really discouraging. That doesn't mean you should read crap all the time but don't try to play Mozart the first time you sit down at the piano. Start with scales.

'Doctor Sleep' was a challenge for Stephen King

Pop culture consumes authors, musicians and actors and quickly moves on. Only a few have staying power, and Stephen King is one of those rare figures.

With the release this week of "Doctor Sleep," his much anticipated sequel to "The Shining," the 66-year-old King continues to
 release and inspire new projects more than four decades after he first started to scare the bejeezus out of everybody. A stage musical he wrote with John Mellencamp is about to begin touring the country, "Under the Dome" was a surprise television hit of the summer and a film project based on his novella "A Good Marriage" is in the works as well.
"I always knew that if I hung around that I'd get hot again," King says with a laugh. "Sooner or later everything that goes around comes around. I just thought of guys like Billy Joel. I thought if Billy Joel can come back, I can come back."
With "Doctor Sleep," King revisits a grown-up Danny Torrance and the extra creepy best-selling novel that became a milestone film for Stanley Kubrick and Jack Nicholson. In this update, Dan is a recovering alcoholic and a mentor to a 12-year-old whose shining is stronger than his own.
King spoke with The Associated Press earlier this summer about how he approached the tricky task of writing "Doctor Sleep" and the home life that has produced two more literary voices:
Writing a sequel to a beloved book so many years later had to be tricky. How did you approach it?
When I went into it I thought to myself, if I do this I can probably never satisfy the expectations of the audience because so many people who read "The Shining," I got them while they were young and malleable, they were young adults, teenagers. I meet people all the time who say, "That book scared the s--- out of me," and I'll say, "How old were you when you read the book or saw the movie?" and they'll say 16. And if you were 16 then, you're probably 50 now and a little bit case hardened when it comes to scary things. I was curious. I wanted to see what happens to Danny Torrance, so I took my shot.
What do you think of the book now that you're done with it?
I like it. I think it's pretty good. I kind of approached it with the idea of it's a movie sequel where the story's supposed to be different but it's supposed to have the elements of the original that were successful, and I thought that's a real challenge. Let me see if I can do something that's really good, that has some of the elements that scared people in "The Shining" and create a story that's entirely on its own and that people could pick up and read even if they never read "The Shining" in their life. It was fun to take the shot.
That's going to be one of the literary events of 2013. Do you enjoy the attention of moments like those?
The short answer is no, I really don't know how to cope with that. I think one of the reasons writers are writers is because they're introverts basically. I'm pretty comfortable in a room by myself, creating stories. I don't have any sense that people are looking over my shoulder. It's a one-man game. When you write a book you don't have a whole team of writers in the way there is, for instance, on "Under the Dome" or some of the film projects that I've worked on. So I like that a lot. But I would be lying to you if I didn't say when you meet a big group of people that come to a reading or a talk or something like that, there's a certain validation. When they put their hands together, you say, "You know what? Somebody was out there the whole time and they were paying attention." That's a good thing and it warms you up.
You aren't the only King with a new book this year. Both of your sons, Joe Hill and Owen King, published novels last spring.
Joe knocked it out with "NOS4A2." I love that book. He's in his wheelhouse now. No question. Owen published his first novel, "Double Feature," in March and it's an entirely different thing. It's funny. It's fall on your knees funny, just roll on the floor funny, and that's a different kind of sensibility entirely.
In a past interview, Joe described his upbringing with Owen and their sister Naomi in idyllic terms with parents who encouraged reading and imagination. Was it really like that?

We all had our noses in books. And we lived way out in the country. There wasn't a lot in the way of TV the way that there is now with these satellite deals and everything. We were a little bit constrained there. We all loved the movies and I'd pick them up at school on Friday afternoon and if there was a Spielberg picture or something, we'd go to Portland and see "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" or whatever it was, and just have a blast. ... I used to get them to read me books on cassette tapes. I would pay $10 a cassette or something like that, and they would read me all kinds of stuff. And, of course, Joe has blocked out all of his memories of me chaining them up in the cellar and driving nails into their little legs and stuff.

World's longest-running cartoon to go digital in Japan

The world's longest-running cartoon is to go fully digital, its Japanese broadcaster said Friday, abandoning hand-drawn celluloid-based animation after a run of 44 years.
Fuji Television Network said episodes of "Sazae-san" aired from October would be produced entirely digitally. The


move will mean there are no hand-drawn cartoons left on Japanese television, according to the Association of Japanese Animations.
Until the 1990s many cartoons were created by artists working directly on celluloid, a painstaking process that meant characters had to be drawn in many different postures to give them impression of movement as the camera was repeatedly started and stopped.
Two decades ago, computer animations began to become widespread, slowly squeezing out the traditional method.
"Sazae-san", which first aired in 1969, revolves around the life of the Mrs Sazae of the title, a cheerful but klutzy full-time housewife who lives with her parents, husband, son, brother and sister.
The 30-minute episodes, which can readily garner more than one-in-seven Sunday evening viewers, tend to focus on tiny incidents in the family's everyday life and are dotted with seasonal festivals.
"Doraemon", a Japanese cartoon about a robot cat from the future that has a following across Asia went entirely digital in 2002. 
"Sazae-san", whose broadcast denotes the end of the weekend for many Japanese, began the switch in 2005.

Bangladesh Book Fair offers treat to bibliophiles

Bookworms in the city are in for a treat! More than 20 publishers from neighbouring Bangladesh are showcasing a rich diversity of novels, essays, short stories at the Bangladesh Book Fair here.

The third Bangladesh Book Fair, that began Thursday, is drawing book lovers to try
 
oeuvre of around a lakh of books, with titles on Bangladesh Liberation War and the country's folk tales stealing the limelight.
"There are 28 publishers and books exclusively from Bangladesh," Kazi Moshtaque Zahir, First Secretary (Press) of the Bangladesh Deputy High Commission in Kolkata, told IANS.

Organised by the Bangladesh Deputy High Commission, Bangladesh Exports Promotion Bureau in collaboration with the Academic and Creative Publishers Association of Bangladesh, the week-long exposition will also bring intellectuals and literati (like Rabeya Khatun, Faridur Reza Sagar) from the nation as speakers in two seminars.

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Hair: buns and bobs, this season's star styles

With each new season come new in-vogue hairstyles. The fall/winter season announces a major comeback for the bob, which is already turning heads on runways and red carpets everywhere. Buns, which were sophisticated and elaborate last season, will remain stylish, but in more minimalist versions,
just like tie-dye hair color, which has become more natural for the fall.
Simple buns
A timeless staple of runway style, buns can take many forms. This season, they are simple, unfussy or even slightly messy. The Viktor & Rolf and Rad Hourani haute couture collections, as well as the Christian Dior ready-to-wear collection, all included quick and easy buns in their Fall/Winter 2013 runway shows for a very natural effect. This uncomplicated hairstyle matches the season's makeup looks, also stripped down and simple.
Bobs, the season's trendiest look 
Angled, short, structured or natural: the bob is huge this season in all of its forms, offering a style that is at once modern and retro, chic and uncomplicated. The trend has been amplified by a number of celebrities, including Rita Ora and Beyoncé, who have transformed their look with the season's hottest haircut. For the fall/winter season, French hair salon chain Camille Albane is offering its "Cheeky Bob," a structured cut, parted down the middle for an uncomplicated yet glamorous style.

Natural tie-dyed color
Lothmann, another French hair salon chain, is highlighting natural ombré hair coloring this season. The look offers a very subtle two-tone, sun-kissed look and is a perfect way to prolong the summer. Thierry Lothmann, the brand's director, explains, "The look is based on progressive layering of color from the middle to the ends of the hair without a clear and sudden separation -- you know, that horrible line that you sometimes see appearing to cut the hair in two." 

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Ranbir Kapoor to play a teenager in Jagga Jasoos

There's this thing about Ranbir Kapoor - Out in the open, there's a cheeky little kid aspect to him. That sense of fun and adventure is something I find appealing. At home, he is the shy type but always respectful to his guests and friends, attending each one of them. Now you really stop to ponder on the question - What really makes him a Besharam? The answer is his approach towards his movies, the desperation to be called the new superstar and his will to survive, come what may, never to be pulled down. For once you want to believe that Ranbir must've signed Besharam for his personal life would've spiralled out of control and his soaring professional career was in danger of imploding. Kidding! Ranbir has proved himself to be someone unique - he has managed to excavate the sensitive soul that lurks beneath a swaggering arrogance, both on and off the screen. This Kapoor lad only buys commitment. Here's how - his background - his own history, is way more important than what he can achieve as a professional. Mother is an actress, grandfather was an actor, director and a producer, father is an actor, grandfather's father was an actor, uncles are actors, cousin sisters are actors. Ranbir's seen all this and all that you can imagine in an actor's life. So he doesn't buy success. He doesn't buy failure. He only buys commitment. That commitment as of now is Besharam. 

You are in a league of your own Ranbir. But when you work with newcomers or actors one film old, do they sense of you over-powering them? 
I don't think I overpower my co-stars. With Pallavi Sharda and Amitosh Nagpal, both have a lot of experience in theatre and have faced the camera before. They are far more enthusiastic than one can imagine. They give more. They add more to the scene. They might not have the stardom that I have, but in a working relationship there is no stardom. It's only two actors working on a scene trying to make certain words on paper come alive. Stardom doesn't count there. What counts is your talent, your intelligence and your hardwork. I've worked with so many new girls - Nargis, Ileana, Shazahn, Sonam and now Pallavi. They are as hard working as Deepika PadukonePriyanka Chopra or Katrina Kaif. I hope Pallavi and Amitosh get the stardom and become established stars in the business and I'd love to work with both of them again.

You've worked with the Kashyap Bros. Bifurcate them please! 
I've worked with both the brothers. But the comparison is startling. Abhinav Kashyap likes to make happy, light hearted and entertaining films. Anurag Kashyap likes to make movies that are too personal to him - things that probably he wants to say or something to do with his personal angst. Abhinav's heroes are larger than life whereas Anurag's heroes are more in the world of the film that he's making. Abhinav's heroes sing songs and Anurag's heroes have to be content with background score (laughs). But at the heart of it, both are very honest to their job. They don't take it for granted and are very hard working. An actor like me wants to work with good directors because they make me a better and a bigger star. I am thankful to their parents to giving birth to both the boys.

Your house must be lying with scripts stacked one over the other. How do you manage to select the best one from the lot? 
Fortunately or unfortunately, since the last two years and the next two years to come, I am working with the same directors, apart from Abhinav and Anurag. I am working with Ayan, Imtiaz and Anurag Basu in their next movies. These are people I have had a successful working relationship with. Yes, I do want to work with new talent. When I worked with Ayan in Wake Up Sid, it was a very refreshing change. Unfortunately, I am not able to listen to any scripts right now and once I finish the run of these films, after a year and a half, I would love to work with new directors, new writers who get in new ideas.

Age no bar! But you are producing movies now. When do we see you turn producer for R.K. Films? 
My grandfather directed, acted and produced films when he was 21 years old. So there is no age bar for me to produce or not to produce movies. I am already 30 and I am producing a film with Anurag Basu called Jagga Jasoos. I have realised that I don't know if I really want to make films under our R.K. Films banner. It's synonymous with Raj Kapoor. It's his banner and his creation. I can't live up to his vision. I want to collaborate with directors as a producer and hence producing a movie with Anurag Basu. We are equal partners in it. It's called Picture Shuru. If I want to produce films with Ayan Mukerji, I will probably call it something else. I don't believe in this fact that I need to rekindle the R.K. Films banner. R.K Films is right up there in the 'Greats of Indian Cinema' and I wouldn't like to touch it or spoil it or take advantage of it. If I do something, I will create something of my own so that if my children are working in movies, they don't have to have anyone's shadow. Raj Kapoor is too big a name to have a shadow.

Why stay aloof from the social media? Your fans adore you. You should visit this world once. 
I know my fans want me on Twitter and Facebook but I wish I could. I want to connect to them personally. I want to connect with them through my movies that I do. I am a bit too shy and don't know what to say. I'm not politically or socially aware to speak things. The mystery of an actor dies I feel if I am too social. Throughout the course of my career, I would like to connect with my fans by the movies I act in, and hopefully in the future, direct. Twitter can always dis-balance an actor. If I have 1000 followers out of which 800 love me and 200 hate me. But I may not get a reality check on things. I might tend to believe them straight up. I think it's better to stay away from it as you are not affected by it and concentrate on my work.

What would be that one scene you'd remember Besharam for? 
There was a scene where I had to tie up my father and mouth such explicit words like - 'gendey, motey, etc'. I had to tickle him, gag him and do lots of banter. My father was so encouraging. He really enjoyed the scene. When the director called 'action' we went into our character more than our relationship. It's the best scene of mine.

Do you transfer yourself in a character more mentally than physically?
The roles I've done so far are coming of age, internalizing boys. Barfi and Rockstar were the only two films that required a lot of physical and mental change in me. Besharam is larger than life and such films are very hard for me to do. I come from a certain generation of actors who've grown up on more realistic movies and certain genre of movies. To do a Besharam you need to have a lot of self-confidence and self-belief. Playing a hero comes with a lot of difficulty for me. I am happy playing the underdog but Besharam is loud and over the top and mouthing corny lines. As far as physicality is concerned, YJHD was me, Rockstar and Barfi as I mentioned before had lots of physical attributes. When I do Jagga Jasoos, I play a twelfth standard boy from school. I'm playing a 17-year-old boy. So I have to undergo a lot of physical change there. 

John Abraham to produce a sports film

After winning critical acclaim for his last release, Madras Cafe, based on the Sri Lankan civil war, actor-producerJohn Abraham is now taking his interest in sports forward by planning to make films on football, motorcycling and boxing. "We are making a film on sports... Shoojit has 
quite a few ideas. The only thing I could reveal is the film is about football, it is based on that. We are still in development stage and we will make an announcement on it," John told PTI in an interview here.
"No, it is not a biopic on any sports personality but it is based on a true story. It is amazing, adventurous, commercial and will be fun to watch for the audience," he said.
There are other areas of sports as well that the 40-year-old actor wants to explore through films.
"Besides this, there are two-three films on sports as that is my area of interest. And one is on motorcycling, that we have started scripting, the other is in space of contact sports (meaning boxing, wrestling etc)," John said.
Ask him if he would be acting in these projects the reply seems affirmative.
"I don't know that yet. I think in all probability I will be the first choice for my own production for these films. Then we will look out for others," he added.
Post the success of his two home production films Vicky Donor and Madras Cafe John insists he will make sure the next film will be even better.
Madras Cafe was a spy thriller, which traced the political and military histories of the neighbours and covered the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) and Lankan rebel group LTTE's activities through the eye of an agent, played by John.
"The film did not have a typical Bollywood song, dance hero and it did half the business of a successful film. This shows there is audience who want to watch these kinds of films as well.
"This segment of audience will grow as the youth is getting more and more aware. I want to create that kind of new and entertaining cinema as a producer and actor," John said.
He says the audience has proved that they are open to see qualitative cinema.
By accepting Madras Cafe they have substantiated their liking towards this space of cinema... I respect the audience.
I have always said audience is my god father but today I feel they are hero of my films, he adds.
John also said that he is happy to see that the attitude of the film industry towards him has changed now.
"I think the film that began changing things was Force, then I had hit films like Desi Boyz, Housefull 2, Shootout at Wadala, Race 2 and now Madras Cafe. I think Madras Cafe has changed people's perception completely about me... it has done a completely 360 degree turn," John said.
"People look at me in a completely different light. I would like them to know that this is how I always was... it is only that I gave myself an opportunity as a producer to do it finally," he said.

The actor-producer is busy shooting Welcome Back and Dostana 2 and is also looking forward to begin his third production tentatively titled Hamara Bajaj.