Tag Archives: kyrgyzstan

50 Shades Of Grey Hires Saving Mr Banks Writer (Tom Hardy For Christian Grey, Anyone?)

The kinky erotic pop phenomenon 50 Shades of Grey has finally landed — or shall we say, tied down — a writer! British actress/scribe Kelly Marcel, who co-created the short-lived Steven Spielberg-produced series Terra Nova and scripted the upcoming Mary Poppins pic Saving Mr. Banks , will adapt E.L. James’ S&M romance about a young woman who falls for Christian Grey , a damaged dreamboat with a bondage fetish. Marcel’s a surprise choice for the hot property given her relatively scant writing credits; here’s hoping her script keeps all the salaciously sexy allure of the books, which will be one of the bigger challenges Universal and Focus face with their big-screen adaptation. One hurdle: Making a 50 Shades of Grey movie that’s half as great as this fan-made trailer : Oh, man. Never gets old . Once a script’s in place, the next trick will be casting their perfect Christian Grey . Someone not too old, not too young, the picture of male perfection and virility. An actor capable of pulling off both brute sensual dominance and crippling emotional trauma. A dude who knows how to wear a suit. Well, Marcel did co-found a theater company with Tom Hardy after the two worked together on Nicholas Refn’s Bronson , which she re-wrote. (Another fun fact: Dad Terry Marcel wrote and directed 1980’s Hawk the Slayer .) Maybe she can make a phone call… who’s down with casting Tom Hardy as Christian Grey? The official press release: UNIVERSAL CITY, CA, October 8, 2012—Universal Pictures and Focus Features today announced that Kelly Marcel will write the screenplay to the highly anticipated film adaptation of “Fifty Shades of Grey.” Michael De Luca and Dana Brunetti will produce the film based on E L James’ #1 bestselling book, alongside James. The announcement was made by Universal Pictures Co-Chairman, Donna Langley and Focus Features’ Chief Executive Officer, James Schamus. Marcel wrote the 2011 Black List script, Saving Mr. Banks , the story of Walt Disney’s twenty-year pursuit of the film rights to author P.L. Travers’ novel, “Mary Poppins,” and the rocky relationship that formed between the two. The film is currently in production at Walt Disney Studios starring Tom Hanks, Emma Thompson and Colin Farrell with John Lee Hancock directing. Marcel served as the co-creator and executive producer of the Amblin/FOX-TV series Terra Nova, for which she wrote the series’ pilot episode. She will also produce The Madonnas Of Echo Park for HBO. “Kelly’s work demonstrates her flawless structural technique and passionate commitment to emotion, humor and depth of character which is particularly visible in the celebrated screenplay for the upcoming Saving Mr. Banks,” said De Luca. “We were all taken with the depth and passion of Kelly’s engagement with the characters and world E L James has created, and we knew she was the right person to augment our Fifty Shades family,” added Brunetti. Universal Pictures and Focus Features acquired the rights to the three books in the “Fifty Shades of Grey” trilogy in March of this year. Focus Features will market and distribute the first film in partnership with Universal. “Fifty Shades of Grey” has become a global phenomenon and the trilogy has been translated in 45 languages worldwide since its release. In the U.S. alone, the “Fifty Shades” trilogy has sold over 32 million copies in e-book and print, making it one of the fastest selling book series ever. “Fifty Shades of Grey” follows the relationship of 27-year-old billionaire Christian Grey and college student Anastasia Steele. Subsequent novels in the series, “Fifty Shades Darker” (September 2011) and “Fifty Shades Freed” (January 2012) explore the couple’s deepening relationship. For more information please see the official Fifty Shades of Grey Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/fiftyshadesofgreymovie. Marcel was represented in the deal by WME and Casarotto Ramsay & Associates Limited. [ Deadline ]

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50 Shades Of Grey Hires Saving Mr Banks Writer (Tom Hardy For Christian Grey, Anyone?)

Oscars 2013: 71 Countries Submit For Best Foreign-Language Consideration

A record 71 countries, including first-time entrant Kenya, have submitted films for consideration in the Foreign Language Film category for the 85th Academy Awards®. Not joining the list this year is Iran which is boycotting this year’s Oscars because of fall out from the anti-Islam video Innocence of Muslims . Last year, Iranian director Asghar Farhadi won the Academy Award for Best Foreign-Language film for A Separation , a first for a filmmaker from that country. The list of contenders follows: The 85th Academy Awards nominations will be announced live on Thursday, January 10, 2013, at 5:30 a.m. PT in the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater. Academy Awards will be presented on Sunday, February 24, 2013, at The Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center, and televised live on the ABC network. The Oscar presentation also will be televised live in more than 225 countries worldwide. The 2012 submissions are : Afghanistan, “The Patience Stone,” Atiq Rahimi, director Albania, “Pharmakon,” Joni Shanaj, director Algeria, “Zabana!” Said Ould Khelifa, director Argentina, “Clandestine Childhood,” Benjamín Ávila, director Armenia, “If Only Everyone,” Natalia Belyauskene, director Australia, “Lore,” Cate Shortland, director Austria, “Amour,” Michael Haneke, director Azerbaijan, “Buta,” Ilgar Najaf, director Bangladesh, “Pleasure Boy Komola,” Humayun Ahmed, director Belgium, “Our Children,” Joachim Lafosse, director Bosnia and Herzegovina, “Children of Sarajevo,” Aida Begic, director Brazil, “The Clown,” Selton Mello, director Bulgaria, “Sneakers,” Valeri Yordanov and Ivan Vladimirov, directors Cambodia, “Lost Loves,” Chhay Bora, director Canada, “War Witch,” Kim Nguyen, director Chile, “No,” Pablo Larraín, director China, “Caught in the Web,” Chen Kaige, director Colombia, “The Snitch Cartel,” Carlos Moreno, director Croatia, “Vegetarian Cannibal,” Branko Schmidt, director Czech Republic, “In the Shadow,” David Ondrícek, director Denmark, “A Royal Affair,” Nikolaj Arcel, director Dominican Republic, “Jaque Mate,” José María Cabral, director Estonia, “Mushrooming,” Toomas Hussar, director Finland, “Purge,” Antti J. Jokinen, director France, “The Intouchables,” Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano, directors Georgia, “Keep Smiling,” Rusudan Chkonia, director Germany, “Barbara,” Christian Petzold, director Greece, “Unfair World,” Filippos Tsitos, director Greenland, “Inuk,” Mike Magidson, director Hong Kong, “Life without Principle,” Johnnie To, director Hungary, “Just the Wind,” Bence Fliegauf, director Iceland, “The Deep,” Baltasar Kormákur, director India, “Barfi!” Anurag Basu, director Indonesia, “The Dancer,” Ifa Isfansyah, director Israel, “Fill the Void,” Rama Burshtein, director Italy, “Caesar Must Die,” Paolo Taviani and Vittorio Taviani, directors Japan, “Our Homeland,” Yang Yonghi, director Kazakhstan, “Myn Bala: Warriors of the Steppe,” Akan Satayev, director Kenya, “Nairobi Half Life,” David ‘Tosh’ Gitonga, director Kyrgyzstan, “The Empty Home,” Nurbek Egen, director Latvia, “Gulf Stream under the Iceberg,” Yevgeny Pashkevich, director Lithuania, “Ramin,” Audrius Stonys, director Macedonia, “The Third Half,” Darko Mitrevski, director Malaysia, “Bunohan,” Dain Iskandar Said, director Mexico, “After Lucia,” Michel Franco, director Morocco, “Death for Sale,” Faouzi Bensaïdi, director Netherlands, “Kauwboy,” Boudewijn Koole, director Norway, “Kon-Tiki,” Joachim Rønning and Espen Sandberg, directors Palestine, “When I Saw You,” Annemarie Jacir, director Peru, “The Bad Intentions,” Rosario García-Montero, director Philippines, “Bwakaw,” Jun Robles Lana, director Poland, “80 Million,” Waldemar Krzystek, director Portugal, “Blood of My Blood,” João Canijo, director Romania, “Beyond the Hills,” Cristian Mungiu, director Russia, “White Tiger,” Karen Shakhnazarov, director Serbia, “When Day Breaks,” Goran Paskaljevic, director Singapore, “Already Famous,” Michelle Chong, director Slovak Republic, “Made in Ash,” Iveta Grófová, director Slovenia, “A Trip,” Nejc Gazvoda, director South Africa, “Little One,” Darrell James Roodt, director South Korea, “Pieta,” Kim Ki-duk, director Spain, “Blancanieves,” Pablo Berger, director Sweden, “The Hypnotist,” Lasse Hallström, director Switzerland, “Sister,” Ursula Meier, director Taiwan, “Touch of the Light,” Chang Jung-Chi, director Thailand, “Headshot,” Pen-ek Ratanaruang, director Turkey, “Where the Fire Burns,” Ismail Gunes, director Ukraine, “The Firecrosser,” Mykhailo Illienko, director Uruguay, “The Delay,” Rodrigo Plá, director Venezuela, “Rock, Paper, Scissors,” Hernán Jabes, director Vietnam, “The Scent of Burning Grass,” Nguyen Huu Muoi, director.

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Oscars 2013: 71 Countries Submit For Best Foreign-Language Consideration

2012 Bride Kidnapping In Kyrgyzstan: 35 Min Documentary [Video]

2012 Bride Kidnapping In Kyrgyzstan These fools are cray. Back to the cave man days: In rural Kyrgyzstan men still marry their women the old-fashioned way: by abducting them off the street and forcing them to be their wife. Bride kidnapping is a supposedly ancient custom that’s made a major comeback since the fall of Communism and now accounts for nearly half of all marriages in some parts. We traveled to the Kyrgyz countryside to follow/aid and abet a young groom named Kubanti as he surprised his teenage girlfriend Nazgul with the gift of marriage/kidnapping. Turn the page and watch these women ball out!

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2012 Bride Kidnapping In Kyrgyzstan: 35 Min Documentary [Video]

Kyrgyzstan Extends State of Emergency

The newly-formed government of Kyrgyzstan has extended a state of emergency announced last week after ethnic violence between Uzbek and Kyrgyz groups has spiraled, killing more than 100 and extending to neighboring provinces. The violence began in the southern city of Osh on the border of Uzbekistan last Sunday, but has since spilled over to other areas in the region. —JCL Al-Jazeera English: Kyrgyzstan’s interim government has extended a state of emergency in the country’s south in a bid to stop ethnic clashes that have killed more than 100 people. Authorities on Sunday imposed a 24-hour curfew in the southern Osh region, and extended a state of emergency to cover the entire neighbouring province of Jalal’abad. Police and soldiers have also been authorised to “shoot-to-kill” to defend civilians and in self-defence, but the measure has not stopped the spiralling violence pitting ethnic Uzbeks against Kyrgyz. Gunfire rang out on Sunday in the city of Jalal’abad, where the day before a mob burned a university, besieged a police station and seized an armoured vehicle and other weapons from a local military unit. Read more Related Entries June 11, 2010 Kyrgyzstan Violence Kills Dozens May 24, 2010 Secret U.S. Plans for Clandestine Mideast Military Activity Brought to Light

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Kyrgyzstan Extends State of Emergency

Kyrgyzstan Violence Kills Up To 41

An outbreak of violence in the southern part of Kyrgyzstan has erupted, killing up to 41 people and wounding 624 others as the newly-established national government imposed a state of emergency on the region on Friday. Witnesses claim fighting broke out between ethnic Krygyz groups and Uzbek groups in the southern city of Osh, a stronghold of the president who was overthrown in a revolt this April. —JCL Al-Jazeera English: Up to 41 people have been killed and at least 624 others wounded in an outbreak of violence in the southern Kyrgyzstan city of Osh. The unrest forced the government of the Central Asian nation to impose a state of emergency in the region on Friday. Several buildings across Osh were ablaze, according to witnesses, in the wake of shooting that began on Thursday night. “Clashes and exchanges of fire between groups of youths took place in Osh and the neighbouring districts of Karassu, Arava and Uzgen,” Farid Niyazov, a government spokesman, said. Read more Related Entries May 16, 2010 Thai Government Rejects Mediation May 7, 2010 Kanellos the Protest Dog

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Kyrgyzstan Violence Kills Up To 41

Hipster Protester

I'll say this about the rioters in Kyrgyzstan: They know how to dress. This Reuters photos shows a protester in Bishkek carrying a riot shield, shouldering an RPG and sporting APC jeans View

Riots in Kyrgyzstan: Raw Video

Bishkek, the capital of central Asian nation Kyrgystan, is in the midst of a revolution on its streets. Riot police fought with demonstrators on Wednesday in clashes that killed at least five. Late in the day, opposition leaders said they had taken control of the country. Rumors placed the country's President in hiding on the American airbase Manas. Political unrest has gripped Kyrgyzstan, an impoverished former Soviet republic, since early March, threatening a spillover of violence into the fragile, mainly Muslim region. The clashes followed Tuesday's riot in the town of Talas, where protesters demanding the resignation of President Kurmanbek Bakiyev seized a local government office and took a regional governor hostage for several hours. added by: ctv