Tag Archives: swedish

Prosecutors: Rape Claims against Assange Bogus – CBS News

(AP) Swedish prosecutors have withdrawn an arrest warrant for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, saying the rape suspicions against him are unfounded. In a brief statement Saturday, chief prosecutor Eva Finne says: “I don't think there is reason to suspect that he has committed rape.” added by: toyotabedzrock

WikiLeaks founder charged with rape, molestation in Sweden

Stockholm, Sweden (CNN) — The founder and editor of the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, has been charged in Sweden with rape and molestation, a spokeswoman for the Swedish prosecutor's office told CNN Saturday. Spokeswoman Karin Rosander said the charges were filed Friday night in relation to two separate instances, but she didn't have more detail about when the alleged crimes occurred or who the alleged victims are. Assange denied the charges in a posting Saturday on the WikiLeaks Twitter page, saying, “The charges are without basis and their issue at this moment is deeply disturbing.” The rape charge carries a possible prison sentence, while the molestation charge would not, Rosander said. added by: TimALoftis

Meet ‘Girl With The Dragon Tattoo’ Star Rooney Mara

Before landing the dream role of Lisbeth Salander, Mara starred in ‘Nightmare on Elm Street’ remake and more. By Eric Ditzian Rooney Mara Photo: Getty Images Get used to hearing the name Rooney Mara. After an extensive search that reportedly focused on A-list names like Scarlett Johansson and Natalie Portman, “Girl With a Dragon Tattoo” director David Fincher selected Mara to play the role of dark and damaged Lisbeth Salander. While hardly a newcomer to Hollywood — she starred in this year’s “A Nightmare on Elm Street” and her sister is “Iron Man 2” star Kate — Mara remains largely unknown to the public. That’s all about to change. “Dragon Tattoo” is based on the first of Stieg Larsson’s best-selling crime novels, a trilogy that has been published in 44 countries and has sold more than 40 million copies worldwide. Anticipation for Fincher’s adaptation, slated to get an Oscar-friendly December 2011 release, is already running high, with every casting rumor — Kristen Stewart as Salander? Ellen Page? — getting wide media attention. So just who is Mara? MTV News first met her in June 2009 on the set of “Elm Street.” By this point, she had appeared in a few low-profile roles on the big and small screens. But the remake of the beloved horror flick would give the actress her widest exposure to date. And taking on the iconic role of Nancy — originated in 1984 by Heather Langenkamp — left Mara more than a little nervous. “It’s quite stressful,” she confessed. “There are big shoes to fill, and people love Nancy. There’s a lot of pressure to not let people down.” How will Mara deal with the burden of portraying Salander? As with “Elm Street” and Nancy, there is already a cinematic Salander. The Swedish version of “Dragon Tattoo,” starring Noomi Rapace, opened in the U.S. earlier this year to wide acclaim. Perhaps, though, Mara’s success on “Elm Street” has boosted her confidence: The film notched an impressive $33 million opening in April. A few months earlier, Mara had appeared in a supporting role alongside Michael Cera in “Youth in Revolt.” And by the time “Elm Street” hit theaters, she’d already lined up another high-profile flick, a prominent part in Fincher’s “The Social Network,” the story of the founding of Facebook, which arrives in October. Before then, Mara will already be in Sweden, where “Dragon Tattoo” is expected to begin shooting in September. Last year on the “Elm Street” set, Mara revealed to us how she prepares for each day in front on the camera by creating specific playlists of songs that fit the day’s shoot. “It’s sort of like reading my diary. It’s very personal,” she said, at first resisting the urge to open up about her musical tastes. But she eventually told us she listens to Red and Three Days Grace when she needs to get pumped up and, when she has a somber scene, Radiohead and every cover of Tears for Fears’ “Mad World” she can find. “I have a playlist for Nancy for just every day, and I have a specific playlist for the stuff I have to do today, which is really hard-core and I really have to kick ass today,” she explained. Check out everything we’ve got on “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Photos Rooney Mara: Indie Darling To Franchise Star

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Meet ‘Girl With The Dragon Tattoo’ Star Rooney Mara

What it Says About Us When a 17-Month-Old Boy Is Beaten to Death for "Acting Like a Girl"

At approximately 8:25 p.m. last Sunday night, the New York State Police on Long Island logged a 911 call about a toddler in cardiac arrest. The boy, 17-month-old Roy Jones, was rushed from the Shinnecock Indian Reservation in Southampton, N.Y. to Southampton Hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 9:11 p.m. According to authorities, the toddler had endured a savage beating. His tiny body had been repeatedly punched with closed fists and grabbed by the neck. By the time 911 had been called at dusk, he was already in cardiac arrest from the sheer brutality of the assault and it was too late to save his life. Charged with manslaughter in the first degree and held without bail is the toddler's mother's live-in boyfriend, 20-year-old Pedro Jones, who was babysitting. The pair lived together on Shinnecock Nation tribal land, though Jones himself was not a member of the tribe. They were reportedly to marry, and Jones called the toddler “my baby,” though Roy was not, in fact his baby. “I was trying to make him act like a boy instead of a little girl,” Jones explained. “I never struck that kid that hard before. A one-time mistake, and I am going to do 20 years.” He told troopers that the little boy had been too feminine and that he'd been trying to toughen Roy up by literally beating the life out of him. “I'm sorry,” he said “That's my baby. I loved him to death.” A nominally civilized society such as ours can only recoil in horror at any news of a child's death at the abusive hands of an adult. Infanticide is the ultimate forfeiture of our humanity, rightly seen as a perversion of the very essence of the natural order and the circle of life. The act is a declaration of such abject monstrosity that is very nearly beyond forgiveness. But it happens every day, and we guiltily avert our eyes to these stories when we read them because, on some level, we realize that the children could easily be our own and the pain is too much to bear. In 2008, in the U.S. alone, the Department of Health and Human Services reported 772,000 cases of child abuse, resulting 1,740 fatalities–a sharp rise from 1,330 in 2000. But there is an added and significant dimension to the tragedy. The reason given for the beating is that, even at 17 months, the toddler was perceived by his killer to be effeminate. Madhouse logic indeed, but to Pedro Jones there was a way that little boys should act and a way little girls should act. While Jones is a tragic example of the paradigm taken to deadly lengths, society's discomfort with gender variance permeates nearly every part of the national dialogue and runs through every part of the culture. It's present in the heightened male objectification of women inherent in certain types of music videos that present them as “bitches” and “hoes” who crave an answering violent thuggishness from their men. It's present in advertising that teaches young women that they're essentially a life support system for their physical assets, that the ideal woman is a weak-willed, mindless consumer of frivolity, whereas a “real man”–stronger, but stupider–is waiting for nothing more than the arrival of the Swedish Women's Nude Basketball Team with cold beer. There are coded echoes of it in the leading and prejudicial questionnaire put to servicemen and women this spring by the Pentagon regarding the viability of openly gay soldiers serving side-by-side with heterosexual ones. The document is mined with phrases that seem crafted with unease on the part of straight male soldiers as a goal, fears that their gay counterparts might not be “real” men but something inferior, less masculine, less reliable in a firefight. It was there in June of this year when the Family Research Council hailed Republican Governor of Rhode Island Don Carcieri for vetoing hate crimes legislation that would have included transgender-identified persons as a protected class. Gloated Tony Perkins, the president of the organization, “[Governor Carcieri] deserves praise for his strong stance for the Families of Rhode Island, and other Governors can learn from his example.” Perkins neglected to explain how excluding transgender people from hate crime legislation had anything to do with protecting families. It was there in the Hieronymus Bosch-level grotesquery of the lies, distortions, and misrepresentations of the lives of gay and lesbian couples used by the Proposition 8 supporters in their now-failed battle to make their horror of sexual and gender variance the law of the land in California by codifying their bigotry at the ballot box and in the courts. It's endemic in fundamentalist Christianity, which claims Biblical authority for rigid gender roles and, more importantly, the appearance of rigid gender roles. Psychologist and Southern Baptist minister George Alan Rekers, co-founder of the Family Research Council and formerly of the National Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH) who, until he was caught this year flying a gay rent-boy to Europe to “lift his luggage” and give him nude sexual massages, was best known for sharing his wisdom on how to “cure” homosexuality. A May 2010 article in the Miami News by Penn Bullock and Brandon K. Thorp reported on Rekers' 1974 “Feminine Boy Project” at UCLA. The article highlighted the story of a 4-year-old-year old “effeminate boy” named Kraig was subjected by his parents to Rekers' aversion therapy. Part of the therapy involved putting Kraig in “play-observation room” with his mother, who had instructions to avert her eyes from her child when he played with “girly” toys. An essay by Stephanie Wilkinson published in Brain, Child magazine in 2001 recounts that, during one of the sessions, Kraig became so distraught and hysterical at what must have seemed to the 4-year-old like the withdrawal of his mother's love, that he had to be carried out of the room by the staff. At home, the “treatment” continued, with Kraig being rewarded for “masculine” behavior and spanked by his father for “feminine” behavior. …full article at link added by: animalia_libero

Folding Table is Inspired By Pop-Up Map of New York

Images by Sabine of Mocoloco Mocoloco introduces Swedish designers Sanna Lindström and Sigrid Strömgren , who collaborated on the Grand Central Table. It is composed of 22 pieces that unfold like a map and sit on a folding base. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Folding Table is Inspired By Pop-Up Map of New York

‘The Girl Who Played With Fire’: Middling, By Kurt Loder

Cyber-icon seeks better movie. By Kurt Loder Noomi Rapace in “The Girl Who Played with Fire” Photo: Music Box Films The good news about “The Girl Who Played With Fire” is that hacker-punk avenger Lisbeth Salander is right at the center of it. In “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” the first movie drawn from Swedish author Stieg Larsson’s “Millennium Trilogy,” Salander (Noomi Rapace) was a bit peripheral, a sort of cyber-sidekick to investigative journalist Mikael Blomkvist (Michael Nyqvist) on his quest to solve a 40-year-old mystery involving a secretive industrial clan. Here, she’s the focus of the story, which is more of a straight-ahead thriller, and unsurprisingly, she’s a treat to watch. At the end of the first film, Salander had taken off to the Caribbean with millions of dollars of bad-guy cash. Now she’s back in Stockholm, paying a visit to her sleazy social-worker custodian, Bjurman (Peter Andersson), whose last encounter with his angry ward left him with a new appreciation for tasers and an unexpected collection of nasty tattoos. Meanwhile, Blomkvist has commissioned a sensational story for his magazine by two young reporters — a blockbuster expose about sex trafficking that incriminates a score of government big shots. Then the reporters are murdered, and Salander’s fingerprints are found on the gun that killed them. The gun belonged to Bjurman, and it turns out he’s dead, too. Salander is suddenly on the run, and determined to find the truth about the murders. Blomkvist is, too — he knows his odd little friend is innocent. The story expands into areas of espionage, corruption and sexual abuse, with a towering white-haired killer lumbering into the action in the service of a vile Russian thug. We also learn about the devastating childhood incident that landed Salander in a mental institution (and gives the movie its name). There’s a lot of stuff happening, in other words. But the best parts are pure Lisbeth. She takes her taser and makeup box along to pay a visit to another sex pig (they’re her mission in life), and leaves him tied up like a very sad clown. She takes on a trio of greasy bikers and leaves them deeply wishing she hadn’t. We also get a glimpse of her sensitive side (who knew she had one?) in an artfully shot lesbian sex scene. Noomi Rapace owns this iconic character, and even though we’re getting more of her here, we can’t get enough. The bad news about the movie is that it’s not well-made. It’s a chopped-down Swedish TV movie, and it looks it. Niels Arden Oplev, who directed the first film, is here replaced by its second-unit director, Daniel Alfredson, who brought along a new writer and cinematographer, too. The picture is flat and disjointed, and some of its gaudier elements (the white-haired killer might have drifted in from an old Bond movie) aren’t as much fun as you keep wishing they were. There’s also the usual ungainliness of any middle installment of a movie series — we have to wait for the story’s ambiguities and unanswered questions to be clarified in the final film, “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest,” which is due out here in the fall. The bad news about that picture is that it was also made by Arden, back-to-back with this one. Lisbeth Salander’s most formidable opponent may turn out to be her director. Don’t miss Kurt Loder’s reviews of “Predators and “The Kids Are All Right,” also new in theaters this week. Check out everything we’ve got on “The Girl Who Played With Fire.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘The Girl Who Played With Fire’: Middling, By Kurt Loder

REVIEW: Girl Who Played with Fire Goes Through the Tiresome Swede-Goth Motions

The novels of the late Stieg Larsson are the little Saabs that could: These three posthumously published thrillers — The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest — might have been nothing more than an entertaining genre-fiction exercise, the sort of thing that might, at best, achieve some sort of cult status. Instead, they’ve become the books that everyone and their grandmothers seem to be reading, and the Swedish movie based on the first book in the series, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, directed by Niels Arden Oplev, became a surprise U.S. hit last year. Hollywood is, of course, preparing its own David Fincher-directed version, but those of us who are allegedly in the know are supposed to automatically prefer the Swedish version, with its dour approach to torture and violence and its efficient “He did it because he’s crazy, that’s why” wrap-up. Because the movie is long, colorless, uncompromising and, well, Swedish, it’s got to be better than any future American version, right?

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REVIEW: Girl Who Played with Fire Goes Through the Tiresome Swede-Goth Motions

Artist Builds Giant Sculpture Out Of Shipping Containers, Pallets, Trailers and

Swedish artist Michael Johansson builds a tower out of three of our favourite things: shipping containers, pallets and trailers…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Artist Builds Giant Sculpture Out Of Shipping Containers, Pallets, Trailers and

THG Week in Review: June 19-25, 2010

Below, we look back on the last seven days in celebrity gossip and Hollywood news. Visit us daily and follow THG on Facebook and Twitter for all the latest news, gossip, rumors, commentary and humor as it happens. Welcome to The Hollywood Gossip ‘s Week in Review … In the Breakup of the Century, Jake Pavelka and Vienna Girardi parted ways, with many parting shots (almost literally). One reason: Jake is a prude . Friday marked the one-year anniversary of Michael Jackson’s death . A few days ago, Joe Jackson accused Conrad Murray of drinking the night before. Al Gore was accused of sexually assaulting a massage therapist. The former V.P. was never charged, but her nasty accusations were still made public. Mel Gibson filed for a restraining order against baby mama Oksana Grigorieva, who countered by accusing the actor of ” extremely violent ” behavior. Eclipse premiered and shattered records … for hype occurring before a film even premieres. R-Pattz defended K-Stew and bashed nerds on blogs . A fairy tale romance came to a hilarious end this week. Vanessa Carlton came out as bisexual during a Nashville concert. Justin Bieber’s mom was reportedly offered $50K to go nude. DNA results say Tiger Woods did not knock up Devon James . Jon Voight called Barack Obama an anti-Semitic socialist . Amanda Bynes retired from acting at the ripe old age of 24. Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt may actually be divorcing . Lady Gaga and Miley are always good for headlines. Justin Rego’s girlfriend is going to be outed on The Bachelorette. Kate Gosselin is returning to The View . With botched Botox . Miley Cyrus cannot be tamed, says she empowers women . Jerry Seinfeld thinks Lady Gaga is a jerk and he hates her. Jessie Lunderby Playboy pics caused a stir for the jailer. Peeps don’t know if Lindsay Lohan was drinking or not . If you date a Kardashian, do you win a professional sports title? The Dallas Cowboys’ Miles Austin may soon find out with Kim K., as Ty Lawson jealously Tweeted. Couples Watch: Miles Austin is dating Kim Kardashian; Ryan Seacrest and Julianne Hough are an item; Josh Koscheck may be dating Holly Madison. Wedding Bells: Kellie Pickler will marry Kyle Jacobs; Orlando Bloom and Miranda Kerr are finally engaged; A gym owner married a Swedish princess .

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THG Week in Review: June 19-25, 2010

One year after his death, what do you miss most about Michael Jackson?

What are your thoughts on the first anniversary of Michael Jackson's death? added by: joshuaheller