Nicholas’ brutal life story a masterclass in sensitivity


REVIEW:

Last night’s Consent, (TV One), had a fair few chilling, skin-crawling scenes, but one of the most affecting was when we saw rape complainant Louise Nicholas and her daughter having coffee on their hotel balcony during the trial.

Down in the street, a paddy wagon is leaving the High Court across the road. Nicholas tells her daughter the passengers are two of the three former policeman rape defendants, already in prison for gang-raping another woman.

It was a badly-kept secret, but an officially enforced and defended one, and remains one of the nastiest stains on justice in this country’s history. Which is why a well-made dramatisation like Consent: The Louise Nicholas Story is money and effort superbly well-spent. Nicholas’ story shows us how far we needed to evolve in the way we approach rape complaints at official and personal levels, while subliminally freighting the message that we should never take a beady eye off this particular ball again. A powerfully told true story like this illustrates with visceral clarity how much easier it is and always will be for everyone concerned not to do the right thing.

Michelle Blundell did a note- perfect job of portraying the young woman whose life was blighted both by vile individual officers, and their in-the-know colleagues who turned a blind eye.

Perhaps the cleverest portrayal, though, was Mark Mitchinson’s of John Dewar, the senior officer who, while appearing to support and help Louise, in fact was found to have perverted the course of justice to protect his institution against her.

Deft acting and scripting meant the viewer could see without needing to have it spelt out in dialogue how deeply conditioned and conflicted Dewar was about where his duty lay. On paper what he did was monstrous, yet this was not obviously a monster.

The programme left us with the sense that Nicholas, like us, will never know the enigmatic Dewar’s true nature. A nod is also due to the show’s portrayal of Dominion Post journalist Phil Kitchin – brusque, uningratiating, relentless and meticulous. A reporter with a tiger by the tail, weighing up whether the risk of his project could ever justify the potential damage of making a bad situation worse.

Seeing the story in a compact sequential form like this makes it the more of a wonder Kitchin and Nicholas even embarked on this process. Despite the court acquittal, they proved their case to the outraged and grateful satisfaction of the public, and the establishment.

We can only celebrate again that they did, courtesy of this TV masterclass in how to approach a story of the most brutal realities with sensitivity.

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– The Dominion Post

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Coro’s Steve torn between two women


Coronation Street’s Steve McDonald (Simon Gregson) is trapped between two women – his ex-girlfriend Michelle Connor (Kym Marsh) and Tracy Barlow (Kate Ford), the volatile and conniving mother of his daughter Amy. So why is Steve in such a dilemma

When faced with a choice between the alluringly vivacious Michelle Connor and the toxic temptress Tracy Barlow, the decision for Steve McDonald should be straightforward.

But as usual on Coronation Street, Steve (played by Simon Gregson) manages to create chaos out of the most ordinary of situations.

“Steve has been trying to get back with Michelle,” says Gregson. “But he manages to mess it up again. As usual, Tracy steps into the mix.”

Steve is caught up in a love triangle which looks headed for disaster. Gregson admits that Steve is in a predicament.

“He’s in this situation where he’s stuck between two women – which is when Steve is, at best, terrified. I don’t think he’s a bad guy, but I would tell him to man up and sort Tracy out big time and get out.”

The fraught situation arises when Tracy becomes seriously ill and is taken to hospital. Concerned that she might die, Steve lets Tracy believe he still has feelings for her.

But Tracy recovers and is intent on hooking up again with Steve. Tracy has always wanted Steve in her life and she is deluded enough to believe that is now what Steve wants too.

“The thing about Steve is that he doesn’t like confrontation and he’ll do anything for an easy life,” says Gregson. “He likes to just go through life, have a nice girlfriend and have a laugh with Lloyd.

“When crunch comes to crunch, he does think, ‘Right, I need to sort this out’, but he ends up just teetering around it.”

Tracy has the potential to cause a heap of trouble for Steve and Michelle.

“I have absolutely no idea how Steve is going to talk himself out of this mess,” says Gregson. “Stuck again between

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Comic-book heroes big earners for film studios


It is no secret that so-called “action figure tent-poles” – big-budget super-hero films that hold up a studio’s yearly schedule – have become Hollywood’s bread basket.

But rival studios Marvel and DC Comics are planning to stretch the spandex to breaking point in the next six years, with an astonishing 30 super-hero films scheduled for release.

Disney-owned Marvel and Warner Bros-owned DC Comics have spent the past two months announcing, and updating, incrementally longer release slates – arguably the longest game of chicken in cinema history.

Both studios have now announced slates that stretch to 2020.

Marvel’s slate is larger than rival DC Comics, as before its acquisition by Disney, Marvel had licensed some of its comic book characters to other studios, such as 20th Century Fox (Fantastic Four, X-Men) and Sony (Spiderman).

Latest release: <i data-recalc-dims=The Guardians of the Galaxy gave some of Marvel’s lesser-known characters an outing.” />

Latest release:

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Jeff Bridges: Parents dealt with fame


Jeff Bridges credits his parents with preparing him for fame.

The Oscar-winner grew up in showbusiness as the son of late stars Lloyd and Dorothy Bridges.

And he credits much of his career longevity to their guidance.

“My mum and dad were great examples,” he told America’s People magazine.

“How my father dealt with fame – it didn’t seem that unusual to me. He was such a lover of showbiz, loved [doing interviews], loved signing autographs.”

The 64-year-old actor now has dozens of movie roles on his credits list, most recently producing and starring in Phillip Noyce sci-fi drama The Giver.

But The Big Lebowski star says the most valuable lesson he learned from his father was to find happiness in Hollywood that wasn’t based on the superficial.

“He taught me the basics of acting, but what I really got from him was the joy he experienced while working,” he explained.

Jeff and his father also shared the joy of appearing on screen together.

The men co-starred in Stephen Hopkins’ 1994 crime drama Blown Away, and he’ll never forget the memories they made on that film.

“I remember when he came on the set, in a genuine way he was just joyful – it was contagious. It would go through the community,” Jeff recalled.

“With joy comes relaxation about the way things are, and with that comes getting out of your own way. And you end up with some good work.”

The Giver was released in the US Friday, and co-stars Meryl Streep, Alexander Skarsg

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Daniel Radcliffe: Celebrity is ‘weird’


Daniel Radcliffe says he finds the concept of celebrity and the level of interest in the trivia of actors’ lives “weird”.

While promoting his first romantic comedy What If, directed by Michael Dowse, the 25-year-old British star was keen to keep the conversation away from his own love life.

Radcliffe is rumoured to be dating his Kill Your Darlings co-star Erin Darke.

“People ask me about my relationship and I try to give a little away as possible,” Radcliffe said.

“People are dying in the world, give time to that.”

And yet despite his best efforts to keep quiet about his personal life, the former Harry Potter star still finds himself tabloid fodder.

“That gets turned into a story in itself,” he said.

Radcliffe was happy, however, to talk about his career choices post-Harry Potter. Since leaving the boy wizard behind him, he has sought out challenging roles and embraced on-screen nudity.

Whether portraying beat poet Allen Ginsberg in Kill Your Darlings, or skinny-dipping in What If, Radcliffe joked that he wasn’t “intentionally” seeking out roles in which he can appear naked.

Yet it all comes naturally now after a stint in Equus back in 2007 when he stood in the nude on stage night after night.

“Doing it on stage when I was 17 kind of makes you go ‘Meh’ about anything else after that,” he explained.

What If features Radcliffe pining for his character’s best friend, played by actress Zoe Kazan. It opens in Australia in November.

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– AP

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Robin Williams part may be axed


Robin Williams may not have completed voicing his part in Sci-Fi comedy.

Williams provided the voice for Dennis the Dog in the film, which will feature members of Monty Python and stars British actor Simon Pegg.

The film’s makers now face having to replace Williams with another actor and re-recording the entire part.

“I’m not sure Robin had completed doing his voice in the movie. He was doing the voice of my dog and I hope that he had completed it because it would be a real shame not to have him in it,” Pegg told The Daily Telegraph.

Pegg added that he was devastated by Williams’ death.

“It is a terrible loss. He was someone who we assumed to be a bright and vivacious and interminably happy man, but he clearly wasn’t.”

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Downton Abbey cast respond to ‘water bottle-gate’


The cast of Downton Abbey has responded to the snickering, following the release of a publicity still that included a water bottle – an object not quite era appropriate for a period drama television series set in the early 20th century.

Each holding a water bottle, the show’s actors and actresses posed for a photo in support of WaterAid, a non-profit organization based in the United Kingdom that seeks to provide clean water, hygiene education and safe toilets worldwide.

“It brought a really big smile to my face when the cast of Downton Abbey said that they wanted to support WaterAid’s work. How fantastic that the attention created over one water bottle ends up benefiting some of the world’s poorest communities through access to safe, clean water today,” WaterAid chief executive Barbara Frost said on the organisation’s website.

The hubbub all started when someone noticed a water bottle in the background of a photo released to promote season 5 of Downton Abbey.

Oh dear. Someone left a waterbottle in this press photo from @DowntonAbbey #PhotoFail pic.twitter.com/EdZxc8Xlj7

— Darren Bell (@darren_bell) August 14, 2014

Online commentators had a bit of fun with the error, posting photoshopped versions of the photo:

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Barbra Streisand’s Instagram debut


OPINION:

First of all, let me just put a disclaimer out there –

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Tamahori set to work Charles V film


Lee Tamahori doesn’t know why people think he lives in Hollywood.

He’s directed big name actors Morgan Freeman and Sir Anthony Hopkins and is about to work on the Charles V inspired film Emperor with Adrien Brody. But New Zealand is still home.

The 64-year-old director of cult 90s film Once Were Warriors splits his time between Auckland and Tologa Bay on the East Coast where his family hails from.

“It depends on work, how long I’m here for. But I’ve been based in New Zealand since 2003. I don’t know why everyone thinks I still live in Hollywood.”

Tamahori is reassuringly chatty. His clear, somewhat-British accent rolls out responses thick and fast. But he keeps to the point.

No, he doesn’t want everyone knowing what he spent on recladding his luxury Shangri-La tower penthouse in Herne Bay. The complex’s multimillion-dollar apartments needed refitting for weather-tightness and there was a squabble over who should foot the bill.

“I had to spend a lot, on reflection, you could say for the amount of recladding,” he says. “No, I’m not going to say how much but it was a lot of money. Ridiculous, really, but it’s just one of those things.”

If someone of Tamahori’s status is saying it’s a lot of money, perhaps it doesn’t bear thinking about.

His 2002 James Bond blockbuster Die Another Day starring Halle Berry and Pierce Brosnan was the highest grossing Bond film of its time, pulling US$160 million (NZ$189m).

While he calls New Zealand home, he speaks to the Sunday Star-Times from the Czech Republic where he’s filming Emperor, a movie based on 16th century Roman ruler Charles V.

It’s a change from the action flicks he’s done recently.

“I made Along Came a Spider and then James Bond and I started getting sent all these action scripts like xXx (State of the Union). But I prefer dramas with a bit of action in them.”

However, xXx and action flick Next were not great moments for Tamahori and contributed to his exit from Hollywood. “They were flops so my use-by date in Hollywood was up,” he’s said previously.

“I went back to Europe which was more of a middle ground.”

There’s a better variation of genres in Europe and the actors are extraordinary, Tamahori opines. Particularly in Scandanavia. But he won’t name names. “I like working with people all over the world.”

Does he have relationships with the people he’s worked with Hopkins, for instance

“No. Never,” he says in almost retaliatory fashion. “I keep my life separate from all that.

“I tend to not have personal relationships with actors, just Temuera [Morrison] and some of those back home. Not those heavyweight A-list guys.”

Any reason why not

“Hollywood is full of people creating mystified CVs, not those actors of course. But everyone’s trying to get into the film industry.”

Nor does he spend much time socialising with other directors, though he takes the time to speak of his admiration for fellow Kiwi director Peter Jackson.

Jackson’s name comes up as he fields a question about his level of responsibility for reinforcing a negative stereotype through Once Were Warriors, a film released 20 years ago but which remains, for many, a startling first glimpse into Kiwi culture.

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Academics accused Tamahori and the author of the book on which the film was based, Alan Duff, for setting back Maori progress by a few decades by reinforcing ugly stereotypes of an aggressive, uncultured race. Singer Moana Jackson called it “an exposure of all that is rotten in Maoridom”.

Tamahori brushes it off. He’d been dying to sink his teeth into a real New Zealand story and he had the support of his peers and family.

“Of course you think twice.

“Beating up women and raping children is not anyone’s cup of tea. But people know it’s make-believe and that reflects the reality of cinema,” Tamahori says.

“We all got very uneasy about some of the stuff we were doing. I drew on a lot of personal experiences to make that film, I’m not going to say what they are.”

The antidote to Once Were Warriors has been Jackson’s Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit trilogies, which have been a PR boon for New Zealand. “There’s your soundbite,” Tamahori snaps.

Despite the pair sharing global fame, the two Kiwi directors are not friends.

“Peter and I are very alike in that we came from nothing and are madly enthusiastic about film-making. But we all get too busy. In Hollywood you’re not going to bump into each other. Most of my friends are not in the film industry.”

Tamahori has scheduled our phone interview so he had a week to consider questions.

I picture him leaning over his desk, surrounded by paper, reading glasses halfway down his nose. His frosty white hair would be slightly ruffled, a covering of soft stubble on his cheeks contrasting nicely with those formidable black eyebrows.

He appears an intensely private person. His interviews are few and far between. He flits in and out of the country unnoticed and keeps a low profile away from the cocktail circuit. “I’m not about to ring up the Sunday papers and get myself snapped at various parties.”

He just does what other regular guys do. Spends time with friends and family, fishing, the usual stuff.

Although there was the time, eight years ago, when Tamahori was arrested in Los Angeles for allegedly propositioning an undercover policeman for sex while wearing an off-the-shoulder black dress. He didn’t want to talk about it then and he’s still not prepared to talk about it.

The much publicised incident seemed in conflict with Tamahori’s reserved character. It made great magazine fodder. So-called friends came out of the woodwork expressing shock and disbelief but not before revealing details of an apparent penchant for latex and threesomes with then girlfriend Sasha Turjak.

Was it difficult being in Hollywood after an incident like that

“No. I don’t want to talk about that,” Tamahori retorts.

How does he cope with such speculation over his personal life

“I don’t have to cope,” Tamahori replies.

“I didn’t know you were going to ask me about this and if your questions continue down this path then I’m going to have to end the conversation.”

Nevertheless, we continue along the safe topic of New Zealand cinema.

It’s 20 years since Tamahori broke away from TV advertisements and found fame with Once Were Warriors, cementing the careers of Cliff Curtis and Morrison.

The latter is to work with Tamahori again in Patriach, the film adaptation of the Witi Ihimaera novel Bulibasha: King of the Gypsies.

It’s set to be filmed next year though dates and locations have yet to be confirmed.

“It’s hard to find good actors aged 50 and above,” Tamahori explains of his decision to cast Morrison.

“I know how to get the best out of him.

“And I haven’t made a film in 20 years in New Zealand so I’m looking forward to it.”

Tamahori still yearns to tell a story about the 19th century land wars in a modern context.

“It’s an idea that’s developed about taking the events from the land wars of the 1870s to 1880s. It’s in the early stages yet but we’re talking about how to get it going.”

BATTLE TO BRING OUT THE MUSS

A new documentary has revealed how hard it was for director Lee Tamahori to turn Temuera Morrison into violent drunk Jake the Muss for his breakthrough 1994 film Once Were Warriors.

Morrison is now synonymous with Jake but at the time it was a big shift from his Shortland Street role as mild-mannered doctor Hone Ropata.

Even Rena Owen, who played Jake’s long-suffering wife Beth, doubted Morrison was up for the job.

“Oh shucks, Beth’s going to be beating up Jake,” Owen admitted in a new Maori TV documentary Once Were Warriors: Where Are They Now “Every spare moment was spent on extra rehearsals for Tem.”

The Jake we see firing up at Beth in the family home comes courtesy of a line that a fed-up Owen spat at Morrison during retakes.

She wanted to wipe the “Dr Ropata smirk” off Morrison’s lips.

“I said ‘What the f… are you smiling at Jake It’s not funny’.”

Morrison thought Owen was ad-libbing after a long day but quickly got the message. Tamahori called for them to redo the scene. Convincing now, Morrison fired the line, “Who the f… do you think you are”

Everyone went home with smiles on their faces, Owen said. “We saw the beast.”

Slightly built Morrison also worked with a fight co-ordinator to build some muscle and worked on his road-rage on the way to the Shortland Street set to hone his mental aggression.

And he used Owen’s doubt “as fuel” for the violent role.

– Sunday Star Times

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Review: 20,000 Days on Earth


REVIEW:

For a film like this, you almost need two reviews: one for the fans, for whom Nick Cave’s rambling musings will never be less than treacle to their ears; and one for filmgoers who may be only mildly interested in the Australian rock star as an Actual Person but may appreciate the twist on the documentary artform.

With those caveats in mind, here’s the rundown:

Cave has collaborated with British artists Jane Pollard and Iain Forsyth to produce a necessarily self-conscious, sometimes delightful, often ponderous, mash-up of the documentary trope.

The conventional style would have had the directors following him around and capturing the “true” essence of Cave-life, the highs and lows, and delivering a searing portrait of the troubled genius soul.

This is the type of (usually contrived) fare put out by the likes of Katy Perry, whose Part of Me film was fascinating but ultimately so constructed that watching the beleaguered singer wave a frail hand at the camera, begging privacy, actually antagonised this viewer for its total BS.

But several things set 20,000 Days apart from the purported cinema verite model (which aims to be observational, fly-on-the-wall, unbiased).

First, there is the voiceover – spouted by Cave himself, and not a running commentary but more of his rambling musings – matched to beautifully-photographed images. Then there is the dream sequence of entertaining conversations Cave has with various notables (Kylie Minogue offers insights; Ray Winstone delivers a humorous science lesson) as he drives them around in a car.

Far from verite, the film was in fact constructed by Cave and his artist-directors as an imagined Day in the Life – Cave’s 20,000th day on Earth – and the gambit works reasonably well in giving us a taste of what the lanky fella does with his time.

Where it gets self-indulgent, the fans will lap it up. There’s a lot of Cave tapping away at his old-school typewriter, driving off to recording sessions, giving live performances.

Aficionados will luxuriate in the three long tracks played in full (there is an ironic conversation about editing one’s work which seems lost on Cave when it comes to writing his songs) although others may find them sleep-inducing.

Perhaps the most fascinating moments happen in the therapist’s office, as a frightfully nice English chap (Cave lives in Brighton nowadays) probes gently into Cave’s childhood and that old chestnut, one’s relationship with one’s father.

Though there are no brutal or startling revelations, the sessions serve up a fascinating anecdote about Nina Simone and reveal the gentleman Cave has become.

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