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Search Result for “film director”

Showing 1 - 10 of 11

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WORLD

Bill Nighy, master of misdirection

Sunday Spotlight, Published on 29/01/2023

» British actor Bill Nighy was trying to describe how he prepared for his character in the new drama Living. He plays Mr Williams, a buttoned-up, almost catatonically reticent bureaucrat in post-World War II London who, upon learning that he is dying, decides finally to live.

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LIFE

Summer vibes

Life, John Clewley, Published on 24/05/2022

» The Thai entertainment scene got a welcome boost this past week with news that bars, clubs and pubs will reopen from June 1, albeit with a closing time of midnight. The government also announced that the lifting of restrictions would apply to 31 provinces that have successfully controlled potential outbreaks of Covid-19, with the other 46 provinces still under Covid-based surveillance and restrictions.

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TRAVEL

Filmmaker's dream

Life, Karnjana Karnjanatawe, Published on 06/05/2021

» The Serpent, an eight-episode crime drama series screening on Netflix since April, left the audience including me wondering where the film was shot.

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LIFE

One amazing documentary

Life, Kanin Srimaneekulroj, Published on 16/03/2018

» Some people like to say there's nothing left to discover in the world. As humans continue to develop better technology, the far-flung corners of the metaphorical map continue to be coloured in.

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LIFE

Lewis Gilbert, director of three James Bond films, dies

Life, Published on 01/03/2018

» Director Lewis Gilbert, whose dozens of movies included three James Bond thrillers -- You Only Live Twice, The Spy Who Loved Me and Moonraker -- and the Swinging London classic Alfie, has died at 97, colleagues said this week.

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LIFE

Into the strange forest

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 09/09/2016

» The dirt road is dry and red, scorched by the Isan sun. The headmaster is wary, sardonic, and enervated by the heat. The students, or at least some of them, are bored and ironic ("What do you want to be when you grow up?" a teacher asks. "A bank robber," he deadpans.) Next to this poor state school is a forest, sun-dappled, mysterious and probably haunted. Girls are warned not to go in there because they may never come back out.

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LIFE

The horror of our inhumanity

Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 25/09/2015

» Historical films, when they stare into the abyss, are always horror films, and none attests to that with a greater conviction than German Concentration Camps Factual Survey. This is probably the most frightening documentary ever filmed, the sheer scope of inhumanity shown in it almost beyond belief if we didn't know that everything was indeed true. A very difficult film to watch, and certainly not for the faint-hearted and Holocaust deniers (not an endangered species here), this is one of the most important accounts of the event whose ramifications remain relevant 70 years after World War II ended.

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LIFE

Pinch of literary spice

Life, Parisa Pichitmarn, Published on 01/06/2015

» For the first time in India, local language authors such as Chetan Bhagat and Amish Tripathi have become marquee names in terms of sales, eclipsing even mainstream Western writers on the market. Books using local, vernacular language are edgy and have a huge following among young readers.

ADVANCED NEWS

Buried Spitfire fighters under Yangon's airport?

Jon Fernquest, Published on 07/01/2013

» 60 years ago at the end of World War Two 30 fighter aircraft were buried by Americans as they left or so the story goes...