Showing 1-8 of 8 results
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Lord of the Dance
Life, Published on 09/03/2012
» Translated as "my own history of dance", La Dance, Une Histoire a Ma Facon is a solo performance by Beau Geste Company's Dominique Boivin. The work is an expression of his personal relationship to the great masters of dance with a humorous twist. Guru spoke with him ahead of his performance which is part of French-Thai cultural fest La Fete:
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Road Trip
Guru, Published on 09/03/2012
» Rock Around Asia - A Photographic Essay of Southeast Asia Off the Beaten Track, The Imperial Queen's Park Hotel, Mar 9-Apr 5
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The Ukulele-tube tutor
Life, Pimchanok Phungbun Na Ayudhya, Published on 09/03/2012
» HOW DID YOU BECOME PASSIONATE ABOUT UKULELES?
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Rebirth of a nation
Life, Vanniya Sriangura, Published on 09/03/2012
» This coming Sunday marks the first anniversary of one of Japan's worst natural disasters in its history. On March 11, 2011, the Land of the Rising Sun was shaken by a 9.0-magnitude earthquake and its resulting tsunami caused widespread destruction across the country _ entire towns were engulfed, industries destroyed and numerous lives lost.
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Wishing upon a bullet train
Life, Kong Rithdee, Published on 09/03/2012
» Hirokazu Kore-eda's I Wish is a film about small happiness hidden under earth-shaking woes. An unexpected hand clasp on the shoulder, a swimming trunk in a wash basin, the sound of a clinking bell, the volcanic ash that falls like confetti _ the random joy of life slowly works its way into the heart of a young boy at the centre of this family drama, on limited release starting yesterday. Sweet but thankfully not saccharine, observant without being obsessive, I Wish has the delicate lightness and calm lucidity of all Kore-eda's films. And although this one won't move you to ponder the painful disintegration of family values the way the director's near-masterpiece Nobody Knows did in 2004, the uncoiling of revelations here is as gentle as it is refreshing.
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Martian odyssey from book to big screen
Life, Published on 09/03/2012
» John Carter, Disney's US$250-million (7.7-billion baht), 3D sci-fi epic, which opens this weekend in the US and Thailand, is based on a novel, Edgar Rice Burroughs' A Princess of Mars, that is 100 years old and was already a little dated when it came out. Burroughs, better known for his Tarzan saga, published it in monthly instalments in the All-Story magazine starting in Feb 1912. It was the first thing he ever wrote, after a lifetime of failing at just about everything else, and he was clearly learning on the job.
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