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Ghostbusters trailer remade by student filmmakers

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 31 Oktober 2014 | 22.20

If Ghostbusters 3 director, Paul Feig, is still looking to cast his all-female reboot of the supernatural comedy franchise, perhaps he should start by looking in Lynn, Massachusetts.

Students from the Boston suburb have created a Halloween-worthy, shot-for shot remake of the original Ghostbusters trailer. But unlike the 1984 film, the main characters are all played by girls and the female characters are played by boys.

  • On mobile? Watch the middle school remake here

The short was produced by Real to Reel, a local nonprofit program that inspires youth to tell their stories through film.

The 2-minute short syncs up with the original trailer's audio track, but the Ghostbusters' hearse, the Ecto-1, is hilariously replaced by a hand-held Dinky car.

What the video lacks in special effects, it makes up for in heart, with the girl playing Bill Murray's Peter Venkman character nailing the comedian's signature deadpan.

So, just how close is the remake to the original? Watch the side-by-side comparison and judge for yourself.

GhostBOSters Trailer Split Screen Comparison from Real To Reel on Vimeo.

  • On mobile? Watch the side-by-side comparison here 

As for the highly anticipated Ghostbusters 3, not much is known about the re-boot, except that Feig plans to fill the cast with "hilarious women."

Earlier reports pegged the release for early 2015, though that date appears unlikely.


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Edmonton's homeless piano man reveals rough life behind his music

Ryan Arcand has the look of a man many people would avoid on the street. Homeless for the past three decades, his worn jacket and laceless sneakers telegraph to those he encounters that he has lived a hard life.

He might have remained one of the city's largely anonymous homeless panhandlers, if not for a serendipitous encounter with Roslyn Polard, who recorded a video of Arcand playing the piano and posted it on YouTube on Oct. 23.

When Polard happened on him, Arcand was playing an old, battered piano set up in Edmonton's Sir Winston Churchill square, free for anyone to play.

Ryan Arcand

Ryan Arcand, who became a viral sensation when a video of his piano playing was posted to YouTube, says he's been banned from using many of the free pianos in Edmonton because of his drinking habits. (Rick Bremness/CBC)

As Polard passed, the sweet notes drew her closer. She was mesmerized by the beauty of the melody. After he finished playing, Arcand noted that he had written the piece.

Within days, the video of the man, then known only as "Ryan," had gone viral.

In just 24 hours, it drew almost 800,000 hits. Within a week, almost two million people had watched the video, with many viewers from around the world posting comments on the quality of Ryan's skill and musicality. Many asked questions about the mysterious melody he played. 

But for more than a week after the video was posted, his story remained a mystery. 

Searching for the unknown musician

Outreach workers at homeless shelters in the city said they knew vaguely of Ryan, but not much about him.

Workers said he'd occasionally appear at shelters or where food was served to the homeless, but remained relatively unknown, in spite of his longevity on the streets.

It took a CBC News crew three days of searching to track him down.

In the end, we found him sitting on the stairs of an Edmonton Church, with some cans of Bow Valley Strong beer in a plastic bag beside him.

As we spoke, he cracked one beer after another. We began before noon.

'Meant for each other'

Ryan Arcand was born on the Alexander Reserve near Edmonton 43 years ago. A family member told us he and his brother were taken away by social workers when he was three or four years old.

Ryan Arcand

The YouTube video showing Ryan Arcand playing the free red piano in Edmonton's Winston Churchill Square was viewed nearly two million times within a week of being posted. (YouTube/VVRoz P)

Arcand says he first encountered a piano in the basement of a foster home when he was eight.

"It was as though we were meant for each other," Arcand explained. "You're looking at the piano and you're falling in love with it."

He says he sat down and began to play, first movie and soap opera themes, and then music of his own composition.

"I was in tears with this piano" he says.

How and when Arcand's life went off the rails is unclear. An aunt who spoke with CBC News says she has tried for years to help him get off the streets.

'It's like you're playing, but you forget yourself.'- Ryan Arcand on performing

"There is hope for him," says Ruth Arcand, "but he is set in his ways on the street."

Over the years, Arcand has had many encounters with the law, often because of drinking.

He was recently banned from playing the piano in Churchill Square because he was caught with an open can of beer, and has been barred from playing a piano in the foyer of Edmonton's city hall.

Arcand said he used to spend many afternoons playing piano at a downtown hospital until he says he was banned from there as well for drinking hand sanitizer.

'This is a dream'

After chatting with Arcand, we took him to the nearest available piano, which happened to be a Steinway Grand located inside a nearby church.

He lit up at the sight of the instrument, immediately sitting down on the bench and murmuring, "This is a dream."

Ryan Arcand

Arcand smiles in delight when he's shown the YouTube video Polard posted of him on Oct. 23. (Rick Bremness/CBC)

Arcand then launched into the same melody that made him famous on YouTube. 

He didn't stop playing until a priest said he'd have to wrap up, because the church organist had arrived and needed to practise.

Asked how he feels when he plays, Arcand responded, "It's like you're playing, but you forget yourself."

He continued: "You know, it's like truth, life. I love people. Sometimes I don't even know if people love me, but it doesn't matter. I love people."


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Maps to the Stars and Nightcrawler: HALLOWEEN FILM REVIEWS

CBC film critic, Eli Glasner, looks at two new movies with seriously disturbing storylines

CBC News Posted: Oct 31, 2014 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Oct 31, 2014 5:00 AM ET

Maps to the Stars and Nightcrawler hit movie theatres this weekend, offering up some disturbing fare for movie fans who are looking for a fright.

Mia Wasikowska and Julianne Moore, Maps to the Stars

Mia Wasikowska and Julianne Moore star in Cronenberg's scary snapshot of Hollywood today. (eOne Films)

While director David Cronenberg's Maps isn't your typical thriller, it's a "razor-tipped look at life" in Hollywood says CBC film critic Eli Glasner—who likes the kind of cinema that really gets under his skin.

Speaking of skin, the film by Canada's master of macabre centres on the aging and unravelling actress, Havana Segrand (played by Julianne Moore), who is plagued by the ghost of her legendary mother.

Jake Gyllenhaal in Nightcrawler

Jake Gyllenhaal is out to collect carnage in Nightcrawler. (Elevation Pictures)

Nightcrawler stars Jake Gyllenhaal as an ambitious freelance cameraman drawn into the seedy underbelly of Los Angeles by his morbid fascination for blood and crime.

"Imagine Network meets Taxi Driver and you get this pedal-to-the-metal thriller," says Glasner.

Watch Eli's full reviews in the video above.

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Stephen Colbert praises Kevin Vickers: 'To hell with Bruce Willis'

House of Commons Sergeant-at-Arms Kevin Vickers has earned praise from across Canada for his dramatic takedown of the Parliament Hill shooter Michael Zehaf-Bibeau. Now he's caught the attention of American comedian Stephen Colbert.

Colbert hosts a satirical news program on Comedy Central and used a four-minute and 32-second segment to praise Vickers — well, in the comedian's own style.

Colbert showed several clips of the CBC's Evan Solomon describing how Vickers discovered Zehaf-Bibeau on Parliament Hill and then shot him with his sidearm.

"To hell with Bruce Willis. This Canadian just put, this guy, our neighbour to the north just put the 'eh in Yippee-Ki-Yay,'" Colbert said on Thursday night on his Comedy Central television program, a reference to Willis's famous line from his 1988 movie Die Hard.

The U.S. comedian then showed footage from the lengthy ovation that Vickers received from MPs the day after the shooting.

Colbert quipped, "Look at that magnificent bastard; stoic, humble. Folks I have not this moved by something this Canadian since the return of Degrassi."

He then apologized for all the "terrible" things he has said about Canada in the past such as "maple-sucking moose humpers."

Colbert didn't, however, apologize for his 2012 description of Windsor, Ont., as the "Earth's rectum" or suggesting in April that the United States could invade Saskatchewan.

The reaction to Vickers's actions has spurred praise far beyond Parliament Hill and the Colbert Report.

He has been hailed as a hero on social media and been celebrated in his hometown of Miramichi, N.B.

Vickers became the sergeant-at-arms in the House of Commons eight years ago after a varied career in security that included protecting foreign dignitaries and members of the Royal Family.


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Trailer Park Boys star Lucy DeCoutere claims Jian Ghomeshi choked, slapped her on date

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 30 Oktober 2014 | 22.19

Actress Lucy DeCoutere is the first woman to attach her name to allegations of violence at the hands of former CBC host Jian Ghomeshi in interviews with the Toronto Star and CBC's The Current.

DeCoutere, who plays Lucy on the TV comedy Trailer Park Boys, told CBC's The Current that Ghomeshi physically attacked her during a date in 2003.

CANADA/

In a Facebook post responding to his dismissal, Jian Ghomeshi denied that he has instigated non-consensual violent sex with women and said he only participates in sexual practices that are 'mutually agreed upon, consensual and exciting for both partners.' (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

DeCoutere's allegations come after a string of similar accusations from women who did not want to be named that have appeared in recent days on the CBC and in the Toronto Star.

DeCoutere met Ghomeshi at a Banff, Alta., television festival and maintained a playful correspondence with him after that.

On one occasion in 2003, she visited him in Toronto and the pair went to dinner and later to Ghomeshi's house. They started kissing consensually, but, she said, Ghomeshi soon became violent.

"He did take me by the throat and press me against the wall and choke me," DeCoutere said. "And he did slap me across the face a couple of times."

She doesn't recall telling him to stop but said her facial expression turned very serious and Ghomeshi was no longer violent after that. She left within an hour and saw Ghomeshi two more times that weekend, but they did not discuss the incident, and no further violent incidents occurred.

She said she had no physical marks on her body from the attack and did not seek medical attention or report it to the police, partially because she felt there were too many holes in her story.

In a new Facebook post Thursday morning, Ghomeshi responded: "I want to thank you for your support and assure you that I intend to meet these allegations directly. I don't intend to discuss this matter any further with the media."

Ghomeshi's lawyer, Neil Rabinovitch, earlier told The Current that neither he nor Ghomeshi would be commenting on the allegations DeCoutere made to The Current because the case is before the courts. 

Ghomeshi launched a $55 million lawsuit against the public broadcaster on Monday after the CBC ended its relationship with the former host a day earlier.

In an earlier Facebook post over the weekend responding to his dismissal, Ghomeshi denied that he has instigated non-consensual violent sex with women and said he only participates in sexual practices that are "mutually agreed upon, consensual and exciting for both partners."

"In the coming days you will prospectively hear about how I engage in all kinds of unsavoury aggressive acts in the bedroom. And the implication may be made that this happens non-consensually. And that will be a lie," he wrote.


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Mike Myers pays tribute to Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at New York gala

Famed Canadian comedian Mike Myers wore his heart on his sleeve and his patriotism on his lapel at Elton John's annual AIDS benefit Tuesday night in New York.

The Toronto-born actor was spotted with a golden maple leaf over his heart in a personal tribute to fallen Canadian soldier, Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, who was gunned down at the Ottawa War Memorial last week.

"I wore a Canada pin in honour of Cpl. Cirillo, who was laid to rest today," the Ontario-born actor told ET Canada. 

" [It's] very important to show your respect to a great Canadian and a hero."

The benefit, "An Enduring Vision: A Benefit for the Elton John AIDS Foundation," was hosted by musical legend Elton John and raised $3.7 million US.

Myers raised a grand total of $40,000 by jumping on stage and auctioning himself off for a lunch date.

Elton John called Pope Francis "my hero" for his compassion and push to accept gays in the Catholic church at his annual AIDS benefit.

He said Francis is pushing boundaries in the church and told the crowd: "Make this man a saint now, OK?"

Elton John

Founder Sir Elton John performed onstage at the benefit, and called for Pope Francis to be sainted. (Larry Busacca/Getty Images)

"Ten years ago one of the biggest obstacles in the fight against AIDS was the Catholic Church. Today we have a pope that speaks out about it," said John, earning cheers from the attendees at Cipriani's on Wall Street.

Catholic bishops scrapped their landmark welcome to gays earlier this month, showing deep divisions at the end of a two-week meeting sought by Francis to chart a more merciful approach to ministering to Catholic families. An earlier draft of the document offered a welcoming tone of acceptance, but that was stripped away after the bishops failed to reach consensus on a watered-down section on ministering to homosexuals.

"He is a compassionate, loving man who wants everybody to be included in the love of God," John said of the pope. "It is formidable what he is trying to do against many, many people in the church that opposes. He is courageous and he is fearless, and that's what we need in the world today."

John, who wrote an op-ed for The New York Times on Tuesday, also honoured New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo for his plan to end the AIDS epidemic in his state by 2020.


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Roman Polanski, filmmaker wanted by U.S., questioned in Poland

Prosecutors in Poland questioned filmmaker Roman Polanski at the request of U.S. prosecutors who are seeking his arrest on charges from 1977 of having sex with a minor, a spokeswoman said Thursday.

Spokeswoman for the prosecutors in Krakow, Boguslawa Marcinkowska, said the filmmaker remained free but available for further proceedings.

Mateusz Martyniuk, a spokesman for the prosecutor general's office, said the U.S. requested Polanski's arrest and Polish prosecutors were expecting that an extradition request would follow.

Earlier, Deputy Foreign Minister Rafal Trzaskowski hinted that Poland would not be willing to act on a U.S. extradition request, if one were made.

Polanski's movements are restricted by an Interpol warrant in effect in 188 countries, but he travels freely between Switzerland, France and Poland.

Of Jewish descent, he attended the opening in Warsaw on Tuesday of a monumental museum of the 1,000-year history of Jewish life in Poland. He later travelled to the southern city of Krakow where he lived when World War II began.

The 81-year-old director of movies like Chinatown and the Oscar-winning The Pianist lives in Paris, where — as French citizen — he is immune from U.S. justice, which he fled in 1978. In 2010, he was freed from Swiss house arrest after that government refused to extradite him.


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Vatican unveils new air, light systems to protect Michelangelo frescoes

The Vatican on Wednesday unveiled new high-tech, energy-saving lighting and air purification systems to protect Michelangelo's delicate Sistine Chapel frescoes from damage caused by ever-growing crowds of tourists.

Dust brought in from outside, body sweat and carbon dioxide pose a major risk to the masterpieces, which are more than 500 years old. They include one of the most famous scenes in the history of art - the arm of a gentle bearded God reaching out to give life to Adam.

To protect the frescoes, the Vatican has decided to restrict the number of visitors to the chapel - where popes are elected in secret conclaves - to 6 million a year.

Sistine Chapel

The Sistine Chapel, where popes have been elected since the mid-15th century, is visited by 6 million tourists a year. (Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images)

The previous lighting and air conditioning systems were installed in 1994 - when the number of visitors stood at about 1.5 million - and had become inadequate to protect the work of the Renaissance master.

The new air filtering and conditioning system, which is virtually invisible to visitors and uses pre-existing duct openings, moves air at a very slow speed so as not to damage the frescoes.

Hidden cameras, including two on the massive Last Judgement​ panel behind the altar, check the number people while some 70 monitors control machines outside the chapel that determine air flow, filter out dust and reduce humidity.

"This chapel is a unique structure so we spent a great deal of time understanding how air flows here in order to map the technology," said John Mandyck, chief sustainability officer for United Technologies unit Carrier, which developed the system.

"Air flows differently here than it does, say in an office building or even another church," he told reporters during a evening presentation after the Vatican Museums had closed for the day to tourists.

The new lighting system, made by Germany's Osram uses some 7,000 LED (light emitting diode) lamps consuming up to 90 per cent less electricity than previously, reducing heat to further protect the frescoes.

It has three levels of lighting. One very low level will be used when the chapel is empty, a medium level of illumination will be used when the chapel is open to tourists and a third, much brighter and hotter level will be used only several times a year during papal ceremonies.

The frescoes, inaugurated in October 1512 by Pope Julius II, underwent a major 14-year restoration that ended in 1994. They also include the famous Last Judgement on the wall behind the altar, which the artist painted separately between 1535 and 1541.

Neither the Vatican nor the companies would disclose the cost of the work.


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Alanis Morissette's rep says singer was too sick to attend Ottawa fundraiser

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 29 Oktober 2014 | 22.20

Alanis Morissette raised the ire of some Ottawa residents this week when she pulled out of a major charity event due to illness and then posted Twitter photos from a beach location, but a spokesman says the Ironic singer really was sick.

Morissette's publicist told The Canadian Press that the photo tweeted Monday was actually taken on Oct. 10 at a private residence in L.A.

"She was indeed sick, which is why she unfortunately could not make the trip to Ottawa," said Morissette's publicist via email.

Backlash over poorly timed tweet

The $400 per ticket benefit was to raise money for Fertile Futures, an organization that connects cancer survivors with information and treatment so they can have children after beating their illness.

Morissette had been advertised since the summer as the marquee performer at the annual concert, with CBC personality Rick Mercer hosting for the sixth year in a row.

After booking Morissette in July, organizers were told Friday evening by her agent that the 40-year-old singer couldn't make it. Canadian rock legend Burton Cummings filled in instead.

On the evening of the event, Morissette posted pictures to Instagram and Twitter from a beach, mentioning the Adrienne Shelly Foundation, a New York-based charity that raises money for women filmmakers.

  • On mobile? See Alanis Morrissette's tweet here

Several cabinet ministers and Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau attended the Monday night event. Some in Ottawa tweeted Morissette back.

"Pssst @Alanis, I think online donations are welcome," wrote Industry Minister James Moore.

  • On mobile? See James Moore's tweet here

"@Alanis get well. #ottawa had a rough week too. #awkward #hopelive," wrote Leah Ferko.

  • On mobile? See Leah Ferko's tweet here

Cummings 'the biggest Alanis fan'

Cummings charmed the crowd at the Great Canadian Theatre Company playing hits from the Guess Who and his solo career, sitting alone at a digital keyboard. At the end of the gig he saluted the work of Canadian servicemen and women, and then took pictures with fans.

The Hope Live event was launched by Rogers Communications executive Heidi Bonnell, herself a survivor of melanoma and non-Hodgkins lymphoma. Bonnell and her spouse had frozen embryos before her chemotherapy, and two years ago a surrogate gave birth to their twins.

She announced Monday that 300 men and women have so far been helped with fertility preservation through the money raised at the event.

Burton Cummings

Burton Cummings, seen here in 2012, described himself as 'the biggest Alanis fan you'll ever meet". (The Canadian Press)

"All's well that ends well. It was an exceptional evening that raised a large amount of money and was a huge amount of fun," said Bonnell, who pegs the amount raised at approximately $150,000.

"Burton Cummings really stepped up and gave it his all, and the audience loved it. It was a frustrating weekend, but an amazing event."

Meanwhile, Cummings documented his own response to the hurried weekend with a Facebook post.

"I'm the biggest Alanis fan you'll ever meet," he wrote. "I've championed her artistry for years. I was thrilled to meet her years ago at the Junos and have a beautiful photo taken of the two of us.

"It was a heavy charity event with power and wealth in full evidence, and it was all for good reasons," he added later in the post.

"Fascinating to be at the centre of the whole deal, especially in light of the fact that I was 'filling in' for Alanis."

Previous musical headliners included Jann Arden, Gord Downie, Randy Bachman and Serena Ryder.


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Julia Roberts weighs in on cosmetic surgery debate

Julia Roberts, who turned 47 on Tuesday, is the most recent celebrity to comment on the pressure on actresses to look young at any cost.

"By Hollywood standards, I guess I've already taken a big risk in not having had a facelift," said Roberts in an interview promoting her role as a spokesperson for Lancôme cosmetics.

Her statement comes on the heels of Renee Zellweger's appearance last week, when her dramatically changed look set social media ablaze with speculation of cosmetic surgery.

Zellweger attributed her new look to a change in lifestyle and greater happiness in her personal life, but many commentators speculated more extreme measures were involved.

Roberts did not comment specifically on Zellweger, but did say that leading a balanced life has helped her feel at ease with the natural aging process.

"There is a lightness to my life now—an airy quality of not taking things too seriously. That's happiness," said Roberts, who lives in New Mexico with her cameraman husband, Danny Moder, and the couple's three children.

But whatever risks Roberts took in not going under the knife, it appears the decision has not hurt her career.

Last year, she acted opposite Meryl Streep in the Oscar-nominated August: Osage County.

In 2012, she parodied the obsession with staying young when she took on the role of the Evil Queen in the retelling of Snow White, Mirror Mirror.

Roberts says she hopes to be a role model for other women in their forties and fifties.

"I've told Lancôme that I want to be an aging model, so they have to keep me for at least five more years until I'm over 50."

Roberts's next big film project is The Secret in Their Eyes, which co-stars Gwyneth Paltrow and Chiwetel Ejiofor.


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Black Panther, Captain Marvel revealed on massive Marvel slate

Doctor StrangeBlack PantherCaptain Marvel and the Inhumans are joining the Marvel cinematic universe.

The studio unveiled the titles and release dates of its upcoming superhero films through 2019 during a Tuesday event in Hollywood. The schedule includes a mix of sequels featuring familiar faces and originals focused on Marvel characters that have yet to be introduced on the big screen.

The slate includes Captain America: Civil War and Doctor Strange in 2016; Guardians of the Galaxy 2Thor: Ragnarok" and "Black Panther in 2017; The Avengers: Infinity War — Part ICaptain Marvel and Inhumans in 2018; and The Avengers: Infinity War — Part II in 2019.

Black Panther

Marvel's Black Panther is set to arrive on Nov. 3, 2017 starring Chadwick Boseman. (Ryan Meinerding/Marvel Studios)

The movies join next year's The Avengers: Age of Ultron and Ant-Man.

"When we have information we want to reveal, we reveal it," Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige told fans and members of the media on stage at the El Capitan Theatre. "Sometimes that's in a press release, sometimes that's in San Diego Comic-Con — if everything comes together well — and sometimes that's on a random Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the morning."

Marvel's new lead

At the end of the event, Get On Up star Chadwick Boseman was announced as the actor who will portray Black Panther. He joined Iron Man and Captain America stars Robert Downey Jr. and Chris Evans on stage for the reveal.

Robert Downey Jr., Chadwick Boseman and Chris Evans

Actors Robert Downey Jr., Chadwick Boseman and Chris Evans joke around during the Marvel Studios fan event Tuesday in Los Angeles. (Alberto E. Rodriguez/Disney/Getty Images)

"I'm blessed to be part of this Marvel universe," Boseman said. "I look forward to making magic together."

Feige said the character will make his first appearance in Civil War, which will pit Captain America and Iron Man against each other. In the comics, Black Panther is the leader of the fictional African nation of Wakanda who becomes a member of The Avengers.

"He is definitively a big part of Civil War," Feige said. "We will see him for the first time in Civil War in costume."

First female standalone

Black Panther and Captain Marvel will mark the studio's first films centred on black and female characters from Marvel comics. Feige said the big-screen iteration of the Captain Marvel character will be Carol Danvers, a U.S. Air Force officer whose adventures take her to space in the comics.

Captain Marvel Carol Danvers David Lopez

Captain Marvel will become the first female superhero to get a Marvel movie on July 6, 2018. (David Lopez/Marvel Entertainment)

No casting announcements were made for Captain Marvel, the sorcery-centric Doctor Strange or Inhumans, which is about a race of superbeings.

The Marvel films represent an important chunk of the Walt Disney Co.'s portfolio. Feige said the first 10 Marvel films, which kicked off in 2008 with Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk, have made over $7 billion.

During a question-and-answer session with the media following the event, Feige defended the studio's decision not to focus films specifically on the characters of Black Widow and Hulk, who are portrayed by Scarlett Johansson and Mark Ruffalo in The Avengers.

"It's about bringing new characters to the screen," Feige said. "Black Widow couldn't be more important than as an Avenger herself, and like Hulk, The Avengers films will be the films where they play a primary role."

Tuesday's unveiling of the so-called "phase three" of Marvel's film schedule comes two weeks after Warner Bros. announced a slate of 10 films based on DC Comics characters, including The Flash, Aquaman, Cyborg, Wonder Woman and Shazam.

The full slate of upcoming Marvel films:

  • May 1, 2015: The Avengers: Age of Ultron.
  •  July 17, 2015: Ant-Man.
  • May 6, 2016: Captain America: Civil War.
  • Nov. 4, 2016: Doctor Strange.
  • May 5, 2017: Guardians of the Galaxy 2.
  • July 28, 2017: Thor: Ragnarok.
  • Nov. 3, 2017: Black Panther.
  • May 4, 2018: The Avengers: Infinity War — Part I.
  • July 6, 2018: Captain Marvel.
  • Nov. 2, 2018: Inhumans.
  • May 3, 2019: The Avengers: Infinity War — Part II.

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Daniel Radcliffe raps like Blackalicious on Tonight Show

Harry Potter star proves he's a lyrical wizard, rapping Alphabet Aerobics for Jimmy Fallon

CBC News Posted: Oct 29, 2014 10:09 AM ET Last Updated: Oct 29, 2014 10:09 AM ET

Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe cast a spell over The Tonight Show ​audience Tuesday night, with a show-stopping performance of Blackalicious's classic rap hit Alphabet Aerobics.

"I've always had an obsession with memorizing complicated, lyrically intricate and fast songs," the British actor confessed to host Jimmy Fallon. "It's a disease."

The admission prompted Fallon to hand Radcliffe a microphone and the challenge of performing the super tricky song, which the 25-year-old actor handily accepted.

  • On mobile? Watch Daniel Radcliffe's performance here

Radcliffe stunned the audience, which gave him a standing ovation, when he dropped his accent and flawlessly conquered the song's tongue twisting rhymes, which include verbal hurdles like: 

Casually create catastrophes, casualties
Cancelling cats got their canopies collapsing
Detonate a dime of dank daily doin' dough
Demonstrations, Don Dada on the down low

If you want to see how the former boy wizard stacks up to the original, check out the Blackalicious's version in the video below. Warning: it contains explicit language.

  • On mobile? Watch Blackalicious perform Alphabet Aerobics here

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Taylor Swift gets wax treatment in two Madame Tussauds

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 28 Oktober 2014 | 22.20

Pop star immortalized in museums in Hollywood and Washington

CBC News Posted: Oct 28, 2014 8:26 AM ET Last Updated: Oct 28, 2014 8:26 AM ET

Taylor Swift is getting double the love from Madame Tussauds wax museum with her figure being unveiled in both Washington and Hollywood.

On Tuesday, the museum will add its new wax statue of the 24-year-old singer to its attraction in downtown Washington. Madame Tussauds Hollywood unveiled its new Swift figure Monday.

In Washington, Swift will join figures of President Barack Obama, Beyoncé and Katy Perry.

Madame Tussauds says Swift has been a popular fixture in the museum's New York City location.

For her original figure in 2010, Swift spent time with a team of Madame Tussauds artists. They travelled to Nashville, Tennessee, to take precise measurements and photographs of the young star. The museum says Swift shared her favourite styling and makeup tips to help recreate her look in wax.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

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Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Johnny Cash's son arrested at Deer Lake airport after removing his clothes

John Carter Cash

John Carter Cash, seen here during an interview for CBC's Q, was in Newfoundland for a hunting trip when he was arrested. (CBC)

Johnny Cash's son was arrested in Deer Lake for causing a disturbance after police responded to a report of a man stripping down to his underwear in the airport.

Deer Lake RCMP later identified the man as John Carter Cash, son of the late musician.

Cash was in Newfoundland for a hunting trip and was on his way home from the excursion.

RCMP said Cash had stripped down to his underwear.

Police had been told as they headed to the airport that a man was either drunk or suffering from medical issues, and that he had missed his flight.

On arrival, RCMP officers spoke with security and learned they had convinced Cash to put his clothes back on, and that he was indeed drunk.

Cash will be released when sober and will catch a flight home on Tuesday morning.

Charges are not being laid as Cash cooperated with police and security and has no previous criminal record.

Very few people actually witnessed the event, security told police.


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Fine art becoming more consumer-friendly

The average consumer who wants to explore the rarefied, exclusive world of fine art may find that arcane market a bit more open and welcoming these days.

For the novice art lover, some galleries — with their sparse, silent spaces, lack of price tags and unwelcoming staff — can be a tad intimidating, says Susannah Rosenstock, director of Canada's biggest modern and contemporary fine art fair.​

"There may be one lovely girl sitting up at the front desk who doesn't want to talk to you. I've had that experience myself. But galleries that are here at an art fair want to talk to you. That's why they're here."

The Art Toronto fair that wrapped up Monday drew 105 galleries from Canada and 12 other countries to the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, where they nearly filled an exhibit hall.

There were hundreds, if not thousands, of works on display, ranging from pieces by up-and-coming artists to the Group of Seven.  

Almost all of it was for sale, and unlike in many galleries, most had price tags clearly visible for all to see.

"They have a lot of information for you. Sometimes the artists are here. They want you to ask questions, they want to tell you why they've selected this art works to hang in their booth at this time," says Rosenstock.

You don't have to be rich

That accessibility seemed to bring in crowds from a broad socioeconomic demographic.

While the show's preview night drew high-profile, power collectors with names like Mirvish or Weston, when the doors opened to the general public, in walked Aaron Kotick, casually dressed in a white T-shirt and blue hoodie.

A.J. Casson, Barns on Bayview, 1930

A.J. Casson's painting Barns on Bayview, 1930 was one of the works available for sale in Peter Priede's booth at Art Toronto. (CBC)

"We've got a big space on our wall in our family room that's blank right now and we're looking at different artists and thought this could be a good place to experience a bunch of different artists," says Kotick. 

Neophyte art aficionados might find the $60,000 price tag for an A.J. Casson in Peter Priede's booth out of reach, but that doesn't mean he caters only to the well-heeled.

"Customers come from all walks of life," says Priede, owner-director of Hazelton Fine Art Galleries in Toronto's tony Yorkville district.

"We get the old school, the new school and the upcoming school. It's a broad perspective, everyone from corporate purchasers, private purchasers, beginners," says Priede.

Catering to first timers

With beginners, Priede says gallery staff will work to help determine their taste in art. 

"Do they like landscape? Do they like traditional work? Do they like contemporary? Do they like abstract?

"If it's a beginning piece, we usually try to bring several pieces to their home or their office. They get to try them on their wall on approval. To make sure the sizes are right, that the imagery is right, that they enjoy the painting — that's the key thing," says Priede.

Alongside several Group of Seven paintings, Priede's booth also featured works by emerging Quebec artist Eric Dupont. One of Dupont's paintings was priced at $3,500.  

Three paintings by Jane Waterous

Colourful, whimsical pieces by Jane Waterous were priced between $5,400 and $10,000. (Shawn Benjamin/CBC)

But the big seller for Priede one day during the fair Nassau-based, Ontario-educated artist Jane Waterous.

Priede sold about half a dozen Waterous paintings — colourful, whimsical pieces priced between $5,400 and $10,000 — in just the first couple hours of the show. 

The accessibility theme continued on the other side of the hall, where less-established galleries had their booths in the "Next" section.  

Artists in the Dopamine Collective, a group of artists from Owen Sound, Ont., have science backgrounds and day jobs: one is a dentist.They use their scientific training to create their art. Works in their booth started at $300. 

"One of the things to consider when you're selling art is who is that audience," says the Collective's James Fowler.  

"We're going to have someone who is your new collector, your young collector, someone who maybe has a little bit of money and has bought maybe one or two pieces and they want to broaden their collection."

It all adds up

It's hard to get a sense of the effect this newly gained access to fine art is having on the overall market.

According to the Canadian Conference of the Arts, total spending on works of art, carvings and other decorative ware was $930 million in 2008. 

Anecdotal evidence suggests that market is growing. The Canada Council for the Arts, for instance, says it has seen a great number of galleries moving to bigger spaces.

The financial crisis in 2008 hit the art market hard, but values have increased since then, to the point where relative novices like Kotick, looking to fill that empty spaces walls, are also looking for a potential return on investment.  

"I'm at that age — mid 30s — where I'm starting to think about it. I've got a bunch of friends who are starting to invest in art. So I'm also looking at it as a bit of an investment as well, something to pass down to my kids," says Kotick.

Most consumers aren't going to get rich investing in art.  

Recent analysis from the Stanford Graduate School of Business suggests the true annual return on art as an asset class over the long term is about 6.5 per cent. That same analysis also found art had higher overall risk than the stock market.

But stock certificates don't look nearly as nice hanging above the couch.

And with galleries welcoming more novice buyers and showcasing more emerging artists with more entry level prices, many of the barriers for buying art are coming down. 

If you have a consumer issue, contact Aaron Saltzman.


5 tips for the first-time buyer

  1. Start small. Don't try to fill that two-metre-by-two-metre space above the TV. Large pieces are likely to be more expensive.
  2. Try starting with a drawing or a photograph or even a limited edition print. They're less expensive and can also help in discovering your taste prior to splurging on an original.
  3. Avoid big names. Look for younger artists who haven't made a name internationally and haven't had many shows. They may be just starting out, and often have lower price points.
  4. Do your homework. Visit lots of museums and galleries and even auctions. This will give you a sense of the type of art you prefer and a broad idea of the cost of that art.
  5. Buy something you really love. It sounds clichéd but it's true.  If the value happens to go down, at least you can still enjoy the way it looks in your room.

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Alanis Morissette accused of faking 'sick' after cancelling fundraiser appearance

New

Fans accuse Canadian singer of playing hooky from Ottawa benefit concert

CBC News Posted: Oct 28, 2014 10:51 AM ET Last Updated: Oct 28, 2014 10:51 AM ET

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Alanis Morissette fans are taking to Twitter over the singer's absence at an Ottawa fundraiser Monday, and a tweet that appears to show her participating in a different cause at the same time.

Hope Live Alanis Morissette sick

Hope Live announced Alanis Morissette's absence with this message. The foundation is a national charity helping Canadian cancer patients have children. (hopelive.ca)

A message on Hope Live's website shows that the Canadian pop star pulled out of an "intimate and acoustic" benefit concert planned for Oct. 27 citing illness, with the Guess Who's Burton Cummings stepping in to replace her. But a message posted on Morissette's Twitter account the same day of the appearance seems to show her participating in an event for a different foundation.

  • On mobile? See Alanis Morissette's tweet here.

"A great day of sous-chef-ing for The @AdrienShellyFDN. An honour to be a part of supporting this cause again this year," Morissette's tweet read.

It's not clear when the photos were taken, but Canadians wasted little time accusing the 40-year-old singer of playing hooky.

While some demanded an explanation for the alleged double booking, others jumped to her defence.

Morissette has partnered with The Adrienne Shelly Foundation​ on a number of occasions, but the not-for-profit organiztion for female filmmakers doesn't list any events involving the singer on Oct. 27. 

Morissette has yet to comment on the Twitter reaction. 

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

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Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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J.K. Rowling promises Halloween treat for Harry Potter fans

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 26 Oktober 2014 | 22.20

The best-selling author to publish boy wizard-based story online on Oct. 31

The Associated Press Posted: Oct 24, 2014 3:36 PM ET Last Updated: Oct 24, 2014 3:45 PM ET

Harry Potter fans can look forward to a Halloween treat, with some tricks, from J.K. Rowling.

In an announcement posted Friday on her website, the author revealed that she has prepared a 1,700 word story about the witch and former Hogwarts professor Dolores Umbridge.

The story will appear on Halloween, Oct. 31, on her site. It will include Rowling's "revealing first-person thoughts" about Umbridge, according to Friday's announcement.

Umbridge first appeared in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the fifth of seven books in Rowling's multimillion-selling series. Imelda Staunton played her in the film adaptations of the Potter books.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Nathan Cirillo honoured by National Arts Centre Orchestra

The National Arts Centre Orchestra (NACO) is dedicating their remaining U.K tour performances to Cpl. Nathan Cirillo.

The soldier killed was killed Wednesday in a shooting at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.

Seventy NACO musicians are currently on a 10-day, 5-city remembrance tour of the U.K. to coincide with the centenary of the First World War. 

​Upon hearing of the tragic events in Ottawa the orchestra chose to honour the fallen reservist during a concert Thursday in Edinburgh.

Pinchas Zukerman

Canada's National Arts Centre (NAC) Orchestra, featuring acclaimed music director and violinist Pinchas Zukerman, respond to the tragedy back home with a musical tribute. (National Arts Centre Orchestra)

"We were worried, concerned, and very sad about what happened," spokeswoman Rosemary Thompson said in a statement to CBC News Friday.

"Maestro Pinchas Zukerman spoke from the podium at the end of the concert about the tragedy. He said when an innocent life is taken he responds through music."

The orchestra followed Zukerman's words with a moving encore from Elgar's Serenade for Strings.

"There were tears in the audience," said Thompson. "It was very beautiful."

The orchestra now moves on to performances in Nottingham, London, Bristol and Salisbury, where it will perform inside the Salisbury Cathedral.

The 755-year-old church is steps away from the grounds where many Canadians trained for battle 100 years ago.

Despite some security changes at military sites and for Canadian Forces personnel at home, the orchestra is moving ahead with the tour's events as planned.

"Security concerns have not changed," said Thompson. "We are very pleased to be presenting wonderful music across the U.K. Our partners are aware of the situation back home." 

The NACO's U.K. tour continues through Oct. 30.


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Jack Bruce, bassist from 1960s band Cream, dies at 71

British musician Jack Bruce, best known as the bassist from the 1960s group Cream, has died. He was 71.

Publicist Claire Singers said Saturday Bruce died at his home in Suffolk, England.

A statement released by his family said "the world of music will be a poorer place without him but he lives on in his music and forever in our hearts."

"It is with great sadness that we, Jack's family, announce the passing of our beloved Jack: husband, father, granddad, and all round legend," the statement said.

Cream, which also included guitarist Eric Clapton and drummer Ginger Baker, sold 35 million albums in just over two years and were awarded the world's first ever platinum disc for their album Wheels of Fire.

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Cream, which also included guitarist Eric Clapton and drummer Ginger Baker, sold 35 million albums in just over two years and were awarded the world's first ever platinum disc for their album 'Wheels of Fire.' (David Livingston/Getty)

Bruce wrote and sang most of the songs, including I Feel Free, White Room, Politician and Sunshine Of Your Love.

Cream split in November 1968, and Bruce went on to record the first of his solo albums, Songs For a Tailor. He also fronted many of his own bands.

Many artists covered Bruce's songs, including Jimi Hendrix, David Bowie and Ella Fitzgerald.

Bruce returned to the studio around 2000 to record his solo album Shadows in the Air, which hit number five on the British jazz and blues chart.

Bruce was born to musical parents in Glasgow, Scotland on 14 May 1943. His parents travelled extensively in Canada and the U.S., and the young Bruce attended 14 different schools. He finished his formal education at Bellahouston Academy and the Royal Scottish Academy of Music, to which he won a scholarship for cello and composition.

He left Scotland at the age of 16 and in 1962 joined his first important band, the influential Alexis Korner's Blues Inc., in London. The band featured drummer Charlie Watts, later to join the Rolling Stones.


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High fidelity 2.0: How your favourite music could sound even better

If you look at your average television, it's obvious that picture quality has become significantly better over the years.

We've gone from VHS to DVD to Blu-ray in relatively short order. With every leap, the promise and delivery of higher quality video put the previous generation to shame. More importantly to the manufacturers, it has made the old technology obsolete.

So why hasn't that happened with audio?

In the 1950s and '60s, the talk was all about "hi-fi" (or high-fidelity) sound, but since then, consumer audio has put convenience over quality. From cassette tapes to compact discs to MP3s, the push has been to fit more songs onto a device while shrinking the audio itself.

But at least one major manufacturer is trying to expand the sound, so to speak.

Through a new campaign called Hi-Res Audio, Sony has been touring music festivals and university campuses doing listening tests. It's a push to promote not only richer audio, but better playback equipment.

"With Hi-Res Audio, we saw a huge opportunity," says Karol Warminiec of Sony Canada, "because artists are getting tired of having their music shown to the masses in low-resolution format. They put in so much time and effort and it's always compressed."

'Lossy' files

The idea back in the "hi-fi" era was to make the sound reproduction as faithful as possible to the original recording. The focus was on expanding the frequencies played back, reducing the distortion and noise and being able to power the equipment to get the best out of the sound.

Decades later, audio experts say an entire generation has grown up on basic headphones and lower-end players.

When we talk about music formats nowadays, we're generally referring to MP3s. Though the technology was created decades ago, it rose to popularity in the iPod generation.

Sony headphones

Sony's MDR-10BT headphones are part of a broader campaign by the company to make consumers appreciate richer audio. (Sony)

To sound engineers and audiophiles, the MP3 is known as a "lossy" file format, because it removes information through compression, which affects the final product, says Ian Colquhoun, founder of Axiom Audio, an Ontario company that engineers and manufactures sound equipment.

"In order to get the file size down," says Colquhoun, "you can digitally remove information that someone who wrote an algorithm assumes you're not really going to notice is gone."

But Colquhoun notices. "Even from one piece of music to another, if it is removing information, it is certainly audible."

The compression that occurs with MP3s has been advantageous in that it enables you to fit hundreds of songs on a device. It also helped deliver those songs quickly to hungry consumers in the age of slow home internet.

But it isn't that way anymore. Hard drives are bigger and cheaper and internet speeds are faster.

"I think that if we look at the file compression algorithms like MP3, they were borne out of necessity in the early days of digital," says Andrew Welker, research and development manager at Axiom.

But nowadays, there's "very little need for that sort of file compression."

Feeling the difference

Welker believes that people who grew up with MP3s would in fact notice a difference between a song on an iPod and a higher-resolution file on more robust playback equipment that hearkens back to the hi-fi era.

"I think if you polled 100 people and put them through a basic listening test and asked their opinions on two versions of the same file, I think most people would be able to pick out the difference and say that the uncompressed one was better."

Sony is hoping to tap into this idea. The company's Hi-Res Audio line includes the MDR-10BT headphones, which support uncompressed files and boast a frequency range reproduction of 5 Hz to 40,000 Hz.

To put that into perspective, human hearing – in the prime age of life – can only hear between 20 Hz and 20,000 Hz.

Even when the biology doesn't support it, Sony claims people can tell and have been getting a good response from their tests.

"It's not that they can hear something different, but they can feel it," says Sony's Warminiec. "Even though the human ear can't pick up those frequencies, the sound waves apply a different pressure."

He says that in the last decade, consumers have been "reprogrammed" in how they listen to music.

"We've gotten into this kind of 'good enough' society where it's convenient, it's easy, accessible," he says. "Our challenge [at Sony] is to go and show people this is what music can really sound like."

'Nice marketing'

Some experts in the world of sound research, however, disagree with that basic premise.

Pono high-fidelity digital music player

Neil Young's Pono digital music player is part of a trend of giving music lovers better-quality audio. (Pono Music)

"It's nice marketing, but doesn't make much sense," says Bernhard Grill of Germany's renowned Fraunhofer Institute, one of the largest research organizations in Europe.

At Fraunhofer, Grill was part of the team that created the MP3 decades ago, and admits that at the time, "there was an urgent need to make the files as small as possible. The modems were just so incapable compared to today."

But he says one of the problems was that "people were [creating and recording music] with bad tools," which "unfortunately ruined the reputation of MP3."

Grill says a properly created MP3 can reproduce everything accurately, and that an uncompressed file would do little to improve it.

"The real issue is the loudspeaker and the room acoustics. That will make a real difference in the sound experience."

While the uncompressed versus compressed debate will continue in audiophile forums for years to come, it isn't stopping the push forward. From Sony's new line to Neil Young and his crowdfunded Pono music player, many say the time is right for a better listening experience.

Welker acknowledges that high-fidelity audio isn't necessarily sexy, but with the help of recording artists, engineers and hardware companies, it could become the new normal.

"As soon as people can hear something better, they're going to want to reproduce that in their homes. It's an exposure thing."


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J.K. Rowling promises Halloween treat for Harry Potter fans

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 25 Oktober 2014 | 22.19

The best-selling author to publish boy wizard-based story online on Oct. 31

The Associated Press Posted: Oct 24, 2014 3:36 PM ET Last Updated: Oct 24, 2014 3:45 PM ET

Harry Potter fans can look forward to a Halloween treat, with some tricks, from J.K. Rowling.

In an announcement posted Friday on her website, the author revealed that she has prepared a 1,700 word story about the witch and former Hogwarts professor Dolores Umbridge.

The story will appear on Halloween, Oct. 31, on her site. It will include Rowling's "revealing first-person thoughts" about Umbridge, according to Friday's announcement.

Umbridge first appeared in Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, the fifth of seven books in Rowling's multimillion-selling series. Imelda Staunton played her in the film adaptations of the Potter books.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Nathan Cirillo honoured by National Arts Centre Orchestra

The National Arts Centre Orchestra (NACO) is dedicating their remaining U.K tour performances to Cpl. Nathan Cirillo.

The soldier killed was killed Wednesday in a shooting at the National War Memorial in Ottawa.

Seventy NACO musicians are currently on a 10-day, 5-city remembrance tour of the U.K. to coincide with the centenary of the First World War. 

​Upon hearing of the tragic events in Ottawa the orchestra chose to honour the fallen reservist during a concert Thursday in Edinburgh.

Pinchas Zukerman

Canada's National Arts Centre (NAC) Orchestra, featuring acclaimed music director and violinist Pinchas Zukerman, respond to the tragedy back home with a musical tribute. (National Arts Centre Orchestra)

"We were worried, concerned, and very sad about what happened," spokeswoman Rosemary Thompson said in a statement to CBC News Friday.

"Maestro Pinchas Zukerman spoke from the podium at the end of the concert about the tragedy. He said when an innocent life is taken he responds through music."

The orchestra followed Zukerman's words with a moving encore from Elgar's Serenade for Strings.

"There were tears in the audience," said Thompson. "It was very beautiful."

The orchestra now moves on to performances in Nottingham, London, Bristol and Salisbury, where it will perform inside the Salisbury Cathedral.

The 755-year-old church is steps away from the grounds where many Canadians trained for battle 100 years ago.

Despite some security changes at military sites and for Canadian Forces personnel at home, the orchestra is moving ahead with the tour's events as planned.

"Security concerns have not changed," said Thompson. "We are very pleased to be presenting wonderful music across the U.K. Our partners are aware of the situation back home." 

The NACO's U.K. tour continues through Oct. 30.


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Frank Gehry, celebrated architect, shocks Spanish media with obscene gesture

The American-Canadian architect responded to reporter's question by flipping him the bird

The Associated Press Posted: Oct 24, 2014 3:11 PM ET Last Updated: Oct 24, 2014 3:19 PM ET

Architect Frank Gehry travelled to Spain to receive a prestigious award but shocked his hosts by responding to a reporter's question with an obscene gesture and making contemptuous comments about most modern architecture.

Frank Gehry

Gehry shocked his hosts Thursday with the obscene gesture and biting comments about modern architecture. (J.L. Cereijido/EPA)

The American-Canadian was in the northern city of Oviedo to accept one of Spain's Prince of Asturias prizes Friday.

Local media reported that on the eve of the ceremony, Gehry reacted with a rude gesture at a news conference when asked if his work was based on spectacle.

Gehry said 98 per cent of buildings today lack sensitivity and respect for humanity, according to El Pais.

He has created the Guggenheim Museum in Spain, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, and the Louis Vuitton Foundation in Paris, an arts centre sponsored by the LVMH Fashion Group.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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imagineNATIVE's Shane Belcourt on directing, dance and #MMIW

It's day three of the 15th imagineNATIVE film + media arts festival in Toronto. Can you believe it?

I took a moment this morning to sit down with award-winning filmmaker extraordinaire Shane Belcourt.

Belcourt's film Kaha:wi: The Cycle of Life, premiered today (Friday) at the festival. He is also collaborating with acclaimed Métis author Maria Campbell in the festival's Storytellers Screening on Saturday.

Let's get into it!

How did you find out that you wanted to become a director? What was the moment that you thought 'this is for me'

Shane: Oh geez, in some respects I'm always still asking that question! Obviously, I went into film school with that ambition in '93 and prior to that in high school. My dad had an aboriginal production company, so [I saw] that movies are made by people.

I like to have a collaborative sort of exchange, not just like 'Sit here, shut up, and do what I tell you.' I've never been good at that. So it just kind of naturally progressed, and when you're writing things, it's sort of a natural kind of thing to do if you have some inclination towards directing, and some talent towards camera directing, and working with actors, it just sort of flows naturally.

So, I guess I could say I never would have imagined it any other way! I watched Woody Allen's movies and I'm like 'I want to do that!' … but I didn't think of it as 'Oh, I want to be a director and I need to study the arts and crafts of direction.' It was just like 'I'm going to make a movie!'

When you start something new it's always tough. Kaha:wi: The Cycle of Life was your first 'dance movie' What was that like? 

Shane: Of course I was a little nervous at first. The initial thing was: 'Hey, do you want to do a film with Santee? (Santee Smith is the choreographer of Kaha:wi: The Cycle of Life.)

KAHA:WI: THE CYCLE OF LIFE

Kaha:wi: The Cycle of Life interprets traditional Iroquois legends through contemporary dance. (imagineNATIVE Fim + Media Arts Festival)

I was like 'Yeah! She's amazing! It would be great!'. So I sign off on it, then I think to myself , 'Wait a minute. I've never done a dance movie before!' I am not in any respects at all a 'dance expert'.

So it was sort of: 'What are the stories of these dances? What are the characters? What is the emotional space, the psychological space of the character as they go through this scene or this movement?'. I thought if I focus on that experience, then I will have done my job.

I know you've been involved with the festival for a number of years, what do you think is most important about imagineNATIVE?

Shane: Community! Years ago, the first film that I ever made was in the Witching Hour [short film program]. There were a bunch of other young filmmakers in the Witching Hour and we're all there, we're in it together. Some of those people I still see and know and so it was a real great entry into the festival.

There is a real community and camaraderie amongst all the artists. Dancers know the filmmakers, the writers know the photographers, and everyone comes out. It's one of those things in the calendar where aboriginal people in Toronto know we can get together.

That is what I was drawn too, what I'm most excited about: 'I'm going to see everybody!'.

The festival has grown so much. It's now the largest indigenous festival in the world!

You have another film in the festival called Apikiwiyak (Coming Home) that deals with violence against indigenous women, why was this an important project for you?

Some of it comes from personal family story, so I think that the phenomenon of lateral violence is known throughout a lot of aboriginal families in the community.

You know we can talk about the side effects of colonialism, we can talk about the violence that happens to mother earth and the connection that indigenous people have towards it. It's so very emotional and raw in me.

APIKIWIYAK (COMING HOME)

Apikiwiyak (Coming Home) deals with violence against indigenous women. (imagineNATIVE Film + Media Arts Festival)

So you make films to hopefully shed some of it, or get a new light on it, and you get a new perspective on it. As a viewer when you watch other people make their work or when you make the work yourself, it affects how I am as a dad, and as a husband, and as a friend to people.

The sadness, and the helplessness at times get translated into aggression, to anger, and to lateral violence. The core of all these negative things is just broken heartedness.

So really, I should make a comedy next! As opposed to drudging it up…lets just move on and laugh…that's what we loved so much about the opening (imagineNATIVE opening night screening was a comedy) you know…we just laughed!

Shane Belcourt is one of the fastest tweet slingers out there. If you have a question I didn't ask feel free to tweet your questions to @Sab72 with the Hashtag #iN15th.

For all the latest and greatest from imagineNATIVE, tweet, follow or message me directly at @itsKinosh.


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Keanu Reeves blasts into theatres in John Wick

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 24 Oktober 2014 | 22.20

The 50-year-old actor stars as a retired hitman taking on the Russian mob

CBC News Posted: Oct 23, 2014 12:52 PM ET Last Updated: Oct 23, 2014 12:52 PM ET

Fifteen years after donning the black trench coat for the blockbuster The Matrix, Keanu Reeves is back in black and armed to the teeth in the action thriller John Wick.

The Toronto-raised actor plays the eponymous role of a retired assassin forced to get back into the game after a Russian mobster (played by Michael Nyqvist) marks him for death.

But — as Reeves recently explained to CBC News — what really sets Wick off is the home invasion killing of a puppy that was a gift from his recently dead wife.

"When that's taken away from him — stomped and killed—this impulse to reclaim, which might be vengeance or revenge [is ignited]," explained Reeves.

The film's dark and stylized action was co-directed by stunt experts, Chad Stahelski and David Leitch, who worked with Reeves on The Matrix.

Eternal Hollywood bad guy, Willem Dafoe, ​and Game of Thrones actor Alfie Allen also star.

John Wick hits theatres across Canada on Friday.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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5 top picks for the imagineNATIVE film festival

If you are an avid film festival fan and you are in Toronto right now, you are in luck. The imagineNATIVE film + media arts festival is in town until Sunday.  

This celebration of indigenous film and media will showcase over 130 works representing more than 70 distinct indigenous nations from 12 different countries, including Canada.

You can show your savviness of film festivals by telling your pals that the most important indigenous film and media arts festival in the world  - in my opinion -- just turned 15. Happy Birthday, imagineNATIVE!

Or you can brag about the powerful and creative indigenous voices that are a part of this year's lineup including: DJ Bear Witness of A Tribe Called Red, Canadian novelist Joseph Boyden, as well as award winning and multi-disciplinary artist Caroline Monnet, to name a few.

Here are five films or events not be missed this year.

1: The Embargo Collective II – Closing Gala 

Sunday at 6:30PM – TIFF Bell Lightbox

The way you close a festival says a lot and imagineNATIVE is going for a strong finish this year.

Embargo Collective

The Embargo Collective II series, at this year's ImagineNative Film Festival, features five Indigenous female filmmakers from across Canada. Caroline Monnet, Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, Zoe Leigh Hopkins, Elle-Maija Tailfeathers and Lisa Jackson. (ImagineNative)

"I'm excited to see the Embargo Collective on closing night of the festival - indigenous women's voices in cinema need to be heard more often and this is an incredible collection of filmmakers and works," says Ryan McMahon, the man behind the popular Red Man Laughing podcast. 

The Embargo Collective II series features five indigenous female filmmakers from across Canada. This highly anticipated evening will begin with world premieres for each of the five films, and conclude with an in-depth and in-cinema panel with the directors: Caroline Monnet, Alethea Arnaquq-Baril, Zoe Leigh Hopkins, Elle-Maija Tailfeathers and Lisa Jackson

2. Storytellers Screening

Saturday at 3:00PM – Tiff Bell Lightbox

Author Joseph Boyden

Joseph Boyden will be reading from his latest novel at events in Winnipeg on October 17th and 18th. (Camille Gévaudan)

If you are looking to be engaged as a writer, a filmmaker, an actor, or just as an audience member this session will bring a new level of live multimedia performance you won't get anywhere else.

This two-part event features an author and filmmaker collaborating in what imagineNATIVE calls a "storyteller screening". 

Author and activist Maria Campbell collaborates with filmmaker Shane Belcourt, and literary star Joseph Boyden teams up with master of animation Terril Calder

It's followed by an in-depth panel discussion with all the artists, hosted by CBC Aborigireporter, Connie Walker.

3. Kaha:wi: The Cycle of Life – World Premiere  

Thursday at 7:30PM - Tiff Bell Lightbox

Kaha:wi: Cycle of Life by Shane Belcourt

Kaha:wi: Cycle of Life; it's a cinematic dessert for the eyes, a dance film focusing on performer & choreographer Santee Smith, who tells traditional Iroquois legends through contemporary dance. (Still from Kaha:wi: Cycle of Life)

I had the pleasure of being on the set for Kaha:wi: Cycle of Life; it's a cinematic dessert for the eyes, a dance film focusing on  performer & choreographer  Santee Smith, who tells traditional Iroquois legends through contemporary dance.

"Because Santee is a majestic powerhouse and everyone in her entourage is stunning, my first-time dance film was reduced to: 'keep in focus'," says director Shane Belcourt.

I'm so excited to see how it has come together. I'll be front row centre this Thursday, (Popcorn in hand, of course).

4. Australia Spotlight VI: Shorts II

Sunday at 3:45PM – TIFF Bell Lightbox

This year's international spotlight shines on the land down under.

Online and on-the-go. Download the imagineNATIVE app to stay connected to the festival from your living room in Calgary, or on the streetcar in downtown Toronto. Follow on twitter: Hashtag #iN15th.

This collection of shorts brings some amazing directors and award-winning films to the festival including: Frankie's Story, winner of three Australian film institute awards, and two films directed by Tyson Mowarin, who received the Troy Alberts Award for Excellence in Cinematography.

There is a deep connection with imagineNATIVE and Australia. I caught up with the founder of imagineNATIVE, Cynthia Lickers-Sage, who pointed out that imagineNATIVE was shaped by its early Australian influences such as Pauline Clague, who curated this collection of shorts.

It's easy to see why more than one person will be saying: Aussie Aussie Aussie!

5. Indigo (TIFF Official Selection) opening for the world premiere of The Lodge

Thursday at 5:15PM – Tiff Bell Lightbox

Stop-motion film has always been fascinating to me,  I am drawn to the creative mastery that flows from thousands of frames onto the big screen.

This one-two powerhouse punch of stop-motion films has my attention and my vote as a must see event!

Indigo is directed by Amanda Strong, who was named one of "Six emerging aboriginal artists in Canada who are inspiring change" by the National Post. Indigo was an official selection for the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival and Strong has created a lot of buzz around the film scene for her animation brilliance, dream like imagery and traditional storytelling.

"I am honoured and humbled to be opening for the amazing Terril Calder's first stop-motion feature film The Lodge," says Amanda Strong.

The Lodge is director Terril Calder's first full-length feature in the festival, with previous works playing at imagineNATIVE over the years and at festivals worldwide.

Now that you've got my list, comment, like, share; let me know what are you looking forward to. I'll see you at the movies!

CBC Aboriginal on Facebook or on Twitter @CBC_Aboriginal or contact me directly @itsKinosh #iN15th


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Rosie O'Donnell's remarks on Ottawa shooting draw criticism online

The View co-host Rosie O'Donnell is drawing criticism online for remarks about Wednesday's deadly shooting in Ottawa.

Thursday's episode of the chat show kicked off with the panellists discussing the attack on Parliament Hill and the killing of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo of Hamilton as he stood guard at the National War Memorial.

The Ottawa shootings came just two days after two Canadian soldiers were run over — one of them fatally — in Quebec by a man with jihadist sympathies.

As The View panellists discussed whether Wednesday's shootings were an act of terrorism, O'Donnell said "most of these shooters have severe mental illness" and then expressed support for a controversial tweet about the shooting from model Chrissy Teigen, who used the tragedy in Ottawa to make a point about U.S. gun control.

  • On mobile? Read Crissy Teigen's tweet here

On Wednesday, Teigen tweeted: "active shooting in Canada, or as we call it in America, Wednesday." She then clarified in a follow-up tweet: "Sorry you don't understand that is a knock at America and our issues with gun control. No one is minimizing the Ottawa shooting."

"I thought it was brilliant and on-point, but some people thought it was insensitive," O'Donnell said of Teigen's tweet.

"Timing is everything," responded ABC News anchor Amy Robach, who was on the panel. "And I think when you tweet something like that in the middle of an active shooting, people are afraid, people are running for their lives and a man is dead."

Chrissy Teigen

Crissy Teigen, has since quit Twitter, announcing Thursday "I feel sick. Bye Twitter. Taking my talents to instagram." (Michael N. Todaro/Getty Images)

Co-host Nicolle Wallace also challenged O'Donnell, saying: "I know it's important to you that mental health is always raised as a possible, unaddressed cause. It's also possible that he was an evil terrorist, OK? So I don't want that to get lost.

"The Canadian government has classified this as a terrorist attack. The definition of terrorism is arbitrary violence and death rendered on innocent people who are just doing their jobs."

"I get it," replied O'Donnell. "But 86 people a day are killed in America with guns, and you know what? That is terrorism here."

O'Donnell then further backed up Teigen's tweet.

"I think she's saying: I'm an American, I live here. I see two people shot this week in Canada and the entire country of Canada is in mourning. However, in America this happens on a daily day basis and we don't even pay attention anymore."

On Twitter, some users expressed anger over O'Donnell's remarks.

Teigen, who also experienced a social media backlash because of her tweet, has since quit Twitter, announcing Thursday, "I feel sick. Bye Twitter. Taking my talents to Instagram." 


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Whiplash: FILM REVIEW

A student vs. teacher battle of the wills that 'doesn't let go', says CBC's film critic

CBC News Posted: Oct 24, 2014 5:00 AM ET Last Updated: Oct 24, 2014 5:00 AM ET

Seasoned character actor, J.K. Simmons, plays a tyrannical instructor to Miles Teller's ambitious young drummer in Whiplash.

The gripping jazz music drama, written and directed by Damien Chazelle, centres on the pair's twisted dynamic and hammers on the fine line between passion and obsession.

"It's a case of Stockholm Syndrome set to a killer beat," says CBC film critic Eli Glasner. "A battle of wills that doesn't let go until the very last shot."

Whiplash also made the CBC Arts list of top choices for the People's Choice Award at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival.

Read more reviews from CBC staffers in the link above, and watch Eli Glasner's full review in the attached video.

Whiplash is in theatres Friday.

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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Avengers: Age of Ultron trailer released early after leak

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 23 Oktober 2014 | 22.19

Marvel Studios has released the official trailer for the highly anticipated superhero sequel Avengers: ​Age of Ultron Wednesday after an unauthorized clip hit the web earlier in the day.

The action-packed 2-minutes features many of the original superheros, including Robert Downey Jr.'s Iron Man, Chris Evans' Captain America, Scarlett Johansson's Black Widow and Mark Ruffalo as a beleaguered-looking Bruce Banner.

It also features new Avengers characters Scarlett Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) and Quicksilver (Aaron Taylor-Johnson).

Director/writer Joss Whedon is back at helm for this next chapter in the blockbuster franchise, which centres on the the supervillainous robot, Ultron — a Tony Stark creation gone wrong.

The video was expected to air on ABC next Tuesday after an episode of Marvel's Agents of SHIELD. But it surfaced online early Wednesday, forcing Marvel to show its hand, and acknowledge the breach in a Twitter message, blaming the leak on the villainous organization, Hyrda.

  • On mobile? See the tweet here


Shortly after that, Marvel released the trailer, and then gave fans their first look at the movie's official poster.

  • On mobile? See movie poster tweet here

The Marvel publicity machine appears to be working full tilt, and the studio is clearly banking on a winner.

The first Avengers took in a whopping $1.5 billion US in 2012, making it the third highest-grossing film of all-time. 

Avengers: Age of Ultron is due in theatres May 1, 2015. 


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The Walking Dead's Laurie Holden describes her role in Colombian sex slave sting

Laurie Holden became famous playing the brave civil rights lawyer, Andrea, on the hit TV series The Walking Dead. But offscreen, the Canadian-raised actress recently took on the role of a lifetime.

Earlier this year, she took part in an undercover operation that resulted in the rescue of 55 sex slaves in Colombia, some as young as 12.

"I had a pretty good disguise — I had a wig and glasses," said Holden in an interview with CBC News.

Her role in the sting was to keep the young girls distracted as armed authorities closed in on their traffickers.

"We pretended we were having a big bachelor party, so my role was the girlfriend of one of the rich Americans, so I kind of had to sell them and the traffickers on the idea that I was a party girl, that I was there to have a good time with the guys."

'We have to protect those who can't protect themselves and it's not about writing a cheque.'- Laurie Holden on her work protecting victims of child sex traffickers

Holden was one of a handful of civilian volunteers who participated in the sting, orchestrated by a non-governmental organization, Operation Underground Railroad, and Colombian authorities.

They contacted Holden because they knew she had done similar work in Cambodia and Vietnam, though those were smaller operations and never involved armed personnel. 

Operation Underground Railroad is founded by the former CIA investigator Tim Ballard. It specializes in rescuing victims of child sex trafficking, often in cooperation with local authorities.  

Under Colombian laws, money must be exchanged before legal action can be taken against sex traffickers. So, Ballard and his team set up a fake bachelor party at a mansion they rented in Cartagena, Colombia.

Holden and another female volunteer had to gain the trust of young girls as their traffickers delivered them as "entertainment" for the party.

"When you've been sexually abused, no matter how wonderful they are, there is a fear of a man," said Holden.

"I think having myself and this other lovely woman, Krista, who is a cross-fit trainer, we were like the motherly figures who were able to comfort them."

Laurie Holden

Laurie Holden is best known for her role in AMC's horror hit, The Walking Dead. Her character Andrea was eaten by a zombie last season. (AMC)

Holden and her peers' mission was captured on undercover cameras and shown on ABC's documentary show Nightline.

Since her character on The Walking Dead was killed in the last season of the show, she's getting more scripts than ever, but the actress says the Colombian mission won't be her last.

She says her work in rescuing victims of child sex trafficking is much more meaningful. "We live in a cynical world and there's so much emphasis on money and success," said Holden. "All that fame is great but, you know, why are we here?" 

"We have to protect those who can't protect themselves and it's not about writing a cheque. That's great, but I've seen [child sex trafficking] firsthand and I can't get it out of my head, I'm just going to keep going until the day I die."

Watch Holden talk about the issue in the video above.


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Best new movies and videos for week of Oct 20: The Watchlist

In Theatres

St. Vincent  - Bill Murray's newest film is a sentimental and overly manipulative story. So, why did I find myself tearing up at the end? Probably because Bill can find the soul of any character (I mean, this is the man who gave heart to cartoon furball, Garfield.) Here, he stars as Vin, a grumpy sourpuss veteran enlisted to babysit the kid next door. The film is a remarkable and assured beginning for first time director, Theodore Melfi. (full review)

Gone Girl - Sure, you could go watch Brad Pitt blow away Nazis (again) in Fury, but if you want a movie meal that will stick to your ribs (and psyche), Gone Girl is a bro-tastic buffet of outrageous behaviour and carefully observed filmmaking. It's got a plot that ties the audience in knots, plus Tyler Perry plays a criminal lawyer you just can't get enough of. (full review)

The Book of Life - Leave it to producer Guillermo del Toro​ to give us an animated movie where the main characters look like misshapen wooden marionettes. But it's the unusual nature of the characters that is a big part of the story's charm. Set in a Mexican village, the plot centres on Manolo and Joaquin and their fight for the affections of Maria. But the struggle between the singer and soldier gets complicated by some visitors from the afterlife. Awkward musical choices hurt the cultural aesthetic, but the Day of the Dead has never been so lively.

The Guest Lean mean and packed with thrills to spare, The Guest is a smart scary ride starring Downton Abbey's Dan Stevens. Stevens plays military man David, who befriends the family of fallen soldier Caleb Peterson,  with his Ken doll looks and killer smile. But, as the visitor begins burrowing into the Peterson's lives, emo girl Anna begins digging into David's background. Horror director Adam Wingard twists the tension by filling the frame with wide open skies and a pulsing soundtrack​

The Tale of Princess Kaguya

The bamboo cutter and his wife welcome their discovery in Isao Takahata's The Tale of Princess Kaguya (Studio Ghibli)

The Tale of Princess Kaguya Isao Takahata, co founder of Studio Ghibli, has delivered an animated movie the looks like a living watercolour in this interpretation of a Japanese folk tale about a bamboo cutter. What begins as a beautiful baby, discovered in a bamboo grove, grows into a young woman with the power to drive princes and emperors mad with envy. In many ways, it's a simple tale about the tension between nature and man's desires — a common theme in Studio Ghibli productions. While the tale takes its time unwinding, it is an absolutely enchanting place to visit. 

On video, Netflix or VOD

The Lunchbox, Irrfan Khan

Irrfan Khan stars as a widowed accountant seduced by his senses in The Lunchbox. (Michael Simmonds/Sony Pictures Classics)

The Lunchbox (new to Netflix) - A delicious treat to wash away the taste of overcooked love stories, The Lunchbox is a film to savour but don't watch this one on an empty stomach. Set in Mumbai, the film revolves around the relationship between a neglected housewife and a widowed accountant. The Lunchbox captures the colour and characters of bustling Mumbai but also the ache of two lonely souls in a city of millions. I'll give you my Glasner Guarantee© on this one. Not to be missed. (full review)

Snowpiercer - A sci-fi parable about the class system trapped in a catastrophic super train circling the globe. Snowpiercer is the ultimate movie mash-up: a disaster film and apocalyptic thriller starring an international mix of stars directed by South Korea's Bong Joon-ho. What stops this giant metaphor from spinning off the tracks is inspired art direction and a story that takes no prisoners. Bloody good fun. (full review)

Earth to Echo - At first glance, Earth to Echo may look like a film filled with gimmicks: E.T. for the iPhone generation. But behind the found footage and YouTube references you'll find a carefully observed story about how it feels to be a kid in 2014. The awkward ones. The forgotten ones. Goonies for millennials, Earth to Echo is a film worth discovering. 


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Wilko Johnson, British guitarist, says he's cancer-free after terminal diagnosis

The 67-year-old ex-Dr. Feelgood member says doctors had given him months to live in 2012

CBC News Posted: Oct 23, 2014 8:32 AM ET Last Updated: Oct 23, 2014 8:32 AM ET

British guitarist Wilko Johnson says he is free of cancer, two years after being told he had months to live.

The former member of blues-rockers Dr. Feelgood launched what he said would be a farewell tour after his diagnosis in 2012 of incurable pancreatic cancer. He also recorded a "final" album with Roger Daltrey of The Who.

He told The Associated Press at the time that the diagnosis had made him feel "intensely alive" and renewed his creativity.

Accepting a trophy Wednesday at the Q Awards, 67-year-old Johnson said he had undergone radical surgery to remove a 3-kilogram tumour. He said: "They cured me."

Johnson said he hoped to go back on the road soon, "and the moral of the story is you never know what's going to happen."

Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

Submission Policy

Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


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