Friday, November 29, 2013

Daily News: Entertainment - 'Catching Fire,' 'Frozen' heat up Thanksgiving film box office

Friday, Nov 29, 2013 01:07 PM PST

'Catching Fire,' 'Frozen' heat up Thanksgiving film box office 
Friday, Nov 29, 2013 01:07 PM PST
Jennifer Lawrence attends the premiere of the film "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" in New YorkLOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Action film "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" led the North American box office with ticket sales of $35.6 million over the first two days of the long U.S. Thanksgiving weekend that began on Wednesday, while Disney's animated "Frozen," sold a hefty $26.3 million. "Catching Fire," the second installment of the "Hunger Games" franchise, grossed $14.9 million on Thursday's Thanksgiving Day holiday according to studio Lions Gate. That broke the record previously held by "Toy Story 2," which earned $13.1 million on Thanksgiving in 1999, according to Rentrak. ...
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Saatchi says has no proof ex-wife Nigella Lawson took drugs 
Friday, Nov 29, 2013 12:37 PM PST
Charles Saatchi leaves Isleworth Crown Court in west LondonBy Alexander Winning LONDON (Reuters) - Millionaire art dealer Charles Saatchi told a British court on Friday he had no proof that his celebrity ex-wife, TV chef Nigella Lawson, ever took drugs. Earlier this week, two of Lawson's former personal assistants alleged that she was a regular user of cocaine and other drugs as part of their defense in an ongoing fraud trial. Lawson, often nicknamed the "Domestic Goddess" after the title of one of her best-selling recipe books, is a cookery author who is popular in Britain and the United States. Saatchi and Lawson ended their 10-year marriage in July, and he accepted a police caution after newspapers published pictures of him with his hands around his ex-wife's neck at a London restaurant a month earlier.
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New "Parsifal" is "powerful journey" for all: director 
Friday, Nov 29, 2013 10:41 AM PST
Director Stephen Langridge knows MTV video clips tend to have mass appeal and Wagner operas do not, but he thinks anyone can be moved by his new production of "Parsifal", opening at London's Covent Garden on Saturday night. In the second act, New Zealand tenor Simon O'Neill as Wagner's "pure fool" of the title must resist the seductive lures of German soprano Angela Denoke's witch and temptress Kundry. "Anybody who comes to see 'Parsifal' is in for a powerful journey which will shake up all sorts of emotions and corners of their subconscious, almost without their knowing it," he told Reuters during a rehearsal for this last Wagner production by the Royal Opera in the composer's birthday bicentenary year. "It's the absolute antithesis of MTV, where you are battered with fabulous imagery for three minutes - and which I kind of enjoy, actually," he said.
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Pearson sells Mergermarket to focus on education business 
Friday, Nov 29, 2013 07:09 AM PST
British media and education group Pearson has agreed to sell its Mergermarket news service for 382 million pounds ($624 million), to invest in its global education business. The sale to funds advised by private equity group BC Partners was at a higher price than the 300 to 360 million pounds banking sources had expected. Pearson Chief Executive John Fallon is reorganizing the company to concentrate on fast-growing economies and digital services, rather than Europe and North America, where austerity measures have hit public spending. However, Pearson has said it intends to hang on to the newspaper, which it believes has a better fit with the overall group.
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South Africans warm to Mandela movie, critics unimpressed 
Friday, Nov 29, 2013 03:55 AM PST
Elba and Harris pose at the premiere of "Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom" in Los AngelesBy Ed Cropley JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - 'Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom' won rave reviews from South Africans who flocked to its opening night but critics were unimpressed, with one describing the latest biopic about the anti-apartheid leader as overly reverential ANC propaganda. With South Africa's first black president now 95 and in poor health, cinema-goers were in emotional mood at Thursday's first airing of the 150-minute epic, which stars British actors Idris Elba as Mandela and Naomie Harris as his wife, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela. "I grew up in the streets of Alexandra township and for me every step that Mr Mandela took, it was as if I was taking that step again. I feel very loved and fortunate to be a South African." Mandela, who became president in 1994 but stepped down after one term in office, gave independent South African producer Anant Singh the film rights to his 'Long Walk to Freedom' autobiography more than 15 years ago.
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Masked artist makes sticky issue out of radiation in Japan 
Friday, Nov 29, 2013 02:00 AM PST
People walk past a sticker art made by an artist known as 281 Antinuke, designed in the likeness of Japan's Prime Minister Abe, along a street in TokyoBy Sophie Knight TOKYO (Reuters) - With his face hidden behind sunglasses and a white surgical mask, the artist is almost as invisible as the radioactive contamination he is protesting against - yet his stickers are graphic reminders of the Fukushima nuclear disaster. Known as 281 Antinuke, Japan's answer to Banksy has covered Tokyo streets in images depicting politicians as vampires and children being shielded from radioactive rain to highlight the consequences of a meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear plant after an earthquake and tsunami on March 11, 2011. The disaster and the response by plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co (Tepco) stoked anti-nuclear sentiment and the biggest public protests in Japan since the 1960s, but the movement has since lost momentum. "Perhaps because everyone believes people telling them on television that everything is fine, they don't seem so worried," 281 Antinuke told Reuters.
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Rembrandt, Chinese painters star in Sotheby's first major China sale 
Friday, Nov 29, 2013 01:57 AM PST
A member of staff checks a display prior to the exhibition sale of Sotheby's Diamonds during Sotheby's Beijing Art Week in BeijingBy Adam Rose BEIJING (Reuters) - Sotheby's will hold its first major auction on the Chinese mainland on Sunday as competition between the New York-based auction house and its long-time rival Christie's moves into one of the world's hottest art markets amid a government crackdown on corruption and luxury spending. Sotheby's and its local joint venture partner, Beijing Gehua Art Company, are offering a slate of modern and contemporary Chinese works with a total estimated value of more than 123 million yuan ($20.19 million) as part of "Beijing Art Week". The event will feature more than 100 lots including canvases by some of China's most renowned oil and ink painters, as well as three selling exhibitions with a selection of diamonds and European furniture and art. "The Beijing Art Week is basically our first major move into China," said Kevin Ching, CEO of Sotheby's Asia.
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