Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Crystal Skull” even dusts off the Russians, so severely under- exploited in recent years, as the bad guys. Up against them, Indiana Jones is once again played by Harrison Ford, who is now 65 but looks a lot like he did at 55 or 46, which is how old he was when he made “Last Crusade.” He has one of those Robert Mitchum faces that doesn’t age, it only frowns more.

He and his sidekick Mac McHale (Ray Winstone) are taken by the cool, contemptuous Soviet uber-villainess Irina Spalko (Cate Blanchett) to a cavernous warehouse to seek out a crate he saw there years ago. The contents of the crate are hyper- magnetic (lord, I love this stuff) and betray themselves when Indy throws a handful of gunpowder into the air.

In ways too labyrinthine to describe, the crate leads Indy, Mac, Irina and the Russians far up the Amazon. Along the way they’ve gathered Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen), Indy’s girlfriend from the first film, and a young biker named Mutt Williams (Shia LeBeouf), who is always combing his ducktail haircut. They also acquire Professor Oxley (John Hurt), elderly colleague from the University of Chicago, whose function is to read all the necessary languages, know all the necessary background, and explain everything.

What happens in South America is explained by the need to create (1) sensational chase sequences, and (2) awe-inspiring spectacles. We get such sights as two dueling Jeep-like vehicles racing down parallel roads. Not many of the audience members will be as logical as I am, and wonder who went to the trouble of building parallell roads in a rain forest.

Most of the major characters eventually find themselves at the wheels of both vehicles; they leap or are thrown from one to another, and the vehicles occasionally leap right over one another. And that Irina, she’s something. Her Russian backups are mostly just atmosphere, useful for pointing their rifles at Indy, but she can fight shoot, fence, drive, leap and kick, and keep on all night.

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No one’s too young for a play

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

At Assitej, the 16th World Congress and Performing Arts Festival for Young People taking place in Adelaide, visiting companies include the Makhampon Theatre Group from Thailand, which is happy to hear itself described as a form of family, community, university and even food centre. They are performing a Buddhist tale about perseverance. Australian group Zeal Theatre, is collaborating with the South African performers Ellis and Bheki to create a comic show about nationalism and sport.

From Israel, “this crazy country”, as director Norman Issa calls it, comes the Arab-Hebrew Theatre of Jaffa, which, as its name suggests, is determined to defy that country’s political divide.

“We’re not the Christian-Jewish theatre company, or the Muslim-Jewish,” Issa says. “We deal in languages, not religions. We’re a very new idea and the only theatre working like this in Israel, and while we don’t have many sponsors, and are very small, people love this place. We have many friends.”

Issa’s Arab-Hebrew Theatre of Jaffa has brought a two-hander called Ach Ach Boom Traach to Adelaide for the Assitej festival. He co-wrote the hour-long piece with Yoav Barlev and both men perform in it. The fact that he is Jewish and Barlev a Muslim, Issa says, is not the issue (although that’s one of the first things he says about the play). The issue is how any two people, whose languages distance them from each other, can find common ground.

The production is pitched at children as young as three, but it’s also suitable for people in their late teens, the top-end of the age spectrum covered in Assitej’s broad program. Issa reckons it’s for everyone. “This play is very simple, and very difficult,” he says. “Everyone finds their own level within this play.”

Its premise is that the two actors represent brothers who play together, quarrel, then make up, and quarrel again. “The balance of power swings back and forth.”

As their history unfolds in scenes spoken in what sounds to the audience like jibberish (Issa says it’s the “language of Jesus”, Aramaic), one thing remains constant: a prettily coloured box that dangles enticingly above their heads. This appears to be the prize they constantly fight over, as their bitter feuding becomes ever more violent and hurtful. Finally, when they have “settled down to an uneasy truce, the box opens up by itself”. Ach Ach Boom Traach poses the question to the audience: “What are the brothers fighting for?”

Issa is unapologetic when he calls his theatre political, even though he has his critics because of that. “Most people here (in Israel) don’t like political stories, they look, maybe make a noise about the political situation, and then nothing happens. Most people here, they look, and do nothing.”

That’s why he believes children are the hope for the future and theatre for children is his way of turning this hope into action.

“I love children,” he says. “If we can change children, maybe we can reach out for peace. These children in the Jewish community, many years on they will become soldiers and maybe they will be different people because of what they’ve seen. I believe in that. This is my fighting, here in this crazy country.”

The company is in its 12th year, and Ach Ach Boom Traach has been in development for several years, already touring to a long list of countries, including Uzbekistan, Armenia, South Korea and Japan. “It’s very interesting,” Issa says, “that children all over the world react at the same moments during the play. It’s amazing. The inner child is a child wherever you go.”

The key to touching that inner child is to make the experience live, and Issa is animated in his denunciation of the kind of education children are receiving by way of television.

“It has to be live,” he says. “The theatre is life itself, and you can smell it, the actors, the props. It’s not in a box, in your salon (lounge room). In the theatre, the magic is that you see the story happening now, right before you, not edited so you only see the best takes.”

He describes what happens to people who lose touch with the theatre, those who sit in front of the TV screen with a beer and a sandwich as a process of “becoming heavy”, physically and mentally. Issa’s Arab-Hebrew Theatre of Jaffa uses a minimalist set, lots of brightly coloured props, and the energies of its two actors to capture the attention and imagination of its audiences.

According to a growing number of specialists in theatre for children, there is no reason to draw the line there: performances can be directed effectively to babes in arms.

In the Assitej festival, the highly respected Adelaide company, Windmill, has two shows, Cat and Green Sheep, both directed by Cate Fowler, which are pitched to audience members as young as one, but according to Suzanne Oster, theatre can be effective for even younger babies.

Oster is the artistic director of Unga Klara, a division within the Stockholm City Theatre created in 1975 to cater for children and young people. She is attending the Assitej congress, with the support of PlayWriting Australia, to talk about just how young an audience theatre can, and should, target.

The ideal audience, she says, is, in fact, a baby: “Present. Here and now. Not concerned with what it’s having for dinner, doing tomorrow or said yesterday. Free from conventions. Hasn’t read the reviews. Receptive without bias or prejudice.”

Oster’s showcase production, which is not part of the festival but which she will be discussing with delegates at the congress, is Babydrama, designed to present to children as young as six months.

It tells the story of the journey from conception to birth, through to the moment of “meeting their parents and their own will”.

“As far as we know,” Oster says, “text-based performances of this calibre have not been done for such young audiences,” although a Norwegian project has been evaluating the success of dance, mime and puppet theatre for babies from birth to three years old.

That evaluation was so positive, Oster says, there is now a project called Glitterbird, involving the collaboration of several European countries, developing theatre for the newly born. “The more elaborate the productions were, the more alert, concentrated and carefree the child seemed to be.”

Unga Klara works with test audiences, and documents the reactions on film, in order to build knowledge about what works best.

“The fact that one cannot speak,” Oster says, “does not mean that one cannot understand what is said. Experience has shown that the capacity for understanding and assessing situations is present at a very early age. Creating full-scale theatre to the youngest children with all our know-how and passion is a cultural policy statement.

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Connery won’t be back for next ‘Indiana Jones’ film

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

The next “Indiana Jones” flick will not be another father-son affair. Sean Connery says he will not return to play dad to Harrison Ford’s globe-trotting adventurer Indy.

Connery played Indy’s father in 1989’s “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade,” the third installment of the franchise directed by Steven Spielberg and produced by George Lucas.

“I get asked the question so often, I thought it best to make an announcement,” Connery, 76, said in a statement posted Thursday on Lucasfilm’s “Indiana Jones” Web site. “I thought long and hard about it, and if anything could have pulled me out of retirement it would have been an ‘Indiana Jones’ film.

“I love working with Steven and George, and it goes without saying that it is an honor to have Harrison as my son,” he said. “But in the end, retirement is just too damned much fun.”

The fourth “Indiana Jones” film, not yet titled, is again directed by Spielberg and produced by Lucas. Shooting begins the week of Monday, June 18, at an undisclosed U.S. location, and the movie is due out May 22, 2008.

Lucasfilm also announced Thursday that Cate Blanchett, John Hurt and Ray Winstone will be joining the cast, which along with Ford, includes Shia LaBeouf.

***

Police are looking into a clash between Akon and a concertgoer that ended with the R%26amp;B star tossing the teen off the stage and onto another spectator who said she suffered a concussion.

Audience members said the trouble started when a spectator lobbed something at Akon during a concert Sunday at Dutchess Stadium in Fishkill, N.Y., and the 34-year-old singer asked the crowd to point out the culprit. A security guard picked out a 15-year-old and sent him up to the stage, where Akon hoisted him onto his shoulders and flung him back into the audience, the Poughkeepsie Journal reported Thursday.

The boy landed on Abby Rosa, who told the newspaper she quickly felt a headache and blurry vision and was later diagnosed with a concussion. She said she has hired a lawyer and spoke to Fishkill police about the incident, and that she wants an apology from Akon.

Fishkill Police Detective Lt. John Berlingieri said no criminal charges had been filed against Akon. And the singer’s attorney, Benjamin Brafman, released a statement saying there was no basis for criminal charges.

***

Paul McCartney says he’s “surprisingly OK” despite his difficult divorce from his second wife, Heather Mills.

“It’s very tough, you know, going through a separation,” McCartney said in an interview that aired Thursday on ABC News’ “Good Morning America” in New York. “But I’m just trying to keep my dignity, trying to just move forward and not talk about it in interviews, really.”

McCartney and Mills, a 39-year-old former model and activist who recently appeared as a contestant on ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars,” are in divorce proceedings. They have a 3-year-old daughter, Beatrice.

McCartney and Mills married in June 2002, four years after his first wife, Linda McCartney, died of breast cancer. They separated last year.

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Hog plans spur trip

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

By MIKE AUGSPURGER

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OQUAWKA, Ill. — Henderson County board members will take an unprecedented trip to Iowa next week to inspect the operations of a family-owned corporation that wants to raise more hogs in Illinois.

Approximately 100 people packed the small county courtroom here Thursday night to learn what action, if any, the county board could take to stop proposed plans to build more hog confinement operations in the Gladstone area.

The standing-room-only crowd learned the county’s zoning can’t buck state regulations when an agriculture project meets certain standards. Changes regarding local control by the 11-member county board only could be made through new state legislation.

Board chairman Marty Lafary, however, said he and other county representatives have met a few days ago with TriOak Foods of Oakville, Iowa, who would provide the hogs for nine of the 11 proposed confinement operations. Each confinement system would raise about 2,500 hogs from wean to finish.

One site being considered would place a confinement building in an area that has 100 homes within a mile or so, which owners believed would cause a decrease in property values and curtail future home construction.

Lafaryt said the county board plans to visit TriOak’s facilities next week. When asked after Thursday’s meeting if such a gathering could be a violation of the open meetings law, he said board members have been invited as a group of individuals, not as a board in session. The date of the private meeting has not been set.

“Believe me,” he told the audience during the meeting. “If we all work together, we’ll get something done.”

The board’s meeting Thursday night was in response to one earlier in the month organized by Coalition Against Factory Confinements. The group led by Carol Eibes, along with John and Judy Cate, was formed in 2001 when similar hog operations were planning to set up in the area, and later cancelled plans.

Eibes told the board that hog confinements threaten residents’ water quality, health and way of life. Trucks hauling the hogs also could damage roads, forcing more burdens on taxpayers.

She said the state has 35,000 hog facilities and only four people are in the Illinois Department of Agriculture to inspect them.

“The importing of hog confinements will affect generations to come,” she said.

Other residents voiced concerns about smell wafting in the air as well as water being tainted by manure spills or runoff.

Judy Cate said the group is not opposed to agriculture, but doesn’t believe hog factories should be classified in the same category.

Carl Swan said a small handful of people will benefit from the hog operations.

“Please don’t let a few people ruin the quality of life for people in this room and those not in this room,” he said.

County zoning office John Carrier told the audience that the county board can’t do much under state regulations when hog confinements are of the size being proposed.

Lafary, Eibes and others encourage audience members to contact state legislators to change regulations and put more control back into the hands of county officials. Eibes also said various groups opposed to confinement operations are hoping to form a more united effort to push state officials for change.

Meanwhile, Lafary hopes talks with TriOak will continue in a civil manner and encourage the audience to conduct themselves in the same way.

“They are willing to listen to us,” he said.

Lafary noted that the hog confinement issue has reached the attention of a younger crowd. When his daughter wished him good luck before attended Thursday night’s meeting, he asked her why.

She told him that the matter has been the main topic of conversation for second-graders.

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